tv A Bigger Brother Al Jazeera July 6, 2019 5:32pm-6:01pm +03
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took intelligence. to the states i guess there informants among the society another one himself came to germany and called you out as that. he has from the government to give me back to turkey. german government knows what what's going on into. the some of turkey's exiled journalists those goings on resemble a living hell one in which the ability to report freedom to hold power to account and to expect process seems all but dead and that. freedom of the press in this country has been buried in a big grave bio leaders not just by it we have to fight for it just like our other rights we have the power to dig up these fundamental rights from the grave but we can only do that by resisting otherwise it's impossible that. we
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wanted to get the heir to one government's response to some of the allegations made by sane aloft and journalists the turkish state cost terrorists we requested interviews with a number of senior state officials including the president's director of communications his spokes person and his special advisor none of them agreed to speak. so we asked for an interview with gems and aired on a loyalist and a prominent face on the privately owned t.v. channel t g r t. agree but with strict conditions he said he did not want to answer any questions about the turkish government's handling of specific journalists in particular the exiled reporters we interviewed he said our questions would be better answered by a representative of the state he did however defend certain other statements about the media made by president aired on and some of his call. sr advisers tell
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kids they can you know you should be. interested but you a little. nervous showing she just loves to. visit interested in that. we should look. limbaugh sure the a little different just a little look at the each syllable. get it because in the scheme he's on the 1st visit to the school. they had to return to it to like you don't. get to make both of those you're. not. very good study make it. could listen i mean as you and you thought of a medical. yeah good. idea only of the. whole someone with a kid is going to name if you could kid. if
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it were like you don't. get to know old when i. was on when you someone if you that . should be can and you're too good for your part just a little on the lot there are no journalists imprisoned. when i said there are no journalists there are no people convicted of journalism for what the one they've done as journalists. convicted on john's a lot i mean one of the bombers from one of the t.v. show and your little computer got to. give the. most about. 5 years ago that is all that shit and shit all told you all the. chiquita alone should not be the. guys if they did our good opinion. in which mission of the committee to make it to. well you can just move on because
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if you did use the phone the both he and i did try to come to that you go over to the to the queue. before you took on the man childish more than addition you know to. be. sure to talk money needing some beautified the soul of. the singing or gun and. then it limits in a minute inch below the chin usually listen up because you're cheap mother you can use. a psycho phone you michel de. vos on muguruza to didn't tell you he was young not on drugs you're a lot i'm interested in fight that is very true. although i will not be learning kind i learned that you did good you if you commit to this gust and have to do john not only commit to be fitted then that of i'm on a mission as i want to cure data shouldn't be scripted want if it wanted to fold
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and walk up and down in there. as i want to cure the. good news you knew then it still. goes you knew there were only 2 months. journalism may be under siege here in turkey but there's a specific group of journalists for and once thriving here in the aftermath of the arab spring hundreds of reporters from egypt yemen libya and syria have all fled authoritarian governments oppression prosecution in some cases war to come to turkey there are more than a dozen arab t.v. stations now based in this country most of them right here in istanbul deeming their content back home to the arab world now the irony of all of this as well as the apparent hypocrisy turkey jailing its own dissident journalists while playing host to those from foreign countries it's not a lost on either turkish reporters or their foreign colleagues they. we all know
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that there are politics at play here we've come to istanbul to speak to arab journalists about life in exile as well as the space that's been carved out for adversarial journalism aimed at the arab world. that a man who in. ready fact himself often either the. c.e.o. meant to laugh. or than. the case who might still have nothing that. we have now had he's keeping track of. the children. in the theater. the sooty in a new court and on. to. him . and had the size of. the. mayor
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time from him. what about. half an hour back at him. but the paleo men and look at the bulletin bob and he could have. come up out of all to see them saline into him what he did in. the bay them probable 2nd nobody in the called the celica about the. they said. a c c c a sick. couple of the other group and then you lied to in the midst of a missile soldier and the missile and all of. them are mr watt clear the last. is a couple of cool. again at the limit he of saw that there. was
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a whole. concert shuffle him he's a bum and at the. well here no one i think mad. or well yet here. i said i want to. do them all and that in this village and then we go. then i get me on. bob. hard on the problem of what i'm going on in a cold war 100 with their hand in the war when the well i'm going to put an end. and you know i. love that if i would. absolutely. and i had. a one i mean what.
