tv Good Morning Rocinha Al Jazeera May 16, 2019 11:00pm-12:01am +03
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to any threat against our national security to be discussed how we would prevent further escalation discuss how the north and community could step in to save cage keep your a crusade he knew he would be in properties and the only way to do it would be to distort the economic evidence put it on. from case he is the purpose of the new year. meanwhile the commander of iran's revolutionary guard is warning of imminent confrontation with the united states major general has seen salami says the u.s. escalation in the region represents what he calls a decisive moment for the islamic revolution iran's u.n. mission also accused washington of trying to deliberately provoke a confrontation by claiming tehran is a threat to the region. weather is next but still ahead on al-jazeera china hit back against what it calls a unilateral u.s. action against tech giant hallway costs.
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the u.s. states about obama passes the nation's strictest abortion bill. we've got some rather lively showers pushing down across central and southern parts of china at the moment the the plumber gathering quite nicely now some wet weather but if he doubts what's the southeast of china hong kong seeing some big showers and thunder downpours as we go through friday 31 celsius is southerly wind kicking in across many possums to slot a little further west was as we go into saturday by sas i sang all is good temperatures here 28 celsius plenty of sunshine a hot one for hanoi temperatures could reach the 40 degree mark and we've been up into the forty's across a good part of india recently but over the last day or so the big story really has
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been the law of the shower as a crop of showers just rather decent sort of india and down towards the far south this is bengaluru of the lightning bolt and picked up i started the showers in the process of easing away at least during the overnight period come a heat of the day there's a with a chance of catching one of 2 shallow as it has to be said want to show is there into trouble not there for example there we go with temperatures in the into the forty's for hyderabad from that pool close to 40 degrees for new delhi but the top temperature 39 degrees celsius it falls back to 37 on saturday afternoon and cool off in karate. you know this is a tipping point scientists are telling us right now that we have just 12 years as the world's leader. to agree on a solution. to taking matters into the. evening
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after. we try to such and to get people to understand that the kills people and that it kills people now is critically ill throws were to the people in stores only $0.00. hello again i'm just. a reminder of the news this hour in yemen at least 6 civilians have been killed in saudi u.a.e. coalition air strikes in and around the capital saana residential neighborhoods were bombed the coalition insists the targeted truthy military positions and weapons storage facilities. talks between saddam's opposition coalition and the
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military council have been suspended for 3 days this follows an increase in violence the negotiators are trying to decide who should head to the council that will oversee the transition. and egypt's military says it's killed 47 armed men in multiple raids across north and central sinai hundreds of explosive devices and other weapons were seized and more than 150 people were arrested. all to northwest syria now where at least 150 civilians have been killed during 3 weeks of syrian government offensives backed by russia the violence has been a strain on us. fire agreement struck by turkey and russia last year out of there as in a lot of reports from beirut. people's lives have been destroyed while their neighborhoods are reduced to rubble general but the law schools mosques and hospitals have been hit. for 3 weeks syrian and russian jets haven't left the skies over northwest
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syria opposition controlled villages across southern and northern hama and provinces have been targeted like about us and elsewhere and those in the middle that the majority of the people flocked to early years further north many were injured and killed in the bombing of a solution there is no ghost told empty of its residents. it's the biggest military escalation since the ceasefire agreed by turkey and russia last september that agreement is now under strain turkey says it is intensifying diplomatic efforts with russia to deescalate the violence but it seems moscow has its own agenda but perhaps the structure. itself was all right this was. not what's what's the reaction. in the streets that's what's wrong. nato ally turkey is in
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a difficult position going ahead with a deal to buy russian made s. $400.00 missile system would worsen a troubled relationship with the united states which is threatening sanctions. president treasurer favorite line was also careful not to mention russia's role in the violence in northwest syria he accused the syrian government instead of seeking to sabotage turkey's relations with russia the 2 countries don't just cooperate in syria. turkey is increasingly reliant on russia for its energy needs they also have an important economic relationship and the kremlin's expanding influence in the middle east is. reality so it is difficult for turkey to walk away from another lions that secures its interests in syria and gives a say in its neighbors future. it live gives turkey political leverage but the offensive around the province is unlikely to break its alliance with moscow. smart
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or. interest or think it was going to. turkish officials say a working group with russia on northwest syria will could be soon it didn't give more details but the offensive continues dozens of civilians have been killed and nearly 200000 displaced many more remain trapped not just in a war zone but in a geo political struggle so that's what they're built sri lanka's government says hardline but his scripts are being investigated over a recent wave of anti muslim attacks at least 31 people have appeared in court in connection with the raids that's all mosques and muslim into businesses targeted in days of violence but its myth has more from the gumbo. they press conference on wednesday updating the security situation in the shrine where the government says.
