tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera April 8, 2019 3:00am-3:34am +03
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indian administered kashmir for part of the week. find out why it was a special hong kong sevens tournaments first c.g. that's coming up a little later in sport with peter. the first syrian government forces have killed at least fourteen people in the northwest that happened in libya countryside the town assad was the hardest hit the last rebel held territory in syria it's supposed to be free of fighting under a deal negotiated by russia and turkey. an explosion following an airstrike by saudi u.a.e. coalition forces as at a school in yemen killing at least eleven people thirty nine others were wounded in the attack on a residential area east of the capital sana'a witnesses described scenes of panic. the so. we suddenly had a jet fighter while we were at school we didn't have the first strike we remain
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calm then the second strike and then the third which was the strongest of all the building was damaged and we were injured by broken glass as the fourth strike came and we panicked and ran. everyone was easter some were crying and shouting in panic the situation was horrible is. two thousand one hundred some girl students were killed and others wounded and are in hospital as a result of the missile strike the school building was destroyed too so the state media is reporting that a security checkpoint has been attacked with explosives in. it's about five hundred kilometers northeast of the capital riyadh it's understood two people were killed and two others have been arrested. thousands of her wanderings are attending a vigil at the national stadium into gali they're marking twenty five years since
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the one nine hundred ninety four genocide when eight hundred thousand people were killed some of the tutsis targeted in the killings ran into the stadium when they came under attack by food to militia rwandans are observing one hundred days of mourning that's how long the killings carried on president paul hogan they praise rwandans for reuniting after the massacre. the. group for old wound as a story is profound hope. no community. is beyond repair. and the dignity of the people is never forty extinguished well the prime minister of belgium rwanda's former colonial rulers said his country is willing to confront the past so as you see it to see this genocide represents the failure of the international community which
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couldn't war which couldn't prevent which couldn't stop this crime against humanity i stand before you in the name of a country that also wants to take responsibility for its part in history you oppose it's seen some of the worst coast cities known to man and then you were just as in africa this time come every race the doc is of course you know what is. it just to do to remember the police are here to do it is oh i'm over it and because it's good in perth and or simmons has more from can golly. paul kagame is positive tone in his message to rwandans was followed up with this he said every day we learn to forgive and not forget forgiveness being a key part of these commemorations he also referred to the population in that it
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sixty percent of the rwanda population was born after the genocide so there is opposed genocide generation and much effort being made to address so many of the problems in integration trying to integrate so many killers and rapists amongst the population now the justice system could just get such a courts that actually went through nearly two million cases and programs such as integrating the attackers and the victims in. similar locations as others in terms of communities together trying to get all this is a colossal act is not just an act of remembrance right now it's a real aside from a healing process it's a look to the future and as the president said a real form of hope.
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britain's prime minister has addressed the nation explaining why she's entered into across party talks to agree on a way to leave the european union. story hi mary. hi there during yes that's right in that video statement that tourism a stress that there were areas on which she and the opposition labor party could agree or a deal to exit the e.u. has been rejected by parliament three times now she says that she has to compromise with the opposition in order to find a way for it when you think about it people didn't vote on party lines when it came to the brics it referendum and you know i think often that members of the public want to see their politicians working together more often now there's lots of things on which i disagree with the labor party on policy issues but on bracks it i think there are some things we agree on ending free movement ensuring we leave with
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a good deal protecting jobs protecting security and so we're talking can we find a way through this that ensures that we can get a good deal and a deal agreed through parliament it will mean compromise on both sides. but i believe that delivering bricks it is the most important thing for us or. has been following this story and joins me in the studio now sanya prime minister treason may as long face criticism for intransigence for not consulting members of parliament how important is it that the government is now talking to the opposition labor party well it's drawing a lot of criticism from her own quarters she faced fierce wrath of criticism from certainly the more hard line bricks it is within the party who who have six signal this to be almost like a treacherous move on her part but the numbers really speak for themselves and the fact is she has not managed to get her deal through just with the numbers from her own deeply fractured party this is all very split very tribal not just within the
