tv 21 Up South Africa P1 Al Jazeera April 6, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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interferon is important the provision of shelter but also a creepy priority is that of food and food water as well as healthy the major concern yeah is health considering that there is an outbreak of cholera that so far it did two thousand people the government is that two people have died so far but that's based on the records they have people who have actually entered camps and medical facilities looking for help given that they are areas they haven't reached that number could rise significantly all right still ahead on the program a dozen protesters are injured in the latest friday prices of the gulf is around. twenty five years on the skulls still healing from the rwandan genocide.
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we got a real mixed bag of weather across europe of them there are some lovely sunshine around see it there it's essential that east impossible for the west's the clouds on the rain keeps on streaming in more showers rattling in the crust the british isles western areas of france to supporting tablets look at madrid eleven degrees celsius as pretty poor it's going to be pretty damp as well lots of rain that's true for portugal southern areas the front seeing some big down poles and some live on the other side of the med that just around greece ceasing over towards the western side of the further north as that warm sunshine be getting up to twenty celsius in berlin on sas day off name similar is big on sunday perhaps a little more cloud into those eastern areas but on the good bit too bad having said that in freezing weather there coming into athens temperatures at seventeen celsius with some sunshine slightly better there across spain still eleven degrees is not warm but we've got some wet weather still looking the it's a good parts of port. and the other is some latin writers in north africa as well
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l.j. area saying some rather heavy rain on saturday for todd slides his wife father reese was it'll push across into tunisia for a while brought to skies across libya i'd also to much of egypt. the environment doesn't know any boundaries what goes up into the environment goes around the world. best the sights are pushed on crumbs that it's a very modern way to do poppy and we've made poisons the measure of progress. the domestic population has become organized enough and active enough to do something to take your pursuit in the ideas of people who will kill people who are more vulnerable to suckle of poison on al-jazeera.
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again undermined at the top stories on al-jazeera the united nations secretary general antonio the terrorist says he's deeply concerned about the military escalation in libya asked the lord who have to hold his advance towards tripoli. crowds of protesters the flooded the streets of algeria as capital in the first mass demonstration since the president announced he was resigning. the african development bank his promise around one hundred million us told us to reconstruct parts of nights on the zimbabwe malawi which were devastated by cycling die. israeli forces of injured dozens of palestinian protest as in the latest friday demonstrations at the girl say israel border the demonstrations which are known as
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the great march of her term began in march last year that demanding an end to the blockade on the right to return to land mines by israel. was us the process. at a time when this egyptian led mediation between hamas and other palestinian factions in israel is still ongoing and on a day when it was indicated by hamas officials that those negotiations are still on a positive track things did get a lot more tense than many people would have wanted at the site of the great march of return protests that we were out here today in the last few hours you had many ambulances whizzing by we've been told by the ministry of health in gaza that dozens of people were injured by israeli live fire and one must wonder if that is going to put a damper on the negotiations going forward at a critical time when there. been confidence building measures going this past week when the situation in gaza the mood has been cautiously optimistic we'll what
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happened today the tear gas that we saw the burning of tires or the fact that so many people we are being told have been injured is that something that's going to cause tensions going forward the u.s. president is touring part of the newly constructed border fence with mexico donald trump arrived in calexico california a short time ago where he's due to meet immigration officials because it comes a day after the president but down on his threat to shut the border because of the influx of migrants hundreds of people are protesting against the president's visit a giant balloon depicting donald trump as a baby is flying by well how did you cast her joins us live now from el paso texas near the border with mexico citrus been saying recently the economy is doing so well why introduce this uncertainty about the border. that's a great question felicity because there is a lot to be ciphered out of the statements from the president he's kind of been all over the place on this threat to close this order at first he said it would happen
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this week now he's saying that if he it would only happen if he imposes a twenty five percent tariff a mexican auto imports and which he would only do if mexico does not step up its efforts to keep central americans from approaching this border so there are so many qualifiers and if that honestly it just leaves people scratching their head what the president's true intentions are one working theory why he is introducing this uncertainty is that this may just be a political tool the presidential elections are one year away seeming tough by tough tough talk criticizing mexico saying the whole owes this border is red meat to his base so this may serve a political purpose he even said this morning that mexico apprehended one thousand four hundred central americans yesterday and it's our efforts at it's response to his right to close the border while mexicans own foreign minister said afterwards
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he has no idea where that figure came from but listen in reality heidi how big how low does this flow of across the border. now that is real because last month in march more than one hundred thousand people from mostly from central america attempted to cross into the u.s. and were apprehended by u.s. border patrol and it's notable not only in that number which is an eleven year high but also the make up of these refugees and asylum seekers they are by the large part families women and children or even children traveling alone and when you ask them why they've left their home countries they cite reasons like poverty game violence horrific violence towards women and when i asked them point blank why do you come when the u.s. president hasn't made it very clear that you're not welcome here in his opinion and they respond that it doesn't really matter what they'll confront once they arrive
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at this border or how difficult it is to get through mexico because simply those conditions in their home country are pushing them out trump has only responded to that by claiming that that is in his words a big fat con job he has ordered four hundred fifty million dollars of u.s. aid to central america cancelled and this morning he stepped up the rhetoric even further saying that the u.s. asylum system doesn't work and that it should be getting rid of and that these asylum seekers should not be afforded due process once they arrive here which is completely contrary to international law felicity or i hunted you castro with. thank you the u.s. has revoked the entry visa of a prosecutor for the international criminal court has been investigating possible war crimes committed by american forces in afghanistan last month the u.s. secretary of state polperro threatened to withdraw visas to i.c.c. still involved in the inquiry.
