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tv   The Apollo of Gaza  Al Jazeera  July 19, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03

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the lawmaker said. and also an attack as an animation studio in japan has killed at least $33.00 people a man is said to have shouted die as he poured petrol around the 3 story building in kyoto it is the country's worst mass murder you know most 2 decades. has. the fire broke out thursday morning in this popular animation production studio in kyoto fire and smoke in gulf the 3 story building as rescue teams searched for survivors. and there were some women inside the building firefighters had to break windows to pull them out. many were unable to escape with the rising death toll japan fears are this could become one of the deadliest fires in his recent history dozens were injured others were missing if you cut it when the fire broke out about 70 people were inside the building so we checked the whereabouts of these people using their mobile phone contacts we also checked the number of the people who made
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it outside safely what's left of the building is also a crime scene the man in this video is a suspect he's accused of entering the studio employing a liquid onto the floor and igniting it while shouting die he was arrested and taken to the hospital. he seemed to be in pain irritated and suffering he was also angry and seemed resentful prime minister she has called the fire to a polling for words he offered condolences to the victims and their families as the country tries to make sense of what's happened. katia lopez to the young on al-jazeera. or i still has on the program. demonstrations in puerto rico turned violent says protesters demand the governor's resignation after the leak of inflammatory messages plus.
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why there's something fishy about boris johnson's latest complaints regarding the e.u. . hello for a change there are no warnings of any significance throughout europe at the moment the setup is much the same there are still some storms floating around anywhere from switzerland down through the balkans and still driving in from the west to the northwest atlanta care which is kept in the little bit cooler says no heat wave in the immediate future at least not for most of europe and the breeze is very up with a lot of cloud in the british isles for example or north and fronts temperature wise i were in the high twenty's sometimes the low thirty's even in athens is only $31.00 or the difference is in spain and particularly spain where 38 becomes 39 in
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madrid between friday and saturday and that he will cross the mountains the pyrenees into southern france that's the hot area of europe the rest no comparison is there nice sunshine but not too hot which is actually fairly description for almost all of north africa even caro's $37.00 now down the valley the kings and that was us $147.00 admittedly for the most part though it's just sunshine not exceptional in any way the big showers of course are around they do every now and again reach the sale for example the greenbacks here for that spree standard for this time of the year. information in the case did you have or associated to it as a police department has the potential to be biased in a number of different ways there are too many opportunities for the computer to do
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who's checking those offices who commit those data entry is wrong to be saying that your son the shinai is wrong to. kill becoming a suspect before the actual crime and then depth examination into preventative policing pre-crime on al jazeera. taliban and reminder of the top stories on al-jazeera iran's revolutionary guards have seized a foreign tank in the strait of hormuz which they've accused of trying to smuggle oil 12 crew members have been detained. us president has distanced himself from his supporters denying that chance that his campaign rally which called for democratic
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congresswoman born in somalia to be sent back to his. libya's un recognized government has accused forces loyal to the warlord khalifa haftar of kidnapping female politician c humps a guy what she's from the east a government backed by hafta but has criticized his offensive to take the capital tripoli. health workers in the democratic republic of congo have told al-jazeera the world health organizations declaration of it by law as an international public emergency will help them get the results is needed to fight the disease more than 1600 people have so far died. the disease getting too who recently crossed into neighboring uganda after saw reports from by roby. well there is a pensive mood in a market southwest in uganda a congolese fishmonger who visited the market to buy fish for trade died of a bolo and she turned home she came by road on a motorcycle was
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a regular here interacted with many people health workers and looking for several high risk contacts some of whom a say to have gone into hiding my seeing on your own burial who knew the woman does not believe she died of a bullet it's a believe many people also share complicating government efforts to deal with it. but she was pregnant and she had a miscarriage everyone knows that the people who touched our have not died why are you saying she had women bleed then they have a miscarriage that's what we know. this is one of the busiest trade routes between uganda. but the border is porous and many people use informal crossings to get from one country to the other but have a look at what to do if someone comes to the market how are we supposed to be took not everyone uses from across. the wall health organization has now declared to embroil outbreak an international public health emergency he says based on the high risk of the disease spreading across the region the fact that it's still flaring
