tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera July 7, 2019 11:00am-11:34am +03
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leaders well mark and also said european leaders will do everything they can to stop the 2015 uclear deal from collapsing his office said in the statements that he's trying to find a way to resume talks by july 15th iran has set a sunday deadline for europe to offer any terms and has warned it will accelerate uranium enrichment 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. he has the latest from tehran. it was just a few hours ago a call went around to reporters based here in teheran inviting them to
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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 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 roll back cooperation with the 2015 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 that 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
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they will do is begin enriching uranium at higher purity levels under the agreement of 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 here in iran even said that iran will enrich uranium to any level that it deems necessary possibly as high as 20 percent and even more. well they are such a party takes a look back at the inception of the clear deal and higher raffles. july the 14th 2015 was supposed to be the start of a new era it's been iran and western powers signing up to join a comprehensive plan of action and with it high hopes for iran's economic future. iran along with 5 permanent members of the united nations security council britain
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china russia france the united states plus germany agreed to put a limit on iran's nuclear development in exchange crippling sanctions or at least most of them would be lifted. last may u.s. president donald trump made good on his election campaign promise and pulled out of the deal since then a wide range of u.s. sanctions have been reimposed on iran's oil dependent economy the u.s. government says its maximum pressure policy is aimed at getting iran back to the negotiating table. iran's highest authority made his position clear during a visit by japan's prime minister last year but. yesterday we believe no problem will be solved through negotiations with the us americans have adopted luxembourg hostility towards us and they are continuing no liberated nation will accept to negotiate under pressure iran maintains the remaining signatories of the deal have
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yet to fulfill their end of the bargain due to pressure from the united states which forced president hassan rouhani to trigger a clause in the deal i mean johnny or announcing the reduction of our commitments not be trouble from meet iran is a standing as strong differences aside against us pressures we chose diplomacy over war again. days later iran's atomic energy organization announced a 4 fold increase in production of low enriched uranium for which meant iran's stockpile would soon exceed the 300 kilograms allowed under the nuclear deal high level diplomatic efforts fail including a meeting in vienna where iran's deputy foreign minister declared that the european signatories aren't willing or able to fulfill their ends is. iran finds itself yet again at a crossroads between its own domestic nuclear needs and the concerns of the international community that appears to distrust iran's intentions dorce as
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a party al-jazeera tekla. the saudi emirates the coalition says it intercepted the laser strongs launched by yemen's hasty rebels before they reached their targets earlier he said their drones hit warplane hangars and other military sites in the kingdom's site western cheese and airports if your leaders had claimed another strike on the same airports on thursday well the pace of the drone attacks aimed at saudi arabia has escalated in recent weeks airports in g.'s and up ha been targeted several times in may a drone missile briefly shut down a key oil pipeline there who sees initially claimed responsibility bazza report from the wall street journal suggested the attacks of originated from iraq on june 13th airport was hit by or drawn attack sorry i'm article the sions said 26 people were injured 10 days later one person was killed and 21 people were wounded in
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another drone strike on the same airport saudi arabia says other attempted attacks were intercepted by their air defenses. by thousands of yemenis have been protesting against the presence of saudi forces in their country demonstrators in our mara province are tears in riyadh and the u.a.e. of economic occupation in several poses in the area against saudi involvement in the conflict tens of thousands of people have died and millions have been displaced . plenty more still to come on the news are including. african leaders gather in the share with the goal of creating the world's largest trading block. the u.s. women's football team is flying high at night they want the money to match. the also in the last season's brad. friedel will be here to tell us why.