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one hundred days and at least eight hundred thousand people killed twenty five years since the rwanda genocide the scars remain on the healing continues this weekend to commemorate one of the worst periods in its history. visits the area of some of the worst atrocities took place find some of. his reports to stepping. prepares to commemorate twenty five years since the start of his genocide the same images of horror dominate his. questions remain who shot down the aircraft killing rwanda's president from the hutu majority an act that started one hundred days of killing on a scale rarely seen in modern history around three quarters of the minority tutsi
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population were murdered. while the international community didn't respond still exist how many lives could have been saved why didn't the united nations at least take early action against a highly organized campaign of hatred and incitement by the hutus. underground in one of the mass graves there is only one answer and that's to forgive despite her extraordinary loss she shows some of the seemingly endless lines of coffins containing the dried bones of whole families. in this casket are the remains of her mother father two sisters and three brothers i vividly remember the death of my parents and my siblings i hear their voices in my heart i'm sad but i forgive their killer in a separate attack alice was hacked all over her body one of her hands was amputated
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with a machete she nearly died yet she forgives the man who did this as well above her you see the tops of these modern day two they contain the remains of more than forty five thousand people killed in this district alone a family died in the church just here this is one of so many churches where people tried in vain to seek sanctuary but moment when files and people died here mostly women and children their clothes now spread out over the pews above shrapnel rained down upon this place and below here now you see coffins filled with the remains bones of victims twenty five years on what happened here still defies understanding. as alice continues with her visits here the man who attacked her is now free living with his family he served eight years in jail and completed
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community service aside from killing in a group he's murdered twenty one people in cold blood would you say you feel nucky that you didn't get a life sentence or you did even you for serving a life sentence to be ok because it will be punishment for my crimes being alive is not lucky i kneel in front of those i have had and beg forgiveness this form of reconciliation is one of many initiatives aimed at trying to ensure peace can be permanent but not everyone is as forgiving as alice andrew simmons al-jazeera in rwanda. well the french president emmanuel macro has appointed a panel of experts to investigate france's role in the rwandan genocide twenty five years ago historians on research as well look at the period from one thousand nine hundred ninety to ninety four the findings will be used in french teaching materials about the genocide paris had denied complicity in the massacre which has
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strained its relations with rwanda. european council president all too says the e.u. is considering proposing a flexible twelve month delay to practice it much longer than the prime minister has asked for some reason may want a deadline of june the thirtieth but any extension must be agreed by all leaders at a summit in brussels next week and behaviors reports with just a week to go until britain's already delayed departure date from the e.u. the u.k.'s prime minister unable to get a deal through parliament wants to delay brics it yet again writing to the e.u. calling for an extension until the end of june none of our economy is growing fast enough to guarantee that a no deal scenario wouldn't push us into recession so it's a bad outcome all round and i think the french understand i think germs understand that and you know what we are looking for. because to avoid a long extension the e.u. itself wants to avoid the u.k.
