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tv   Born in 48  Al Jazeera  May 16, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03

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the port of who data the humanitarian lifeline for yemen a place where the u.n. once again has access after an inspection by the head of the international monitoring mission general michael lawler's guard who declared the who thiis had carried out a key part of the redeployment of their forces something they'd 1st agreed to do it talks in stockholm 6 months ago for the un this is an important step as this will allow us to start supporting the management of the ports the saudi led coalition is very skeptical claiming that hoofy fighters have handed over to the coast guard but that unit itself is under the effective control of the hoof these but in new york at the security council the u.n. special envoy martin griffiths was positive about recent developments and mr president this moment is significant and it's worth cherishing such moments which are not as frequent as we would hope of this of course is only the beginning these
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redeployments must be followed and i'm sure will be followed by concrete actions of the parties to deliver on their obligations under the stockroom agreement the security council also heard from top humanitarian officials from the u.n. who warned that life for people in yemen was still very difficult with the specter of famine and cholera cases on the rise this year this meanwhile was growing tensions between iran and the u.s. the search for a wider political peace settlement in yemen could be even more difficult the acting american ambassador fighting used his speech to attack the who thiis and iran the who these must cease you avi attacks against their fellow citizens and their neighbors iran needs to stop supplying the who these with weapons to do so. attacks this week against saudi infrastructure are just the latest example of how destabilizing that is the u.n. are hoping that developments in her data will give diplomacy in yemen fresh
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momentum but the situation inside the country is extremely complex and the regional dynamics are becoming more difficult and dangerous james zira of the united nations representatives of yemen's warring factions are holding talks in jordan's capital amman that they discussing how to manage revenues from 3 vital ports including the strategic city of data yemen's government says all money should be handed to the central bank in aden but who think it's a should be used to pay the salaries of civil servants including those in rebel held areas 71 years since hundreds of thousands of palestinians were forced from their homes to make way for the creation of israel. oh protests to be held in the occupied west bank to mark the day known to palestinians as or the catastrophe palestinians are also staging a strike to highlight their oppression on the israeli occupation. he spoke to
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certain people to begin to drink that 5 day protest at the gaza israel border israeli troops fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators. the challenges are live from london still ahead but israel has opposition leader one border defies a military blockade at the national assembly. and rights groups about a challenge the toughest abortion legislation in america after it's outlawed in alabama. hello there the weather still pretty miserable over parts of eastern europe in fact for some of us is being really horrible over the past few days we've had a lot of flooding and some damaging winds as well so we now have this swirling mass of cloud and that's going to stick around as we head through the next couple of
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days in fact that system just going to move and expand across other parts of europe as well so as we head through thursday it will be the northern posit poland into germany where we begin to see that what weather and then that will gradually spread its way towards the west as we head into friday so more of us here will see some clouds maybe old spot of rain as well we're also seeing another weather system pushing from the atlantic that's covering parts of britain and ireland down through france and then popping over into the mediterranean and that's where we'll see a little area of low pressure begin to develop and that could be quite nasty once a very strong winds and heavy rain out of that as we head through the day on friday for the other side of the mediterranean there have been a few showers here but the worst of those are now clearing away so i think for most of us some thursday and on friday they'll be plenty of sunshine around and the temperatures will be recovering force in chain as well get up to around $28.00 degrees for a battery would be quite that will will get to around $21.00 the central belt of africa is looking more lively now plenty more showers around particularly over parts of cameroon i'm bored.
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has his her. northern iraq his homeland. from which. camera in hand he returned. to film whose tiny taste to run. a story soon transformed by a chance encounter. the girl who saved my life i witnessed documentary on the d.c.u. .