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46 migrants on a rescue ship that docks in italy in defiance of a government order have been allowed to disembark 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 and the german rescue boat that's been waiting to dock in italy has changed course and is now heading to malta instead the c.i. tweeted that italy was blocking it from docking and it couldn't wait any longer carrying $65.00 african migrants rescued off libya's coast the libyan coast guard had instructed the boat to return but the captured refused to take the migrants back to what he says are libyan torture camps. italy's right wing interior minister
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mathias salvini has been on social media defending his hardline stance. lawyer yeah i am not reopening italian ports especially if you ask me to but was 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 the dutch and to anyone who thinks anything can be done in italy. the heads own citizens military says he will protect and implements a power sharing deal with the opposition general abdul fatah says 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 late inning 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
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are now starting a phase of building a new sudan where everyone will face a transparent procedure and the law will be above everyone. african leaders are meeting in the shared to move forward with a joint free trade pacts aimed at creating the world's largest trading bloc they african continental free trade area agreements aims unite all 55 members of the african union into a single market of 1200000000 people in agreements designed to boost trade between african countries by removing tariffs taxes and other barriers to low african businesses to grow by giving them access to new markets in neighboring countries where the pact was 1st proposed in 2002 and was given abyss this month where nigeria which is africa's biggest economy committed see signing up at the summits in need share but says a busy just reports from the capital niamey fighting in various african countries
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threatens the success of the agreement. 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 parts of the continent. from north to south east to west and in the herd of africa to government 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 fuel the fighting. experts say an african common market will come with additional risks that as national organized crime criminals take advantage of this free movement you know to flow from one country to another and it is killed just as what to perpetrate the yeah and if i missed opportunities so definitely going to be looking for the for the chink in the are you looking for the weak link in the countries do not have you know security architecture that at
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some countries risk safe heaven for you know or terrorist or criminal are going to scream at us government say they're working to stop that from happening for cement and some we have decided to escalate our security approach in dealing with these attacks and violence so that's africa union will come in and take shots this way the seller region will be safer and all the flashpoints can be contained and solved by africans themselves. leaders from at least $53.00 of the continents $55.00 countries are due 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 was the largest single market in the continent is home to one and a quarter 1000000000 africans leaders hope that the free trade agreement will help create jobs as breaking up the growth but it's not clear whether investors will overlook the internal strife in many african countries and bring in the much needed
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capital to boost production of goods and services. african entrepreneur say the agreement could be the answer to the continent's many problems and the truth is we do have china africa by the nowhere to get the kind of returns on investment that you get in the african so you're confident the investors will come and come to visit me to the point to walk problem what's going to develop policies govern the create jobs i live in poverty there are also fears that corruption and we can force majeure. some countries could model success of what's being billed as a historic free trade agreement but you crease al-jazeera here may be. well protectionist policies in many african states serve proved a major obstacle see free trade advocates of the trade deal hope it will bring employment opportunities to millions of people across the continent to serious market web reports from tika in kenya. betty tibet
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grows here on her farming kenya and up in more than a dozen african countries beings from these soya plants will make cooking oil. some also added. no more a so we decided to call soya because they're. for. and then it is the main class crop for us. the oil from bessie's beans is bottled at this food factory in the town of seeka as well as using locally produced oil its owners sometimes import oil from neighboring countries as well but that's subject to trade tariffs so it costs more the products made in this factory were also subject to trade tariffs and some of the african countries there exported to the provenance of a new person continental free trade agreement say that it's seen. nearly all of the
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member states of the african union have signed the agreement is due to take effect next year and progressively phase out 97 percent of tyrants. at the factory the director told us it will create jobs and reduce costs if it's implemented there's going to be the single biggest market in the world where there will be free movement of goods and services big macro projects like to look very good but the implementation has to be done with a united africa with the united thinking united limitation when leaders promise free trade the african union many still pursue protectionist policies at home selling manufactured products across africa's borders often isn't easy it's here at the port of mombasa that goods manufactured outside of africa are imported to the region. most african countries trade more with countries in europe and asia and
