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tv   Two Worlds  Al Jazeera  July 8, 2019 6:32am-7:01am +03

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of haitian migrants who crossed the river into the united states a few nights ago and this take us one moment that i mean this one i mean in this case unfortunately we are looking for a girl between 2 and 3 years old it's best that we search downstream because she's the baby she could have been swept away easier than an adult we've also had cases where bodies are stuck deep in the water or in the surrounding brush. at a nearby camp for migrants we met 2 brothers from cuba they've been here for almost a month while their asylum cases are processed in the u.s. they tell us it's quite common for migrants to get impatient and take to the river or not. there was one night we're 80 people cross to others across the river 20 or 30 at a time including children sometimes younger than 2 years old single on the campus become a temporary home to more than 300 asylum seekers most of them are from west africa haiti and cuba. but not of those from angola he's been at the camp for more than a month he plays music most days to pass the time. as. we're
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expecting to wait here 23 or 4 months because there are many people ahead of us on the asylum list. many of the people we spoke to at the camp like bit of an article say they plan to wait as long as it takes to cross into the u.s. legally. but illegal crossings at the rio grande day have increased in recent months and so have drownings we're at a municipal cemetery n.p.r.'s neda us mexico where the bodies of migrants who died trying to cross into the united states are often brought and have these what in crosses placed over their graves and this one here simply reads mail not identified pulled out of the rio approximately 300 meters from the black bridge in the modell is neighborhood. there are several other graves of unknown migrants nearby the groundskeeper told us he buried 8 drowning victims just last week. back at the river looking just across the water in the u.s. soil. authorities say they will continue the search operation for one week as per
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protocol we've been told however that at this stage now several days since the child went missing the odds of finding her alive are very good. be resonators mexico. the parents of a young black israeli man shot dead by an off duty police officer say more action must be taken to hold security forces to account solomon take as death has provoked widespread anger amongst the ethiopian community is say they are targeted because of the color of their skin but it's methe reports. these people are in law as jewish as anyone else who has the right to move to israel and claim citizenship but many of them will tell you that their skin color means they don't get equal treatment in this country. had solomon ticket been white his family and friends believe he would not have been shot dead by an off duty police officer during a confrontation in a part of the load people have empathized and supported me but it's not going to
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help what will help is if the police in israel change and go in a new direction we need a new understanding from the roots all the way out. prompted nationwide demonstrations led by ethiopian israelis who say they have enjoyed decades of racism from the government and police. tens of thousands of ethiopians emigrated here in the eighty's and ninety's encouraged by successive governments 3 years ago a ministerial commission made a series of recommendations after widespread discrimination against ethiopian jews was exposed a coordination unit to prevent racism was set up the critics say what has been done on paper isn't being put into practice the police were supposed to work 40 cameras to film every interaction. not there also supposed to be stiffer penalties for violent police officers and
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a reduction in the use of tasers but there's no evidence that any of this is. according to the justice ministry the police have not published yearly reports on how officers who acted in a racist manner have been disciplined we don't want no one to hug us or say that they understand or our feelings feelings won't make me feel safe in the streets what made well will make me feel safe is police officers being indicted over killing young black people and it's not only young black men it's also. a. community we have the orthodox we have. and here that are suffering from police brutality this is an issue of civil rights . the police officer shot solomon is under house arrest solomon's name is 11 on the list of people who've been shot by the police in the last 5 years according to
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official records no police officers have been charged over any of those deaths bernard smith al-jazeera haifa. farming in the shadow of the world's highest mountains has never been easy and the nepalese say climate change is making it even more difficult in calvary district villages having to come up with innovative ways to grow their crops as sabina stressed explains. there is a drought here and garbage district but cultivates he doesn't seem to be suffering this canopy of green has been made possible because people here have changed the way they've farmed. the finished only for a few hours a day coming at the mills in a says the farmers don't waste any water every drop is trained to do this pool for their crops. as the temperatures have risen so to have the number of pairs i mean. they're. only 0 we want over there and we would literally spray the village
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with chemicals these are much better. she is referring to the eco friendly come close she uses now god other chemicals that once made her body ache and gave her head aides i wanted a few years ago these streams were a constant source of water now it's just a trickle the springs that feed into these streams have all but dried up people here say the monsoon rain patterns have changed the rain still come but they are now followed by long periods of drought at the international center for integrative medicine development easy mode climate change scientists on both the shasta says people across the region should prepare for disasters caused by a changing climate. this includes prolonged period of drought intercepted by floods from intense monsoons for others it could bring floods from the accident rated ice melts of the himalayan glaciers on the glacier this is also a go through this is the picture. later in
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2016 nearly $200.00 nations signed the paris accord that seeks to limit any average global temperature rise to one and a half degrees celsius but even if that goal is met scientists predict that by the year turned $100.00 at least one 3rd of the glaciers in the region will have melted managing those extremes so that's going to be the most important factor. in the future of this region for now the farmers in this village are coping but they don't know for how long swedish russia topic district in that part. still ahead for you on the program reaction from france as the knights of state's out of my test start title and at the women's obama's.
