tv Jordans Angry Tribes Al Jazeera July 4, 2019 12:32pm-1:01pm +03
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quest to see a village where few containers live side by side with the estimated 4000 inhabitants everywhere cans of petrol sold illegally on most road sites. and jose luis has a fast a way to transport his contraband the same amount as if they didn't know how to market. or how to follow. el battle. and the all of them a lot of us long in o'clock o'clock local what the. owner of what it's all said and the bottom up at that of what will finance it. part of the battle royal by which. they will not only lightly name monae i'll say that affordable yalom at the office and out in pocket at the end of. the day i want out
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of them in the oval office like this i'll make it a lot i will. say yeah at the end of the day. he's leaving to collect food 1000 liters of fuel and venezuela. was a deal that is so good up front that i think i'll go home and it's one of my most are over but able to. help you i'm on an obvious level of a good thing not so long. we got here and they come up with their little ponies here. but i get up on easy. at the thought of all the mafia lifted up out of there
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. and they did a lot of. good because it is still. ok to look at all of you have a focal goal of the. on the end of the other little seal. plus a new lease arrives at the border to collect the mood of contraband fuel waiting for him unfortunately police everywhere he takes a science route this route is much safer it's his the traffickers have placed and lookouts. as i would just look at and when i'm on the hour i get only one thing at the end result that i. do. in the hospitals all of the 2nd above and below the level if you. want to see all of that you go. yes
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call. for the end of the. problem with something out of the up so when i move a lot of you know there's a little plug for the dental the idea. by doing this jose luis risks a 7 year prison sentence and the compass cation of his vehicle what almost $5600.00 . but i can fancy them going up and see where they are is it added to the by at mco some program or a blanket that i got a note from him because one of the lookouts is missing from his post carefully moving forward plus a new we spots another he warns them the police are patrolling the area and attempts to tell me where i live. i get it back if. jose luis turns back he's not willing to take the risk.
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of going up until i'm over a minute. and then i start to use mine so men and women are part of the family of small time traffickers family they don't understand why the police are jeopardizing their business to them this is the only way to i'm living and i felt as though the name will. be a little gentle the literal i get out belittles ironic process into later oh i don't. know a lot of it is an effort to know what panel really rules the lowest torso so much that i'm gonna go there must yell down the. 5. no money for someone stole the gun in the local manager seems. like you go. so i was talking. money. does not get.
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that right rob they've been here all morning the group of police officers and soldiers began their operation at dawn this river was turned into a makeshift border crossing it separates venezuela from colombia. this summer such as the singer palomino. took a saturday i'm going to the moment. just a few hours ago a small stretch of rocks linked to the 2 shows together dozens of traffic is used this passage every day. the numbers for chess. coming must know something in telling when to sing my song their language my. solemn and then i never thought of as i stand by them and if we
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traffics gas across the border. and various doesn't know which side of the border he comes from he's nicknamed laurel the parrot because he is very talkative nordo is an experienced traffic. jumper with analysts. that operate of depo came out there when i look at those anyone. almost at adi is the go model again these are joining. here. every day and his accomplices make the round trip to venezuela but today there is a problem they've just spotted some men in uniform and on the opposite shore
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venezuelan soldiers no no calls one of his accomplices on the other side of the border. where about where you go to sleep. where no into the end of i but what i. was. all mean anything. to enlist but of. the team of smugglers are more eat along with the usual soldiers there's a man they don't recognize a senior officer the man on the left with a red scarf for them and then yes because i. normally the traffickers offer the soldiers a bribe and would have to cross over the presence of an officer who they don't know complicates things. you know but i have
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a good outcome in most of those. are the but that's another thing the for the what i miss you mean those gentlemen both. sky our island chain got lima. on the opposite shore motos accomplice indicates that the coast is now clear the soldiers are gone no no is free to go and collect his gas bottles from venezuela. or the smugglers also take this opportunity to cross some of them are carrying unexpected goods like this car engine. and. many things have now become hard to get in venezuela even chickens poultry trafficking has become new crittenton but it's not always easy. or
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. thereabout unless. this man drives nearly $100.00 chickens per day across the border he earns almost $170.00 for 15 minute a calculus other than the threat of a. real ministry robbery delicate opposite but the earliest an artist and i are not it where you where will it get them in a company called men or for those of us old enough. to. come out of. this small trafficking business allows a dozen people to and i live and. he left just 2 hours ago but loto is already back. his gas bottles he's exhausted.
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the money was. on a minute. and then a little are going. to break down you see it until you. arrest of again maintain a presence for. $9.00 and he sells them for double that price the profit will allow him to support his wife and the new born baby. jesus and stuff well. ok jaw but i saw i got press all the face.
