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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  May 2, 2019 6:00pm-7:01pm +03

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if you have it out of. all the tone remained mostly civil one democratic senator said bill barr should resign now the american people know that you are no different from rudy giuliani or kellyanne conway or any of the other people who sacrifice or less decent reputation for the grafter and liar who sits in the oval office go to rose million baht insisted the president could have halted the mill inquiry at any point because it was based on false allegations which this was a difficult day for the attorney general the house of representatives also wants him to give evidence the committee chairman says he won't be calling robert mueller as a new witness he says this is over but it's not alan fischer algis it up on capitol hill washington who got a weather update thanks to when i was there and then we're in mozambique where people are already beset by poverty have lost everything and another huge storm plus. annual may day protests turned violent in france where thousands rallied against president tonight he'll not craw.
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hello there the show is generating looking quite subdued over the southeast in parts of asia at the moment we are seeing some fairly shop showers there over the southern parts of vietnam and those of really stuck around over the past a few hours and then we've plenty more as we head through the day on friday so some heavy pearland rain is expected here but elsewhere looks like for many of us in borneo through job and into somalia it should be lots of dry weather and just want to isolated showers around i think as we head further east that's where we see more active weather just in the far corner of your muff there you can see a little circulation that looks like a developing feature that's going to bring us some or all the heavier rain as we head through the next day or so and talking of heavy rain has been quite a bit of that in the southeastern parts of australia you can see why this huge area
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of clouds been working its way across us but many of us some very welcome wet weather that's working its way eastwards still with us as we head through the day on friday and still bringing us some very heavy downpours as we head into the day on saturday it'll edges way towards sydney and will be over brisbane as well and behind it it certainly won't be that warm with melbourne just struggling to fourteen degrees but it will be a bit well what will be up to twenty two but even here expect some cloud at times and a few outbreaks of rain are likely during the day on saturday and some fairly brisk winds to. beat all too familiar. innocent lives ended in an instant. been grilled. on the debate around firearms but for survivors and families of the four then reality often changes forever. faultlines investigates the long
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lasting trauma inflicted on communities the aftermath of mass shootings in america on al-jazeera. again this is al jazeera let's remind you of the maybe use this account a court hearing shortly in london about the u.s. extradition requests for wiki leaks founder julian assange as he's wanted for alleged computer hacking the forty seven year old is serving a prison sentence for skipping bail and holding up in the ecuadorian embassy in london. a hearing is under way in uganda on whether to grant bail for opposition politician bobby why and he's been held in a maximum security prison since monday on charges stemming from protests last year
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against a social media tax and that as well as opposition leader. is urging his supporters not to lose hope after their protests failed to topple president nicolas maduro his supporters held a rival rally in the capital caracas a woman who was shot dead and dozens were injured during fighting with security forces. mozambique is urging people in the northeast of the country to try to find higher ground more rain is expected in the coming days which will worsen flooding caused by cyclon kenneth it's the second storm in six weeks to lash the southern african coast that has already killed at least forty one people out of a tassel reports from the city of pan. this church in the coastal town of came by has opened its doors to almost one thousand displaced mean women and children. in that part of the predicate dog we received information in our area that we should have back your way to a safer place that night i grabbed my family and came here it's the first time to
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cycle in one season. he did rain and flooding is expected to continue for the rest of the week but those on the coastline have moved inland and on to higher ground system. has seen a sharp rise in the number of people turning up at a school with nowhere else to go. over there is the river and there it was water all around so this was the area where people sought refuge those whose houses were getting flooded have been coming here yesterday received two hundred fifteen people. the united nations on tuesday confirm that nearly thirty five thousand homes in mozambique have been destroyed leaving hundreds of thousands of people without shelter food and drinking water and at risk of diseases like malaria and cholera more expected in the coming days which will worsen fruiting the march towards and the end of humanitarian access more challenging in water for us
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people have lost everything they are the is the death toll will rise some homes that used to be in this area were washed away. as the rain intensified it caused my slides and the landfill site over there collapsed on top of some of the houses locals say some people are missing. lost his home in the flooding he and his neighbors are assessing damage course the village. i'm alone and asking for help to build a new house i have two children and a wife i don't have anybody to assist you. some people have chosen to stay in their homes but for some of those that do they risk being cut off needed aid and with more to arrange the rain and flooding on the way aid agencies say they are facing a critical situation they are in desperate need of more funds. in. about things like where you are right now.