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crashing out with no deal it also doesn't want a series of short delay so the idea of a longer extension possibly a year is being talked about in brussels but that would have to be approved by all the e.u. leaders at an emergency summit next week so the question will be has the prime minister got sufficient detail and sufficient. can you give your opinion is sufficient assurances that june thirtieth is a sensible day and has a plan of how to get there and will the e.u. think actually would be into play for domestic issues that the european parliament elections is that a sensible date for them and that will be the big question over the next week or so . and an extension could see britain having to field candidates but the parliamentary elections in may which will be unpalatable to many of those who voted to leave. to reason may is still trying to win support from both sides of the political divide she's still coming under attack from some within her own party and
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talks with the opposition are challenging and we all want to break this deadlock we want the talks to continue but compromise does require change writing on twitter the arch euro skeptic conservative m.p. jacob wrote if a long extension leaves us stuck in the e.u. we should be as difficult as possible we could veto any increase in the budget obstruct the putative e.u. army and block missed him across integration is schemes and her letter to donald tusk to raise a may makes it clear that the current political impasse simply can't go on the public space in politics is being damaged and she acknowledges the ears desire to move on from brick sets britain could soon find itself out of the e.u. decision making process there's still no clear path as to when that will actually happen emma haywood al-jazeera westminster. now there is
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a digital revolution underway in south korea as it rolls out the world's fastest internet service south koreans can now tap into five g. coverage nationwide it won't just change how they watch a viral videos but also affect robotics and driverless cars but bright explains from. events like this one have ensured there is maximum hype for the launch of five g. and south korea becomes the first country to offer nationwide coverage as one of the most digitally connected places on the planet it would be strange if south korea was not first with five g. this event by one of the service providers is in conjunction with samsung that at the moment is the only hand phone maker in south korea that offers a device fast enough to handle the incredible speeds of five g. a but they won't be the only ones for along all the other tablet and handphone makers playing catch up given the anticipated demand for five g.
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and it's not hard to see why the super fast internet speeds many times faster than current four g. speeds will offer all kinds of possibilities in terms of streaming content a virtual reality or mentored reality the gaming applications and so on for consumers here in south korea for consumers anywhere in the world what is there not to like watching younger than i am expecting to use a high quality videos video phone calls in virtual reality and so much faster speed . far with south korea providing the quickest telecom service in the world i have high expectations and i watch a lot of videos so i think it's going to be good for netflix and you tube there are of course the wider implications of five g. force a society and the way we live our lives the ability to move vast amounts of data with almost no delay is reckoned will have a transformative impact on things like robotics driverless vehicles even drones to
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deliver things. as for korea companies there are of course security concerns about having so much more data and access points to it you just have to look at the controversy over chinese manufacturing while away and concerns about it controlling infrastructure for five g. in places like the u.s. and elsewhere but certainly here in south korea the government believes that five g.'s essential for the country to keep its economic competitiveness and as far as the consumers are concerned they believe they need five g. and they need it now remember you can always find much more by going to our website al-jazeera dot com. and reminder the top stories on al-jazeera fierce battles have taken place near libya's capital tripoli forces loyal to the warlord khalifa haftar continue their lightning advance towards the city the u.n. has already tried to intervene with secretary-general antonio the terrorist making
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a diplomatic dash to rival centers of power in first went to tripoli which is home to libya's u.n. backed government and then to benghazi which is half has eastern stronghold but caetera says he remains deeply concerned about the military escalation. at the going to certain and the heavy heart. i still hope to be possible to avoid a bloody call from station in and around tripoli. and the united nations remain. available to facilitate any political solution able cuny fight the levy and institutions. and whatever happens. the u.s. will remain could lead to and i will remain committed to support of the libyan people false crowds of protesters have flooded the streets of algeria capital in
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the first mass demonstrations since the president announced he was resigning after lizzie's beautifully gets to parch after nearly twenty years in power that is celebrations across the country the protesters say they'll keep up the pressure to push out a corrupt elite media says the country's spy chief who is a close ally beautifully has now been sacked the african development bank has promised around one hundred million u.s. dollars to reconstruct parts of mozambique zimbabwe malawi devastated by psycho needed by the powerful storm first hit south east africa on march the fourteenth unleashing catastrophic flooding and killing hundreds of people and israeli forces of injured eighty three palestinian protesters in the latest friday demonstrations at the gaza israel border the process which are known as the great march of return began more than a year ago the protest as a demanding an end to the blockade and the right to return to lands occupied by israel the israeli military says more than ten thousand people took part those are
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the headlines up front is coming next by. a month from today we'll debate britain's brix in chaos has the whole thing been a huge mistake but first the u.s. congress has voted to end the u.s. involvement in the yemen war but will president donald trump allow the conflict to keep going with a veto earlier i spoke to yemen's nobel peace prize laureate tawakul karman who has a message for trump she's this week's headliner.
