tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera March 14, 2019 7:00pm-7:34pm +03
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for turkey the initial u.n. report by agnes called the martyrs important and they were waiting for this report and saw that this murder can can be internationally investigated by many parties and saudi arabia really has a transparent and fair education about the suspects of the smarter case ok thank you. gerri is new prime minister has been addressing the public for the first time since he was appointed the recently promoted nerdy in bed early says he is forming a government of technocrats which will be open to all he added that the government's mandate will not exceed one year the former interior minister was appointed prime minister this week after mass protests forced the ailing president of leader to abandon his bid for a fifth term. of the doors will be open to everyone we are listening to everybody we are talking to everyone and we will work with everyone without any
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preconditions. right now because we too amine our child protests part of the iftikhar our citizens movement and she's joining us via skype from paris thank you for talking to us what did you make then of the prime minister's performance today. performance it was. do we me someone who is a can of the regime who is there just to give the illusion of change with the departure of the former prime minister would remain a regime that has maintained itself through ruse repression and violence for fifty years and who just violated the constitution by the way by delaying elections by before that submitting it can it is ok but he gave it he gave us it was a lie. but he did give
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a timeline sorry to interrupt it did give a timeline he said that this government of technocrats would not be in power for longer than a year and he offered up the prospect of dialogue he said to everybody all of those who took to the streets in algeria should enter into a process of dialogue i mean that's pretty positive isn't it. well positive to someone who does not live in algeria for the past twenty years the klan has made so many promises of reform of change and it is completely not credible not credible to give this huge important task of change and democratic transition to the same people who have put us in a situation in this situation that we found ourselves in today right ok. and something is the departure and it changed it cleancut we need
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a second algerian republic need a different constitution with a constitutional committee that is legitimate that we trust we the people trust so what about them the national conference for political transition that we understand is going to be headed up by lakhdar brahimi a well known and well thought of algerian diplomat what about that do you have no faith in that. i have no faith in mr ludlow but he me who did a great job in syria and ghana stand as a negotiator for these issues but in algeria just yesterday he was saying that president good to flip is in great health and has all his intellectual abilities it can lead he lost all credibility and we are reminded every time they take a microphone and speak to us citizen we are reminded that we cannot trust them with change because they're in a bowl of change they've been negotiating time one year before even the
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announcement of the delay they wanted one year one year to readapt readjust in maintain and retain the reins of power they are trying to reinvent themselves they have learned from this tragedy of imposing themselves too wanted to lead in favor trash and i'm just wondering then how many people inside geria will share your views and your skepticism about the process that has been launched will those big protests that have been called for for tomorrow friday well they still go ahead of course they will end tomorrow if they decide the day and we have to march and protest in greater the numbers than before and tomorrow we'll show we'll be we'll show the proof that we are not going to be cleared with these ruses and what we want is the part of the regina constitution on our own terms with illegitimate assembly and a new departure in you all geria i mean. thank you very much indeed for talking to
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us live from paris. we've got a lot more to come on this al-jazeera news hour including calls for justice forty years on we talk to the relatives of those who died in northern ireland's bloody sunday killing. thousands displaced living in camps what does the future hold for the children of i still. coming up installed we'll have the best of the tennis action with roger federer i am. the president of the european council donald tusk has said that the bloc should be open to granting britain what he called a long delay to its departure the u.k. parliament is set to vote later today that's thursday on whether to ask the european union to extend the breck that deadline that britain is shattered to leave
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the e.u. on march the twenty nine on wednesday m.p.'s rejected the prospect of the u.k. leaving without any kind of agreement let's go live now to our correspondent jonah how he's there outside the houses of parliament in germany you've been following this latest the latest twists and turns in this debate is there any more clarity at this point following last night's a defeat for terrorism a is there any more clarity as to how the u.k. will be leaving the european union if indeed it will. no is the short answer clarity isn't something that we've got used to seeing in the houses a car has comes behind me and from these votes and will be more votes on thursday more drama ahead the top billing vote of course on whether to go to the european union and request an extension to that article fifty deadline march the twenty
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ninth breaks it day whether in fact a delay breaks it that is likely to go through that what the e.u. will say about that we've yet to see there'll be some amendment votes as well among them potentially the first proper outing in parliament to test opinion on a second referendum that could be interesting all happening in the context of talk of parliament trying to wrest back control of the braggs it process a government in crisis a prime minister hemorrhaging orthe already and yet still determined to bring her deal twice defeated back for a third vote possibly next week it's all pretty complex lets try and unpick it with my guest patrick dimond joins me he's former head of policy planning inside number ten under labor prime minister tony blair and gold of brook gold run now a senior lecturer in politics and international relations at queen mary university thanks for joining us now after all of that how likely do you think the reason may's latest gambit is of succeeding she's effectively threatened them either they
