tv The Belarus Dilemma Al Jazeera March 30, 2019 9:00am-10:01am +03
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earlier this week the army back there cools the president uphill is ease because if we could to step down. the ruling party its coalition partner and algeria's biggest union have joined the coals for beautifully could to go the national lawyers union reemphasize its demand that the eighty two year old president must leave office. he had been i was really into a doubt support for the peaceful popular movement which calls for a change in the system of governance and the creation of a new republic that respects the supper of the people and the principle of the law the union calls for a positive response to the demands of the people within whom as sovereign power resides. local media reported millions of people came out to demonstrate in towns and cities across the country this is the town of gigia in the east. and it was a similar scene in miss gunning in the west. we want to
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move to a real democratic country a transitional created to set a new algerian government which will be elected by the people and not by this government we are against this government but even if beautifully could does go that won't be enough for the protesters they want a complete overhaul of an establishment that has been entrenched in power since algeria's independence from france in one thousand nine hundred sixty two they want the resignation of the ruling elite it is such a long sign to flee for twenty years for anything like that to happen the powerful military would have to agree and it's very sensitive to signs of instability. everyone is waiting for the constitutional council to rule beautifully because fitness for office based on health reasons it's given no indication when it will make a decision if it rules the president on fit fall face parliament must indorsed the decision by a two. majority even if that happens it will only just begin to fulfill the demands
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of the hundreds of cells and algerians who have spoken out and protest. al-jazeera . still to come on al-jazeera reports of a deal between hamas and israel as palestinians prepare to mark a year of gaza protests. incident trolls are targeting public figures in ukraine ahead of sunday's election. hello again welcome back to your international weather forecast all across china things are going to change as we end the weekend in terms of more rain and some colder air we're going to be seeing some clouds and in the week and into the
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weekend though for a food show though things are going to look quite nice view starting on saturday twenty seven degrees as your high and probably sunny skies there that will definitely change as we go toward sunday we're going to be seeing more clouds and more rain coming into play but not just there for many regions across the central area over here towards hong kong though you're going to be seeing and picking up some more rain as well with a temperature of twenty five degrees whereas much of south asia clouds and rain will be a factor actually they are going to the north this time of year and that means for vietnam and cambodia we do expect to see an increase of rain over the next few days holtzman city a very warm day for you at thirty five degrees and then as we go towards sunday that rain starts to get a little bit stronger temptress come down and cambodia you'll be seeing some rain as well and then very quickly over here towards india it's those temperatures coming up well actually reaching forty and above in some locations above average for this time of year pretty monsoonal but take a look what we expect to see here on saturday tempers in the interior forty two
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down towards china at thirty four and calcutta with a term for a few of thirty eight degrees. the weather sponsored by qatar at. a time of change and discovery dead king said it dated in veterans their lives to see a time to forge an identity not saying anything stand it back to the baby tell me your whole life plan to get really in one thousand nine hundred ninety in south africa up revisits the children of apartheid seventy years on as they grow and develop where their countrymen fourteen up south africa part two on al-jazeera.
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you're watching all desire a quick reminder of the top stories. presents parliament's house rejected a slender inversion altarpiece amaze e.u. withdrawal deal it's the third time it's been voted down european leaders are warning the u.k. is no one clearly to leave the bloke with no agreements on april twelfth. u.s. president stalled trump is threatening to close the border with mexico or large parts of it he says it will happen next week if mexico doesn't stop people from crossing into the u.s. illegally. hundreds of thousands of algeria and have been taking part in antigovernment protests across the country friday saw the largest demonstrations in six weeks many are calling for the resignation of president up to the scenes beautifully and an overhaul of the entire political system. sudan has freed
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a news paper editor who spent weeks in jail for criticizing the president. also in most polls tomorrow bashir is decision to declare a state of emergency cheering ongoing demonstrations rights groups say more than fifty people have been killed since process began in december over the price of bread they escalated into calls for the president to step down sparking a government crackdown on dissent and media freedom. during my detention which felt like a long time i was not able to know why i was detained and this is because i did not face any questioning my only way to understand why i was detained is to guessing which count lead you to the facts until this moment i was detained without a clear reason i was relieved without knowing what i have committed. and his paper affiliated see hamas is reporting a deal has been reached with israel to reduce tension in the gaza strip it comes as palestinians prepare to mark the one year anniversary of weekly protests along the
