tv Indonesias Football Fever Al Jazeera April 8, 2019 8:33am-9:01am +03
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there is a may has released a video message explaining why she sent it into talks with the opposition labor party her deal to leave the us has been rejected by parliament three times when you think about it people didn't vote on party lines when it came to the bracks 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 breakfast i think there are some things we agree on ending free movement ensuring we leave with 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 if i'm in compromise someplace sides but i believe that delivering breck's it is the most important thing for us. now the greek government is trying to offer an education to young refugees to on the age an
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island but getting children into school is proving to be difficult local say already thin resources are being stretched too far john straw pulis has more from some wants. naveed 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 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 passed but it's. this is our situations don't we can't do anything is the canvas. and the game is
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very lives we don't. and we can'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 for them. when a representative from the great center for disease control came to talk to parents he said we're looking at a public health timebomb to shop 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 aegean islands are kept here for much of 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
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is so slow they are now stuck here for years last september the government extended education to island refugees about thirty haven't rolled so far here on some us but as many as a thousand eligible that's equal to two thirds of the local greek school population many of the people of some most and other reste adjourn islands consider that an unfair burden on the school system 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 east to jian act as europe's buffer against irregular migration 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 algis or some us. civilian vehicles have been barred from using the main highway in
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indian administered kashmir for two days every week until the end of may patients jan water reports. i have been a military presence and little else on this crucial highway. the only one connecting the kashmir valley in the himalayas to the indian plains authorities in indian administers kashmir have begun in forcing a ban on civilian vehicles. sunday each week on sunday and wednesday the civilian traffic will be closed on the highway and only the on the convoys will be able to parse 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 a pakistan based group said it was behind the attack and it brought india and pakistan to the brink of war but the ban has left people in kashmir more fearful of
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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 skid. mark was and as well as the fear there's also anger and shot criticism from the region's politicians or they are uncooperative and after we came to the street 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 attack in kashmir by launching air attacks targeting what he calls terrorist sites in pakistan polls suggest modi's popularity has increased in the wake of this action comedy lab here on sunday pakistan's foreign minister said he had received reliable intelligence
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that india would soon launch another attack and he's went against such action india has called the statement irresponsible this latest phase it's already brought the neighbors close to an all out war but finding a last thing solution that works for both sides is likely to pose a bigger challenge patients john wadda al-jazeera. and still ahead on our desire we'll have all the sports find out why football is really warming up in tanzania peter will have the details. in a chair. and
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and it is now time for sports here is peter. thank you very much napoli have put you vengeance is italian title celebrations all ice until at least next saturday they were up against genoa on sunday the genovese went down to ten man after half an hour and not delete their vantage a few minutes later if not really at last in the chapter but already belong to uva this go from generals darko last of which would seabiscuit a man one one but a twenty point gap at the top means that is only a matter of time until the title goes to two really. so with football and what could have made their way into the f.a. cup final where they will play manchester city on sunday it looked like moves would actually be on their way to the final and they went to no let up through their own human is only a go but what food they never gave up gerrard deal or failed pulling off
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a lovely ship with eleven minutes to go and then in injury time troy deeney held his nerve to convert a penalty and false extra time did a further than popped up to compete to come back and say what for today first if a cup final since nineteen eighty-four. or football in tanzania has gone under the radar in africa for decades but an upturn in fortunes has seen them hit new heights at both club and international level for the country qualifying for the africa cup of nations for the first time in nearly forty years pool. success stories in east african football off few and far between but a turning point may have come here in tanzania club side simba spearheading a steady march to new heights in dar es salaam. they're the first times an eon team to reach the quarterfinals of the african champions league a two legged to date with destiny against multiple champions t.p.
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mazembe of the democratic republic of congo. between the team is just the team work being together loving each other helping each other that's the most thing that makes us successful. different games from various other games we've played but. give them the respect they deserve it's a big team but we're also a big team on we just look forward to our game teams here seem to have got bigger across the board these fans were watching the tanzanian women's side play at the national stadium on friday. enthusiasm fuelled by the man having qualified for june's expanded africa cup of nations in egypt for the first time since one nine hundred eighty it's been helped by a fresh start for money was halted in twenty seventeen after a corruption scandal but has returned under the football federation his new president we are trying to make sure that. they have faith in our new leadership
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and that we are open but also transparent. throughout that you will make it we are going to egypt and to surprise. the giants. these fans at the symbol much witnessed a nil nil draw against t.p. mazembe a in dar es salaam so simba travelled to lupul next week with hope of reaching the semifinals a result that coach believes would be well earned we got some more from results it's a really good thing but they are really shit serious professional and they deserve what happened for now it's back to the training ground for simba as they go ninety minutes away from history but whatever their result twenty nineteen could be remembered as tanzania's year paul reese al-jazeera the hong kong sevens is considered. the jewel in the crown of the rugby seven a side world series in fiji have won it for a fifth consecutive time on sunday if the jeans face france in the final they
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school two tries before half time to establish a lead they would never relinquish twenty one seven the final score to fiji who go second ahead of new zealand in the overall standings the united states of the series leaders with three rounds still to be played. the new york mets had a promising early season form de railed again at home to the washington nationals the mets did their best to get back in it they were twelve three down before hitting two home runs wasn't enough nationals winning twelve nine in new york the mets have lost three of their nine games so far all of them to washington. for. cambridge of beating knocks in the u.k. the university boat race they won with britain's double olympic champion james cracknell longboard at the age of forty six he becomes the oldest person to compete in the race. nearly one thousand foreign runners took part in north korea's pyongyang marathon that's more than doubled compared to last year thanks to produced political tensions although there were no americans because of a u.s.