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that was what. was it managed to destroy. and in some cases a rift or entire roof from buildings you see tree trunks have fallen on top of houses that's why some people were injured and some people were killed or this is part of a police station one of the strongest boding in this town but it was also destroyed . all the way throughout the town many many homes destroyed a lot of people in desperate need of help the problem for aid workers in that region place like this is really hard especially when it rains the roads have been cut off in many areas either they are being brought by the tree trunks or they're just being damaged now is operating for a while in this part of the region so some planes and helicopters are trying to take off to deliver much needed food aid but of course the aid workers are
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concerned if it starts raining again and there are fears it could that will hamper their efforts are trying to reach people who are stranded who need help and concerns understandably about. the problems are emerging to. exact mozambique is the one of the poorest in the world and they have. the problem as it is and. who was to make it clear he can come out of the united nations and he . did and that was destroyed by the loan and they came across a young boy about twelve years old he was so thin so he made a to the family had lost all the crops they've broken into like lone they have no food and he was already hungry as it was that is the thought of how many people are opposed to the concern of course and no one knows how many people need help course the main concern is how to get that food to those cuts but just to those remote areas of course a lot depends on the weather we're told it's going to rain if that happens
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obviously it means that any effort to reach anyone will be at least stopped or limited for a while until they put those top of going near again ok there are many thanks indeed her obsessive their lives in a coma in mozambique india has ordered nearly eight hundred thousand people to leave areas along its east coast ahead of a severe storm the cyclon sunny is tracking north and is expected to cross the coastline sometime on friday around a thousand shelters have been set up in schools and government buildings full cost as a warning that it will move up into bangladesh threatening hundreds of thousands of injure refugees from being who are living in camps there. the united nations has declared the leader of pakistan of a pakistan based group a global terrorist. assets will be frozen but he will be subject to a travel ban he heads the even have a group which claimed responsibility for february suicide attack in indian
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administered kashmir which killed forty soldiers the declaration passed to china a traditional ally of pakistan dropped its objections. chairperson of the u.n. sanctions committee that's how many troops to do what. has informed us that muscle that stands designated the individual who has been promoting terrorism globally this is part i was a significant outcome because we have been at it for several years turkey's government is denying the two turks detained in libya our spies vulcan. and minutes dead were seized by forces loyal to war. in southern tripoli to accuse president has declared have to advance on the capital as a plot against libya's people more than three hundred forty people have been killed in the battle for the capital since fighting began almost a month ago after his face fighters have suffered setbacks in their offensive
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forces loyal to the un recognized government reinforcing their positions his or libya correspondent mark wood of the one had. to libya as you entered ninety government three enforce their positions in the neighborhood they recently pushed out fighters loyal to the world to their hefted from this area in southern tripoli . the group well set up checkpoints prevent civilians from coming back to their houses near the fighting areas just to keep them away from danger the government forces have recently advance itany of the old international airport on the southern outskirts of the capital they have also recaptured the highway connecting tripoli to the city and including. but the situation near the military camp remains tense after he'd be fighting for control in the area the
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government forces here say that have that his forces target their locations with advantage weapons including guided and grad missiles and in many cases random rockets hit residential areas and killed civilians. many civilians including women and children have been killed by indiscriminate shelling since the battle for tripoli began on april the fourth tens of thousands have been forced from their homes. the government's fighters here say they are determined to drive out have to his forces further south despite the lack of support. for this pick up truck in the weapons with my own money with paid for part of the catering and logistics have to his forces continue to receive support from cities like. south of tripoli and with regional and international countries backing the rival factions the battle for tripoli does not seem to be ending anytime soon.