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all have been no further attacks since the beginning of the week and that is essentially because there's been a curfew in place and that has kept a lid on the violence but the greatest challenge of course was your language to try and find some sort of long term solution to bring these factions fractured communities back together but it was not in this one and i asked one of the ministers in the government here who for the 1st time we've heard this from the government blamed for this nationalist extremist groups provoking this by. your saw ensured that those people who are behind these were arrested and put it yesterday also last night who did this piece in this country nothing has happened. so we've beefy the again hold the view that these are organized attacks on muslim business hosers premises that are happening and we will ensure that it does not happen well it's quite interesting it remains tense in particularly here in the
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northwestern part of sri lanka which is where all of the attacks at the beginning of this week were censored censored and what the minister says he's quite interesting because it's you go to a lot of the villages here or to particular the sinhalese buddhist majority deletions here and there is this sense of resentment against muslim communities muslim communities that live nearby and that resentment has been given an outlet really by the easter sunday attacks a sort of an excuse that some of the international screws have been looking for looking for perhaps to target muslim groups and when you speak to some of the buddhist villagers some of the in these small communities they'll say that the muslims aren't integrating they'll say that they're not a normal part of sri lankan society and unfortunate this sort of view is quite common and i think the government fears that it's being given fuel by these nationalistic street missed groups. china has vowed to defend its companies from
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what it calls unfair treatment from the united states after washington blacklisted while away and 70 of its affiliates the u.s. believes equipment produced by the chinese tech giant could be used for espionage holloway has repeatedly denied those accusations aging brown reports from tangent. what you see here is at the heart of the trade dispute between china and the united states the 2 countries are competing to be world leaders in artificial intelligence robotics and 5 g. technology. showcasing its achievements while with china's national tech champion its expansion plans in the united states now seem over after the u.s. put the firm and its affiliates on a trading blacklist an issue too sensitive for this company official to discuss the market the country operates a company so sorry. but he's confident while way will still thrive in other markets
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so now later we have your fire level. we hope we can cooperate each other with other countries while way officials had anticipated this move and on thursday the firm issued a statement saying the transactions wouldn't improve safety or security in the united states and would only harm consumers and companies it doesn't bode well for the faltering trade talks between the 2 countries u.s. firms are present here the mood among one technology representative surprisingly upbeat is it very hard to sell u.s. technology in china today because of the trade move i don't think i saw in so many years counties is open for the all the difference to you know the goods products here and our attorneys the customers is what i think the. american. pronounce is one of. the themes. this exhibition is artificial intelligence in
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china the technology is widely used in surveillance and facial recognition cameras . especially in the far western province of shinji where they monitor track and rate members of a largely muslim group known as the week goes this company manufactures many of those cameras and has been promoting its expertise here but officials didn't want to tell you the reason you can't use the u.s. government has once more targeted one of china's most successful companies leading executives of other technology firms wondering who will be next adrian brown al jazeera interior in northeast china. in the u.s. the democratic race for the 2020 presidential election is getting even more crowded new york city mayor bill de blasio is the latest to announce his bid for the party nomination and is pledging to put working people fast a recent poll though found that 76 percent of new york city verses say they think
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de blasio shouldn't run for the presidency. the governor of the u.s. state of alabama has signed into law a controversial abortion bill that outlaws the procedure and almost all cases the only exception being when a woman's health is at serious risk and gallagher has more banning them there's no mo there was a motion today you know you don't know she didn't know come up alabama's new abortion law will be the toughest in the u.s. unless there are a successful legal challenges performing an abortion even in cases of rape or incest will be a crime those kinds of exemptions of angered the state's democrats who say the consequences for women's reproductive rights will be dire this bill would you would doctor up to 99 years of the claires a cell in the in the state of alabama if they perform an abortion in even if there is no abortion this deal will put it down to 20000. and so it
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is wrong this deal basically right doctors out of the state of. 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 it said 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 ska a preschool or small child what are you looking at they say that they would look and say that's a big we recognize what science law and common sense told us to do those in utero in georgia with a human heart with a 4 circulatory system and all the components of humanity should get 4 protections or was 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 floor known as roe v wade that legalized abortion in 1973.