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a year after it started and the incredibly volatile security situation health workers are working under health workers we've talked to say the declaration could not have come sooner they want more logistical help and money they're also dealing with local communities that don't trust them and in areas where militias have been attacking them as well as a bowler treatment centers up to 10 health workers have been killed since the outbreak began a year ago the security. people are expected. to but i think of for. is it really so good to lose it is to. get the point where it is a complete certainty project it will i hope for cause us where the gauge will is for this. for now the focus is to make sure that it does not spread in goma a strategic city after preacher who tested positive of the disease diet and to
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regional countries or other parts of congo catherine saw. nairobi a large car bomb has exploded near kandahar police headquarters in southern afghanistan killing at least 11 people and wounding more than 80 after the initial blast there were 3 more explosions and security forces came under fire from several attackers the authorities say both police officers and civilians were among those killed the taliban has claimed responsibility for the time. the u.n. special rapporteur on human rights in min mall says more than it is to be burned down in recent days in rakhine states young he leave also said sanctions imposed on the country's military leaders by the u.s. this week don't go far enough of a job reports. the u.s. state department has announced saying sions on myanmar is military commander in chief men on lying and 3 other military leaders punishment for their role in the ethnic cleansing of the ring of minority but the united nations special repertoire
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and human rights mean more says the sanctions don't go far enough. it's better late than never. but i just want to know why it took us so long after other countries and i and others have raised this issue we have a family as listed as 6. generals that should be on that that should be sanctioned immediately special reportory young the league said reports for me and more in recent weeks suggested human rights violations and abuses by the army and armed fighters against civilian populations may be getting worse a particular concern an ongoing internet and mobile phone blackout in myanmar as record and chen stakes the question is. did the government of myanmar impose the internet than to inflict more time on the people living in rakhine. the internet blackout has also prevented individuals wanting to
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engage with me from being able to make contact it is challenging to get information on what is happening on the ground under these circumstances but i have been told that 3 villages in rakhine have been burned down by the 10 model in the last 2 weeks in 2017 a military crackdown in iraq and state caused more than 730000 rohingya muslims to flee to neighboring bangladesh according to un investigators mass killings gang rapes and arson were perpetrated by me in march military and executed with genocidal intent. a team from the international criminal court is now in bangladesh to investigate what happened the i.c.c. prosecutor 52 have been sued or has asked to launch a formal investigation into the violence many are waiting and hoping that will become a reality mohammed jim groom. british m.p.'s have backed a bit to stop
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a new prime minister suspending parliament to force through a no deal bracks it it is another obstacle for the man to take over as prime minister next week force johnson has vowed to leave the european union by the end of october deal or no deal john holmes reports. the eyes to the right 315 the nose to the left 2740 a crucial victory over the government m.p.'s opposed to a no deal breaks it and by a handsome margin with 17 conservative party rebels and a number of senior ministers abstaining so the our eyes have it the option of prorogue or suspending parliament to force through breaks it unopposed is now plays do something prime minister in waiting boris johnson had refused to rule out he's almost certain to take over as britain's prime minister next week whoever becomes prime minister next week is going to have an almost non-existent working majority
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we also don't know how long the agreement they got with the d.p. is necessarily going to hold up so whoever it is boris johnson or jeremy hunt is going to really have their work cut out particularly if they want to push through. it which you know it's worth reminding ourselves has been voted against on several occasions by parliament already with parliament demonstrating again its distaste for no deal and the e.u. repeatedly refusing to reopen the existing deal the prospect remains of no bricks at all to be clear parliament here has not prevented and no deal breaks it that many experts say could be economically disastrous for the united kingdom that would require an act of parliament but m.p.'s opposed to no deal have bought themselves time in the hope of being able to take more decisive action in the autumn. defeat inflicted less a blow to the sitting government more a preemptive strike aimed at the next one jonah hill al-jazeera london. another
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blow for the favorite to be britain's next leader the e.u. has debunked one of boris johnson's complaints about the blocks red tape. i guess cheering a speech on wednesday johnson blamed the european union for food regulations which are in fact british he held up a smoke skipper saying produces a furious the e.u. rules force them to use ice pillows to keep the fish cool us despite the e.u. not setting rules for smoke products commission has a huge johnston johnson office fighting fake. protests against puerto rico's embattled governor have turned violent in the capital san juan the demonstrations began several days ago after controversial and discriminatory messages sent by ricardo rosello leaks now protesters want him to resign gabriel and is under reports from someone who. was
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hiding in a variety of the cobblestone streets of a historic district of san juan puerto rico anger directed at the governor they say disrespects his own people the protesters are furious after nearly $900.00 pages of governor ricardo rosello those private text messages were leaked publicly last week messages that were polgar and sexist summit made fun of obese people mocked political opponents and seemingly joked about the thought of killing the female mayor of san juan he's admitted the messages were his and apologized but said he won't step down so the people are trying to force him out hasn't been the best governor. when those attacks got leaked we know that he hit right rock bottom like there's no way that this guy could continue governor puerto rico we need our strong leader we need someone to. guide us in the right way what