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accept her deal and a short extension a technical extension to implement it or the m.p.'s must be willing to face a very long extension i think for exactly that reason the chances of the may deal passing up the third attempt on our very high you would not bet against if may puts this to a vote for a third time passing because i think as a result of the vote on tuesday night the penny has dropped among the heartbreaks it supporters that if they don't vote for this now there's a very good chance on there will be a second referendum or frogs will be lost altogether then that's a huge risk there's already talk of the d u p e o r g jacob riis. morgan others going back to the legal advice looking for that loophole to jump through and possibly concede and of course donald tusk you council president giving it all a little bit of credibility saying he'll encourage the other twenty seven to look at a long extension if britain's got nothing else to offer yeah i think the politics all that the crucial group that she has to move the d.p. if the d.p.
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move on this then she stands a very high chance of moving a launch swathe of her own party the ecology and other hard line approach breaks and peace will come in behind it if that happens and the dynamic starts to shift very significantly in her favor in the meantime patrick there's another whole swathe of opinion in parliament looking for another way a plan b. what if a deal doesn't go through is there any chance of a kind of consensus compromise approach emerging from i did i've somewhere it's possible if parliament tries to take back control that you could see a consensus emerging for a soft a form of bragg's it is very difficult to pull it together unless the government is behind it so i think they want to happen they would have to be a change at the top three some i would have to resign you'd have to be a new prime minister he was prepared to bring parliament together and try to forge a new brakes a consensus on that you've been inside number ten you've spent time there i mean what happened last night you said to me you've never seen anything like it i've heard lots of people say that ministers voting openly against the prime minister she's got no soroti left surely how long even if she gets
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a deal through can she survive one thing it's almost certain if the deal were to be passed the price would be two reasons premiership scituate have to agree either publicly or behind closed doors to go i think that would be necessary to persuade the last of the algae to come behind her but the atmosphere in number ten was no doubt one of crisis lost my main lost control of the process. trying to say that next week we'll see what happens but i think as things stand today there's a reason a chance you get this deal through going to she does that and she will go down as the prime minister who at least did get a break that deal through the parliament they must be pretty used to a sense of crisis inside number ten now yes i think crisis is an overused word a lot in politics but in this case it's a perfect. the appropriate phrase to use about the state of british politics parliament and no doubt the atmosphere number ten as we speak after donna thanks so much she knows about moment number ten spent a significant amount of time in there on the tony blair and gordon brown pretty different place it is now back to you jonah how live westminster what we're seeing
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in the u.k. because northern ireland public prosecution service is expected to announce a little bit later on today whether it will seek prosecutions over the so-called bloody sunday killings in one hundred seventy two thirteen civilians died when british soldiers far into a crowd of demonstrators in the city of london derry sonia has been speaking to relatives of some of the victims. opened fire people scattering looking for shelter the last moments of jim ray's life marked in the memory of his brother liam jim was only twenty two years old when he was killed in the one nine hundred seventy two bloody sunday massacre. a wounded. of the soldiers cross the square on a very close range fired a second shot on the journey back which ranks like result that day that they then proceeded to the park and opened fire modern and or corporate. a twelve year
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investigation into bloody sunday known as the savile report which find that none of the victims posed a threat and that british paratroopers fired shots into a group of unarmed civilians running away. for more than forty seven years this corner of northern ireland was synonymous with one of the most brutal episodes of the troubles bloody sunday deepen the already bitter divide between the communities all that irish catholics quickly turned against the british army seeing it no longer as a protective force but as a tool of oppression. nearly five decades on from the killings in londonderry northern ireland's public prosecution service is about to decide whether those soldiers from the parachute regiment should face charges for murder but the very idea has been criticized by army veterans as well as pro british unionists who shouldn't be
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a particular word chant against. the section of the military given the fact that they themselves have suffered at the hands of terrorists as well so we have to look at all of those contacts there's a lot of hurt has been caused and also at all most half a century british the british army i mean people kate nash is nineteen year old brother william was killed at the march her father shot and wounded was trying to save him she hopes that justice will eventually prevail i want the word you know that my brother really was regardless of the way we were treated became a knife at the time i want to know though i want to warn to know that there you go . murder people on bloody sunday and that can only happen if prosecutions and convictions. there is also the theory that whatever the prosecutor's decision it will reopen old wounds and reignite tensions which have been festering below the
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surface of this fragile peace all right wing go live there. who's in london darien sagna from listening to your piece in the conversations you had with some of the relatives of those who died it seems very clear that there is a a great demand for justice no matter it's forty seven years since the event. well indeed in the as you heard from the relatives of the victims in the report that they feel very much that it is unfinished business of course there were the findings of the twenty ten subtle report which exonerated essentially the victims from any accusations that they were part of any group trying to attack the paratroopers there they weren't they were civilians marching on a civil rights march and were fleeing from the scene when the soldiers went in shooting so what they say is that although that justified it they feel that they've
