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tv   Gaza Between Fire Sea  Al Jazeera  March 28, 2019 8:33am-9:01am +03

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of rape murder and enslavement the spanish even built their churches like the famous cathedral in mexico city on top of sacred as take sites they destroyed. but that was five hundred years ago and many mexicans now have woman feelings about a country some called the mother learned the majority of indigenous and spanish blood for some the president's request for an apology was just published he's done that over the years and that is not a political the truth is i think it's something political what presidents always do say something to distract from another situation. for others it's simply too late because they were and that is what this is going to bring is more hostility towards the country i admire president lopez obrador but i think there's no place for this now it's brave but no the historical picture is also further complicated by the fact the aztecs themselves were hated conquerors several original peoples in mixteco actually i loyd with the spanish against them is that this would kill the
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conquest made mexico what it is now the mixture a new country been no longer as takes and the aztecs were in sweet peace either they were bloodthirsty enough. whichever way the mix km president's unlikely to get through the complex tangle of history and diplomacy to get what he wants john homan al-jazeera mexico city. scientists and health care professionals have written a letter to the u.n. calling for an international ban on so-called killer robots that they don't exist yet that campaigners say they're just a year or two away twenty eight countries have signed up so far but the u.s. and russia are among those resisting our science and technology etc mariana hones has more mention killer robots and many of us. of this a machine able to think feel and kill we have no way of knowing whether the kind of
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artificial general intelligence needed to create a scene tiant robot like this will ever be possible but here's what we already have sameeh autonomous machines dryers tanks aircraft robots big and small machines that can be wittman ised even programmed to find targets but the final decision of whether to take a life lies with us so-called killer robots fully autonomous weapons that can select and kill without human intervention well they don't exist. here we don't want to see killing outsourced to machines on the battlefield or in policing or in border control and of a circumstances this is why we call for a preemptive ban on the development production and use of killer robots as soon as possible we already have facial recognition technology to on low cal fire and they could be used by a fully autonomous weapon and trying say to identify and then attack
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a target without a human having the final say but what if it kills the wrong person or the machine malfunctions and continues to hunt and kill long after a conflict has been resolved whose responsibility is it when a fully autonomous weapon gets it wrong so everybody's got their experience with computers not working with foreigners and i pads failing. and that's an inconvenience at best imagine that when you have the weapon system which is failing which is failing to turn off killer robots could be hacked and then used by your enemy forces against you and against your population and that they could be programmed to target a certain popular part of the population to go out there and to seek all military age males you know and determine them to be legitimate targets and fire upon them. sixty one percent of people polled in twenty six countries last year oppose fully autonomous weapons twenty eight countries have signed up to
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a ban take companies scientists researches and engineers and their thousands have over the years pledged not to knowingly creates killer robots but plenty a lot of those are embracing artificial intelligence and will fia and states like israel russia south korea and the united states are among those resisting the ban countries may agree we're all better off without killer robots but no one wants to be left behind on the battlefield qatar has a new national museum space bombing the size of nearly nine football fields a sob and divides when checketts. dug from the sons of cutter this fossil is more than two million years old an essential part of the country's cultural heritage and a natural exhibit for the new national museum this extraordinary building is designed inside and out to mimic the intersecting discs of
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a desert rose. each space showcases a different theme designed by a renowned french architect to create two lines the sun rose. to love you touch the scale something very difficult to do when you know that he's as soon as he said to have an issue a strong signal to c.b.r. and so he's the same time you see his son he said imagine the russian ship was an eternity if you do that and somebody on the tail of today it's taken eight years to complete the building and its contents are intended to educate and inspire to visit is that the reason to foreign workers and tourists. the nomads of arabia will tell you that the desert rose symbolizes hope that there is water underneath and that is the message that organizers at this museum would like people to take away with them . building was still underway even for arab countries imposed by land air and sea blockade other now the museum's creators want to use it
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to illustrate the region's shared history. we believe that. culture should really stay away from any political tension between countries and it is a really open in fact we have a team from from the blockading countries are working with us and us and this is very great when you work with people who believe in the culture and they believe that culture attache should have no boundaries innovation in design can be seen everywhere here the idea is to give equal prominence to each and every exhibit to help with it to understand the global significance of popper's history. qatar has some of the most significant pearls and they were used to design european tayo as you'll see in the galleries and also a bird a carpet they came from the by roger of the road that was supposed to be gifted as a cover for the tomb of the prophet muhammad so the brotherhood is always in
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dialogue with the rest of the world and therefore i don't believe in importing any culture i think cultures are always in dialogue and exchanging knowledge between east west you can even say norse i was. before oil and gas pool diving drove but there's economy the country's relationship with water is another key theme it's my first divorce of film it's the first time i've used this kind of pretty futuristic technology stitched cameras it's shot entirely in cut cut thirty's curators also want to highlight the role of women in company society this is not the first time we've had the national museum and we were the first museum in the gulf and this is something that is very interesting for a series reopen and actually show the public our heritage all the research we've been doing for years really find this very interesting to be able to bring all these stories together and actually not not say everything which is why the exhibit
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is to actually immerse ourselves into expounding on different topics and sam the architect of the national museum of art there wants to do stand for centuries a shared ambition between those who planned and built the vision of a grand desert drawls osama bin. time for the sport now with tara. thanks very much byron munich unsigned french world cup winning defender lucas hernandez in a record breaking deal join the been asleep aside from athletic a majority in july the ninety million dollars fee makes him the most expensive player in the history of germany's top division in addition to the world cup the twenty three year old has also won the roper league and has been a champions league final list former manchester united an england captain bryan robson has suggested that only gunners still share its chances of being named to permanent boss adult trafford handed on united finishing in the top four in the e.p.l.