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we're going to run to the top stories here on out is there a gun fire has broken out at a major protest site in sudan's capital less than $24.00 hours alter the opposition admits a council reached a breakthrough in talks several people have been injured outside the minute she had called his in khartoum. the u.s. state department has ordered all non-emergency government staff to leave iraq immediately it follows a warning by the u.s. military of a threat from a range in linked groups. and there's been renewed fighting in yemen between hoofy rebels and saudi u.a.e. backed forces potentially complicating a troop withdrawal agreement from cape ports here and says the put out could pave the way for a wider peace deal. washington has suspended all flights between the u.s. and about his way to the reports of violence near airports in the country it comes as opposition leader one why don't defied a military blockade to enter the national national assembly in caracas that arsenal god had surrounded the build. for
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a 2nd day tuesday session was canceled after police barricaded the building over ledged suspicious package again opposition politicians have called move an act of intimidation all of america to listen human as more from outside the national assembly. oh you are about 60 meters away from the entrance to the national assembly where after threatening to hold the meeting to day either in a park under a bridge or anywhere in public finally opposition deputies were allowed into the legislative palace but not the media in fact the media was physically pushed away from the entrance by the national guards riot police that you see behind me and who have cordoned off this entire area in fact we are being kept away the press gallery is empty but the meeting is going ahead nonetheless they are discussing among other things the fact that a 7 more opposition deputies who are also notoriously are all very evidently not taking part in this in this session were stripped of their parliamentary immunity
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on tuesday and one of them has actually been given refuge at the mexican embassy which is very significant because mexico until now has been considered one of the soft allies of president me collapse my boodle it has refused to recognize as the interim president as have most other latin american countries but now by giving this opposition deputy refuge at the embassy here in come back as that that this mission that sort of boss support is being held or at least that unconditional support nic is being called into question. of the 17 soldiers who have been killed in an ambush by rebel fighters near the border with mali troops were attacked near the village of. an area where several groups are active authorities are still searching for 11 soldiers missing since tuesday's attack. 31 people have appeared in court in connection with a wave of attacks against muslims in sri lanka and not curfew has also been
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extended into provinces tensions in the country have been high since the easter sunday bombings which killed at least $250.00 people but a smith reports from. the capitol. hill. an appeal for calm from one of the 9 mosques attacked in a wave of violence across northwestern sri lanka this week. and from these catholic priests a show of solidarity with they told us their 1st visit to a mosque there 3 weeks ago on easter sunday suicide bombers targeted churches and hotels in sri lanka killing 253 people. it's so sad that things like this had happened in. the church had been digging. a lot of hips in order to the previous working in these areas become that people don't you can never know. there are certainly groups in all the more dense you know and but the gunman months put
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a stop to these sri lanka's minority muslim population is now living in fear they break the ramadan fast behind drawn curtains. there's no visiting friends and neighbors a curfew empties the streets the mosques usually busy in this muslim holy month a closed. we're not sure what will happen we're hearing reports of attacks in different places and we don't know what to do we don't really trust any government witnesses described what they called mobs of sinhalese young men smashing up shops in and around 30 towns and villages the businesses in this town are owned by sinhalese people who are mainly buddhist as well as muslims. jessamy watched helpless as bricks rained down on this mosque and these people who are blames the government that my but it joined of our military when really we knew this was coming and the government warned there would be atrocities but they wanted this to
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happen to us the government thought we'd leave these areas so those goons could unleash mayhem and. true lanka's prime minister says the country will be destabilized if sectarianism escalates more than 70 people have been arrested and are in custody facing charges related to this week's violence nightly curfews have been keeping a lid on the violence and they'll be another want tonight it's wednesday but they're only a short term measure the much greater challenge is repairing the into community relationships which have been so badly fractured by the easter sunday bombing burnet an al-jazeera northwestern sri lanka. violence has broken out during campaigning ahead of india's 7th and final round of voting this weekend it happened in calcutta as prime minister narendra modi's ruling party was campaigning as it is in the state of west bengal that's led by
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a rival party scott hardly reports new delhi. thousands marching on the streets of kolkata these people are denouncing the violence the played out on their streets just the night before between supporters of opposing political party. was this is not the culture of bengal we had ashamed of this filthy culture of we're going to zoom in courted by the political parties in brisbane all political parties have co-existed. i am a former student the may political parties are destroying a what educational institution we are protesting against this we are not bardolph any political party we don't want any political party to hijack what a political protest. the chief of the ruling baath party john to a party. was leading a campaign phrase when violence broke out of the groups such as the capital of west bengal state and b.g.
