Skip to main content

tv   Kashmir  Al Jazeera  August 20, 2019 3:32am-3:59am +03

3:32 am
more from istanbul with simple. turkey's interior ministry stated in a press release that those 3 mayors who have been removed from their mayor or old post this morning are accused of a rise crimes including being members of the out both kurdistan workers party of the pick a k spreading the p.k. k. agenda and exporting to misspell team money and resources in order to finance and support the agenda the picket k. is listed as a terrorist organization not only by turkey but also by the united states and the e.u. also turkey's interior ministry detain 418 people doing in a parisian held in 29 provinces of turkey this morning and those people are accused of being linked to the kurdistan workers party the minister says that those people has links to the out both kurdistan workers party and they have identified that those people have been supporting the p.k.
3:33 am
and after the removal of the mayors from their paws the city governors have been appointed as trustees as the acting mayors according to turkey's constitution and a regulation for election the interior ministry has a right to has the authority to remove local authority members from their pause for a temporary period of time if they have ongoing persecution process or legal proceedings until a final decision is placed several people hoping to be the next u.s. president will be in iowa in the next few days at a forum focusing on native american issues most of them are democrats but one of the speakers mark charles is running as an independent fisher a native american aiming to change the face of u.s. politics. mark charles hopes in 17 months he won't be walking in his dining room but from the oval office in the white house he's running for president and believes
3:34 am
america is ready to elect a native american i am running this campaign not as a protest but a way. to try to change me a citizen of the navajo nation he launched his campaign as an independent online my realtor's our name is mark charles and since the launch he's campaigned mainly in native american areas for one very good reason native america alone has the power to put me on the ballot in all 50 states. that is incredibly empowering to our communities which for so many not just decades centuries has been left behind and disenfranchised by this nation and said you don't have any political or voting power and so you're going to be dismissed and. journey the principle plank of his campaign the from the very beginning of the country marginalize many that the us constitution of we the people left women marginalized known whites and put power in
3:35 am
the hands of a few i'm laying out this vision of let's build a nation where we the people truly means all the people one political expert says those who feel excluded might rally around him but not running for one of the 2 big parties makes it hard for his voice to be heard but i do think though that the constituencies he would have to win right and he knows that he's going to need all of these people who are you said marginal in our society and these are people who are becoming the majority in america so i think he has the right sensibility i mean i think his message of one of we the people is the kind of message that people are interested in and perhaps why people issue partisan labels but i do think the fact that he is an independent speaks to this larger issue that we have with people who look like non winner mark charles is only the 2nd native american to run for the u.s. presidency. his campaign is small says tiny but he believes he is a big message and that the u.s. is ready for something new from someone whose roots go back to before america was
3:36 am
america alan fischer al-jazeera washington. now for nearly 4 decades in chile members of a german sect that actually became a refuge for nazi fugitives were enslaved and abused by their pedophile later an extraordinary story and more than 100 victims of the so-called dignity colony are now set to sue the chilean state for damages a latin america editor lucien newman reports now from. on the foothills of this mountain range in central chile lies on a large rural estate. shafique was 3 years old when his parents and 300 other german emigrants came here in 1962 to establish a plummy on their leader was self-proclaimed pastor paul schaeffer a former nazi who turned the so-called dignity colony into a prison for 40 years unimaginable things happen.
3:37 am
from the age of 8 i was beaten and abused we lived in a nightmare in purgatory in a hell that's why today i want it understood that we still live in and just as. horst and his wife helga who was born here had no formal education and worked 7 days a week with no pay. from infancy children were separated from their parents and the boys sexually abused by schaeffer young and old were beaten and drugged to keep them docile. to govern and. almost every day someone had to be beaten for 20 minutes and everyone had to take turns hitting the victim with a pole the community was under permanent surveillance and kept within electrified fences but some of the colonists did manage to escape through this the forest to neighboring farms or to the nearby town of and when that happened paul shaeffer would call the local police which was in his pay there are documented cases to
3:38 am
prove it and when that happened the police would bring the escapees right back here . lawyer winfred him for was also born in the commune i met him 6 years ago when he was preparing a lawsuit against a german and chilean states for their alleged negligence and complicity in the suffering of the colonists in may germany agreed to pay up to $11000.00 to victims as a token gesture but since chile has not agreed to settle out of court the lawsuit will now go ahead in. the chilean state and where the colony began by a perverted sadistic pedophile who collaborated with the pinochet dictatorship and corrupted all the institutions in the area in the 21st century there was a slave camp before the eyes of the chilean state. horses among the a.v.o. so colonists who remain on the property now called villa. like almost. all the men
3:39 am
he suffers from acute back pain from use of force labor and with no pension or savings the couple is struggling to overcome economic hardship and psychological trauma. we want the government to help us receive justice because authorities knew what was happening here and did nothing to a. $1000000.00 for each of the $117.00 plaintiffs it may help compensate they say but never erase the horrors that they still live with you see in human al-jazeera. still ahead on this news hour we've got sports news and a call for any changes to get another major crash.
3:40 am
3:41 am
sun is going to be a sports news now thank you devon football champions by munich have completed the signing of. from barcelona the brazilian has joined on loan no but by and have the option to make it permanent for a fixed price of $133000000.00 continuous struggled since it joining a bus up from liverpool 492000000 last year a move that made him the world's 2nd most expensive player off the nema citizen. and will because of violence importance and its history it's a club that comes with a certain responsibility at every competition with expectations to win big titles
3:42 am
each season and obviously the champions league is among them so i'm here to work hard learn to give my all and do my best to help my teammates win important titles and little known defendant playing in northern ireland women's league is in the running where the likes of linen mrs latin abramovich for a fee for award basis and who plays for cliftonville ladies is a nominee for the world goal of the year award for this strike officially called the push us award to fans of vote for the winner online the price was established in 2009 and simpson could join an impressive list including a marker santa or naldo and olivier giroud issuance. are there more calls for indy car to stop racing at pocono race way in the pennsylvania after another huge crash there on sunday it happened on the opening lap of the race had at the oval circuit at 5 cars with him volved but there were no serious injuries
3:43 am
thankfully one of the drivers that feel it because i was in 5th that was hospitalized but has a since it been released to have a look at the own borders camera shot and you get a real sense of just how terrifying it would have been. many feel that the track as pocono is too dangerous for the modern high speeds involved in indy car justin wilson died there in 2015 and last year old the 2 akins was catapulted into a fence leaving him paralyzed from the waist down. while wiccans tweeted how many times do we have to go through the same situation before we can all accept that an indy car should not waste as pocono as just a toxic relationship and maybe it's time to consider divorce i am very relieved
3:44 am
that everyone is ok from that scary crash all jazeera spoke to indy car journalist john rich he believes that is the indy car regulations not the tracks that are creating dangerous situations. i don't think you know it's any more dangerous than any other oval track on 1st schedule it doesn't know it's bad karma in the last few years with 3 major accidents now and i think it's a product more. more of a modern racing itself and anything else. carson been designed to be as equal as possible and when nobody can create space sells on the racetrack you end up with situations like that were cars running in close proximity they can touch you when indy cars touch with open wheel as you're about things now i think it's a product of the form of racing fans and if you read comments after any race whether it's national are going to go or formula one they get upset when they don't
3:45 am
get close race and the cars through the regulations whether it's nascar or in the park the cars have been regulated so that no one can gain things and yes it's created incredibly close and sliding recent time the same time it's unintended consequences with cars running this close together that came from together single thought mayweather jr has denied that he's a set to fight money pacquiao in saudi arabia it follows a video that surfaced on social media on sunday in which the books and legends said that the fight is happening is that video. i want to say thank you it's an honor to come to saudi arabia to say don't you guys talk about the mayweather patio saudi arabia flowing money made with a moment. where they may take spain that video was shot earlier this year ahead of promotional trip to saudi and that he was specifically asked to mention pacquiao however he confirmed that there are currently no talks for the fight to happen. ok
3:46 am
sunny thank you for that someone's got all sport a little later the next news are 2100 hours g.m.t. but there is more news after the break with felicity and the team in london i'm come all santa maria and sweet company seek answers. i was raised in france. these are my grandparents. these are my parents and this is mean. by them both isis and us on. the 2nd of a 2 part epic tale of
3:47 am
a remarkable family. the father the son and the jihad. on al jazeera. al-jazeera explores prominent figures of the 20th century and how rivalries influenced the course of history steve jobs a much better marketer than bill gates. apple is going to reinvent stuff below made software what it is today will change the world to high tech visionaries whose breakthroughs inspired a digital revolution jobs and gates face to face on al-jazeera. and smy privilege to name al-jazeera english the broadcaster of the year the cartels are fighting each other and we've been told that we can go on the field yet
3:48 am
