tv Everything Must Fall Al Jazeera May 3, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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leave a shout oh. they all make it out and i. say the united nations is condemning the latest round of syrian government and russian air strikes on the deescalation or safe zones in the northwest and rebel held areas of it live and hama. school health centers and residential areas have all been hit in the northwest of syria the u.n. say they are the most intensive barrel bomb attacks in fifteen months there are strikes follow the killing of at least sixty syrian soldiers and their allies during opposition attacks in the last couple of weeks. to assure that there is proportionality backed national law and. rejected. nearly one hundred forty thousand syrians have fled the latest bombardment of the war within the last three months. many of them have managed to travel close to the border with turkey and many more are expected to arrive soon.
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al-jazeera. mass protests are taking place in sudan where demonstrators have staged a million strong march to press for civilian government protest leaders say the military isn't serious about handing over power after ousting longtime lugar omar bashir the two sides have agreed on forming a joint civilian military council to run sudan but are at odds over the details of the african union has given sudan's military and other sixty days to hand over power to civilians or face suspension. head valis live for us in khartoum so any movement on the on the talks between the protest leaders and the government . right. just a few hours ago the leaders of the declaration of freedom and change submitted their vision of what the what they want the transitional government to look like the
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structures which they proposed one of them is a presidential council made up of civilians and military but they did not be they were not specific about how many members from the military side and how many members from this it inside which was a sticking point over the last week or so during the talks the second by the executive cabinet with the power to launch a state of emergency if needed and many other powers fully executive body there leading the way to the running of the country affairs and a parliament of up to about one hundred fifty members that should legislate for the country during the transitional period which until now is not defined in terms of how many years but in this proposal by the leaders of the protests they once again insisted on four years which they say is the only put it the only amount of time enough for sudan to transit to. a civilian.
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civilian government through an election this proposal has been submitted to the military council the military council recognized receiving this document and said it's going to study it and respond to it and one of the articles in the four paper four four page document say that it should replace it should not under place the constitution the provisional to that constitution of two thousand and five the military council is going to study it and they said they are. they are engaged and . they are fully. engaged in continuing talks even though these talks are not going on face to face as they did during the last few days now they are continuing through mediators so every side submits their suggestions to the other side and that means more difficulty in terms of negotiations and the public prosecutors announced that he will investigate a share on money laundering and financing terrorism charges how significant is that
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. right it has just been announced that the public prosecutor has started investigating president omar bashir we know that to just a week ago they announced that huge cache of money a huge issue amounts of money found in his house including six million euros three hundred fifty thousand u.s. dollars and about five billion in local cash that's just the beginning of a long process of investigating omar bashir money laundering for misuse of public funds and that's one of the key demands of the revolutionary leaders but they think it's not enough and they think it's not done in the right way they are criticizing the way it is being executed they want to be they want every trial and every investigation to be fully. disclosed to the public they want public trials and they don't want just about bashir to be tried they think but there are probably hundreds
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of people around him from his senior aides to his former ministers who are corrupt and bashir himself and they are asking for transparency in this process thank you very much indeed still to come ugandan opposition m.p. bobby wine is freed on bail after being arrested on charges he says well made up to silence him. and five hundred years after his death to tape the legacy of an adventure and help repair relationships between italy and france. hello there is one part of europe that's going to stay warm over the next few days and it's just down here you wouldn't notice early but look at the motion of the carrolls were coming down from the north we did have
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a cold spell coming is already right actually on friday the highest temperatures stuck only seven and barely ten wind coming down from the north or some out arctic air tucked into that the snow up in northern parts of sweden and norway hasn't got much further south of course except for the higher ground of the alps but it will show itself so friday is a coldish day i think but it'll feel at his worst in places like switch to northern italy and austria where the temperatures in the low teens mid leap it was you know cloud overhead and rain for the sky overnight stows apparent want to get you out cold have missed the picture for saturday still cold she scandinavia and just touch into germany parts of poland still not much better but not so more in bucharest at twenty five and much the same in madrid so that's spain and portugal sort it otherwise it gets colder ten's new eleven's now that's in northern parts of europe there's some excess throwing in the middle part of the trade of the most part northern africa is fine but this gray represents
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a potentially quite dusty breeze coming out of libya ticking back into tunisia. how have you changed since you missed seven. charting the lives of the children of apartheid over twenty one years each story reflecting a history of dramatic social and political change twenty eight up south africa three on al-jazeera.
