tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera May 6, 2019 7:00pm-7:34pm +03
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if you give me a second. then i have used peaceful protests against the israeli operation under siege and that isn't of that was the killing of two hundred twenty palestinians by the israeli me including the us unlike john who was a first it writer and three other have including many shipments and this was a vote issue of every basic right now will israel combatants with of course the gazans will but it's for good what would you have is our kurds. if the united states and is there once again i was there and i have the right amounts with more sophisticated equipment so that they got indicted more properly but i do not sing for them that isn't so for traffic you know this is three days that i am asked what about the simpletons it was it held up a splendid city so the israelis were killed two of them were sort of gets twenty eight by just not when they launch indiscriminate world i'm sure that can be argued
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to be targeting of civilians as the un secretary general is making right i do not think they have found anything since we do you think they are using the image of the kids as a form of defending themselves against aesthetics the very substance let's talk of that any picture if any civilian let's look at the bigger picture you have seen what happened on the t.v. you can see how do i but that civilian areas do you think of downed. buildings do you think some of the the get this sort of easing of restrictions which are at least being talked about is the solution for the tensions of gaza no not the solution is to thinks that he moving c.-h. complete the siege is inhuman and acceptable and should be left to completely the second thing is often the hardest and probably the palestinian problem is in the fact that we've got in the west bank book. we have now something for us is the move . that has to end with out in the book inflation which has become dominant us to
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completion in modern history and without him being this system will fall apart which is worse than what south africa one time there will be lots of what we see now in the field since it is nothing but support think is there to continue its occupation and the system of apartheid it has. or i thank you so much most of out of all to both from the mandala. the u.s. is deploying an aircraft carrier group to the middle east to send what it calls a clear message to iran the u.s.s. abraham lincoln and support ships have been dispatched national security advisor john bolton says it's in response to what he calls troubling developments in the region. is live for us. what's the reaction been like that. i mean normally when it comes to something like this
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reaction would come from the country's foreign office we've been in touch with them since the early hours of the morning when this development when this news broke and we haven't gotten any response as yet but usually when things like this happen we can be certain that the various leaders from the various branches of the civilian government as well as leaders from the military branches will be getting together in consultation sessions and we can be fairly certain that those meetings are taking place now try to come up with a response to what has come out of the united states in this most recent development but we can point to is comments made by first of all the foreign minister zarif in the recent past foreshadowing something like this during a recent trip to new york he was on a media blitz and he told various american news networks that when tensions are heightened that accidents can take place and no doubt the presence of more american more american military presence in the region will likely increase a so-called accident that might happen in around the waters surrounding the country we also can look to recent comments by the supreme leader ayatollah khomeini in
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which he also foreshadowed something like this and let me read to you a statement he made during a speech earlier this month at the beginning of this month to a group of teachers he said that in the face of this battle formation by the united states that iran had to take about a formation as well and the most important thing to do was to stay united he also said that every one of the people and the officials must prepare themselves for this aggression and where ever they are they. must take responsibility to enter the battlefield so a lot of war rhetoric in this what is still very very much a war of words but iranian leaders are taking john bolton's hawkishness in iran very seriously in a few days we'll see it'll be one year since united states pulled out of the joint comprehensive plan of action the anniversary of that will be on may eighth and leading up to that we are expecting to hear more strong rhetoric from various senior leaders here into iran all right thanks for that and plenty more still ahead on the news hour including. its trade talks set to resume between the u.s.