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talk of common thank you for joining me on up front when you won the nobel peace prize in twenty eleven you were the first arab woman to do so at the age of thirty two you are one of the youngest ever nobel peace laureates what is it like today to be a nobel peace laureate from a country yemen that has been torn apart by war and conflict for so many years. it's really hard it's really hard for me as an open peace laureate and also as a one of the leaders of the peaceful revolution it's very really hard for all the yemeni people who sacrificed peacefully and made that great revolution peacefully and entered through the transitional period peacefully. but we are not the one who caused this war we are not the one who caused this kill us this cause and war is waged by the come to rebuild usually led by saudi and in madrid and iran who in
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your view is at the top of the list in terms of taking responsibility for the catastrophe in yemen we can blame all of them but there were the most important party or part of this conflict i believe in the saudi and you because they are behind the militia who you can't imagine that the one who encouraged to think militias before the iranian interfere or announcing that they are supporting both aids is the saudi and emir that they thought that they can encourage foresee to make the coup against the transitional authority so they will be able to destroy yemen and also to stop the on going movement to democracy so they made revenge against the in many people who made their peaceful revolution against against that ally against the law the. former president
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the same thing that they did in egypt in libya so they are the one who behind the fire that finally said and also now they are the one who destroying yemen and who doesn't want to yemen to succeed they want yemen to stay as a filler canty so they will be able to continue that it could be a she and he to any man so what i interviewed you last on the show four years ago you were quite reluctant to criticize. saudi arabia back then with regard to yemen at the time you were saying to journalists quote the majority of yemenis you said support the saudi led military intervention since then you seem to have done this kind of u. turn now you're saying saudi arabia is to blame for the humanitarian suffering now you're calling saudi arabia and the u.a.e. occupiers you call them stupid fools recently in an address what made you change your mind and saudi arabia look. it was really the most of the yemeni doesn't want to criticize the saudi interfered in the beginning in the beginning of the their
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interfering because they announced that they came to face the militia or coup and they are pretending to returned. to the country so that was these seen at that time i didn't publicly support saudi intervention in yemen absolutely i don't want and i want because their policy in yemen that one in yemen should be weak that is the only way that saudi will the strong so i didn't you know. i didn't support them but also i was calling the international community to be responsible and to fulfill and they're supporting the man and also implementing the security council resolutions because what happened in yemen also not just the result of saudi him or it's and here and it's also because of the complicity from the international community they sponsored the dizzy initiative but they left also
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hoses to interest in yemen and they didn't make anything and also until now they support saudi and the minute selling them the bones and killing a man is while they don't you know do any really great any real force to stop this war your critics or the world to walk a communist criticizing saudi arabia now but they point to leaked cables that show that you said to the saudis you're a natural ally as you were calling for saudi support in private that's what your critics yes and i still call for that they are more our neighbor they should be the allies of yemen is and they should. change their policy and their bed view to yemen is so yemen is the national security of all the region and all the all the world so any collapsing any destroying yemen yemen if it will be real. feel countries that want to love the region and security and also the international security so yes i'm calling saudi i'm going to oman i'm going to all the religious i'm calling us and
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calling so that day should be with the m.n. so would you then as a minute as an end if you could send a message directly to mohamed bin solemn on the saudi crown prince who has been a driving force behind this war from the very beginning as crown prince as defense minister what would you say to him. i will tell him that he is a criminal i want to ask anything from edmonson and because he is destroying my country mohammed man said man and mohammad instead they should be trialed in the international criminal court because they are committed to the war crimes in my country last year you referred to saudi arabia in the u.a.e. as having a very ugly occupation and ugly influence in yemen shortly afterwards you were suspended from the yemeni political party that you were part of that's been allied with president hadi at one point that is often described in the west as a muslim brotherhood party is that the reason you were suspended from the party because you criticized the saudis are you still
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a member of that pot yes they tried to suspend me and to freeze my membership but i told them who freeze room because they are there this issue is being kidnapped by the saudis i want brigitte it also is kidnapped by the south so all political decision in yemen it even if it's with the police then fill in the level all with the parties is could not buy sell and the most important thing for us as a yemeni if we want to make the peace in yemen we should flee our political decision given western governments like the u.k. and the us are supporting and arming the saudi led coalition in yemen are they also quote stupid fools who are among those responsible for the suffering in your country of course saudi and the u.a.e. stupid fools what about their western backers they are so still bitter as well in the way either they are see what follows or they are conspiring with them so they
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are participating in killing yemenis the u.s. and the u.k. of course u.s. and u.k. participating in killing humans or any other countries the third thing. is to saudi and emirates or also any other country that supports iran to this. send or export would best to the host is so and they really u.s. and u.k. should stop their selling weapons to saudi and immunity for many many reasons for the fairer sex for fairness is because of the humanitarian issue here many people being killed yemen now under the fair mean because of this and the world and also because of the security of the world in the if they are really concerned about the secure the peace and the security around the world they should stop this war because this war will can love sing yemen in this very important geographic.
