tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 7, 2019 8:00am-8:34am +03
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i have all the watches we have all the time but don't trump. was not elected to perpetuate these wars he kind of promised to scale back our involvement the middle east and this is being increasingly viewed in the united states as a counterproductive war there are some issues that will be left unresolved. and i'm sure that there are plenty of people in washington think this is premature but the bottom line is the afghan government's had 19 years to get it so free for this point i'm not sure if they've made good use of that time and what chance does any of these any of these talks have if if the afghan government is not so on boards or is not up to the time. that's that's the big challenge because you might see this dynamic where they take action which spoils any kind of agreement so they have to be brought in you can't have an arrangement that doesn't have all the parties involved what you'll have is a facade and i think that while trump dislikes being involved overseas he dislikes
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being seen as work as as weak and he really dislikes being you know this idea that people can say he was manipulated by somebody so i don't think the united states will leave quite as precipitously of as some have announced i think it's a goal that we're working towards but it won't be resolved soon david sirota joining us live from washington thank you very much indeed for your thoughts sons analysis thank you thank you hala. now the french president's a man of a mic home has admitted soon iran's president that europe hasn't been able to see protect iran from u.s. sanctions what's according to iran and for was a phone call between the 2 leaders mccraw also sent european leaders will do everything they can to stop the 2050 nuclear deal from collapsing his office said in the statements that he's trying to find
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a way to resume talks on july 15th iran has set a sunday deadline for europe to offer a new terms and has warned it will accelerate ukrainian enrichments but. we'll definitely not initiate anything to withdraw from the nuclear 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 while jazeera is aimed as ravi has the latest now from tehran. it was just a few hours ago a call went around to reporters based here in tehran inviting them to a press conference at the presidential complex here in the capital people in attendance at that news briefing are expected to be from president hassan rouhani
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is office of course from the atomic energy organization of iran and from iran's foreign ministry what we're expecting to hear is senior leaders briefing reporters about the next phase of iran's plan to rollback cooperation with the 2050 nuclear deal now iran has said over and over again that it will not go forward with its plan to do so if other signatories to the deal or able to help provide the economic relief that was promised as part of the deal help mitigate u.s. sanctions or as the united states returns to the deal and lift economic sanctions that many iranian leaders have called economic warfare economic terrorism now with less than 24 hours to go before that deadline expires it seems nothing has changed and so stopping the rollback of cooperation with the 2050 nuclear deal seems very unlikely we're not expecting any surprises tomorrow senior iranian leaders including president hassan rouhani himself have said that one of the things they will do is begin enriching uranium at higher purity levels under the agreement of
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the j c p a way article state that iran can enrich uranium up to 3.67 percent in purity many leaders who here have said that they will turn that number into 5 percent president hassan rouhani in a speech just a few days ago he even said that iran will enrich uranium to any level that it deems necessary possibly as high as 20 percent and even more. the saudi embassy coalition says it intercepted the latest drones launched by yemen's rebels before they reached any targets earlier that he said their drones hit warplane hangars and other military sites in the kingdom's site western she's an airport if your leaders had claimed another strike on the same airports own thirst say. well the pace of dollar tax aimed at saudi arabia has escalated in recent weeks airports in g.'s and have been targeted several times in may a drone missile briefly shut down a key oil pipeline he's initially claimed responsibility of us are reports from the
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wall street journal suggests that the attacks originated from iraq on june 13th our airport was hit by a drone attack the saudi embassy coalition said 26 people were injured 10 days later one person was killed and 21 people were wounded in another drone attack on the same airports where saudi arabia says other attempted attacks were intercepted by their air defenses. thousands of yemenis have been protesting against the presence or saudi forces in their country demonstrators in our mara province are accusing riyadh and the u.a.e. of economic occupation there's been several protests in the area against saudi involvement in the conflict tens of thousands of people have died and millions have been displaced. there's lots more still to come on the news are including african leaders gather in the asia have the goal of creating the world's largest trading
