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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  April 5, 2019 11:00am-11:34am +03

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so who's going to do with nato going to promote. this lunatic will be too pleased to. move the militias and he's going to keep and he's one tremendous amount of. people who will set up all this if you wish you know that the u.s. house of representatives has approved a bill to support for saudi u.a.e. led war and yemen the resolution had already passed the senate and now kosar president donald trump who last month said he would veto the measure had it all hang reports from washington d.c. . i don't want to see fourteen million yemenis starve to death harsh words for saudi arabia build the house chambers if the saudis don't stop their blockade and let food and medicine in within six months we will see one of the great humanitarian crisis in the world and with that in a vote of two hundred forty seven to one hundred seventy five the house joined the senate in sending the message the congress wants the u.s. military to stop supporting the saudi coalition's war in yemen this is the first
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time that he u.s. congress has rebuked a president on a war powers resolution which was a concern for some who voted no it really basically states yet again that the fundamental premise of this resolution is flawed because u.s. forces are not engaged in hostilities against the who are these in yemen which is what the war powers act requires if we want to cut off economic assistance or logistic assist assistance security assistance the saudi there's a way to do that but it's not through the war powers act the lawmakers made clear this is about much more than ending the war in yemen the vote in the senate and in the house makes you think that the united states will not continue to follow a despotic and hard democratic leadership coming out of saudi arabia day how they are aggressive foreign policy their aggressive military policy i think it's a bad idea but at the very least the united states should not be led into
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a wall by a despotic undemocratic murderous regime this was a bipartisan vote the president's likely to respond with a veto the congress probably can't override still for many members of congress this was about much more than a message or a historic rebuke of the president it was a statement on congress's ever darkening view of saudi arabia pedicle hain al jazeera washington. the man accused of attacking two mosques in new zealand has been ordered to undergo a psychiatric assessment to see if he's fit to stand trial in britain terence made his second court appearance in christ church on friday he's been charged with fifty counts of murder and thirty nine charges of attempted murder since the attacks new zealand's prime minister has banned the sale of assault rifles and semiautomatic weapons. anymore out of the news hour including the talk of complete my speech before writing still. water pouring from the ceiling to british parliament there
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are. talks with the opposition. experts are calling it a complex humanitarian emergency. health care system collapses and sports sponsors step in to compensate the u.s. women's football team for earning less than their male peers at world cup. if you have his government house released its first report into last month's fatal plane crash and it says the ethiopian airlines jet was forced by a faulty automatic anti stall system the pilots tried to regain control but a crash just six minutes after takeoff from. a one hundred fifty seven people on board were killed or he'll mohamad reports. it's been almost a month since a boeing seven three seven took off from ethiopia's capital ababa bound for nairobi
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it crashed six minutes later near the town of be sure to killing all one hundred fifty seven people on board it took his transport minister has now released the first official findings of the investigation into the crash which says the pilots did everything that was recommended by boeing that. this investigation needs to make sure that there is safety in that. it's not to blame someone it's not soon gets some sort of there are some things that we are going to do which. is something very notable and forming the procedures but it's all good things to get results of these reports is going to have to are sure safety in. the pilots reportedly struggle to control the plane's automatic anti stalling system. which is meant to push the nose of the aircraft downwards if it detects a stall or loss of as speed analysts believe this issue may have led to the crash
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the crew reacted. quite correctly by carrying out a drill that has been pressed for bribes if this occurs and isolated this system which was trying to push the nose down but having done that they then found that one of the control systems that they have for pulling the nose back up again simply wouldn't perform for them this was the second crash to involve the boeing seven three seven max within five months in indonesia last october a lion f. light went down shortly after takeoff from jakarta killing all one hundred eighty nine passengers and crew the lawyers representing the families of the victims of the line f. light say the united states should do more to hold boeing accountable you know what the united sates. is there to say is no. more we say more of those who work may be just as all