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political place and that it will increase rebellions terrorists burger t. refuses it cetera et cetera so here is the unknown i think that they don't think in a good way not just in yemen by the way they are allying with the dictators in arab spring countries and that is the big mistake that the west is committed so allying with the dictators that means that you are all you are destroying the safety and the security around the world you you say they should stop the war bruce reidel a former cia officer a middle east expert he said if the united states of america and the united kingdom tonight told king solomon of saudi arabia that this war has to end it would end tomorrow do you agree with him of course i agree with this but unfortunately most of the countries special u.s. and u.k. they put the interest above the their values there but also with that they are wrong because they had should know that they should make allies the people of the
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dictators the dictators will go today tomorrow after one month when years two years but the people who are dreaming for freedom i think through fighting for democracy they should they should they are should they should be the one who made the lies with them so donald trump president your state soon. may have a bill a law on his desk but he can either sign or veto which would and u.s. involvement in the yemen war a group of bipartisan senators democrats republicans have helped pass a bill through the house in the senate to stop u.s. involvement some say he might veto that bill because he's so close to saudi arabia what's your message to donald trump my methods do business center you are looking for accomplishment in your presidency period this company will be really if you stop the war in yemen and that is very important and you are the one who can do it so i'm calling him to stop the war in yemen he can do it more
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than making the nuclear agreement with north korea but the trumpet ministration itself isn't so keen on stopping the war u.s. secretary of state mike pompei o has said that the hoofy group in yemen the militia and iran are to blame for yemen's humanitarian crisis he doesn't blame the saudis are you worried that your country is stuck in the middle of some clash between america saudi on one side iran on the other yemen under the books this is exactly and also saudi emir it's iran and their super powers behind them but also i don't want to exclude who he is because these are really committed to big crimes in yemen they are the same they are committed to the war career crimes in yemen they were used they accepted to be the truth even though they've beaten the fears of saudi and emitting they're getting all then to do that iran but if both sides are committing war crimes which is what human rights groups say can
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there ever be justice for ordinary yemenis because at some stage one of those two sides is going to be in charge of your country so i'm calling them. who is from one side and also islam from one side if we really want as yemeni to make solution by ourselves without interference from outside countries who things and islam should sit together and decide and to. reconciliate and make something another step for peace in yemen and just before we finish you were a close friend of the murdered saudi journalist democracy do you hold the crown prince of saudi arabia mohamed bin salma responsible for his killing of course mohammad minson man is responsible of killing a german hotshot which is the highest power in the saudi and this kind of crimes will not happen without his permission and also i'm not just telling talking about general how she has eight. hundred or so and also committed to another crime
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to our colleagues women activists inside the brazilian of saudi arabia and want to make one hundred missile man continue his ruling on. killing journalists torturing women and other activists and religious people inside while because the i've said all because of the. complicity of the world because of the dark oil money he buy very the silence from the so do you think in the international community western governments will ever be able to get justice for jamal given a lot of them are in bed with they should they should if they did they had to make justice for them and that the world send a very bad message to the dictators in our region and all our around the world but special in our region to continue their brutality look with all this darkness you
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should that we are facing a cultural revolution and that is part of the in the path of people for freed. and for democracy we are suffering we suffered from dictates of brutality of dictators and we are no paying the price of freedom so. all this counted of nations cantor is . still there conspiracy went away and now what you see now in syria is today it's the victory of people the elite of spring and that we will not to give up our dreams our second fight and our will to achieve our freedom and democracy to a common thanks for joining me on the front thank you. three times british prime minister tourism has asked the u.k. parliament to approve a deal to get britain out of the european union three times m.p.'s from all sides rejected up she even promised to resign if they backed up but they still didn't
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despite an extension britain is still on course to crash out of the european union with no deal then the three years on from a controversial referendum the country is bitterly divided and the economy has already taken a massive hit is it any wonder that the brics it has been called the u.k.'s biggest political crisis since world war two and is it time to recognise the brics referendum as a catastrophic mistake joining me to debate this of a wall a an anti bracks a campaigner and co-founder of the pro e.u. group our future our choice unclear fox director of the think tank academy of ideas who's called a fantastic mover for popular sovereignty thank you both for joining me in the arena. clearly we start with you here given all the chaos that we're seeing inside of the u.k. parliament given the chaos we're seeing on the streets outside of the u.k. parliament given the way in which britain has become a little bit of a loving stock in the eyes of many around the world is it time to say the brics referendum in the whole process that ensued was
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a mistake. the whole process has proven to be somewhat traumatic but i can't emphasize enough to view is how exciting and brilliant it was that the vote happened in the first place and i think the chaos that ensued is because of a major democratic crisis which is that the elected parliamentarians in the house of commons disagree with the electorate and so consequently you've got this huge clash of a majority of people who voted to leave the european union were politicised mobilised and took the opportunity to strike a blow for sovereignty and the chaos happened since is because the establishment is don't see lately every think it can a democratic mandate for me it's not spoilt it's not the fault of bricks that it's the fault of elected representatives going against the people well the problem