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we're going to run to the top stories here on our syria venezuela's president nicolas maduro as urge the armed forces to fight any traitors plotting against him in a show of strength maduro took to the streets of the capital caracas surrounded by thousands of soldiers. more than a million people in india have been ordered to leave areas along the east coast ahead of a severe storm cycle and funny has been upgraded to the highest category level with winds gusting up to two hundred fifty kilometers per hour. mass protests are taking place in sudan where demonstrations have staged a million strong march depressed person really in government just to say the military isn't serious about handing over power. that's been one week since cyclon kenneth made landfall in northern mozambique aid workers say remote communities still waiting for desperately needed supplies the powerful storm flattened villages on the island of with many in need of food clean water and
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medicine contaminated wells. increased the risk of cholera and other water borne diseases so i can kind of killed at least forty one people and left thousands more displaced. one of the worst affected areas. we are in my career it's about a three hour drive from p.m.s. when the area was worst affected by the psych learned and in this community the houses weren't that well bills to begin with so when the flagler in came the heavy rains and the winds are rather more knocked over and completely destroyed some of the power lines were also brought down we're told some people were injured when the houses collapsed some were even killed now it's been a couple of days trying to get aid into this community partly because some of the roads were damaged during the cycle and so now that some of the roads are fairly passable we're now seeing some aid agencies bringing in some much needed to these communities that's one of the first load to arrive is many maize meal and it's
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women and children who help first and then of course the main afterwards is not enough but it's something that people here say they do waiting for days to get help the concern for aid workers is that trying to access people in more remote areas is actually more difficult partly because of the weather they can only get the planes and helicopters up in it when it's not raining so for now it seems the weather has slightly improved but they are concerned if it rains again heavily it will hold relief efforts to give an idea of how some people are in those remote areas one u.n. worker said that they came across a family that a young boy is what twelve years old he was so thin and there is so sick yet to be airlifted to a hospital in payment that is one family of thousands of people who need help wasn't big is really one of the most poorest countries in the world this lichen hasn't made things in the easier the concern for aid workers and the government is to reach as many people as possible who need help who really stranded out there.
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ugandan pop star turned opposition politician bobby one has been freed on bail after spending two days in a maximum security prison is facing trial after leading a street protest last year against attacks on social media wind has been warned not to engage in protests while on bail catherine sawyer has more from kampala. when the magistrate granted bobby wine build a lot of collaborations in the courtroom and outside where some of his supporters had been gathering they started singing one of their favorite songs that he performs often they say they're happy that he's been released but we also feel that he's been politically targeted unfairly by the government this charge comes from an incident that happened last year where he led protests against the social media and mobile money pack that had been introduced to people asking why is he being charged now with something that happened last year so we also spoke to his
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wife who said that she's just happy that he's going to be home tonight the procedure now going forward is that he's going to be taken directly to hear how the police do not want him to make any stopovers or to address any of the supporters who will be gathering perhaps to hear a word from him what also stands out from this is how the case he was not physically present. the day of. the prison where he's being held this is a new system that has been introduced by the judiciary officials say it's more effective also is going to. bring him. to court but then some of his supporters people who've been talking to us here are saying that the reason why it's happening with the wind is because the have the government does not want too many people gathering to wait for him to appear in court
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there is a lot of garnering a lot of crowds everywhere he goes to perhaps people are saying the government is afraid of that the situation in the political situation in the country have talked to lawyers and politicians were saying it's very. a precarious indeed we've seen some media stations being function for how they are covering. issues with the the key opposition figure being their movement being killed the government very keen indeed to show that i think controlled but the opposition politicians led by will be one thing that we will not relent we will continue and hold to continue to hold the government to account and to see that is meaningful change in the country where he's founder julian assange says he'll fight extradition to the united states speaking via video link from prison a source told