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the wires for the united states and it's a major setback for the company boeing really has to work very fast to recover its trust because its brand name is so strong and its products for a long time have been so good the boeing seven three seven max has been grounded worldwide pending a review into the software with flight control system investigators in here p.s.a. a full report into what happened could take up to a year to complete for healing mohammed al jazeera. and the u.s. plane maker boeing continues to defend the safety of the seven thirty seven max and acknowledge that activation of the automation system may have foreseen ethiopian and indonesian jets to crash u.s. aviation regulator the f.a.a. is reviewing the safety of the now ground the boeing seven thirty seven max eight
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and that is facing a number of lawsuits john hendren has more from chicago. here in chicago the family of the victim of the ethiopian airlines crash last month is now suing boeing this is not just any victim however she is also the niece of ralph nader a one time presidential candidate and a consumer advocate who has taken on auto companies for flaws in their parts now this is the latest bit of bad news for boeing that comes after ethiopian transportation officials found in their preliminary investigation that the pilots pursued all of the procedures that boeing had given them in order to correct the trajectory of that doomed plane and also they said they found no damage sensor on that plane you know there was a damage sensor that might have suggested there was a make its problem and that could have been been blamed on the airline so this center of the focus of the investigation remains on the software system that was supposed to correct the trajectory of that plane the so-called anti stall system
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there was one fix that boeing had sold for that system as an option for eighty thousand dollars eighty thousand dollars on a one hundred twenty million dollar plane no that is found to have been something that might have been wrecked in this incident that could be a serious problem for boeing the secretary of state has called on nato allies to adopt the alliance so it can front emerging threats from russia and china i compare spoke to foreign ministers gathered in washington to mark the alliance the seventieth anniversary out of their state department correspondent ross in jordan has more. the twenty nine foreign ministers of nato spent thursday discussing the latest challenges to the security alliance chief among them the government of russian president vladimir putin from support for bashar assad in syria and nicolas maduro in venezuela to what the u.s. says is russia's repeated violations of the intermediate range nuclear forces
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treaty better known as the i.n.f. treaty the fear is that the u.s. decision to pull out of the i.n.f. will launch a new nuclear arms race the nato secretary general again stoltenberg called the situation grave but avoidable russia going on this treaty is a prompt on. of destabilizing behavior the trumpet ministration and before it the obama administration had been critical of nato members failure to spend two percent of their annual g.d.p. on defense but with european spending now going up u.s. secretary of state mike pompei ago told reporters on thursday it's time to address other security priorities facing the alliance and we've also talked about new challenges that face us right so telecommunications systems infrastructure cyber hybrid warfare things that aren't resolved by more troops sitting on the ground
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someplace but which present rest to the baltics to all of europe to all the nato partners including the united states and canada as well so we're trying to make sure that our resources our focus our meeting the challenges of today one problem within the alliance itself turkey and its plans to buy the s four hundred anti aircraft missile defense system from russia the u.s. opposes the deal and says all korea could be jeopardizing its nato membership already the pentagon has suspended transfer of f. thirty five fighter jet parts and manuals because of the s four hundred matter. of the situation we fully realize that this is now a challenge and it is an issue that has been discussed on is addressed by united states and turkey i hope that it's possible to find a solution to this issue because we see now that this is. an issue where there's disagreement between two allies turkey and united states they all marking the
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seventy years of mutual defense the nato foreign ministers agree the organization is still relevant but this time it's a new generation of global threats that nato must confront walsall in jordan al-jazeera the state department. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has met russian president vladimir putin for talks in moscow and yahoo requested the visit which comes just five days before israel's general election the two leaders talked about the latest developments in syria and hansing the security ties and has more from moscow. it was all about the timing of prime minister netanyahu his visit to moscow just five days before the elections in israel and while mitt and had announced that he was going to come and talk about syria the most important outcome of the meeting with putin seems to be the handover of a soldier israeli soldier who went missing thirty seven years ago after israel