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trafficking work is scarce in this region and unemployment overwhelming they see no better options but to smuggle. you know. for this month at least nordo will be able to feed his family. one of the last remaining ancient forests in southeast asia is a lifeline to hundreds of lumberjacks and drive as. we follow their treacherous journey as they walk through extreme conditions. to gather and transport this dangerous but precious cargo risking it all. on al-jazeera. she's the head of 4 generations of family
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and the bearer of 40 years of suffering. a heart or a hinge a refugee in her ninety's has fled persecution in myanmar 3 separate times in her life 1st in 1970 then 1991 and finally in 2017. they beat as they kidnapped as they detained does. ghoul and her family span almost a century in age bonded through blood and displacement they now all live in a single hut located in the world's largest refugee kenya in many ways what's happened to this particular extended family really mirrors what's happened to so many other rohinton who face decades of repression and abuse the range of aren't just the world's largest group of stateless people they're also among the world's most persecuted minorities. they say is a dialogue
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a meeting about it for the ethyl still next on the international media and on t.v. a plashing stop is comes with skepticism because there's a lot of it on my every line has a voice me of being taken advantage of just because you have a small back community without a network just each health join the global conversation announces iraq all they want to do is start the debate the same kind of debate that we have here in the street. the u.n. security council fails to agree on how to respond to an attack on a migrant detention center in libya that killed 44 people. and this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up just days after donald trump
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crossed into north korea kyung accuses the u.s. of being held bent on hostility. saddam's military gentile and the opposition back at the negotiating table and the african union and ethiopian mediation. plus climate change rising centers here and now a new power plant the threat stacking up against one of the well it's not just mangrove forests. well the u.n. security council has failed to agree on a course of action and libya following imagines he talks on the bombing of a migrant detention center that killed 44 people at the un's mission in libya said the attack could constitute a war crime while the un chief through a spokesman demanded a full independent investigation he condemns this horrendous incident in the strongest terms and he expresses his deepest condolences to the families of the
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victims and wishes a requip recovery to those injured the secretary general calls for an independent investigation of the circumstances of this incident to ensure that the perpetrators are brought to justice it is important to note that the united nations had provided exact coordinates of the detention center to the parties. well the un recognized government says forces loyal to war on a cliff that have to hit the detention center with an air strike for the ministry of interior for the government of national accord denounces the horrible crime that's been committed against the detention center for illegal migrants into giora that took place last night carried out by criminal aircraft this is a definite crime in every respect which has led to a humanitarian tragedy the interior ministry affirms that it will take legal measures to pursue and catch the war criminals both domestically and internationally and have to reject that allegation his spokesman says they were targeting a weapons step controlled by an armed group allied to the tripoli government. we
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were surprised to see the false claims that the migrant camp was targeted the syria houses no migrants and no libyan civilians. the weapons supply coming from misrata came through this point therefore we destroyed a legitimate target of our enemy. if the claims are true they brought those illegal migrants to that area on purpose therefore we are innocent it was a legitimate target and 17 minutes later the migration center was destroyed 17 minutes later well earlier we spoke to hospital well he's a senior fellow at johns hopkins university is foreign policy institute and he says the un's failure to take action against khalifa haftar sets a dangerous precedent for the region. it doesn't look like the united nation news is going to do anything beyond issuing the nation which is. given what's
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happening in libya. very serious and dangerous precedent globally and in the united nation is basically telling a warlord who's been trying to take over a capital of a government that the united nation it's out recognizes and all of the security council members recognize as a government and not being a will for the in a half months now almost 4. of even condemning that aggression by a warlord that in itself is a is a sign of a serious really are happening and the united nation in the highest levels it can actually signal to every warlord around the world or will be or they can get away with such an action now north korea is accusing the united states of being hell bent on hostility towards it and of being obsessed with sanctions responding to allegations that it breached
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a cap on petroleum imports north korea's mission to the u.n. issued this statement the united states is practically more and more hell bent on hostile acts against the d.p. r. k. it goes on to say it's quite ridiculous for the u.s. to continue its pressure campaign considering sanctions as a panacea for all problems it's a sharp turn of events from these scenes just days ago when donald trump became the 1st sitting u.s. president to visit north korea he met kim jong un at the demilitarized zone between north and south korea and they agreed to resume denuclearization talks well earlier i spoke to robert kelly who is the professor of international relations at precisely national university he says the latest statement may be north korea's way of exerting pressure on the u.s. to make concessions on sanctions before returning to talks. the trouble ministration has been pretty clear for a while that sanctions are in place until the north koreans actually make some kind of meaningful concession on either nuclear warheads or missiles. i think the north koreans kind of knew this was coming i think what they're hoping to do is sort of
