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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  August 5, 2019 1:00pm-2:01pm +03

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the f.b.i. spoke to the governors both governors that were doing a lot of work you know a lot of people are working right now a lot of law enforcement people and other spoke to members of congress about whatever we can do and a lot of a lot of things are being done right now as we speak. libyan media reporting that 40 people have been killed in strikes point forces loyal to ward cleaver hafter the victims were attending a wedding in the town of music. turkey's president reza the one says he's sending troops into an area controlled by kurdish one p.g. fighters in northern syria why peachey has been an important u.s. ally in the battle against the turkey sees it as a terrorist group so those are the headlines about with more news in half an hour to stay with us here on out is a. conflict that is now considered to be the world's worst humanitarian crisis you know how many would have to die like this stock is hard says former really for sale and investigation into how billions of euros are made from supplying arms to
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saudi arabia a leader of the coalition fighting a ruling the saudi case is interesting to watch. yemen war profiteers on al-jazeera. we understand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world so no matter how you take it algis their ad will bring in the news and current affairs that matter to you al-jazeera. this is techno a show about innovations that can change lives the science of fighting wildfires we're going to explore the intersection of hardware and humanity and we're doing it in a unique way. this is a show about science lol all are not lies scientists tonight techno investigates the v.p.
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who ever bought this got way more than they bargained for and yes they did it's everywhere in clubs street corners in cars they say it's safe and can help break the cigarette habit if i had to say what is more dangerous honestly it very well but what's really inside those pieces you never know what you're getting dr chrystal dilworth is a neuroscientist who specializes in nicotine studies she'll bring us the latest research what happens to your lungs when those metal particles go and see them read to davison is an environmental biologist and they're going to be around the corner they went through there really quickly we got them she's off the coast of california where drones are taking some incredible images of migrating whales as this technology becomes available to more people and we're going to see more research is using that i'm filled tor is i'm an entomologist that's our team no it's do some scientists.
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hey guys welcome to techno on phil tours joined by maria davison and dr crystal still worth no bigger and potentially more dangerous that's the best way to describe what's happening with the smoking alternative known as the cigarettes or. it's an industry that seems to really be exploding i mean you're seeing it everywhere and a part of me wonders if this might be because of some misinformation about thinking that's that's my sense in our daughter krystle dorothy your ph d. in their studies so we've asked you to keep a tab on this there's a lot of academic research is being done on the safety of the use of these devices but it can't really keep up with a growing industry. i enjoy the taste of the harmful effects of what smoking does call them vapors or foggers or competitive cloud chasers all are welcome at crystal vapor one of
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thousands of big shops across the country since techno 1st reported on the beijing phenomenon in 2013 the industry has taken off like wildfire revenue is estimated to reach 3500000000 dollars this year doubling since 2013 according to a recent poll 10 percent of all american adults are baiting that's an estimated $20000000.00 people when it comes to kids well conventional tobacco smoking among them is dropping to record lows east cigarettes are a growing concern at the centers for disease control between 20132014 alone we saw our tripling in use among us high school students to the point where it was about 13.5 percent of us high school students had used these products within the past 30 days from the early generation of cigarette lookalikes techno 1st reported on personal vaporizing devices known as models have gone high tech baby has come a long way baby we've seen the shift move from pens and tanks at least culturally
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to what we call cloud tracing devices went from mechanical models to basically box models what's going on right now and it may sound confusing but the basic mechanics are pretty simple there's a battery powered advisor that heats up a liquid mixture known as juice entered into vapor which the user inhales. when we 1st met researcher men equal humans she'd wrapped up a study that found harmful metal particulate in the vapor from earlier models of east cigarettes following the evolution of the industry she's updating her study so the original study we had looked at a card a miser style cigarette and we had detected high amounts of 10 present in the car demise are parts do you still finding heavy metal particulate in the paper we're still finding yes because it's going into people's lungs what happens to your lungs when those metal particles go in and of metal especially things like 10 can cause stenosis and that could constrict the. you know the airways in the lungs across the
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hall at u.c. riverside they're studying one of those compounds researcher a lot of it is focused on nicotine concentrations and refillable. in this case the solution tested is tennessee cured by red oak a fluid made by johnson creek enterprises and online seller of the liquids and accessories we order a bunch of and just most of them just the accuracy of the label and in this case this is 18 micrograms per milliliter so this may be considered a high nicotine concentration so the test here is we'll see how much it's measuring from the speak and we'll compare that to what's on the label and as you can see from our control it was a lot higher so we know for sure that it is nicotine and recent paper that we published we found out that this specific sample was 59 percent higher than it's advertise able to ever bought this way more than they bargained for and yes they did take no asked johnson creek enterprises about its nicotine labeling discrepancy they offer this statement between 20112012 there was