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invaded lebanon with russian and syrian forces managed to retrieve his remains and they were handed over to nato in moscow today. we are very pleased that at home they can give him the necessary military honors what is most important in the question of humanitarian nature is his family and loved ones will have the possibility of bringing flowers to his to. the ceremony and the handover was of course a very important boost for nato just before the elections between russia and israel ran high in september last year fifteen russian soldiers were killed when their plane was gunned down by friendly syrian fire after an israeli attack since that accident putin has urged me to limit these attacks on rainy and forces in syria and give a longer warning time and this on yahoo has urged them to help him to remove raney and forces from syria all together on these points no progress seems to be made so
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far but for now this is enough for now a better election resolutely could not have wished for revenge mission. i want to thank you my friends on behalf of myself and the people of israel for what you have done for a strong friendship which is very important to our country which is very important to our relations but there has promised that he will also help to retrieve two other israeli soldiers who have been missing since one thousand nine hundred eighty two. are all action will take place on tuesday and it's been a hotly contested campaign with many issues on the table stephanie decker asked people unless it's important to them. bibi isn't the only nickname the israeli prime minister goes by another term benjamin netanyahu has cultivated and banked on over the years is mr security to the people of israel that he is the only one who can make them feel safe and secure but now the strongest challenge to his position in a decade is coming from three former army chiefs of staff men who also know security
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here in west jerusalem most people are telling us that security has always been a priority for israelis but there are other issues just as important that need to be addressed in a simple that people here are barely living it's the economy we can have costs go up without salaries also increasing i hope this time netanyahu will have the strength to create a broadly focused government that will be able to address all of these issues not only emphasize security which is where we invest most of our money recent polls show that the main issues on voters' minds are security the economy and corruption netanyahu is facing corruption charges in three separate cases you turn a general has announced he intends to indict the prime minister pending a pretrial hearing. is trying to curity just like is trying to emphasize the economy just like he is trying to emphasize his roles of out of relations but the election is not about any of those three things it's about corruption. and whether
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israelis care about. so far as occasions are that they don't. most predicted yes benjamin netanyahu will once again become prime minister but they also say that the corruption indictments hanging over him may ultimately defeat him it's finished he will go within ten months it will be prime minister. is up. and. we will get him out of. israel goes to the polls on april ninth but it's what happens which may be more defining for the political career of benjamin netanyahu stephanie decker al-jazeera west jerusalem. still ahead on al-jazeera. children born to mixed race couples during belgium's colonial era rule are receiving an apology. the truth of what they really go through it's heartbreaking. to hear what
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families are enduring in their desperation to reach the united states. and then support the football coach who actually quit on a street to avoid being tackled by his own player kahlil have. hello welcome to another look at the international full cost well some fine weather into eastern parts of china for the time being but then larry a cloud just making its way across the southwest just pushing out of vietnam will produce some downpours for a time but of wet weather just coming in here right down into the gulf of tonkin to the east of that we getting up to twenty eight in hong kong to about it so twenty four degrees there for shanghai as well and if anything those temperatures nudging
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up a notch as we go or named. chance of wanted to show still a possibility towards the southwest having said that usual showers continue through southeast asia and in the india china seeing some wet weather malaysia seeing some lively showers too and the showers run down into indonesia but some day since spells of sunshine in between through friday and also into sas day a little the humid side there for bangkok basin pieces of cloud and ryan rolling in here temperatures around thirty five degrees celsius will see some bits and pieces of cloud and rain also making the way across the far north of india maybe some shop shelves once again into bangladesh to fall northeast of india over towards me and ma in between still very much on the hot side here with temperature. creeping into the long forties. the weather sponsored by qatar and. the brazilian economy is booming but deep divisions still exist between the haves
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and the have nots in a country where smartphones have become a part of everyday life technology help reached again. the series the challenges developers to design apps for a better world travels to rio dish a major and meets the young people tasked with making a different life than for vela farm on al-jazeera. around ten million yemenis are on the edge of balance examining the headlines netanyahu was looking at charges of bribery fraud and breach of trust setting the discussions you're denying that he was beaten by the police i did not deny sharing personal stories with a global audience explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform motivate and inspire you and that it's all good but the world is watching on al-jazeera.