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was the point i walked with money and resources into its campaign here in new delhi the b j p holding a protest after what happened in kolkata west bengal is a critical battleground state for the party because they fared poorly there in the last election in 2014 b j p leaders say this silent protest is their effort to counter what they claim is a threat to democracy in west bengal lodge but if someone sorts of the region the fact that he's beaten the. fault of media people as a factor now and back then home can one call it. but no matter what political parties say about the state of democracy here the people of west bengal will decide this weekend which ones will speak for them scotland al-jazeera new delhi. police in bangladesh 0 shot dead 2 suspected raping a human traffickers outside a refugee camp in the southeast earlier this week authorities intercepted more than 100 refugees about to make the journey to malaysia by boat agnivesh efficiencies
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say traffickers atomic in the 740000 rangar who fled a brutal military crackdown in minot. alabama has passed the street just a portion or in the u.s. by outlawing the procedure in almost all cases legislation which was passed by $25.00 male senators makes it a crime to perform an abortion at any stage of pregnancy the only exception being when a woman's health is at serious risk so it is in missouri also debating in your bush and bill it's similar to laws in mississippi kentucky ohio and georgia that ban abortion once a heartbeat is detected over or abortion rights have been restricted in 16 u.s. states so far this year and the gallagher report was no modal emotion and no motion in a limited motion most of alabama's new abortion bill aims to be the toughest in the u.s. if passed it will make performing an abortion even in cases of rape or incest a crime those kinds of exemptions of angered the state's democrats say the
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consequences for women's reproductive rights will be dire this bill would you would doctor up to 99 years with a class a felony in the state about alabama if they perform an abortion in even if there is not just the abortion this deal will put a doctor up to 25 years and so. is wrong this bill basically wrote doctors out of the state of alabama. alabama isn't alone in legal moves to effectively ban abortion in all more than 2 dozen states are considering new restrictive laws georgia's governor brian campus already signed a bill that will ban the procedure once the heartbeat of a fetus is detected and set to take effect on january the 1st. if you look at a child in the womb with a beating heart with a distinct blood type yeah scott a preschooler small child what are you looking at they say that they would look and say that's a baby we recognize what science law and common sense told us to do those in
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utero in georgia with a human heart with a full circle story system and all the components of humanity should get full protections of our laws supporters of alabama's bill expect legal challenges that with 2 new conservative judges in the supremes court there's a renewed push to challenge a landmark law known as roe v wade that legalized abortion in 1973. alabama's bill which allows abortion only if the mother's health is at risk will now go to the state's republican governor planned parenthood is a nonprofit organization that provides reproductive health care in the u.s. it's called the move a doc they for women in alabama and across the country but supporters of restricting abortion rights and moving closer to challenging the law they've long considered immoral and gallica al-jazeera the french president in new zealand's prime minister just have launched a global pledge to get tech companies to combat violent content it is from the e.u.
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canada jordan and it is that in paris and with representatives from facebook twitter and google launch of the church cole comes in response to attacks in the city and not when a gunman opened fire at 2 mosques killing 51 people insult was not streamed on facebook a 17 minutes before being taken down. never before have countries and companies come together in the wake of her if a tech to commit to an action plan that will deliver collaboratively work him new technology built to make our communities ultimately safer facebook has made a start with changes to the community rose around live streaming. if you decide our objective was simple that what happened in christ church should never happen again it was not merely an acceptable terrorists attack but it was
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permission not that you turn that into mushing aiming to destroy any form of cohesion you know what society. the head of the roman catholic church has taken 8 migrant children crispin in his popemobile. pope francis took them around st peter's square ahead of his weekly vatican address most of the children were from syria nigeria and democratic public of congo and had arrived by boat from libya others came with their families through a humanitarian corridor last month. the mind of the top stories on our. gun fire has broken out at a major protest site in sudan's capital less than $24.00 hours after the opposition and military council reached a breakthrough in talks several people are being injured outside the military headquarters in khartoum protesters have been camping there for weeks demanding
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a civilian government and an end to military rule the morgan has more from the sudanese capital. the protesters are saying that they do not trust the military council and the army they want to know why was this attempt made to remove their barricades and especially with them being very close to their sitting area this happened less than 500 meters away from the army headquarters on one of the main roads that is lit leading to the thetan in front of the army headquarters so there's thing that the army has ulterior motives they have other motives to try to move the barricades and at the moment loren they're saying that they're bracing themselves for more attacks more gunshots and more loss of lives the u.s. state department has ordered all non-emergency government employees to leave iraq immediately the order follows the warning by the u.s. military of a threat from iranian linked groups but that appears to contradict the view of a senior general in iraq who confirmed there had been no increased threat. the u.n.