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conservative party but in the labor party as well and with this she is hoping that she's trying to get some kind of cross party consensus with which she can then go to the when she meets the next week and say look i'm just this close to getting the deal passed through please grant me a little bit more time and then i can get this passed and that is the key this week isn't it because she will travel to brussels on wednesday and she will ask for an extension but it's not clear what what the europeans will be willing to agree to no i mean don't forget also of course that throughout this whole process the twenty seven nations have really spoke with one singular voice and there's been a sort of slight rupture at this whole idea there are those who are sort of trying to stay as patient with this is possible and saying ok let's just grant this deal but then you've had are the more shall we say harsh of course they've moved sample france is the president who's who's actually commenting on how the is running out
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of patience on this and perhaps also the other threats that are coming that you know the european union can actually withstand no deal bricks at all of these are designed to apply as much pressure as possible and of course that is something that perhaps might have. have a little bit of influence on british parliamentarians because time is not on mess side pressure is really bearing down and there is only a matter of days if that be the u.k. could could crash out if it takes that path or it could try and cross through what will be mrs may's deal if that is what eventually both sides of the house both the labor and conservative m.p.'s manage to pass through another busy possibly dramatically lying ahead thank you on a gago on every outfit was among the stories of following here in europe and migrants in greece have started to leave the country's border with north and north macedonia after a false report raised hopes they'd be able to cross it hundreds of them set up camp
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as a crossing point after the room this thread is led to clashes with police have blocked the migrants and refugees from leaving the country to gas was fired after some of the migrants threw stones and bottles are also increased the government is trying to offer an education to young refugees on the asian islands but getting children into school is proving difficult locals say already thin resources are being stretched too far from the island of some oss johnson reports. muddy is a fifteen year old afghan who dreams of becoming a civil engineer he missed a year of school while his family made its way from iran to greece something he can ill afford if he has to enter university now he has enrolled in a high school on summers but some local parents don't want refugees like interviewed mingling with their children one reason appears to be that refugees live in squalor four thousand of them packed in and around a camp meant for six hundred fifty naveed is lucky to live in
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a mobile home for most there is no proper sewage no electricity and no washing facilities we try to have the same life as we have the best but it's. this is and our situations don't we chance to do anything is again. and again is very easy we don't. do anything many refugees opt for informal education offered by private charities that also gives them a break from the difficulties of camp life formal education for refugees and asylum seekers is a recent development here or them on the skin it gets in a letter when a representative from the greek center for disease control came to talk to parents he said we're looking at a public health timebomb basically vaccinated they get a single shot for measles mumps and rubella that doesn't mean it's going moment requirements refugees who arrive on the edge and islands are kept here for much of
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their asylum process in case they have to be deported back to neighboring turkey so they've been seen by many as a temporary population when the government offered education to asylum seekers and twenty sixteen refugees living on the islands were left out but the asylum process is so slow they are now stuck here for years last september the government extended education to island refugees about thirty have been rolled so far here on some months but as many as a thousand are eligible that's equal to two thirds of the local greek school population many of the people of some most and other resurgent islands consider that an unfair burden on the school system some of the ceiling that some of us have shouldered all the refugee burden for europe's sake we've been left to our fate and people are worn out we don't have a problem with refugees we've got a problem with those who are responsible for the situation. greece and especially the islands of the eastern jian actors europe's buffer against irregular migration
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from turkey most seem resigned to that fate but here at the border they want to europe to do a better job of demonstrating its humanitarian values jumpstart ople us al jazeera somers. a british man whose girlfriend was killed by novacek poisoning says a meeting with russia's u.k. ambassador failed to provide any answers charlie rally was homeless when he and his girlfriend dawn sturgis came across a perfect bottle that british authorities believe was used by russian assassins to transport the poison to person a poison was used in the attempted murder of russian defectus sergei scriptural and his daughter. has now met moscow's ambassador to london but says he was just told russian propaganda the ambassador reportedly told a rally that if russia had been behind the attack nobody would have survived. and that the wife of the foreman isaan boss is flying to paris to appeal to the french government to help in her husband's case carlos ghosn was arrested for the
