tv Jordans Angry Tribes Al Jazeera July 4, 2019 1:32am-2:01am +03
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on holiday to strike against this i'm just. continue and in the beginning when i started playing that actually awesome you want to sit down which i didn't want so i'm playing records and i have a single sitting on the wrong looking at the expectancy which made me very uncomfortable 9 hours and it wasn't working in quite the way that i want because when i'm dancing people don't look at me look at each other enjoy something not so long. yes let me know here it is. bridget. is it real you don't want to
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ah yes. i advocate getting. the look like to be done no i don't look to be good you know the other side would you concede that music is overdue that i don't get a little bit. in one movie and i think title is a movie that i like and it's not that i think it's something like star of the country but on top in front of. it. the jews should give us confidence that our idea could work and after that we were invited to play at other protests and other venues and there really were itching to take the system and then finally brought out john spence students from the f.b.i. which is india's leading institute austin book on the campus and point. f.b.i. has all to see major pushes against the time limits and hoping that this has been the strongest and hopefully also be able to contribute some energy to that. when
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for that do it supposed to do a show at f.b.i. asked. well the director all to institutionalise. consular officials you know 2 days before on some bureaucratic kind of pretext but i have a feeling you just didn't really want us to play that so you went to a meeting by this organization called it from what i gather it's the 1st time i met them all it's a well it's a people's organization they're very much kind of pushing for change which is exactly the kind of people that i want to work for. they've never really heard big of music before that never really experienced based on a sound system before so you don't know if this thing is going to go kind of. a law that i or you. i mean. i know i i don't. i mean you see me as you get to.
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go to you because you talk. too much you want me. to want to meet you so that you're going to let me know will question if i saw music. plays a. game let me make sure. that the heart of the music. you're not on automatic i mean he was. being miserable at that bond is a colleague of. yours it was saying you know i'm just going to be i'm going to keep i'm not. going to think they're going to going to be. going to give me just a wish and lose much of my disability. i'm going to going to be. that's what. 5 i mean i don't have. the room to be believe. me i'm not going to be on the. top that's cool things are going to get in the
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i realized that the combination of jamaican music with local lyrics what sort of a dual purpose and not only would it make the show more dynamic it would also help post communicate the music's message to the audience and with that in mind i suggested to look at you all to get these rappers don't call it by d.c. they rap in hindi and they have revolutionary songs and we felt that this would help the audience to connect to the show. and not just talk this enough. which a lot they saw somebody said here but. it's this. man this is rough. tough tough tough dealing man i think it's empowering it's empowering for the mc and it's empowering poing for the people who hear it because look i mean a lot of the times culture that's imported from abroad is english called in there
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sometimes associated with elite you know but this is not what this music is this is going to music you know so i think. for people to hear things from from here it's like it makes it makes everything everything more meaningful and bruff i want to be in a don it's ok you play a shofar on to play oh you know stephen marley and i want to be like you know this is door for you know joke anita and smash the place apartment people feel it appropriate and up and nobody's my movement but i'm not going on i'm saying. check . the line. again yeah yeah well that. you know i'm close enough to. the barely got any. beds foundation and let's not 70 like you said. the minority do traditionally definitely it's kind of a test for us to see also want to cross over. how far people would go back to do
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what we're doing and open the singles from looking at them and and the rappers is the one to kind of element that people relate to and connect to. the table entirely. let's find a certain. cosmetic to it all and then i sort of when i was a. woman or when i am black is i mean those women as it's rebel or. a move like this for my you don't turn on so you do you do stuff. with a gun in the you. we. just moved about the time i
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get the rules. then it will lead it into. it now with a little of her own because he physically. lemus i want to go look up for it or not you will know expect it from me but how many of us i mean if you take a. camera. you go home look signals you can make up there i'm a still more technical then will deduct their course now that they're up and about soft soft at the give them honest guy so i've got a good policy with regard to the home looking forward to going to get that uber what i'm what i develop as cities don't get to politics well little postman as a kid at the oh what a son is it was like i was like them and they could be watching me so s.m.l. mom got me but votes if we are down but all over some of the committee. that i now live a shade. but at. but it isn't made yet so i
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no no no don't. to see everybody energized in this way and dancing in this rain with so much freedom gives me a lot of joy it also gives me a lot of hope that for me this is just the beginning that that shows the potential the knowledge task is to find ways to build on this find ways to make it more
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poignant more important. there's a journey ahead for us that much is clear to me. that . the pages of this exercise book unspeakable mannerly compiled testimonies a victim is of congolese mustn't. as this intimate evidence finds its way to international courts the central african republic is plunged into further. and intricate 10 of the people and a nation crippled by recent history. comes part 2 of a 2 part series on al-jazeera.