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had to wait for nearly five decades of of the paratroopers having gotten away with it according to their perspective of of the murders of their relatives so it is still very real they're still living with the implications of it and also the fact that they said shortly after about some of them said that they were hounded by authorities afterwards in the whole misc misinformation that followed so yes they've had some justification from live in the savile report but now what they want to see is a clearly defined notion of justice and for them justice means prosecutions and if indeed sort of prosecutions are launched. into process i mean how likely is it to disrupt that rather delicate. piece situation in. the end of your report of the good friday agreement of twenty years ago.
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yes i mean in some ways i mean those tensions that even before the good friday agreement have not just simply magically disappeared into thin air there still is a sense of divisiveness a sense of tension brewing under the surface here however that has been sort of kept in the fear is is that if there are prosecutions then there could be recriminations from those who support the point of view of the paratroopers i.e. those who are against those prosecutions that there could be recriminations from the right there aren't any prosecutions and they fear there could be recriminations from those who feel the victims have been dealt and the relatives have been dealt a severe blow and that justice has not been done so either way you sort of caught between a rock and a hard place of how to deliver this very delicate situation now if there are any convictions of the paratroopers it is possible that they would be given an early
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release this is something that was granted in the good friday agreement for any of the people who were involved in any killings or acts of crime there however the good friday agreement only covers. issues from nine hundred seventy three the bloody sunday massacre took place in one thousand seven hundred two but the british government is looking to see how bad could be extended and if any of the paratroopers are convicted then it's possible that they may qualify for an early release martine all right thank you very much indeed. very reporting live from derry also known as londonderry of course and will bring you that decision as soon as. soon as it happens this is a mouse we'll bring you that decision from northern ireland now more than one hundred schools have been closed in malaysia because of toxic fumes around forty tons of chemical waste was dumped in a river in the southern region of passing last week since then more than five hundred people have reported dizziness nausea and shortness of breath several of
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them are in a critical condition. to debate whether to declare a state of emergency. in florence lou you have more now. the order to close more than one hundred schools in the southern state of to hall in malaysia affects some thirty thousand school children now more than five hundred people have been taken ill since toxic chemicals were dumped into the kim kim river last week they had a range of symptoms that include dizziness shortness of breath and norcia we also understand that more than one hundred people had to be admitted to hospital investigators from the department of environment say they've concluded their investigations and the substance dumped into the river some twenty to forty tons of it is a type of marine oil now the heat and the strong winds have combined to make the matters worse helping to disperse the toxic fumes three people have been arrested including two factory owners and one is expected to be charged in court now
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malaysia hasn't fared very well in the environmental arena lately in the last couple of months more than one hundred illegal plastic recycling factories had to be shut down they were accused of importing plastic waste without permits and also of burning plastic to ways that could no longer be recycled and a couple of years ago unregulated box like mining created huge environmental problems that led the country to impose a temporary ban on box like mining now authorities are taking this matter very seriously they've already started a cleanup operation the military as well as the state oil company is involved and the prime minister himself is visiting the area today rescue and recovery efforts are continuing in the nigerian city lagos a three story building collapse on wednesday at least fifty people were killed the building had apartments and a primary school on the top floor. coming up in just
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a couple of minutes we'll have rob and the weather also coming up in this and is there a news out why many in colombia think the president is trying to undermine the peace process with rebels. and in support with jen tiger woods is clinging paying frame ready to heal in florida. hello arches say tropical cycle or to using them as you think of very much because it doesn't give you an idea of size and scale this is a tropical cyclone which has grown if you try and put itself the northern hemisphere has developed an o.e. where these things develop and are they're clearly pretty major this is the equivalent now off a category three hurricane if you're in the north has it as would be called that is
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what's coming on to the coast of mozambique his current winds are just shy of two hundred kilometers per hour it's generated waves of eleven meters tall and it's like generate a storm surge and it was lifting the water level itself to meet is above whatever high tide is so this is a signal heading for the mozambique so a fairly long lived storm as it is i think he's going to make landfall just north of beirut after dark about nine pm local time so this is it moving in over about the next twelve hours or so once it's gone over land it will slowly tend to to do's its strength in the point of view of winds but not because not because not from the point of view of the amount of rain that to get to where it was it's taken quite a power it is the same thing that cause flooding in malawi was killed what fifty six people and because of its course it's recent and next few days massive really will cause flooding again. the weather sponsored by cats our own eyes.