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with each other economists say the free trade agreement alone won't solve that and that they'll be resistance from a powerful few who make fast profits from the status quo the politicians have become beholden to these types of folks and i think you're breaking up much more than might appear at 1st glance here breaking a system that's been there since independence the products from the food factory a truck to run. the region that this kind of manufacturing and export happens less in africa than any other continent economists say free trade within the continent would change that and create more jobs and income for people like betty but many feel it's still a long way off malcolm webb al-jazeera kenya former u.s. vice president joe biden has a poll gys for his remarks about working with segregationists during his time in the senate during last month's democratic primary debates rival presidential hopefuls criticized by his past involvement with sector geisha n'est senators folks
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now was i wrong a few weeks ago. to somehow give the impression to people that i was praising those men who are successfully opposed time and again yes i was i regret it and i'm sorry for any of the pain or misconception i may have caused anybody but. that misstep to find 50 years of my record for fighting for civil rights racial justice in this country i hope not i don't think so. that just isn't an honest assessment of my record i'm going to let my record of my character stand for self and not be distorted or smeared. still to come on al-jazeera why more and more women are joining the workforce in carson. california is brace for aftershocks as
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a massive earthquake rocks the southern part of the saints. and in sports the raptors star man is on the main to bring you details of a big change in the n.b.a. . the weather sponsored by cattle and ways. the seasonal rains continue to tumble down across a good part of central and southern china lots of clouds showing up on our weather system have plum rains across the maya by a front continues to bring some really big downpours in across the central areas for sunday trying to sink a little further south which as we go on into monday so you can see some rain coming into the southern fringes of china hong kong for sunday see some wet weather
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temperatures around $32.00 celsius $32.00 also into manila some showers are rolling through here the heavier showers for southeast asia are going to be across towards him our church was the malaysian peninsula so some big alabi downpour certainly a possibility here as we go through sunday further north might catch your charge just around the gulf of thailand over the next couple of days that will change as we go on into monday but those showers extend across the andaman sea they push up towards me and lots of cloud showing up here both eastern parts of india into bangladesh and the monsoon rains really peping out once again across the central plains trying to push a little further north that's just knocking the edge of the temperature in new delhi high of 36 over the next couple of days as we go on into monday when the rains strike into ways for central parts. the weather sponsored by qatar airways. because in 1999
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a boeing 767 took off from new york to cairo i'm. afraid it will everything no one survived the journey 20 years on al-jazeera world to revisit the case of the fatal egypt air crash flights 990 what really happened on al-jazeera every weekly news cycle brings a series of breaking stories is maximum jail term has jumped from 5 years to 175 years joined the listening post as we turn the cameras on the media donald trump shouldn't be the one deciding who is a journalist and who isn't and focus on how they were caught on the stories that matter the most they will cause for a cause or to look at the tire shut down both international and domestic news coverage on al-jazeera.
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this is al-jazeera a quick reminder of the top stories this hour. the u.s. special envoy for afghanistan says the current round of negotiations with the taliban have been the most productive so far he made the comments in qatar where afghan political figures and the taliban regime to hold talks aimed at ending the civil war. the french president has vowed to keep the 2015 you clear deal alive during a phone call with his opinion counterparts emanuel mccraw and her son behind me have agreed to create the conditions for talks to resume by july. 15 iran has warned it will accelerate uranium enrichment. and 46 migrants are rescue ship
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docked in italy defying a government order had been allowed to disembark its the 2nd vessel in a week to go against an explicit ban on rescue ships entering italian ports. and the brazilian musician and bossa nova pioneer barito has died at his home in rio de janeiro at the age of 88. while 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 bossanova signed a fusion of somber and jazz artists have been paying tribute saying he left a huge legacy for brazil and the world. or to discuss that legacy in more detail as
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welcome felix contreras sees co-creator and host of national public radio's out latino and joins us now live from washington d.c. thanks for speaking to us here on al-jazeera most of us of course there will be jovial i mean but about his influence extends far beyond that one song doesn't it. jobs robert was one of these kind of people that you can put a marker down and talk about what the world was like before him and what the world was like after him because he had such a profound influence on music on the culture and society there in brazil and what he did was he didn't really create he sort of created something new but more and more he transformed it transformed the samba that you mentioned before he transformed it into something sort of stripped it down to it as it's down to the pulse really and just with his guitar technique and his voice that you hear on the break right there and a little bit of music he transformed it because it's very boisterous very loud very
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festive it's like an extrovert paradise. bossanova just the complete opposite and absolutely he helped establish and decide that this is at the end most interesting is that he wasn't the finder of this balsa knew of the style that's you know but he's the one that he and his essence made it famous made it take off tell us more about. just like any form of music like with jazz like with rock n roll like with any form especially popular music trying to pinpoint exactly who started it and when it started is lost to history really but he was certainly one of the very 1st pioneers and just about all the music historians will pinpoint his particular style like i said he played it all on acoustic guitar and he muffled it and he he breathed the lyrics rather than seeing them really it was more like a soft soft subtle enunciation of all the lyrics so yeah he was part of that