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store. it is small protests have turned into a huge street demonstrations with tens of thousands of people now protesting from all walks of society young people old people even people that belong to the governor's political party now all out here with the same message not asking him to step down but now demanding it it's the worst political crisis in puerto rico's history 2 cabinet members who took part of the texting the secretary of state have resigned but being mocked and ridiculed by their leader has seemingly united 3000000 puerto ricans against rosello but i've never seen something that connects us in such a deep and social level it's not about politics it's about our people and our humanity that's been slapped in the face time and time again and we've had enough with a government caught in scandal over text messages that the people saying the only
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way out is for the man who sent them to leave gabriel's on al-jazeera san juan puerto rico the u.s. senate minority to chuck schumer has called on the f.b.i. to investigate one of the most popular applications in the world face up he's concerned the face as a scene photo op poses national security and previously respond millions of americans as the company is based in russia the democratic national committee has also warned the policies 2020 presidential candidates not to use the app. well face up has been still a little more than 100000000 android phones and is the most popular application in the i tunes still take us i say i'll add it uses artificial intelligence to manipulate the image to make it a call to younger or even change you know genda for to see what stocks a user's need to read the fine print because they granting the company a license to use the images for evah and however the company wants to face up says it deletes nice photos from its service off to 48 hours and does not send data to
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the russian government's allowable can a as a code to a digital x. that he says the public should be concerned about their privacy regardless of who owns the app americans have some of the worst rights when it comes to privacy and the world were a little better in the e.u. with the general data protection regulation that g.d.p. are but in america it's a free for all i mean remember that when it it when it comes to facebook and google doing the same thanks. you know americans call it innovation and disruption and they celebrate it it's again only when the russians and chinese are involved when they're like ok this could be bad yeah but it's bad in general you know we should be looking at alternatives we should be looking at funding alternatives because you know all the funding goes into these sort of businesses venture capital billions are are spent creating new types of businesses based on surveillance you know we
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should be looking at alternatives there how do we spawn technology that is in the common good maybe we need to start thinking about funding it from the commons maybe instead of big tech we should be thinking about small tech how do we fonts acknowledges that are just tools for people not surveillance devices we need to start having these conversations and not just in reaction to the latest leak or the latest app that has a privacy issue that you know blows up on twitter we start talking about this is a systemic issue. and of course there's much more on our website the address is al jazeera dot com al jazeera dot com. and reminder of the top stories on al-jazeera iran's revolutionary guards have seized a foreign tank which they've accused of trying to smuggle oil the announcement was made on thursday on arabian state television but the time was reportedly seized on
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sunday in the strait of hormuz all 12 crew members were detained iran says the ship named drea had been smuggling 1000000 liters of oil the ships based in the united arab emirates but they denied ownership of the vessel the u.s. state department says to run must immediately release the vessel and its crew. president trump has just announced that a u.s. warship has destroyed an iranian drone in the strait of hormuz the boxer took defensive action against an iranian drone which had closed into a very very near distance approximately 1000 yards ignoring multiple calls to stand down and was threatening the safety of the ship and the ship's crew. the drone was immediately destroyed will be while trump has distanced himself from his supporters who chanted send her back about a u.s. congresswoman who was born in somalia.
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politicians have defended ilana omar following the spectacle at trump's campaign rally which the president now says he feels a little bit badly about democratic presidential hopeful come along tweeted that the rally defiles the office of the president. yet no one really for half that of kidnapping a female politician and injuring her husband. disappeared from her house in the eastern city of benghazi on wednesday she's an m.p. in the alternative parliament set up into a book which is backed by have to but has criticized his military operations at least 33 people have been killed in a suspected arson attack at an animation studio in japan is that more than 70 people were in the building when the fire broke out in the city of kyoto national broadcaster says a man was arrested after reportedly pouring fuel inside the studio and setting its
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allies and most of the latest headlines on al-jazeera the stream is next of i. i am funny ok i really could be you're in the stream so they would take a look at sierra leone stuck liberation of a state of emergency over sexual violence how did it go well also pay tribute to a remarkable somali journalist. but 1st we return to our castors joins us on the string several times over the last 2 years uganda's musician chun politician bobby why have a look at this case of him talking to al-jazeera is capturing saudi back in may.