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fourth time on thursday in tokyo accused of trying to embezzle funds from the carmaker his wife as crimea rest is an attempt to muscle grown who is a french citizen or appeal comes off to go on himself called for the french government's help in a video statement. that's it from london for now let's get back to doing and out. thank you very much marion while israel heads to the polls on tuesday to elect a new government benjamin netanyahu has been fighting hard to maintain his hold on the prime minister's office up against a strong challenger and facing corruption charges he has gone on the attack against his opponents the legal system and the media very fast that has more from western. four years ago benjamin netanyahu pushed the raisman who can do booze in a facebook video on polling day he used fears of the palestinian israeli vote to mobilize his own core support. for that but in this campaign israel's prime
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minister has deployed race as an issue unapologetically and much earlier in the piece is most controversial move drawing criticism from moderates at home and jewish organizations in the u.s. has been to engineer a coalition of smaller right wing parties that includes the supremacist jewish power one of his candidates has been barred from standing for inciting racism against palestinians from all parties incitement racism against the palestinians in general and the palestinian minority in particular against the leadership of the pristina minority. clear statements that they are not part of the political the critic game. one of the him you know his lines of attack against his main rival blue and white party has been that they would need the support of palestinian israeli parties to block him from forming a coalition that was taken up by israeli model lawyer and t.v. presenter returned seller who used her instagram page to ask and what's the problem
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with the arabs calling on the government to tell people they lived in a country of all its citizens and all people are born equal israel's prime minister engaged telling his own six million strong social media following an important correction israel is not a country of all its citizens. adding israel is the nation state of the jewish nation and its alone israeli jews are concerned and in some cases with good reason about the attitudes to israel of the duly elected arab leadership and therefore he's tapping into something that you know has some that exists and has some basis i would say for lots of israelis but he's taking it into. very disharmonious directions netanyahu denies a few division insisting his likud party has served the interests of palestinian israelis benjamin netanyahu is throwing everything he can at this campaign as he battles to stay in office face down corruption charges and cement his legacy but his opponents say that legacy will be permanently tainted by the way he's chosen to
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fight this election are a force that al-jazeera westerners still ahead on the al-jazeera news out i'm currently in bangkok about indonesia to get that help children to grow up here faith and confidence future but one school is trying to change that and coming up in support of you to find out why football is really warming up in tanzania. one of the still plenty of flooding on the ground arrests in iran which i'm sure you're aware the system that brought the last trains on its way out taking a train to turkmenistan what cloud there is coming out afterwards shouldn't begin to think too significant you have about five days we think of largely dry weather before more significant rain is possibly on the way so the forecast the monday
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brings you showers for terror around significant ones that can cause for his central iran that has to cajun showers seem likely he created through northern parts of iraq and syria curling back to turkey south of that is quite warm dusty at times the gray indicates cloud rather than rain and that certainly there's who suddenly iraq produced in kuwait come tuesday which of course eventually probably crossed the border there are isolated showers is not continuous heavy rain. throughout the gulf peninsula and the gulf states this cloud indicates ad it feels like the increase in humidity temps is not that hard at thirty mark has been harder but the potential for thunderstorms increases come tuesday particularly in saudi arabia possibly near medina but not the seventy in mecca shouted disappeared in our thankfully from the lhari and from mozambique but occasional ones are still to be seen in the east and south africa.
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a city defined by military occupation has never been an arab state he with the capital of jerusalem everyone is welcome but this depôt structure that maintains the can only project does what we diffuse it was one of the founders of a 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. al-jazeera . where ever you are.
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hello again the top stories on the al-jazeera news our fighting has escalated in libya despite a call for a truce by the united nations which was largely ignored the forces allied to the u.n. back government have come under heavy fire from troops loyal to warlords. orderly to. push towards the top it's all to the. leaders in the demands of the protesters must be for thousands of anti-government protesters want the military to back their demands are forced out of power.
