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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  June 3, 2019 8:00am-8:34am +03

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the middle east among other things back on the right track jeff stay with me because i do want to ask you about some comments that pompei was made well separately we've learned that the u.s. secretary of state has given an assessment of shared krishna's a long way to plan for the middle east the washington post obtained private audio recording of pompei is recent meeting with jewish leaders and here's a portion of what was in that recording i get why people think this is going to be a deal that only the israelis could live he said i understand the perception of that i hope everyone will just give the space to listen and let it settle in a little bit jeff what you make of all of that i mean it's remarkably revealing it's it's almost shocking that he as the chief diplomat of the states of america would let that slip even in a private meeting he should be a little more aware but we're happy nonetheless to be here ian because almost all of us are opposed to what is now being put on the table which is not going to get anywhere we know that this thing is absolutely being received with the cold the
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responses it's not going to lead to middle east peace to a 2 state solution any of all the arrangements that have been worked on for the last 20 years should not be leading in this direction so we are really out of kilter entirely and it's to use your words it's inflaming tensions and even conflicts in the region and jeff just how much do we know about peace plan at the moment given that it's going to be unveiled in bahrain soon and how the different sides are feeling about it at this stage. well i mean the statements coming from the palestinian leadership are extraordinary i mean the language the even the expletives that they are using are unprecedented you can tell that they've never been more hostile to any thing coming out of u.s. policy and washington d.c. as this supposed the big deal but it's precisely not that. if
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the israelis were smart netanyahu in his ministration would be telling them each has got to alter some of this it's all in our favor and it's not going to help things with the palestinians with the jordanians with the rest of the middle east we've got multiple counter 16 diplomatic and actual shooting conflicts going on at one time they're all feeding on each other and this is only one more step in the wrong direction it's not going to help things it's actually going to cause things to be even more unstable than they are at present and have they been more unstable than this not in this century not in the last half of the last one either we are in very rotten new territory here and this is going to make us even deeper into the mire of it i'm afraid to face a political analyst speaking to us that from washington d.c.
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thanks for being with us. and a pleasure. well the u.s. president arrives in britain on monday for a 3 day state visit the one trump was formally invited by the queen so there's plenty of pomp installed about also protests as reports from london. thank you thank you let me. reverse roles for the sort of welcome donald trump could expect if he joined the audience at the king's head theater in london's arpa street and this is a flavor of the welcome the u.s. president will actually get on his state visit to the united kingdom so i think people are really sick of that he's been finally buy it over the 1st state visit for lunch with the queen why should a man like this who really friends core values of our society be lavished it's. definitely for bigger numbers than last time. almost 70 percent of britons have
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a negative view of donald trump and during a visit last summer trump avoided central london where hundreds of thousands took to the streets in protest. he met the queen at windsor castle instead where he sent off in front of her in a breach of royal protocol that forced the monarch to overtake him. with the country now in political turmoil new off script moments lying in wait are you going to tell your secret plan king nigel farage of england he's invited you to visit buckingham rona to run parallel trump palace yes of course the new hotel. president trump will be denied some of the traditional privileges of a full state visit bilby no address to both houses of parliament he's too divisive says the speaker he won't be staying in buckingham palace the room renovations going on nor will he join the list of other heads of state to be enjoyed a golden carriage ride along the mile too but others decide to police reportedly
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because of security concerns or because the mel would likely be lined with unflattering placards not flag waving fans. and water talks between the president and the british prime minister who less than a fortnight ago gave notice of her intention to resign the disputes at the top of the headlines of the moment between the u.s. and u.k. around while way and the question of 5 g. networks and whether hallway will be allowed to build those in allied countries to the u.s. and around the questions of iran with the u.s. having dropped out of the chase e.p.o. is pressuring european allies to do the same and those are the major issues but both the u.s. and u.k. have fairly hardened positions and i don't think that it's particularly likely that this visit especially with a lame duck prime minister is going to resolve this. for donald trump and the family members accompanying him they'll be pumped they'll be ceremony and at the king's head in london's up a street they'll be