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border fence that is feel sorry for said reports. for twelve months now gaza's border with israel has been the scene of mass protests and major bloodshed gaza's health ministry says more than two hundred sixty people have been killed by israeli sniper fire at least seven thousand shot and injured but on the eve of the anniversary protest the organizing committee which is calling for a million man march issued instructions to the demonstrators stay back from israeli guns follow commands of organizers on the ground make new aggressive actions don't burn tires a clear sign that a deal was in the works that they looked into the occupation have to meet the test to implement the positive responses we heard from the egyptian delegation we the palestinian factions had our people struggling to achieve our fair and legitimate demands. the great march of return protests began on the thirtieth of march last year initially called by civil society groups in gaza as
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a call to action against the israeli blockade a un investigation found that while some protesters used violence the vast majority were unarmed and peaceful stating israel had had no justification for using live bullets for months and through repeated military escalations egyptian mediators have been trying to broker a truce on friday night or how my civilian aged newspaper reported that an agreement had been reached according to the report in the hours salah newspaper among the concessions that hamas has won an increase from fifteen to forty million dollars a month in qatari funding an extension of the fishing zone from nine nautical miles to twelve nautical miles and increase in israeli electricity flowing into gaza and israeli approval of a major new desalination project. in return israel has been seeking an end to rocket fire such as that which destroyed a family home north of tel aviv on monday injuring seven and sparking a new round of escalation israel which has sent extra troops and tanks to the border also wants an end to in century balloon launches and
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a guarantee of karma at the fence its prime minister has been trying to balance projecting military strength with seeking deescalation before the general election on the ninth of april. all is ready should know there for a comprehensive campaign is required we will enter it strongly and safely and after we have exhausted all other options hamas is also on the domestic political pressure earlier this month protestors went to the streets instead of the border over price rises and tax hikes hamas security put the demonstrations down with beatings and arrests at the core of those protests the same feelings of despair and frustration that for a year now and despite all the risks have brought thousands to the border week after week sorry for said gaza the heads of the arab league has rejected the u.s. decision to recognize israel's claim over the occupied golan heights. also called for political solutions see conflicts in syria libya and yemen he made the comments at a meeting of regional foreign ministers ahead of sunday's arab league summit. that
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the arabs refuse the occupation to be given names other than occupation nor the occupation force be given legitimacy we say it loud and clear that the golan is an occupied arab syrian territory as per the international law and the un s e resolutions any unilateral declaration of sovereignty over the golan by any state is in conflict with this fact and will not change the true reality well maran the sherif is sound as era senior political analyst he says lack of unity means the arab league will take little action on the many issues facing the middle east. the arab league has any regional or international organizations like the united nations like the european community or the european union union when its members are committed to its charter when they are truly representative of their people and and
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truly loyal to this group and then the group it works the arab league's continues to fail because its member states continue to fail because out abrasions today care only about one thing their survival's they don't get about anything they don't care about most i mean most of the arab regimes care about their survival they don't get to buy their people's interest they don't care about the collective political and strategic work at the arab league headquarters in cairo there are some magnificent documents about joint defense about a road map to economic common market about cultural this and that and the other thing but none of them see the light why because there's so much division among that up so much weakness and of course so much chaos because of the way out abrasions have responded to popular uprisings in various countries the u.n. secretary general is calling for international supports to tackle growing insecurity
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in mali and the sun health region the situation in mali is a test of the international community's ability to mobilize in support of peace and stability this is not a question of charity it is one of in light itself interests security money has an impact on the entire cycle which in turn affects global stability the entire sail region faces if years as national challenges from climate change and droughts to growing insecurity violent extremism and the smuggling of people weapons and drugs you want to win of the growing student to stability in building a fossil. we cannot stand by while humanitarian situations are today it's the relevant gaps employees and security risks become unsustainable but as fighting intensifies in mali some countries are pulling their soul just off the un peacekeeping force. linked up with canadian troops in the city over.