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tripoli demonstrators in algeria have celebrated may day by demanding the removal of the ruling elite the army's chief of staff says the protesters need to end their nine weeks of unrest since president abdulaziz beautifully quits following mass protests to stop his bid for a fifth of the ruling national liberation front party elected a new leader on wednesday and french riot police were busy on may day during protests in paris dozens of people were injured as david schaper reports. clouds of tear gas and burning barricades marked the progress of the may day marches it filled the streets of the french capital as predicted fighting between demonstrators and riot police surged along its whole length practicing their policy of zero tolerance charge after charge was made with shield and baton against crowds
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throwing rocks and stones. for today with another. as usual we have been surrounded you can't go to sway you can't write that way getting gassed is the only option people just start losing. twenty three people have lost their five have lost a hand to join our demonstration so far for their say agree must continue but micron made his speech he didn't show sympathy to the wounded what this government . who shows no compassion for its people the days gone on the clashes with the police and the riot forces stationed along the length of march i've got much more serious a mess c.d.s. was torched sending billows of smoke into a block of flats full of families only the prompt arrival of firefighters managed to stop the spread of the flames the french interior ministry said they had monitored messages on social media calling on demonstrators to turn paris into the
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capital of rioting that is a form based on the information we have one thousand two thousand what he called activists potentially reinforced by individuals coming from abroad could try to spread and violence. the police had snatch squads in the side streets to catch members of the so-called black bloc of extremists who were infiltrating a march tens of thousands of protesters joined the march here and tens of thousands more across the country president emanuel macro had hoped he'd got the measure of the yellow vest protests with his so-called great debates across france and some recent concessions on areas such as the minimum wage but there was no sign of wavering by the protests as on the streets of the capital david chaytor al-jazeera paris caster semenya is said to run in the diamond league. here in doha on friday night the olympic eight hundred meter champion is back in the spotlight after losing her appeal against new testosterone rules for athletes the change means
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she'll have to take drugs to reduce her whole body levels if she wants to race. explains. this was a verdict as much to do with human rights as a threat excess cost as a menu was appealing against a rule that would force her to take medication to reduce her testosterone level and still be allowed to compete in women's competition she lost her appeal against the rules of the court of arbitration for sport. such discrimination is a necessary result of all kinds the question is means of achieving the ideal believes objective of preserving the integrity of female athletics in some strike you dance international competition studies from four hundred metres to one my. athletics while governing body the. maintains it is striving for fairness it said it was plays that the regulations were found to be unnecessary raise the ball and
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proportionate means of achieving the legitimate time of preserving the integrity of fame that takes the effort has been criticised for its handling of the issue which included the suggestion that women with rice testosterone should switch to compete against men so many responded to the verdict immediately on social media sighing sometimes it's better to react with no reaction but later she released a statement accusing the i w f of having always targeted base specifically for a decade has tried to slow me down but this is actually made me stronger she's yet to indicate if she's prepared to consider medication in order to remain a champion i hundred meters she's a multiple olympic and world champion but can't now defend a title at this year's world championships in doha unless she takes the chemical route she can switch to long distance and did win gold in a five thousand meters at the south african athletics championships last week but the treatment has been questioned by the united nations human rights group by the
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south african government who called it a gross violation of human rights. while sport tries to adjust to gender issues some men use words when collecting an award last year on the line the need for compassion and respect along with science and competition justin rose again in no i grew up in a dusty place. i really you know appreciate you know the support the love you know also for appreciating you know as. so we can be the best we can be. adrian finnegan here in doha the headlines on al-jazeera wiki leaks founder julian assange is due to face a court hearing in london shortly a u.s. request to extradite him for alleged computer hacking a soldier is expected to appear via video link from prison forty seven year old
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australian is serving a sentence for jumping bail in twenty twelve and taking asylum inside the ecuadorian embassy in london at the time he was facing extradition to sweden where he was accused of sex crimes hearings on the way in uganda on whether to grant bail of opposition politician bobby why and he's been held in a maximum security prison since monday on charges stemming from protests last year against a social media tax. country. and . so they are following the script but as well as opposition leader who is urging his supporters not to lose hope after their protests failed to topple president nicolas maduro his supporters held a rival rally in the capital caracas in the u.s.
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capital some senators of the modeling the resignation of the attorney general over the report william barr faced hours of questioning by a senate hearing on wednesday boss published a sense of version of the report which he says clears donald trump of collusion with russia boss refusing to give further testimony in the house of representatives and could face a vote on contempt. demonstrators knowledge area have celebrated may day by the mahdi the removal of the ruling elite the army's chief of staff says the protesters need to end night weeks of unrest it's a month now since president up to lizzie's beautifully quit following mass protests to stop his bid for a fifth of the ruling national liberation front party elected a new leader of what is today turkey's government is denying that did libya aspies fall cut out all kinds of minute dimia was seized by forces loyal to the wall of khalifa haftar in southern tripoli turkey's president has described tough times and violence on the capital as
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a plot against libya's people there's the headlines that is continues here on al jazeera off the fault lines thanks to. a university degree to be a doctor or a teacher but without any study. one want to investigate the pakistani company at legibly selling by degrees. around the world zero. the truth is that an active shooter attack on campus is what we do the most frightening experience of your life the more we care the more christian you are. the more. the. mass shootings have become a grim part of american life. there were more than three hundred and two thousand and eighteen alone all of which have four more victims who were killed or injured.