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a musical chorus line to be the real thing here over the lift that's jonah how al-jazeera london. war. well there's plenty more ahead on this news hour including. the dangerous car craze that's helping young libyans take their minds off to a nation with devastating conflicts. and liverpool return as kings of european football greeted by tens of thousands of fans after clinching the champion's league title. boeing is facing a new problem with it 737 models u.s. aviation regulators say some aircraft may have wing parts that were improperly improperly manufactured and will have to be replaced the statement from the federal
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aviation administration applies to the n.g. and max models boeing is still working to get it 737 max planes back into service after they were grounded following 2 fatal crashes while col bailey is a pilot and a former f.a.a. safety team representatives and he joins us now live from new jersey via skype kyle faulty parts in passenger planes always a terrifying thought these i believe that tracks talk us through what that is and just how serious this is this is the slope is simply on the aircraft which basically gives the aircraft increased lift during takeoff and landing. the good news here is that they've actually caught the problem before an incident so i would assume that these airplanes will be thoroughly instructed. to the air the aircraft to ensure that these ports in the assembly are was assembled in the proper manner colored talking several hundreds well more than 100 planes here how does something
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like this happen when there are such stringent safety standards. if if it really was an imperative problem where the f.a.a. thought that it was that a catastrophe you know was imminent or could happen as a result of the assembly of the parts they would not allow the airplanes to fly until that action is taken now if there very well could be a time period involved where the the f.a.a. perhaps regulators could say you have a week you have 2 weeks you have a month to inspect these parts based on how critical. they deem the out the inspect the anomaly to be as far as the proper way they were assembled so the fact that these are planes are immediately grounded or were they're demanding inspection prior to flight would lead me to believe that this isn't a tremendously imperative situation that has to be corrected immediately or on the spot when boeing has already admitted shoojit losses after the contract the face of
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mounting the $77.00 knots in particular the 2 crashes hundreds of people dead then admissions of software glitches simulated can boeing recover you know it's going to it's going to be hard for boeing to recover with the 737 max because the 737 max is in the mind of pretty much everybody around the globe so i mean i pretty much think a rebranding probably is going to have to happen or a name change of the aircraft if i was in the public relations department a boeing it's just going to be every passenger will be hesitant to fly on the airplanes even if they are recertified which we do expect so and that that sometimes a passenger traffic but how is the industry feeling about boeing now and presumably even more admissions now of potential failing pilots isn't winning back the confidence of an honest and pilots like yourself. you know the experts know the
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great job boeing does as far as building airplanes and the regulators the f.b.i. here in the u.s. does a very good job as well so the pilots and the airlines they know that when the green light is given the airplanes will be safe to fly i think it's worth a problem with the general flying public who quite frankly don't. know every day not now mix or the seas of these airplanes that's where their problem is and there are only 2 major players in the game it's blowing air bus and i think air bus is benefiting from this already. kyle bailey a pilot and a former f.a.a. safety team representative speaking to us there from new jersey thank you so inside sky thank you. syrian state television says the military's ed offenses have intercepted in its braininess on attack on an ad base in homs province which killed 2 people at least 13 people have also been killed in a suicide bomb attack and
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a city in disputed territory in malls in aleppo because the texas border sorry to say a car was blown up with several civilians close by and no group has yet claimed responsibility . staying in syria government forces backed by russia have bombed several rebel controlled areas and provinces and activists in the town of can check or are reporting the use of a banned and devastating type of national. reports. syrian opposition activists say this video shows syrian government forces dropping white phosphorus on the town of qana shakoor in in southern al-jazeera can't independently verify this footage. but white phosphorus is an internationally banned weapon and incendiary material conclusive ear burns and breathing difficulties. activists say it's part of the strategy to depopulate a particular territory in order to secure 2 strategically important roads tens of
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thousands of syrians are believed to be caught in the middle of the fighting hundreds of thousands more have moved north towards the turkish border. april 26th the continuous bombing campaigns carried out by the russian and syrian regime airplanes have directly hit 22 medical centers 5 markets and 6 white house centers it's led to a catastrophic humanitarian disaster there are more than 300000 displaced people sheltering and olive trees along the syrian turkish border. russian syrian jets have also been bombing neighboring hamma provance hitting residential areas analysts predict the latest fighting could have far reaching consequences beyond syria's borders. the displaced people will soon move towards other countries their potential refugees the status quo continues turkey the european union and the whole world will suffer