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a london court his work had quote protected many people and refused to agree to be extradited a source is wanted in the us for alleged computer hacking and in baba reports from central london. the. star was. passionate support for the u.k.'s most famous prisoner but will he see be on the way to face trial in the united states. julian assange was removed from the ecuadorian embassy in london and arrested three weeks ago hours later u.s. prosecutors charged him with conspiring to access a classified us government computer has just started a fifty week jail sentence for skipping bail in twenty twelve so he addressed the court via video link mr assange said i do not wish to be extradited for doing journalism that has won many awards and protected many people well that's a message that resonates with many supporters here but whether he wins out in the courts is hard to say. a lawyer for the us said that in twenty ten the former army
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intelligence analyst chelsea manning downloaded more than a half a million classified reports relating to the wars in iraq and afghanistan as well as a quarter of a million diplomatic cables the vast majority were later released on a signed his wiki leaks foreign. journalists and wiki leaks are published they publish the truth they're being targeted for telling the truth and this has huge potential implications for journalists and media outlets all across the world american officials have accused the sounds of endangering people's lives through the mass publication his backers say he's done nothing wrong and they fear the u.s. could widen his legal case beyond the hiking charges of course we're worried about it we have a provisional question united states which has at this stage one charge with a five year sentence but there is much speculation the united states about whether additional charges might be brought by that now for once he's returned to the
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united states julian assange his legal team say they'll wait to receive a full extradition request before deciding on their next steps barbara al jazeera london. it's five hundred years since the death of the italian painter leonardo da vinci the artist architect and engineer was born near the town of vinci in four hundred fifty two but spent most of his professional life in florence and milan his last supper and mona lisa are among the most widely popular and influential paintings of their in a sauce they try to report so i was in france when it you know the davinci spent his final years the another division she arrived in france carrying his most famous work the mona lisa on the donkey's back. this royal chateau and on was on the banks of the rwa is where he spent the final chapter of his extraordinary life. young french king francis the first was enthralled by his genius he called leonardo his
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father never will tell you what's false it to the french kings through the west to show you were seeking choo-choo an intellectual refinement the tea had previously discovered in italy and wanted to transpose to the french court you wanted to show that the french court was the most elegant in europe five hundred years after his death his hope the legacy of leonardo the maestro of the nascence can help repair relationships between italy and france which once again have hit turbulent times. president emmanuel macron has a talian counterpart social matara hope to soothe the tensions between rome and paris over the hardline immigration policy of italy's populist government and its support for the yellow vest protesters in france the president's lunched at the mansion which leo dato was given was close to say which contains his workshops and studio it was here one of his apprentices sketched a hasty portrait of his master now
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a non-rival collection of leonardo's during held by the british queen is to be put on display for the first time at buckingham palace we are now dorry's the. italian genius but also europe ingenuous no a days is becoming a universal genius a portrait hangs in the royal chateau of francis the first at the deathbed of leonardo. it is in fact an example of sixteenth century fake news the king was away on rolled business when david she drew his last breath but his spirits and his genius still haunt this land david j. to al-jazeera on france. reminded our top stories are now jazeera but israel is president nicolas maduro has urged the armed forces to fight any quote traitors brushing against him and show of
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military support madeira took to the streets of the capital surrounded by thousands of soldiers it follows two days of violence in caracas which left at least four people dead after a failed call by opposition leader one gordo to unseat him david speransky is a spokesman for god oh he says the opposition leader has the support of many members of the military. all the soldiers that supported the president while your two days are all all disorders that one to two column b. on february twenty third and all the soldiers that are in contact with the interim president is why or they want a change they are suffering from the same problems as any of us what are shortages of food shortage of medicine in violence and they want something different and also why always are we to support of the bottom or your. of them as well and fifty four countries are when i see him as a head of state of oven as well as will the million people in india have been ordered to leave areas along the east coast ahead of
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a severe storm so i can find funny has been upgraded to the highest category level with winds gusting up to two hundred fifty kilometers per hour it's expected to make landfall on friday. aid workers say remote communities in northern mozambique are still waiting for desperately needed supplies after psycho and kenneth tore through the region last week a powerful storm flattened villages on the island of ebro with many in need of food clean water and medicine contaminated wells have increased the risk of cholera and other water borne diseases so i can kind of killed at least forty one people and left thousands more displaced. these four people including children have been killed by syrian government asked rice on a rebel held area in northwestern province schools and residential neighborhoods in the town of can see for a hit in what the u.n. describes as the worst viral bombing campaign in italy in fifteen months it says russian and syrian forces intensified airstrikes and shelling overnight in what's