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a noticeable improvement in our manufacturing process including in process controls and analytical methods for testing nicotine concentration with greater accuracy while the company stated claims point to a step in the right direction the red oak sample that they manufactured with the 59 percent higher. discrepancy it was purchased for the u.c. riverside study online in february 2012 well within the range of johnson creek stated internal improvements in controls and accuracy but they're not alone currently u.c. riverside is evaluating a new batch of liquids from a variety of vendors and polyphony results continue to suggest large discrepancies in nicotine labeling throughout the industry just based on all the research that we've done you never know what you're getting it could be higher nicotine contribution it could be lower and although lower might sound better that's going to mean that you need smoke more interesting what your buy is normally used to researchers are also concerned about the content of the hundreds of flavored liquids that fuel the number one seller is from animal and this is
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a cereal fruit loops flavored with a little bit of milk. a lot of the flavors that are regarded as grass is generally regarded as safe that is a term that's given to flavor in products that can be ingested what's happening to these flavoring products when they're being aerosolized at these high temperatures and inhaled into the long you have chemical reactions that can break them down into a lot more toxic chemicals known as carbon compounds a prime example being formaldehyde that's a very common when everyone's heard of formaldehyde and everyone should know it isn't good so in head to head comparison versus conventional cigarette which one do you think is healthier my opinion i think they're both dangerous i think the narrative that most people are missing is that the public health opponents to vapor have lumped in vapor with the evil tobacco folks that they fought you know back in the eighty's in the ninety's and so they've decided that this is the exact same
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thing cynthia is the executive director for the smoke free alternative trade association called safaga of aping lobby group we need to dispel the idea that these products paper products are the same as combusted tobacco products because they're not. so we need to look at any time that anyone is using a vapor product they're not smoking and that's a win for everybody these east cigarettes they don't contain the $7000.00 plus chemicals that conventional cigarettes have and that's always a plus but on the flip side i they do have their own set of compounds that you're being exposed to unfortunately we're going to have to wait for the long gemini studies but if i had to say what is more dangerous honestly i they're they're equal to me they're equal the food and drug administration which regulates tobacco is still reviewing babying regulations travis padgett has been smoking since high school today he baits to cut down on tobacco use for me it was you know it was just
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kind of sort of i was like a different you when you get to now a microbiology major at u.c. riverside travis is babying for science participating in a study that measures his intake puff duration volume and frequency when you get out of here you're going to have a science degree why not wait for science away now before we know if it's safe i mean it's either a vapor a smoke cigarettes and we already know cigarettes are bad so roll the dice exactly it's a roll of the dice so. the people that are choosing a thing over conventional cigarettes are choosing the unknown over the know and they know that conventional cigarettes and give them cancer there's a chance that it's better and so they're rolling the dice with that but they're still gambling with their own how sometimes adults are making more informed decisions with only of. well absolutely i mean adolescents there's still in a stage of brain development they're not as capable as adults of making good decisions and they're uniquely susceptible to addiction and usually we've got
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regulations in place that help protect for specifically those kind of cases but here it's so new you know the regulations aren't they haven't kept up obviously that's a major concern all of the regulations of protections that we have developed for tobacco products conventional cigarettes are not there when it comes to the things will go. fascinating topic and i'm sure crystal you'll keep us up to date on this but coming up next marie to understand you when we're watching i did i got to go whale watching using drones in the sky so a little bit like spying but it's a great way to observe whales that we normally wouldn't be able to see and we don't really disturb them at all. most times when you see images from a drone something is exploding usually devastation from the air these are the military drones in service around the world. closer to home in california they're also used for important peacetime missions like assisting firefighters by mapping out hot spots during raging wildfires and much has been reported about the use of drones
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especially when it comes to military applications drones may even become the delivery system for consumer goods but today off the coast of san simeon california researchers using drones like this one here behind me for a spectacular use all in the name of science this is the peters walk of life station this is a very unique piece of property because it sticks out into the migratory corridor or of the north found great whale cows and calves a picture perfect location for researchers to fly a science drone to get an unprecedented bird's eye view of what swims below right at it. but in the distance all i got. was already the data for 22 years wayne perry men and a team from noah have been here from march until may counting and collecting data on great whales migrating north from the breeding grounds of mexico to the arctic a trip of 6800 miles this point is kind of