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to highlight the reality that when it comes to gun violence no place is sacred malls movie theaters places of worship even schools. but these shootings continue to happen this is where i carry curse every day with me. little baby earth. and that's why i carry him with me all the time. in the is as crazy as it sounds this really does give me peace doesn't it does that i have him with me all the time. even though he's in there a little piece of him in sit in there it makes me feel good that i still carry my son with me. in this episode of faultlines we explore the long lasting trauma of mass shootings on a generation of survivors and victims' families. and the new normal that day and the country continues to reconcile.
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two thousand and eighteen was the worst year on record for gun violence in us schools. and the majority were killed in two mass shootings. one of those was in a small city south of houston texas called santa fe. the worst thing you have to worry about missing a flake is literally get run over by cow i said that. and here i am rushing to school because most saw got shut. out i had a lot of trying. to get over what i'm doing what i was. american. i started going in in a scene like cops running. but i don't really remember much. hard about r r r r r r r r. r r r r.
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m well that. must be mom's cry in seeing people reunited with their kids and. it was just waiting for chris. who we met at work. who. are tracking new developments a plane has crashed last card santa fe high school in texas. i'm eighteen two thousand and eighteen this became the side of the twenty ninth mass shooting that year. say the suspect carried out the attack with a shotgun and handgun both taken from his father after planting explosives inside the high school. the seventeen year old gunman a student at the school killed ten people. among them was his football team a chris rosie stone son. he was interested in the middle kid. and he was
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not shot a cry. he was a mama's boy one hundred percent mama's boy. we met rosie and chris his older sister's angelica mercedes at her brother's home about a five minute drive from santa fe high school. when i took him to prom his junior prom the saturday before most kids don't want their mom and dad there. he wanted me there. but that's just too chris was i i taught my. family was everything. for christmas sisters reliving happy memories help them cope in the months afterward. the three amigos. he was only one who committed. but the trauma of losing chris changed their lives in ways they're still coming to terms with. your good days where you don't cry as
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much. you don't want to just stay at home all day. and then you have your really bad days where you just want to talk to them. even when it's. chris would have wanted to. put my life on the field. and i haven't. but every day i think about him. got a phone call i think about it constantly make one phone call changed my life forever like that second and every moment while chris is being killed. will she never have to think of their kid or their brother or sister like that. it's been particularly hard for rosie. she told us she hasn't been able to sleep for more than three hours at a time since her son was killed. there is not a place in my home. and that's what makes it hard.
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so what i do is a spin couple of hours every single day at my house. i haven't tried to stay the night there yet. eight months on and you haven't spent the night back in that house you know i can't. i really can't. just a lot of memories so it's hard for her to. do it. like little things from taking up the trash like chris took out the trash chris fed the dogs like it's just hard. to see instead finds peace in an unlikely place. where the shooting happened. right here see that door. that's the art room where my son was and i'm just glad ministration is planning to tear down the part of the building where people were killed the rows he has been
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fighting to keep it i literally go in there and i sit. in chris's spot. and i'll sit there for me about thirty forty five minutes nobody talks to me or not then i don't say nothin i just sit there. and when i leave i feel little better because. that's when chris took his last breath. you know i was there when he took his first one and i wanted to be where he took his last one of. those he is haunted by how chris his death could have been avoided. and like many others in santa fe which sits in the heart of texas gun country her focus has been on improving school safety measures not gun control. i don't blame the gun. it wasn't a gun that walked in there by itself and killed my son parents need to be held responsible gun owners need to be held responsible those who supports expanding
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background checks for people buying firearms ever she also believes that guns can keep her and her family safe in fact after chris's death rosie and her daughters got licenses to carry concealed hangups i do feel like it's a safe tool i don't like that now our students feel that way i don't like that that our kids feel like they have to have some kind of weapon in order to make it in this world but that's the reality that we live in. that reality means that as parents in their kids to school they're now thinking of ways to keep them safe there. and there's a growing industry to help them. lockdown drill right now if this was your classroom this is the only door in and out where would your teacher have you go and go there no no don't just go. this is a class for kids as young as eight years old called school say. it's one hundred