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supposed to be a safe zone when years in just under thirty minutes time coming up next it's the street thanks for watching the scene of it. ok and you're in the stream today we look at the challenges faced by thousands of foreign students in the u.k. who are in legal limbo after losing their visa that were examined what's in the minds of voters in south africa's election draws near central thoughts through twitter and also you choose but first there is widespread anger among people in
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hong kong over proposals to allow the territory to extradite people to countries that include mainland china on sunday thousands of people took to the streets organizers say that one hundred and thirty thousand people joined the march it was a the crowd size was about a sixth of the at last the police questioning those figures but the rally came for days off the key figures within the pro-democracy movement were imprisoned for their role in a seventy nine day occupation of hong kong and that was it back in twenty fourteen so what lies ahead for the pro-democracy movement we're joined from hong kong by activist joshua long he was a key leader of the twenty fourteen occupation also in hong kong elaine wu she's a correspondent at the news agency a.f.p. so it's good to have you both here ah goodness look at these pictures elaine i haven't seen these pictures for a very long time people here protesting the extradition bill i found this on your twitter feed so looking at this what are we seeing here i mean. so we see
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protesters dressed out as mayor and police and there are a lot of white fear in hong kong about whether law enforcement in china can in the future work in hong kong openly so they're really just you know dressing up to me you know that another picture hey joshua what do you see when you see this picture recent picture of people out in the streets again what do you think. after the. twenty four team to fight for free election and democracy hundred thousand people come to the streets again to ask for free election and especially to against the hotline suppression from beijing especially triger just try to impose extradition law in hong kong to freely extradite anyone in hong kong kuhlmann men chop china for trial we sort of explained a little better the very top of the segment about what we're talking about tempers this actually just about what it might mean if you travel outside of hong kong and
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go to mainland china we also spoke to some of the young people about how they could explain what their season concerns might be have a listen. to what you know like this law has been passed and won't matter if you're an average person or a foreigner coming from hong kong there will be a real possibility you'll be taken and sent off to the mainland will go with. he's a come to light that he extradition law will affect everyone especially young people as they frequently join activities on the mainland or go shopping there and once this extradition law has been passed these activities will carry the risk of being misused to extradite iraqis out there to it over. there is this happening now . so it has a long story there is a murder case in taiwan where they are hong kong or is or robbed but after the murder it was between a couple. the men had led back to hong kong and because there is no extradition
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agreement between taiwan and hong kong the man cannot be tried for murder in taiwan and could only be tried for another rot case in hong kong so people are saying the government is taking advantage of the murder to push for a deal that did not have to include me around china but now has so people are a lot of critics the opponents of the bill are questioning the motive behind that and why it's even necessary to include china seal joshua this summer to him twice a he says beijing will crackdown without any regard to international reaction there are protests right now what is the idea of the protests what are they trying to actually do in terms of this extradition bill so the bill not along. we the government to withdraw its solution men women that you wrote on the home calls upon
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me especially we would at this rally you wrote also falling on the principle of one country two system that's the promise of beijing rest of the sheet was hong kong but now already turned to be one country one and a half system and is specially we have fully aware and right of went and one leaf or based in hong kong at all and a tourist in hong kong might be extradited to mainland china that's the place out for an open trial. of course we remember you from the twenty fourteen occupy movement movement and hong kong i'm looking here at a headline in a story that you wrote quite recently. and it says hong kong democracy leaders jailed over the umbrella of these in the protest that is going back some years but this is just happened it's not a coincidence that these pro-democracy movement activists should be jailed just at the same time as an extradition bail was been unveiled i think it's