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this canadian task force is deep in mali's desert on a training mission to rescue frontline troops down below un soldiers french and west african forces are fighting twenty armed groups including the slum mixtape in the greater sahara and al-qaeda in the slum make my grab dr murray on her level and her team of medics flying aboard a chinook helicopter. this is a training exercise in hostile terrain. we don't know if there is still enemy the area so by truly never here we're putting ourselves a target so there's a possibility that if i asked the snake is a really big target so we don't there was an enemy. in the area so which swung the back a step up a get out close to two hundred un troops have been killed in mali and this has become the deadliest peacekeeping operation in the united nations' history. while
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this is a training exercise the dangers are real these canadian forces play with live ammunition and have through helicopters hovering above us because the situation in mali is slowly deteriorating. this mobile phone footage captures the aftermath of the latest attack entire villages are burnt to the ground after a local militia group armed with machetes and guns killed over one hundred full on the villagers dismembering even the youngest. the attackers accuse felonies of supporting rebel groups. what started as a localized conflict is turning into ethnic cleansing moving beyond mollies border into neighboring brick enough are so in the share the theater of operation is as vast and wide as the european union the fighting is intensifying making the medivac operations essential to troops often compare it to. the canadian arctic today
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to northern canada that looks very much the same it's a barren landscape if you replace the sand with ice and rock that you'd be in northern canada. a thousand feet above ground level it turns this helicopter into a flying hospital while they have saved lives the french in charge and soldiers have also returned dead bodies faced with criticism for putting canadian lives at risk prime minister just introduced government is pulling back its troops overstretched the us i want them to stay it's an operation they can't afford to lose. nicholas hawke al-jazeera northern mali. for cessna's have renewed calls for haiti's president to step down opposition groups have demonstrated in the capital port au prince accusing juvenile mores of corruption and economic mismanagement dozens dies in previous process haiti has been struggling with high inflation and fuel shortages and for years russian
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internet trolls use ukrainian cyberspace to test techniques they would use to influence the twenty sixteen presidential votes in the united states night they appear to be turning their attention to ukraine's own election which takes place on sunday or if it reports. russian interference in ukraine's presidential election is less a concern than an expectation according to the s.b.u. state security service it says cyber attacks have already occurred and has war gamed scenarios including attacks on government ministry websites and the central election commission media outlets are another obvious target the news channel broadcasts from kiev aimed at the mostly anti russian muslim ta-ta population of occupied crimea staff say there are frequent efforts to disrupt communications but it is the editor in chief himself a former russian journalist and popular blogger who seems to be
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a person of particular interest but the most. i knew kremlin trolls concert there apart my posts on facebook on the book my account of facebook. facebook is literally full of russian accounts which guarantees information about ukraine that the country is afraid of that power should change that avarice should change it's not the first time that facebook stands accused critics say the social media network did not do enough to prevent manipulation of the twenty sixteen us presidential election in a statement on ukraine facebook said we recently removed a network of facebook and instagram accounts for engaging in coordinated in authentic behavior as part of a network that originated in russia and operated in ukraine. not everyone agrees with the anti russian narrative some see the hand of the ukrainian state at work instead. of
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a plane yet again to make that ninety percent of what people call russian influence is internal machinations of the ukrainian government cementing its position based on creating hysteria and paranoia and peaceful choke sits on the foreign affairs committee in ukraine's parliament i think that russia influence is still very big both in ukraine but also in the world here in ukraine we see that they're playing gas card still also they're supporting with russian money one of the political forces one of the presidential candidate but also they are playing a big part in the e.u. by stimulating some of the countries beyond aside the truth may be a question of perspective but the results old friendship ties severed seem impossible to reverse laura frick berg al-jazeera.
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this is al jazeera and these are the top stories britain's parliament has rejected a slim don't version of turkey's maizie you withdrawal deal is the third time it's been voted european leaders are warning the u.k. is now likely to leave the book with no agreement on april the twelfth u.s. president donald trump a threatening to close the border with mexico or large parts of it he says it'll happen next week if mexico doesn't stop people from crossing into the u.s. illegally. and we have the weak is the most pathetic laws number one congress has to act and number two mexico and make so much money from the united states and so many other things so many others as that they have to grab it and they have to stop it we have right now two big caravans coming up from guatemala massive caravans walking right through mexico so mexico is tough they can stop them but they chose
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not to now they're going to stop them and if they don't stop them which closing the border they will close if there was a close for a long time i'm not playing games mexico has to stop it hundreds of thousands of all jiri and suffering taking pawson antigovernment protests across the country friday so the largest demonstrations in six weeks many are calling for the resignation of president of the seas beautifully and an overhaul of the political system in sudan has freed a newspaper editor who spent weeks in jail for criticizing the president also among ghani opposed to omar al bashir is decision to declare a state of emergency during ongoing demonstrations rights groups say more than fifty people have been killed since protests began in december over the price of bread for testers have a new coals for haiti's president to step down opposition groups have demonstrated in the capital port of prince accusing giovanna moyse of corruption and economic
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mismanagement well those are the headlines news continues after inside story. a year of weekly protests more than two hundred fifty people killed and twenty nine thousand injured the people of gaza have been demonstrating near the israeli border demanding their rights but have they achieved their goal this is inside story.