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security council has heard yemen is at a crossroads between peace and war with the rebels began a withdrawal from 3 key ports on saturday it was seen as the most significant advance yet in efforts in the country's 4 year old war un cease fire monitor general michael miller scarf says the move will allow the u.n. to support the management of ports. c at least $47.00 people have been injured during that day protest at the gaza israel border israeli troops fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators palestinians have been protesting against the 71st anniversary of the day with thousands were forced from their homes for the creation of israel. washington has suspended all flights between the u.s. and venezuela citing reports of violence near airports in the country it comes as opposition leader when gado defied a military blockade to attend a session of the national assembly in caracas national guard had surrounded the building for a 2nd day. to stay with us the stream is up next thanks for watching watching in
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a bit. ok and you're in the stream today how can the so-called children of the caliphate be helped. rights activists say minors who once lived in a controlled territory should be repatriated to other countries but security experts warn that they could pose a threat to what do you think your comments in the u chief will do her best to get those comrades into. syria lawyer vice
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president of the syrian national coalition and you are in the stream. thousands of children who once lived in i still controlled territory of being held in prisons and refugee camps across eastern syria iraq and libya some were captured fleeing i saw with their mothers while many others opens overboard to foreign parents a handful of countries including kosovo russia and kazakhstan have taken action to repatriate minus security analysts have suggested the issue is a political landmine warning of the potential for radicalization if these children are repeat treated carelessly rights groups so see the children have experienced significant trauma and should not be used as political pawns or punished for circumstances beyond their control relief agencies have also raised concerns about the number of children in these camps who are severely ill noting that local health
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care facilities are ill equipped to handle the number of patients who need urgent care joining us now with some insight into the debate in sweden dr niemann 40 is founder of joint help for kurdistan that's an organization working to help conflict afflicted people she's also a volunteer in the whole camp in eastern syria in london in the u.k. gina valois is a research fellow at the international center for the study of radicalization. at king's college london also in london. is a lawyer who specializes in cases involving the repatriation or for what i saw members over but it's good to have you here you have all had experience of what it is like to go to some of these camps where children are mothers are after they have been part of the islamic state and they're there and they can't get back to perhaps they will countries and they're going to go for all of you and see what is that experience like what kind of conditions are these youngsters these babies living in
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. i'd like you to start got to go for it can you give us pages a picture describe the scene in one of the kind that you go to regularly. like to start with actually not use anymore. because they are not marked or they are. you know. right. a little problem in the way that this whole county is and these monsters they are really not mothers anymore and you know we. also isis we have started an era where we cannot anymore say women and children are the most affected. victims of the war because i says women have shown that they are not any more mothers they are not any more women and they are just as monsters as those men who
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have started this kelly thought it was so but at the same time you have to take care of the children and this is what i've been arguing both. sweden and norway we cannot anymore have the you know our democracy mark on our faces to say that children is the best for children to grow up and to be taken care of by their parents or the close it ok because they are not any more parents children should be separated from the preachers who are living in a whole camp i mean and i mean the thing that he had the affair with what do you think about the parents of the children so you are concerned about that mental well being having the conditions that children are actually i have been born in all the living in their experience and right now because the should actually inform what should be done with those camps doesn't go ahead. sure so if we look at the world
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health organization reported around concerns to the children particularly hold. back in january 2000 to 2019. a press release was sent out by them with serious concern around the ability for those comes to look after children with very very basic issues to food. sanitation not appeased. medication we knew there was not really very much of a hospital presence now that's generally $2000.00 a month and that was roughly when our whole. 29 to 30 something 1000. dennis's fooldom to february and we had the death of 29 children really i'll hold by that stage and again the world health organization raising serious concerns. up in march and then through to may we have about the
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same time which was stretched with resources in general is now with 80 samples in. the number of children that recorded dead i'll hole alone was 100 and isolation figures and so given the it was. about a 3rd of the capacity that it was it was already overstretched one can only imagine what we were thinking about really with respect to the children now the food supply has always been somewhat strained medical supply that is almost nonexistent any very serious cases have to be taken let. me interrupt you here sorry i should really interrupt the here because this is the thing the planning i don't know what they have planned before starting bazemore but i have i saw how they were planning before her ration and put in months and months you know sitting in the meeting and they were planning for that w.h.o.