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only going to a moment where people are feeling there's so much going on the same time i think it at any moment in hong kong or last two years or so it feels like there has been multiple crackdown on trade and are in despair and happening so it definitely rude but the culmination of all these events it has our contribution to what we saw last monday which is you know the biggest protests but it was the wrong movement by any counts so it has helped galvanize people in that way just for the last time the world was really paying attention to hong kong in terms of protesting was around twenty fourteen what is even doing in that interim period as the umbrella movement died down to you changing the tactics what's going on. a political system in hong kong remain unchanged especially under the hot line policy of emperor she was
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received but i would like to emphasize that in a previous dissident or activist might look be jel it might be the situation only happen in mainland china but in the recent years it seems that being locked up in prison or political persecution become a kind of common norm in hong kong but we have never give up that's why hundred thousand people come to the street again and two against hotlines suppression from beijing and then i'm just wondering how many people might be caught up in the extradition bill this is a set a lot of people. well it's not immediately certain it can. business people in the business community have the new expression and about this but people are saying by principle if in fact that independent judiciary is not protected. and can be exposed to the lack of creature. fair trial and china then it can happen to. anyone because the law is not very
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clear in china or what we're going to war or eagle and the uncertainty that really struck a lot of people just what's the what's the plan what's the next move. is the us british and piling government along with the european union already expressed their opposition to the extradition of amendment and i believe more and more people will come to st again and i urge the international communities to keep the ice in hong kong because large scale massive mobilization will happen again you know the next few months in hong kong i want to say thank you very much to our activists josh along i'd also joining us and you will continue to follow the story coming out of hong kong and now on students in the u.k. who have had their visas consulates awaiting a final ruling on whether they can stay illegally in the country in twenty fourteen the home office acted against thousands of people amid allegations of cheating on
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language tests the phone individuals must pass for these or those affected say that they have been on saturday treated by the government. the bust nightmare anybody could have in their life and i don't want any human being to go through. the pain and the acne that i had in my life i don't have anything left. i don't have any money. and i don't know what will my what will be my next next day. for more on this we're joined from glasgow scotland by a second i'm a dan cheese director of migrant voice which is campaigning on behalf of those who have lost their visa their seculars impossible to look at those young people and not be touched by their emotion how upset they are it's not usual for migrants voice to take on cases with students or young people why did you take this one on
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what was the motivation behind that. yes you read because international students. in many countries are not seen as migrants because they're seen as people who comes when she is in the country in the turn back to the country or asian but we've taken this issue because of the level of injustice that those students faced and because the students were also caught in a hostile environment. for migrants in newquay that the related our politics in the past the few years we just could not ignore the scale. of this injustice and the number of people who are affected we are talking about tens of thousands of the national students. coming so many tens of thousands of students absolutely adding up to fifty six thousand students were caught into this scandal. fifty maybe thirty six thousand of them nearly where
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had that he walked and they were told that to get out of our cities and they were told to leave the country go back to the country where the criminal allegations and then offer them. twenty two thousand words or your best is questionable you might have cheated i mean this is is that he used a number of young men and women who lost their future were wrongly accused of cheatin without them being presented with the evidence against them and most of them had not put to me. the innocence to chelate to change. yet this allegation is going to litigation is hanging over them they were full of them for the rest of their lives if they got to know the names it means that they cannot go and continue their studies at other universities nor will have them they cannot get a job because they have legation they cannot get
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a visa to travel anywhere else in the world. when i say and remember those students . they came in good faith they came to the fore it's a good reputation. universities and i'm trying i'm just trying to do a good telling us about the impact of what this at the they will lose their visas and try to understand what happened to sat at tested everybody sort of test exactly the same time or was it multiple tests and then they were case of cheating well it's all started when there's a b.b.c. panorama programme in twenty four thirteen short explores that there were some cheating in english and was that the one you mentioned that students they need to. adjust and there's only but remember you can't there are a king up to ninety six different centers a saw the way the home office and the government responded to this program was in instead of going to other centers investigate in they are the english language.