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and welcome to the program pollan march thirtieth marks a year since mass demonstrations began at the fence that separates gaza from israel and since then on friday afternoon prayers have been followed by demonstrations by hundreds of palestinians they are demanding their right to return to their homes and the land their families were expelled from seventy years ago israeli soldiers have responded by firing live ammunition and gaza's health ministry says the now killed more than two hundred fifty people and injured thousands of those hurt the united nations says more than one hundred twenty people have had one or both legs amputated and un investigators say israel has committed war crimes all this at a time of heightened tensions in the region so what is the way forward well there is plenty to discuss with our guest but first harry fawcett sets us up with this report a tunnel for you because we devolved in the weekly protests since the beginning his
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right leg had to be amputated after he was shot by an israeli sniper last be free as soon as he was able he started going back again every week but this weekend's first anniversary he says is different. i'm not going anywhere why should i go on saturday there are going to be a lot of people killed tensions have risen again this week after a rocket fired from gaza hit a family home north of tel aviv injuring seven israeli airstrikes the follow destroyed the offices of hamas as political leader among dozens of targets israel has built up ground forces on the gaza border threatening further military action this is all israeli should know that if a comprehensive campaign is required we were entered strongly and after we have exhausted all of the other options those options center on egyptian mediation towards a deal understood to involve calm on the border and an end to rocket fire in exchange for an easing of israeli economic restrictions in the expansion of the un job
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program seeds over the tension and conflict in the still are still existed in gaza unless the bigger problem for gaza which is a political in the completion and in the way the seed i expect that there will be more of confrontation the great march return protests began on the thirtieth of march last year after a call to action against the israeli siege by civil society groups in gaza since then gaza's health ministry says israeli snipers have shot and injured more than six and a half thousand protesters killing more than two hundred fifty people children journalists and medical workers among them a un investigation found that while some protesters used violence the vast majority were unarmed and peaceful it stated that israel had no justification for using live bullets and they were reasonable grounds to believe it had committed serious violations of human rights for twelve months now the protests in these border areas have been an expression of the sheer desperation felt so widely in gaza but increasingly in evidence has also been how masses ability to dial them up and dial
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them down now with the israeli army staging a major show of force on the other side of this fence gaza's ruling faction has to decide how to calibrate this weekend's events in order to get what they most want major concessions out of israel and hamas is under pressure. to get results earlier this month protesters went to the streets instead of the border over price rises and tax hikes from a security put the demonstrations down with beatings and arrests but the core of those protests the same feelings of despair and frustration that for a year now and despite all the risks that brought thousands to the border week after week harry fawcett out zero for inside story gaza. we can now bring in our guests from gaza city are abu sada professor of political science at al azhar university in gaza and from west jerusalem we have mitchell barak c.e.o. of kievan global research and he was the advisor to the former israeli president
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shimon peres and speechwriter for the ex prime minister ariel sharon and from haifa israel by skype he jazzy is the deputy regional director covering the middle east and north africa region for amnesty international thank you all very much for joining us now i'm going to get straight to it and let's start in gaza in gaza with . firstly as words talking about these anniversary as the anniversary of the protests is coming up what's your expectation for it do you expect that there will be a large turnout will see the kind of momentum that has been building up. well let me start by saying that the palestinian factions mainly hamas and islamic jihad and other palestinian factions have been preparing for this first anniversary of the gaza are big mush of return and breaking the siege for many days now and it is expected to be a big ten now tomorrow another question with oh there would be violence or there
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would be defend injuries tomorrow or not it would be seen but my it my understanding is that the egyptian security delegation who have been shuttling between tel aviv and gaza for the past forty eight hours are trying to defuse any further violence between gaza and israel along the border tomorrow but my estimation is that there will be tens of thousands of palestinians committing the first anniversary of the great mush of it in and also its course sided with land they had in palestine. but i believe that there are at the house on the security services which belong to hamas they will try to destroy a in palestinian protesters from approaching the separation fence between gaza and israel and try to minimize the number of casualties on the palestinian side but it also depends on the behavior this way the snipers and its way to soldiers who over
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the past year have killed more than two hundred and sixty palestinians and injured thousands of palestinians over the past year now to back i've seen you not to ever there i am what is your expectation and what is the expectation from the israeli side as we come up to this big day. well i'm sure it'll be a successful turnout because as he says a hamas and islamic jihad two terror organizations bent on the destruction of israel have arrested hundreds of buses and there are thirty eight different locations throughout the gaza strip and they're going to be bussing people to five different locations on the border so i'm sure it's going to be a very big turnout but my question is are you going to let kids on the bus is this going to be where you put kids in the front line like you did all last year and all last summer we're going to push them up to the front lines and tell them to go rush the fence i think you have to have some responsibility here and understand that rushing a fence and trying to break through a border or releasing flaming kites or putting kids in the frontline or launching