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and sealing champions league qualification the norwegian is in term control with united two points off fourth and into the champions league quarterfinals he's got the players play with called for to use a bit of freedom to go for which the funds are really happy with it. bunches united have a. big decision to make to the way to the end of the season. either a boy or leo to play somebody else hopefully. we can be a lawyer and go further forward in the job and really what it is really important that we at least finish in the top four simona halep is on course to reclaim top spot in the women's world rankings the romanian tennis star is through to the semifinals of the miami open she got there by beating chinese player wang chang in straight sets six four seven five on wednesday is currently ranked third in the world winning this tournaments will lift her to number one it's very beautiful here playing against semifinals this is going to be
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a big challenge and maybe i can play my best i can do my best result here playing the finals but there is going to be a big match makes it around so i would be just ready we thought we enjoy in the plane this beautiful crowd these beautiful quarter because it's only a pleasure to come here. roger federer is reached the quarter finals in miami the world number five daniel and medvedev in straight sets to get there federer is looking to win the tournament for a fourth time the swiss will face south africa's kevin anderson next. the new york yankees haven't won a world series since two thousand and nine but baseball pundits are betting on them winning the championship this season and a pitcher mushing hero to knock out will start opening day as they begin their twenty nine hundred regular season against the baltimore orioles on thursday it's the fourth time the japanese right hander will be pitching the season opener for the yankees but the thirty year old will be looking for a different outcome after losing the first three times. definitely the the
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tension like getting high or i guess you can tell by just how many people are here in this room a lot of always there on this game so yeah i'm very looking forward to it but as far as you know how i spend the next twenty four hours most i'll just take it as a regular season game and try not to do something out of the norm. have sealed a one day series victory over poc son in the way they won the third o.d.i. to take an unassailable three nil lead aaron finish top scored with ninety as the aussies posted two hundred and sixty six they then made short work of pakistan's batters bowling them out for one hundred eighty six to win by eighty runs it's now back to back series wins over india and pakistan with the world cup just two months away britain's adam yates has won stage three of cycling's volta at catalunya in spain to move him to second in the overall race and everyone fared while sharing the one hundred and seventy nine kilometer race was fastest in the final sprint to
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the finish line is now just twenty seven seconds behind race leader thompson. yeah it's more we're going to have to stage a never possibly first stage would. so far so good. today to look after me so we have more of a sense of our. olympic champion caster semenya has hit back at comments made by the head of world athletics sebastian coe so many as challenging an effort to bring in new rules that will restrict testosterone levels and female runners in a newspaper interview coa said the reason we have gender crossing cation is because if you didn't the no woman would ever win another title or break and other record that so many has issued this response via her lawyers the scars that miss the manuf developed over the past decade randeep re in the comments of mr coe this weekend open those old wounds mr crow is wrong to think ms a man yet is a threat to women's sport and the spirit of fair play is alive and well among young
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footballers in turkey the captain of gala tests arise under fourteen team missed a penalty on purpose followed what he believed was the wrong call by the referee thirteen year old back now as bekoff fell inside the box and was awarded a penalty and instead of trying to double his side's lead he kicked the ball out of play his team though did go on to win three nil. and that's all your support for now more later on that set for this new user but i'm back in just a moment with more of the season.
