tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera June 10, 2019 2:00pm-2:34pm +03
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i'm talking only about how true that has relatively a crock of information leaking but we're know what's happening in other cities and this is not new it happened in darfur and everybody was watching we documented so many crimes everything that happened in darfur is happening now with sudan countrywide it's good if you fail to stop there for you have a chance now to make this right and correct your mistake i have no idea what can the international community do but since this is their mass they need to clean it 1st starting by cutting any aid any aid so that t.m.c. any aid they're doing they need to cut it to t.m.c. money anything do not recognize them they fail to do that time and time again look where the goddess the need to recognize that she can see ginger we are not trustworthy in any political solution or any peaceful solution any delay or recognizing this fact just make it harder for the u.n.
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refugee agency says the risk of people dying while trying to get to europe is at its highest ever libyan coast guard says it's rescued more than 500 refugees trying to reach europe in the past 9 days most were brought ashore off the coast of tripoli and taken to government shelters santana from doctors without borders says the number of crossings across the mediterranean sea is much lower than last year but refugees are taking more risks. the absolute number of people who are fleeing across the central mediterranean is much lower this year than it has been previous years but the key point of concern is that whilst over the same period last year the chance of dying in attempting to make that journey was one in $59.00 over the last 5 months the chance of death during the course of of that journey is now one in 15 there are many factors that drive people to take this desperate option one of
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those factors is the recent conflicts in tripoli in northwest libya that has destabilized a large region had a massive impact on civilians in and around that city but is also likely to be pushing people to take options that otherwise might not thought of including crops in boise there's a new bipartisan effort in the us congress to block the sale of weapons to saudi arabia senator chris murphy a democrat and senator todd young republicans want to force a vote on a bill a bill introduced on monday both men of long an opponent of u.s. involvement in the saudi led war in yemen the measure would have to pass the senate and the house are still ahead on al jazeera the anger against corruption drives thousands of protesters back on to the streets of haiti was. the human cost of a deal on migrants between the united states and mexico and what it means for
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families seeking asylum. hell or turn around is one of the coolest cities in this part of the world even is time the year and if you're lucky and get on towards the shores the caspian you might catch a shower temperature wise and we're still talking about $33.00 or so because the hardship of sea level baghdad by contrast is up to the $47.00 mark and further success in iraq it could well be up to near 15 basser for example clearly if you're near the water near the coast is cooler so high twenty's the bear is an example a leper 34 on these docks a green things in turkey or georgia well they're just rogue thunderstorms that could appeared any time still change from day to day at this time of the year the heat being the thing to focus on and the lack of showers of any so usually and
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that's true throughout arabian peninsula with doha included $44.00 degrees but at the same all the way across saudi arabia it is increasingly getting humid every now and again so i was not far away from these 3 month period where of course it is drizzling in cloudy every day it's thinking about it because the monsoon is coming in as you can see otherwise a dry looking picture for the next day or so and so as is the case for all of southern africa the longshore breeze occasional showers seem likely still in mozambique. a horrific crime that shocked the good 51 people queued up mosques in christchurch new zealand why want to investigate people or could have done more to prevent this massacre on al-jazeera.