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eighty eight tactical a private company in omaha nebraska. it's meant to supplement the lockdown drills which are now conducted in nine out of tempo schools across the country what are these representing to us six desks we have put yourself what is your teacher tell you to do. stay cry until the bad guy leaves. only right now. what if the gun shooter comes in your classroom. if somebody came in that door right now and pointed a gun in this direction do we know that desk is going to help out. no so what would we what would we do if someone pointed a gun in this direction over the course of two and a half hours. the kids learn different self-defense strategies based on the run hide fight model we're going to run away from the bad guys are you guys ready. to do it for. the instructors retired police sergeant and believes the kids need
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more perforation to evade and even fight off an attacker than they're currently getting and most schools will go go go go go run. trying to scare and we're not trying to turn them into swat commanders or anything like that is just to give them some information and give them some strategies so if something were to happen in their little part of the world they would have an idea of what to do. i'm just going to come in with my hands open like this like a catcher and i'm going to come in and grab this here. and hang on tight right somebody's coming in here what does that say about our effort to educate our children that they are in their minds preparing to potentially be killed in their own school i mean as unlikely as it is it doesn't feel that way to or kids and we don't know how that's going to affect an entire generation we john cox is
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a reporter for the washington post who's investigated the impact of gun violence on children including the psychological toll of lockdown drills at schools someone has to get the gun i'm shooting people right now school shootings are no more common now than they were in the one nine hundred ninety s. and the likelihood of a child dying in one remains low. but after each mass shooting the demand for schools and kids to be. prepared goes up the hill so we know that lock downs can be incredibly frightening but should we not have the kid do the drill and then the day comes and they have no idea what to do that's probably not a trade that parents or teachers would make a go of something good. bet is the reality until we as a country make some really significant changes for the shootings from occurring in the first place or your belt i don't know we've talked about running out in fighting we haven't talked about giving aid all right this is just
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a brief little thing about pleading control and it will work on kids your age. to tie one not whom but the pencils in their. mouths watching your presentation i thought that's some scary stuff to talk to kids about a woman shot in the knee bleeding on the mall what do you think about that he took his talk but i did do it i believe our kids know about this kind of stuff all right and i don't believe in a lot of respects that we give our kids credit enough for being able to handle what it is that needs to be talked about and because of that that's where we were very blunt or just very straightforward it's going to hurt. more the way about see that than anything in the presentation was as it was a. really low. key kind filing cared for how often do. you know that you've done the training how do you feel i feel more confident about it. for
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a generation from bill you would lockdown drills and connected by social media the thought of a shooting at school doesn't seem far away. it happened here a year ago at marjorie's dome in douglas high school in park in florida. the government used illegally bought semiautomatic right. to kill seventeen people. it was valentine's day. and for some students it wasn't unexpected. i had already planned like what i would do if a shooting were to happen because i was surprised that it happened at all. a few years ago when the shooting happened that the for a lot of the airport they said to always look dead if there's nothing else to do you go under somebody that has passed over so i had always told myself if i can't go out the window then that's what i would do so i did it. a lady eastman had just finished a presentation on the groups when the gunman began firing
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a tour classroom. she took cover under her presentation partner. who had been shot and killed as soon as he saw i just followed his everybody movement and went underneath him and laid there and at that moment i just began talking to god and telling him i just i don't want to feel i just wanted to be fast i remember laying there and looking at the floor waiting for footsteps so i knew when to hold my breath because i did it what should it to see me breathing alive i went to look like i was dead and i'd say about twenty seconds he moved on to the next class and i sat up and just sat in shock. the child that i gave birth to almost that distraught mother and gunshots. over the phone she said. a lot of the. get off the tension and i couldn't breathe
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i assumed she was going to be killed. in a small classroom with. fifty how could you how did you find out the way it was safe. actually i was a texan that's how i know my baby. was a life because i thought of bubbles she sticks to see. and that's how i know. that the vigil for the one year anniversary of the parklane massacre it's a familiar scene. one repeated across the country in the aftermath the mass shootings and you're. leaving it's become so predictable. there's the shooting and then the politicians denounce it there are the visuals oh there's no morals there's intense coverage in the states. if you're a member of the media you just move on to move on to move on and move on because
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they just don't stop. after the news moves on survivors and their families are left to pick up the pieces. in your heart the three. in this first. three to. be strong. listless three. to one another. like watching a six year old try to process the trauma that she experienced those difficult. she slept in my room for two weeks and you know. it was very traumatic for her you know it was traumatic for me as well but i had to put on the brief mommy face and be there for. for me to maris guilt is still something that i struggle with knowing that i'm here but he's not. knowing that his parents aren't upset with me and. are happy that i don't live