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a focal point for them and we're able to see them very very well they passed often within 100 meters of the beach so it's a great place to count animals great whales swim close to land as protection against their main predator killer whales even so. it takes a sharp eye and strong binoculars to spot the northern migration once they do it's go time for a one of a kind unmanned aircraft named mostly. to the rights to the right now moves there and then i let the frame the right keep on going out on hold of the service economy of the frame good come down a little that i'm doing to the right as i'm underwater know a scientist and pilot john durban is tracking a mother and her calf from a distance of about 3 quarters of a mile out from where he stands john's wife and co researcher holly fernbach is under the towel that shades a control panel giving her
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a real time video feed that aids in guiding the flight so when they come up next i'm going to move out of them at taking out markel but the very right adds to be perfect so now it's split 2nd timing for john to remotely trigger the camera to take high definition photographs of the whales i am going to be around the corner they went through there really quickly we got there we did well the. this is really it's all we have a flying a camera and we're trying to make inference about size and shape of whales by taking photographs of school photogrammetry so this is a camera and we want to get above the whales. mobley was built by don the boy at a cost of $25000.00 it may look like a hobby a stream project but in fact it's packed with many high tech systems to do science
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so it's called how to go up there because it has 6 motors and 6 rotors if it's not being told what to do wants to see how we're going to be stable in the air. behind a finish and photos taken from the eye in the sky give scientists a better look at the overall health. the whales a female has been eating a lot and she's fat her whip relative to her length will be different than a female who hasn't eaten very much so we can take just those 2 measurements and with those 2 we can get an index of condition index of that miss for that female peri min says this season many of the northbound lactating female gray whales observed appeared more robust than in previous years data that is important for many reasons will health give scientists a snapshot of the balancing act between food sources natural predators even climate change we're getting to the point now where we really can talk about how climate change in the arctic is impacting this population now there's less ice and it's
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thinner there's more photosynthesis going on in the wintertime because like can penetrate and what we want to do is kind of understand that dynamic what's going on . recently john durban and the know it's team took mobley to canada to study killer whales taken from 100 feet above this video the 1st of its kind give scientists a clearer picture of the health of northern resident killer whales in these images the whale on the right appears robust and in good condition while the whale on the left is then and in poor health scientists believe this will later died because it was no longer spotted with its pod. killer whales are important because the competing with this fish we're trying to understand all the getting enough food as this technology becomes available to more people we're going to see more research is using it safer research say for the
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animals i think it's a win win. from an emotional perspective just being able to see these incredibly beautiful species out in their natural environment we'd never be able to do that and we don't have to disturb them to see them but in terms of the overarching story i mean a scientist you can collect data on. things what is and what's changing and it seems like this method allows them to collect data that's sort of speaking to both of those objectives they're studying what is now and when things change we'll know yeah and i mean that also speaks to the importance of having these long term datasets right because you have to be able to establish a baseline which i think they're doing very well we know with 22 years' worth of data and now with the changes of climate change you know that that's a really powerful set a date it to to give us a sense of what's what's on the horizon. you are going to tell us about a unique sewer you took of a little unusual lab into tray here you know it's basically
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a lab full of trash and ford invited us to check out the ways that they're making the auto industry a little bit greener so clearly a lot of environmental incentives here at play and you know obviously when you use recycled materials over new ones are going to be saving a little bit of money but they also found some new ways to solve some old problems using some very cool methods so saying look. it's taken over a century but today car manufacturers are getting into high gear when it comes to going green from hydrogen fuel cell cars to electric plug ins and hybrids mileage is going up and with the least 10 percent of vehicles environmental impact the assembly process manufacturing is going green to. companies like toyota g.m. volkswagen ford and honda are all stepping up eco friendly methods with 0 waste factories diverting millions of pounds from landfills reusing water recycling