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block. by life's not so large and one of the world's heritage sites. and in sports we know messi seems rather corporate america. is here to tell us. their rescue ship with 46 migrants on board has defied the italian authorities and docks in the ports of lampedusa it's the 2nd vessel in a week to go against an explicit ban on rescue ships entering italian ports malta offered to accept the migrants when italy refused but the crew said it was too far for them to travel this island seekers were rescued from a rubber dinghy on thursday off the coast of libya and a german rescue boat that's been waiting to dock in italy has changed course and is
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now heading to malta instead the cia tweeted that italy was blocking it from docking and it couldn't wait any longer it's carrying 65 african migrants rescued off libya's coast the libyan coast guard had instructed the boat to return but the captain refused to return people to what he says are libyan torture camps well it isn't syria minister mathias salvina took to social media saying he's meant taining his hardline. against migrant rescue ships you're used. to this cry i'm not reopening italian ports especially if you ask me to but it's a german ship and then you take care of it or we put them all on a bus in front of the german embassy that's enough and this applies to the french dutch and to anyone who thinks anything can be done in italy. government's airstrikes in syria's. killed a mother and injured her son the area was heavily bombarded during the early hours
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of saturday another 13 civilians were killed when strikes hit the same area on friday fighting in it has intensified over the past few weeks as government forces step up their campaign to recapture the rebels' last stronghold the head of sudan's military gentles says he will protect and implement a parish sharing deal with the opposition general abdul fatah her and says the time has come to rebuild the nation after months of political crisis we go. through our work the 5th of july agreement with freedom and change and other powers is considered a win win situation and we are now lightening the way of the revolution because we will be seeing different practices in our country against corruption and against racism and against the dignity of the citizen and the honorable people of sudan we are now starting a phase of building a new sudan where everyone will face a transparent procedure and the law will be above everyone. siddons opposition
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leaders say the deal announced with the military will be finalized by monday they've been holding a series of public meetings to explain why they signed the agreements which has been met with both celebration and skepticism well actually a brian has more. from early morning until late at night in 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 decades of dictatorship. but now 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 spread mostly by word of mouth and in public meetings held by opposition leaders.
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the agreement will be signed off to its final laws and some heads of state from different countries will be attending the signing we are expecting this to take place within the upcoming week before says of the freedom and change have already picked 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 in just under 2 years they'll lead it until elections june and 2022. now we've started a new era in the history of sudan that we all have to join and accept we all have to bring stability and in the long suffering of the sudanese people. there are mixed feelings and sit down for some the day a victory for others it's a surrender. would still have demands and these demands have not yet been met we
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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 killed. 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 a testament to the resilience of ordinary people they chose to stand up for they rights alexia brian al jazeera. algerian opposition parties and civil society figures have called for elections in 6 months which should be overseen by an independent body. various groups got together for a national forum for dialogue meeting on saturday pro-democracy protests began in
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february which led to the resignation of longtime president abdulaziz bits of victoria gave reports. in the seaside resort of. politicians academics and journalists met with the aim of finding a solution to algeria political crisis talks discussed interim solutions such as the formation of a new cabinet made up of independent professionals as well as the establishment of an independent election commission once formed and visited a presidential election would take place within 6 months. we agree to have these presidential elections that we all have accepted in order for our people to be able to have the 1st democratically elected president in a transparent white the presidential elections will grant a strong legitimacy to the new president so it's for him to cares a gurgly bring the change. for 5 months hundreds of thousands of protesters have demanded a complete overhaul of the leadership entrenched in power for the past 57 years
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since algeria is independence from france on wednesday interim president abdelkader ben salah called for a national dialogue about ranging a presidential election but didn't set a date for when that might be analysts say protesters are likely to continue to reject elections if that organized by the ruling elite as they have. just yet and when you react. that they want a clear and and elections. some opposition leaders say the interim president needs to do more to gain the trust of protesters. the release of prisoners of conscience is considered one of the most important steps to prove the sincerity and seriousness of those who are now in charge of the nation but all topics that help achieve the demands of the people should be discussed the.