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al-jazeera. where ever you are. again you're watching i just you know minor about top stories this hour hong kong's chief executive has defended an extradition deal with china that triggered the largest protests in 16 years demonstrators say it will allow the government to target political opponents and send them to mainland china for trial. sudan's military genter says it will deploy more troops on the streets including the paramedic she group known as the rapid support forces at least 4 more people were
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killed in hard to neighboring on demand on the 1st day of a general strike. a police and protesters a 14 kazakstan on election day. talk i have is on course to be the 1st new president in 30 years but some opposition groups say the vote wasn't fair and called for a boycott at least 500 people were arrested robin forestier walker reports now from the capital was full time. i was. so this was no it's the electoral turn out to the authorities wanted disorder in kazakstan capital. and 2nd city. where we caught the votes protestors cried because they do not believe this election office them a real choice. some said they supported the democratic choice of extern a banned political party. and the reasons for i'm not afraid because i've had
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enough i've been living without a home in temporary accommodation for 13 years i'm fed up others said they wanted freedom to demonstrate because unsanctioned protests are illegal and hasn't started only just here nixon is in fear it's all been decided already it's not like attend choices as they are all on its own like the circus was the right police now working their way down the central street the protesters in front of me they are trying to say heads of the police. in the vicinity of the drugs are being seized but it's really getting it's a good if the situation. was good that there. was this was the image the authorities wanted to project an orderly participation by
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the electorate in a peaceful transition of power. as a boy of the man who ran kazakstan for nearly 30 years has stepped into retirement although he retains significant powers as chairman for the life of the country's security council is chosen successor. to talk of his own course to take over what is your specific message to those individuals who are campaigning for democracy and rights in this country those individuals who. being detained i advised all the law enforcement agencies to be more tolerant and to exercise restraint but any serious violations of our laws of course will not be tolerated. but at the same time all the young people. on the same level. to exercise
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restraint to be tolerant to the power to the government a rare acknowledgement because it's deserved more political freedom although that didn't stop the detentions kazakstan has never seen an election day quite like this before let's go live now to robin robin the state media's released the exit poll results what are we to make of them. exit polls have given the custom jorma taccone i have around 70 percent of the votes and i meet a german cassano who is considered by many to be the 1st sort of genuine opposition candidate in elections here picking up about 50 percent of the vote so this whole process. suggests a more kind of a democratic outcome for this 1st new president of kazakhstan within 3 tickets
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well with me to talk about this is professor cheap-o. shrum knows a boy of university your assistant professor of political sciences there what are we to make professor of the protests that we've been seeing in the last 24 hours in opposition to this vote and the boycotts of this vote by some of those protesters i think we have seen in this election and on president and mobilization kazakstan has it because it's some people because external people have a history of mobilization they were there 2011 they were unfortunate so violent events and you know then there was a protest a very large muscle mass protesting in all the because it's on the over the land reform in 2016 but they target specific issues but this type of mobilization regarding election. and. we can say the fund diamonds and diamond tolls of the stony political system i think these are unprecedented and they were all over the
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country and they're concerned very different groups so we have seen it started in march already in the stern and then that sort of spilled over in the rest of kazakhstan with the protests of the mother's requote after this very unfortunate fortunate event when a family of. 5 of 4 children died in a fire when their parents were away in the night and the sort of working it working so it exposed many of the flaws of the kazakhstani economy and that that the level of inequalities that we see in this country well there is it do you have you have these grievances don't you want widespread grievances whether it's over. salaries as we saw that violence in 2011 was over oil workers salaries we had in 2060 the reforms it's about fears about china taking loans the dominant neighbor to the east of the country. but these are all. at the same time problems that the government
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has to deal with and yet there's a very entrenched political system a power behind a power in full power in kazakhstan right yes indeed we can argue that well the 1st of all i mean the structure of the economy is based on oil dependency right so there's the government has not been able to diversify the economy like it was planning to so far there are some efforts that are done but it's not it's not easy because again like collecting his own nick an exception in that in that sense it's very hard to move away from this oil dependency and because there are a lot of economic interests it's there is there is tremendous wealth connected to this and there is also. i would say access to 2 to property is an issue and access even to the higher echelons of power. indeed because a lot of the informal politics really matters in connections really matter i think