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that didn't happen some say. through do your christmas for you. i'm late for that. in the last year. and i said not so far. never can make. all the land of the others and most of the. movie how could. you. and you're not good enough. for the last of the 5 this will happen the bullet that's why not the half dozen you call me mode where you. had even sort of analysis of the israel. and the maya form.
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wood on the foot a bit and that is a number. you've been watching a special edition of our program in turkey a country that while offering refuge to hundreds of arab journalists has grown into a giant prison be it metaphorically or literally for many of its own reporters a concerted campaign of intimidation arrests and closures by the government in all korea has ripped huge holes in the turkish media fabric the fact the turks at least those who look beyond their television screens can still find news and information that questions the official line is a testament to the courage of those who risk their safety and their freedom be it at home or in exile in the name of journalist we'll see you next time here at the list just. i'm victoria but my childhood was not always easy
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my mother was suffering from c.v.r. depression through making this film i have to understand my mother's mental illness and to find out if the conditions for the mentally ill have improved literally millions of people can be treated receive no help medications we all have a duty to change attitudes. mental illness breaking the silence on al-jazeera. the u.n. calls for a cease fire in libya as it condemns an attack on a migrant detention center. the robin you're watching al-jazeera live my headquarters here in doha also coming up the u.s. asked for
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a special meeting on iran's nuclear program and the un's nuclear watchdog agrees. also southern california is rocked by a 2nd powerful earthquake in 2 days. they may look content but why life's not so lush for more than just the buffalo one of the world's heritage sites. welcome to the program the u.n. security council has condemned the attack on a detention center in libya and called on warring sides to commit to a cease fire video has emerged showing the moment the airstrikes hit the capital tripoli on tuesday 60 people were killed or more than 100 others injured tripoli's recognized government says warlord khalifa haftar and his forces are responsible but they say they were targeting a nearby weapons depot and didn't give orders to hit the shelter the world health organization says almost 1000 people have been killed since after began his
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offensive to take over the capital 3 months ago or rob rebels explains why it's taken the u.n. security council 3 days to present a unified response to the migrant center attack. you could put this in the category of better late than never on wednesday the u.n. security council met for more than 3 hours behind closed doors but was unable to come up with a statement on the airstrike against the migrant detention center in tripoli now they have done so and in addition to condemning the air raid the security council urges all sides in libya to commit to a cease fire it says lasting peace tense the civility in libya will only come through political solutions and the also the council gave something of an admonition to other countries without naming any of them but telling him not to interfere in libyan affairs it said that the council call for full respect for the
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arms embargo by all member states and called on all countries not to intervene in the conflict or take any measures that exacerbated. but when you blow this is a professor at george washington university school of international affairs he says governments are ignoring the u.n. . weapons there are american weapons on both sides chinese drones on both sides russian weapons on both sides and a number of the both the p 5 at the security council and number of the other nations that you mentioned and some others are doing things that violate the u.n. embargo and impact what's going on on the ground and so again this u.n. resolution doesn't solve anything but it may put the brakes on the most egregious actions so take for example france france was supporting have to or so with some robustness until early april but they've stepped back their support significantly
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and maybe down to almost 0 except for certain counterterrorism operations a lot going on on the ground right now and it's clear that nations are looking to be opportunistic but not be to agree just in their violations of these international agreements but right now have to or isn't singing the right notes and isn't conducting himself in a way that indicates that he's ready to make peace sometimes you need more pressure or more negative stories to come to light before enough pressure can be put on him and to that end i should say that have to are now has the large lawsuit against him in the united states other lawsuits in europe investigations being called for at the u.n. level the u.s. level in the european level and there will need to be increasing pressure on both sides to behave better and in particular on have to are to be serious about going back to the negotiating table. malta has agreed to take in 54 people who were rescued off libya's coast on thursday the migrants were stuck at sea while malta
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and italy argued over who should lead the rescue ship dock a similar number of migrants already in malta who will be sent to italy in return for accepting the latest group the german rescue ship was also picked up 65 people from an os loaded diggy of libya rescuers say the boat had almost no drinking water and no navigation system the refugees and migrants are being cared for border rescue vessel italy is warning the crew not to attempt to dock at any of its ports . the un's nuclear watchdog will hold a special meeting on iran's nuclear program next week the session was called for by the u.s. after president trump warned iranian president hassan rouhani to be careful with his threats the senior aide to iran's supreme leader says the country will slowly but surely reduce its commitment to the 2050 nuclear deal or less europe does more to save it that. real definitely not initiate anything to withdraw from the nuclear