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destinations which is an american issue. with the agency which was accused of facilitating the cheating they asked them to invest and the government rely on evidence presented by this just in company and we discovered later because there were hundreds of cases the other off cases students were so desperate to get their names because for them their future and and then we discovered later on how flawed how underlying this is that this is such a hot mess to try and sort of unpack this for us a little bit more and i know he's been doing some reporting on this is robert wright his social policy correspondent at the financial times we spoke to him a little bit early adolescence. i have looked in considerable detail the way the u.k. home office and all these cheating claims the impression it emerges is of a department that initially panicked over the cheating allegations and then like
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each year's company that had done a great deal to create the problem mark its own homework it should have realized there was a terrible mistake being made in e.t.s. came back and said there's a question mark over more than ninety six percent of the tests instead the department trashed the head ignored all evidence to the contrary and tried to revoke the visas of six thousand people new bits of evidence so thin it's hard to see how anyone could possibly have relied on it now that i'm sorry some of the comments from our online community silliman says here foreign students contravene positively to the u.k. economy so he's saying the value measures how many students this might actually possibly impact and will they be just a total wholesale leave the country that's what can happen to them is that possible . i mean did most of them have already left the country. i mean all the results and
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were forcibly removed from the country stars and were detained and many of the students give up because they couldn't have this against him is not there they couldn't go to court to courts to does that instance there was nothing big to do and it was threatened i mean many of them began this you would have a lot of friends and charities. they'd they were not allowed to work they were not allowed to access health. they're not allowed to drive i mean they were just you know they were put in impossible. situation so many many of them actually give up and joined the conti's but there are still a few thousand of those so you're still compile and you're still campaigning on my voice still can't let me finish. voice her voice is of the students whose lives were ruined by the u.k. home office and twenty fourteen finally being heard these are some of the
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protesting students and i also want you to listen to the. documentary that will be coming out a little bit later look at migrant voice dot org to impact on the street and let's end this segment with their voices have a listen i've lost everything actually those memories that that damage cannot be accomplished and my my mental health damage oh my god i can feel that. even know what i can see the darkness if i'm in a. closed environment i'm so scared it could i get that i'm still suffering. thank you for bringing the story to us gramma down director of migrant forests. now to south africa where millions of people are considering how they will vote in
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elections in a week's time the ruling african national congress is expected to remain in power but is facing a one of its sternness challenges in the years for the democratic alliance and the economic freedom fighters presence or a gram opposers says that he wants to reform the a.n.c. and on wednesday he addressed the labor union rally into than. we do. the challenge. and challenge. al-jazeera southern africa correspondent will be covering the election race she's in the eastern portion of durban as from johannesburg we have nicholas bower he's a reporter for television news channel e n c a and also seven o two if you listen in south africa you won't know that station very well all right
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so for me to you actually literally walking on election coverage right now you drag yourself away to talk to us about what you're doing what is the biggest story do you feel right now what was the because that we should be paying attention to. and into so much going on and perhaps this is what characterizes and what's different about this election in particular compared to the others but a big issue really for many south africans is corruption so the africans are dealing with a government and a ruling party that's been employed in a number of scandals and i think the issue for many is despite the a.n.c. saying this is not what time for renewal we are now maybe reinventing ourselves we are promising you are a lot more especially with the new president will to. jacob zuma resigned the thing is those on every comes on seeing what these investigations and these
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inquiries into corruption what they're actually resulting in and who's head i suppose is rolling because it really is much of the same months on and heading into another election yeah and also major issues around poverty education employment so africa has a wiring unemployment rate at about twenty seven percent so these issues continue to plague this government and also the opposition parties have to come up with policies that address this but the agency has put itself in a tough position considering what happened in the last few years because i feel that that introduction that we just did about the next election i thought that's the same introduction that we've been doing for the last few years every time we come up to a big election time for him puts it really beautiful here the a.n.c. on twitter the a.n.c. is now a shadow of itself they have lost contact with the electorate but parties like identifying with people's problems that is it perhaps take but do you feel like
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we're just saying the same thing about the a.n.c. . well i can discount what melissa d.n.c. is facing massive challenge heading into this election twenty five years after democracy but just touching on the opposition i mean in many ways the opposition has failed as well because in the fairness of all of the mcs failures and problems that they've brought on this country in the twenty five years of governance it should be fairly easy for the democratic alliance or the economic freedom front is to capitalize on that but the fact of the matter is is there's no poll that gives the democratic alliance the largest opposition party anything above twenty two percent and the economic freedom fighters got a million votes last election which was about a six percent of the electorate and they're due to about double that so even in the face of all of these issues the a.n.c. is still going to all intents and purposes all the polls are showing us going to win this election moreover when you look at the pauses performance in the past
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year or so since he deposed president jacob zuma came to many are nobody actually predicted he would be able to do so it's been slow incremental change and while ms miller is correct in saying that there hasn't been enough change for you to do tangibly feel a change in the world's most unequal society you can't discount the small fundamentals that have been put in place and i'm specifically talking about the national prosecuting authority this is a new attorney general in joy and these two deputies that were accused of all sorts of malfeasance and corruption and oncology brain learns quickly that have now been fired as a result of one of these commissions of inquiry which we see about three or four of them going on concurrently at this point in time in south africa all right so let's hear some some voices as a senator i think to say let's and. this is a solace for south africa talking about what they want from
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the election and what the whole thing for what they're voting for have a listen. we see corruption being investigated but no one is being arrested if it were me i would have long been in jail that's the painful part. our main problem is that we are starving and we have children as you see this farm is working so why is the government not compensating us with some groceries monthly so we can eat it would be better if they at least give us something to live on i'm just looking ahead at some of the campaign posters have on my laptop so everybody is that how going to the rallies they're getting their message out for the media i'm just thinking in terms of what people expect in what that hoping for what they're voting on are we still looking at these basic inequality issues in south africa all they are they thinking that that's going to polity that who might be.