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there's like the big 3. colors or being. when you see is there more ice composers lyricists musicians instrumentalist those 3 guys really sort of put it all together and made it popular and pushed it out to the rest of the world now in terms of legacy has he influenced the musicians not just of his day but the musicians who followed him. i just saw something online where one of pianists said it would take another generation to really understand his influence and his impact on brazilian music and music in general because bossanova had a huge influence on jazz had a huge influence on popular music there was a special relationship between the united states and brazil and they spoke the same language and the bus in over was one of those things that help bring those 2
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countries together and those those kind of things are some of some of his legacy as well for our legacy not just in musical terms but cultural time see thank you so much felix contreras for joining us on al-jazeera and sharing your thoughts thank you hala thank you very much. now people in southern california have been told to see brace themselves for more aftershocks following 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 united states states in 2 days john hendren has more. the biggest earthquake in 2 decades struck california's mojave desert it rattled chandelier and was felt by news presenters 250 miles away in los angeles to get
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into the path all right we're going to go to break we'll be right back after a while it came a day after a magnitude 6.4 quake along the same fault line shaking buildings and shutting down a highway strewn with rocks so growing up sort of piece the 1st earthquake ruptured a bit more in the 5.4 this morning and we're up here 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 i'm trying to think if we've ever seen a situation with the 6.47 and 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 los vegas and los angeles we're gathering intelligence and we're taking action on multiple structure fires we're gathering information we've got our helicopter in the air
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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. police in kazakstan have arrested dozens of people who were protesting on the birthday of former longtime leader new shields and those are by of. the protests in the capital and in say were quickly dispersed as riot police to demonstrators away in buses it's illegal to hold public process in kazakhstan many cousins were also arrested last month for protesting against a snap of presidential election which saw him as a bias hand-picked successor wins 70 percent of the votes. more women than
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ever before are joining us workforce with unemployments that record levels women are sensing up their own businesses to raise money for their families but they have to deal with cultural as well as economic barriers 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 opportunities when i work it means i can provide for my family my husband and my son when his mother sabrina 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 wrote 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
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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 shrank by 8 percent in 2800. well isn't cousin da started selling her t. shirt designs online in 2014 that's 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 isn't printing people
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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. had to leave home because the 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 business women like supporting maybe creating new jobs they may also be helping to shape the attitudes of gaza's new generation right matheson al jazeera gaza. the co-counsel of the u.s. women's football team has accused of not respecting the female game. care to size the governing body for paying teams playing in the women's world cup hundreds of millions of dollar less than the men he does offer to double the prize money for the women's tournaments from 30 to 60000000 but that's still
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a lot less than the 400000000 given to the men's world cup it's certainly is not fair. we should double it now and use that number to double it for you know or quadruple it. for the next time obviously i mean i think that's what it that's very mean when we talk about do we feel respected in the men's game financially as far as the women's game but i mean if you really care you let in the gap girl are you are you scheduling 3 finals on the same day. well that was rapinoe calling ice fee for offer less in the final matches of $2.00 male tournaments happen on the same day as the women's world cup final u.s. women's team is going up against the metal ends on sunday but once the game's over it's going to courts to fights against gender discrimination hard to castro reports . their moves emulate those of their heroes on the field at
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a summer sports camp in washington are 9 year old sophia mariska and 8 year old he learning go to future u.s. women's team that hopefully is there really. like how they pass back and more nervous for the next game because i really just want them to win that next game is all that stands between the u.s. women's team and a 4th world cup title they've also won 4 olympic gold medals drawn record t.v. audiences in the u.s. and have the bestselling football jersey ever on nike dot com but for all that the women's players earn less than half of what players on the men's team make they're not at all. tell me more about that while there they should be treated equally because they're both in this they're both doing the same thing they're both playing soccer the lawsuit filed by 28 women's players accuses their employer the u.s.
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soccer federation of institutionalized gender discrimination after the world cup finals the 2 sides will begin mediation with consequences that may add go well beyond the stadium we understand that the eyes are kind of on us and it's kind of in a magnify situation the fight for equal pay for american women have all hmong history off the field in fact equal pay has been required by law for more than 50 years but still today. an american woman on average makes $0.80 on the dollar compared to men in the case of this team which wins everything which draws more viewers and fans of she makes more money it just sort of puts the lie all the typical justifications about why it's ok to pay women less than men.
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