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you are lucky that we are living in a generation where our moats can not be shot we shall speak the truth and we shall continue using the law as it does do stand for our rights and has a president ever reached out to you mean to talk about you know political issues to talk about how to move the country forward and things like that no he has not reached out to me and would you be willing to sit down with him to talk about what's ailing the country and what perhaps can be done better because he is the head of state i would be very glad i'm very honored to see to be the president. that interview was filmed just 2 days after but we why an m.p. an opposition leader was released from jail for protesting attacks on social media that hasn't been an easy road for wine since he was elected to parliament in 2017 there have been treason charges his driver was shot dead by security forces and he was badly injured while in military custody so why does he keep going and what does
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he hope to change the wine uganda member of parliament joins us now from kampala welcome back bobbie to the stream it is good to have you some headlines that i know you're very familiar with but just updating our audience for al-jazeera singur probably wind says he will run for uganda president in 2021 ugandan singer bobby wind answer run for president in 2021 the last time we spoke he didn't tell us about these plans what made you decide that you could take on that top job in uganda where we have been discussing need and remember the last and why he didn't need but we've come to a conclusion that we as a generation must challenge president museveni we're not going to wait for anybody else but we ourselves so right now as we speak out resolved to challenge president was a greenie and my team believes that and based group is in our generation in this cause
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. i think our audience are many of them as well believe that as well this is one person who writes in on twitter bobbie one can do great things to uganda and for uganda because it's one of the very few voices of the very many voiceless he respects everyone and the country needs a leader not in love with money not greedy selfish but in love with justice not in love with published city but in love with humanity so a supporter right there but on the other hand there are a few tweets like this says there is a big difference between leading a country and being a voice for those that have been treated unjustly so seeing you as this voice for those who've been treated unjustly some people are questioning whether that means that you can become president of the entire country are you ready for that it looks like the. collection is ok we're there's
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a slight delay there but someone is questioning whether or not just because you're the voice of the voiceless you can actually become a voice for the entire country. has been my. raised voices of the common people and here we are with our local do you need to put them into a dictatorship country and. so yes now that this opportunity. so probably you have to obviously campaign there's no way that you can run for president without campaigning and we've talked before about how difficult it is to be an opposition politician i'm looking here on your twitter page here and you talk about television and radio not being able to cover your events live can you tell us is that an embargo on you
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appearing on t.v. appearing on media at one point even your concerts were bad what's the situation right now. yes president must so many currently going all over the country campaigning he has blocked myself or any other opposition politician from reaching out to the audience he's particularly bit scared of young people in this way he does not let me reach out to any people are they last time i tried to reach out to people in church the church was young guys and yes yes look all my music shows and any i belittle to communicate to the people however dance to sort social media and the energy within the people will always find a way around that and yes even right now as we speak i know that millions upon millions of young people are watching so much as he tries to block us we always find a way because reality is on our side i'm just looking here at this
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tweet here from quito james talking about the difficulty you have in terms of getting on to uganda media and he says this just shows that in the 70 or am 7 as he is now and is feeding the people power heat many so i want to play one critical comment we got from someone who takes issue with some of your travels so here is a common we got from out of kampala here's what he told us i've been looking for is a result of concrete on things now fisher and then been efficient to his core student protests if you serve the food we're going to make a christian if this were the people who are t.v. presenting problems and they feel sorry for people who have given you. probably what would you say back to ear. well i do not believe some. young people that i've been it's been
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a fisheries of this regime and the contrary i represent more than 80 percent of the disenfranchised and excluded young people in uganda i must assert you will never leave the country if i have not gone to perform because they can't people are allowed to do my job but i'm moving on to receive in a while the only money jerry and intrudes or moving out to meet. butlers in development i wouldn't it's explained myself to the regime every time i move out of the country a year is an international bus analogy and i represent my people not only within the country but internationally let's talk about that international personality that you are well known for being buffalo soldier who supporter of yours tweets this out. nice seeing you all ready to hit the stage and then here is a music poster but we wind life this is not an hour posa from before you were an m.p.