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state department ban on traveling to the country and we'll leave it there for now all sport coming up again later. and that is it for me and the team here for the news hour but don't go away i will be back in just a moment but mark the day's news. we live in a time of war and tragedy it's crimes against humanity. activist repression. enforced disappearance arbitrary arrests.
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extrajudicial executions brutal torture the list goes on. who investigates who judges the criminals. who compensates the victims the international conference on national regional and international mechanisms to combat impunity and ensure accountability under international law. organized by the national human rights committee. united nations human rights office of the high commissioner. european parliament's. and global alliance of national human rights institutions. for the nomadic jacka tribe survival is about reaching their destination goals if we don't hurry the lever be able to give the thumbs up to the storm we follow the mongolian herdsmen on a treacherous migration find the trace dangerous the ice is then as they strive to
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call for. intensifies in libya. seeking support from saddam's army protesters gather in force outside the military. for a second day demanding the president's resignation. facing a tight race for reelection israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is accused of using racism to win votes. the u.s. secretary of homeland security kirsten nelson out donald trump announced that sheep leaving her position over twitter practical hang takes a look at her legacy. it's fair to say that cures didn't ailsa and will go down in history as the most controversial secretary in the history of the young department of homeland security she put in place what many saw as draconian policies under her
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watch almost three thousand children were ripped from their parents trying to cross the southern border many housed in crowded camps until a federal judge stepped in and demanded the families be reunified she leaves office with hundreds of children still separated from their families her actions were met with scorn and widespread protests at her home i don't restaurant with marches across the u.s. and pleas from overseas but as you can leave it to bag and asked president donald trump to please return my baby soon i don't want to keep waiting a long time two months is enough punishment for mothers to learn not to cross she responded with a tweet saying there is no formal policy of separating families and justified her order with this this is ministration did not create a policy of separating families at the border both of those statements were lies simply not true according to an inspector general's report she also ended the
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program that allowed hundreds of thousands of people from hundred or us in el salvador to stay in the u.s. legally some who had been here for twenty years. she was also known for going out of her way to try and publicly please her boss asked in congress about reports he referred to african countries with a curse word she deflected asked why he wanted more people to immigrate from countries like norway her response was widely criticized. predominately white. country. i'm i i actually do not know that serve but i imagine that is the case she made sure not to upset the president when asked about russian interference in the election i haven't seen any evidence that the attempts to interfere in our election infrastructure was to favor a particular political party but there is evidence the intelligence community has explicitly said the russians wanted to help president trump in the end none of it
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was enough to please the president she tried so publicly to impress leaving her department more controversial there when she came and more concretely thousands of families with the permanent scars of separation. and patty's live for us in washington so patty as we've seen there a controversial figure backed many of president trumps more controversial policies what do you what has led to this point. what is led to this point well you know i think we see the broader backdrop as president donald trump has been increasingly irritated with what he sees of the southern border frankly he sees this as a winning campaign issue for him it fires up his base we've seen him focus a lot of attention as of late the border he calls it a crisis he flew down to the border and said look this is the fence that i promised to build and they even put a plaque out it but it turns out there was already a fence there it was just being replaced with this now bigger fence that he has
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a plaque with his name on it so he sees this is a winning issue just before the midterms you talked about this invasion this caravan he's described these migrants who are fleeing. the door. describe them as animals saying they're not humans he is upping his rhetoric on this because. politically he thinks this is a win for him although that's questionable but obviously with his base it goes over well and he is i think very frustrated he is sending the message that he thinks that this is a legitimate national emergency and he's been blocked at every turn congress wouldn't give him the money for the wall that he said mexico was going to pay for so that he said i'm declared a national emergency and now he's being sued by states by the congress and waiting to see what the judiciary size so he'd like to say that he's just going to shut down the border stop migration that says it's illegal for these migrants to cross when it isn't it's perfectly legal he can't stop that that is the law they can ask for asylum there's nothing illegal about it the president would like to say i'm the