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welling vesta gating crime an admission of guilt is the ultimate corroboration. or is it there are tactics that can be used to get innocent people to confess to crimes they didn't commit witness explores the shocking phenomenon of people incriminating themselves the person who falsely contrast actually came to believe the lie that they were told about their own behavior false confessions on al-jazeera. the ultranationalist marks connected with one of the world's worst humanitarian crises as we doe as illegally maigret joining with the military to impose a deadly political agenda we have devoted our nation what has happened to the revenge of us one of the biggest stains on the country as a whole. as another religion this is the politics me and an unholy alliance on
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al-jazeera. travers take a look at the top stories here in the al-jazeera news out saudi arabia says asians will for the murder of the german this democracy have been brought to justice the head of its human rights council made the statement in geneva but he gave no further details. algeria's new prime minister has addressed the public for the first time the recently promoted nurit imbed away said he is forming a government of technocrats which is open to all he said the government's mandate will not exceed one year. more than one hundred schools have been close in malaysia
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because of toxic fumes tons of chemical waste was dumped in a river in the southern region of passage good down last week and ever since then more than five hundred people have reported dizziness nausea and shortness of breath. china has pushed back against a request to put the leader of a pakistan based armed group on the un's terror blacklist massoud azhar heads the a mohammed group that claimed responsibility for last month's suicide attack in india the minister of kashmir in which at least forty troops were killed china says it needs more time to consider the request which was tabled by the u.s. france and britain beijing has blocked previous attempts to put on this list we can speak to happy monday could his associate professor of diplomacy and disarmament. hollow mary universities joining us from new delhi thank you for
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talking to us why does china consistently block this attempt which on this particular occasion was supported by the u.s. by france and by britain to put this individual on the list of prescribe to terrorists. clearly aren't you going to be pointed out this is not the first time in china i was doing it this is actually the fourth time china is doing it got us china is concerned china has to make a choice between each more important ally in the region pakistan or india and that's what our side has going to baucus on is more important. than that india china has good investments you know in it in pakistan and china has to also be gauged the other guy in geopolitical landscape where so all of that out there are economic and strategic to be some sort of china times i'm going to put a box set of yes indeed i mean you don't you correctly identify that across
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pakistan as an integral part of the one but one roads policy of beijing but also i mean beijing itself doesn't have a few qualms to say the least about the activities of groups like mohammad base in pakistan with regard to particular to its northwest and reason and john. that's correct i hear age has its own reason as to what evolved in some of the activities of these groups in the long of it in the long run but i think in the short bus pulled out there or. not or set records i am not in directly so i did there looking at the shot that picture and i leave you if you ask me i think that's more a smart move because there are some at the end of the day may come in different shapes and forms for terrorism is terrorism i think china has something to worry about in the long run but on the same day by a set up additional hamas continues to be a proscribed organization even though its t.v.