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the venezuela colombia has become a stomping ground for us. as desperate people transgress an illegal passage. to feed an emerging field trafficking markets. we follow that perilous journey unguarded for the line of fire. risking it all. on al-jazeera. outrage from the u.n. secretary general over the airstrike on a libyan migrant detention center that's killed at least 44 people. the e.u. calls for more protection for migrants in libya but some say it's europe's policies that are to blame for the hundreds of fountains stuck there.
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hello and welcome to al-jazeera live from doha i'm mounting debt is also coming out iran's president says time is running out for terror around partners to hold up their end of the 2015 nuclear deal plus. i was out of a job it in the 3rd desert and i'll tell you how these created living women are changing their communities are driving trucks. the u.n. secretary general has expressed outrage at the bombing of a migrant detention center in libya that killed 44 people the security council is repairing to hold an emergency session on the attack the un's mission in libya called the strike a cow woodley act which could constitute a war crime there's an estimated 670000 refugees migrants and asylum seekers in the
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country the tripoli government is blaming the forces of warlord holly for half the but exactly who carried out the attack and why a detention center was hit remains unclear we begin our coverage with mahmud up the one head who was at the scene of the attack in tripoli. this is the migrant detention center in neighborhood in the eastern suburbs of the libyan capital tripoli it has just been hit by an airstrike launched by fighter jets loyal to the world khalifa haftar it's very tragic here dead bodies are still under the law but i can see dead that is over there and here the medical workers are just picking up one dead body over there. this this detention center according to the supervisor here there were about 150
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migrants here in this detention center from different nationalities including african nationalities and the it seems that the airstrike was very precise that it hit the center the center of the detention center this is the creator of the airstrike it's very precise but here the. sources with the government of the u.n. back the government of national called accuse has to fighter jets of targeting this detention center here supervisors here say that they have managed to transfer those who made it the other migrants who are still alive to other areas but there is yet there is still a state of panic among the other migrants and also among civilians who live nearby they say that this explosion was huge we can see ambulances just rushing
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here to. pick up the dead bodies and transferred the casualties to medical center. well that security council meeting is due to get under way in a short while live now to the u.n. in new york rob reynolds is our correspondent there and rob we've heard from the u.n. secretary general antonio tabish. that's right martine the u.n. is responding to the attack on the migrant center in libya with strong words at least the secretary general could terrorists is on a trip to the caribbean but he is spokesman stefan do shark provided this statement for reporters earlier the secretary general calls for an independent investigation of the circumstances of this incident to ensure that the perpetrators are brought
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to justice it is important to note that the united nations had provided exact coordinates of the detention center to the parties. now the next steps as mr du indicated there would be for the libyan government that is the government that's backed by the u.n. in tripoli to establish an independent investigative body to look into exactly what happened exactly who is responsible for the attack that may take some time asked about comments made by some u.n. officials senior u.n. officials that this could constitute a war crime mr during said that the question of intent would play a large role in that in other words if whoever dropped the bombs was actually aiming for the detention center full full of on armed and helpless migrants then that would play a large role in the determination of whether war crime was committed or not and as
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you mentioned martina just a couple hours from now the u.n. security council will hold a closed door session to discuss the attack on the migrant center in libya as well as the general outlines of the libyan situation martin thank you very much rob reynolds that live u.n. headquarters in new york where we've also been hearing from the u.n. high commissioner for human rights michelle bachelet she says that the bombing could possibly be a war crime depending on the precise 2nd says is she says i have repeatedly called for the closure of migrant detention centers in libya way un human rights star have documented severe crowding torture ill treatment forced labor rape and acute malnutrition what charlie yet see as a spokesman for the united nations high commission for refugees. this is