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makes me feel better but i feel like sometimes i'm alive at his expense because he of course. in my life. the parklane shooting reinvigorated the national conversation on kind of violence and kick started a movement led by young people including a late. night last night working on her testimony so please you know your when you see your encourage your. she's worked really hard on this. february she spoke at the first congressional hearing on gun violence in eight years many like me were fortunate enough to walk away with our lives but we will never be free from the terror some will carry visible scars but all of us were scarred emotionally for the rest of our lives i was in my fourth place activism has given her sense of purpose and a way to cope it was just eighteen with his whole life ahead of him but her mom
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worries that she still has a long recovery ahead of her she's pretty enough going balance we know this as a fact at the end of the day i tell her when expect when to come on the lights and auction is gone. you're going to be in a dark place by itself it's like a house and the only thing when the phone calls don't come in to come speak at this event you have to process what happened to you and seek help. often you'll see it right that people are ok in the beginning when they have a chance to talk about then when people go through transitions in life is when often the trauma really sets. and it changes the trajectory of people's lives for decades. now and no other american community turns and we're looking to each other for support in the wake of the nation's leaders. the event is only the
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beginning. my heart hurts for those people because. it's not a quick fix it's never going to be a quick fix your level and depth of trauma is totally going to vary based on a number of factors but there are in for a long road after columbine i stopped watching the other morning and was a senior columbine high school when the shooting happened in one thousand nine hundred ninety. at the time that shocked the country it was the worst school attack in u.s. history. now it doesn't even make the list of top ten deadliest mass shootings. today other works as a high school english teacher and has been through multiple lockdown drills but news of other mass shootings can still trigger inside attacks the trauma of what i went through that day will always be a part of me it's taken me quite a few years to kind of come to terms with that for nine years i was really not in
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denial that the event happened but in denial that the offense impacted me to the extent that it did felt last isolated alone i really started my journey at ten years ten years after the of it. frightening to think back to the best shooting at a movie theater in aurora colorado in two thousand and twelve co-founded the rebels project a support group for mass shooting survivor some victims' families. it started with people from a handful of incidents and care seven years later has members from around sixty communities impacted by mass shootings if you could introduce yourselves and what community you're associated with. a survey by the. we started it because one of the things that we were missing were people who understood and people who we could talk to more deeply and not just about the worry there was that scary did you know the gunmen so we can automatically dive deeper i
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would always be freaking out like i'm going to go through this again i think it's probably because i was reliving it constantly like you know this is last for the flashbacks and i was like oh i'm going to just get and like i realize like it's not just stuff that i'm going to know but your brain of your brain has recalibrated itself to make you safe and so what your brain does is say oh well when my friend got killed it was sunny so maybe a sunny day becomes a trigger because that's what was going on last time something will happen and it makes so much sense that's why i couldn't smell pumpkin spice lattes from starbucks after my shooting without like britain breaking down or greek yogurt for years that that's what trauma. i have taught i have met one other person that has a similar one and maybe you as you too when i get triggered for a day or two afterward i actually see bodies out of the corner of my room because
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that's what i saw when i was running out of the school it's not like a full blown like hallucination or anything it's just like at i like the liberals who write so. i do survivors everyday occurrences can take them back to the day they wish they could forget. i believe they are for a few years. punching. the brand. name. on it is naked because he does through one more center and. he didn't freak out. the sentence and. could ask questions when you guys talk about the kind of trickery and how long do you think your brain might be rewired that way for how little you have to undo it it takes
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a lot of work it's really hard labor. i started in the art three times period working and. i wrote down every trigger. and then head to kong's two pages in my first year of every single trigger were to my final to build a loose. it's down to cash triggers are exacerbated by news of other mass shootings which these days can be hard to escape. but the survivors say that staying connected with one another makes all the difference. we tend to think of trauma as this huge thing and something you're never going to get over. but if you take it in small steps at a time. you can get over it and. maybe. in the earlier years it's like a one step forward two steps back type of scenario now my steps back are shorter in a way i almost feel really awful for the people that it's happening to now because