he says the largest demonstration that's been held by women to refugees since over 700000 of them lived near some of the nicest losers on the planet earth here or they think that they could be put to him. here in english proud recipient of the new crystals gold coast of the year award of the city a running. rising tensions in northwest syria turkey condemns the government as strike that narrowly missed its army convoy. hello there i'm from a steeple and you're watching al-jazeera live from london also coming up a new york police officer is fired 5 years after the chokehold death of an unarmed man which led to the black lives matter meeting and. evidence that sudan's deposed
3:49 am
president al bashir received $90000000.00 from the saudi royal family as his corruption trial gets under way. and after 4 decades of abuse in chile at the hands of former nazi victims are set to see the government's the damages. syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of lip giving them access to the strategic town. it happened just hours after narrowly missed a turkish military convoy just a few kilometers away it is one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian and turkish government forces during the 8 year war said huldah reports from beirut . a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind this attack close to a turkish military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled
3:50 am
province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that in the harbor town of more ak and like the rebel controlled town of punch a hole in a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies. the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the frontlines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army were sent in massive amounts to the front lines and and the 2nd we have seen today morning the turks armisen mess of calm war 2 hunchy of all the 2 established. and. cutting 5 highway that highway will allow the syrian government to collect cities under its control
3:51 am
and revive trade but many population centers like lie along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. syrian regime did not enter haunch a clean and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime from entering college and as usual the syrian regime targeted the turkish convoy turkey's a key guarantor in this region as part of the deescalation that we meant and we do not expect it to give up the airstrike may have been a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as a violation of existing agreements and cooperation with russia and turkey's
3:52 am
deployment of troops seems to have been its own message to syria and its backer russia not to advance any further but many are asking are both sides just posturing or will the sharp escalation and tension turn the proxy battle in into a different kind of war so what they're beirut. sudan's former president omar al bashir told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency which were not included in the country's financial records revelation came during bush's 1st court hearing on corruption and bribery charges since he was deposed by the military in april out of sarah's have a morgan has more now from the capital khartoum. he was once feared and guarded as the head of the country now sudan's former president on what it was here is under
3:53 am
a different guard as he appears in court to face several criminal charges which include illegal possession of foreign currency and bribery investigators say they found more than $130000000.00 in his house days after the military deposed him in april. presenting the head of a country to trial proves that there is a rule of law in the country and that no one is above the law this message is not just for the ousted government but the incoming government the case will resume next week we can't tell you what the outcome will be but we can say that we are assured that the case is going in the favor of the defendant. the court heard that bashir admitted to receiving $90000000.00 from saudi arabia he also admitted to receiving millions more from the ruler of the united arab emirates during his time as president bashir is 10 sudanese soldiers to fight alongside the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen but investigators say the former president said he doesn't know how the money he received was spent nor did he follow up on its use he was also
3:54 am
charged in may for inciting to kill protesters and demonstrations that started in december over the rising cost of bread which quickly turned into a nationwide anti-government movement those charges are yet to be heard in court charges not addressed are charges that are brought against him by the international criminal court which involve work crimes crimes against humanity and genocide the transition military council that ousted him said that they will wait until a transitional government is formed and an independent and impartial judiciary is set up and that body will be the one to determine whether the former president should be tried for these crimes and if he is whether he's guilty or innocent. wouldn't 300000 people who have been killed in the western region of darfur since 2003 and more than 3000000 displaced international experts say there are many reasons as to why bashir isn't likely to be handed to the international criminal court recent research. warrant of arrest released by the
3:55 am
international court would do not really. provide incentives for. peaceful solution the current transitional government is composed also by many who are directly or. allegedly. ready in the massacres like the 1000 or 3 so we should start asking the question on whether the just claim the i.c.c. could bring to sudan will be a plus sagal justice but after 30 years in power with immunity from any kind of prosecution for. people in thought then the corruption charges are about to start to justice then one atone for the morgan under their attitude. a new york city police officer involved in the choke hold death of a black man has been fired the decision was announced by the new york police commissioner 5 years off the office a daniel ponce alayo wrestled eric goanna to the ground in the video recording gun
3:56 am
account he had repeatedly saying he couldn't bring his death spot process of a race on police use of force on inspired the black lives massive movement. n.y.p.d. court ruled that while certainly not preferable that hold was acceptable during that brief moment in time because the risk of falling through the window was so high but that exemption circumstance no longer existed the court found with officer pants away on mr garner moved to the ground as mr garnet balanced himself on the sidewalk on his hands and knees deputy commissioner of trials rosemarie maldonado found that officer panda layo consciously disregarded the substantial an unjustifiable risk of maneuver explicitly prohibited by the department she found that during a struggle officer panta last had the opportunity to readjust his grip from a primitive choke hold to a less lethal alternative but did not make use of that opportunity gabriel as well
3:57 am
to joins us live now from new york and gay one of the family and the police union saying about this decision to fire the officer. well as you might imagine 2 very differing opinions there 1st the family one of eric garner 6 children spoke after the decision was announced and she said that the family was very pleased that it was the right decision to fire the officer daniel penta layo but they said while they were happy with it that it should have happened 5 years ago and they thought that the officer should have been fired almost immediately after the death of eric garner now on the other side you had the police union came out and just absolutely blasted this decision said that it was unfair and unjust decision the police union and the lawyers for the police officer basically have said all along that he was not intending to even hurt let alone kill eric gardner but that gardner was resisting arrest and that the officer had to do something to bring him under
3:58 am
control and that it was simply a reaction to his asthma that ultimately caused his death that was really what the family or sorry what the police officers lawyers have said all along they said that their union for the police officer said they're absolutely don't agree with this decision at all have a no confidence vote against the mayor and the police commissioner as well so it's 2 very different opinions on this decision as you say gabe it's 5 years since eric on adult life why has this taken so long to get to this point. the wheels of justice on this case have been very slow they 1st had to wait for a grand jury a state grand jury here in new york to decide if they were going to look into this they ultimately decided not to but also went to the federal prosecutors as well all the way up to the department of justice and they were looking into potentially human rights violation charges they ultimately decided as well to decline in
3:59 am
pursuing this any further and then it went to the new york city police to finally make a ruling on it the police department waited until everyone else had their say in the matter so everyone disagrees in many ways on this decision as we just talked about but everyone does agree that this took way too long for alternately this decision to be rendered the police commissioner said in the future that they will no longer wait that they will make rulings on appropriate action against officers accused of wrongdoing much sooner than what it took in this case 5 years was a very long time not only for the family of eric garner but also for the police officers that were involved in this as well. as on the latest thank you the u.s. assisted a ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the instant media at range nuclear forces treaty washington formally withdrew from mark
4:00 am
$97.00 pots with russia of this month for that had been violating the cold war era treaty it also applies to test an intermediate range ballistic missile in november . or a still ahead so on the program thousands of demonstrators set fire to public buildings in indonesia protesting against what they call abuse of ethnic papuan students plus . our neighbors more charles the native american man who started his political career in his dining room and has his sights set on the white house. hello again welcome back to international weather forecasts were here on tuesday we're going to be seeing a lot of active weather in terms of severe weather here across parts of central and western europe notice the rain right here across the area well in that rain we do
4:01 am
expect to see those thunderstorms to develop a continuation really of what we saw on monday evening so in the sun the storms expect to see some gusty winds some hail as well maybe even some localized flooding across the area now here across the northwestern part of europe we are going to see a nother system coming in out of the atlantic and this one right here is going to bring some very gusty winds across northern ireland ireland as well as into scotland on wednesday for london though really not looking too bad we're going to be seeing your conditions really deteriorate as we go towards wednesday evening but windy conditions and rain could be a problem as we go towards the end of the week well here across another part of africa things are looking quite dry across much of the area temperatures are quite seasonable for this time of year we're going to see tunis at about $34.00 degrees there coming up to about $35.00 degrees and algiers with attempt a few of $29.00 and across central africa we are going to sing plenty of rain across much of parts of nigeria over the next few days lagos is going to be seeing
4:02 am
some heavy rain as well with $28.00 degrees in the forecast across it's going to be rainy as well with a temperature of 28. by asking looking at your instagram account and reading takes into the apples fall behind the scenes they see is a dialogue when donald trump announced his candidacy for president ever laughed at them everyone has a boy's best chance the democrats have to beat donald trump is to nominate an exciting inspirational callus about a nominee joining the coloe the incumbent say send in your thoughts get clear and. announce his iraq.