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in beijing president down from threatens more tariffs on chinese goods why a visit by former sudanese president omar al bashir to jordan two years ago is at the center of a case of the international criminal court. and spall the kenyan running champion aiming to head at a time target many believe is in possible. for civilians have been killed in russian and syrian government and strikes in northern syria the white helmets rescue group says the two week attack on rebel held it live is now killed at least sixty eight people the victims include a volunteer from the white helmets on the ground hospital was also hit. so dan's ruling military council is expected to unveil
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a transition plan on monday protestors continue their demands for civilian rule the military and protest leaders are deadlocked over who will control the government who sides agreed to form a joint military civilian council last week but they failed to agree on who should be in the council a coalition of opposition parties have submitted draft proposals for a way forward. how would i know is live for us then from khartoum so mohammed what do we expect the transition plan to look like while some immediate a small been tossed with the responsibility of breaking the deadlock between the military on one side and so on society organizations under the umbrella of the forces for freedom on change. have come up with a proposal for two different sovereign councils lots where they're calling them right now one which has
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a majority militant presentation and another one that has risen from the military is led by civilians and as a civilian why do that and led by the possum who's going to become the head of state and that is the proposal now both the military under civil society the opposition groups will been behind the protest us studying trying to come up with their. responses to it and whether that is acceptable to them of course the opposition figure is. getting what they have always wanted because they've always wanted to really get the military and the military council to just mater security and this is what the proposal is now entailing but it will be very interesting to see whether the transitional military council will agree to such a proposal which takes the entire month away from them and hunts it over to a civilian or forty so how is the opposition likely to respond to what ever is
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unveiled today. well i mean the proposal favors them but i've not been speaking with one voice there is a clear split within the opposition with the civil society with more of it led by the sudanese professionals of the ocean accusing sudan's constant opposition particularly sad development is almost and the communist off seeking no interest and quick gains from the negotiations that they're kind of going on with the military so we have a situation where the opposition are not speaking with one voice and this is the greatest fear of the sudanese people because that is actually going to weaken them and strengthen the military is higher than it was sessions. all right thanks so much what about. the international criminal court has ruled not to refer jordan to
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the un security council for failing to arrest former sudanese president omar bashir of two years ago he was wanted by the i.c.c. for crimes committed in darfur by militias aligned to his government calls those jordan should have arrested bashir opponents request when he visited our man in march two thousand and seventeen bashir was there to attend the arab league summit seventy deca has more from the hague. it took more than half an hour for the judge to read out the background and the verdict of jordan's appeal basically unanimous of all judges saying that jordan should have handed over the former sudanese president omar al bashir to the i.c.c. when he visited a man in two thousand and seventeen but they will no longer be referring jordan to the un security council it really had to do with the issue of the immunity of a head of state sudan is not a signatory to the i.c.c. but jordan is now the judges here ruling that omar al bashir did not enjoy that immunity that jordan failed under its legal obligation as
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a signatory to hand him over but the bigger question really is this is where does the i.c.c. stand what kind of power does it have what are the consequences of actions like this the case against him all bashir the arrest warrant has been out for ten years now the i.c.c. accusing bashir of genocide war crimes and crimes against humanity he is of course at the moment in a high security prison in sudan the sudanese military has said he will not be handing him over and that they intend to try him in sudan. u.s. president dog trump is stepping up pressure on china to resolve their trade dispute trump says the u.s. will raise tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese products to twenty five percent on friday his announcement comes two days before representatives from both countries are scheduled to resume trade talks stock markets reacted nervously with lost. and shanghai.
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china says its team is still preparing to head to the u.s. for negotiations despite donald trump's threat to raise tariffs though this week. i think the top priority now is that the u.s. and china could work together and meet each other halfway today who can see spaced on mutual. benefits growth which is not only in line with the interests of china and the u.s. to but also makes the expectation of the international community to speak now. in beijing she's an analyst at the economist intelligence units access china's service good to have you with us so for a while it looked like both sides were stepping back from the sort of track terror of escalation war what happened what changed. well it all because of one tweet by president donald trump which i think the market
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is really overreacting because just last week we heard president traumas talking about this would be the biggest deal ever in the u.s. history and there is also the pending invitation for president xi jinping to visit a white house if everything goes well so deep down i think donald trump or the one this deal to happen especially before the next election cycle or i don't but what prompted him or prompted the us now to then escalate things with terrorists if as you're saying things seem still to be going well. right so this very aggressive toy does seem to be in sharp contrast to the to market sentiment in the past few weeks watch i think is that this is not really talking to china present a trauma is trying to talk to us to muster voters out of what a tough deal maker he can be and if there is a geo then it's mostly because he works out the magic but if there is not that most
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because china doesn't comply so he either way it's more win for him rather than for other courses. is he going to impact the trade talks coming up. i would be very surprised if the trade talk collapse at this point because if we look at how this negotiation has evolved in the past a year in fact that the likelihood of both sides reaching an agreement has been increasing not decreasing and at this point there is even no point for either side to step out of the talk mainly because there is this in force and term what i think is very likely to happen is both sides will sit down and get some sort of deal even if it is limited in nature and at some point along the way if the u.s. decides that china is breaking the rule it could always use the in-force meant. to reimpose to tariffs on china and that makes a lot more sense for the u.s.