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you're going to have to end it there because we're running out of time on the show but professor to go ellen thank you very much for talking to us those are the issues at stake here political interests behind the scenes snorts not to exclude mr knows about himself he will continue to wield significant power the former presidents will. expecting now the real results to come out and assessments of as we as we go ahead to do so more moral codes that start if you're interested later on american syrup thank you laura i will look forward to that robin thank you robin foresty a walk on the fallout there on the elections in kazakstan at least 2 people have been killed and 5 others injured in protests in haiti's capital port au prince demonstrators set up roadblocks and torched buildings and cars they want president job to resign after accusing him of stealing money from an oil a program has been demands for an investigation into suspected corruption involving
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the petrol all program under which haiti received cheaper venezuelan oil a u.s. president on trump is pushing back against media reports that his latest agreement with mexico doesn't actually contain anything new the white house announced the agreement on friday trump threatened to impose tariffs on all imports from mexico unless it did more to stop asylum seekers from crossing into the u.s. the report soon emerged the deal mostly involves agreements that were reached months ago from washington alan fischer explains what's different in the agreement . well there are some new elements to this 1st of all the idea that the national guard in mexico would be deployed to the southern border to stop people coming up through the country are partly in agreement was reached in december between the u.s. and mexico what we have now is a number around 5000 national guard troops will do that job and also a time scale mexico say they are moving on and they are moving on it quickly mexico
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is also going to make it easier for people to stay in mexico while the asylum claims are held in the united states now that whole thing is being challenged in the courts here in the u.s. so that might not become such a key issue donald trump has also said in a tweet on sunday that there is one big thing that wasn't unknowns when the news release about this went out on friday and that will become clear at the appropriate time no idea what that could possibly be and also he is saying that mexico has agreed to buy a great deal of agricultural produce from the united states but that has left both people here in the u.s. and in mexico scratching their heads saying there is no such agreement mexico has entered into no agreement about agricultural products what supporters of donald trump are saying is that the threat of tariffs undoubtedly made mexico come to the table because within hours of him saying that this was a possibility that the foreign minister of mexico was in washington discussing
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a deal this also gives donald trump a convenient political out if the situation on the border does not improve that he can say this is not a problem this is mexico's and he may well raise the issue of tired of sigyn because the talents for the moment are only suspended not completely canceled. about the u.s. and mexico have hailed the agreement to as a success john heilemann reports from tapachula on mexico's southern border with somalia where people there tell a different story. over the earth united states and mexico but by celebrating the new agreement mexico's avoided the threatened us terrorists the us has the promise mexico will tighten its borders. it's been sold as a trial by both sides but there's bound to be a human cost and these people maybe it central americans trying to get through mexico to the u.s.
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and cool it up in the crackdown the president trying to push pull in the couple of hours we spent at a mix can checkpoint 5 groups who are detained. many like honduran. say that the end demick violence and chronic poverty in their homelands means there's little choice but to flee if you want as much of the planet it's the situation here organized crime there's no work the americans the whole lot we can do nothing but he and his family will now most likely be headed back home and this is just the beginning because national guard are being deployed to the border to. mexico as road out that kind of blanket security before and it's led to migrants taking even more dangerous and isolated routes. what to mull until fellow is still recovering from his own taste of the people smugglers squeezed him and some 50 others into a truck standing up and drove it through mexico's mountainous backroads it plunged
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into a ravine killing 25 people on medicare when i woke up and heard that 6 of my friends from the community had died 3 of whom had gone to school with i was very sad the solution many would say is to simply stay at home and the new agreement does include a plan for development in central american countries so that. we don't have to leave but the presidents of honduras el salvador and guatemala themselves have been virtually soilent during this crisis and without their support their countrymen could be forgiven for thinking that in this new deal they've been left on their own journey home and i'll just see a couple children mexico. and sport rafael nadal has made tennis history in paris by winning the french open for a record 12 time spaniard beat dominic team of austria in sunday's final roland garros it takes the dollars total of grand slam titles now to 18 is just 2