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deal unless the other party does the other party has step by step americans directly and europeans in directly violated the deal we will show reaction exponentially as much as they violate it we reduce our commitments as much as they reduce it if they go back to fulfilling their commitments we will do as well this will happen at a rational and gradual pace. bar as our correspondent following events for us in tehran door so let's just begin with sort of the new and you can nuclear meeting called for by the us i mean will this give iran a forum to voice its complaints about u.s. actions against it and against the j c p a way. well the position here is that this call for this meeting by the united states government is really not legitimate because the u.s. is no longer a signatory to this nuclear agreement they withdrew last year and the iranians are
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saying this is absolutely ridiculous the iran's diplomatic mission in vienna has tweeted about this and he said for the united states government to ask for this meeting is very ironic since they themselves left this nuclear agreement and urged other signatories to do the same and that now that iran is scaling back its commitment they are the ones saying no we need to meet and we're concerned about this she says that this diplomat says that iranians are actually really don't have to answer to the united states any longer because they're not part of this nuclear deal and that is of course a concern for the iranians because the sanctions that the u.s. has imposed on iran since they have left the nuclear agreement has been crippling iran's economy and heightening the tension between the 2 countries but also what. this oil. being held under investigation off the coast of just brought in the mediterranean it also seems that iran's exports of being held up apparently elsewhere to. yes we've heard from various
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m.p.'s who have expressed concern about a developing story that's been going on for the past 2 months there was an oil tanker at the iranian oil tanker that was on its way to the suez canal carrying about 1200000 barrels of crude oil on april 30th and it where it experience apparently some engine problems and it was in the red port city of jeddah in saudi arabia where that this stress calls were issued and these saudi officials rescue this vessel with $26.00 crew members on port and it has been since fixed in this port city but the saudi officials are charging the iranians 200000 dollars per day for this vessel that's docked at the airport in the rain in oil minister has said that they are looking into this and the issue they have right now is they want this vessel back but the cost is very very high it will work out to about $12000000.00
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so far for the 2 month period but the saudi government has said that they're not going to release it until the iranians pay this amount in the iranians have said they are investigating and looking into it and they are trying to secure the release of this vessel or see what happens with that in the coming days and also thank you for the stay in the region because in syria a mother has been killed and her son injured on a government strikes targeting rebel held it to the province there it came under heavy bombardment early on saturday rescue teams rushed to the scene and search for survivors at least 12 civilians were killed on friday during another government to solve all the problems to disease president has called a presidential and legislative elections for later in the year c s a b c signed the decrees as he made his 1st public appearance since being discharged from hospital there were concerns the 92 year old leader would be well enough to authorize elections on time as a b.c. also took action to extend newsies ongoing state of emergency. has been the wearing
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of a full face veil in government offices prime minister use of the head says it's for security reasons last week a double suicide bomb attack rocked tunis 2 people were killed and several others injured i still claim responsibility for the attack witnesses say one of the bombers was wearing in the car. opposition leaders in sudan say the deal with the military will be finalized by monday they've been holding a series of public meetings to explain why they signed the agreement which has been met with both celebration and a skepticism and brian has more. from early morning until late at night and main squares mosques and on street corners. sudanese people came together. facing the drums of change and chanting civilian revolution. hailing what some say as the 1st step towards ending
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decades of dictatorship. but i think that i am telling the youth that the revolution is not over the revolution has just started with the internet shut down by the military john to news of the day and spread mostly by word of mouth and in public meetings held by opposition leaders who have used. the agreement will be signed off to its finalized and some heads of state from different countries will be attending the signing that we are expecting this to take place within the upcoming week before says of the freedom and change have already picked up their candidates for the announcement of the sovereign council and the prime minister the sovereign council will include 5 military and 5 civilians plus an additional civilian agreed by both sides the council will 1st be led by the military will hand over to civilians and just under 2 years they'll leave it until elections june and 2022. i think the civilian opposition will reman change was in
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a no win position they either had to take a green as presented by the african union if the opium or the transitional military council is going to say they won't negotiate we're withdrawing there are mixed feelings and saddam to some the deals a victory for others it's a surrender had to sort of i'm not tonight we're still have demands and these demands have not yet been met we have the blood of the martyrs in the main city inside we still want rights that haven't happened yet. part of the deal includes an investigation into a violent crackdown by security forces which saw more than $100.00 protesters code . amnesty international says this agreement must be judged by how those in power now live up to their responsibilities to respect people's fundamental rights something the sudanese people have been deprived of for well over 3 decades amnesty called the deal.
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