4:03 am
again a reminder the top stories on al-jazeera an asse strike in syria has not really missed a turkish military convoy traveling through opposition controlled province meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in it a move which would give them access to the strategic town of concha create. a new york police officer involved in the choke hold death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired at a video recording showed officer officer daniel pipes in a wrestling gone to the ground on a can be heard repeatedly saying he couldn't breath. at a court in sudan considering corruption charges against former president omar al bashir has heard he told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency the money was not included in the country's financial records. demonstrations in indonesia's west papuan region
4:04 am
have turned violent as protests as the public facilities and blocked roads the angry what they say is police abuse against ethnic students. the western part of the on and new guinea and has been disputed since the end of dutch rule understood pal reports. as protests spread across 3 cities and thousands took part to show their anger. in the capital of west papuan protesters blocked intersections by burning tires and brought some areas to a standstill and they set fire to the local parliament building. earlier in the day a protester named alfred explained his reasons for participating but this is racism against pop when people pop when students were attacked and arrest. did only because they were willing to raise the indonesian flag or the incident he's referring to happened over the weekend on independence day rumors spread on social
4:05 am
media that ethnic pop and students living on java island had damaged the indonesian flag. their dormitory in surabaya was surrounded by a group of people who were recorded chanting kick them out and other anti west papuan slogans. rather than disperse the crowd police fired tear gas and raided the compound on saturday more than 40 ethnic pop when students say they were subjected to racial abuse as they were being detained after being held for nearly 9 hours the group was released without charge. this incident clearly disturbed the unity as a nation the government ordered a thorough and fair investigation of the incident and those who had violated the law we will pursue anyone who used this incident for their own interest. in the past indonesia's government has blamed separatists for stoking violence in the west poplar region which has been home to a low level armed rebellion really by indigenous pop once for decades in the 1st
4:06 am
day i. joke always doesn't he good policy by giving amnesty inside. prisoners however in the recency delusion he forget about you know how to preserve. as a human or human rights. the latest allegations of police abuse are likely to add to their list of grievances and or schapelle al-jazeera. the french president and his russian counterpart have been discussing the world's major crises during talks in southern france from iran to syria to ukraine but it appears in told emmanuel mark all that recent talks with the new ukrainian president's had given him grounds to cautious optimism in eastern ukraine a call is hoping to agree a time frame for the next round of talks on the complex. or russia's to investigate alleged foreign interference in its upcoming local elections in moscow is concerned
4:07 am
that quote foreign meddling has been encouraging unauthorized rallies and reports from moscow. protests on the streets of moscow 6 weeks in a row broaden up wrapped and to the russian parliament summer recess and peace held an emergency session and set up an investigative commission. i'm sure that we must investigate financing from abroad that leads to interference in russia's internal politics we must look at the activities of some of diplomats who are based on russian territory maybe i'm getting ahead of myself but i promise you we will have interesting findings. of the protests started in july after several opposition candidates were barred from running in local elections in moscow election officials sat signatures they needed to collect were false normally these local elections don't attract a lot of attention but banning the opposition from taking part motivated tens of
4:08 am
thousands to protest police have arrested thousands of protesters and some say they were beaten and now face serious criminal charges this is like many more to take part 2 observers that may sound all too familiar blaming foreigners for anti-government protests is not only seen as a way to distract russian public opinion from the real reasons behind a protest it also put trace these protesters negatively as being used by foreigners and this could be used to convince people not to join. on his visit to france on monday president vladimir putin said protesters have a right to let their voice heard but the authorities will do everything to prevent violence. no i am a guest here and it is not a good place to say that but i have to since you asked so we all know about the events related to the so-called yellow vests in which about 11 people were killed and 2500. including 2000 policeman were injured we don't want that to happen in
4:09 am
russian capital. while russian politicians say the american accusations of russian meddling in the 2016 presidential elections will force there are real so it's basically the russian version of the investigation. but we don't have a person like bill or of course the hope or result we've got to compare to what he has achieved because he achieved 0 and will probably find something the parliamentary commission says it will summon journalists and diplomats it suspects of interference so far the u.s. embassy has been blamed for meddling as how do you choose and the german channel to . step fastened al-jazeera moscow. the white house says the u.s. president on the trumpet spoken on the phone to india's prime minister narendra modi and stressed the need to reduce tensions with pakistan it is 2 weeks since the delhi revoked the autonomy of indian administered kashmir and rodeos are said to
4:10 am
have discussed increasing trade and preventing what they described as cross border terrorism. well as tension increases over the disputed kashmir region the term for pakistan's powerful army chief has been extended for 3 years prominent opposition leader the foreign minister and the president of pakistan administered kashmir express their views in a talk to al-jazeera special with a salvage of 8 attack on press freedoms in occupied kashmir i wish i was speaking from a moral ground moral high ground and i would be speaking from more high ground of my own government was not restricting some human rights and media freedoms in pakistan but having said that we can't equate our concerns about the curtailment of democracy in pakistan with the military occupation by an extremist government by the man seen as the butcher of good drug my biggest fear is. the.
4:11 am
genocide. that can take place on the inside of it we have no evidence as you. open up open up you hear did anybody stop you you went to the elysee you made people you into and we were will they allow you there because why don't you attempt and try after having been here. and make a request to the indian side and let them allow you to go to srinagar to meet the leadership over there will be allow you i doubt it so you are nothing to fear you have nothing to hide is that your concern that these 2 nuclear armed neighbors could go to war because you would be essentially on the front lines if that happens that anything can happen there can be miscalculations but before miscalculations india has taken escalate 3 steps in february this year indian prime minister had threatened pakistan with the use of nuclear weapons and at that time we had said
4:12 am
that he doesn't know what he's talking about but if he takes that step then that would mean a nuclear armageddon. and a nuclear winter not just for south asia but for the entire world. and you can watch that special episode of talks al jazeera at these times on tuesday and wednesday now for nearly 4 decades members of a german sect in chile were and slave to under buz by their paedophile leader of their kamin became a refuge for nazi fugitives now they are more than 100 victims of the so-called dignity colony assess to sue the chilean state for damages on latin america at a center see and you've been reports from per hour. on the foothills of this mountain range in central chile lies a large rural estate. shafique was 3 years old when his parents and 300 other german emigrants came here in 1962 to establish
4:13 am
a commune their leader was self-proclaimed pastor paul schaeffer a former nazi who turned the so-called dignity colony into a prison for 40 years unimaginable things happened. on earth. from the age of 8 i was beaten and abused we lived in a nightmare in purgatory in a hell that's why today i want it understood that we still live in and just as. the . horst and his wife helga who was born here had no formal education and worked 7 days a week with no pay. for moon fancy children were separated from their parents and the boys sexually abused by schaeffer young and old were beaten and drugged to keep them docile. to cover one and. almost every day someone had to be beaten for 20 minutes and everyone had to take turns hitting the victim with a pole the community was under permanent surveillance and kept within electrified
4:14 am
fences but some of the colonists did manage to escape through this the forest to neighboring farms or to the nearby town of and when that happened paul shaeffer would call the local police which was in his pay there are documented cases to prove it and when that happened the police would bring the escapees right back here . lawyer winfred him for was also born in the commune i met him 6 years ago when he was preparing a lawsuit against the german and chilean states for their alleged negligence and complicity in the suffering of the colonists in may germany agreed to pay up to $11000.00 to victims as a token gesture but since chile has not agreed to settle out of court the lawsuit will now go ahead in. the chilean state ended where the colony began by a perverted sadistic pedophile who collaborated with the pinochet dictatorship and
4:15 am
corrupted all the institutions in the area in the 21st century there was a slave camp before the eyes of the chilean state. horses among the 80 or so colonists who remain on the property now called villa. like almost. all the men he suffers from acute back pain from years of forced labor and with no pension or savings the couple is struggling to overcome economic hardship and psychological trauma. guns a particular we want the government to help us receive justice because authorities knew what was happening here and did nothing. the lawsuit is for a $1000000.00 for each of the $117.00 plaintiffs it may help compensate they say but never erase the horrors that they still live with you see in human al-jazeera chile several people hoping to be the next u.s. president will be in iowa in the next few days out of 4 focusing on a sea of american issues most democrats but one of the speakers we mark charles
4:16 am
he's voting as an independence unofficial met the native american who has his sights set on the oval office mark charles hopes in 17 months he would be walking in his dining room but from the oval office in the white house he's running for president and believes america is ready to elect a native american i am running this campaign not as a protest but to win. the 2 cheney mashonaland a citizen of the navajo nation you launched this campaign as an independent online column i wrote as my name is mark charles and since the launch he's campaigned mainly in native american areas for one very good reason native america alone has the power to put me on the ballot in our 50 states. that is incredibly empowering to our communities which for so many not just decades centuries has been left behind and disenfranchised by this nation and said you don't have any political or
4:17 am
voting power and so you're going to be dismissed and 2 months journey the principle plank of his campaign from the very beginning of the country marginalize many that the us constitution of we the people left women marginalized known whites and put power in the hands of a few i'm laying out this vision of let's build a nation where we the people truly means all the people one political expert says those who feel excluded might rally around him but no running for one of the 2 big parties makes it hard for his voice to be heard but i do think though that the constituencies he would have to win right and he knows that he's going to need all of these people who are you said marginal in our society and these are people who are becoming the majority in america so i think he has the right sensibility i mean i think his message of one of we the people is the kind of message that people are interested in and perhaps why people issue partisan labels but i do think the fact
4:18 am
that he is an independent speaks to this larger issue that we have with people who look like non winners mark charles is only the 2nd native american to run for the u.s. presidency his campaign is small who says tiny but he believes he is a big message and that the u.s. is ready for something new from someone whose roots go back to before america was america alan fischer al-jazeera washington and of course you can find out much more by going to our website the address their adult court. but reminder the headlines on al-jazeera syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of conscious this just hours after a strike narrowly missed a turkish military convoy just a few kilometers away it is one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian
4:19 am
and turkish government forces during the 8 year war a court in sudan considering corruption charges against former president omar al bashir has heard he told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency the money was not included in the country's financial records a new york police officer involved in the chokehold death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired a video recording shows officer daniel pipes alayo wrestling eric garner to the ground his death sparked process over race and police use of force and inspired the black clive's mass movement april elizondo has reaction from new york one of eric garner 6 children spoke after the decision was announced and she said that the family was very pleased that it was the right decision to fire the officer daniel penta way o. but they said while they were happy with it that it should have happened 5 years ago and that the officer should have been fired almost immediately after the death
4:20 am
of eric garner now on the other side you had the police union came out and just absolutely blasted this decision the u.s. is tested a ground launch missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty washington formally withdrew from the landmark $987.00 pact with russia earlier this month and edging moscow had been violating the cold war era treaty. the white house says the u.s. president donald trump are spoken on the phone to india's prime minister narendra modi and stressed the need to reduce tensions with pakistan it is 2 weeks since the delhi revoked the autonomy of indian administered kashmir and modi are also said to have discussed increasing trade i'm preventing what they described as cross border terrorists. and those are the latest headlines here on al-jazeera more news in about 25 minutes next though it's the story by.