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been latest news as it breaks communities may be in disagreement accusing the other for these attacks tend to fill it with details coverage thousands of protesters have been streaming away for minutes ago how but thousands of all have been staying dog from around the world sacrificed he said quote how to remain bears the brunt of those sacrifices is what this is all about. one of the last remaining ancient forests in southeast asia is a lifeline to hundreds of lumberjacks and drivers. we follow that treacherous journey as they walk through extreme conditions. to gather and transport this dangerous but precious cargo risking it all. on al-jazeera.
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sport now with andy and. thank you so much marm all the u.s.'s celebrating their 2nd consecutive women's football world cup cycle they beat the netherlands sunil in the final in france a 2nd half penalty awarded by the video assistant referee and converted by cats in mega europe a no certain on their way a fine individual goal from roosevelt followed it's a wrap up the victory let's say of looks a cut above the rest throughout the tournament it started with a 3rd see no demolition of thailand this success there for the world cup the team
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also in the midst of suing its own soccer federation for gender discrimination the players want equal pay with the u.s. men's team through our correspondent paul race was at the final for us in leon. well the 58000 fans here at the start and millions watching around the world certainly didn't see a classic match but they did see the usa cement their place as the major force in women's football and a 4th world cup title for them to add to their 4 olympic gold medals and their 1st back to back world cup trophy after also winning in 2015 it's quite a hard result for the netherlands to take they were hoping to cement my says the real breakout team in women's football having come from nowhere to win the european championships in 2017 now reaching their 1st ever world cup final but a to know the fate of the usa no shame for them as they become one of the examples
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of the expansion on the strength and depth of the women's game now after this final the usa will go back home to fight a lawsuit against their own federation arguing for equal pay if not greater pay than the men's team and this is something that's going to be played out more and more across women's football with at least $3.00 for now promising double prize money for the next world cup in 4 years time i. have found back in the u.s. force that seems the lightest triumph face estimates in viewing figures for the tournament as a whole have topped 1000000000 in the usa will be honored with. a new on wednesday . they're not a big city proud of right now in america especially when you're winning and like it feels like you're on the side of against yale died to tell us how much i mean here that it was you know like it was like yes we won the world coming up the legacy of
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this team and when the world cup it was released i think very inspiring especially for like me since i used to play like a little girl thing inspired by this and it's like someone says i got to. there are such great role models here all the girls you get to play soccer the women's team they're like super heroes to me i cried like every single girl there are. brazil are closing in on victory at the corporate america house supply in peru in the final evidence in any government has a scouting so early goals for brazil at which allison is just scored a penalty in the last few minutes it's $31.00 there with full time approaching and argentina counseling or messi has claimed the event is corrupt and that the tournament has been fixed to benefit the hosts mostly since off ageing saturday's 3rd place play off against chile argentina won the game but their national association complained about the standard of referee. algeria have cruised through to the quarter finals at the africa cup of nations they were 3 no winners over
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guinea in cairo read marrs amongst the scores as algeria and to win this title for the 1st time since 1990 and their 1st ever appearance at saumur madagascar into the last states they won their last 16 side with the democrats or a public of congo on penalties after the game ended 22 after extra time was crazy like even were due some was crying some was laughing i was like i. was crazy you know i'm not one of the wards because they were what we are living but. mark mark has won the german moto g.p. to achieve the feat of 10 successive years of victories at the sachsenring the honda rider and defending world champion beating need for dollars to stretch his lead in the championship on his 1st win at this circuit in moto 3 back in 2010 followed by winning twice in the most cats are great and he's won the last 7 german
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marks so cheap it's. ok that is how your sport is looking for now let's get back to marry him in london andy thank you very much well that wraps up the news hour but i will have all the top stories for you in just a couple of minutes time a full and be here very shortly cease. from cutting edge medical technology toxic venom could be a vast resource for the development of lifesaving drugs to advances in the most difficult regions of the world. against scotland and you are getting to the new
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home. side of. innovative solutions to global health care problems as you hope to do to make a difference maybe out of all these words get it sure to solve the cure on al-jazeera. tibetan culture a down's thrives here every day generations of tibetans continue to embrace and maintain their cultural heritage it's a reminder of who they are a weather problem this is a suburb of the idiot capital new delhi tibet subbie refugees here since 1964 buttons here have been defined as migrants are not refugees because india hasn't signed up to the 1951 un convention on refugees so tibetans here have been able to access the indian welfare system so they become self-sufficient setting up their own businesses and looking for work independently but for some it's not enough. to
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his supporters hungary's prime minister is a guardian of europe's borders manning the ramparts against margaret paul. 2 others viktor orban is an authoritarian demagogue whose far right agenda poses a significant threat to democratic values. people in power investigates the leader taking his country to extreme. hungary europe's bad boy on a 0. the u.s. threatens iran with greater isolation off to teheran begins enriching uranium to beyond the limit agreed in the 2015 u.k. a deal. by maryam namazie in london you know with al-jazeera also coming up. with.