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sludge and going solar powered and it's not just assembly take forward 85 percent of its cars are renewable recyclable or compostable everything from recyclable aluminum bodies and engine parts to so we form seats in fabrics needs. 5000000 was cycled plastic bottles and this is where the ideas percolate the materials research lab at ford headquarters in dearborn michigan what would you say is the craziest thing that you guys work with when you think those are the hook ups yes oh these are cigarette filters it's a cellulose yes a tape fiber and so we're looking at that fiber as a reinforcement for plastics debbie moleski storage of the lab back in 2001 was soil foam oil was about $40.00 a barrel and so nobody saw a reason to use plant based materials even though there was an environmental improvement when we launched our soil base foams oil was about one $150.00
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a barrel and so suddenly what was a very poorly received idea was very well received instead of the petroleum base the foam and every seat in north america is made of michigan soil and now the lab is testing algae oil with its more global reach plastics researcher ellen lead gave techno the 1st public look at this newest experimental phone rang and have you had in search back then this one. and that's acts like the egg and so plan every time you get there and then i'm going to have you add the following agent which in our case is water i'm going to mix this up. and then we'll see the phone start to react. oh. there it goes bacon until a cake you can see all the gas bubbles all ready for we use this to kind of evaluate our formulation and how fast it comes out why is it important that this reacts fast
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how fast you can be made each part is really important for manufacturing because we want to be able to make things in a timely manner are we talking a matter of minutes per phone seat or seconds or less than that ford is aiming to make their plastics at least 20 percent bio based this actually made. plastic stronger yes it does. these parts are later in weight i can show you one that is made from hemp 1st class and it's about a 30 percent weight reduction so if we continue to do this we will improve fuel economy as well ford says it's already diverted more than $30000000.00 pounds of plastic from north american landfills with materials as diverse as we grass coconut hair shredded jeans and millions of dollars of greenbacks a lot of people don't know as money isn't actually paper it's a blend of cotton and linen trying to grind it down into a smaller fine and right research engineer giuseppe look hillary has showed me how would stun bullets crime some wanting to use a crime there's a shuttle that goes inside and using magnets it turns the magnets on and off and it
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will move the shuttle back and forth between the 2 metal ends smashed the money using liquid nitrogen around the liquid nitrogen the liquid nitrogen all just cool the money down to a brittle so it's easy to smash and turn on the machine. is on yeah would you. powder money then it's melted in with plastic in formed into pellets you melt them down and then you formed them into things like this right and this is a coin trick that is a coin to your money money back into your vehicle what is this tomato flavors these are actual skins leaves and stems from the tomato plants from hines's ketchup production they process millions of pounds of tomatoes every year and they have a lot of leftover why is this a good product for you guys to use we can use this to reinforce our plastics to
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make them stiffer but then at the same time we can start in the lab is in the very early stages of testing the tomato responsibilities making samples bun melting and mixing plastic extruding it into pellets and molds for testing you would mention part of the test is actually the smell. you know if they're driving a lot and they may not want to smell tomatoes because they might get angry. so what's your big end goal for all of us we all have kids and we want to make sure that there's a green nice planet for them with materials that they can continually replenish i don't want them to depend on petroleum as their only source of materials. sitting between you guys is of course $10000.00 worth of cash but unfortunately it is old cash shredded would normally go to the trash but in this case they're reusing it making trees and this idea of closing the materials you know going as
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much as we possibly can to words 0 waste and manufacturing it's not just lip service anymore it's happening and it makes total business sense i think it's so interesting that you take that trip across industry collaboration like catch up and ford motors that these aren't really 2 companies that i would think would work together in this way i mean i as a chemist i think a lot about it is a green chemistry that you want all of the by products of your chemical reactions to be used for their reactions and that's kind of like how i think about it but this is really created when your doctor crucial. difference made in the past not only catch up and color interactions when i spilled ketchup and my car been there from the california coast all the way over to detroit we've covered a lot of ground today guys and covered some pretty interesting topics so thanks for that level up more for you next time on techno see that dive deep into these stories and go behind the scenes with al-jazeera dot com slash techno follow our expert contributors on twitter facebook instagram google plus and more.
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it's very difficult as a chef or restaurant tour to buy shrimp with the confidence that what you're serving is going to be good seafood by nature it is a high risk sometimes for it was raised using production drugs. that are not approved for use in the us the f.d.a. simply isn't testing enough on the imported market to really find all of things by a lot of brands to be take no at this time on al-jazeera. hello there some more some of almost all across much of the southeast of the united states also a band of cloud with rain gradually pulling away from the east coast of sun sinking the skies into new york and d.c. in the last few hours we could just see is that a thunderstorm in washington d.c.