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alabama's new law will allow women to have an abortion if their pregnancy is a health risk but the battle lines are now being drawn in one of the most polarizing issues in u.s. policy planned parenthood the nonprofit organization that advises women on reproductive rights say this state's new ruling is a dog day for women in alabama and across the country but for supporters of the new law the want to restrict abortion rights it's a step closer to challenging a law they've long seen as a moral and agalloch al-jazeera birmingham alabama. former straight in prime minister bob hawke has died at the age of 89 mr holt led the country and the labor party from 1983 to 1991 and his death comes just 2 days before the country's federal election a former trade union leader bob hawke cept for terms as prime minister and was considered a reformer his government introduced a universal public health service and environmental protections for the great
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barrier reef and forests in tasmania while the one that is one of australia's most loved to native animals but wildlife authorities say they are under threat from a fatal and painful disease the one but population one has declined by 94 percent in just 6 years to ambrose reports from the strain is southern states of tasmania see how these big leagues. warmbloods are under attack from a contagious parasite called suck up to. left untreated the results are horrendous . the mind works with a community action group to try and tackle the disease we've seen them disappear in the hundreds just in this area admittedly this is the worst period probably but it's not always saluted in today's syria. used to run to national park and the surrounding forests a ground 0 for the worst recorded outbreak the woman population in this national park declined by non to 4 percent in just 6 years because of mines. in an
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attempt to save the population volunteers placed flaps outside. then put a sheep lice treatment on them every week. strain scientists are working on more effective medicines at the moment if we want to treat a minor while on that we have to use treatments so we have to deliver every week and it's really challenging to do that consistently so what we're trying to look at as a longer lasting single treatment that can protect individuals for up to peps 3 months . down a step and runs a century on the mainland and doesn't believe flat treatments work with help from a university she's been testing what she calls borrow hospitals built over a woman it's natural borrow it enables one to be treated with pills while they are fed we know it works we use it here for the last 2 years. if we could recreate that
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over and over again in the different states managed by the people who currently put their energy towards bets in the wrong way the results would speak for themselves donna believes innovation is the only way to save strategy as one that's from the disease in the last decade it has escalated every single year the amount of areas with. just continuing creases on the critically endangered list when 20 is no doubt in my mind these trained government has no national major monitoring program but says the disease is being adequately controlled however few states have . populations and that's heartening the concern of wildlife carers dry ambrose al-jazeera. and you can watch one i want to film the one that was spread by virus which will fast at 20 to 30 g.m.t.
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day here on al-jazeera. hello i'm the star with the headlines on al-jazeera in yemen. at least 6 civilians have been killed in saudi u.a.e. coalition air strikes in and around the capital sana'a residential neighborhoods were bombed the coalition insists that targeted toothy military positions and weapons storage facilities nasser rb as a yemeni journalist from sana and he explains what happened. this morning here in samarra was. through the. oil facility in riyadh of the very clear but unfortunately it was a. blind completely blind. because.