4:21 am
striking scenes in hong kong where pro-democracy protests ended their 11th consecutive weekend as crowd numbers swell will china intervene to quell the armrest and for me ok. and you're in the stream tweet us or comment with your thoughts in our live youtube chat. our 1700000 people watched down hong kong streets on sunday undeterred by rain and
4:22 am
the heavy police presence the protocol excuse me the pro-democracy protests was the largest in weeks with activists estimating that a quarter of hong kong's population was in attendance the demonstration was largely peaceful but hong kong police say more than 750 people have been arrested this summer since a mass protest against an extradition bill erupted in june but legislation has been tabled but unrest continues as activists push to preserve hong kong's autonomy from mainland china hong kong's government said it will be gained sincere dialogue with protesters once everything has calmed down by using however is growing impatient with the protests which officials say are hurting china's image and causing economic damage paramilitary troops are massing near hong kong's border and officials warn that further on rest could prompt a swift intervention so can the government of china and activists in hong kong reach a peaceful resolution with joining us to discuss today's topic is agnes shouting
4:23 am
a leading member of pro-democracy groups still in hong kong. also with us from hong kong is nixing lamb district councilor of the democratic alliance for the betterment and progress of hong kong also known as b. and finally we have mary hoyer hong kong based reports of a court's we also reached out to more than a dozen chinese officials to join this program but nobody was available thanks for joining us the ladies start online but the pictures of what was a really massive protest scene on august 18th this was on sunday freelance photographer may or may ying was there and these are a few things she shared on her feed a woman pleads with protesters to get off the bridge some urging each other to leave to preserve today's peaceful protests another one here this protester came to cover her with an umbrella while she took pictures because 1000001700000 estimated number were out there even though it was raining and she sent us
4:24 am
a video comment about what she saw at the protests and here's what she told the stream. was really a much needed period of relief and took care sent to all of the violence at the airport last weekend because especially when men they on sunday near people were waiting to see whether hong kong to get through the entire weekend without gas and it almost felt like a strange kind of new year's eve countdown so in the end there was no sure but it still remains to be seen whether this is a new trend or just a brief respite. this what was witnessing those protests like for you. actually i was opposed to something and i you know i have been a participant of this movement from journey until now and i could say that hong kong people have tried different kinds of methods to fight for our 5 demands from the hong kong government but until now how can governments supra
4:25 am
tanser the not listening not listen to. our fire and also the violence of police as go lading day by day just when you have a look at the little picture behind me is going to come up any 2nd now senor see it there you go all of these people on sunday protesting who do you think they are who do you know that they are. and they're just everyone i have friends there as well i think one of the thing is this is a big relief for me sunday i actually smiled after the protests because they everybody's out loading tears soaking feeds his it was raining b.b. have really long and their hats you see each photo was actually on land that means everybody gone to the protests and then his fleet went home so i was really happy to see those pictures rather that big as news going on so i think it would be good
4:26 am
i mean that will last more for the government to rethink whether or how you should respond to those 5 demand rather than focusing on violence if they can continue to do for the rest of the other a range has a thing is going on. what are your friends telling you they were that today why are they on the streets of hong kong are they are very dense like. i have a lot of friends that are saying. similar group press for the law as well at this moment those 5 the monsters that increase strong i think one of the things that while you do have people that was time really strong and then you do have other friends saying well. the only things that i'm testing is the independent stations looking into this incident so i think there's a lot of people having different demands but and there that's meant to have genuine
4:27 am
reply from the government but i thing at the moment one thing that was challenging for the government stepped this movement this time is pretty different from the umbrella movement figures fact what happened is this time you don't have a lot of states coming out to say ok we represent the people so if you want to dialogue you can come to me this time is more like everybody is playing their role . those went out good at doing design you're helping out free he and. like that ok it might be hard if you go into this like conversation like who do you know or maybe they should have rounds and rounds and browse and question oh here's an idea that i have i don't see next thing i think any think that and that it is true that it isn't even smooth but we haven't really seen the government really make
4:28 am
it sound. and activists seem to be pretty clear on them agnus he started though with the extradition bill talk to us about how we went from protests about an extradition bill to what we've seen today. actually were fight against extradition
4:29 am
agent f.l. and because if the extradition bill is passed in the legislative council people could be extradited to the mainland china. you know you know china is a country with any kind of rough law and transparency and it would be very dangerous to hong kong people and also to the system of hong kong to the legal system and to don't one country 2 systems of hong kong if how can people or even foreign or you know chatter this coming car that could be sensed it in mainland china but when the firelands of the police. has been escalating in this 2 or 3 months how come people to not only get him out for the retraction of the complete retraction arctics traditional model but also an independent investigation
4:30 am
over the fire that some police and also the most important thing is a democratic system of democratic political system and universal suffrage and one can't marry go ahead jump in there elizabeth 2 while look at the contacts that we can then jump back a little bit to june we 1st had a 1000000 people march on the 9th of june and demanding that the extradition bill be drawn and offer a 1000000 people to the streets we really had no response. from the government and the government had insisted on pushing forward with the 2nd reading the bill which was the next step in the legislative process that then eventually all went to plan and it wasn't until that fall when once they when things when clashes happen here gas was fired well bullets were fired that a few days later the government says we're now suspended. so it seems like the
4:31 am
government tacitly implicitly or not and intentionally or not assumes the absence of think want that peaceful protests will be a bit too tame for them to respond to anything. and i wonder if the government. needs to take responsibility for how much the escalation has come about because of the message and. what do you think. i think we need to also look. honestly i mean the government is definitely not doing well a lot of people used to i know that we've used to do you support kerry lie just like variance is one that moment but i think the bottom deuce is not only it happening in july it happened starting from what should a lot of like there was starting to seem like bars taken from the road census taken off and just like paddling and then later on there's gas bomb and that so we cannot
4:32 am
just say well there's only police but using bollards and not the not the other protesters i think one thing that we have from any camp it's just stop use violence which is why i'm so happy what's happening on sunday so nobody's using violence anymore and that it will actually be more powerful than using bouncers because the government can always responses say well this is about us i'm not going to sponsor and next thing you make a really good point i should say there for anyone who's following the hong kong protests i know who carry is if you're just stepping in county lamb is the chief executive officer back home have a look here on my laptop i recommend you follow all of our guests on twitter but mary hawley in particular has the scintillating details of what the protestors are up to how the protests are going mary says here h.k. protect the online stuff for protest care announced today that the mainland chinese police have confiscated as. the mount of goods including gas small helmets and the
4:33 am
own as a now raising funds so they can refund on field orders and said that they are closing shop maybe this speaks to how prepared the protesters are on what they feel that they are going up against is it the police that are going up against is it the police who is from. all is it government officials who are they battling right now i suppose really the movement has been a defense of one in the sense that it really started out by what people demonic that this would go that this will be what you're on because they see it as an attack on on freedoms and liberties so in that sense i think those have been really banding together and drawing on various different sectors of society and drawing on professional skills as you see with this hong kong attack website i spoke to. 2 of the members there are volunteers and they've really just come in together people blocking a marketing business on t.v. to put together this online store which i'm sure we can all appreciate. it's
4:34 am
complicated logistically so i think people are and they're just banding together to try and respond to all these various needs and seeing what needs to be done rather than going to want to and want to target and going back to this point and the point about this being a meatless movement i think that is kind of the most fascinating thing for me as an observer as a joe as observer so far is that it is such a. movement and you do see so many different. sectors of society trying to chime in and it has been truly a creative one also. nixie you mentioned the violence being on both sides and so it only being there to look at and there are some online who are saying some group of protestors have apologized for that and have said that that is not part of their movement or it shouldn't be one of their movement but others say that it came after police violence and i want to share this from sharon on twitter he says one of our
4:35 am
5 demands is to have an independent inquiry into police conduct hong kong police have been using excessive force against protesters in different protests since june and these need to be stopped do you see that happening the inquiry into police conduct. i think that might have and after what the normal procedure is to think governments are pretty strong on. at this moment on various occasions when you come up to talk points face me on well we have apparent system on looking into do you. think the police force any any complain that they have a little. not not like a bureau but they have this commission to talk about that that's going to look into is the intent and those sheets and all busy investigate that so i think the government to be standing strong on going on this normal procedure before that intervention in korea but i think on the other side when we're talking about
4:36 am
protests are we also new suit looking to a lot of the other hong kong as well of those of those who are actually against this protest i think one of the things that they are mainly focusing on is the amnesty part i talked to a lot of the friends including myself that doesn't agree with the amnesty on all the protests all of the virus or i think at this point as mentioned by various speakers here a lot of the violence we use excessive violence we use and those swanston represent the normal protesters and when the balance of using up it's up to this gas level maybe amnesty shouldn't be a solution to be one of the down monta os form. you know you really slam. me there that. the normal procedure of complaining police officers this is actually not not a realistic way that. protesters or even journalists who were hired by
4:37 am
police could follow because the purpose of this is now they are actually often hiding their own numbers are even hiding their appearance so that no one even like . or late protestors who are being a reasonably that's had by police couldn't identify couldn't complain anything and about the police officers that's why these kinds of so-called normal procedure to complain police officers fire like oh really useless and i think it's very you know you know i mean the same as saying there's no numbers of reference on the this man's who are you going to sue for you don't have a number and that's what the protesters are also hiding that they're not it's using mosques and i think. or it is because police weapons legally they're
4:38 am
holding guns legally they're holding tear gas legally and they're also illegal as we don't plan on doing the love polls all to balance spite of yes i think we have expanded into the situation i need to say i'm willing to listen to ground under such i'm going to. put a pause on this for now because without a thorough investigation and an unbiased investigation there is it's very difficult to prove what you're both saying unfortunately i do want to share some reporting that mary did with quartz in hong kong almost everyone everywhere including pay pets getting tear gassed let me show you how some protesters are dealing with this fascinating to watch this online thank you mary again for. sharing this so you don't even have to be able to read all the details are they just have to get a watch it we have to take ask canister. protesters approaching.