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behind his great rival ajah federer. right let's get a roundup of our top stories on a hong kong's chief executive says the extradition bill with china will go ahead despite the largest protest seen there in 16 years they ended in violent scenes after hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets on sunday protestors fear the new laws will allow the government to target its political opponents and send them to mainland china for trial sarah clarke has more from hong kong. kerry lam did respond to these protests yesterday which as you mentioned it attracted more than 1000000 people to the streets a huge increase in a number of people at this rally and she said that the government will go ahead with this bill despite those protests however she said that the human rights safeguards they will be protected and they will have
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a legally binding effect on the government she said 9 fugitive will be extradited unless they cumin rights are protected and she said hong kong does respect the rule of law she said the rights and freedoms have not been eroded under this bill. sudan's military has defended its crackdown on protesters saying it is meant to ensure the safety of the country at least 4 more people were killed on sunday as demonstrators are to answer protest leaders calls for a mass civil disobedience movement exit polls suggest cassim jamal talk a of has a one kazakstan surprise eventually but opponents say the vote was neither free nor fair at least 500 people were detained in protests talk of succes for president nursultan nazarbayev. the oil rich country for almost 30 years the u.n. refugee agency says the risk of people dying while trying to get to europe is at its highest ever the libyan coast guard says it's rescued more than 500 refugees
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trying to reach europe in the past 9 days most were brought offshore off the coast of tripoli one of many stairs next. a journey of personal discovery by a great grandfather he was a slave of the only property algis there is james gannon expose his family's legacy of slave ownership down like my family's status and wealth has benefited from their choice to slave people and america's debt to the black people today some of us old scar we even scared to speak out because it's a problem. al-jazeera correspondent a moral debt. it's regarded as one of the most picturesque and peaceful places on the planet. but in march this year new zealand's ideally kimmie church was shattered. when
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a gunman went on a rampage at 2 mosques in christ church. one o one east investigates why and how these horrific attack happened. mohamed atta at am. linda susan strong as zahra ahmed read out the names of the did it at a remembrance day service 2 weeks after the christchurch attack she was only just beginning to come to terms with the hora she witnessed time and the hamill. the names i'm pleading i know them. i know them that i know them through businesses and know them through the most analysts through the through coming to the clinic and all those kind of things so. so it became a reality. on
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march 15th and it's strange in gunmen targeted 2 mosques during friday prayers and streamed it online. 51 people were killed and scores of others seriously injured some people already at risk. we have to do what we could to save their lives. a trained nurse sarl if the medical clinic where she was working and went to one of the mosques to help but even students on the front line of a ball epidemics in africa couldn't prepare her for the emotional challenge ahead this was completely and absolutely horrific situation even today i don't understand what or drive and of ritual to do such saying to god listing a village in no color or whatever day background i just don't understand the anger
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and the hatred drove and killed innocent people. sorry came to new zealand as a refugee 20 years ago having fled balance in a homeland somalia. the mother and brother always go to friday prayers at this small school with 42 people were killed. as she tended to the injured at the other mosque across town it was hours before she knew if her family with saif the phones were getting overloaded so sometimes you couldn't get through the phones it was a little fool to not known that they were ok and when i saw them they were ok then i felt ok. ok feel lucky that there are. but it's the unlucky ones that haunt. us all the other people came us refugees who just a couple of. the injuries they sustained in those places but to be afraid taumata
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asked that's what our close in the think about it where do we go from here to say you're going to be safe. it took a week before sorrow was ready to talk to her husband no come about the day of the attack i'm not the security she said to me the one thing she said to me was a lot of saying things that nobody should ever say and there was the knowledge to guess i was in a shop in my own way and i just sat down. like most new zealanders the couple full of the country was site from such attacks but both now believe the warning signs with their there was different a white supremacist skinhead something past history of the last for his are once again from our point of view. just last september sorry says she came across these white supremacist stickers on the sign for one of the christchurch