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in killing women and children in the residential area sudan's military rulers have suspended talks with protest leaders for 3 days the opposition alliance which has been demanding civilian rule has called the decision regrettable negotiators are trying to decide who should head to the council that will oversee a transition period before new elections are held egypt's military says it's killed 47 armed men in multiple raids across north and central sinai hundreds of explosive devices and other weapons with seized and more than $150.00 people were arrested true lanka's government says hardline but just groups are under investigation over a recent wave of anti muslim attacks at least $31.00 people have appeared in court in connection with those attacks. china has vowed to defend its companies after a u.s. government decision to place while away and 70 of its affiliates on a trade blacklist washington believes equipment produced by the chinese company could be used to spy on the u.s.
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far away has repeatedly denied those allegations nextstep sympathetic. one of the strategies most love making random. is under threats from an agonizing. one was one you know he's dedicating a lot to say. what i want to east makes. 0. and for me ok and your in the stream today how can the so-called children of the caliphate be helped by my legal 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 new chief will do her best to get those comrades into. syria lawyer vice president of the syrian national coalition and you are in the stream.
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thousands of children who once lived in i still controlled territory are 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 are old friends or were born 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 repatriated 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. have also raised concerns about the number of children in these camps who are severely ill noting that local health 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 duff henri is
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founder of joint health for kurdistan that's an organization working to help conflict afflicted people she's also a volunteer in the al 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 of for what i saw members and everybody 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 among others are after they have been part of the islamic state and they're there and they can't get back to perhaps their regional 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. i'd like you to start doctor before we can can you give us pages a picture describe the scene in one of the kind that you go to regularly. like to
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start actually not use anymore. because they are not marketed they are. you know. but 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 effective. 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 have started these killings fought. wars so but at the same time you have to take
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care of the children and this is what i've been arguing both. sweden and norway we cannot any more have the you know the christian mosque on our places 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 right ok because they are not any more current children should be separated from the preachers who are living in the whole time i mean and i may be mistaken you had apparently what you think about the parents of the children so you are concerned about that mental well being as being the conditions that children are actually i have been born in all the living in them experiencing right now because donna should action full what should be done most of those can fashion go ahead. sure so if we look at the world health organization reported around concerns to the children particularly older. in generally 2000 to
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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. medications i mean there was not really very much of a hospital presence so that's generally 2000 a month and that was roughly when our whole. 29 to 30 something 1000. dennis's fooldom to february and we had the deaths of 29 children really i'll hold by that stage again the world health organization raising serious concerns. up in march and then through to may we have about the same time which was stretched with resources in general is now with 80 samples in. the
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number of children that recorded whole alone was not 100 again world health organization figures and so given the it was. the sort 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 supplies as almost nonexistent any very serious cases have to be taken but i think right you hear stories 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. all to you and or to all those 30 where you know responsible for planning what to
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do before starting their last attack. and you know leave for a few boxes they should have planted much business 1st of all they should have not account behind a village whole village which is full of the remnants. to make it even more difficult for his. what if this would have not been all. i people you know before they knew little there were only 1800 people in the now we are talking about 7000 people and then you an order your throat saying we don't have any control well. learning this will only mark the. week we'll obviously do that we dream of 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 a number of pictures you can just see and gina as we go through these pages the
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clarity that i want is is this a place for kids to grow up. or just bring test doesn't we just begin again if i may then then we can go back you go ahead gina. 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 and 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 it's a contentious issue as to whether the right policy is to separate children from
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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 it's very contentious issue what's also important to and to understand and as a new mom actually alluded to is the issue of when many is edis 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 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. think they were calling because basically my right rear ended up in a car by the beginning of their right to have children. for the kids who are under that or going without because you employ everybody there that the
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basic and i like that they have a culture that they really of if you go by and we have been finding you know even boys going. my math because i. for seeing them and the way that you and cons of the issue is just. leave boggling and they both use to hold all the 40 women they have organized and even for those women and. among those in tundra. and it's a shame that in front of us for 2 weeks ago we received braces 15 years old. she was carrying one on our old baby and she was pregnant 2 months so this happened in front of you and
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qualification and the rest of the war and i'm pretty surprised. i think everybody say you did the right children to even hope the easy didn't feel that you know i've been in finding a doctor who for you actually want to get in there because you're enjoying your mentoring an important question that will have the almighty unity a question about as well because after the 40 just for a moment because you mentioned that is easy children i want to share with you this tweet that's 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 these easy women and their children from war crime seems not to be striking a chord and what they are referencing is news reports that have come out that the mothers who were freed by isis or i so now face a very hard choice and it is whether or not they want to return to their families