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missiles even by accident which you say you do is not going to go on the israeli side israel will be there with massive force to protect its border and to make sure that nobody comes through and that cuts aren't launched and that's been the problem in the last year is that israel has had to respond to all these new kinds of threats over the border and that's where it stands on the israeli side israel is not looking for alter cation is not looking for a fight is not looking to use force especially now right before the election so let's see how the other side behaves but if you're bussing people in then you've got to control those people again brought up so many points we need to talk about that but first let's go over to high five and one let's let's stay with us line of responsibility misty's been documenting the past year of protest tell us about the findings off your latest report which i believe you are an author to and the main
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message that comes out if it. says you so you've been monitoring what you meant to punish and the potential to put this you know exactly. this will so it's been done by whom going to those issues c.n.n. has really and we've also been. u.n. commission of inquiry report published in a couple of weeks ago in the human rights council what we found is that israeli forces have been using a lot of. lethal force excessive force against and see them streets on the fence this which has led to a lot of killings many of which amount to work crimes there's also we've. documented the pattern of the use of force as the lead to severe injury like changing injury of of protesters and that's what's as pointed to what seems like
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a policy meaning and causing the severe injuries to the protesters targeting has also included medics journalists and children according to the un office of the commission of human ten affairs in the uk quite honestly the territories or chop one hundred ninety five cities have been killed in the contessa put us. in this one year span including forty one children and there's been more than twenty nine thousand injuries according to the commission if we were to put. it over underneath achilles. as well as injuries and in the report they expose one hundred twenty two injuries. and it was life changing injuries where people have lost their lives these include twenty one children so this is a very dangerous part and we are extremely worried that was going to happen tomorrow israel has an obligation to refrain from using excessive force and this is
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. it in terms of law it's a policing of them stretches it's not it's not active hostilities and therefore israel should as also the occupying out. the safety of the people as a stop can. we'll go through some of those points you talked about in detail but first let me go back to my first one of the themes of this program is what has been achieved by these protests and to put it bluntly as we're hearing those numbers aside from more injuries aggression from israel deaths what have these protests actually achieved for the palestinian people. but a please if you couldn't let me just to respond to what was mentioned by michonne about iraq from jerusalem before i answer your question it seems to me that mr about iraq is ignoring the fact that israel is occupying palestinian land for more than half a century now and also israel is besieging the gazans to and enforcing looked at
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punishment on two million palestinians in gaza when live conditions have deteriorated to our very low level and let me do also alert you against a mist of what i doubt its his way to snipers and his way to soldiers who have killed hundreds of palestinians an end to thousands of palestinians not all of them approached the fence some of those yes some of those who were killed and injured were approaching and were tried to infiltrate the fence but as it was documented by amnesty international there were many palestinian civilians journalist powder mother and civilians children who were shot and killed and there were very far away from the separation fence between gaza and israel anyway going back to question what has been achieved over the past year i yes the palestinians have fed up that is the price in terms of the sacrifices that they have faded but i believe that the mother get most of it in
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a bed in the siege have made palestine and the siege over gaza are again synthes to john regional and international politics and second as a result of this marshall britain israel has agreed finally to ease and livy it it's a jump like it again is gaza by are now in qatar the money into gaza to. took to the power station and to employ thousands of palestinians and also is when i get aid to our now more exports from gaza into the west bank and israel and we are hoping that is when we'll come back to its mind and put an end to it see jump blockade against two million palestinians in gaza. mr barak i'm going to let you respond to some off and mr abu sada comments directed at you would you like to tell us what you think. you know i don't i don't even know where to begin meaning you know we're ten minutes into the program and neither the gentleman from them the war
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from gaza mentions that thousands of rockets have been fired into israel that hundreds of kites with full flammable liquid has been launched into israel burning fields terrorizing civilians nobody mentioned it sounds like the march on washington of martin luther king just peaceful protesters at the border some are too close some are maybe too far some are only burning tires you know israel acted you know aggressively first of all every single one of these deaths every single one of these casualties and every single one of the thousands of people injured which is terrible many of them with life changing injury it all could have been avoided it all didn't have to happen israel didn't ask to come in protest and do violent protests israel didn't ask and push teenagers to charge the fence journalists i think there were some cases of journalists that are also members of terror organizations israel didn't ask for this israel warned the palestinian