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a new wave of refugees last september russia and turkey reached an agreement to reduce hostilities in it live since then an armed group formally allied with al qaida has ceased long. parts of the area triggering the syrian government's latest offensive and leading to yet another humanitarian crisis. victoria gates and the al jazeera. israeli forces have entered the compound and occupied east jerusalem they used pepper spray and detained a number of palestinians who were inside attending prayers a large group of israeli settlers also entered the compound alongside the israeli military force that reports from their. protests inside the mosque compound in the last days of ramadan the word had gone round that israeli security forces were about to allow access to hundreds of nationalist israelis gathered outside usually the compound the introduces the temple mount is off limits to non muslims in the last 10 days of ramadan but not this time but please how do you know of this
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israel wants this to be a religious war and this will bring about destruction and israel is responsible for the results of this aggression it is unprecedented aggression against the worshippers and against muslims al aqsa mosque hundreds of settlers are allowed in a muslims are not allowed to walk in from the gates of the old city. the jewish activists were marking what's known in israel as jerusalem day the anniversary according to the jewish calendar of the day israel seized east jerusalem in 1967 last month it was understood israeli authorities had decided to bar access to jews on jerusalem day because it coincided with the end of ramadan but on the day itself they decided differently last week sunday monday and tuesday the temple mount was opened in the regular visits wednesday thursday there are indications that this statement says that we had to close it this morning the situation was relatively calm and our units responded allowing on the jerusalem celebration days regular
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visits on the temple mount inside the old city preparations were under way ahead of the next potential flash point of the day well there's a heightened israeli security forces presence here inside the narrow streets of the old city where you can see that shopkeepers are starting to close up their shops it's ahead of what we're expecting in the next 3 minutes large scale marches of ultranationalist and religious nationalist israeli jews carrying flags celebrating what they call jerusalem day it's a yearly tradition for the shopkeepers here but concerns this year were particularly acute after the morning's incident was a few meters away outside damascus gate the marchers were arriving many of them settlers many of them teenagers all of them here to make their presence felt for the participants this is a commemoration of a great victory a reclaiming of a religious and national capital for the palestinians who live here under occupation it's an expression of power and of ownership that many find deliberately
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provocative ari force it out 0 occupied east jerusalem. now israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has fired his education and justice ministers their wish awful as being seen as a possible precursor to general elections in september it will be the 2nd time people in israel will go to the polls in a single year the parliament or knesset dissolved itself last wednesday following netanyahu failure to form a governing coalition. still ahead. mexico is matter rate of all time high we'll tell you what the president is proposing to change that. go on the road. by breaking the law. and bangladesh break a scoring record of the pack of wild cup to leave south africa in trouble in the group stages.
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hello it's not whether it's on the ground but flooding is the story still through most states here is central section of the u.s. now if you top up the river levels and these showers will do that running up through texas and kansas it just makes things worse for all the way up the mississippi the missouri and the arkansas the river is pretty high and flooding in many many places so there will see to many more showers and we haven't got that many more to be honest and beyond this beyond the plains states really is looking fine to the east is fine quite old 50 in toronto to the west apartment kasia no high ground shotokan ok 19 san francisco rising a little bit on tuesday a greater chance of showers throughout the midwest and up towards chicago at least on tuesday and they drift down towards louisiana some will be big heavy ones we don't think is a huge risk the 2 arctic risk has declined
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a great deal through the caribbean the cloud has been extensive is not quite as extensive as it was but shows still seem likely in the lesser all the great run tilly's but the concentration of right is to the west but it's gulf of mexico and it's the gulf coast of mexico where potential circulation could become a tropical circulation even if it doesn't heavy rain for southern mexico. a journey of personal discovery my great grandfather he was a slave of the leave property al-jazeera is james garner and expose his family's legacy and so many of ownership don't like my family status and wealth has benefited from their choice to enslave people and america's debt to the black people today some over some score we even skew the speak out because it's a problem. al-jazeera correspondent
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a moral debt it's my privilege to name al-jazeera english the broadcaster of the year the country has a fight each other and we've been told that we can still be here these are still largest demonstrations it's been held i will need to refugees sit over $700.00 making beer the some of the emergence of losers on the planet earth here or they think the big plus the. 0 english. recipient of the new system is called coast to be a little of the city. hello again i'm not. a reminder of the news this hour. u.s.