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that's a very interesting question and i think it also goes back to what nicholas spoke about a few moments ago in that these opposition parties haven't perhaps capitalized on the drop in support for the a.n.c. and i think that raises a number of issues one of people staying away from the polls people who would normally vote for the aid see that are happy with the party but they can't bring themselves to vote for anybody else and did these opposition parties also rely heavily on jacob zuma as presidency and once he was out of office what do they go on now yeah what have they managed to grab and the interest of south africans and offer something solid because if that were the case we would i think see these oppositions opposition parties perhaps grow at a foster or more significant or they sort of falling apart in terms of their own fight in fighting allegations against other parties and not actually linning last
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a.n.c. voters because those people say well i'm still loyal to the a.n.c. i'm pretty messed up to vote for anybody else i'm happy to stand let me just bring this because i found this on your twitter feed here so rama post during a panel a conversation with young people has to i guess for youth a future that works he was very comfortable with the young people that young people's vote is interesting in the last forty five seconds of asho tell us about young people and what will they get as opposed to do they get. well. you are in camps like that yet for you in this the fact of the matter is is that there's a sleeping majority in the youth and you started this conversation by saying when we talk about that africa we seem to be saying the exact same thing and yet correct why i for one am absolutely bored by this election because it doesn't seem to be anything new coming out of it and the reason there's nothing new coming out of it is because they're not speaking to the youth this six million young south africans
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that have decided not even to register never mind to actually go out and vote that's out of two thousand million young back thank you for not telling us that you were born into the family owned a vasectomy maker a spouse and get that we're covering the south african elections with. i will see you next time. like cattle airways experience economy class like never this qatar airways going places together.
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the story of one of the most successful p.r. campaigns in the u.s. study after study has demonstrated that israeli perspective american media coverage what part of this case you get through your thick head is hamas a terrorist organization. the only thing that you're going to say is what we want and if you don't say it when i go what you speak it would be very hard for ordinary americans to know that they're being deceived the occupation of the american mind on al-jazeera.
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it's all too familiar and innocent lives ended in an instant. then grief anger and the debate around firearms but for survivors and families of the four then reality often changes. faultlines investigates the long lasting trauma inflicted on communities the aftermath mass shootings in america on al-jazeera. i know more intel are not on the top stories on our zero. and then israeli president nicolas maduro has edged the armed forces to fight any quote traitors plotting against him in a show of military support but dura took to the streets of the capital caracas surrounded by thousands of soldiers his actions follow an attempt on tuesday to
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unseat him by rebel forces loyal to opposition leader one gordo the failed military have pricing sparked large scale protests against the government which left four people dead and hundreds injured. some of their own. they want to show an armed force of thieves of tricksters is that the armed forces we want that is why i say we have to keep up the pace with treason with coup plotters stay active the order has been given to the traces to stop them to the coup plotters to reject them the armed forces must be united in cohesive. the u.s. is one of more than fifty countries which recognizes venezuela's interim president the interim says washington is ready to help but as well as opposition in what he called its righteous struggle for freedom the brutal repression of the venezuelan people must stand that most people are starving they have no food they have no water and this was once one of the wealthiest countries in the world so we wish
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them well we'll be there to help and we are there to help. with a million people in india have been ordered to leave areas along the east coast ahead of a severe storm struck and forney has been upgraded to the highest category level with winds gusting up to two hundred fifty kilometers per hour it's expected to make landfall on friday correlate reports. these families aren't taking any chances are they leaving their towns and villages as cycling funny approaches india's east coast odisha state has deployed teams of emergency workers to set up shelters in schools and government buildings we have more of us trying to record the pregnant women on the black getting more. particularly the world people and people and that's the whole system because there are more prone to be in there so we have just trying to lessen the human casualty so that we can get rehab attention to the people and just everything for i mean they obviously are people that i don't think for all the milk and or whatever things they need in the rehabilitation
