tv From Agadir To Dakar Al Jazeera March 12, 2019 11:00pm-12:01am +03
11:00 pm
this new kind of entity. so the man. and on a crushing defeat for the u.k. prime minister as politicians once again reject e.u. withdrawal deal. our intake of this is al jazeera live from london also coming up. prices for boeing the seventy seven x. eight is grounded in many countries after sunday's crash in ethiopia that killed one hundred fifty seven people. protested nigeria showed no sign of easing after
11:01 pm
the president abandons his bid for a fifth term but postponed next month's election. and talks between the u.s. and taliban and with progress on some key issues. and of britain's parliament has dealt a major blow to prime minister to resign may resoundingly rejecting her bricks it withdrawal deal just seventeen days before the u.k. is usually the e.u. so the measure. is the second time that may's deal has been dismissed by m.p.'s in parliament this year as she has now agreed for a vote on whether the u.k. should leave the e.u. with or without a deal. i profoundly great the decision that this house has taken to it i continue to believe that by far the best outcome is the united kingdom believes the european union and orderly fashion with the deal. and that the deal we've negotiated is the
11:02 pm
best and indeed the only deal of the yeah but mr speaker i would like to sit out briefly how the government means to proceed two weeks ago i made a series of commitments from this dispatch box regarding the steps we would take in the event this house rejected the deal on earth i stand by those commitments in full therefore tonight we will table a motion for debate tomorrow to test whether the house supports leaving the european union without a deal on the twenty ninth of march opposition labor leader jeremy corwin has again repeated his call for a general election the government has been defeated again by an enormous majority and they must now accept their deal their proposal the one the prime minister's port is clearly dead and does not have the support of this house. the prime minister's run down the clock and their caucus rain run out on a maybe it's time instead we had a general election and the people get things through their government should be.
11:03 pm
and just a reminder again of how politicians voted two hundred forty two were for the deal and three hundred ninety one against that means the prime minister lost by one hundred forty nine votes in january the last time this was put to a vote she lost by two hundred thirty votes. need joins us live for westminster. a big defeat still and now all eyes turn to the next vote in parliament on wednesday. well well yes but i mean the mood hits and i seize is you know the word meltdown is being used fairly liberally to describe the states of u.k. politics treason may have self looked and certainly sounded absolutely broken they've totally lost their way frankly and there's going to be a free votes to some or it was you say which is seen by some some majority will rule out leaving the no deal even though it doesn't actually rule out no deal because it's illogical position if they can't find anything else to do and then
11:04 pm
based on that they would have to go to the european union to organize a delay but that puts all the power of what happens next in the hands of the european union and all the indications we're hearing from brussels and i saw that the points of view of the european union based on this as a lucky set of affairs here in this couple of days is that the u.k. now has three choices either leave at the end of march with no deal or else the european union for an extension which the e.u. agrees on but it has to be for a good reason they won't just ask for a couple of months if they think it's this endless cycle of not getting anywhere or as a third option the u.k. has to revoke article fifty and decide it's not going to leave the european at all and so all those things that people like jeremy coleman was saying about we must have an election may not even come to pass because power is being taken out of the hands of the british governments and into the hands of the e.u. instead which is plainly the opposite of what brics it was supposed to be about in the first place rather than less from british influence what an absolute mess. just
11:05 pm
talks with about the free vote this must be conscience vote for in peace now how many m.p.'s do you think there are in parliaments who will stand up and say i'm happy to have no deal and crush out. i can't imagine it would be more than twenty five or thirty it could be a little more than that but in pops from tory m.p.'s they really won't say they want to use their show you case that breaks the credentials for the all important membership who are very pretty bright say really they we know absolutely certainly we will that there will not be a no deal at least at the end of march but what does it tell you about the government sorry just just just pick up on that point that surely there will be a no deal at the end of march if they can't think of anything else to do because that's the default isn't it both that's why you have the t. stage process so you'll vote for your rule and no detail on the parliament will presumably not certainly because part of it could be crazy things but presumably pala rules are no deal well then very to request extension to article fifty now the
11:06 pm