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this is this is art it was last month the 1729000 in copenhagen go and hear your twitter page denmark see you tonight that was a couple of weeks ago looked ready for action and then underneath that criticism about you not being a proper m.p. or an absentee m.p. when you are campaigning to be president are you still going to play geeks outside if you can't so you can to be the musician and the politician and perhaps even president to consider all of those things. yeah i'm a different kind of leader and yes i'm going to be a different kind of president i'm going to be an ordinary human being that goes around my luck the same way other human other citizens do and that will allow me to understand the difficulties that common people go through doing their work. i use music as a communication tool because i cannot perform our my music was abolished and indeed
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all my concerts outlawed i can only perform outside the country and because music is my only form of. gainful employment i have to go around into training my audiences but most importantly the only opportunity that i get to freely air out the concerns of my people and the only time i get to communicate the plate of my people and i late they are. plight is when i'm out of the country alcohol i use that at any opportunity i get but in line thank you for joining us on the street i'm sure that you will be back thank you very much for your contribution as i will be following your campaign with great interest also present 70 you are welcome to be on the stream anytime we look forward to taking your your 20 on the strength now to 70 and have
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a look at the us. version of. this. bill is this vision of. being committed and peace on whom. she. probably. that was sierra leone's president. declaring sexual violence a national emergency back in february as part of the plan a dedicated police division was announced along with a special court focusing on rape and sexual assault but the emergency status has
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just been revoked by parliament and a new sexual crimes bill is in the works so what was achieved from february to now and can other countries learn from sierra leone's radical action joining us to discuss in freetown sierra leone for him president of lawyers a group that gives pro bono legal services to vulnerable women and girls and vicky remote is and she's from sierra leone and hosts a popular show welcome back to both of you i want to start with this tweet from deb so who says i think gender based violence and sexual assault can only be evaded if the sierra leone government chooses to enforce heavy punishments jail time and implement them on offenders at least this will cause fear and reduce the number of cases so vicki the state of emergency has been revoked does that mean that what this person in this week here has wished for came true. not.
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because. the back to emergency. 2nd ball in motion to get things in pleas for more action and so problem and here came together they removed the state of emergency and then he got down to the business of evaluating the sexual offenses act with. input from activists like lawyers and other women women's the civil society groups but the most important because people need to understand is you can't fix the problem in 6 months at least not a problem ask to be sued as rape culture is clearly you don't. fear we don't have a civil war and i think that one of the things that we forget is that one of the big leftovers or on sol or on big story healed problems in our society is that we have so many women who are violated so many girls are
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violated to rebuild war and that means we have so many perpetrators of violence and nothing's happened right so what i believe because a lot of people ask how did we get here from why because they are but what we have is a society where sexual violence and joe that the presence of general mcchrystal made years have gone on shrinks and people and women have been living in silence here and what's happened now because of the response center and walk access to reporting and i consider the fact i read your novels it's not a part ok so let's talk about a lot thinking that's let's go i want to have a conversation with martha as well let's talk about what actually was a change even in not giving time of state of emergency that much of what would you point change to say well this is tangible it had never happened without the speculation. so what the 1st thing is that there's a good vision of political will and we needed that to move things forward so that
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the people in power can understand that we continue to suffer every speck of the laws we have so we want proper implementation execution and also once he has sentenced him we've got a special court now that has been established by the judiciary since april it deals with sexual offenses exclusively and specific judges have been assigned to that we've got things speedy trials over the past couple of months so there are many more cases are going through the criminal justice system we're talking about over 200 compared to the 30 something cases in 2018 we've got more people coming forward to complaint and report on these cases so that's why we have a report that has come out to say that from general eaton now we have about one $1681.00 cases that have been reported so that is good enough to push us to the next level which is the bill we have the bill and we have a stiffer sentence in the bill when we never shading and lobbying and advocating it with our parliamentarians to make sure that the steeper sentence then. we want it applicable that there is some discretion given to the druggies to set