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center at the railway station in the town of putting tourists are queuing to leave extra trains and buses are running to take them somewhere safer. to the rain hurry when a previous cycle hit back then we stayed in the hotel we wanted to stay this time to see what the government wouldn't let us the hotel owners also want to just leave still being forced to go. on here like funny these two with low lying bangladesh threatening hundreds of thousands of refugees from me and. who are living in camps. but first the sightlines expected to strike india's east coast putting hundreds of thousands in harm's way car legler al-jazeera. it's been one week since psycho and kenneth made landfall in northern mozambique aid workers say remote communities are still waiting for desperately needed supplies a powerful storm flattened villages on the island of ebro many in need of food
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clean water and medicine contaminated wells have increased the risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases second kenneth killed at least forty one people and left thousands more displaced. mass protests are taking place in sudan where demonstrators have staged a million strong march to press for a civilian government purchase leaders say the military isn't serious about handing over power after ousting longtime luda omar bashir the two sides have agreed on forming a joint civilian military council to run sudan but are odds over the details of the african union has given sudan's military another sixty days to hand over power to civilians or it will face suspension. you noted nations has condemned what it calls the worst barrel bomb attacks in northwest syria for fifteen months government helicopters and warplanes supported by russian jets attacked deescalation or safe zones in rebel held areas at least four people have been killed including children
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. there's a top stories do stay with us twenty eight up south africa is coming up next our morning's feel for that night's watching. i guess. that's what. i'm looking for people. places told me then and it's what i mean what when they wake up we all mentally ill. people call call but i ain't got a lot of. subsistence to. get
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. to. we first filmed seppo when he was seven he was one of a group of children from all over south africa it was nine hundred ninety two and they had very little in common black white rich and poor some lived in townships some in white suburbs officially segregated by a pocket. which was only two years since mandela's release from prison and the racist policies of the past were just beginning to crumble and. since then we have followed their lives filming them every seven years. in one thousand nine hundred four. mandela became their president and as they grew up every south african was made
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like the lightning the way like a spot. twenty. twenty one. twenty one exploring. myself i think they determine. the fate things. have. supposedly grown up. so professional. i think my parents are quite. often david he patted me when i was you know you believe that actually from claudia was seven schools were still segregated along racial lines. would you want to go to school to watch or not.
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acted the way that the eaves feel free to speak the same language day as you do your madam speaks the same language. by the time claudia was fourteen a lot of change for her she and her family had moved to a care home for abused children where her father was the principal. as lot about is that goes on in the area is a lot of gunshots it's got the feel of being hijacked. who never feels being that i . should also moved schools and have gotten to a private school that specialized in science. at their old school we need to deal science facilities and it's in band of us we've got. an mi g. gillooly do experiments and i think it's a bit environment. by
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twenty one the family had moved again to a comfortable house in the suburbs and claudia had started a science degree adverts university. well i want to do. some of the first one is the courses you've called for quite the be a doctor so people. i just have a sense of needing to do something and it scares me sometimes because they so there's so much that's. a twenty eight she is a junior doctor and pediatrics at the chris high. barack want to thaw spittle in sweater. when you a student you you talk to patients in you know them but this is a domestic shift when you qualify and you're not responsible for the care of
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somebody else. her father now runs the university student who was so close to your lives in the residence on campus. i feel responsible we have us. to give back. and to try and make a difference because i have had opportunities i mean if there's one person in the family. who's been really well educated. that has implications not just for themselves but for the and i and me. in the sorts of classroom separate was a very keen student it. also set the course for the marketplace and. clearly says all right.
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i'm going to see you can speak. eat you. can't risk losing six. till we can make. the dramatic two phenomenons honestly you have the conceit to own which came when they were no. twenty eight you words a twelve hour shift from six am. over there you know what i would go for them i'll go over there well the first thing a good sound like if you can't if you're bored is nobody cause.
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