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this is at the top stories now forces loyal to libya's u.n. backed government are being deployed in and around the capital tripoli that's in response to an advance on the city by troops loyal to warlord khalifa huffed are controls parts of eastern libya and the un security council will be holding an emergency meeting on friday to discuss the situation in libya the country's interior minister has told al-jazeera the un backed government has lost faith in the international community's ability to resolve the crisis. u.s. house of representatives has approved a resolution to end u.s. support for the saudi war in yemen the bill will now go to the president on a truck but he's already said he will veto it. saudi arabia said to be in talks
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with firms from five countries to build two nuclear power reactors according to the reuters news agency is planning to launch a bidding process for the projects in two thousand and twenty former nuclear inspector said the kingdom's first reactor could be operational within a year identified this site in riyadh using these satellite images crown prince mohammed bin solomon has indicated saudi arabia is interested in nuclear technology to counter what he calls a threat from iran robert kelley's a former inspector and associate fellow with the stockholm international peace research institute he says the development of saudi arabia's nuclear program goes against its international commitments. saudi arabia has been very slow to embrace the rules and standards that the i.a.e.a. demands they signed a nonproliferation treaty to not get nuclear weapons about thirty years ago they promised not to do that and they still don't have a real agreement in place for inspections and how to handle safeguards they've
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managed to do that because they've simply said we don't have any nuclear facilities or material so you don't need to come the fact that the crown prince has said that he would be willing to make nuclear weapons despite the fact he signed the nonproliferation treaty makes you very uncomfortable finding the reactor was just a an interest of mine too to fill in some holes in my knowledge but now you see that the previous history of michael flynn trying to sell lots of reactors to saudi arabia and then the department of energy stonewalling on what it is they've allowed to be sent to saudi arabia makes you think that this this event is not over yet oh i think in this case there are major powers been struggling with each other in the middle east i tend to believe that the agreement that we have made with iran to not produce nuclear weapons is a good agreement and it's working when saudi arabia comes along and says if i think
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iran is doing it i'm going to make nuclear weapons too on what basis will lehrer intelligence be when we have really good evidence from the i.a.e.a. to iran has is sitting this well now that the moment. so much as thought markel says the e.u. will work until the very last hour to avoid a no deal prax it in case it'll leave the block in a week unless leaders approve another extension and a papa has more. i hope i can complete my speech before the rain stopped fly i'm going to suspend the sittings thursday and breaks it landed it was a wet one at least in the commons where a water leak ended proceedings early so the sitting is no suspended and no fall to grab leaves. off of the house passed legislation forcing the prime minister to avoid a no deal brix it by seeking a delay yet the opposition is trying to rush the bill through the lords parliament's upper chamber not much by way of leaks though from closed door talks between to resume a's government and labor's shadow cabinet we've had further
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discussions with the government and discussed for now going to continue thank you very much on the question of whether to insist on any brics it deal being put to a referendum is dividing labor is it on wednesday emily thornberry the shadow foreign secretary wrote to colleagues insisting a failure to do so would breach party policy now twenty five labor m.p.'s almost all from leave voting areas have won jeremy corbyn not to seek a new referendum in a letter they called the talks an opportunity for a deal including a customs union and protecting workers' rights saying at the general election we were clear about respecting the twenty sixteen vote and about securing those labor goals therefore we feel it compromises necessary to achieve this deal and avoid fighting the european elections we should go the extra step to secure this with the government also split on the way forward it fell to the chancellor to make clear to resume a would need to make concessions some kind of customs arrangement is clearly going to be a part of the future structure but look when you when you enter into
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a negotiation like this to find a compromise way forward both parties have to give something up there's going to be pain on both sides minimising islands pain was part of angular merkel's trip to dublin before the german chancellor's meeting with her counterpart leo veronica the pair heard directly from people from northern ireland and the border area no deal scenario could impact but we have to put their selves all that comes. with that in my. and we discussed timing at european and domestic level for no deal thank you to how we can work together to meet our twin objectives of protecting the good friday agreement on which peace in our it is based and also protecting the integrity of the european single market in the course of the. others to to help us and we want to do everything we can until the last hour to prevent a disorderly breaks it will put every if it into that but we have to do this together with person so plenty of worries about no deal despite parliament's latest
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moves and today you summit next week where leaders will want to know what britain intends to do more uncertainty is the only certainty but the barber al-jazeera a new unicef report says more than nineteen million children in bangladesh are being adversely affected by climate change as the waters are driving many families from coal still areas to the capital dhaka a unicef says that once they arrive in the city children are at risk of being used as laborers and even end up as prostitutes coverage hattori sent this report from me all islam in dhaka. among one of the older slum in dhaka is home to a generation of migrants who fled their village home due to some sort of climate change impacts now the world bank says that nearly four hundred thousand people on an average move to the capital city dhaka among them seventy percent have fled their villages due to some sort of environmental shocked or climate change this is