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on you and order all those 30 where you know responsible for planning what to do before starting their last attack. and you know the break you bought was they should have planted much business 1st of all they should have not to account behind a village whole village which is full of the remnants. to make it even more difficult for his. what if they should have not been all. i people you know before they knew little there were only 1800 people in the now we are talking about 74000 people and then you an order your thoughts saying we don't have any control well. landing this will only mark the. week we'll obviously. limit this and this is critical it's really important to understand why the caps look like they do. mean was talking about a whole let me show you what our whole looks like here i've got
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a number of pictures you can just see and gina as we go through these pictures the clarity that i want is is this a place for kids to grow up. let me test doesn't let me just begin again if i may then then we can come actually go ahead dear. no of course not not only are many of these children lacking official documentation because they were either born under islamic state rule or they are lacking official documentation after liberation which then bars them potentially from accessing health care accessing education within the camps and beyond that will say lacking shortages in water in food in sanitation in supplies so this is not the place to raise children in any circumstance let alone in a circumstance where there are children. where there are also dash supporters now
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it's a contentious issue as to whether the right policy is to separate children from their parents whether that be the mother or father who was once affiliated to the dash this is something that is still up for debate and is very contentious issue what's also important to understand and as a new mom actually alluded to is the issue of when many as it is were liberated some of them were taken to a whole camp before their family members were able to collect them and liberate them from these camps this means that sometimes you see the women were in the same space and same location as some of their captors or at least the family members of affiliates this is not a situation that only i get to have off of because they gave the right who i. play a big they were calling because basically my right rear up in a car by the beginning of their right to have children. for the kids who are
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under that or going without because you employ everybody there that the basic and i like that they have a culture that they believe they should go by and we have been finding you know even boy growing. batman because i. courting them and the way that you in terms of the issue if you. leave the bottle and they brought you to hold all the partying women they have organized and even poor women and. we're there among don't like how many hundreds you know we have. and if the shame there in print preview and you know for 2 weeks ago we were liberated 13 years all the get out she was carrying her one and all baby and she was pregnant 2 months
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you know had this happen in front of you and quality and the rest of the world and i'm sitting upright now that i think everybody even the right they were children who live in hope of these children you know as. a doctor who for you actually want to get in there because you're enjoying your mentoring an important question that will never be online community has a question about as well so dr before you just pause for a moment because you mentioned the ghezzi children i want to share with you this tweet that circulating online radio and writes i often wonder what reasons create international sympathy and outrage over crimes against humanity including women and children the ongoing plight of women and their children from war crimes seems not to be striking a chord and what they're referencing is reports that have come out that the mothers
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who were freed by isis or ice now face a very hard choice and it is whether or not they want to return to their families in iraq or give up their children because the children born of rape often cannot come home here's what one of our community members has to say about that this is someone on twitter who says if these kids are not a part of the commune. where do they belong are they to be thrown in waste bins dr 40 your thoughts on that. well i always say it's very easy to attack. these questions should not be put to work is easy before everyone else you have to put the question to iraqi government and. law in iraq by paragraph 6 a so everyone born by name the child so when you ask them if. they thing no but when prudie is easy women come back with her child then he or she is there and also by putting 26 be it say
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that you can be converted for any other religions who are. around in so i don't question to the weakest who are just diseases and they don't have any voice and they don't have any right. to government who sees the born of iraqi government to have been you know healing minorities in the region before anything else they have to change the law then you can. keeping the babies or not ok minutes i don't remember because the same much you want to get to i want to bring back ties meaning to the conversation has mean you became extremely well known because you represent the family of a young lady called shamim a beggar i'm going to discuss one of the headlines as an old headline but just to remind people it is a story about you trying to get to the camp to actually see your client and being pushed back this is the young lady concerned tell her about tell us about her story