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on monday and what we will see certainly is an increase in the rain working its way across the great lakes on the upper midwest and in fact by cheese day becoming much more widespread the rain stretching all the way from missouri right there across into ohio and actually down as far as tennessee we could have some strong thunderstorms in the mix here as well fading a bit fresher in the wake of this rain certainly on trees into chicago high that of 28 degrees celsius and still very warm in los angeles 30 degrees and 18 celsius in san francisco then we had a down into the caribbean some very heavy rain for the next couple days pushing across into the windward bridgetown will certainly see the rain and those thunderstorms but it has been a caring picture will continue to be fairly clear across much of hispaniola and on towards cuba we will they see an increase in the rains are pushing further to the west all the way across into nicaragua some rain showers into southern mexico 22 the high the on choose say me what i have on it with a high of 31. the
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wilderness of cambodia is under threat. for profit by an illegal timber trade one of one east investigates the plunder of cambodia's 4. point 00. this is ultimately to understand in a very different way where there. is a we don't leave. the palestine national locust was 1st founded in the 1930 s. but has had to be revived in 2010 all was very important for me to sing in palestine now musicians from all over the world come together to perform in the occupied territories so good for the thing it's like every palestinian living in the aspirant felt it was the 1st time they performed using their identity al-jazeera world hears music as a force for unity in the diaspora orchestra. set
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aside differences and bring back all the. and say no to chaos and violence battled hong kong's leader carrier faces an unprecedented general strike across the city. councilwoman you're watching al-jazeera lines my headquarters here in doha coming up in the next 30 minutes parts of india administered kashmir under lockdown as the government sends thousands of troops over security fears in the disputed region also. hate has no place in our country's. u.s.
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presence. shootings in texas and ohio in which 29 people are killed and turkey's president says his country's military will move into northern syria setting up a potential fight with america's kurdish allies. welcome to the program it's well past 12 noon in hong kong where a rare citywide general strike is underway monday's are usually busy in hong kong but as you can see the streets all almost empty on that aerial shot designed over the government's handling of protests against a now shelved extradition bill and concerns about china's influence in the territory many want the territories leader kerry to resign and she's accusing protesters of trying to destroy hong kong such extensive disruptions in the name of certainty months or are uncooperative and the men have seriously
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undermined hong kong's law and order. and are pushing our city the city we all love and many of us helped to build to the verge of a very dangerous situation. hogans opposition politicians say carolina has lost all legitimacy to continue in office and carry land has practically tell the hong kong and international community that he has done nothing wrong and that it stands to fat tissue and has definitely morally bankrupt and how to use a diversion tactic claiming that the people he's the mountains have changed more into thomas is a correspondent launching events for us in the home andrew road rail all seems to
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be affected in terms of today's general strike a moment just how that really is going to manifest itself as the day unfolds. well look for example so right in the center of hong kong city and it's extremely quiet for a work day monday morning where the processes of don is they're locking the doors of the metro trains right across the city all day work for about 6 hours they've actually finished in the last hour their morning processed at the m.t.r. stations has now finished so the trains are running but people aren't really in the city center in any numbers yet roads as well like reduced barricades on many of the key roads into hong kong but a frustration spilled over there when one car trying to get through a barricade drove through at speed and actually took out one of the testers as he went through the airport as well more than 200 flights canceled it's not clear whether it's actually controllers unable to get to work or whether they've called in sick as part of strike action but the effect is the same at the international
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airport as well and that's true more broadly of hong kong very very quite unclear whether people are actively taking part in this strike or whether they are simply unable to get to that place of work and right now protest starts in 7 different life is right across the city but they seem so different to those we saw on sunday night. sunday night in one of the most upscale districts of one of the most sophisticated cities on. but in hong kong this is becoming the norm. of the protest as tactics have changed. rather than targets one building and wait for the police to clear them. lose all their aim is maximum destruction across the city be like water they tell each other everyone. on
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sunday they marched to china's liaison office in hong kong on route some hid behind umbrella's as they use spawn is to break apart fences gathering the metal foot barricades 7. finding pleece protecting their 1st targets they moved swiftly on. taking metro trains to the shopping district of kools wife a. then they built barricades used pliers to cut the wires of traffic lights and stopped traffic people over there disabling traffic lights that taking a paul barry is let's see if it will compile it grows with compiling to the rolls actually we try peaceful means and bad person and he responds and so we try to introduce may be to increase the pressure dropping the roles and so the more people interrupt. and we try to do it just it was just