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side because it will always have this leverage over china but if at this point the trade deal breaks down then there is really no no more talks and no more leverage all over china in the past in the future just on the substance of how far apart the policy is though when it comes to substance of issues in trade relations. there are quite a few differences or we can call those baselines for for either side for china really cannot budge more in terms of changing its domestic policy or how it's treated and. the protection order force technology transfer but for you us these seems to be the priority to reach a deal which i think is very likely for china to commit to buy more things from the u.s.
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especially agricultural products financial services and also open up more of the domestic market and even this deal would be very much a win or a gift to the president trump already because it would fulfill his a commitment to reduce the u.s. china trade deficit all right thanks so much. ideation authorities in russia have recovered flight data recorders from a plane that caught fire as it made an emergency landing in moscow on sunday at least forty one people were killed as the details of. planes burst from air flow to fight fourteen ninety two as it came in for an emergency landing at moscow's sheremetyevo airport and bounced off the runway. by the time the sukhoi superjet one hundred came to a halt it was engulfed in fire seventy eight passengers and crew onboard. only thirty seven made it off alive the flight
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a taken off from the same airport just thirty minutes earlier heading for the northern city of months. the airline said it was forced to turn around due to technical reasons flight radar tracking shows it circled twice over moscow before making the emergency landing russian investigators have launched a criminal inquiry but some i looked on there were seventy three passengers and five crew members twenty eight passengers are now at the airport terminal investigators on psychologists are working with them five people have been hospitalized thirty seven out of seventy eight people on board of the plane survived thirty three passengers and four crew members superjet one hundred came into service in russia and twenty eleven the first new passenger jet developed there since the fall of the soviet union a year later a plane on a demonstration tore to indonesia crashed on mount sonic killing all forty five people on board that accident was blamed on human error through the intensity of
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the fire it may consume a lot of physical evidence so we'll have to wait and see i didn't see any. rescue equipment in the early pictures at the scene so that may be an issue as well where was the equipment and what kind of equipment they have available what the fire oh what the recorders will give us. some indication that this type of action i think the the cockpit voice recorder may be most beneficial this i believe is the third accident in total for this type of airplane and so it's it's been proven to be a pretty reliable platform so it's going to be interesting to see what comes out of it so corey has struggled to convince international airlines to buy its jets proving the planes are safe will be crucial to the future of a project that had been a source of russian pride for healing mohammed al jazeera. the un food agency says it has finally gained access to food aid in the yemeni port city
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of data for the first time since february the mission had been delayed because of security reasons the world food program had accused the rebels of blocking access to a mill warehouse in april. it has winds that can feed three million people affected by the war. a few moments we'll have the weather with staff but still ahead on al-jazeera. i'm rick lot reporting from the live photo it's all to go away all the threats faced by one of the most important fisheries in the world. and what's turned the water of pakistan's largest into a health hazard. of its border a new name but the same result for cycling leading to.