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and the baby in the story that is relevant to this question about what should happen to the children of isometric. what it really comes down to is this is every human being with the right to be of some sort of citizenship and the question becomes with citizenship which country. also for the children and the citizens. when they find themselves in a conflict zone and indeed in rebel territory so would respect as a 15 year old charles she was groomed and struck out in 2015 to syria very quickly she was married quote unquote. that the question of marriages is a lie one because she was married to a dutch national. and technically was statutory rape in the u.k. law and in dutch law. she spent 4 years there quote unquote husband is in custody she had 3 children 2 of them died before she reached hole camp and she was
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pregnant with her 3rd she was she gave birth to a child and then she was subsequently stripped of citizenship now the issue of the using the women in and everyone really who's out in al hold raj and in syria the question about who the fathers of these children are live because if they are if their fathers are from european countries then those children also have europe in citizenship and the countries where their parents come from need to step up and take responsibility for these children because the kurds or the kurdish rebel forces are in no position whatsoever to. even manage the numbers that are out there let alone give the basic human rights that these children deserve food shelter clothing the right to life people. because they're not they're not being supported so what should happen to the camps because that's
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a very very clearly because there was a big debate happening and actually mad her little boy you can see them both here and before he die and then the debate was humming where we were single his family was ready to tell him in a saloon the issue there was that there was no real debate about the child. even subject except of the child was a british citizen and so the question was one of practicality how do you get a child who's days old in a refugee come back over to the u.k. . where the trouble documents how do you arrange those how do you prove through d.n.a. testing given that the child or the mother are in a refugee camp how do you get those d.n.a. says to them to satisfy the conditions required for a trouble up to. now there are administrative hurdles around all those administrative hurdles have been thrown out by the u.k. government so that even though technically the child was accepted as british in
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practical terms that child was languishing. in a refugee camp regardless of what the legal status for this is what the question is go ahead when you toss a question. i would like to ask a question actually because since you know it has been c. the isis children and we are talking about children who should not be in a war zone i have a simple question for you your government u.k. government do you support being. out of the gun and the terrorist acts of his country who are killing people all over find other countries and every day people are smuggled out of all counting on what's a question go ahead with a question i don't know my question is that i'm coming to my question the is the children a woman tempted to put a mosque to the soul so do you really trust your country with these kind of you
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know my girls that they could rehabilitate people like me who have you know being one of them are like a i hate the question it's also because a rapidly running out of time on the show that i want to get to know if i can get the committee to get back in passing feels that medical. if you trust in u.k. government can take rehabilitate. but no i don't trust the government acted in bad faith when it comes to. but it's not for a government to rehabilitate individuals as the 1st port of call it's the families it's the people that love and care for them that will take them back in and attempt to reintegrate them back a 1st into the firm and then be into the wider community now the u.k. government has spoken about prevent strategically i was ability to push back point is that they can really sorry to interrupt on that go. yes i think that a family can play
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a role in the rehabilitation of someone that joined an extremist organization or a terrorist group like islamic state but if we start to put the burden on this in this responsibility on families this then securitize is the family space there have been many articles and much research done on the role of mothers in radicalizing all increasing resilience of against radicalism of their children now if that and fails and a mother fails to prevent her child either traveling to a war zone or becoming increasingly radical in that ideas all in actions potentially how does that and then following that matter all the farther shore which will not matter because again. so so we persuaded almost from going on separate sort. of that we have 3 children what. they are not the mother more and that's what you have to thank you these here in so
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that is absolutely i've heard your point there and i think i think it will resonate with a lot of people and i wrote it down because i'm so striking what you said no these are not mothers they are monsters and so i hear your point but i want to bring in this perspective this is 90 days on twitter who says if i so can brainwash a full grown person into believing there. doctrine so can any government rehabilitate the children of these mothers people that some of whom you referred to as well. i take your point but i want to push on towards then what to do about the children as this person is asking in the tweet we have a video comment from someone who picks up on that point she talks to us about what is next for many of these children she's a senior fellow at the council on foreign relations and here's what she told the string when it comes to their children they did not choose to join isis many were born in the caliphate brought there before they were even school age and they should now be forced to pay for the sins of their parents they should be brought