thing is that no matter how big that extension is framed it is bound to be greeting because our island will always the pooch that extension on the e.u. is not going through our and on to the bus i'll just say how extraordinary is it that on the most important issue of the day which could send thousands to economic devastation food or medicine which is a finite the government is so teammate has so little power and authority it can't even take a phenomenon that that it can tell m.p.'s it's a value for that position of having a deal and if m.p.'s can say it have no sanction or so other that show you see the government's loss as moral compass you know you talk about the e.u. protecting and defending our lands interests over the issue of the border. they had that the president the european council said issued statements not saying i just want to see was that the parliament here would reject the deal and they will consider an extension but it has to be for a really good reason they won't they won't just have it just says so treason they can sort of wonder on for the for a month or two more what's your sense of what sort of extension the european union
11:07 pm
might want at this point the e.u. has overseas interest space person choice is to avoid a deal and protect protect right and as you say so that means that they would be inclined to keep the u.k. . a longish extension they'll tell you they are the alternatives that is have an extension only salute out of may which is when the european elections take place now the u.k. has to get its act together pretty quickly and slay some sacred cows now the moment the labor party and the conservative party than the other position where we are not fight the european elections in may that has to change because we simply don't have any alternative there's no deal that's a very tell me no you that there's not going to be a renegotiation of the withdrawal agreement and that means you have to stand those elections and then take this forward and decide what we want to do with a referendum or general election or whatever it is ok fine you know. that's that that does seem to be the way it's going for all the things it's a reason he has said i will never go very very vocal school fifty will not do this
11:08 pm
and we'll do this something pretty big i think is that now going to have to happen to try to to alter the trajectory of this because if they don't want no deal they can do something else completely different instead thank you very much. spokesman for the european commission president donald tusk tweeted a reaction saying the e.u. has done all possible to reach an agreement and the u.k. vote has significantly increased the likelihood of a no deal brics it and the e.u. will consider a reasoned request for an extension to the march twenty ninth deadline and i'm joined by alan wager who is a research associate for the initiative the u.k. in a changing your base to king's question and thanks for joining us again so what do you make of the reaction so far they have they seem to be highlighting the idea that this this vote on the defeat increases the possibility or over the probability of a deal why they saying that at this stage well i think they're right in that every day that we get toward the twenty ninth of march in a chance for the increases and i think every day the u.k.
11:09 pm
can come to a decision the chance of a no deal increases but i think it also increases their political leverage with really raising the stakes and saying look if you don't really move on this then a no deal as i likely would increase it because practically the there is there is legislation in place which means that it would leave on the twenty ninth unless something else happens before then absolutely and there's also another deadline in terms of would britain participate in the european elections and that's why they talked about the twenty third of may is the deadline for another another sort of hard deadline for the for the u.k. so i think unless we go for a lot much longer extension we really are getting towards another sort of cliff edge either the end of in a couple of weeks or a couple of months and we've heard that the from the promises spokesman receiving that may has no current plans to hold more talks with the european union i mean is that partly because they've been so clear that they that this the extension of these changes they've agreed just now just on sunday in strasburg now the end of the road and they're not going to make any other changes and is that the assumption
11:10 pm
there i think that's not really a choice that they've made i think that's a choice the result of the fact that these negotiations effectively ended to resume could be forced to go back to the negotiating table by m.p.'s if they. say look we'll accept your with your agreement on the premise that we go towards a much softer form of rex's that would involve changing the political declaration the other part of the would your agreement negotiated settlement so they could be a renegotiation there and we could actually see some change in the approach from the u.k. and that's that would that would necessitate we opening talks in brussels and said they would do that if there was a big change of heart from the u.k. it looks to the politics of it in turn terms of the u.k. politics i mean we've had. you know this this decision to make it a free vote. for the conservatives who why is that so significant was it really wrest control away from the government and from the executive inputs into the hands of the legislature the parliament and it means that probably the the choices that
11:11 pm