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they don't get the coverage the other shootings get and that's really minimizing for someone's experience. when your shooting is out of the news cycle within a week what does that feel like as a survivor that feels like i should be over this. society is moving on but the people who are impacted aren't and then the struggle sometimes or even worse. long as you want to take one. most of those types are different groups estimated more and more people do not even see it's almost ten o'clock in the night. i ended up buying the pizza and he was sitting at the table eating it when i went out and. i was shown in the box. quickly. and this can do customer service. believe that's
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a lot of smiling and families walk in with their kid is in there have be if. i can get. money and find something that's more clerical behind the scenes. not the face any more like i used to be. this is my new normal. and it's a sad normal it's normal. you never think that your child would ever get ripped away from you. you know it's different when you have an illness and you prepare for it. but not when you think about your son the day before and your body is pete so you kissed him good night and that's it. when it's. a bonds that nobody wants to share. but there's so many of us that have this and shame. all over the country.
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and we should be connecting from the music we listen to the cars that we like the regular teenage things. but a quick connecting because of gun violence. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
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business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together. this is zero. and this is the news hour live from doha and coming up in the next sixty minutes a london court is due to begin hearing a u.s. request to extradite. a song. feeling more flooding mozambique's
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government people to seek higher ground in the aftermath of. the rain intensified it caused my slides and the flight over they collapsed on top of the house. people are still missing. venezuela's opposition lays out its next moves as the latest push against the president fails. the u.s. attorney general refuses to face a second round of questioning in congress after being grilled about his handling of the russian inquiry. over the sport a day after. the eight hundred meters in doha but also could be about to quit to applique takes. it's a question of life and death for julian assange that's what the wiki leaks founder
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supporters is saying as he begins a court battle in london to prevent extradition to the u.s. is expected to appear via video link and claim innocence against charges of conspiracy for allegedly hacking a computer and the pentagon in twenty ten for the help of u.s. whistleblower chelsea manning wiki leaks released about half a million classified military documents exposing mistakes made by washington in the iraq war it's the largest data breach in u.s. military history later that year they released a further two hundred fifty thousand documents relating to top secret u.s. diplomatic cables supporters say more serious charges could be filed a fees extradited a son has already been sentenced to fifty weeks in jail in the u.k. for breaching bail conditions. joining me live from london outside the court being give us some of the case and what's been happening. who are all but just to recap what you were saying of course on wednesday mr science was sentenced
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to fifty weeks a footbridge for breaking by all conditions but his legal team said they were very disappointed over that but very determined to fight this extradition request all the way there are a number of his supporters here today and there's you a save that not convinced that the u.s. indictment says so far would be the totality of the possible charges against you know signs for a bit more on that i'm joined by peter tatchell a prominent human rights activist peta a lot of people who support julian assigns are very worried that in fact the u.s. is preparing to whiten the charges against him explain explain why people believe that but i think it's very clear that the u.s. has put forward some specimen charges namely conspiring with just the money to publish u.s. classified information which carries a maximum sentence of only five years and that doesn't sound to buy but i'm
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absolutely certain that once they get him to one states he will face much more serious charges and we know that even the top administration and members of congress have demanded the journal songs be jailed for thirty forty fifty years so i think much more serious charges will follow and this is another of the reason why he should not be extradited to the united states because after all or he did was probably the truth about u.s. government and military war crimes a human rights abuses corruption and cover up was a lot of supporters cold julian assange an important journalist some of his to try to say that he's acted outside journalism boy boy oh. on my ass releasing information on claiming that he has put so in some cases lives in danger do they have a point when it's true that journalists entrepreneur makes public information about
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misdeeds of wrongdoing by the u.s. government but in the same way that the new york times and many use papers around the world was also published information so why is joining us on being targeted and not the new york times and all these other newspapers was it looks like double standards it smacks of a political vendetta on the question of the frequency that ricky leaks publication put people in danger or cause them home there's been no evidence so far that anyone was home and you can be sure that the critics of journal sons were to come forward evidence if holman actually being coldest now yesterday at the sentencing hearing the judge obviously wasn't really convinced by arguments that mr assigns hides all alone pretty reasonable fear is of being sent to the united states but in your opinion is it likely is is it more likely than not