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turn all these sort of media events the spectacles into some kind of movement on sanctions it's pretty clear the north koreans want sanctions removed they've really been banging the table on this now for a while and they're kind of hoping that you know hey we had his meeting with trump and then you know a day later we're getting this we're getting slapped with new sanctions what's going on and this is their way of telling us that you know that the summit was more important than these sanctions and i do think the north koreans actually want to negotiate there's a debate out there i think some hawks think this is all just sort of a game by the north koreans i do actually think they're willing to negotiate away some of their programs but they're going to try to ask for a lot they want the white house meeting for example that's can be great for legitimizing the regime and making it look like a real country they want sanctions relief they want aid are going to ask for a lot and you know trump is kind of in a weak position as the reelection is coming up live but the north koreans use that as a lever to get more out of them now south korea is threatening to hit back against japan for cutting exports of materials used to make small trials and the high tech air it's now fair to a long running dispute of a wartime forced labor is evolving into a trade fight but the bride reports from seoul ironically this dispute comes just
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days after japan hosted the g 20 summit of world leaders went to foster good neighborly relations and promote free trade and it could harm south korea where it hurts most in its production of semiconductors. the restrictions be that will be harder to expose to essentially materials from japan to korean manufacturers. as one of the world's leading producers of chips especially for use in smartphones it could have a knock on effect in other countries and industries if this thread be smart to allies about 3 really big broad to the industry and not only through the korean industry and there are disruption of the global value chain south korea has long been angered by what it sees as japan's failure to take responsibility for atrocities committed during world war 2. japan maintains that the issue was settled
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when the 2 countries normalize diplomatic relations in 1965 but courts here recently ruled in favor of former workers used as slave labor by japanese companies ordering them to pay compensation japan denies this is in retaliation for that and there was your this is not a counter measure but a review of operations from the point of view of appropriately implementing export controls for national security reasons if citing national security as a reason for trade control sounds familiar that's because it is the administration of u.s. president donald trump has often used the same excuse in its trade disputes with neighboring countries and many people here believe japan is resorting to tactics drawn straight from the trump ian playbook i think they copied it from trump of
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course the trump pectic makes toys much easier so i think a better right that. they are using this economic measures seemingly new norms being adopted in international trade with in this case south korea losing out rather bright al-jazeera sold. at least 6 people have died and over 190 others have been injured after a strong tornado hit in northeast china's leonean province the tornado struck the city of. rampaging through an industrial park before moving further south dozens of factories were destroyed and some residential areas were also heavily damaged the city government said about 120 people have been rescued from the area and china has warned the united kingdom to keep its hands off hong kong and not to meddle in the ongoing protests there this comes after china's u.k. ambassador was summoned by britain's foreign secretary jeremy hunt threatened
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serious consequences if beijing fails to on the international agreements on hong kong's autonomy in response china's ambassador condemned the british government for its support of the protesters while hong kong police have arrested 12 people over the violence which broke out during the protests on monday probation politicians there say it could cost around $1300000.00 to repair the legislature building which was ransacked a special task force has been set up to look into the mass protests most of which were peaceful they were triggered by a controversial bill which would allow extradition to mainland china. now talks have resumed between sudan's opposition and the ruling military jumped on transferring power to a civilian led government negotiations between the 2 sides collapsed a month ago after security forces raided a sit in protest killing dozens of demonstrators the talks in the capital khartoum of being mediated by african union and ethiopian officials the opposition had said
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it would only resume talks once certain conditions were met including an investigation into the killing of protesters well earlier we spoke to calvin dark president of cd global strategies group and an international affairs analyst he says the military will be under increasing pressure to make a deal with the protest leaders. well i think that they're coming to terms with what we're all seeing now there's an asterisk beside what we're all seeing because you know the internet is still out so we're not getting all of the real time. kind of reaction of what's going on on the ground but they see that even without the internet that the sudanese people are continuing to protest they are not relenting and they realize this is not something that the sudanese people or the people outside of the country support them are going to easily give up so i think they're basically going to try to manage transitioning to that civilian led transitional body with. maintaining as much power as they possibly can well i think that if it was up to those neighbors and those countries are support them that are more in
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favor of military rule because it supports their and then the sudanese people who are protesting wouldn't really have a chance but i think that they do i think that people have been you know focusing on what's been going on sudan more. than they had and then they had before and that i think it's a pretty easy argument that folks are making around the world that there should be civilian led. transitional government especially after the sheer study years in power so i do think that it's going to be a hard climb for the protesters but i don't think that the military has any choice because as they see the protests of only increased even after they tried to clamp down. still ahead on al-jazeera donald trump fries a new warning as iran telling its leaders their threats will come back to bite them . their president promised things would get better that argentina and families still have to travel for hours to find a hot.
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