britain has to make on break set for example whether to go for a softer exit or harder will also be decisions that will be personally be made by the house of commons not by the government up to now the government has decided to go for the particular course of action now we could see thousand commons which is more likely to have a majority for a new way to. putting it spring is very forward ok thank you very much indeed if your first thank you. so to come on out is there a report from evacuation center in southern malawi where flooding has killed thirty people and left an estimated two hundred thirty thousand without shelter. and the world wide web turns thirty but there's a word of warning from its inventor. is everywhere and it's choking our planet very toxic and very dangerous and we could spend years cleaning this i alone but breakthroughs are being made showing that it
11:12 pm
is possible to change our relationship with nate substance issues running out i think a lot that we pick up on the beach we try to move on plastic waste fridays on al-jazeera how do you. examining the headlines setting the discussions a warning from air bus over the risks of the no deal breaker sharing personal stories with a global audience you have your own intelligence network on the ground to tell you where to go and we'll go explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform motivate and inspire brazilian people are truly afraid the world is watching on al-jazeera isn't the problem for your candidate that you may not have a health question mark over him but he does have a corruption question mark or really doesn't look good for the image that a ticker has made very i'm going to do every we'll probably not knowing about this
11:13 pm
or you certainly will you get why there's a lot of disillusionment with the u.s. across the globe this far that is called for or that bridge doesn't build confidence it breaks will join me near the hot sun on our front of my guests from around the world take the hot seat and we debate the week's top stories and big issues here on al-jazeera. the ultranationalist marks connected with one of the world's worst humanitarian crisis. ido as in my grad joining with the military to impose a deadly political agenda we have to photo of our nation what has happened to the engine that's one of the biggest stains on the country as a whole. as in not religion this is a politics. an unholy alliance on all jews here.
11:14 pm
and one of the top stories here on out is there. so the no use having the no use cover imo britain's parliament has dealt a major blow to promise to theresa may resoundingly rejecting have it withdrawal date or just seventeen days before the u.k. is due to leave the e.u. is the second time a deal has been dismissed by m.p.'s in parliament this year politicians will now vote on whether the u.k. should leave the e.u. with or without a deal i profoundly agree to the decision that this house has taken to it i continue to believe that by far the best outcome is the united kingdom believes the european union and an orderly fashion with a deal. and that the deal we've negotiated is the best and indeed the only deal of the. that is to speak i would like to sit out briefly how the government means to
11:15 pm
proceed two weeks ago i made a series of commitments from this dispatch box regarding the steps we would take in the event this house rejected the deal on a i stand by those commitments in full that force night we will table a motion for debate tomorrow to test whether the house supports leaving the european union without a deal on the twenty ninth of march. in other news the european union safety agency has followed several aviation organizations around the world in banning the boeing seven three seven max eight from its air space it follows sunday's crash in ethiopia that killed one hundred fifty seven people almost forty percent of more than three hundred seventy jets in service globally have now been grounded several european governments have also banned the planes from their air space along with malaysia australia and singapore and operators across the world from europe to asia and south america have grounded their seventy seven x. eight feet as a precaution but in the u.s. aviation officials say they're still standing behind the safety of boeing's best
11:16 pm
selling at craft john hendren has more from boeing headquarters in chicago. as investigators began the first full day of their probe into the cause of a second deadly crash more and more of boeing seven thirty seven max aircraft are being grounded u.s. aviation officials insist the aircraft is safe but a growing list of countries say that until they get the assurances they need over the safety of the seven thirty seven max it is banned from their airspace u.s. airline passengers and an american flight attendants union share their concern u.s. senators are joining growing calls for the plane to be grounded well i think out of an abundance of caution and frankly common sense it makes sense to ground aircraft has been involved in a two very tragic accidents and six months the seven thirty seven max. a should be grounded immediately. there is no reason for american flyers to be less safe than. china
11:17 pm
ethiopia argentina mexico and now apparently the united kingdom but boeing insists the plane remains safe saying it has full confidence in the safety of the seven thirty seven max the biggest users of the aircraft american airlines and southwest continue to fly the plane as do several foreign carriers and at the moment based on our safety assessment there is no requirement to take any action aircraft that safe to fly speculation into the cause of the two separate crashes is centered on flight control software the u.s. federal aviation administration plans to require a software enhanced meant that boeing says will be deployed on the next fleet in the coming weeks boeing says the update to maneuvering flight control and pilot display software would make quote an already safe aircraft even safer passengers might be confused but investors have reacted decisively they have hammered boeing