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a lower this is the forecast for many even though you might think it's december if you're in europe it's certainly been very cold and pretty windy for many of us across many parts of europe over the last day or so you must say we saw a gust of wind up to one hundred thirty kilometers per hour just down the road we had one hundred fifty so incredibly windy for some of us here and as well as windy is also be very wintery this willing massive cloud here hasn't only brought us a lot of rain and thunder it's also brought us a lot of very wintry weather as well so this is what it currently looks like in the northern parts of italy but we've also got snow through parts of germany switzerland and into france as well say although it's may we should be approaching summer it's looking more like a winter so all of that very cold weather that is following this weather system here are working its way southwards we still got some pretty strong winds with it
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and still some heavy rain but straight ahead of it it's really very warm here up to nineteen degrees and that was where they continued further northwards into parts of russia as well really very warm above average but elsewhere across europe very cool amounts the way it's going to stay as we head through the next few days for the western parts of europe temperatures generally below average feeling rather chilly and down in the southeast things are going decidedly downhill the temperatures are dropping and there's some pretty heavy rain around to. whether sponsored by cattle or employees. as we embrace new technologies rarely do we stop to ask what is the price of this progress what happened was people started getting sick but there was a small group of people that began to think that maybe this was related to the chemist and investigation reveals how even the smallest devices have deadly environmental and health costs we think ok we'll send ari waste to china but we have to remember that air felician travels around the globe jeff i design on
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al-jazeera. in a two part series. zero observes the lives of two children. over twenty years. where insights into circumstances that shaped lives. in a rapidly changing world. twenty years of mean starts with blood and land to build a story on how to zero. welcome back you're watching out of zero time to recap our headlines as
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a ceasefire agreement between israel and palestinian groups in gaza and egypt brokered a deal to end days of cross border attacks twenty four palestinians and four israelis were killed in the latest round of violence. the u.s. is deploying an aircraft carrier group to the middle east said what he calls a clear message to iran. national security advisor john bolton says it's in response to what he calls troubling developments in the region. u.s. president dog trump says the u.s. will raise tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese products to try to five percent on friday but beijing says it will still attend a meeting on wednesday to try and resolve a trade dispute with washington. one million animal and plant species face extinction according to the united nations the report says we're facing a global ecological emergency that can only be fixed by quote transformative change
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increasing ocean temperatures are threatening the arctic called a fish considered to be a delicacy around the world net clock reports from the law fatten islands in arctic norway. this is what made norway rich long before oil take told all scray in then millions filled drawing rocks across the lefe tonight lands winter off the wind fisherman here have cashed in on the annual migration south from the barents sea it is a tradition that goes back thousands of year is called it's cold it's got it and then it's hold out to dry for several months and what you end up with is a dried fish that retains nearly one hundred percent of its nutrition apprise delicacy from its me to nigeria this is what supplied the vikings on a long voyages to far off lands and still now is a big part of the norwegian economy with millions of dollars to fish comes from the barents sea and its goal is to look for them to spawn. and that's because of the
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atlantic stream to the left extreme it stops by locals and brings food it brings to the higher temperature even though it's not warm but it's high high enough to spawn and it's a very delicate ecosystem in that fragility is spelled out by a remove scientific research as a changing climate and warmer ocean temperatures upset the balance of the marine ecosystem meaning the scray may be forced out and then it's a question of where they go obviously it keeps things keep warming some of those true polar species might. not have a whole lot of places to go if they're being out computed by sort of these more southern species moving north and where you see might see some considerable changes there this ca give nielsen cold thirteen thousand kilos of cold it's been a pretty good season but he's worried about the future climate change could change
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everything. they're called suddenly stopped because they'd be warmer and going at all around the dollar north so then being the how bad a big program every arab spring comes they called league their return has always been a certainty and in the city not just for the fishermen if the seals see birds and whales that feed on them now this extraordinary feat of nature is under threat the outcome as ever depends on the political will to act in a time of global crisis nicknack al-jazeera the foton ottomans norway. pakistan's largest freshwater lake has become a dumping ground for industrial waste hider reports from the among child lake this is putting the lives of people who depend on it at risk. what is left of the word sprout mohan are dry. eyed one time hundreds of boards harder to get indeed shallow
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water now there are just a few dozen left. for these people to be their homes for as long as they can remember. i know that nobody and i got in the previous new had about fifty varieties of fish in much a lake but in polluted water came through many fish took a wiped out. here we used to have a good catch now we on the brink of ruin we don't even have drinking water here we have to buy it from the city for fifty rupees for a small drum. it's lunchtime and bread is begun a small stall stocked away in one corner of the book even the firewood above the water line costs money but if they said. living off the lake it was struggle and read out he does not know what really happened to his family let him out of the dharma we don't even have houses here how can we give education to our children if someone among us gets sick we need one thousand rupees