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back to their countries of origin government should monitor them along with their mothers and determine who may pose a security threat who should be prosecuted it's what's best for justice and in fact for our national security but it would also ensure that the children who did not choose to join isis have a chance at a better future and have access to education and health care that is their right. so do not act that way to god gina. what we need to remember is there are different categories of children as far as research with myself and my colleague got to join a kirk yes i have found the youngest miner to travel unaccompanied to iraq and syria to join dash was 15 years old so teen and teenagers may have had similar or the same reasons and motivations for joining dash as an adult we have to understand that they have had agency in their decisions begun being one of them she did not
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travel the company of an adult whether that's a parent or guardian however they are still children and we have a judicial juvenile judicial system for a reason when we then deal with younger children even those who have been indoctrinated through the education system trained militarily through dashes cubs' program and then of course going down to very innocent victims of those children that were born into the 2nd stances well let we cannot generalize across but to go forward just large enough to finish a case out. of just allowed to finish it just for me to finish off the right hand of the show i don't buy i want to finish i thought. there's been recent fantastic programs that have that have actually taken place inside mosul working on educating children who have lived under dash control admittedly not dash the courting or affiliated children but integrating sports my name games into education
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teaching those teachers how to deal with the trauma that is experienced by those children enabling them to understand and come to terms with their experiences and what they've seen so there are certainly ways to rehabilitate these children but what's most important and the final point i'll make is that initiatives like this that the children wealth comes they don't securitize these children and give them labels as the cure. threats all ticking time bombs as we had in recent headlines they have the 2nd injury objective and secondary added benefit of ensuring that these children are given better resilience to radicalization in the future but it's more important to deal with their developmental needs that are right where right at the end of the show i've just got a minute to ask has named this one thought and that is you have been right in the central part of the huge debate that is happening in the u.k. and in many countries actually about what happens to the kids or former ice or
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fighters public opinion can you describe what it is like to be in the middle of that to feel that public opinion how serious it is what you describe that went public opinion the the vocal part of it tends to be right wing and that's why it's called populism so my experience has been personally or got death threats letters in the post and you know some of the some of the comments are are we wouldn't be outside in terms of what people are proposing so as to retrieve themselves really bug having so on then have emails and letters of support at the same time ok so it's all because the cartoon extreme right yeah well yes and that is what we got i got crying that's we're going to wrap it up as they will thank you when we hear way where you're coming from they're going to say thank you so much that has named to gina and also to dr newman golf for e as well this conversation is not and then we will continue always online you can
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find a link on myself at a stream on twitter and to watch a scene x. .
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i name a law that i was born in the same year as is going to voice i feel as though the state is my mother. maybe not because of celebration for some a catastrophe for the nakba is still going on they put my sons in jail so every
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birthday i feel disgust for a few twice over al-jazeera well tells the stories of palestinian and israeli women born in the same year but on opposite sides of this divide born in $48.00 on al-jazeera worlds. al-jazeera this is the opportunity to understand sleep in a very different way where there is the we don't leave. the law or. hello entertainer in london the top stories on our jazeera breaking news from sudan talks between opposition leaders and the military council have been postponed indefinitely it comes just hours after gunfire broke out at a major protest site in the capital several people were injured outside the military headquarters in khartoum protesters have been camping there for weeks demanding
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a civilian government and an end to military rule. the u.s. state department has ordered all non-emergency government employees to leave iraq immediately it would have thought as a warning by the u.s. military of a threat from iranian linked groups that appears to contradict the view of a senior general in iraq who confirmed there has been no increased threat sent to strive a has been following developments from tehran. any time in the past several weeks when the united states has raised the stakes against iran when it is ratcheted up the pressure iran's leaders have come across saying the same thing over and over again that this is all psychological warfare and iran's supreme leader ayatollah ali companies seem to reinforce that point in a speech he made to senior members of his government tuesday evening just last night he was speaking to people that included the president head of the judiciary the head of parliament senior military commanders and his message to them was that the united states in iran are locked in a battle but it is
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a battle of wills that iran will certainly when and that the united states is making an uproar that its public grantor its public posturing is far more loud than they are dangerous and he said that this is all basically orchestrated to put fear into iranians and it is not something that they should be worried about that a conflict that is military in nature will not come to pass but he also reiterated iran's standing position that it does not want a conflict it does not want any fighting with u.s. forces in the region. the u.n. security council has heard yemen is at a crossroads between peace and war with iraq began a withdrawal from 3 key ports on saturday it was seen as the most significant advance yet in efforts to end the country's 4 year old war un cease fire monitor general michael color guard says the move will allow the un to support the management of ports. 71 years since hundreds of thousands of palestinians who were