11:18 pm
stock costing the company billions of dollars in market value boeing. had hoped to use this plane to overtake airbus in market share but now the company is just struggling to survive there is precedent for a global ban in two thousand and thirteen boeing took its massive new dreamliner out of service to resolve a problem with battery fires now once again boeing is struggling to hold steady through the turbulence john hendren al-jazeera chicago venezuela's chief prosecutor has asked the supreme court to investigate opposition to one why door over alleged involvement in the ongoing power outage and government is still struggling to restore power in many regions almost a week after much of the nation was plunged into darkness president maduro blames the outage on the united states whilst the opposition says the power grid has been poorly maintained in the economic crisis thousands of protesters have returned to the streets across town geria demanding immediate political change this
11:19 pm
a day after aging president of disease but if you abandon his bid for a fifth term in power but stop short of stepping down and the heywood has more. they say there will be no letup and no backing down until what they see is real political change in algeria. the people demand the downfall of the regime protests a shouted as they return to the streets after president abdul aziz. announced he wouldn't seek a fifth term but also announced he was postponing the election and we are against any extensions any decisions to delay the elections or extend presidential terms we want to transition the government rule not sustain this corrupt government. we haven't requested an extension yes we said no to the fifth term but we didn't ask the government to stay nor beautifully could stay. to shipley who's been in power
11:20 pm
for twenty years has promised to go eventually but has delayed any new elections meaning he's likely to stay in power for some time it's expected talks to plan algeria's future will take place at some point this year but no date has been set is reported will be chaired by lakhdar brahimi the u.n. arab league envoy to syria. has made some changes to his political team but the chief of the army is staying on more evident say demonstrators that little has changed former prime minister and please says postponing the election is unconstitutional well sort of me so we're definitely. throttling the president's attempt to run for a fourth term is an achievement made by the algerian people not a favor or grant by anybody the people lived up to the aspirations lived up to their responsibility especially that the constitution was violated where
11:21 pm
a president's term runs for five years only the character has been extended without the people's approval or endorsement and the constitution. many demonstrating here have no no other leader than abdelaziz bouteflika high unemployment among young people and rising living costs a pew with these protests along with a strong desire for political reform and the heywood. and u.s. backed syrian democratic forces say between fifteen hundred and two thousand people have left arsenal's last enclave in the village of bugaboos in eastern syria surrendering included both eisel fighters and their family members a kurdish led force say they have also killed thirty eight members of the armed group but who is offensive which has asked us for a number of weeks resumed on sunday following a brief pause to allow civilians to leave. airstrikes carried out by the saudi m r t led coalition in northern yemen this week until twenty two people according to the u.n. humanitarian agency the u.n.
11:22 pm
has also warned that thousands of yemeni civilians caught in the fierce flashes clashes are trapped in the area which has become another flashpoint in the country's bitter civil war tens of thousands of people have died in yemen's four year battle between the iran aligned movement and yemen's saudi backed government your state department says meaningful progress has been made in talks between the u.s. and taliban negotiators in catarrh this fifth round of discussions began sixteen days ago sources say another round of talks is expected soon change pace has more from the. the talks here in doha started sixteen days ago they've come to an end but no breakdown and yet no breakthrough both sides are saying there has been some progress in fact rather remarkably both the u.s. special envoy zalmay khalilzad and the taliban spokesman put out tweets almost
11:23 pm
civil taney asli making the same point that there are four issues they've been discussing on two of those issues they've reached a draft agreement one of those is the withdrawal of troops from afghanistan potentially most of the u.s. troops leaving the country and what has for the u.s. been its longest war in history also on another key point what the u.s. calls assurances on counterterrorism we understand that's the taliban making a commitment not to support carder what will happen to those two draft agreements is the leadership will go back to their respective commanders the taliban to afghanistan and pakistan the u.s. special envoy zalmay khalilzad back to washington d.c. to brief the secretary of state might pompei o and quite possibly the president the u.s. secretary of state just happens to be coming to this region in the next week floods