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president so be it but in america that's just not how this works chance offended many of trump's more contentious policies to and she's been seen as a polarizing figure and the question remains what next for her and also what kind of a person is expected to take that. well you know trump has made it clear that he basically wants to see people that look like they come out of central casting that they look like they fit the party he just nominated someone to be immigration and customs enforcement and then just a couple of days ago surprise pretty much all of the staff and said no i'm withdrawing that nomination i want someone who's going to be tougher so now he's saying the acting homeland security secretary is going to be the current head of customs and border patrol so expect for trying to find somebody like meals and who will repeat his talking points and i think it's important to point out this was a woman who was seen as basically a bureaucrat somebody coming up through the ranks but once she took that position she like so many people in the trunk cabinet started repeating his lines verbatim
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defending the president at all costs regardless of the impact to their reputation so i think that that's one of the lessons were seen here that this is becoming a repeated pattern people stand up for the president it's not enough and they leave under questionable circumstances. and in washington for us jeff house or as a lawyer and executive director of the revolving door project which examines government appointments he believes the u.s. president has influenced nielsen's decision to resign. i'm sure she was affectively fired it's possible that trump in a passive aggressive manner made it that she felt like she had to resign to retain some scrap of dignity at least dignity in her own eyes about herself but i think she was forced out because donald trump is as he has often been in a politically perilous moment and i think he is view of his presidency is that he
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is the producer of a television show and the storyline that brings in the viewers that brings in his base that retains that connection between trump and the republican voter base is immigration and nielsen while she's hard hearted and willing to do immoral things she is not a showman she is not a good actor in this television show that trump is producing racism and bigotry at the border and so i suspect in time he needed to get someone into that position who he felt could ratchet up pressure and increase. attention on the border which is what obviously what he wants to turn everyone's attention to right now. moving to some other news now fighting around libya's capital is intensifying off the ass trikes launched by the un backed government and warlord highly for how start forces have to our troops are imported to be preparing to open a new front in that push towards tripoli the u.n.
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has called for a temporary truce so injured people can be moved to safety but there is quest has been largely ignored the u.n. back tripoli government says at least eleven people have been killed in the fighting since thursday mahmud abdullah the head has this report from tripoli. fighters loyal to the u.s. and back tripoli government more trucks mounted with machine guns to does the libyan capital under orders to stop will have to advance on tripoli. we call on those brainwashed and radicalized to lay down their arms we will not allow the you wanted to return to roll libya will be a civil state and our pledge will be to the homeland and god we announced the launch of the volcano of wrath in order to restore the seized areas. have to his assault began last week and so far his forces say they have seized some areas around the south of the capital. saturday the sand the taking over the old eighth
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port but were pushed out by forces loyal to the tripoli based government have to his forces have now increase their attacks opening new fronts in the south of tripoli they are bad government in the capital is urging civilians to leave where there is fighting a naturalist called by the un was ignored by all sides. have to his forces say they are fighting terrorist to groups that are backed by the. arabia and egypt. tripoli has become the capital of terror and terrorists tripoli is the capital for a group of criminals who number around one or two thousand but they have weapons and they control the political decisions most dangerous way they have the money by controlling the central bank of libya and the oil companies. the head of libya's tripoli based a government has accused the have to end his forces of betraying the country and
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has won it over would without any winners. libya has been divided between two competing government says twenty fourteen analysts to say have to his fighters will face a stiff resistance in chip ali i don't see any lack of intent i mean we're concerned about capability and that's where i'm not sure whether his forces are up to the task i mean he was able to to you know take over much of the south west i mean easily tripoli is going to do you know he's going to face a lot of resistance so we're looking at you know a long protracted conflict the u.n. says talks to rebuild libya's fractured political system will go ahead as planned but would really libyans are now facing the prospect of some of the worst fighting since the twenty eleven uprising that toppled former leader. mahmoud up to. tripoli. thousands of protesters are continuing to defy curfew in the sudanese
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capital khartoum demanding the president resign about the city and outside omar al bashir his residence and then your bar army headquarters for a second day least eleven people have been killed in protests across the dance and saturday. security council's calling for dialogue to end the crisis it has its details. i it's the second day of a sit in at the sudanese army headquarters in khartoum the first time crowds have reached this part of the city since anti-government rallies began in december over the price of bread and escalated into calls for an end to president omar bashir is three decade will. they face the army compound cooling for freedom the protesters want the military to support their goal to remove the president i think it's time.
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