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population in gaza there is a real humanitarian crisis but maybe you should look at the people that are stealing the humanitarian aid and using it to build tunnels and using it to buy themselves things and using it for terror purposes and not for. to help the people and it's a you know prime minister that you know is under terrible terrible criticism because he's allowing qatar to come in and to give money so that the whole place doesn't collapse this real humanitarian issues there there's no clean drinking water in gaza there are children that don't have food that should be addressed by the palestinian leadership not the march of gaza not talking about our keep. haitian not talking about a siege because every time israel lets in thousands of tons of concrete the concrete doesn't go to build schools and hospitals the concrete goes to build tunnels in order to attack israel and that's unfortunate because the people of gaza those two million people they deserve better leadership they deserve
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a leadership that is not a terrorist organization they deserve to live peacefully side by side with israel just like israel israelis deserve to live peacefully side by side with gazans and with that kind of leadership you're not going to get anywhere and that kind of rhetoric you're not going to get anywhere so pushing people to the limit tomorrow not going to be a good thing that it does he so given what we've heard from both sides. what do you think these protests have achieved if anything at all. when they raised the gazans voice. very hard in protest of the conditions which israel we haven't suffered unfortunate that we have to remind. like now that israel is the occupying power it has been imposing it no more than twelve years now of an olaf and blockade on the gaza strip that amounts to collective punishment this is the prime reason for the protests people are protesting against these conditions they want the
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blockade to be lifted they were rightly want their rights to be respected and protected and just a point here that people in gaza have agency and then shown that not only protesting against israeli policies and israeli occupation and that for a year a lawful blockade but they've also shown that they they protest policies by hamas the five to government in gaza people are rejecting the conditions which are imposed on them and i think. now the people around the world. governments as long as saudis as well as scientists i have heard the message you know it's our responsibility to take an action and again i remind of the commission of inquiry report it was a detail in the situation unfortunately israel prevented the members of the investigators from the commission of inquiry to enter israel or gaza to carry out investigations and i but they were able to to do it regardless they came to
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conclusions they have recommendations including recommendations for international justice and i think now actually it's time now that international justice. takes a lot of takes a role here as as for amnesty we're also at equal to impose an arms embargo on israel until it basically abides by its international commitments and commitment the commitments to human rights and stops these by dishes against people that they occupied. now i want to go back to a point that mitchell barak made mr abu said that who is in charge in gaza now and do people i mean the i think they needed answers would be hamas but do people trust them given that they have suppressed demonstrations themselves criticizing them quite aggressively so who is in charge and if these protests do actually result result in some kind of a result who's going to be leading the people there were the short also to question
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is who is in charge and girls are they also is how the us hamas has been in charge of girls off with a post that will views in spite of the fact that there is something we called the palestinians consensus government but it has been absent from the gaza strip for more than a year no. since the attempted assassination on them and my point is that there were more protests against hamas and criticizing hamas and hamas crackdown on those protesters which takes away some their legitimacy in pointing the fingers across the border do people still feel that they are equipped to leave them. without that what i was just going to say are the palestinians in gaza hold israel responsible for their suffering they hold the palestinian authority who have imposed a punitive measures for more than two years on the two million palestinian also in gaza responsible and also how muscle is the de facto government in gaza is
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responsible for the deterioration of the living conditions and that's why the two weeks ago hundreds of thousands of palestinians a protest is and in the middle of the streets of gaza again as hard as this put this to the ghettos the living conditions of the slogan was we wanted to know if we wanted to live a dignified life but unfortunately hamas does in a value brutal way it doesn't it security forces do it in a very brutal way again is that often in the book this those of us thing on does of them beaten also hundreds of them which was which give a very negative image of how the us and its security forces in the gaza strip so here you go you have the palestinian people in a very very tight spot their leadership also aggression against them across the border they're having you know there's conflict there too what happens to to the people of gaza adam and then if i can bring you in mr mitchell barak i have these
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protests changed in any way the way israel would deal with the people of gaza who are perhaps change their approach and give some kind of concession. again this and there's no i mean i think prime minister netanyahu has been very fair in trying to make sure the place doesn't collapse from a humanitarian aspect you know you may mention early in the program i worked i wrote speeches for prime minister ariel sharon so we're going back what is it fifteen years when he first announced his disengagement plan from gaza so you want to talk about occupation let's talk about gaza there were israeli settlements in gaza there were israeli cemetery there was a cemetery in gaza and sure own said i'm going to get out every israeli presence every israeli settlement settler there and we're going to leave and hopefully the people of gaza and the leadership of gaza will take it as an opportunity and they'll turn it into universities and hospitals and high tech centers and they will