11:24 pm
in southern malawi have left thirty people dead and almost a quarter of a million without shelter as an author military care has declared a state of disaster in the region welcome web reports from an evacuation center in southern somalia. it was the middle of the night when agnes easy says she woke to find floodwater rising through her home. she ran now she and her five children have a little back you ation center in southern malawi one by land there was another tell what world are you the floods have destroyed our cups in the fields we don't have anything to harvest. even all our clothes and belongings are gone we've had to come here with nothing have been destroyed. she hausen is more tell similar stories hundreds have been injured dozens of died survivors have no choice but to come to centers like this and wait for help most of the people here
11:25 pm
are subsistence farmers they don't own much and they carried with them whatever they could this disused farm warehouse will be their shelter for tonight for a bed to sleep on not much more than this. this is what happened to their homes and their farms after four days of heavy rain the river sheer a person it banks hundreds of thousands of people live on the surrounding lowlands their fertile for farming but dangerous too it's not the first time this has happened broken bridges and washed away roads have made it hard for the government trucks to bring food and supplies it'll take long for people here to rebuild their lives. back at the center people gathered to hear what the local chief has to say he told us the government's bringing food and tent and will build much needed
11:26 pm
toilets the border rules not only the crops they lose their belongings they do will lose their lives then no more dead to this day is just saw people become. and so the weight goes on some assistance here will make things a little easier floodwaters are still high and more heavy rains are forecast in the coming days people don't even know when they might be able to start to rebuild their lives. malcolm webb al-jazeera found a district the lhari the world wide web has turned thirty and over the past three decades has transformed the way we live its inventor tim berners lee says he created it to everyone free access to information she says is a human right but he fears that's no longer the case with governments and companies increasingly controlling the online world thirty years ago i submitted
11:27 pm
a vague but exciting proposal for a free open permission of space for all of humanity to share knowledge and ideas today half the world's population is still unconnected and those of us who are online feel that our rights and freedoms on not fully protected and respected our technology editor mariana hunt has more. it may be hard for many of us to imagine a time when you couldn't just log on to the internet and search the web it's how many of us stay in touch make friends talk search and share information but thirty years ago none of that was possible electronically at least wow all this as this is british scientist tim bernoulli because back in one thousand nine hundred nine he
11:28 pm
and other scientists were frustrated unable to share the experiments and data stored on the many different computer says he proposed a system with by information in one part of the globe was connected to every other part easily searched available to all and not controlled by anyone he published how to do it on this the very first web page their vision of universal connectivity became the world wide web the web works because you can examine into anything the web works but because it is actually an independent country when you're reading a blog you don't know where the up this grows at the moment and it shouldn't matter i think that's really healthy thing you might think of the internet on your computer or a device like this as a ken to a library some way you go to get information but instead of books you access data
11:29 pm
more than a billion web pages problem is the world wide web is so vast you don't always know is a find what you want so much like asking a librarian you use a search engine to type in your query it's processed using a set of rules known as algorithms to the intro all through the messes of data on the web and find the best matches click on the link and it's like being taken to a book and that library a global digital library the bareness lee envisioned would be accessible to war. but the web has brought new challenges concerns such as cyber crime bullying misinformation and breaches of privacy and a growing number of governments and now blocking content and monitoring what we search this is of course a very big threat to the value of it as a global open battle is shuji great the that what it would be if it were broken
11:30 pm
into national continental chunks thirty years on half of the world is online the berners lee that said job half done connectivity for all is a human right he says and he's calling on governments to sign up to a global contract to protect people's rights and freedoms and the digital age medium hardened al jazeera. are one of the headlines on al-jazeera britain's parliament has dealt a major blow to prime minister to resign may resoundingly rejecting her bricks it withdrawal deal just seventeen days before u.k. is due to leave the e.u. so the nose i mean the nose curve it comes up it's the second time that may's deal has been dismissed by m.p.'s in parliament this year auditions will now vote on whether the u.k. should leave the e.u. with or without a deal i profoundly agree to the decision that this house has taken to heart i