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around message but you faithful that's the way they say in this room is that china might send in it's all me. i'm not afraid of. my belief that's not going to happen the protest does have support. even among those disrupted that in the end disruption here near the entrance to a close harbor tunnel didn't last long. i mean one step ahead of the police will not this is where it's come to a head gets a good take us on the streets of hong kong there's a general strike planned for hong kong on monday and promises the protests that day will be the most widespread yet. yes and we wait to see how that say unfolds overall monday and through of course you know we heard kerry. speaking and i think it was interesting to perhaps think about a weed between the lines about the things that she didn't say what we can make of
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them yeah. yeah. well she said that hong kong is on the verge of a very dangerous situation a lot of people in hong kong think we're already in a very dangerous situation economically so what does she mean by the verge of a potentially more dangerous situation that you mean one where we could see the chinese army for example on the streets that is one of the rumors flying around social media didn't address that directly but what does that phrase on the verge of a dangerous situation very dangerous situation me she also talked about the protest is putting at risk the one country 2 systems that hong kong is essentially part of china but governed separately another protest of course want to put that risk is i want 2 countries 2 systems democracy. kerry that seem to be implying that if they're not careful they might get one country one system china as well so a lot of big questions that come about that press conference not only on since she's not standing down the chief executive she's not giving any further ground to the protesters and the cross they city as well as a quiet what they were going to say perhaps more protests in one day than any other
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7 different ones a plan for the city and if previous protests are anything to go by they could morph into something more violent. and that he will continue to monitor events through the day with us in the home called under thomas the reporting force. another story that we're focusing on is in india where a cabinet meeting chaired by the indian prime minister has just ended now the situation in indian administered kashmir is expected to have been discussed the home minister or a statement in parliament in the coming hours the thousands of troops have been deployed to the region and the government of cited security concerns the government has imposed an indefinite security lockdown in parts of the disputed region priyanka gupta has more. parts of kashmir under lockdown thousands of indian troops monitored checkpoints neighborhoods and squares and more soldiers are arriving at schools and colleges are shot overnight mobile internet is blocked politicise ins
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are appealing for calm me up mello will say i appeal to the people of the state to meet in the dark and they should maintain peace and happy since it is very necessary we should not take any steps that would disturb beauty in the region. by sunday india put 3 prominent political under house arrest 2 of them former chief ministers it's also banned public rallies this former leader says he doesn't know what's in store the uncertainty prevailed for much of the week students from across the country in kashmir were packed into trains to wrists and pilgrims were ordered to leave the indian government says their intelligence reports about possible attacks on the annual pilgrimage but some think they could be something larger in the works in terms of very dramatic such as ordering
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a mandatory evacuations of tourists and closing schools down putting local leaders under house arrest to me that suggests that something is much greater as a play than a mere terrorist threat there have been terror threats encounter many times before and. the indian authorities you know are like this so i really think that there's something broader and why it seems like india is trying to head off possible on rest which suggests that india could be planning to make some sort of major move revoking. that is. something that's unacceptable for many here. article 35 in article 370 is our basic constitutional right we have made an agreement with in here the basis of these articles and now they are trying to derail vocals articles this is an injustice to us here is they're not going to tolerate the should just. push me as one of the most militarized regions in the
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world claimed by both india and pakistan over the past few days tensions are high between the 2 nuclear powered neighbors as he treated accusations of attacks on each other islamabad is accusing india of using banned cluster bombs delhi says pakistan is sending fighters to stage attacks across the border the valley is on the edge amid fear and panic over how little is known about what's to come priyanka gupta al jazeera well pakistan's prime minister has warned that tensions over kashmir could escalate into a regional crisis reports now from islamabad. any prime minister. meeting all face national security committee of the cabinet that tended by all the armed forces chief. said that the united nations security council should day ignored. that did developing in the region pakistan had blamed india
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for sending tens of thousands of troops in to mean that it's going on and pakistan that india may go for another adventure on the other hand india had denied that you . which are banned under the geneva convention focused on war and the international community taking note of the price it was being the prime minister saying that the time for called was now and the us president should mediate but india has said all along that it is not by and large and is.

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