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start to take responsibility for their own people so that didn't happen obviously it didn't happen and it's horrible what's going on there michel it's absolutely horrible the humana did i mean because you as well you know i met an irish was there but but again again the blockade again how many tons of cement can you let in before you realize that that cement is going for bunkers in order to tunnel into israel ok where where why should israel allow that right there's only a blockade and there's only you know some kind of israeli involvement with the egyptians by the way because any kind of humanitarian aid come that comes in is used for weapons against israel and that has to be stopped you have the opportunity the people in gaza have the opportunity to take areas selves stop sending children to the front lines stop releasing balloons and those are real war crimes when you fire a missile into a country indiscriminately into a civilian population and tell of events they rode in be'er sheva when you throw
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a flaming how little it meant to larry and sorry i'm going to how are you sure you were running out of i'm afraid so you can use that as you want. with that if you respond. we quickly before we end this program with thank you what i wanted to say is that yes israel disengaged from the gaza strip in the summer of two thousand and five but right after that six months after that the palestinians eld the parliamentary elections in the gaza strip which led to the winning goal behind us the majority of the seats in the parliament and as a result of that. fed style democracy in palestine israel refused to what it could not as it acknowledged the it is all to palestinian elections and imposed isolation against of us an isolation against the palestinian government even if in before i'm asked to its responsibility as a government it was as well in it's a terror organization or the terror organization it's going let the management of
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the palestinians all right i'm afraid it's a lever are going to find its military organization defined by the united states and they call for the destruction of israel in their charter which should israel recognize that yes this is the charter of the us all israel said as i'm sure the charter as if they are us has respect international no as if they you us have good try changing the charter the national budget deficit. ok looks like we're not raising any three hundred thousand as euro graham and definitely no agreement between the two sides from israel and gaza but definitely great to have this discussion it's much needed good to have you all on this program really do appreciate your time i want to thank all our guests. mitchell barak and salehi jazzy and thank you too for watching you can see this program again any time i visiting our website and you'll find that at al-jazeera dot com and for any further
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discussion you can always go to our facebook page you'll find that at facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story of forget you can always join the conversation on twitter our handle is actually a.j. inside story from me pollen and the whole team it's goodbye for now. april on al-jazeera nato leaders will gather to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the alliance in washington d.c. madam husain engages in rigorous debate cutting through the headlines on up front
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twenty five years on from the genocide that killed nearly a million people rwanda has rebuilt but how far of its people have been reconciled the emmy award winning show phone lines is back with more investigative journalism and in-depth stories israel is to hold an early election on the ninth of april but with a corruption scandal looming will benjamin netanyahu extend his ten years as prime minister april on al-jazeera. in twenty sixty one a one east revealed that goes for me in march some as young as fifteen were trafficked to singapore to work as mate it's illegal and costing lives so why does it still continue when law abiding singapore one the one east on al-jazeera i really felt liberated as a journalist was. getting to the truth as i would that's what this job. early is influenced by their football for you don't think about doping really had
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that lead explaining when the real madrid a club worth five hundred million euros or expresses a position of something like the world anti-doping agency has to take notice you don't get. in part two of this series al-jazeera continues to explore the widespread use of performance enhancing drugs sports doping the endless chase on al-jazeera. i'm how mohit seen in doha the top stories on al-jazeera britain's parliament house rejected a slim down version all to reason these e.u. withdrawal deal it's the third time it's been voted down. the implications of the house's decision are grave the legal default now is that united kingdom is due to
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leave the european union on the twelfth of april in just fourteen days time that is not enough time to agree the just late fall and ratify a deal and yet the house has been clear it will not commit to leaving without a deal mr speaker i fear we are reaching the limits of this process in this house this house i. this house has rejected no deal it has rejected no brick sit on wednesday it rejected all the variations of the deal on the table and today it has rejected approving the withdrawal agreement alone and continuing a process on the future. european council president donald two scales called for an emergency leaders' summit on april tenth to discuss brics it's that sasha butler is monitoring e.u. reaction from brussels. well designed curry singley talking about the possibility of a no deal snorer of britain's leaving the european union without a deal is something that's been mentioned by many top e.u.
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officials including the use a chief exec negotiator michel barnier and there's certainly a growing sense of frustration amongst officials that this bridge that process is taking so long that it is deadlocked and that sense of frustration has been fuelled by the events in the british parliament today in which you can piece decided not to support the withdrawal agreement that decision was met by great disappointment amongst the u. officials we heard from the e.u. commission spokesperson saying it was with deep regret that they you saw what was happening in terms of what happens next of course we have very poor tents as the next day to look out for because that is the day that the you council president tosca set for an e.u. summit to resume a the british prime minister has been invited to that summit she's been told that she must come with some sort of plan for britain to move forward if there is no plan e.u.