11:31 pm
continue to believe that by far the best outcome is the united kingdom believes the european union and an orderly fashion with a deal. and that the deal we've negotiated is the best and indeed the only deal of the yeah that is the speaker i would like to sit out briefly how the government means to proceed. two weeks ago i made a series of commitments in this dispatch box regarding the steps we would take in the event this house rejected the deal one of i stand by those commitments in four therefore tonight we will table a motion for debate tomorrow to test whether the house supports leaving the european union without a deal on the twenty ninth of march. the european union safety agency has followed several aviation organizations around the world in banning the boeing seven three seven max eight from its air space it follows sunday's crash in ethiopia that killed one hundred fifty seven people u.s. airline a manufacturer boeing says it has full confidence in the safety of its seven three
11:32 pm
seven x. eight model venezuela's chief prosecutor has asked the supremes court to investigate opposition leader one door over alleged involvement in the ongoing power outage the government is still struggling to restore power in many regions almost a week after much of the nation was plunged into darkness president nicolas maduro blames the outage on the united states was the opposition says the power grid has been poorly maintained during the economic crisis. the u.s. state department says meaningful progress has been made in talks between the u.s. and taliban negotiators in qatar this fifth round of talks began sixteen days ago with sources saying another round of talks is expected soon there's the headlines to stay with us or not is there a witness is up next more news after that by phone or. al-jazeera is there when a story breaks but the schools today to see what happens next if you wish to chew
11:33 pm
on it fired by the barriers for a mobile barricade of the full seven streets that lead to here the middle east now is we were about change people have gone to hear varya the mission of the national army is to search the entire one complex and i'll just your stories about telling it from the people's perspective what they think is happening in their country. morning to morrow morning for you doing a larger selves. when you hear. of the third chance.
11:34 pm
and nervous all or buds. playing a little finger or ten or piers i haven't been to syria for probably thirty years i'm fortunate that i was able to come over here and to going to the medical field i think it was footage of a father carrying his son with his arm completely empty to that's what they actually instigated me to contact the syrian american medical society and they put me in touch with the facility in turkey. what did your wife say she said she's a nervous wreck don't cross the border. i'm really nervous about it i try not to talk about it too much but pam and i try not to think about it too much but i'm nervous about everything about him we haven't talked about the trip yet with our younger daughter with my older son we just tried to explain where dad's gone and
11:35 pm
what he'll be doing while he's there we've talked a little bit about you know how. children had to leave their homes or some families had to leave their homes and go someplace out. it's probably going to be difficult i don't know what exactly healthy so i don't know what to expect and i don't know what how it will. i don't think what i'm doing is really anything special in particle or. but i think every little bit helps i know if i was in this situation how would. i like to have somebody who would be able to provide care for me. these are mainly external fixed herbs devices which goes on the outside of the body if there is an open fracture. the soldier here are males which goes inside the born
11:36 pm
11:37 pm
i can see syria with them. fifty feet from where i'm standing. speaking to the hospital law administrators today usually they are closed tomorrow . because they have couple doctors who came in from out of town they are opening the hospital and they want us to start seeing patients first thing tomorrow morning . bill.
11:38 pm
11:39 pm
to figure. i was covering for we might be called the bullet here is too good a life. for me to teach turkey. i cannot they would keep me fit cats me it happened with some friends if i said he was army loyal for him if they were no longer my name they would kill my parents directly. i think. when our people started there were no guns no more we prinz with us. boortz flags go out that's it then broke it long that ranks shooting us everywhere. you know what do you
11:40 pm
call this. filled on from his book that i said army through we don't you know mark it they were like just trying to watch some food and go back home. i've seen the pieces of them bread with blood with it over with blood and parts of their bodies spread everywhere and a good wind skin he sent like a rocket from the make the. team or killed. that we have never imagined overseer of will be fighters we are citizens we are not terrorists everybody should understand we are just defending ourselves that's
11:41 pm
it. this is i who what are. your my with the acid or. hog the m.-a winchell for law them the few see them and how of the lawyers of the high. sea. they have entered where it will normally with. my assistant. this girl. come from my home for ten ten your first night but you. probably heard from stockholm off. but they said even if it were dashed in time it didn't get already and. the one.