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a horrific tragedy the should never have happened around 2 months ago you and 8 c.r. warned that these people in side the sentence and to needed to be evacuated that was after an airstrike badly damaged the roof and injured 2 of the detainees we called for that urgent evacuation then that didn't happen they remains detained inside the center and sadly people have paid the tragic consequence project price of that with their life last night. these are very few g.'s many of them who left behind warm persecution and have fled to neighboring countries in the hopes of finding safety and if instead found themselves held in terrible conditions inside these detention centers but also now are no longer have their physical safety guaranteed either we need to evacuate people in these detention centers out as a matter of urgency the problem we've been having in recent months is that people
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are being brought to the detention centers faster than we can evacuate them they're being brought to libya after being rescued or intercepted by the libyan coast guard a rate that's quicker than we can get people out so we need a new policy there we need to see a renewed effort that sees an end to people being returned to libya no refugees should be returned to libya at this time well it's thought that many of those killed and injured nigerians corresponded on the dangerous has been speaking to the authorities in the capital of about just how many may have been affected by this attack. the officials here are actually at a loss of. zachary how many people or how many nigerians are involved coming in dead or injured in that particular attack but it's touching that a lot of nigerians were involved among the casualties and one official described to me that it's shocking it's barbaric it's condemn
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a ball and outrageous whether or not this attack from yesterday will sort of push the nigerian government to accelerate its repatriation program voluntary partition program of stranded migrants nigerian migrants stranded in libya it's not clear at the moment but we know thousands of them have been returned home since december 2017 to date and the nigerian government is continuing with that a parisian according to one particular official what had the cabman is an international human rights lawyer found all gannicus $37.00 he says this attack does constitute a war crime. obviously the fingers being pointed at the moment. harley for and his after and his his troops this is not the 1st time they've targeted tripoli and certainly not the 1st time he's been accused of committing war crimes or crimes against humanity but certainly this attack on the face of it. is is to be
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considered a war crime there's no military justification for the attack it is a civilian target civilian casualties so we will have to see what comes out of the u.n. security council now but certainly opposition is it comes to a war crime could it be argued to be that there are many levels of responsibility in this tragedy what was a detention center for migrants doing in such close proximity to military death pose for instance i mean they're the authorities libyan authorities that's where they've put them what about the e.u. who's migration policy has led to this numbers of people being returned by the libyan coast guard and left pretty much to their own devices in these detention centers which of course we all know particularly harrowing in terms of their conditions so many people could be responsible would you say absolutely i think you've touched on a number of very very important issues 1st of all when considering whether this
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constitutes a war crime the question will be have to be asked the close proximity to military targets and whether those to talk to actually were aware that there were civilian areas detention facilities within military compound so so that's the 1st question the you mention the e.u. policy that's certainly something which is near the subject of a filing that has been made with the international criminal court in relation to crimes against humanity falling on the responsibility of the e.u. member states of course there is also the responsibility of the un sanctioned un supported government in tripoli in terms of the conditions that it is detaining migrants in and around tripoli. so here opinion leaders say they will not see you disciplinary measures against iran after the u.n.
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nuclear watchdog confirmed that it had breached the stockpile limit which had been agreed under the 2050 nuclear deal but they're edging terror on not to go forward with a plan to reduce its compliance under that agreement al-jazeera zain besser avi has more from tehran. with just days to go before iran is expected to take another step in its plan to reduce cooperation with a 2050 nuclear deal president hassan rouhani had an angry rebuke for the united states. over the past one year it is then was started to light the fire extinguisher if you say it is dangerous to play with fire why did he start it rouhani was responding to comments by president donald trump after the international atomic energy agency or the i.a.e.a. on monday confirmed iran had breached an agreed stockpile limit for enriched uranium you know what do you know what they're playing with and i think they're playing with fire the u.s. pulled out.
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