4:39 am
it's a very creative approach. fascinating tactics about how they are dealing with how the police are dealing with then mary is your reporting or a vase how would you sum up the police's approach right. i think undoubtedly we have seen. a large amount of he gets used a magnitude a little bit of magnitude more than what we saw in 2014 and then it's people who've just been caught in the fray have had to take into your gas right and i think there is a valley very valid question there are a few whether police really need to use this much tear gas and whether. it is achieving any of the intended effect because the protesters that they are looking at this 1st no longer respond. to tear gas because they've got masks and so at that point i think a lot of people being affected are the elderly it's hong kong it's very compact
4:40 am
that's a good place place and so it ends up seeping into homes. getting into each read it does add to the tension and spills over beyond just the protest site so i think undoubtedly there are a lot of. fear and anger being felt by by everyone and kind of what we've seen is the government saying everything needs to return to normal to begin the peace that we only man a thing or dialogue and then inquiry can happen but has there is a bit of a chicken and egg issue there because do you see tensions escalating because there is no dialogue and the government is saying. we cannot have dialogue until we're tensions really or could have really cool down so i think there needs to be some kind of at least some kind of show they think from both sides and so far i think
4:41 am
we've seen. very very peaceful march sunday i think that has been showcasing the protest inside we haven't quite seen the same from the government because the kind of immediate response we've been in the statement has been that the government . this public to the organized on sunday that was characterized as a more simply because technically there was no commission granted it was a march and that and also the. government and the police expressed regret much and the targeted in that slogan police misconduct so we're not seeing very much action i don't think and i think that's what's needed to push things forward and some very ugly interesting point that you made about the negotiations because we're hearing that from people online too so i want to share 2 comments one on twitter and the other on you tube this is troy on twitter who says you only negotiate with a party who has almost the same power as you do but in this case hong kong is not
4:42 am
china's equal therefore china will be stooping so low if they negotiate i believe there won't be any negotiation so keeping that in mind we've got this live on you tube robert says i still think china was playing the long game and knew that eventually china would take hong kong and get rid of the one country 2 systems that's of course the system that is in place now agnes keeping in mind those 2 comments about negotiations and moving this forward where do you see them going. they. were going to go after a kid xscape thing from their responsibility. so they're very real it's political problem that is created by actually government caring and caroline themselves and it is actually a response answer listen to the 5 demands of the protests as that is actually very very clear that we advocate or from june. i want to talk about before we wrap
4:43 am
up this conversation a very unusual press conference a media conference that was helped by the chinese ambassador to the united kingdom he's perfectly precipices a very rare read to take questions read to have those questions are answered in english so bang that all in mind this happened in last thursday and perhaps gives an indication of what might happen next have a look central government of china would never allowed a few violent offenders to jack hong kong dong a dangerous. dangerous a base should the situation in hong kong be curated further into unrest and control or the government of the hung can specialize administrative region the central government would not sit on its hands and watch we have
4:44 am
enough solutions and you know how our we can the limits of basic law to quell any and rest so we explain marian of solutions what could those solutions be. i think there's been a lot of strong signaling from the government from the chinese government relatedly the people's liberation army they've sent out nice to emotional videos now showing . how military and the military quelling. and protest as i think at the same time it seems to me that will be a very very closely the session one china to make the send in any troops not to mention that already troops station and hong kong and they have been there for well years so any i think it seems to me that all of this is. if i might say saber rattling and sending a strong signal that there is acute ability for china it's. it would be
4:45 am
a very very costly but everyone will show make up this from 80 floors who says it's in beijing's interested keep these protests about the extradition bill rather than the overall status of hong kong within the chinese state otherwise they risk this protest becoming it independence movement which is an interesting point in nixie in just one sentence because we're almost out of time here is it too late is this already an independence movement. i think. that's not the we see a lot of amnesty. like those black and accuse flights well it although it's not the are the times when i know it's just not in your home does it is not the independence no no i mean that's you know you guys out another point on the right there we have joseph i really think you guys out it really go or even and look at say what we started we were initiated on i and you'll find really kind i
4:46 am
always online at a day stream on twitter thank you ladies for being with us today c n x time take care. trust is fundamental to all our relationships we trust banks without money talk to us without really personal thought what happens to trust in a world to buy out. as more want to citizens and for us by these complex pieces of courage the question that comes up. can we trust. the 1st of
4:47 am
a 5 part series great question of the new trauma of digital the. trust me i'm an algorithm on a. set in the discussions policing cape town has struggled to regain its data gathered by and examining the headlines now under president putin russia is making a push to engage explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform motivate and inspire me but. it's almost 2nd nature and i also know what they see the world from a different perspective on al-jazeera. inmates learning from other inmates acquiring knowledge that could set them free. through legal education classes and mock tribunals their dedication has led to staggering results even in prison for 15 yards is all recent and that was said to be teaching
4:48 am
empowerment kenya part of the rebel education series on al-jazeera. else was this is the opportunity to understand the train a very different way where there is possibly a happens and we don't live up to. hello i'm maryam namazie in london with a quick look at the top stories now syrian forces saying they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel hell province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of khan. as happened just hours after an as strike now missed a turkish military convoy just a few kilometers away so you know all the reports now from beirut. a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind this air attack close to
4:49 am
a turkish military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that in the harbor town of moore ek and like the rebel controlled town of hunch a hole a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the frontlines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army were sent in message for some months to the front lines in the loop and the 2nd we have seem to be mourning the turks armisen mess of cold war 200 order to establish to base there and set regime for cutting 5 highway that highway
4:50 am
will allow the syrian government to clear their cities under its control and revive trade but me population centers like. along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. syrian regime did not enter. unshaken and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime from entering college and as usual the syrian regime targeted the turkish convoys turkey is a key current tool in this region as part of the deescalation agreement and we do not expect it to give up is the airstrike may have been a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as a violation of existing agreements and cooperation with russia and turkey's
4:51 am
deployment of troops seems to have been its own message to syria and its backer russia not to advance any further but many are asking are both sides just posturing or will the sharp escalation and tension turned the proxy battle in into a different kind of war so what their beirut a court in sudan has been told that the former president tomorrow bashir accepted $90000000.00 from saudi arabia's government a series on trial facing corruption charges is accused of possessing foreign currency and accepting bribes the military removed bashir from power in april after months of anti-government protests a new york city police officer involved in the chokehold death of a black man has been fired the decision was announced by the new york police commissioner 5 years after officer daniel until a.o. wrestled eric garnett to the ground in the video recording gone can be heard repeatedly saying he could not believe on his death sparked protests and inspired
4:52 am
the black lives matter movement. the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers a test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty but washington formally withdrew from the pact with russia earlier this month alleging moscow had been violating the cold war era treaty it plans to test and intermediate range ballistic missile in november. the white house is saying that u.s. president donald trump has spoken on the phone to india's prime minister narendra modi and stressed the need to reduce tensions with pakistan still weeks since new delhi will vote the autonomy of indian administered kashmir trump and modi also said to have discussed increasing trade and preventing what they described as cross border terrorism all those the top stories i'll have more news for you in about half an hour from now and of course as always our web site that's the place to go
4:53 am
al-jazeera dot com. you know what don't demonise you all by being down on him why at any moment borghi i mean him one of. us. in all. of us. 1
4:54 am
of not accord you let you know the whole lot well said the. 100 kilometers out of it if you breath because i know a lot of your must get moments. where you know you know how you. alone madi said you are one of the along masi am i that. what i thought. i saw in the fact that you are in a beautiful i mean. a play ball did one. just she with a newborn it's not a vehicle but of the more you know dumb won't be. surprised who volunteer movies but the tools in the pond some member. let me continue that you need to.
4:55 am
i know i'm colombo just about some additional level but you'll see it again this will you do if you're fast on the really mute. di. going to be easily if not always tell. people to keep you know book equipment in. illinois she too got. in some of the she on times in the bus some good music. jiffy empathy to be not done that is you. the press c.o.r.p. don't. push it i'm don't see this if it was the. good stuff but ot be
4:56 am
not bottle beat up. don't go sit in sampled yourself. didn't you see students all. allow michael i did. point goodness in the what you ate of the. roadies and your kids just you don't i don't i doubt it but c.b. piss on for years i love it did. they would it not. be said you did die. awful but you know i sample songs on few of the. local roads. this is the cake and eat it you know the decision is you a me and the sort of the thing you know. and all the. the.
4:57 am
tool be. says on the egypt who. did know. the liberals will. need the good. news of the moves he did the good the one. is will be easy. to miss the easy listening. is the only thing he. did this is a. market . that. the market was up on. the high school.
4:58 am
in the us what the other half said. if. i want. to see. a child. that. has. a shot at it can. kill us for the shabab. stuff looking to make sure. busy taught him kill himself a shot and democrats seem to. have all cut off.
4:59 am
would you tell us about that gordon could it was so you know a lot of the stuff. unless you have. been done follow the news doesn't mean that he's got and if that he. said i want to go. live. with you i'm going to pay for your silence. most of them no more than what i do. know about good news to them have gone bad. so many. people to do don't. want to tell mcneal what i mean and to do
5:00 am
a little for over the 4th on just don't be good to see you good to see if you disagree but you do your song well if. you're going to use the money then there should we have an issue and all. of us know what that was so that. the doctor should know that. and we'll. done that and got. the whole obama come up with that other bill is good for the moon. what i love most of all.
5:01 am
i would. not deny. it was him on a dispute the vehicle is on but he did so obviously if we had a fund of his own dishy days or don't. do it i don't need to bone on bone but it was a walk through that i mean. i mean you can start small that you. know yourself that morning did easy. as you know as you did the problem is a long list but you'll think this general but. we did instead you measured did 2 still coming down and i don't feel you know. what. i got from the last. thing.