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secretary of state mike pompei is says the u.s. is ready to sit down with iran with no preconditions about its nuclear program iran has said that relations must return to normal in order for there to be further dialogue. as foreign minister has told al-jazeera he has reservations about the statements on iran that came out of summits held in mecca last week nama been on the ramadan tani's says the. communiques only condemned iran without referring to a moderate policy of engagement. u.s. aviation regulations say some boeing 737 aircraft may have faulty wind pilots that will have to be replaced the company is still working to get it 737 max planes back into service after they were grounded following 2 fatal crashes. mexico has one of the highest murder rates in the wild and it's rising fast nearly 8 and a half 1000 people were killed in the 1st 3 months of this year that's almost 10 percent higher than the same period last year tackling violence was
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a key campaign pledge for president on the us manual lopez obrador in the latest part of our series on his 1st 6 months in office john holeman looks at what he plans to do. record murder levels in mexico it's clear the president and his mother will not a daughter needed a plan to bring the killings down this is it or a big part of it the national guard branded as a new security force it's actually made up of the same soldiers marines and federal police that have been deployed to mexico's hot spots for years now $50000.00 of them will be stuck together in the new food and give an extra more permanent policing powers its 1st deployment in a tip line in the southeastern state of veracruz the force was sent here up to 13 people including a baby were recently killed at a party. many residents are relieved including local doctor and community leader laurel petty's. the gang says had gone past all the limits
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there was no want to control them right now they're being stopped and it's tangible they're still kidnappings and robberies but they've gone down. the relief some are worried about a militarize force permanently on the streets armed forces temporarily deployed across the years have committed human rights abuses eliciting that and then says marines were involved in the disappearance of a son had called. the force disappearances haven't stopped and if the national guard comes with carte blanche to do what it wants they'll go on that's what we don't want more disappearances more human rights violations there is another issue now on the new force has been promised is the government really going to come through president lopez obrador announced almost a month ago that it was already operational here a minute to plan but in 2 days in the city we haven't seen a single member of the national guard and that's only going to lead to questions is
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this for real or just to show. we were unable to put those questions to the new national guard commander our interview request went unanswered. critics have other questions the main one why is the government starting this new fools why not work on the badly paid and equipped local police which ready in place in the long term you're basically just increasing the rely of of local governments in federal security institutions instead of strengthening their own capabilities so you're not really feeling gob the institutional vacuum that we have at the local level in various places of mexico where security forces and police forces are basically useless and very incompetent because of a myriad of issues mainly corruption and infiltration. president lopez obrador to
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reach results and quickly he's calculated that the national guard will deliver the it's impact to the long term is open to question john homan just did a minute. and next in our series on president operators 1st 6 months in office well look at the social programs meant to be a deterrent against crime that's on monday here on out of there iraq has sentenced to frenchmen to death for joining i sell there among 14 french citizens handed to iraqi authorities by u.s. forces 9 of them are now on death row human rights watch has accused interrogators of using torture to get confessions char stratford has more from baghdad. the french government have always said that french citizens suspected of being i saw members should be tried locally i.e. in the region in the country in which they were apprehended now we understand that they've been high level discussions by the french government and their iraqi counterparts as the french try and pressure the iraqis to stop these death
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sentences being carried out we understand that those convicted have a month to appeal but as yet there have been no strong efforts by the french government to try and repatriate these french citizens of course this has huge ramifications in terms of questions over potential human rights abuses human rights groups very critical of the iraqi judicial system they concerned that some of the evidence in these cases may have been acquired through the use of torture and these cases also have relevance on an international scale as world in terms of international law recorded to international law prisoners can be transferred from one country to another if human rights can be guaranteed but only by state actors by 2 states and these men it's understood were apprehended initially by a group called the s.d.f. the syrian democratic forces who are a kurdish group that were u.s.