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greece's new prime minister says he has a strong mandate to change greece off to resoundingly victory in sunday school election. tempus friday in hong kong as demonstrators gather once again to protest against a controversial extradition. and the ethiopians in israel say they targeted because of the color of their skin as another member of that community is killed by the police. u.s. president donald trump has warned iran that it will never have a nuclear weapon after decided to enrich uranium to levels grice and that equate as part of the 2015 u.k. a deal to iran says it will continue to reduce its compliance every 60 days unless an agreement is reached to stop u.s. sanctions same bus. it is the boldest step iran has taken so
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far in its choreographed campaign to reduce compliance with a 2015 nuclear deal on sunday morning it announced it would start enriching uranium to higher levels than allowed under the joint comprehensive plan of action. in a few hours the technical process will come to an end and enrichment above 3.67 percent will begin tomorrow when they. take the sample the level will be higher. iranian leaders warned for months if the international community did not help their country reap the benefits guaranteed in the way it will no longer honor its commitments the level of enrichment is unclear but senior leaders have suggested it could be as high as 5 even 20 percent still far from the 90 percent needed for weapons grade uranium there has been a flurry of diplomatic activity in recent weeks with meetings of the united nations security council and the commission in vienna there was hope that an injection of cash into instax or european bypassed u.s.
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banking sanctions might convince iran not to roll back cooperation in stakes. in stakes is a good 1st step is taking too long it can only be successful if europe buy some more oil or locate some credit to it it's not useful yet but is politically significant in a call with president hassan rouhani on saturday night french president emanuel acknowledged that nations had been unable to mitigate u.s. sanctions but he also warned his iranian counterpart of the consequences of weakening the deal mccrone and rouhani have agreed to a deadline of july 15th for all parties to resume talks what comes next is unclear . so far the international atomic energy agency the un's nuclear watchdog has issued 15 separate reports confirming iran's cooperation with a j c p o a when iran breached a nuclear stockpile limit last week the i.a.e.a. refrained from reporting that as a violation with this latest move that could change. everyone benefited from us
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adopting the j.c. the us made a strategic mistake by leaving it but we will not stay in it at any cost the decision taken today is in order to preserve the j c p o a but it depends on other parties now to say the deal is fragile is to perhaps understate the complicated power dynamics at play the united states pulled out of the nuclear deal in may last year reimposing unilateral sanctions crippling an economy that was experiencing a long awaited period of growth since then remain. signatories to the deal have been caught in the middle of escalating tensions between to iran and washington but despite recent military escalations in the gulf at its core this dispute is economic and putting pressure on the seems to be iran's way of dealing itself a stronger hand you can. joke about the u.s. can attend meetings if sanctions are lifted how would that process go 1st orlin banking sanctions and then other things that lead to states. before the u.s. pulled out of the deal iran was exporting up to 2800000 barrels of oil
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a day as one of the largest producers in the world it wants back into the international oil market for now the spokesman of iran's atomic energy agency says it will not renew work at nuclear facilities that was halted as part of the g c p o a but iran's deputy foreign minister had a warning iran can do so whenever it wants and if in the coming 60 days their demands are not met that's exactly what iran might do next. well the u.s. . respond that iran's decision warning that the move could cause to iran greater problems in a tweet said iran's latest expansion of its nuclear program would lead to further isolation and sanctions nations should restore the longstanding standard of no enrichment for iran's nuclear program iran's regime armed with nuclear weapons would pose an even greater danger that the world. has the latest from washington. amid doldrums warning to iran to be careful trump did also say something rather
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interesting he said he was suggesting look all he was doing was expediting a process that would have had to happen anyway because of the various sunset clauses in the j.c. theo way of iran uclear the various various moments 20252030 where new negotiations have to occurred over the keith iranian nuclear deal go away so what he was saying was that we were going to have to have those negotiations anyway all i'm going to do is to get a better deal the problem is with this presentation of all the transactions as as a man consumed by getting the best deal possible to deal maker in chief as iran always points out it is very difficult to take that seriously to take that that that idea that you'll simply have the best interests of everyone of hald when you're filling the entire gulf region with weaponry when you're starving the iranian economy and its people with of resources through silent sions and you're surrounded by people who've always made it very clear that they'd rather like to