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officials have made it very clear that on april the twelfth the britain will leave the european union without a deal that's something that e.u. leaders and officials have always said they would like to avoid they would prefer the person left in an orderly fashion but as the days pass that is looking more and more difficult. u.s. president tom of trump is threatening to close the border with mexico or large parts of it he says it will happen next week of mexico doesn't stop people from crossing into the u.s. illegally and we have the weak is the most pathetic laws number one congress has to act and number two mexico and make so much money from the united states and so many other things so many other assets they have to grab it and they have to stop it we have right now two big caravans coming up from guatemala massive care of events walking right through mexico so mexico is tough they can stop them but they chose not to and now they're going to stop them and if they don't stop them which closing
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the border will close that they were looking to close for a long time i'm not playing games mexico has to stop it hundreds of thousands of algerian something taking parson antigovernment protests across the country friday so the largest demonstrations in six weeks many are calling for the resignation of president of the beautiful and an overhaul of the political system. sudan has freed a news paper as or who spent weeks in jail for criticizing the president under ghani post omar al bashir is decision to declare a state of emergency during ongoing demonstrations rights groups say more than fifty people have been killed since process began in december over the price of bread protesters have a new coals for haiti's president to step down opposition groups have demonstrated in the capital port of prince accusing juvenile maurice of corruption and economic mismanagement has been struggling with high inflation and fuel shortages. those
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are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after fourteen up south africa. south africa nine hundred ninety nine traveling across the country to meet fourteen yo and about their lives. in one thousand nine hundred two we visited them over there were seventy two hours . the. project was in its death throes
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and it was virtually a civil war in the run up to the first free election. in one thousand nine hundred two vellum lived in the north and transfer all part of a very conservative community. dos what condition of school and you can you know sister. ms clinton but it. school. and school think just oppose it so what does know is the photos the next. day it's. going to school yes. well it was only finitely many mocking those who would lead sydney
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and the brothers one of those going to start. up a concert. a little better and it stuck with stupid back with me. got a little. dividend is quite as good as i'd like to lose by her means i could be nice to give it me shove it about me but i'm disinclined to buy from his aunt that lachlan minimus quiddity my son is still fine dive a boy when mesa did not disturb my nedda balcony opprobrium must learn in school as a new look under software that all. we have adequate stand up be a program is a lot oh yeah. there are all those again in my other dog coop. so i was valley. by fend off in a shoebox dropped the book audiobook in the packet taught them how to put on spill
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the whole family. i got to suffer drawn i do it's been a nice only hanun puppy to adult when she only has as i have it going to change her non stop a tree. by the field with the b.m. and set off to come and so i kiss on some people and you go with the troop to be and then i see it is silent. in the get cute yeah. and the law is number of anthony lawn. i'm ok with i do just have. a good gift and good to sew for has what i do need and oxted money into cash to. hunt and look next year's duncombe walk i say it's a good deal of sunni sure. well i was quickly finished and so.
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was the scene. like oh miss accusingly could run to al gadhafi for about stormy's would do it skewed toward mean to him on to me visit offical to sean up on the line vent quickly did not appear to have hit me. when we met long grade seven he lived in devon and went to a school which had formerly been for whites only and he was one of just a few back children. there. you see if you are black and you are married to a white person he'll call on. you let you lost girl wish roots.
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or she has a wife she'd like to live with like people you see. but why does she do what you want to do. if i did that. i wonder where the black challenge like you and me and the stand alone which i speak when i meet home that's. so do you think that i think she was she would be the one. who tells me wish i was as cool as i know english that's so you think you end up marrying a white person who may you be. but you know i think. that that. that was the snow mix. it up there would. be a bit. of a slim chance. but
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we will be watching sinlessness no steven spielberg's example and we saw what terms of normalizing our society and the fact that we have a legacy of white privilege to get her on the. left and it's time to take its course some of the black people in parliament at least trying to push to push the system a too far lou trying to process laws that that's to me like i said among the black people and the right beside in this one which i think is wrong. i think they should play for the national team of the good enough to stand in the state from the. neck on the. force they step in because they'll do that when they'll miss it up you know start a living. hell beginning nobody. i think is just a little girl and it happened. when we met resistance at age seven they were both up to school for black children on. the test
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was a test. but c.s.s. a second mission you're a sponge hot sheet he actually did that so much to my no one knew jack would longest long so slack a single doctor said. me and the next and it's a lot of this isn't really i mean. who could buy any funds for this. in his name if might actually do look like nasty. look leave me. a little slug gloucestershire all cheer. this is a young actor suki. missed the audience here will he see actually a man that i'm serious government goals over this is my board of pizzey.
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