5:02 am
anybody i mean needed all the new stuff i meet bob could that it be admitted that he did imagine you brought. a gun to each mall sunday monday and see what i mean he said to. me have you are have you ever have yourself. to deal. with your loved one is a little. long she's been 11 feet. i'm going to listen to a little in there violating going to the words you want to muzzle with. me on the telephone nobody would. know that.
5:03 am
it's just it's just. too damn pleasant which was. yesterday it was. obvious to me that this automatic toss of the plane. will look like. a whole bomb all sensitive almost class. war thank god for in that position yes i suppose it is still not one thing but. yes the national best. you can you know what. is on the dial.
5:04 am
his cell phone talk to the community young more. invisible less not on the truth is it a shot of his own split. a kitty kitty these more. whole milk is an awfully big a what is she. going to shandon off elf it. seems. like it could you get. i saw. them going to try to shut us up. so i thought of those you know 2 slimy are those i mean i'm appalled at the doris freeman do you not even this fear. if you did it when i thought he didn't know how the. kennedy
5:05 am
died he me i was the mean kind that in macau going to join my local to own a gun well what will you call their want to know for what i do want and that she had the solution but i'm too lazy to how do you know i'm in the unit been ish you know how to eat a lot of. the flesh was a vicious aid but when paul says snow son son just exist. there are. a set of you don't get all same and. a machine can comb. over this it was full. of hope and it up and put it aside exist.
5:06 am
on mars you see people fairly judge and she plays people not only. mr wolfe idealogy had bouts lethally yet belief in the new national police and we all do you know. said ms on. the new amazon say that since i'm awful doing what. i'm in a movie she sees it will be complete and kentucky infamy just some don't think of it more how much socialism going to and lean as we. see it out general chic to my family. if she can be. a yes she said the 2 countries a little bit of what. he's all said so to use or do you want to move to civilian
5:07 am
death don't hold what you do who wouldn't. create a relationship bucket. you might create i mean you know. if you go on the computer don't foresee any chord. the moment buck i mean a phone for a song she. sees you key does it be really deep that. assad. as you did just hear about the bus he says he's done it and bucky then it's me. he verna it cause it is old but it's still going to face it live and. but you know about the how that i just got it and they just got it and he. said you know the. but he said . i don't just watch this you don't be
5:08 am
a must see. a let them go to democracy years see i'm only. and. only the 1st song treat. all cause. it's course over here let me get the. irish assaults me to. really got so sick service is supposed to send me to so. savory may said good bye thank you dem on day and age and if you don't buy the book or tell me limbaugh voronin. of the coalition
5:09 am
was there what i'm calling the ome these 2 are. inevitably not child to go. on dorm. suicide be easier to do you see concussion explode in here. and she she did example of all. a she it u. g. . a b. . sky b. to have a. in it to you about it the music division of young but. it was. a on the cuff he did do got song the he had it on to bust up. on the gate him if. he. come so no. must be young. and maybe really 50 or more
5:10 am
they have the. theory of beauty kofi on a body i'm proud of you could. we should we don't give it to live on phones. really make sure you have a fear of it so if you've got to leave a concert on want to feed up to about it she could you quantify. that you tube is that week on this ultimate you don't song. a.p.m. assured me just a moment you were. a concept that can i last give a can continue focusing on nothing so how. do you decide something and feel you did and that he had me. you won't. see all that somebody else almost all sounds this other book also sit back maybe see if you need to tell a book. state bastable museum unquenchable don't bomb us it decreases the stamp on
5:11 am
the commission the men. who he body to marry look at your own for something reasonable as you go deep shit image in my body go read a book blame if you need to buy the monkey on top of the bridge shelley stump up today if you don't have a good did. you miss you ma. ship you my family only parts you want to have you showed you. let make a dem a deal on a need. i believe and you just released. always you could have been i think we'd done the songs and degrees. the good body if it is you can bet you'll go on appreciate it fixed or don't think. about long gone play don't please too if you defaulted to week good as you probably should do. the
5:12 am
concept goal is you can you bet some of us she on the other said with. us in the book is recalling the pool of course we showed you. do you with her was all the only media i mean this was expecting the. shit they were members to pull off a bus saying oh yes she it they all come and also i will contact. them all she beats me you say it will wake up to us a bit all of us to get if it all to finish the civil war since enough about you go for the local mall see whatever you don't go to bed afterwards on the city can tell the. truth to have all. the news even those investing the time all the dust is. just the measure god will call her the flash. team is going to play don't speak also call
5:13 am
elizabeth banks here do you have a problem i said. is it you could. spend the device and then yes she. scenario because of it it will get but just in it is and yet so many. use it about to go dont says all of us well do you mean if we still are yes you know single call us well you know that thought is since you are using. so there you will see in the call me a go all keep the memory of the pretty equal. in so can they have had if any of what you say we did it is because it is true that we should be. if you. want all the. good a mob you can get if you don't cause as you go more the. more as. dick. was just.
5:14 am
this accounting must came. in that. movie don't get called but. if you do have a good dog said you know goodies as you'll give me away you. son of all mean if. he. would let some of the. things that you. don't want to. see. if you're not on duty if you knew someone say. something i used to sit down don't.
5:15 am
just make a point. then if you did. this so you can just say you. know you're going to. miss it you know more than the whole if you. see. me real doesn't deal. with it if he's a year. so again. this was not that it isn't unique. to say would you do as you do you mean. i'm going to you. would i pretty t. get a song. called idea most a d.j. p.t.
5:16 am
. and then i mean the ones in the obsolete market i don't know what i don't want to eat you can eat candy did they did i don't see veins that cause we don't want to embrace them all see because you go new seashell is unique but don't need them for my joints i got bored he's going to hook. what are they going we want as your boss because you have you as you do as a dickhead he did me feel a small. bottle about that you should diesel be. relieved because he has also said that every survey that we used to have them all. not only shows you made money. so that i don't need to see many tell you except i need a 0 on the. street or. part
5:17 am
. with every. 67 words that spelled promise for one people. but disaster for another. the bled to be establishment of
5:18 am
a jewish homeland at the expense of the palestinians. the story of the british declaration that changed the middle east for seeds of discord on al-jazeera. hand. hello i'm in london with just a quick look at the headlines now syrian forces saying they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of concha couldn't this just hours after an ass strike now really missed a turkish military convoy just a few can almost as a way it's one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian turkish government forces during the 8 year war. a court in sudan considering corruption
5:19 am
charges against former president tomorrow bashir has heard that he told investigators saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars jere in the course of his presidency the money was not included in the country's financial records. in all the headlines a new police officer involved in the chokehold death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired a video recording showed officer daniel until a 0 wrestling gone out to the ground gone a can be heard repeatedly saying he could not breathe his death sparked protests of a race and police use of force and inspired the black lives mass and movement elizondo brings us the reaction now from new york one of eric garner 6 children spoke after the decision was announced and she said that the family was very pleased that it was the right decision to fire the officer daniel penta layo but they said while they were happy with it that it should have happened 5 years ago they thought that the officer should have been fired almost immediately after the
5:20 am
death of eric garner now on the other side you had the police union came out and just absolutely blasted this decision. the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with a range of more than $500.00 kilo the test would have been banned under the intermediate range. but washington withdrew from the 1907 pact with russia. alleging that violating the cold war era it passed a test an intermediate range ballistic missile. and at the white house is saying the us president donald trump has spoken on the phone to india's prime minister. and stressed the need to reduce tensions with. its 2 weeks. to kashmir. increasing trade and preventing what they described as possible to terrorism. in 25 minutes time join us.
5:21 am
5:22 am
if we knew some of the need of false and very strong on the penalty for this and the benefit yet motions that libya on the court said. the. video game is an investigation that we follow you down the country. good luck giving me good about. how easy it down for you as begun yet. mosher to know. on the. on the back even. if you don't move can go fly one of the probably man himself still me. on the bank. if watch as he is there was george
5:23 am
if you could. move him objects on the walls. did you do. that for him pretty much get was have you. gotten me. i think it. should nothing i have. been saying. the sun. and sand success. it's just. one of. the body bags of this since you got so freezing. through november. they did you screw
5:24 am
you story more. real lou are all burned devoid you know goes on when we know best summit because then divide among. the. point don't need bush difficulties. a best time to see all the old things you just saw again while select the trial to reach. the highest the physical or unusual that they funded the sense. that i'm poor i left the best something we had to nearly always by those. people this is beck and i will have the piano. i said lucy for more but we should be limited to modern family opinion on for all
5:25 am
their brood see will do the aborted if she does she'll be a white barely budged. now and of course as immediate on the levy passed on in deja vu known to the lazy to do it all falls it as a. liberal being. a summer was gone she cheated on television played a wild animal that you also wish you had a companion for a lead on assault so you had 2 more in the salsa do it was all she. did if you dream about still do it will be give each was healed if your mate is still. on glee . gave us all more yoni of the on one day meet sang saw the situation obey and he's on the news or it will be today thought it was. the fear for the. kids cause of would you. feel to
5:26 am
polynomial for the. summer she's the result of what is going to court concurred here of us on the whole it is moving towards or to do you over go here but to keep what you were given the arterial road you would as a teacher let me see to you live it more that of a huge star some. people to be 0 over with you you can choose what you're going to shoot. more on the good ship to be there the more you have declared what did i show you how does that mean. sit there vs let in what is the idea of god can't you want his coffee. can gain him all his goldfish oh yeah the boss i don't think it's just that he. still was on the noggin he.
5:27 am
had the kid if you meet that song with your little good there. little's. if. there is risk to the shire suggested. no threat to their commute. shifts did it down. so when i've been buddies you don't know what we'll do come on the do quite young only for bob be good at that bend that want to be good down to bridgeport you'll. be our border hookey have you the zone i'm led to all about it on the design good idea only if you'll be dealing of the problem. since you know me to draw people out give it in the flow of. the decisions almost your own journeys that will be different from. shall the sun.