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mosques. they had the stickers on everyone and i took the 2 over the and then i went to their website i think google you are very dangerous and also thinking. of you they report the mom said that he didn't report at the time. but any fight she had in police taking action as fall into a new law. exactly a month after the attack a man let out an anti muslim tirade outside one of the mosques the police guarding the scene didn't apprehend him the policeman said all is a freedom of speech is nothing to my speech if it hit other people. it took a social media campaign a new reports to the police before they finally arrested and charged the man as much as his grace to come together solidarity and say you know we all from here and all that the truth is there is a strong racism in new zealand that exists among saying it's
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a large number of people but significant number of people and there are people who actually races but not even know about it. here a destiny church followers believe there's only one true god and he's the christian . my the pentecostal service is being live on the internet for an estimated $10000.00 followers in new zealand and australia the vast majority maori. now apostle. albert ship may you amazing. there. to stay and not only for us as your people. but you stand for god jesus christ. like never before. under 3. let's give them
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a round of opinions as it comes to the pope. followers call the church founded apostle be ship brian tam a key and it was our heritage as a people with the maori were european to go back as far as the 1800s we were introduced to christ and it was great. after the attack to mckeon his fullaway's office to the muslim community that makes up little move than one percent of the population but he has strong views about the place in his native country you come into my country and so therefore you respect the the host country and they ways and what and then after attunement being here you run your life and your values and your religion like you did when you came from that's disingenuous to the foundations of countries that have been built of
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years did he blames a clash of cultures for the shooters action i think it's naive to think that. very different audiology ism beliefs. could happily and how modestly live together i think that's a bit naive and almost ignorant they immigrations and new people come on the ground and they have firm beliefs and ideologies now we've seen the results of that in europe this is where the white supremacists have had the the deep hood and the buttons. in 2005 he called the new zealand pol event evil when one of the members sworn only on the koran. and a week after the massacre he voiced outrage at the planning of the movie. before 2
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minutes of silence fell victim. to be claimed the nation's identity was its dyke prime minister on our state owned aways which is text by iran was so that like it waves was going to put the. the the the muslim priya through that i felt at that point as a christian in this country i had to say something but given the gravity of what happened wasn't there the show of respect for the muslim community that new zealand is with banding alongside them after this horrific event you know what i don't think and i'm pretty sure i want to say this that i don't believe that the muslim community were upset about not having the preceding of the us i don't think they requested it i'm not sure he's getting from that the muslim community did not ask for this it was a powerful just sort of inclusion i guess some of those in his professional life gulag ma is
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a government policy advisor but in his spare time he's an advocate for the country's muslim youth and for us it's a horrific incident and we welcome all the films of solidarity that are willing to be there but we don't welcome those hateful divisive years that come from people like brian tamaki and just sort of double standards. of his views in this particular situation on the one hand ok we want to defend muslims and protect them on the one hand we're going to stand for anything that allows for them to freely express their religion and for that to be you know a showcase publicly because it's against his basically his racist hateful views. and tommy keyes views can be dangerous according to former u.s. government intelligence analyst paul buchanan this gets back to the vast pool of enablers and accomplices is you know if you have people of his stature. be. outright islamophobia you have the possibility that one of his followers may
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decide to take up arms and the friends of christianity are in defense of the new zealand way of life. now a private security consultant buchanan has lived in new zealand for the past 20 years he doubts the christchurch killer was a true lone wolf if there were other like minded people still out there i mean he was part of a community that was both physical in the south island and then why he was being cheered on and real time during the mass murders including by people who claim to be in new zealand. was just 6 when he arrived in new zealand with his mother and siblings from somalia he says like most refugees he battled racism all his life we feel like you know we have to fight just not only to be. and
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to express how i think the thing to express our religion. and he says he knows what it's like to be targeted by white supremacists getting chased by skinheads you don't expect the scot to suddenly turn around. you knowing he's a skinheads and people pretend life we don't have that history here in new zealand christchurch is wrong on for its being a hotbed of white supremacy in this country. in the ozarks of the christchurch attack prime minister just seemed. was quick to condemn the shooter we were not a target because we are a safe for those who fight. we were not true isn't for this act of violence because we can darn rices them because we're an on clay for extremism we were chosen for the very fact that we are none of these things her response was widely praised around the womb.
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