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tolerance to take them to the nearest hospital from where will these poor people arrange this government to provide a service and houses we could live a normal life by doing other jobs like farming and such. here remember the happiest guy where there was plenty of fishing and the rich plant life including located provided a food for the people of montreal lake fishing i mean their main livelihood but because of industrial pull your parents now being putin did it ward a body awarded nor drink it well the first stocks are down the flora and fauna is gone and it may destroy a whole way of life for death be put. as we traveled deeper into this watch the expanse of water we find more problem these people who had boats and lived along the side of the lake conditions now are the worst they have known. the world can
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a moment for them we request our government to make arrangements for cleaning this water so that we can resume our normal life it's the government was. sponsibility to facilitate us by providing schools hospitals houses and other facilities. lakemont jordan it's around used to be a popular resting ground for the migratory birds the lake itself more than forty different fish but the only ones there could be small and used for animal feed for some fishermen this is their only source of income. they've been dorie by the program cheerleader that they were good but haven't received any buggers on new prime minister brown connors promised a clean and green country but the people here say time is running out for dam. voting has begun in the fifth phase of india's monthlong general election where
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eighty seven million people are eligible to vote across seven states that includes two constituencies in uttar pradesh where opposition congress party president or a whole gandy is seeking reelection for a fourth. final results are expected on may twenty third this election is being seen as a referendum on prime minister narendra modi's five years in office. poverty is still a major concern in india despite the country's recent economic growth west's district and state is one of the most remote and poorest constituencies a recent report by public health research is there says sixty seven percent of children under five amount to wait. as more. this remote part of eastern india's jharkhand state is where many tribal people live for generations they've lived off this land it's rich in natural resources yet
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they are some of the poorest in the country and this pond is protected by the government from fishing but for some locals it's meagre contents are the only protein they can find. down the road we meet her husband's work as a laborer isn't enough to support their four children she earns a living making these cigarettes known as b.d.s. for less than seventy five cents a day she says there are no other opportunities. in this village electricity is a problem water is a problem there's no work here the village has applied. but that hasn't applied for whatever even that has and. the lack of proper facilities is harder on the youngest in the field many are malnourished and underweight. because of that many end up in this treatment center about fifteen kilometers away the doctor here says locals have no concept of the effects of malnutrition and just how damaging it can be for their children. so many people from those rural areas come to
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a big city such as new delhi hoping to find a better life but instead they wind up in overcrowded slums like this one they say india's recent economic growth is not helping people like them poor people get very poor quality help this economist says the solution to helping the poorest won't be found in economic figures but it improving living conditions in remote areas so if you create more it again. more telecommunication more reward and these are very much lacking in those areas and if the children get good education then over a period of time they could get out of the poverty trap back in west singhbhum the local m.p. is running for reelection he says development is already taking place the idea that all men in villages rebuild crude paved road electricity has also. booking on possibly it's not available in all places like. this is my house it's dark it's an unfinished house and those promises haven't
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reached who shows us her home with no electricity. she says politicians only come around during election time for many of india's poorest they feel that poverty is not just a trap but a life sentence. as jamil al-jazeera. millions of young south africans won't be voting in wednesday's general election some of them say they're turning their backs on politics because they feel ignored for me the middle reports from. cosmetics alleging to being fake i want to put it better what we're doing is broken if in fact his expression of a more broad trying to get a degree people told me to get into which i had a life that i think it's through music they're quite elizondo expresses how he wants to change his life but the twenty two year old student belongs to a group of musicians our hard. stuff first time voters in this election care about do you feel like the issues have
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a guy who's twenty six students are those issues being addressed not necessarily what will still wait now those people of all political parties making a lot of promises that don't deliver but now we just stuck in the middle we just have to make a choice like any random choice right now i just feel like i'm just going to vote in vain because i've been given the opportunity of two votes not because i feel like the urge to vote i'm just gonna vote in vain to be honest with you i think there's a lot of corruption in politics and that's why. for me i'm stepping away from politics is. interested in politics because the corruption that's going. to be under a few. hundred peers let me get a degree people probably don't get it if we say the left but odds are with the things that i think i'm seeing this kind of progress if we hope in science and history the energy jobs and the systems of i should have all the amongst the crew.
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