5:28 am
and the whole cover. all the whole. world to the most. of us a work of that tissue no movement no exam or tell us you might give up the motion to publish don't come of it if it's out. levee has how they had it almost all almost all look you know there's a mystery woman without a hole in the middle of what the 1st adult was occurring which i didn't mean to film how did i i'm what i do i don't watch it we have to sort of. yes i don't want anybody to believe me and if you tell a very little of it never mind your own bit. about i didn't want to much of a good cover up doesn't she either for top the other would be a healthy or. not. definitive compass yes. some bias is going to just form tell me at best from those who didn't approve it my
5:29 am
muscles and them would never join the photos you don't pretend she gave a good of value of a body to i do she said to be part of vashti these at me. like a little beyond the victim when i meet. yvonne. i do these you do glee live if lucky to be made a viewer of clunky and down to v. so. she was every album do need what would you want to meet new novel bob i'm going into the do fun i think on the road to a concrete overlook to the 11 have to do them or are. you mom all share best all who gone are you doing minimal share best.
5:30 am
that factional media. is even more. of only that don't argue superdome comodo must today d.s.'s need to force women just to bitch or something of this and other men solutions do come or do you see them of the cubano plea did you. see hydrogen easy you see she knew what she did about the one of the installers. we're going to put to good use to. all of us would. be a list of some. that .
5:31 am
i would say like effective more. reason. to do so on. we are in. fear. on ne. ne ne no that that you.
5:32 am
meant that there. is. like lethal you know to share best some all presumably cafes are on the air that we just. liberated. from with a b. do. visit there you know it was with us and you call him. he took you from. seed. measure food keep us you. see. the. key to all of.
5:33 am
these you know i want to get into. it given a fair way to tell you no evil to minorities to cause. everything your own sort of. i thought i could have you shall do would succumb to sex at the fair in these. me sit. there. and then more can. frame on me for more. i don't like to. see the. office to collect the. posts when i did the maximum damage.
5:34 am
to the. who all knew all. for us on the reason there was. some iraqi internet around the restart that actually mama she could use a live view reading a cd on it i thought that this is a fallacy about it apparently the leverage just of the 2nd thought not absolutely going to the left was that if the reason that rights are not life. is unfair there's a boss clause and the plays on why you are in the pool cook us and also at the fair can on the top of the piece of the list 2nd in the show about some scenes i do when you're talking to me i mean they need to go have i think that you know system
5:35 am
adalius soon as you can hear. all. the. lumpy upbeat mood bear heard about. the money. in. his own ticket count so he didn't. know which was the hosts this is so why in the slum may suck when demi. gnocchi on economics a concept of addition. in conception madame loom. in good discipline madame through. the shop you needed them beat out if
5:36 am
you're on. the i mean don't they bombard the head of vickie's you don't play we gone live is own the amount on your dog they got value. 50 they may be out there for a moment toshiba but you know what. season god given you we would see you know. there could be this young was. this is going to be. up to the love i lean on bob but how do you know bob. the middle of the hospital. under. every move while one dances a little of altered among. different hans's. conditionals rouge wildernesses
5:37 am
to come although or i'm sure she will some because it is of. dog. or useful to hardcore birds it's all because going for to be nor do. the more you will toward softly this will freeze. will freeze or deformed deval who is also to some. of the more you probably you. will. all sing a jihad communal saying you know too much if there is. a new that will is see. may if it is more him at the top of the 2 are jed's. up by the fall don't be is it the priest coming just joy. born with this day off it is very point.
5:38 am
the muslim will keep the vision will keep it in mind that my lad the demand. clueless we might be ok. because it was jesus was in our society more do this and so he did her best on souter is jerry where. no. one will get it don't be a multi-year form one term unto this me at quote you think it almost. becomes you that would be hit with to see john p. d. a vehicle we don't know who's on there is on point news on refer the other one. via. this on tend the right man committee that i'm sure on the news on news on this sort
5:39 am
of it is on phone of course it is on. she built a machine gun you do something. you. and a ton. bed up the law. stuff was sound law till today sun shines just toffees. fair they're. related to ship
5:40 am
an expose your own ears on can you bust on it that's all the. child jeff approach to the funds immense to help then. if you can for the talk to. your vision did you get to post to you. on the field just says he's. the 2nd button you're a kook spears it is a. game of if you sucked it would be bended to my lips as you build your own brother was it much at all did. you have to be on top. was on video you see quantum i said. believe it or a deal is extent at least give it and you don't use it on your theory.
5:41 am
he's going to put in a bomb food of what you wrote. you know my dad content up you know what unions it. would be silly anymore to a new 3 g. at all vehicle. we say you expose the exposure this would set off there was a mall you and all but t.c.p. to show. he. die. in mini me.
5:42 am
movies abdurrahman a boob job. don't be my hero. for. democracy. continetti be it on the wall to movie. for this or that i said did you. say i vaguely recall the i've done. a. good to see it go plan on actual show gorgias lot going on of am really are some of his 1000000 hardy i'm so lucky and you are sure that you all
5:43 am
. live so that you take. your own up to do that they wanted you to sort of go. they did also but you might have a. e.q. needed to decode d.v.d. see if any will be given you did. just to book the film so the day but you won't get on the. it don't be used to that. there will be the fee. for visas.
5:44 am
where. it will. mean. there was not a law in the us and that's now monday and i do not have actual feet. to look. they've got it all but he said. very disappointed. on though of. what happened a week after we moved. the beauty that's here. said it toshiba. that did it was on set. i think. way. on the d.v.d. or not the results of push it. out of the 6 b.
5:45 am
of my father did he sell it up. to you know how to feel the auto if you want to go for 5 you know to be is going to fall off it. could just walk. to other they've got to see those a total of what. i do know about you know. how that money. could buy some of your shit able to do that if you just. lay your daughter don't know what i mean i mean yeah.
5:46 am
hello again welcome back to international weather forecasts we are seeing a lot of weather here across parts of southeastern australia all dealing to a winter storm that is making its way through right now the storm system is going to be entering into the tasman sea but behind it we're still going to be picking up a lot of cold air pushing across parts of tasmania as well as into victoria here on tuesday as well as into wednesday in the high elevations it is going to be turning to snow in the overnight hours so watch that very carefully but we're going to be seeing those temperatures during the day rebound to about 10 degrees for hobart maybe 14 degrees over here for melbourne or for perth you can be seen quite nice
5:47 am
conditions winds are coming out of the northeast dry for you and plenty of sun with attempt to there of 22 degrees for the north in the south island of new zealand over the next few days things are going to be getting worse we're going to be seeing a lot of rain we're going to see a lot of winds storm system approaches out of the tasman sea high elevation snow is going to be a problem as well as you can see on the south island right there for christchurch though it is going to be a day of 13 degrees and as we go towards wednesday those temperatures drop to about 11 and auckland at 13 degrees there and then very quickly across parts of japan it is going to be quite rainy over the next few days it's not going to stop for many areas but for tokyo we do expect to see $29.00 degrees for you in sendai a temper of $24.00. trust is fundamental to all our relationships we trust banks without money talk to us without really personal touch but what happens to trust in a world driven by al. as more want to citizens and for us by these complex pieces
5:48 am
of code the question that comes back is inevitable can we trust our lives in the 1st of a 5 part series great question of the neutrality of digital. trust me i'm an algorithm on a job. 0 . hello i'm ari i'm the mozzie this is the news hour live from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. rising tensions in northwest syria as turkey condemns a government as strike that narron missed its army convoy. a new york police officer is fired 5 years after the chokehold death of an unarmed man which led to
5:49 am
the black lives matter movement. evidence that sudan's deposed president tomorrow bashir received $90000000.00 from the saudi royal family as his corruption trial gets under way. the name is more troops. and the native american man who started his political career and his dining room but has his sights firmly set on the white house. for manchester united drop the 1st points of the new english premier league season. this is a penalty has the red devils draw one all against wolves. welcome to the program out top story syrian forces saying they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of concha kuhn well this happened just hours after an as strike now
5:50 am
really missed a turkish military convoy just a few kilometers away it's one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian turkish government forces during the 8 year war so honda reports now from beirut. a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind this air attack close to a turkish military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that to. how about a town of more eck and like the rebel controlled town of honshu a whole a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the front lines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army
5:51 am
were sent in massive force amounts to the front lines and and the 2nd we have seen to be mourning the turks armisen mess of com war 2 hunchy of all the 2 established there and. cutting 5 highway that highway will allow the syrian government to kill their cities under its control and revive trade but many population centers like lie along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. syrian regime did not enter haunch a clear and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime from entering college shakily and as
5:52 am
usual the syrian regime targeted the turkish convoy turkey is a key guarantor in this region as part of the deescalation equipment and we do not expect it to give up the airstrike may have been a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as a violation of existing agreements and cooperation with russia and turkey's deployment of troops seems to have been its own message to syria and its backer russia not to advance any further but many are asking are both sides just posturing or will the sharp escalation and tension turn the proxy battle in into a different kind of war so what are al-jazeera beirut. well joining me now in the studio is head of the middle east and north africa program at the think tank here in london chatham house what does the attack on the turkish military convoy perhaps indicate about syrian government intentions and at least we know the government said they want to reassert their control of the entire territory but is that what
5:53 am
they're trying to do right now it's going to be very difficult for the syrian army and russia to take back the governor at this is one of the largest regions and most densely populated regions and full of different kinds of rebel groups so they are not going to be able to take hits anytime soon however they can try to inflict damage mainly against civilians which has been intensifying over the past few weeks and also they're now sending a message to turkey which is the most influential external actor in that area to say also don't get too comfortable what does turkey do now because of course there was this truce involving. damascus and turkey was meant to separate groups like. h.t.s. from some of the other rebels now they haven't done that the syrian government is now arguing that that affected effectively gives them a pretext to stage perhaps
5:54 am