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a prominent saudi journalist committed to freedom of expression silenced in tukey by his own government in the most horrific way. al-jazeera weld investigates the death of jamal. which resonates to the highest levels of the saudi government with startling evidence about the disposal of his body. jamal khashoggi the silencing of a journalist on al-jazeera. the arab world is going through some unprecedented changes from the saudi u.a.e. led war in yemen to the conflict in syria and protests in algeria the arab league will hold its thirtieth summit in the two museum capital tunis after a nearly eight year absence will syria return to the leak join us for up to date
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coverage and in-depth analyses on al-jazeera. it is murder when you throw a firebomb into someone's home and need sheet off flashing in all of the next now that is significant in the numbers that insignificant ideologically the insignificant evil is a crime gag down very significantly by dictating big government if they fucked up policy now shall not kill part of the radicalized series on al-jazeera. british m.p.'s rejects all eight alternatives to get series of a's backs until with
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each of the prime minister or their alliance advance to stand down and send. an alibi he in this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up now to syria at algeria is reeling after len party joins the army's call for present bits of the code to be removed from office. many of the fighters. up to forty percent is attached a children as young as thirteen years old. questions in the u.k. parliament so very revelations about british military personnel facing in yemen's war plus. i'm going to hell in eastern ukraine where they're still fighting a war with russia which the rest of the country with an election looming would rather forget. the british
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parliament says failed to agree on an alternative for prime minister to resign may's breaks that plan m.p.'s on project said all options for the countries withdraw from the e.u. earlier may promise she'd step down if her deal is passed by parliament but it's already failed twice the parker reports from westminster. the world's cameras are trained on the british parliament waiting for a break sit breakthrough protestors an hour permanently on patrol on the pavements outside for many the workings of this house appearing creasing lee mystifying but after months of bricks of paralysis could things be starting to move in a closed meeting with conservative m.p.'s theresa may said she's prepared to make the ultimate move and step down as prime minister after she's delivered breck's it i know there is a desire for a new approach
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a new leadership in the second phase of the brakes at negotiations he said and i won't stand in the way if that but we need to get the deal through and deliver breaks it i'm prepared to leave this job earlier than i intended in order to do what is right for our country and our party she concluded by asking everyone in the room to back a deal to allow for a smooth and orderly breaks it. but so far the u.k.'s departure has been anything but a deal's been resoundingly rejected twice but on wednesday she once again championed her plan we have a deal which cancels our e.u. membership fee which stops e.u. making our laws which gives us our own immigration policy and the common agricultural policy for good and is a common fisheries policy for good other options don't do that other options would lead to delay to uncertainty and not for delivering threats to. the opposition labor leaders call the government's handling of bracks it chaotic
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and incompetent why is she prepared to carry on risking jobs in industry in another attempt to yet again run down the clock and try to blackmail the m.p.'s behind into supporting a deal that's already been twice rejected but to reasoning's deal isn't dead yet fears of parliament pushing for a much softer breaks it all at a tall could spook city is into now backing her plan although northern. his democratic unionist party that props up may's government has said it will not support the deal in another vote may well have to do some careful calculations before giving her deal a third go. meanwhile m.p.'s have taken unprecedented steps of their own gaining control of parliamentary for seedings to vote an alternative to tuesday's bricks and plan there were eight options none secured a majority but two of the proposals for a customs union with the e.u. and a public vote on a deal gained more support than to resume may's breaks to plan m.p.'s will vote
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again on monday the government and parliament and locked in a bitter struggle for control of the brics a process there are multiple visions for the future of the country some of them conflicting some of them contradictory but a question that unites both remain as i'm leavers is whether making the ultimate political sacrifice or benefit to reserve manes cause may park out as they are westminster. well jackson is in care does a senior research fellow at the bynum center for the rule of law he says the m.p.'s votes in parliament has brought the bracks this process forward. i think most of the headlines will focus on the fact that the eight propositions for the house were all defeated and i think that's right that will be the main headline but i think there is a more positive story underlying that in the m.p.'s did show that they could engineer a process where we would actually find out more about what m.p.'s think beyond the deal and where the options could be for the government to go if they wanted to get
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the deal over the line so i think the main headline is m.p.'s have it all have offered a glimmer of hope for the government if they wanted to follow it where they could shift to to get the deal over the long relationship with the team he has books that are written but we've always known that if you tapped the other side there was a cost and you know work for the opposition that would be a possible advantage but that would reach one of her red lines now the important thing is that when you actually look at the deal there is actually within the deal there is a potential to have a customs union compatible with the ritual agreement now what this would need the government to do is show a to shift its red lines but feel such a bit of ingenuity when we get to the next meaningful vote to maybe present the deal in a different way to has been presented up to now trying emphasise the possibility of a softer bricks it further down the line and that potentially could get people people inside but again we've seen from tourism a so far she's not willing to shift her red lines and we don't know whether or not the fact that she's announced this timetable will change anything. algeria's ruling f.l.n.