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muscle letter is not so or at least your basis in itself is on the list on the floor of the unit like this which i know that it's not object to about twenty years ago and slightly more generally and given the increase in tensions between india and pakistan what sort of what sort of ten did china take us for from from my observations it was quite neutral despite being a very close ally of pakistan. that is absolutely right that thinks that has made it a god six t.v. read me back to not with no reason and attacking because she needed to have said they've got a dime's or homes off their butts on which game was not good news to the even did a i did save time china has only been saying that you know that it was site should move should be to sort of their issues and there should be decent deescalation between the two sites it has not been taking it betty drove baucus nonstop so i think to that extent china has great amateur or unity in the region it is the weight of the attack is that when she is not at all not going all of the way. for
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her office and say for example the united states supported india or hotly course. the chinese did not support the pakistanis in or top of mind i think so that makes the band of distinction in the in the mind in in the indian mind in unity as a great happy monday compared to very much and david talking to us live from the tiny erotica. the colombians are valid in defense of the peace accord that was signed with the fall rebels they say the new president even bouquet is trying to undermine the process and that's threatening to plunge the country back into violence other sundered ripples from the colombian capital. as they did back in two thousand and sixteen colombians took over plausible lever to defend the peace accord with five rebels which they believe the government of iran do care is trying to undermine doesn't that mean not camels which we fought
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for a very long time to get here we can go back it's been fifty years of killings killing people's hope and a strong thousands of families you want peace and reconciliation for a country that it considers to be iraq by their god who was elected by a right wing coalition opposed to the deal announced last sunday he was vetoing the law regulating a special tribunal known as help it's tasked with judging the worst crimes committed during the civil conflict ducasse said he was seeking to revise several provisions already approved by the country's constitutional court. decided to object to six of the hundred and fifty nine articles of the specials jurisdictions for peace law since i consider them inconvenient i invite congress to debate the changes in a constructive manner. former fike rebels are members of colombia's military have already gone before the tribunals which offers to reduce pain ots in sentences
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other than prison for those who tell the truth and compensate victims mystified his veto among other provisions aims to remove sexual crimes from the tribunal's jurisdiction and create a separate system for military members responsible of crimes against humanity opposition parties accuse the president of breaching the constitution the boy if you open the stall the risk goes beyond the functions of the tribunal we are putting at risk our democracy and the rule of law most political analysts believe the veto will weaken the tribunals and their mining the transitional justice system at the heart of the accords here were not only talking about the mobilize guerrillas we're talking about members of the military who have vocally expressed their desire to remain within the transitional justice system. these challenges show that colombia still far from overcoming the deep divisions surrounding the
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controversial piece the all signed in two thousand and sixteen the issue will most likely once again and in the country's constitutional court in the meantime opposition parties are calling for a major protest against the veto next monday alison that i'm just. now facebook is reeling from what's believed to be the most serious outage in its history and it's affecting uses around the world the outage affected the entire facebook family of products including whatsapp and instagram and it appears to have started around sixteen greenwich mean time when say down detected dot com that's a site that monitors disruptions in web services shows its assessment of facebook's global outage. facebook has more than two billion users as you well know and that's about a quarter of the world's population and many of them took to facebook's rival twitter and to other sites that show how much they didn't like the disruption and facebook
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says it's still working to sort the problem out but it's insisting that it's not due to a cyber attack let's bring to our obama cannot his a digital rights activist he joining us via skype from cork in ireland ira good to talk to you do you believe facebook then that this wasn't the result of a cyber attack doesn't matter i mean that's not the real issue here is it expected we've taken a system of the internet which was meant to be decentralized and we introduce single points of failure like facebook this is why the centralization is so important this is why centralization it's such a problem because if you have two billion people and their means of communicating using the internet is a single place facebook which also makes its money by spying on everything that they're saying and has to commit as they're communicating this is not
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a resilient system it's not a system that's compatible with human rights or democracy ok so you're going to be in chief in them with the lights of elizabeth warren in the united states you know who's running for president for twenty twenty and indeed we understand there are certain elements within the u.k. who are advocating for the break up of these mega tech companies like face value to agree with them. sure break them up regulate their abuses so that they don't harm people as much but also invest in ethical decentralized alternative smaller technologies that this is big tech we need small tech that counter that human scale human level tools that just work for humans not for corporate interests invest in that because some of the other things we're hearing especially from the u.k. with this recent review that came out is they are proposing that smaller companies should have more access to this data and that will increase competent.
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