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we've got is the reason why it's such a masses we took a pretty two percent rejection of our relationship with the e.u. as if that was somehow a fifty percent approval for whatever alternate relationship they decided to negotiate after that wild bill in two thousand and sixteen was we've always leave the e.u. but i expect if we find a blank check as to what r.p. to relationship with the e.u. is going to be really thousand different things right now we've negotiated a deal but most direct voters do not like to see how the thirty million people who would progress it but they don't like the break that deal that we've just negotiated that because it was completely and find two thousand sixteen and that's why parliament is stuck see the thing is is that the. confusion that families refer to which is to say we didn't know what kind of relationship we'd have with the the idea was that we would sever a formal relationship with the by leaving and subsequent to that there's been a huge amount of machinations and all sorts of technocratic ploys to kind of ensure
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that that relationship would carry on for big business for all the different interested parties in the u.k. he actually didn't approve of the vote so here we are in a situation where people voted to several or sever all ties with the european union is simply not true in two thousand and sixteen yes so many of the people on the remains out of the argument said that we believe in the single market because we knew that's the basis of a trade policy of the e.u. and the regulations of the e.u. but the people on the levy side they're the ones who said we'd keep all the same actors that we currently have to our european market and the right now saying that we'd be losing them if the complete bait and switch it's a car i mean. no just no phemie you see the thing is that that doesn't appear to be any switch majors switch in terms of how voters voted i mean you're making it sound as though everybody he voted to leave the e.u. is having huge regrets but in fact all its time does is that the people who want to
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stay have kept up this relentless absolutely hysterical care plenty you know just as are the people have changed their minds are you gov poll done at the beginning of this lead which shows that only forty eight percent of people forty eight percent of people say it was wrong to leave forty one percent say it was right to leave people have changed their minds been three years they've seen the playoffs but they want to change their mind you will let them if we counted based on polls at the moment the majority of people in polls are saying that we should leave without a deal i mean you know polling is a mystery are not it's got a country to run before the referendum it's if you don't trust polls how about another referendum no because understand i think that maybe the viewers will get this you know if your child in. all seriousness that this is a really important once in a lifetime constitutional vote that the outsourcing of that decision has been given by parliament to the public people mobilized in their millions the largest turnout ever in british history if that happens and then what happens is you're basically
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disenfranchised by the way and along the line treat it is that and talked about as chief stupid people who were not informed described in demeaned as racists when those things are thrown at you you're less old saying what is right does not know to say there been insults on both sides miscellany right now let me let me also me the question let me let me i'm trying to explain what it feels like to stood let me put that to me then so you've said another referendum is the only way to reverse this without civil unrest clare's making the point that that's pretty insulting to be who already voted seventeen million people were told it would be a once in a lifetime vote it would be the final say and then you come along and say well let's do it all again where does it end we just be endlessly running referendums for the next few years i do not want under any circumstances to rerun the referendum in two thousand and sixteen that was a terrible referendum and the reason why it was a terrible random was precisely because it had not been defined we were not told
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exactly what religion you were going to have we have a deal now which takes us out of the european union but most people who vote for break that do not like why and what i was saying when the facts are change i change my mind what do you do. and i don't think the facts of change i think what something is changed mind you democracy is now in jeopardy but on this particular deal for me and i will agree on how bad it is and most people who voted leave thought that believed that there would be negotiations in good faith now people don't think that's what of what would you want to see happen just for the sake of our viewers around the world who are struggling to follow no deal deal indicative vote customs union. backstops two point zero what do you want to see happen at this stage although i wouldn't have said this before but at this stage because as we've been told by the m.p.'s totally all the way through that it's you know no deal is better than a bad deal this is a bad deal i would like no deal one of the things we've learned from this whole
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process is that many leave voters did not do this for economic gain they actually did it on a point of principle about self-determination freedom you know there are more important and they have agreed that until the animate i mean however. there was a sort of sense gratian lots of it was a major factor in their voting decision that is a fact rather not anti immigration all concerned about immigration is not anti immigrant and confusing those two things would be misleading ok well i don't grudge these areas are the main politicians late of the day there is a not an outbreak of racism in this i didn't say that you said that so there is not what is your solution right now if you could wave a magic wand what is your solution to this undeniable crisis in the u.k. right now classes walk away i'll be mine i'd say that right now the breakfast fundamentally changed the to the two things people wanted more control over their country and to be better off we have no deal which would turn us into the only major economy in the world that doesn't have