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a minimum so we want them not to also have a minimum as much as it has the maximum we have a maximum of life imprisonment now if that bill passes into a more calm the next session in september so we definitely will get something on the ball rolling but it's not going to be something that we saw resolved in a in a few months like he said we need more things like a forensic lab we need more research because we have we're talking with talking about the war but we still don't understand what is pushing people to commit these atrocities on women so we need research really under that anime to be a mind. i think that the conversation really needs to go back into our routine into our community we can't write i have all the parts you know the government has figured emergency are going to deal with the problem that is punitive right what we need prevention we don't want any drug or anyone here we're actually firing. that means that we need to change the relationship between men and women we need to change the way women are perceived in the way women are treated and the right
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period and men need to take responsibility for their actions in the sense that you don't have a right to a girl you don't have a right to a woman's body right no man. suffering for the mother and making him i'm so glad that you thought that because i want to bring this and this is someone who agrees completely with you t.j. says there should be a massive campaign by media houses and also among the various schools in sierra leone educating young people about sexual consent and sex positive conversations that emphasize healthy and safe sexuality so that education at the root of it being the comment from online but i want to also bring in a video comment from someone who talks about this being the beginning of the change have a listen that we are beginning to see what the declaration means because when the government particularly the president and the 1st lady's pompeian which is so. over go is actually making a huge difference in communities particularly women and girls gaining confidence
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that we're seeing more reporting on various platforms not just the face to face where women are going to the family support center or the rainbow thing but also reaching out to companies and asked to be a prosperous country across the world when they want to report. so fast about where to next. so there were at in there crisscrossing the building the 1st one making it into law and then a book waiting and educating the populace to understand exactly that we have the sentencing now and you have to be careful but we have so many more laws that we need to address we have an issue we're even though a trial is we would think that under the law we have a law about. a parent to give consent to an underage child to believe i am married to an adult manner so we're concerned about that so we want absolute vision of early child marriage to give you an opportunity to reach that if we list within are within the communities and. so much more to talk about the list is endless how do
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you even change that culture sexual violence in just a few months is impossible but he sounds like there is at least some progress being made we will check back in on you the story is not going anywhere i would also love for you to have a look at this on my laptop there was a pop car scored the take the take is hosted by very only couple our current episode is about civil e.o. and sexual violence there you can find this podcast anywhere where you check up and subscribe to your pocket online at jetty so look for jetty and the take from sierra leone we moved to somalia where last week a much loved respected journalist hodor nataliya was killed in an attack by al-shabaab armed group cousin sue i'd sent us this video. as. a lawyer who got a co 2. i am sure i had. think you
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a diseased international of us who had done no live it was some mother and wife she was a light of hope she was changed me her positive thinker she was who rule of love and full of kindness sure was caring in forgiveness person those who she was hard on. me all my grand hair the highest level of gentle not a lot of you know mean a lot of your own mean think you again international us to give me the opportunity to share with you who she was in how we would like to remember her for ever i think just so out for that last week after her dan was tragically killed several people tweeted at us that we should pay tribute to her and her work on the stream here's just one of those tweets molad said can we have a special show in memory of how done and all brave journalists who sacrificed their lives to rebuild somalia let's talk about our resolve to keep the legacy of all
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those who paid the ultimate price in telling our story so with us today to remember what diane is abdellatif to here is a journalist with quartz africa based in nairobi who was a friend for duns welcome to talk to us about the 1st time that you matt. thank you much because i met done for the 1st time in 2014 at a creative storytelling workshop in the u.k. and one of the things that i really remember the struck me immediately was a sense credible sense of generosity of vibrancy and it. that the we should was very invested in not just story telling but also telling stories about somalia. you know in a country that is known for cultural creation and war and disasters she really emphasized the idea of integration right which was also the basis of you tube
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channel integration t.v. she spoke about collaboration she spoke. contemplation and i think she was really dedicated to the idea of using stories to shape the narrative slightly to tell not just positive stories but more nuanced abdi are looking integration t.v. riches guarding thousands of subscribers stations hoda and here there were so many stories that we were thinking which one should we show which one showed the joy that she takes about talking about how land and we decided upon tea have a look i got my money and when i think i've learned that in somalia cities they only serve you hear what men the best to be so i've heard the best tea that place called the bar cafe here so i'm going to check it out feed there allow me to have cops and happen to get. a firm like them or a pet ac and more ammo we're not at again and avoiding.