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in iraq or give up their children because the children born of rape often cannot come home with them here's what one of our community members haas to say about that this is someone on twitter who says these kids are not a part of the commune. where do they belong are they to be thrown in waste bins what dr foote of your thoughts on that. well i always say it's very easy to attack . these questions should not be put to what 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 are. missing the thing no but when prudy is easy women come back with her child then he or she is there and also by far be it say that you can be converted for any other religion to what. around so
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don't questions to the weakest who are g.'s e d's and they don't have any voice and they don't have any right. to government who sees the born of the iraqi government to have been you know healing minorities in the region before anything else they have to change these laws 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 to have meaning to the conversation doesn't 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 hands out you trying to get to the camp to actually see your client and being pushed back says the young lady concerned tell her about tell us about her story and the baby in the story that is relevant to this question about what should happen to the children of i so memphis. what it really comes down to is this is
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every human being with the right to be a battle to some sort of citizenship and the question becomes with citizenship which country. for the children and the citizens. when they find themselves in a conflict zone and indeed in rebel territory so would respect me the begum as a 15 year old child she was groomed and struck out in 2015 to syria very quickly she was married quote unquote. the question of marriages is a lie one because she was married to a dutch national. and technically it was statutory rape already 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 all come and she was pregnant with her 3rd she was she gave birth to
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a child and then she was subsequently stripped to citizenship now the issue over the years the women and everyone really who's out in whole and in syria the question of 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 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 a very very clearly because there was a big debate happening and actually mad her little boy you can see them both here
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and before he die and then the debate was happening where we were single this family was writing to tell him that in aquatic absolutely so 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 portion 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 are 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 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 practical terms that child was languishing. in
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a refugee camp regardless of what the legal status for this is what the question was yes go ahead we want to also 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 seeing. out of the gun and the terrorist acts of the country who are killing people opining other countries and every day people are smuggled out of all counting on what's the question go ahead with a question i don't know my question is that i'm coming to my question the of the children and women tend to turn to you for the market to be sold so do you really trust your country with these kind of you know my girls that they could
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rehabilitate people like. 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 back in the community get back can pass and feel that we can. do you trust in u.k. government to make rehabilitate. no i don't trust the government. acted in bad faith when it comes to. it's not for the 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 its prevent structurally i was ability to push back point if we can really sorry to interrupt on that. yes i think that a family can play 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 and all of
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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 the 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 or inactions potentially how does that and then following that matter all the far there which will not matter because again. so as we did on this front there for a sort of the if. we have very few of them what. they are not the mother more and that what you have to thank you things here in so that is absolutely 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
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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 i saw can brainwash a full grown person into believing their. 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 not be forced to pay for the sins of their parents they should be brought back to their countries of origin government should monitor them along with
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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 will 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 dean alter i got radio gardena. and 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 i.z.'s i 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 travel the company of an adult whether that's a parent or guardian however they are still children and we have
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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 these circumstances well let we cannot generalize across the 4 just to finish a case out. of just allowed to finish it just for me to finish off the white 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 all my name games into education teaching those teachers how to deal with the trauma that is experienced by those
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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 cue. threats all ticking time bombs as we've had in recent headlines they have the 2nd injury objective and secondary added benefit of ensuring that these children are given a better resilience to radicalization in the future but it's more important to deal with their developmental needs asked all right were 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 fighters public opinion can you describe what it is like to be in the middle of
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that to feel that public opinion how serious it is what you describe that went public opinion 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 show us territory 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 yeah well you said i'm going to cry 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 the tasmanian to jena and also to adopt a name and call for e as well this conversation is clearly not other men but we will continue always online you can finally come myself at a stream on twitter and so what you see next. in
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it all up. for the love of his homeland. football rebels delves into the realm of footballing legend rashid makushi. full of the algerian national liberation front with his feet. and the f l n t on al-jazeera. this is al-jazeera. this is the news our life until coming up in the next sick. minutes saturday u.a.e. airstrikes on the yemeni capital sana'a kill at 6 members of one family. saddam's
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military suspends talks with process leaders on a transition to civilian rule. bijection military says it has killed dozens of armed men in a series of operations in the troubled sinai region and sri lanka's government isn't best skating what it calls hardline bertus groups over attacks against muslims are porous for the sport including action from the n.b.a. playoffs as the milwaukee bucks fight back to be toronto i go a step closer to the final. get everywhere there's. the coalition has launched several air strikes in a row in the capital sana'a the coalition insists military positions were targeted but residential neighborhoods have also been hits at least 6 civilians all from one family and including women and children have been killed. has the latest.