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a trade with his closest neighbors or we have this deal which would mean we'd have a substantially and objective be less control over a country than even a members given that record does not match up at all with the promises that were made in two thousand and sixteen and has fundamentally changed lives only the most democratic and logical thing i mean is that people get to judge which one they prefer or whether or not they want to scrap the whole thing and remain in the european union that is the most democratic way forward because that negative i mean to say that people do not get to judge the outcome of that class response. ok it's a thing that is extraordinary and maybe people outside don't realize this is that the campaign is for a second referendum the people's vote to take it back to the people and all people who have come pain to remain within the u.k. within the e.u. so you know it is interesting that the only can paint her around uttering the people's vote of the people in return. are you seriously family please yourself so one of the co-founders of my organization our preacher our choice voted to leave it
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is because bret has been such a disaster but he is realize that we need to change to change direction drastically so one of the commanders of the taller order for the random for newer remote operated leak let me ask you this question you said a while ago but you were adamant that another referendum would be anti democratic how does that work how does how is only the twenty sixteen referendum the only example of democracy and not general elections not another referendum why is that one referendum the only democratic truth yet no it's a very important question because of the way the referendum was posed and remember the election did not call the referendum the politicians did they made it very clear that this was a definitive decision and that they were actually asking voters to make that decision they told us that this would have to happen but what you can't say which you can't overturn a referendum result before it's actually been enacted because if eating that you destroy trust in politicians the other thing is by the way both mainstream political parties are practically civil war over this that splits in the mountain
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this is as you well know an international phenomena which is that there is a growing gap and kind of running out of steam at the technocratic elites all over the place many instances this is one of the many rebellions against the establishment well firstly yes i'd agree that the politicians are in absolute disarray it's been chaos for the past two years but the idea that this is the people versus the. which meant just put yourself in that in the mind of somebody who isn't in that problem right now they know that fifty percent of the population but it's leave the e.u. largely on the basis of having more control over their country and being better off they just negotiated a deal that means we give up our say in brussels we no longer have representation in the e.u. it would still bomb by those rules anyway meaning we end up with less control and then even go bers when the alternative being no deal which as i said was out of the mix thought out all that we have the right amount of government resources that is gone this breaks it thing and i will have to spend the next five years ago she had me at all trade deal that would mean all those issues those things that people were
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really really upset about in two thousand sixteen they will simply not be addressed and that is the tragedy of brags that they only come together if we focus on the things that we all care about family all all they class folks will have to learn to have if we can agree on that thank you both for joining me in the arena that's our show up front and we've got mixed. i'm. about you know. some of the i like. a city defined by military occupation there's never been an arab state here at the
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capital of jerusalem everyone is welcome but the depôt structure that mean things because only project that's what we defuse it was one of the founders of the settlement with this and the story of jerusalem through the eyes of its own people segregation occupation discrimination injustice this is apartheid in the twenty first century jerusalem a rock and a hard place on al-jazeera. hello i'm maryam namazie in london just a quick look at the headlines now fierce battles have taken place near libya's capital tripoli as forces loyal to the wall of her have to continue their advance towards the city the u.n. has tried to intervene with secretary-general and trying to get terrorists making a diplomatic dash to rival centers of power first went to tripoli which is home to libya's u.n.
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backed government and then to benghazi which is half dozen eastern stronghold he says he remains deeply concerned about the military escalation mohammed reports. the prime minister of libya's a un backed government fires out saraj meeting troops thirty kilometers west of tripoli i was earlier fighters loyal to warlord khalifa haftar attempted to take the city but eventually surrendered dozens of their vehicles was seized a setback for halftime who has ordered his troops to in his words liberate tripoli it's raising fears of a major confrontation with the un recognized government i know you are. our courageous heroes the time has come to advance towards tripoli go forward confidently those who want peace will not be harmed as we don't come as conquerors only use force on those that fire on you those that stay home are safe and those that raise the white flags will also be safe the united nations secretary general
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and tunica terrorism right in tripoli this week he flew to eastern libya to meet after in an attempt to ease tensions he also visit to brooke home to libya's parallel government which is backed by have to are i still hope it will be possible . station and tripoli. and united nations remain. available to facilitate any political solution able to uni fight the libyan institutions. libyan officials say the capital remains calm for now no doubt the very well miss the situation is normal and there is no form of fighting prime minister pfizer raj has given orders to their defense to stand up to any possible threat to the lives of civilians libya has been in turmoil since the nato backed removal of its longtime ruler mamak adelphi in twenty eleven and since twenty fourteen it's had two competing
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governments have to dominate the east of libya leading a loose alliance of armed factions he's repeatedly expressed his intention to march on tripoli beyond. his ambitions some analysts say after this goal is a louder voice diplomatic efforts to secure a peaceful future this and now but at this moment is just because the national conference is coming in ten days or some time i don't think you're going to be seeing any pitched battles and he may be working the media narrative in a way that makes an appealing to some groups but then there's going to be a backlash against others who don't want to see him in tripoli would have to move toward tripoli a negotiated settlement to the crisis looks more difficult but the u.n. and world leaders will apply more pressure to try to pull libya back from the brink one hundred al-jazeera in all the headlines this hour vast crowds of protesters have flooded the streets of algeria's capital in the first mass demonstrations since the president announced he was resigning abdelaziz bouteflika departure after