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that level. but the good part of the good was. always makes you feel you can taste it why did you love that story so much batty. i think it say's a lot about who had done was both as a person and also as a journalist who was an incredible storyteller in that scene and it's often like it is you know in a different city walking into like a public space where she's occupying and telling us you know the narrative of what makes somali somali unique right like and and it's just i think the nuances like that come out in his stories that's what that won the hearts of so many people not just in you tube and in somali communities but of home in the diaspora but people all across the world she was able to thread together the stories of you know trying
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to tell people there's another side to this country there's another side to this. country that you know is just one disaster and famine and war this on twitter of the north says her then was an eye opener for the power of women when they use their creative roles to tell positive stories of their homeland the best way to repay her is for you tube and social media giants to support women creators especially from somalia so in thinking about her legacy what's the best way for it to be carried on. yes i mean i haven't touched the lives of so many people across the world and one thing for me is that you know she really deepened the meaning of what peace journalism stands for she really was and somebody who was able to tell stories about her about somalia and about somalis both at home and in the diaspora and in thinking about her legacy and i think it gives us the responsibility to write like she has passed on this responsibility not to us but as somalis and also
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as a journalist writers and thinkers to be able to contribute and to be able to tell stories that you know move the trajectory of this country not just out of the war but you know into a note to that tells something more relatable and more connected to people of thank you so much for helping us remember so beautifully you can find still on twitter at holden t.v. and see the beauty of somalia that's true spread present we will leave you today with a clip of how down doing what she loved enjoying the beach to somalia and so watching we're going to climb the top of this to me what the historic board that they've got this is amazing this is a historic little mountain where the darwin big climbed and they have done for the british so let's go right we're almost there on top but they are. gathering to go back no climbing going back i want to climb this mountain and conquer it mine so
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a lot and man keep i thought i made it to the top of the hill it almost must live your life and all but look at this beautiful land every time i mean everything all the theory i think will hang in there that i think marcella that alison lot of talent has given it was beautiful and that we can enjoy and nature problem last. education is struggling to keep pace often failing to prepare children for today's woes. at some schools the changing the rules are good to have caught the day and
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how they did it. with but still mission results last 5. if it are in. rebel education early known in mexico on al-jazeera. new leaders place children in this refugee camp the latest victims of the unending sectarian violence in central african republic among them are survivors of unspeakable violence 10 year old celine book his mother is dead her father is gone killed because they were christian by their own muslim neighbors this is a least you home an overcrowded refugee camp of 23000 people surrounded by armed militia groups celine wants answers she says she wants to be asking the questions and so we traded places inch took the microphone will we find peace how can we make the violence stop when will i be able to return home thanks love to mechanize to
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sufferance because behind the suffering a millions of taxpayers because us taxpayers never go away is a new one born every single day a 19 it is an urgent national necessity and we put it we officially request to station of the support mechanism we created together because i happen to live in greece somehow i'm a sinner i'm a bad person. that's machine on al-jazeera. hello i'm barbara starr in london these are the top stories on al-jazeera in the last hour president donald trump has announced that a u.s. warship has destroyed any radium drone in the strait of hormuz it comes as tensions are increasingly rising between the 2 countries president said the aircraft threatened the ship by flying within a 1000 yards of it and claimed iranians ignored multiple calls for the drone to
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stand down the boxer took defensive action against an iranian drone which had closed into a very very near distance approximately $1000.00 yards ignoring multiple calls to stand down and was threatening the safety of the ship and the ship's crew the drone was immediately destroyed earlier iran's revolutionary guards to seize the foreign tanker which they've accused of trying to smuggle oil the announcement was made on thursday on iranian state t.v. but the tanker was reportedly seized on sunday in the strait of hormuz all 12 crew members were detained iran says the ship named brianna has been smuggling 1000000 liters of oil the ship is based in the united arab emirates but they've denied ownership of the vessel also jabari has more on this from tehran. the revolutionary
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guard able forces where on an anti smuggling mission in the waters of the strait of hormuz when they came across this vessel on sunday they said that it was suspicious the cargo on board so they decided to investigate further and after that they decided that they needed to pursue legal venues to seize this vessel and that is what they did on sunday the revolutionary guard statement says that the vessel was seen near the island in the strait of hormuz with 12 crew members on board apparently this vessel had fueled up from iranian dows where it was heading further south in the strait of hormuz to sell the fuel that it had on board that is when the iranians decided to carry out an operation and seize this ship of course this all comes at a time where tensions are very high in the strait of hormuz a number of incidents have taken place here and also noteworthy is the seizure of a new reigning in oil tanker in the strait of gibraltar on july 4th where it caused
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major incident between the iranian government and the british because the british navy seized the grace one oil tanker which was carrying $2000000.00 barrels of iranian crude oil they said that it was heading to syria and that is why they seized that but there were a means have said that that was not the destination of that vessel and they're demanding it to be returned this quickly as possible this incident on thursday the announcement from the revolutionary guard appears to be a different situation where the revolutionary guard has yet again shown that it is capable of carrying out the measures needed to secure the waters of the strait of hormuz and they have in fact said in the past that this is their number one priority the revolutionary guard me will forces are concerned with the security of the strait of hormuz and they will do everything in their power to make sure that their area remains stable. meanwhile president trump has distanced himself from his supporters after they chanted his own words about a u.s.