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backed in side syria and it's understood that the initial interrogations of these men were carried out by that group a group that of course is not a state now a candlelight vigil is being held by the families of indigenous women who've gone missing or have been murdered in canada and believe they were thousands of victims the families are protesting the findings of a national inquiry into their disappearances which is set to be released on monday she has returned he joins us live now from parliament telling us what she had to at the vigil what's the mood there like. well that vigil hasn't begun yet but as with so many people who we've spoken to who vive have been involved with this inquiry who have been watching from the sidelines there is that obviously there's the understanding of the of what has just taken place over a 1000 people finally getting getting best stories on the wreck or about the
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missing and murdered indigenous relatives they have the women and girls which is good so often ignored by official authority so that is important but but throughout this isn't over some of the skepticism about what if anything will actually come out of this report we've had so many reports in the past after all it's like i'm joined now by maggie maggie so i wink if you like to join us here. a special advisor to the attorney general of ontario but also your sister sonia was was was murdered in 1948 you did not choose to enter her story into the record off this inquiry into murdered indigenous women why did you choose not to i strongly felt that my sister's story had been well. publicized and it was it's almost 25 years it'll be 25 years this year and this inquiry was done in a very cloning process and it was not going to serve the needs of my family it was
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not family led and community. is it anything that the canadian prime minister can say on monday morning when this report is officially released to convince you that . having had all the families now testified to go through this painful process of talking to the choir that that will have been worth this. i think he strikes a. grassroots oversight committee that is chosen by community and by grassroots to oversee the implementation of these recommendations i thing. that would be something odd palatable that will be acceptable in my opinion so you look for a specific commitment to the end this being a bottom up process and not just a continuation of one of the criticism of inquiry in the 1st place was it was just a top down thing people parachuting into places tell us your story and then you go and write all those communities and you know extracting stories and now that is
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part of the problem of harm that was done to families thank you very much for the magazine i went for joining us. and that is the point i mean there is that skepticism we also know that a lot of the details have been leaked already we already know pretty much what's going to be said and the problems that are going to be pinpointed a so deeply rooted in a kid agent society of a colonial society that's brutalized the indigenous people and build institutions that are in a innately innately racist and violent and in the color way that's innately racism violence you have to wonder what justin trudeau can say other than completely overhauling the country that will convince people that change is coming back to you al jazeera should have a tansey on parliament for us thank you. well to libya now and in the months since world cliff i have 2 launched his offensive to take tripoli the fighting has split the capital into different wild in the city center a young libyans trying to distract themselves by turning the main square into a racetrack it's in stark contrast to the battle scarred southern outskirts where
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fighters are doing their best to observe their islamic traditions and other while his reports. as we approach the front line in southern tripoli. there is silence and uncertainty people have left this area and their homes and shops old ruined by war. a bleak landscape covered by smoke from missiles fired by warlords really for have to the forces. forces loyal to the government in ains our neighborhood. by sunset it's time for the government forces to perform their prayers as it's ramadan the holy month of fasting they break their fast alongside their fire arms. they come under fire. and try to fire back. here on the battlefield food is usually mixed with weapons in between these
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fighters take time to chill out and get on with. chanting jokingly against have to. the. car and blaming fighters from the city of god who are now saying they betrayed them by taking have to decide thought all the hope that if we try to alleviate the tension by just laughing joking and telling personal stories that's how time goes by here but at the same time we're maintaining our location well and are always anticipating a possible counter-attack. time for coffee on a wood fire but as fire light can be spotted by drones they try to hide it. from government the fighters here. defense fighting could break out at any
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moment and it's dangerous when have jets attack this area but here in the center of tripoli the situation is very different. here in the main square come to enjoy watching the drifting in a country that does not have many entertainment activities drifting has become a way out. it's entertaining but dangerous. it's fun i hope all libyans can have fun and get rid of that negative energy caused by the war. it's risky and needs to be organized this should be police here to maintain order. but these young libyans here seem to be fascinated by the sport this is one of the city's landmarks and if the war gets any closer it could
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become another battlefield. tripoli. now it's difficult to get anywhere in a hurry in jakarta's congested streets even when it's a matter of life and death that's why volunteers are now helping ambulances navigate the city's notorious traffic jams and the latest in our series on 1st responders front 3 reports from the indonesian capital. this is a common theme in jakarta and other major cities in indonesia gridlocked traffic which only gets worse during rush hour motorists don't always give way. even for emergency services. that has prompted a group of bikers to band together to provide motorcycle convoys that escort ambulances through traffic they call themselves indonesia escorting ambulance service has proved so popular that it spread from because a city in west java to other cities are.

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