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whatever is decided at this conference may serve as a roadmap to resolve the rest but for some in the opposition what's being suggested is a compromise too far and they won't be satisfied until those in the establishment play no part in algeria. victoria gate and be algis they were. thousands of protesters in georgia are demanding the interior minister step down over a violent crackdown against demonstrators. they're also calling on the police super league those arrested since mass protests began last month hundreds of people were injured when riot police far rubber bullets and water cannon crowds trying to enter the parliament building well that rally was triggered by a visiting russian politician who was invited to speak and prominence. african leaders are meeting in the genre to move forward with a joint free trade pacts and it creates in the world's largest trading bloc the
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african continent all free trade area agreements aims unite all 55 members of the african union into a single market of 1300000000 people the agreements designed cebu's trade between african countries by removing tariffs taxes and other barriers and low african businesses to grow by giving them access to new markets in neighboring countries while the pax was 1st proposed in 2002 and was given a boost this month when nigeria which is africa's largest economy created to signing up at the summits in the share bounce as ahmed's interest reports from the capital niamey fighting in various african countries threatens the success of the agreements. stepped up security in the hurt of the capital underlining the growing concerns not only here in the sahara region of africa but in many other
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parts of the continent from north to south east to west and in the hurt of africa 2 governments are struggling to contain communal clashes and violent extremism. african leaders hope the new free trade deal is the answer to help reduce the poverty that helps you hold the fighting. experts say an african common market will come with additional risks that as national organized crime criminals could take advantage of this free movement you know to flow from one country to another and it is killed just as or to perpetrate their nefarious activities so definitely do looking for the for the chink in the armor you looking for the weak link if the countries do not have you know security architecture that at some countries risk becoming safe heaven for you know terrorist or criminal or organized criminals governments say they're working to stop that from happening. we have decided to escalate our security approach in dealing with these attacks and violence so that's
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africa union will come in and take charge. this way the cell region will be safer and all the flashpoints can be contained in the solved by africans themselves. leaders from at least $53.00 of the continent $65.00 countries i do here to ratify the deal that could be implemented as early as next year. the african continental free trade agreement is expected to create the world's largest single market the continent is home to one and a quarter 1000000000 africans leaders hope that the free trade agreement will help create jobs as breaking a growth but it's not clear whether investors will overlook the internal strife in many african countries and bring in the much needed capital to boost production of goods and services. african entrepreneur say the agreement could be the answer to the continent's many problems the truth is we do have china africa but they're
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nowhere to get the kind of returns on investment to get in so you're confident the investors will come and come to visit all we need to open the walk problem what's going to put in place policies that will be able to create jobs i live in poverty there are also fears that corruption and weak in force might get some countries could model success of what's being billed as a historic free trade agreement crease al-jazeera. to share. still to come on al-jazeera why more and more women are joining the workforce. and in sports a big crash only opening stage takes it in many of the tour de france pre-race favorites going in trying to make history.
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how do we got some rather lively weather spilling off the rockies making its way through the great plains a lot of fun the storms are rumbling away here slowly but surely making their way further east which is quiet at least weather wise i was towards the west coast so we'll see things steadily settled for example san francisco 78 celsius inside by this 24 in l.a. notice a little more cloud up towards the pacific northwest into that western side of canada as we go on into monday that will not a little for a sweet little change right along the west coast but over towards our central areas more showers in play here wetter weather breaking the heat that we have just around the eastern seaboard to be some big downpours possibility of some localized flooding just around the east coast as we go on through monday anywhere from around d.c. into the carolinas for the south while he remains on here 31 celsius for miami we'll see similar temperatures across the caribbean
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a possibility of some shop showers coming into cuba much of the audience will be fine and dry sunshine and showers there into hispaniola meanwhile some wetter weather will make its way into the western side of the caribbean some big and heavy showers rolling through here they extend all the way into southern mexico. this is a really fabulous news from one of the best i've ever worked in there is
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a unique sense of bonding where everybody teams in but something i feel every time i get on the chair every time i interview someone we're often working around the clock to make sure that we bring events as i currently as possible to the viewer that's what people expect of us and that's what i think we really do well. this is al jazeera a quick reminder of the top stories for you this hour the u.s. special envoy for afghanistan says the current briand of negotiations with the
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taliban have been the most productive so far he made the comments in qatar where afghan political figures and the taliban are to to hold talks aimed at ending the civil war. the french president has vowed to keep the 2050 nuclear deal of life in a phone call with his a rainy and counterparts emanuel mccraw and her son rouhani have agreed to create the conditions for talks to resume by july 15th iran has warned it will accelerate uranium enrichment. migrant rescue ship has ignored say to these barren land doctors in the port of lampedusa but the 46 people on board are still waiting to disembark it's the 2nd vessel in a week to go against italy's ban on the rescue ships. at the brazilian musician and bossa nova pioneers joe barrett so has dies at his home. in rio de janeiro he was 88.