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thousands of. tending a vigil at the national stadium. there marking twenty five years since the one thousand nine hundred four genocide in which eight hundred thousand people were killed some of the tutsis targeted in the killings around to the stadium when they came under attack by hutu militia. well since the genocide rwanda has emerged as a model for economic development it has one of africa's strongest economies growing by more than seven percent every year since two thousand. the second easiest place to do business on the continent according to the world bank and it has more female politicians of parliament than anywhere else in the world the president. has been criticized for becoming increasingly authoritarian he won a third term in twenty seventeen with ninety eight percent of the votes human rights watch says laws to control hate speech have been used to silence criticism of the government so while sunday is mostly about honoring the many who were killed
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it's also a time to reflect on stories of survival including this man who was just a child when the killings began in one thousand nine hundred four. two four. inside of that survivor. i was in she gary came up when the genocide says that. the law is a member of my primary between one hundred people and one fifteen people the genocide was like ten years because one day you can you count like one month because every time they had a highway cam to kill twenty s. and you say today is my last day. i got. a chance because one of my neighbor. was also. a tool.
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muslim hides us. and. the other one had a pillow to survive the genocide i remember one of my uncle tell him that. he was good. oh uncle i don't like my father to give. sometimes. a gift and the great smile is in the new year and there we used to dance with you and to see we don't know really where your knees but his skill right in here where yeah by the young generation you don't think about the what or what india is wondering on with that because we don't have it's a nick now just to speak the language we have the same coverage or. we have to some for everything is a wonder you don't think about what to and to see sometimes i have my dreams by the
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genocide. they put it if because. i have to tell the people is to have a hope for their life because even your prayer and your family. members are day it is not the end of life. you have to work hard to think positively. to give everything. it's. turkey's ruling ak party says it will appeal to the country's top election off already demanding a full recount of votes cast in istanbul during last month's may or a race in a major upset president. party lost control of ankara and istanbul party claims the elections were tainted a recount is already underway in several districts. civilian vehicles have been barred from using the main highway in indian administered kashmir for two days every week until the end of may the government says it's to protect the movement of
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security forces and the aftermath of a suicide attack by killed forty troops in february patients to other reports. a heavy military presence and little else on this crucial highway. the only one connecting the kashmir valley in the himalayas to the indian plains authorities an indian administrate kashmir has begun in forcing a ban on civilian vehicles. each week on sunday and wednesday the civilian traffic will be closed on the highway and only the all me convoys will be able to pass but in case of an emergency medical problems or students going for school the magistrates on duty will issue pauses for their travels it has been more than seven weeks since a suicide car bomber killed forty indian paramilitary troops at pakistan based groups said it was behind the attack and it brought india and pakistan to the brink
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of war but the ban has left people in kashmir more fearful of an escalation of violence in the region. travelling on highways has become difficult to lift during an emergency but i couldn't reach my destination people a very scared. oh and as well as the fear there's also anger and shot criticism from the region's politicians or they are uncooperative and we came to the streets so that the orders revoked the orders illegal they want to facilitate the military convoys they should use trains or let them travel during the night so that people do not suffer. the ban is set to end on may thirty first but that likely went and the tension here india's month long general election stops on thursday prime minister narendra modi responded to the it's. hacking kashmir by launching air attacks targeting what he calls terrorist sites in pakistan poll suggests modi's popularity has increased in the wake of this action how many people
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out here on sunday pakistan's foreign minister said he had received reliable intelligence that's india would soon launch another attack and he's went against such action india has called the statement irresponsible this latest phase as a way to approach the neighbors close to an all out war but finding a lasting solution that works for both sides is likely to pose a bigger challenge patients chin wadda out there are happy mon jacob as director of the indo pack on flick monitor and a professor ajar harley without her university in new delhi he says the indian government is taking precautions against further attacks on the military with national elections coming up. and it is important to understand but even about forty four years that lifeline call many of the fishnet is leaving this double lives on even the fact that this meeting has not raided connectivity it has no time for facilities or you all are looking at basically this is not