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for the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen the series of strikes was a successful operation targeting the military installations in the capital sanaa. but these pictures depict another reality rather than say the attacks targeted barely civilian areas and that an entire family was buried under the rubble. it is very clear that what happened this morning here in sanaa was a response to the through the whole of the drone attacks on the. oil facilities in riyadh it is a very clear but unfortunately it was. blind completely blind. because it is only in killing women and children in there is it until area the escalation comes a few days after the her theists attacked an oil pipeline near the saudi capital
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riyadh using 7 drones. it's the most daring military operation by the her fears since the start of the war 4 years ago and a sign of their growing military capabilities the saudi u.a.e. coalition remains adamant it says its military campaign in yemen will continue until both emitter installations are destroyed. these are the fighters of the moment they opened fire on what they say was assad road they remain defiant despite the prolonged conflict rather than so large we will repair the drone and will hopefully flight once again over saudi arabia israel and the u.s. . on the ground generated by a heavy withdrawal from the border city of how data is fading there is fighting on the ask us of the city raising concerns of
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a deepening humanitarian crisis coded aboard the main entry point for food imports and aid is a lifeline for millions of yemenis frightened by starvation. in the solve there is more fighting around the city of by government troops backed by the saudis asked rivaling to push back theo van. gogh one of the un envoy martin griffiths has warned the united nations security council the recent ask elation might damage if gyal peace deal. with the well off from nasser is a yemeni journalist on the editor in chief of sun a review that sent online magazine she's accusing the coalition of deliberately targeting civilians. so there were many airstrikes and that had somehow and most of them had highly civilian populated
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area one of them is my own my own neighborhood so i know the streets and i know that you know the the neighbors. and even my own family my own mother were surrounded by civilian you know they they live and civilian area there is no military target and these places that were had today there is no excuse excuse from the that would be like coalition it was a deliberate and systematic bombardment attacking civilians they want they they did this and really the retaliation of. aipac in the oil. earlier this week and this is not the 1st time that the saudi led coalition do this clacked of collective punishment for all yemenis when the who the attack any of the festivities and 2017 and the. early november there
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were like rockets hit or fired by what these 2 words riad and i believe michael and really retaliation the saudi and coalition at that time imposed a total speed on all entries so this is not the 1st time that the saudis want to take revenge with what they are doing against all this to be an m.m. and this is unacceptable. citron military has suspended talks with process leaders for 3 days at least 4 people were killed in violence on monday and protesters are demanding accountability from khartoum morgan reports. on the day that sudan's military council and the opposition coalition were supposed to announce a deal to form a transitional government a setback appears and the announcement that came was contrary to what people expected just 24 hours before. we have decided to stop all sorts of allegations
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actions for $72.00 hours with the freedom and justice alliance and the removal of barricades from bridges. it's all started on wednesday evening when protesters say a fraction of the sudanese military known as the rapid support forces opened fire on them after they refused to allow the removal of barricades they set up. was this is a bullet casing it's one of the live ammunition what happened is that the forces beat up those guarding the barricades ahead and when the protesters tried to defend the barricades they were shot at the sudanese doctors committee says at least a dozen people have been injured in a scene that unfolded very much like the one from monday night when 5 people were killed and more than 200 wounded. once the evening's events happened less than $24.00 hours after the opposition coalition and the military council which ousted sudan's 30 year president i'm going to be shear announced progress in talks to form a transitional government the coalition said the attacks were an attempt to disperse protesters at the thetan at army headquarters less than 500 meters away