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forced from their homes to make way for the creation of israel. the protests are being held in the occupied west bank to mark the day known to palestinian as nakba or the catastrophe palestinians are also staging a strike to highlight their oppression under israeli occupation for shinton has suspended all flights between the u.s. and venezuela citing reports of violence near airports in the country it comes as opposition leader one door defied a military blockade to end attend a session of the national assembly in caracas and the national guard has surrounded the building for a 2nd day latin america to listen human has more. oh you are about 60 meters away from the entrance to the national assembly where after threatening to hold the meeting to day either in a park under a bridge or anywhere in public finally opposition deputies were allowed into the legislative collis but not the media in fact the media was physically pushed away
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from the entrance by the national guards riot police that to see behind me and who have cordoned off this entire area in fact we are being kept away the press gallery is empty but the meeting is going ahead nonetheless they are discussing among other things the fact that a 7 more opposition deputies who are also notoriously are all very evidently not taking part in this in this session were stripped of their parliamentary immunity on tuesday and one of them has actually been given refuge at the mexican embassy which is very significant because mexico until now has been considered one of the solved allies of president me collapse my little it has refused to recognize a long wide ball as the interim president as have most of the other latin american countries but now by giving this opposition deputy refuge at the embassy here in come back as that that this special event sort of boss support is being held or at least that unconditional support nick is being called into question witness is up
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next by now. yeah. if. you're going out. there you're going to look at.
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the key you need 10 number. of enemies to be pop up. for doesn't it on the old. me papa. of the dogs get up with him and. wish him by the 5th he could just on. ready you thing i said bochum got. up i mean i'm not going to meet somebody that event comes out the chord is coming in even. if they're hoping of course there's going to not have any money from day one. i know you're going to give me a 1000000. for waking up up
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was killing us quicker there's the police kept on going to get even more you don't . get this please men any dog lucky will not i'm told it. would. go to. you. know just such i think i. could just on. the get instant the seed in. the head to meet him month so me and him there's some that owning the only hint that. he stored in a paper she. knew something needed for. then had going on for me yes
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then his films just thought this funny as him. lifted up his morning habit of utter sleep in the middle. but just to this is about him all about image. what they're up to the old testament i'm a. real. winner i'll cut it. just through the system and followed up much of the look of them but the look of the. uplift done in it the myself must cut it down i was.
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still stuffed up i just did not. let me tell. you something. that was a joke. but just done it. yesterday i know that you know those. why not cut. down. yesterday on the new storms just dalton e.-s. come from c.d.o. talking about you know it's nest was just on most of the history proving finishing on. the mr but the idea is he the. some do give us give us some of them room new york loaded up the money again if you want to see these men. they say some of them on t.v. get it with you on imported form. within hadn't even all the us somehow dumped on them you have a state to get em. where. they
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were. for fear of was going on that there are far more footage of the far good. i don't know of but i'll admit to put money into a fund of that be the money you put even if you do. work up to the genius who did. cough it into the knuckle their buddies have done our job well then you know harmlessly dismissing through a bunch. minicon is in the biasing up again if you dog out of. the obvious of it up then go butyl got the middle one other beautician it will go to middle woman mother not posted here much it will be the scene of the end. of the show that we are at the time i'm above the water board but never have been for a moment publish it it wasn't hard huzzard to madama did it in the jury it would go .
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before defending or the. funny fall innocent as it out planting he thought them plus the school going to. saudi and asked for some really nasty thoughts. as to shake the system from what they could you know that the stock has money but easy job in manama is that none of us are going to be going after saddam was a good as you. thought ok maybe what you know but does their model by you know what you know. or draw. them out of on them go on not just the one given the role but if. saddam says if get in
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there or the bit in ma did they know it didn't. just like his mother money. from the daughter paula zahn will get close enough to see that millionaire the media dash didn't warn you about me i should be obama's. honey foresees dad had some of them. small believe it could not but they'll be yes. dog in each of the tiki is easy and prove or. something enough today that he's done a lot of it for them. 0 0 7 7. oh oh no no no call a show how the day her going to a law what i know how mother also law the mother of the arctic the corner.

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