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when his version of the girl from ipanema was released in 1964 and was a global hits it was part of a grammy winning album that sold millions of copies and helped popularize the bossa nova science fusion of samba and jazz artists have been paying tribute saying he left a huge legacy for brazil and the world's. people in southern california have been told to brace themselves for more aftershocks will find the strongest earthquake in 20 years the 7 point one magnitude quake damaged buildings and roads and left several people injured it was the 2nd major tremor to hit the u.s. states in 2 days john hendren has more. the biggest earthquake in 2 decades struck california's mojave desert it rattled chandelier and
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was felt by news presenters 250 miles away in los angeles to get out of the death all right we're going to get a break go will be right back after a while it came a day after a magnitude $6.00 quake along the same fault line shaking buildings and shutting down a highway strewn with rocks so the focus growing up sort of peace in the 1st earthquake ruptured a bit more in the 5.4 this morning a more rupture and more now it is moving towards the northwest away from the metropolitan area as far as we can tell the u.s. geological survey says there's a 5 percent chance a bigger quake will follow this is another earthquake everyone has a chance of trying to think of we've ever seen a situation where the 6.47 and that something even bigger and i can't think of one the epicenter of the southern california quake was in the city of ridgecrest halfway between las vegas and los angeles. we're gathering intelligence and we're
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taking action on multiple structure fires we're gathering information we better helicopter in the air it's dinner upon a sense of the city of ridgecrest and the surrounding areas. we got. reports of tremors came from as far away as sacramento an 8 hour drive to the north and several hours to the south in mexico leaving 1st responders in the desert community scouring the area for damage and anyone injured by the quake john hendren al jazeera a suspected gas explosion has told through a shopping mall in the u.s. state of florida well then 20 people were injured 2 of them seriously the powerful blast sent large pieces of debris almost 100 meters across the streets witnesses told local media a vacant restaurants appeared to be the source of the explosion. and thousands of protesters are calling for justice after
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a 2 year old girl was raped 2 months ago the march comes after the girl's father spoke so local media but his dance on the investigation police arrested a suspect this week for the assault took place in a private nursery school in the capital experts say child rape is very common and man mark but most cases go on report says. now more women than ever before are joining garza's workforce with unemployment at record levels women are setting up their own businesses to raise money for their families but they have to deal with cultural as well as economic barriers but matheson reports from gaza. 17 year old mina simoun studies computer programming at school but she's also learning from her brother how to make coffee in her mother's cafe because she says she doesn't have much chance of getting a job in gaza it is a lot i just read i think women should work because in gaza out there are no job
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opportunities when i work it means i can provide for my family my husband and my son in his mother's supreme started selling her food through a facebook page 2 years ago business became so good customers had to order 2 days in advance after her kitchen cook row broke down supreme decided to open her cafe and it's my life it's security for my children it's the sweetest thing and it has a lot of meaning for me i want to expand and open more shops there are 2000000 people in cars and it's estimated that in 2852 percent of them didn't have a job 2 out of every 3 young people including graduates were unemployed for the same period the number of women who were in work went up by 26 percent even though that's just a small part of the workforce according to the world by up to 80 percent of gaza's economy has been propped up for several years by money from the palestinian authority and foreign aid donations but that funding is dropping gaza's economy