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it's now in its 6th week with protesters saying they're there to put pressure on the military council to hand power to civilian rule the opposition coalition which has been leading the calls for the protests and the certain has urged protesters to remove the new barricades set up on main roads. no one will scare us with bullets will stay and face the bullets but it will be organized and united and it will have certain points a barricade can be guarded by a 1000 people but we shouldn't have thousands of barricades we can't defend our plans didn't include many of the main roads will now open those roads and return to the roads laid out in our maps. and the protesters list and they move the barricades back to the current meter set up when the sit in started on april 6th some analysts think some factions of the military stand to lose if a deal is reached between the council and the opposition there were allegations that the security forces which. the vice president are messy attacked the
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crowd on monday there were a number of deaths. and it's quite possible the same forces are involved here he is after all the kingpin in the whole of the military structure that is responsible for holding the whole of the security forces together and i dare say that he's not too happy about the idea of sharing power with the civilians meanwhile those at the sitting say they know they are the power base for the opposition and the pressure card against the military council to hand over power they say they want and they're sitting despite the violence until their demands are met with the new orders from the military council their determination to continue with the threat and will be tested. well that corresponded to morgan is standing by for as a. khartoum ahead but we heard say your reports council said the barricades must be removed today a lot of those barricades have gone ahead with the protesters seeing this as some sort of a defeat that the opposition is giving in to the military council. well hello
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the opposition the protesters here are not looking at the orders given by the military council they're listening according to them to the orders given to them by the opposition coalition yesterday night to the opposition leader's address that many of the protesters along several barricades on some of the main streets and they said that when the sit in started on the 6th of april they had already identified barricades that perry meters of the sit in front of the army headquarters now the barricade behind me where you see people going in is one of the barricades one of the 1st barricades that's up when the sit in started in the thick of april and this road leads to the army headquarters where protesters are still gathered so they're saying that they're not listening to what the military council says they're listening to what they regard as their leaders their representatives in the negotiations and the talks to form a transitional government are saying and if at the moment the very leaders are saying that they should retreat back to their own original position to the parent as that was set up when the sit ins start and then that's what they're going to do but the biggest test will be when the army comes to remove the barricades on the
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railroads now that railroad overlooks the army headquarters it's in the heart of the city and a protesters have been there from the so far they've been blocking the road and the army saying that those barricades are hindering hindering movement of not just people but services and goods to other things they're saying that those barricades must be removed but they haven't made any move to remove them yet whether the whether the protesters at the sit in will accept for that to happen is something that is yet to be seen and how they would react to it will basically determine what goes on with the sit in front of the army headquarters here but the 2 sides are so close to forming a transitional government how likely is it that talks will resume after the suspension by the military. well the up with. corelation had said initially that they deeply regret their words that they deeply regret that the military council has suspended talks there saying that they want to form a transitional government and they do want to continue talks let's not forget that the main point that they have to discuss now is the formation of the sovereign
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council that is what they were supposed to be discussing yesterday who will be leading the sovereign council and fictive lee who will be meeting the transitional period for those talks of course have been suspended the 2 sides that the military council have said that it's giving $72.00 hours the opposition coalition is the to react to see to it to see if to say if they're going to agree to that $72.00 hours or not and what will happen after that's only 2 hours but largely comes down to the protesters themselves if more violence erupts him then they say that they will hold on the opposition coalition to be part of the talks with the military council and that is likely that what will happen if more women are up in the coming days morgan live for us in khartoum thank you for that update well how the world is. cartoonists and activists he says the talks will likely resume in the next few days for the military is not ready to give up power. and progress there is an.
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