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a good hiding i did it i understand why the government is doing it because in february we had made it that i said that if he did force that there should be. this you know he was the guy that was forty odd years to britain and so the government is taking precautions to make sure that the actions. you give me. for always be even back to east. do be very clear in the weeks to come in the days to go clearly goes wanting to access health care because it is easy to be in that in this state capital is either going to not be able to do that. those who want to do access education institutions. are going to not be able to do that and generally probably examining on tuesday or to for example the i report the thousand are we going to like to be concerned one thousand cuts degassing or on a daily basis all of them will be shut out on two days a week and remember this is
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a big heavy heavy militarized zone if it is actually it is one of the most militarized places that in the in the world as it were and this is going to have an impact and not only are the livelihoods of people in this in order to have negative indications for the upcoming elections while staying and had administered kashmir research a say government's attempts on blocking the internet during protests have hurt the region's developments bernard smith reports. is reliant on the internet as most entrepreneurs anyway she sells a kashmiri dresses to customers worldwide but in india not administered kashmir this is central tool of modern business is caught sometimes several times a month without warning by the government i have to upload because i have to make us tomatoes and i have made effective that i have to do everything online only so far that i need and the need. and right now we are in green the first century and
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we have every day to use it in but we had anybody tell you that by. almost half the internet blackout in india in the last five years we're in the disputed territory of jammu and kashmir that's according to a study from stanford university in the us online access is usually cut after unrest to prevent what the government calls inflammatory content spreading online the shut down often but not to order and have lost as ordered snorted or been. run over that and some are not a visual there are developers or to the block where billions are it would acquired . in twenty sixteen when there was sustained unrest across india not administered kashmir the government shut down the internet for two hundred three days it's. for students here denying them internet access stops their research cuts them off from friends and fuels resentment it just creates you know and it must fear off
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fear and it must fear of just being in lummi it more so because having the internet's nastily it also affects us a heap because you feel like you're in a place where like this is a big issue you don't have the internet this issue is affecting your life. the stanford university study says internet shutdowns over the last five years of cost indian businesses more than three billion dollars and the study found no evidence that taking people off line reduced protests or eased unrest bernard smith al-jazeera. it's known as the mountain of rubbish indonesia's biggest landfill so it's just outside the capital jakarta about seven thousand way speakers or a living their extreme poverty makes it difficult for many families to imagine a different future for their children but one school's trying to change the. reports. every day hundreds of rubbish trucks make their way to bundaberg
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indonesia's biggest landfill all kinds of trash dumped here. just forty kilometers from the indonesian capital jakarta. scavenging is a twenty four hour business here. and often involves more than one generation the fifteen year old left school four years ago to work in the dumpsite with his father we asked him whether he would return to school if given a chance. i don't know it's me. here he says many of his friends died the same position out of the family make their living by. growing mountain of waste dangerous. items they can mostly plastic in aluminum cans to recycling. it's a hand to mouth existence and many dream of a different future for their children. not to far from the landfill is an informal
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school run by grace that is helping to fulfill that dream ray says parents are not to waste because but she grew up here and knows what it's like to suffer what many would consider the stigma of being from the area really. feel but then let anybody they met you. relive among their obvious but we're not rubbish. that seems to have been welcomed by the kids. the same in the schools hell. me a lot reza often advise us not to give up hope even though we pick rubbish we have to keep going to school. it's a message the government is also taking part on a program called the how we have reached hundreds of families we help pregnant women children we also have family development sessions we meet the parents and we
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make them aware of how important it is for their kids to have an education. these initiated to fill a gap. they may not be enough to keep every child in bontoc about at school but there is a start florence li. bum talk about outside jakarta indonesia the us president has ridiculed the system which gives migrants a safe passage donald trump says people seeking asylum at the southern border looked like makes martial arts fighters he was addressing a republican jewish coalition in las vegas the asylum program is a scary some of the roughest people you've ever seen people that looked like they should be fighting for the u.f.c. . they read a little page given by lawyers that are all over the place you know warriors they tell him what to say you look at this guy you say wow that's a tough cookie.
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