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congresswoman who was born in somalia. high profile politicians have defended iran omar following the crowd chanting sent her back at trump's campaign rally which the president now says he feels quote little bit badly about democratic presidential hopeful come about how it's tweeted that the rally the files the office of the president libya's u.n. recognize government has accused forces loyal to the warlord highly for have tire of kidnapping a female politician and injuring her husband see how this appeared from a house in the eastern city of benghazi on wednesday she's an m.p. in the alternative parliament set up into a group which is backed by half he's currently trying to take over the capital tripoli in the west but said what has been critical of his military operations of those who are the top stories coming up in pre-crime as reliance grows on
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technology modern policing could be targeting innocent people ok. way.
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the term pre-crime comes from this movie minority report in which a prediction is being made about something an individual has not yet done but is going to do and a preemptive arrest is made of someone before they performed an act. if you would have asked me 37 years ago if we would have gunshot detection or video cameras in neighborhoods or be able to predict where crimes occurred i would have said you're crazy. claiming to us a future of the future is already in the present right now it's the securitize ation of fossil sizes. i have no idea what the next 5 or 10 years
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is going to be to law enforcement in terms of technology advancement. just look you know we've come so far it's going to be mind boggling. it's just. can we predict and. actual crime and before it occurred. our strategic subject list or is called the s s l is a system that we worked with a professor from the illinois institute of technology and academic partner here in chicago to be able to assess and analyze those people that are at the greatest risk
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of being a party to violence this system is able to prioritize and tell us those individuals that we really have to focus on the work with to try to prevent that violence when you have so many different datasets or you have so many cameras watch which ones do we watch social media right so many different social media communications out there how do you know what the concentrate on that's what our predictive aspect towards is for teaching subjects list that's what i thought. when i heard of this story for the 1st time i thought now it's finally happening hollywood has eventually merged with real life software that predicts where and
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when the next crime occurs police that arrive at the crime scene before the perpetrator computers that generate lists with tomorrow's murderers. pre-crime they call it. a friend writes to me there's something foreign lumen on the horizon and we can only guess that if were shaped as. some tardy one day. they experimented with a with a little bit in 20122013 is really when it took off they came the police department came up with. more than 400 names of people who fit that bill. individuals who are most likely to be prone to violence and either as
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a victim or perpetrator each of the 22 police districts came up with 20 names and they were chosen i don't know the science of it but it was all through mathematical algorithms basically and it didn't have anything to do so much with them being hardened criminals as much as it had to do with who are they arrested with. mr makes no difference ties i'm commander west and i'm with the 15th just as commonplace to permit may we come and.
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take robert mcdaniel for example he was not a hardened criminal he had been arrested for many minor offenses like gambling shooting dice or smoking marijuana minor offenses but the people who he was arrest . and with during those crimes some of them or at least one of them was a victim of violence so the logic was that while robber belongs on the list because he has a relationship with somebody. who's been a victim of violence because he's been arrested with that person before. is an employee. a school drop that it was either both get work or see a drugs in the street and 7 june 1 from. trying to get my ged that they
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were. and in a misdemeanor trying to get my z. the. star given falling home and started having police officers walk up on me rattled on the salmon a government aimed where i have been and like just things like this then. i hand this all for so wes and a social worker i can remember his name but they had stopped in my home they stop at my house in some pain and told me that i was put to some type of test this and i was. supposed to be good for she somebody would give myself dat i was put on the heat there's a full 100 people. mr mcdaniel as part of my violently dungeon strategy i someone has generated a list of potential criminals actors.

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