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nearly twenty years in power led to celebrations across the country where the protesters are saying they will keep up the pressure to push out a corrupt elite algerian media say the country's spy chief alive beautifully has now been sacked the african development bank has promised around one hundred million u.s. dollars to reconstruct parts of mozambique zimbabwe and malawi all devastated by sight clonie die the powerful storm first hit southeast africa on march fourteenth unleashing catastrophic flooding and killing hundreds of people. and israeli forces of injured eighty three palestinian protesters in the latest friday protest at the gaza israel border the demonstrations known as the great march a return began more than a year ago they demand an end to the blockade and the right for palestinians to return to lands occupied by israel the israeli military says more than ten thousand people took part. it will update with al top stories this hour i'll have more news
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for you and twenty five minutes time so with us. environment doesn't know any boundaries you know dust and pollution from china settles in the us you know nuclear radiation from chernobyl went over iceland. what goes up into the environment goes around the world and ultimately this then layer of topsoil. maybe six inches of soil around this hard planet spinning in space represents the dust of our ancestors all of human history and all the other
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creatures are in that soil and to contaminate that and the water supply in the air is an forgivable sin it's something that will pay for as a species. in generations to come this senate agriculture committee is considering a bill that would ban the export of dangerous pesticides farm workers from abroad told lawmakers yesterday of devastating health problems from exposure to chemicals made by american companies close to reagan former morio zimbardo used to grow bananas for export to america until he believes the pesticides sprayed on the plants made him and eight hundred other workers and. he told a senate committee there were times when he virtually bathed in a chemical that u.s. companies and officials knew would render men impotent if a chemical is banned or unlicensed as too dangerous to use in america should it be morally wrong to export it somewhere else aside from morality many experts believe
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americans are eating these pesticides can produce grown over see the so-called circle of poison. we know the circle of poison really started for me years before when i was in the peace corps in afghanistan and my wife and i were in this little remote northern town called has absolutely nothing to do there and. we were bored and one day we'd. picked up some food from the american embassy when we were in kabul and she was reading the ingredients on the kool-aid packet that she'd gotten which shows there wasn't a lot to read in telecom and she said holy cow cycle mates in the us i said wait they're banned about the us government how could a banned substance end up in a poor country like afghanistan and so that started the investigation where i started to realize that systematically anything that was banned or heavily regulated or restricted to iran registered in the us was being allowed by the us
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government and in fact encouraged to be sent overseas almost as compensation for the companies for losing the us market. pesticides pushed on the grounds that it's a very modern way to do. i remember. years ago reading a book that india is on to develop because it doesn't use pesticides and we've made poisons the measure of progress and catalytic this it's called god some countries it is so beautiful it has some of the best health indicators in the world one hundred percent literacy. and you go.
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you know so. she actually got us into the world of. the issue of perception constable is a very unique case the first response in the past in back to her series on animals . we have the disappearing of the dogs doing the chickens dying snakes dying in the in the in the planet's media. initially the people were really happy because the snake said they in the jackals of dying so the nobody will know your color will come and catch you if you can so you're happy you can walk in the plantation freely because all the snakes are gone but in a year's time they found that the chicken is also disappearing. to your spine bank
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they found that they can no longer keep dogs because the dogs again. suddenly you have the backs of this of your own human beings and when the impact became visible on human beings like. the one we call the brain in the man of the soul and. people born without limbs seven cases people born with the unit and then there are things outside the body you name the human disorder which can happen to a body you see in class that will. then be active and then and then to understand the issue of. this is that anderson. the local community and generally they were not to turn off in fact it's a place that can pass the left and there is no source of other source of pollution in that area because except for standing it so even also not initial every disgust of a that it's effects on the level and then slowly even the minister. and collecting the information they said only relates that now these things can happen
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. probably the signs and symptoms was in really early ninety's like ninety one ninety two ninety three that's going to be here by someone it was a. child born with something but we see a lot of new ones born with you know docs who can fix the child is not exposed but the patterns are exposed and the children are born with the former that is happening today. in the cashew plantations of india doctor and his mobile medical team visit survivors of one of the worst pesticide disasters in the world. the. transition here or. here also is sort of spread by the end of. the.
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move. and he didn't move. when i look i've you know saturday. i want you all night to come to an. annual. speed and here i. am going. every day we'd like to live and then the young one. afterbirth. that's. not having no. development many storms like. that some. all our lives so all the guns and dog and bigness does he's having sort of a bus. all.
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