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that he will eventually be sent that of course he was said to be crying wolf about us execution attempts and now it's been proven he was absolutely right you know the moment he got outside that embassy he was not with two charges one for stevie bio on the second an extradition request by the u.s. government so he was right he had legitimate grounds to fear extradition to the u.s. and i think it's awfully shameful that the british government is colluding with the top administration to make that happen when you publish the truth that should never be a crime and that's what wiki leaks did they simply publish the truth and that was a great public service they taught or informed america. people about what the us gov military was doing in the name of which the administration was refusing to divulge the public that is freedom information its freedom to publish freedom to
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publish should never ever be a crime he did touching thank you very much for your time well things are about to get under way we believe here in london but this is obviously the starts of a process which could take a long long time. thanks very much indeed. hearings underway in uganda on whether to grant bail for officers from politician bo b. wine is being held in a maximum security prison since monday on charges stemming from protests last year against social media ones lawyers and supporters say the charges have been made up to stop them criticizing the government let's talk to catherine sawyer she's in kampala uganda. if i understand it correctly but we one is not going to be in court today. we are out by the courthouse the courthouse right there and the lawyers defense lawyers arguing out that case. it's been going on for about three. and you're right
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it is not. present in that courtroom in he is. a video link at the prison where he is being have this is a fairly new system that was introduced by the judiciary basically they say to make it more effective and also to cost cost of bringing the physically to court but some of the politicians here and supporters of the wine i've been talking to us saying that they think something more with. the system has been on a pilot this is the first big case that the plying and people here are saying that maybe it's because they do not want too many people coming out. and is being brought to court to do that. that many of his supporters would make their way here to at the bail hearing is going on so they've been a little security security has been beefed up in areas that the opposition strongholds but people are very angry i spoke to a politician an m.p.
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who say that the he thinks that this charge really is politically motivated. if you are being the uniform of the politics of this country this is not a one of. whatever some one of the mud and oh there's a credible threat to the leadership the crew to mint comped up charges by the region has been the order of the day so they are following the user script. so this m.p. that m.p. also say that he feels and he's very concerned about the political situation in the country he says that it's washington ing it's important to know that just yet the data communications authority has. bank show and a radio and television stations and also asked that some of the employees all those stations be suspended this is because of how they've been covering issues around will be one which authority official the saying has not been has not been ethical
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we've also seeing the movement of some key opposition figures being sales case in point is the best it just was one of the leading opposition figures in this country he had had run ins with the police in fact just recently police stormed into a police station into a radio station where he was being interviewed stopped that interview and that's because he had appeared in another radio station calling for revolution calling people to stand up against the current leadership so people very angry the government really keen the top leadership here really came to show the government is in control opposition leaders led by saying that we are not going to relent we're going to continue holding this government to account we're going to continue to make sure that the right leadership is in place.
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opposition is telling its supporters not to lose hope after the latest major protests against president nicolas maduro failed to push him from power a woman was shot dead and dozens of other people were injured as things again turn violent in the capital. reports from just over the border in neighboring colombia. for a second day thousands of in its wayland's field the streets of caracas in protest and once again government security forces used water cannons rubber bullets in tear gas to try to disperse them leaving dozens injured opposition leaders called for mass mobilization hoping this will be the final phase of the operation to house president nicolas maduro. we have to stay in the streets we have to continue until we achieve it we should demand that the whole of the armed forces declare together that they are with us. the message from
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a day earlier when he first urged the military to defect and join him some heeded the call. me but he's my legitimate president from here on out whatever happens i'm going to follow him to the death but there were few the president remains in office with the military high command still behind them and also behind my daughter remain many venezuelans who came out onto the streets in a rival rally my daughter told them that what he called a coup attempt had been defeated and those behind it would be prosecuted as criminals and he dismissed united states claims that he was about to flee the country under your plan if. when they plan their conspiracies when they come up with their schemes they forget the small detail they forget that there is a majority of the population willing to give their lives for the revolution they forget the small detail they forget that there is a union between the people and the military that is not willing to be treated.

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