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party is backing the army's call for president of disease but if he cuts a step dying on monday the army she said the eighteen year old should be declared unfit for office but if the car has already a grades not to stand for a fifth term after weeks of protests talks have begun on drafting a new constitution and setting a date for elections. has more from neighboring china zia. the man who has ruled algeria for twenty years is facing more isolation than ever the army has decided to trigger article one two and now the party of the president itself the front of national liberation is saying that it's in the horses the move made by the army therefore distancing itself further from the president many key allies of president. are saying now this is about time for the man to step aside
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but whether the opposition and the protestors in algeria are of the view that this is not the core issue and as your ear and that are the result of the yes he has to go but there needs to be a new personality someone with an impeccable track record to lead the nation for a transitional period draft a new constitution and then. declare and organize new parliamentary and presidential elections now many key figures in the opposition including. publishes you who is a leading human rights activists and one of the leaders of the protest movement is saying that he's concerned the move by the army could be just a ploy to further contain the pro-democracy sentiment that has been building up a mountain in algeria insisting that the protests will continue on friday and i think this would leave the country in a very delicate situation with the army the one hand and the protesters on the
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other hand will try to find the a common ground about how to and the political impasse in the area and start a new chapter. syrian state news is reporting a number of air strikes targeting the northern city of aleppo. the syrian arab news agency says the incident was an israeli attack and claimed that serious air defense forces intercept says several missiles they do is have been shared on social media showing the explosions in aleppo al-jazeera has not yet been able to verify the claims. meanwhile the united nations security council has been holding a session to discuss u.s. president donald trump's recognition of the occupied golan heights as israeli territory they are that meeting came at the request of the syrian government's on monday signed a proclamation in which the us recognize israel's annexation of the area that's
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despite its un resolutions that called the golan heights an israeli occupied territory israel occupied the area from syria during the one nine hundred sixty seven arab israeli war. hamas is political leader ismail haniya has made his first public appearance in gaza since his office was bombed israeli jets destroyed a number of buildings on monday and cheesy nights dozens of rockets for far as israel and the a declared victory and says a cease fire brokered by egypt is now in place. a palestinian resistance kept its word and the israeli enemy received the message the resistance can deliver its message in the proper time and place i call on our people to commemorate the naacp our anniversary to refresh their belonging to their lineup especially as the great march of return started a year ago i would like to greet our egyptian brothers for their efforts to reach the ceasefire understanding for stopping the israeli aggression in the gaza.
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stephanie decker has more from the israel gaza border fence. the real test will come this weekend when palestinians in gaza mark one year since the start of the great march of return which has seen tens of thousands of palestinians protest along the border fence the real issue that they've been wanting to highlight is that they need to improve how they're living living under blockade by both israel and egypt there are no opportunities people will tell you that it is the worst that it's been in nears why because of the economic situation the lack of opportunities and it simply seems to be getting worse now there's been huge sacrifices made throughout this year many have lost their limbs because of israeli sniper fire many have been killed there have been active negotiations mediated by egypt in the united nations to try and increase the flow of goods into gaza to increase the opportunities for people freedom of movement across the borders extending the fishings and there are multiple things that need to be addressed but none of that
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seems palpable and this is why we understand from our colleagues inside gaza at the moment we call enter because the official border crossing remains closed including to journalists other than from humanitarian issues is that they are seeing this as a lost opportunity where expecting a huge amount of people to come out and protest along that border fence how is israel going to react is going to lead to yet another escalation we're going to have to wait and see. venezuela's opposition leader is urging his supporters to protest this weekend against the latest nationwide black it's one says the black snow in its third day has affected ninety one percent of the country it's the second major power usage this month president nicolas maduro accuses the united states and the fed as well in opposition of sabotaging the country's para system lloyd. but it bored. with starving us to death because if there's no electricity that the banks are not operating there's no internet there's nothing people are
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walking around like mummies trying to get where they need to go without knowing how they will go out looking for food but then they can't buy any because there aren't any jobs but. it's of people have food.

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