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shrank by 8 percent in 2800. rosen cousin dos started selling her t. shirt designs online in 2014 but her business expanded she became a mentor for other female entrepreneurs here but. the biggest problem i face is that i'm a woman and being a woman is a big deal in gaza society especially because my profession is in printing people say how come a woman is invading a man's profession the dalai association project is one of several that gaza which supports women who want to start their own businesses. happily on gaza society has traditional views it allows a woman to become part of a project but just as a worker the woman cannot be a leader in the society people know she can do it but according to traditions they don't accept it gaza's businesswoman like sabrina may be creating new jobs they may also be helping to shape the attitudes of gaza's new generation rob matheson
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al-jazeera gaza turkey's president ratchet type arabs around has fired the governor of the central bank now official reason was given for marette chit in cairo as the smith's so he'd been resisting pressure from the government to cut interest rates to boost turkey's recession hit economy and in a few hours forces in greece will start casting their ballots in a general election polls are predicting prime minister alexis tsipras anticipates a party will reinstate the conservative opposition dancer oculus reports from athens. this charity shop in the center of athens has more and more pensioners as customers under the city's a government they have had their benefits cut twice despite it promising it wouldn't follow the austerity policies of previous administrations after 49 years of work and that is going to received a pension of $1600.00 a month that is now down by a quarter but when you're familiar. i used to buy
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a newspaper i stopped that i used to go out for coffee with friends i stopped it i used to buy a packet of cigarettes a week i cut that now i just sit locked in my home pensioners one of the most hard hit constituencies of the greek crisis and they helped elect cities in january 2015 to endorse geraghty in july that year in a referendum 62 percent of greeks voted against further austerity instead cities are capitulated to greece's 3rd emergency loan and partial spending cuts the about turn was unpopular but it balanced the budget and kept greece in the euro zone there are many people who vote that series are in because syria see it as it had been promising there will. be a mystic. achievement of their voting them out because.
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they did the right thing they did what was practically big and practically feasible . last year greece's eurozone partners who are its main creditors said it was no longer dependent on their emergency loans and was fit to return to the markets syriza pronounces it a victory. you know we came to unite all greeks we combined our strength without this unity we would not have emerged from our stereotype austerity policies was so unpopular opposition parties could not resist attacking them that's why a conservative government unseated a socialist one and was going to have unseated by serious political parties failed to form a national front to face a national emergency for the past 4 and a half years it has seemed that syriza was immune to the political cost of austerity because it was a new political force having never held power before it wasn't responsible for
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bankrupting the economy but now that greece has graduated from its state of emergency the greeks appear more willing to accept that they too were to blame for overspending their way into debt and ready to come to terms with the global economy again jobs are opal us al-jazeera athens. now you know sco the un's cultural and scientific agency has unveiled another batch of sites that will be added to its world heritage list this year is currently holding its annual meeting azerbaijan i mean mars ancient city of bag and made it to the list 25 years after it was 1st nominated it's home to more than 3000 buddhist temples and monasteries built some 8 to 10 centuries ago the fortified indian city of joy poor has also gained a sports on the list it's also known as the pink city purpose founded in the 17
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hundreds and many of its buildings are decorated with elaborate for some. as you can see now the german city of augsburg was also ground says world heritage status for its 800 year old water system it's aquaducts and fine since i'm kells provided residents with clean drinking water since the middle ages 3 years ago an iraqi site has added see the world heritage list but the people living in the marshlands of southern iraq known as the marsh arabs say the new status is no it's improved their livelihoods and as john stratford reports government the glitz and climate change adds to their daily struggle. the sun rises over the marshes of suddenly rock the what didn't region fade by the tigris and euphrates rivers. home to people as far back as the samaritans more than 5000 years ago.
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