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bomb iran to pieces so this is the problem that we face and the other problem of course is we had the j. c.p.o. a what does donald trump possibly think would be a better deal it's just simply not clear. now the greek opposition to carry out its attack it says he has a strong can mandate to change 1st snap election as new democracy party appears to want to sweeping victory the results are still being tallied but with 73 percent of the votes counted let's attack is has a commanding lead of 39.6 percent while the so it's a posse of prime minister alex a surprise is currently on 31.6 percent he has conceded defeat now and find mr taxes to congratulate him jones are up less has more from athens. the leader of the new democracy party got 40 years to pull not just
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a majority but an outright one that allows the conservatives to rule on their own for the 1st time in 15 years the others who took these says it will allow him to implement an ambitious reform program unhindered by coalition partners occlusion asking close but this wasn't just an expression of the will to close a painful chapter for our country it was much more than that actually the fate of the people in their strength is the desire to take our fates into our own hands and used to prove that we can do great things in our own country. much the pressure is now on me to talk used to deliver on his promise to bring growth to the greek economy and help create 700000 jobs in his 1st he's planning to do it partly through tax cuts but greece can only afford them if the international bailout creditors agree to cut repayments it's a goal that eluded previous governments since the beginning of government austerity measures imposed in 2010 when greece faced bankruptcy because of its massive debts
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the victory of me to take us 4 and a half years of rule by series a prime minister alexis to put us raised the coalition of the radical left from obscurity to seize power from the new democracy party in the last election in 2015 as promised he would be the very. the left wing revolution across europe to defeat us territory policies imposed on greece that caused recession and unemployment. ultimately capitulated to those policies in order to keep greece in the eurozone despite cities are raising the minimum wage cutting sales tax and offering more benefits to pensioners this year it seems to have been too little too late for that . likely to receive mr mr tarkus into the palace so to hand over to him the office of prime minister as is done in the democratic stage i would like to for the vote of my heart thank all the members and friends of our party who gave a good fight in
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a viable condition. in order to double its growth rate of growth much faster greece will need huge levels of foreign investment in the coming years and that will be perhaps the biggest challenge on the economic front and that needs a lot of structural reform which sometimes takes time there's more at stake here than the economy for the past decade greeks have watched their politicians being dictated to by their creditors the international monetary fund and the euros and because those politicians didn't want to assume ownership of unpopular reforms. like his predecessors it's a thank you says he wants to restore greek sovereignty and dignity but unlike when he wants to do it in collaboration with european union partners. has been fresh violence in hong kong as protesters face off with riot police have a controversial extradition bell stand off all at a mass rally outside a train station which links to mainland china from what private ports now from
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callan. this was the 1st major demonstration since the storming of hong kong's parliament last week and it proves this dispute isn't going away. my protesters say the change in the law would mean critics of china could be extradited from hong kong to face summary justice in mainland courts the hong kong government has suspended the bill but protesters are still demanding its complete withdrawal on the our freedom our a male psyche thanks to the same message there's no no absolutely no response from the government it's also the 1st time the protesters have taken their campaign to the cow loo district of homes. with its luxury stores the area is a favorite destination for mainland chinese shoppers and many seemed bewildered by the crowds of demonstrators who goes ok hong kong is the only chinese city that
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permits demonstrations like this. the organizers said they wanted to tell the visitors about their struggle i don't really understand it said this visitor so i don't want to comment because i think they're very brave said this woman. the destination for the march was the terminus for the high speed rail link connecting hong kong to the mainland seen by many as a symbol of china's encroaching influence initially the organizers had been hoping for a couple of 1000 people to take part in this march but even before it began it was clear that numbers would be far greater than that also very obvious by this demonstration is that they anger and the spirits of resistance is still a strong thought t.s.p. as of possible clashes with mainland tourists proved unfounded and many of the protesters seem.

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