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according to international organization of migration life in the slums are very difficult people do not like living here the prefer their old home in the villages but for survival they have to stay here most of the men folks here as construction workers day laborers a rickshaw pullers woman folks if they're lucky they get a job in the garment factory some of them work as domestic help typically a house rent here ordered room rent rather just thirty dollars a month a very difficult environment from most of them to cope with their children don't get to get free education that is another major challenge bangladesh barely contributes zero point four metric tons parked capita to global carbon emission yet it is a country that's bears the majority of the burn on climate change experts say that within the next three decades the average temperature is going to be growing by two degrees centigrade this means
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a major challenge for bangladesh and its environment in coming years. crisis in venezuela starts so bad it needs all skill action by the united nations a report released by johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health and human rights watch points to an unchecked spread of back saying preventable diseases and a rise in the transmission of infectious diseases a lot in america has more from caracas. just off one of his main highways the media of the family collects as much water as possible from the mountain above all this is my son this is my neighbor a cousin practically the whole family were. there lucky to have this truck because it's a long way from home. a nationwide blackout nearly four weeks ago left millions without power a regular water supplies. it's a welcome sight when the boys arrive but this water is not portable the health
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ministry is recommending people treat it with chlorine but with none available at the. hopes of boiling it first will make it safe for her family to drink and that only the latest health hazard for five year old son has severe asthma. and you know yesterday the doctor prescribed medication that costs more than three minimum wages and obviously i couldn't buy it so i gave him an anti allergy pill that i had left . than israeli hospitals are full of people in desperate need of medicine and treatment in many cases for diseases that had been eradicated such as did the area and measles but in the absence of that scenes in the last two years they've returned the combination of severe food and medicine shortages has led to dramatic increases of disease as well as infant and maternal mortality doctor. says the increased consumption of untreated water in the last
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three weeks is making an already catastrophic situation worse than a minority all right i think we don't have the precise numbers yet but we know that in the public and private hospitals there's been an acute increase of cases of severe diarrhea that require hospitalization including children under two years of age which can be fatal. at this public hospital parents queue to try their luck at the pharmacy hoping to find the medicine they can't pay for elsewhere the crisis isn't just in the public hospitals this is that of his best private clinic and as you can see the waiting room is almost empty because it's become so expensive that people just can't afford to come here. local and international public health experts describe the crisis as a complex humanitarian emergency. and they say it requires a full scale response from international aid organizations to prevent the further
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spread of a highly contagious disease is not just here but beyond this country's borders as the exodus of the news whalen's continues unabated you see in human gut acts as president donald trump has backed out from his threat to close the border with mexico trump says he'll give mexico a year to stop the flow of drugs and migrants he's warning that failure to do so or result in border closures and tariffs on mexican products castro has met asylum seekers who aren't giving up their dream of living in america she reports from the u.s. border city of el paso. their first steps of freedom on u.s. soil are from a detention center bus to the doors of a church turned temporary shelter inside the view from the pulpit is a family's resting in cots a much needed respite after an arduous journey. i just see a lot of humble people broken broken people strong people warriors people that they
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have a dream and people that they've been through a lot this family of four is from ecuador where in earthquake destroyed the store that was their livelihood i see no other way to survive they headed north they say the u.s. presidents harsh border rhetoric drove them to faster action my worry was if you don't go no lose your chance better to go now and take a risk. the family says they tried several times to claim asylum at the port of entry in el paso that is the legal way to enter the united states and what the trump administration has encouraged people to do but the family says u.s. border agents repeatedly turned them away. said to ourselves we are already here we can't turn back so we decided to cross the river thousands have done the same in recent weeks after surrendering to u.s. authorities many were held behind barbed wire fence under
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a bridge this mother and her two daughters slept two nights there hungry crying and exposed to the elements and yet. she's only three and she told me mom this isn't fair others at the shelter say they resorted to drinking bathroom water while in detention many are sick adults with stomach problems and children with fever once i sit down with them and finding out their stories the truth of what they really go through it's heartbreaking all of the men were released with ankle monitors the government will track them to make sure they'll appear for an immigration hearing at a later date only about ten percent of asylum seekers from latin america when their cases to remain in the u.s. for good but for these families they feel they've already overcome worse odds just to make it this far. castro al-jazeera el paso texas landslides
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caused by heavy rains have destroyed roads and buildings in the bolivian city of la paz this video shows the moment this road collapses the suburb of has earned carey was one of the worst hit at least thirty people have died and thousands have been displaced or in this year's wet season. thousands of government employees in argentina had been protesting against austerity measures they marched to congress building a bronze stars to announcing president reads your mockeries policies his reforms backed by the international monetary fund are blamed for rising inflation and worsening economic conditions the government last year cut the salaries of civil servants and reduced government spending almost nine hundred thousand people in mozambique are receiving vaccination against cholera after last month's cycle own thousands of people are still living in displacement camps after the storm with little access to clean water or sanitation two people have died and more than two thousand cases of cholera have been recorded a million miller has.

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