11:42 pm
going to get not lost i'll be sure i came to slay. about. going to shut up eating a lot. don't you know it's not how it is said feeney even adequately to our hodges and his arm when he nor thirty of her where there are a lot of the said fear withhold from. getting it wrong. london is on her way. there is a soda in the hand camilla fear she will start. ted kennedy. they gave me a clinic. i started having one patient after the other. and
11:43 pm
this one i was overwhelmed by the number of patients coming in with very complex problems and also by back human side behind. several of these patients had stories behind their injuries which i also like that kind of emotional stress. i mean you don't want to kind of. base your medical decision on the. emotions. for certain one little bit of thought and then you do. you do so but i hate how the. what's on the whole the for the whole evil this isn't on the. patient and what i did and stuff
11:44 pm
and be. part of your stuff. and the most will never be a best thing a lot. of the mass of any and all that had allowed for that that had. me i'm about to finish or for a lot cause effect but c.n.n. has not taken prisoner out of the home i thought and a half of either yes well for george i would have thought of. showed america that again finish we take. in no and yes it might have a legacy. a life the wish to kill who wish feeling saudi have the whole help halla dash ina shuttle knew who was
11:45 pm
11:46 pm
a. this muslim. group will not offer. money. this means if they. could a little over yeah a month to cheer just see just says this is say at this hour of. almost everybody back to you oh my god why did it actually still feel like if you've. got multiple copies of the credit card get money out on the ride like i did stuff. but all i'm holding off which was very.
11:47 pm
good. this is if you don't mind that it got. a good good good good good teaching. return has now because it doesn't have a good. to just put it into off the hook up to. the level of marketing should. they just if people come to visit it. truthfully what the jedi at the machine said he. had discovered that it all love to move forward believes that it's good to see hate . at the. base level to.
11:48 pm
11:50 pm
11:51 pm
told us we would bomb we were all speak on while you are doing three think of the repeating people. when they are bombing the whole speech and that means it has no lines they are killing everyone. when i feel that we come up to protect our sinful as a book till i come up continue. one time one bomb. on the us three of us here was one guy. they brought him to me and his spleen is really they need to speak to me why did the vision when the t. been and see if he was know and history as it was open his t's a little and he seeing just started to speak of three under the will this being
11:52 pm
even the base at the still a week because you need to save him. we are so many and be treated the legs and beauty that is. enjoyed as to the i do mean the just. you will see the just all be all being just. love the need to see images do kind of the. third. i think and this war you had the whole generation which was exposed to massive trauma it's going to affect how they call how they think.
11:53 pm
11:54 pm
11:55 pm
11:56 pm
the loss of the family member so she had a living so we look to see anything in how they live how they go slow tough day of the lord. comes all to. know what they're going for one of them how the whole church your duties in. the home. things go on the studio goes over the writing in the future i assure you we don't you. think we should actually struck me the most an affected me the most was seeing the children. when this starts affecting children and that's that's where i draw the line.
11:57 pm
my kids don't quite grasp what i'm doing. to ask well why is there a war over there. i tell them sometimes people who try to inflict suffering on other people i just try to see if i can make things a little bit better. we have a saying in syria. the donkey does not fall in the same hole twice. we keep repeating the same mistake of srebrenica. darfur and now syria. it's just the same problem keep happening over and over again and we're not doing anything different. i'm fortunate enough to be able to help regardless whether it's big or small but doesn't matter what matters to me is that i'm doing something.
11:59 pm
a father also just kids can't see out shower him maybe the odd shot to just around the queensland coast you have a few showers to the coastal bridges of new south wales but by and large i think it should be essentially driver the next couple of days say twenty four celsius to sydney thirty four cells is that the president's push for the south as in cool weather down to the southeastern corner yet again the winds coming in from over a westerly or southwest direction say twenty degrees in melbourne twenty three four add labor getting up to twenty seven in perth bits and pieces of showery cloud over towards the western side of australia and into those northern fringes over the next couple of days as we go on into thursday it will just form up a touch for melbourne and also for adelaide will safe a sitting around twenty five degrees this stage while the other side of the day it's we're looking at some some rather wet weather making its way towards new zealand clouds streaming in through the tasman what's the weather coming towards south island that has to go through the course of what the state twenty eight
12:00 am
celsius to make the most of it because temperatures will struggle three seventeen degrees by thursday afternoon. this is. this is the al-jazeera news hour live from london coming up. so the measure. of it . another crushing defeat for the u.k. prime minister as politicians once again reject the withdrawal deal. crisis for boeing the seven three seven x. eight is grounded in many countries after sunday's crash in ethiopia.
44 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on