a wide scale offensive and let now yeah but ironically this attack that has just happened is pushing all these different rebel groups that are actually in competition with one another to get together and float retaliation so in a way this is achieving the opposite of what the regime of bashar assad and russia want if they saw this attack is going to push. to become weak in fact it's making all these different tribal groups rethink their own relationship with one another and cooperate against their common enemy which is the syrian government but it's not clear how the region will be able to win. stan the firepower of the russians we know that violence has been escalating in the region and you have one to 23000000 civilians then now is it possible for them to be granted any sort of safe passage i mean is there some kind of route out for them
5:55 am
well unfortunately what we're seeing now is an attempt at cutting off their routes out there is a very important highway that runs all the way from aleppo down to the south it's processed through how many bosses through homes that buses through the mascot's and goes all the way down to the jordanian border and the turkish convoy was heading in the direction of that highway and if the syrian regime and russia captured this highway they would basically split areas this is the ellen choice yes i which is crucial economically to the country which is what it wants it absolutely if they manage to take it then they would split the areas controlled by the rebels into 2 and also the areas under turkish influence into 2 and the regime in russia has been systematically since last year trying to take back parts of this highway so we are talking about this incident being of a much larger picture for the regime in russia thank you very much appreciate you
5:56 am
coming in to speak to us lina from chatham house well in other developments syrian opposition forces as saying a russian general has died in a long range missile attack dogs in a government and base rockets were launched on and then in military air base in the syrian port city of latakia it's believed the general was the supervisor of. on province has yet to comment on the strike. now who are all the headline story this hour new york city police officer involved in the chokehold death of a black man has been fired the decision was announced by the new york police commissioner 5 he is off to officer daniel until they are wrestled eric bana to the ground in the video recording gone a can be heard repeatedly saying he could not breathe on his death sparked protests over rice and police use of force and inspired the black lives matter movement. in white p.d. court ruled that while certainly not preferable that hold was acceptable during that brief moment in time because the risk of falling through the window was so
5:57 am
high but that exemption circumstance no longer existed the court found with officer panta lawyer mr garner moved to the ground as mr garnet balanced himself on the sidewalk on his hands and knees deputy commissioner of trials rosemarie maldonado found that officer pandal aoe consciously disregarded the substantial an unjustifiable risk of maneuver explicitly prohibited by the department he found that during a struggle of japan to lal had the opportunity to readjust his grip from a primitive choke hold to a less lethal alternative but did not make use of that opportunity. joins me live now from tell of tell us 1st about reaction to this decision. yeah there's been 2 different kinds of reactions here 1st we heard from the family of eric garner and they have a little bit of mixed feelings on one side they feel. thankful that this officer
5:58 am
was finally fired there's a little bit of justice they said that was done there but they also feel as though that this should have been done many years ago they feel justice was very slow in this case and they feel that also the family members including the mother who just spoke recently in a few minutes ago as well as the one of his daughters as well that other officers that were there on the scene that they claim covered up for panta layo should also be held accountable but on the other side you have the police union that were absolutely furious about this decision they say that the pencil alien officer did nothing wrong he was just trying to subdue eric gardner had no intention of hurting him let alone killing him and that. the suspect gardner should have not resisted arrest they say that this is a non no confidence vote against the mayor and the police commissioner they feel as though you know city police officers are not treated fairly here that so you have 2
5:59 am
very different opinions from the family on one side and on the other side of the police union that supports the officer why did it take so long to reach a decision on the firing of office up until. yeah well you have differing opinions on if he should have been fired i think everybody agrees that this took way too long there's a whole host of reasons why but the police department decided to wait until all of the prosecutors could review all the evidence to see if any charges would be filed for example a state grand jury looked into this it took them a long time but they alternately decided not to pursue any charges federal prosecutors as well looked into this case to see if there are any human rights violations that they could bring into this as well and the justice department said they would not bring any cases against panta layo that took a very very long time and then there was an internal review of the whole matter and it just took 5 years everyone agrees it took way too long in the police
6:00 am
commissioner james o'neill actually said that was a major regret he said in the future the new york city police department is going to make quicker judgments are going to make decisions on officers that are facing. potential wrongdoing much sooner because this went on way too long thank you very much from new york gabriel on his own day. the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces tracy but washington formally withdrew from that landmark 987 pact with russia this month alleging moscow had been in violation of cold war era treaty it plans to test an intermediate range ballistic missile in november. also i have for you on this news hour from london human rights concerns over pelikan injury suffered by kashmiris at the hands of indian security forces. an opportunity for peace the french president sits down with russia's vladimir
6:01 am
putin and calls for an end to the conflict in ukraine and then later a footballer who swapping barcelona for new start up. now sudan's former president tomorrow bashir told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency which were not included in the country's financial records revelation came during the shares 1st court hearing on corruption and bribery charges since he was deposed by the military in april it will morgan has more now from the capital. he was once feared and guarded as the head of the country now sudan's former president on what it was here is under a different guard as he appears in court to face sobered criminal charges which include illegal possession of foreign currency and bribery investigators say they found more than $130000000.00 in his house days after the military deposed him in
6:02 am
april. presenting the head of a country to trial proves that there is a rule of law in the country and that no one is above the law this message is not just for the ousted government but the incoming government the case will resume next week we can't tell you what the outcome will be but we can say that we are assured that the case is going in the favor of the defendant the court heard that bashir admitted to receiving $90000000.00 from saudi arabia he also admitted to receiving millions more from the ruler of the united arab emirates. during his time as president bashir is sent sudanese soldiers to fight alongside the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen but investigators say the former president said he doesn't know how the money he received was spent nor did he follow up on its use he was also charged in may for inciting to kill protesters in demonstrations that started in december over the rising cost of bread which quickly turned into
6:03 am
a nationwide anti-government movement those charges are yet to be heard in court charges not addressed are charges that are brought against him by the international criminal court which involve work crimes crimes against humanity and genocide the transition military council that ousted him said that they will wait until a transitional government is formed and an independent and impartial judiciary is set up and that body will be the one to determine whether the former president should be tried for these crimes and if he is whether he's guilty or innocent. more than 300000 people have been killed in the western region of darfur since 2003 and more than 3000000 displaced international experts say there are many reasons as to why bashir isn't likely to be handed to the international criminal court. recent research demonstrates. warrant of arrest released by the international court would do not really. provide incentives for a peaceful solution the current transitional government is composed also by many
6:04 am
who are deeply dissipated allegedly of course in the mosque because the late seems that those are 3 so we should start asking the question on whether the just used claim the i.c.c. could bring to sudan wouldn't be a plus sagal justice but after 30 years in power with immunity from any kind of prosecution for people in sudan the corruption charges are about to start to justice than one atone for the morgan under their. yeah and famine as the secretary general of the international association of democratic lawyers joins me live via skype from brussels he was one of africa's longest serving leaders for. a share to now stand trial is enormously significant for the rule of law in the country and certainly for those who suffered from past abuses but will this trial be free and fast. well that's of course very difficult to say at this stage but i
6:05 am
think it's very important that this trial gus take place. it's not very often we don't see very often a situation where a former head of state. is charged and prosecuted for accepting bribes and for personal enrichment and especially in the context of this area i think it's very important that justice is done on a matter of. well bribes with the petro dollars because it's very clear that the petrol monarchy one day basis bribes the heads of state that is not free of charge and so such broad lot of violation of the independence and the sovereignty of the country and of the people when they are paid to the heads of state so i think it's very important that saddam thus conduct this trial and thus investigate this question of bribes and this could set a precedent of course there is always
6:06 am
a danger of politically biased trials. against former heads of state. we've seen some trials or pursue their trials in latin america on corruption charges for example against former president lula from brazil which did not meet the standards or the highest possible standards and which did not. result is a tell me what it is if you raise a very interesting point because these are charges of corruption but if there are concerns about a domestic trial not meeting the standards possibly what happens when he stands trial for more serious offenses that supposed to come later when there's a civilian led government in the country but what are your expectations of that. well actually. i'm i hope that it will be possible to. also try these aspects human rights violations in saddam it's of course very difficult
6:07 am
in a crisis situation like this when a regime is toppled then another government comes in it's very difficult to set up an independent justice but if such a trial. can be conducted in saddam it's i think much more to be preferred than a trial in an international court because we've seen that the international courts are not truly a very big success and so the local court is of course one that depends very much of what you need to be better frame to stand international trial than to go through a flawed trial inside the country particularly the judiciary is not independent. well the whole question there is whether the international court the international criminal court could have an independent view on that. from my experience the
6:08 am
international criminal court hasn't proven that it really is independent from i would say geo political interests at this stage and so if saddam is capable of conducting such an independent trial possibly with international assistance and help it would be very important because international law anyhow for seize the principle of serbs of geraghty which means that the priority should be to the local court because the local court is always in a much better position to assess the evidence to look at all busy the elements of the context of the crimes that were committed the local court is in a much better position the question there is of course will the new sudanese government be able to set up an independent judiciary offers all necessary guarantees if yes it would be much better to have a dr in sudan that they have a drone in an international court thank you very much for sharing your expertise
6:09 am
with us and famine sector general the international association of democratic lawyers joining us from brazil for having me the white house is saying u.s. president on a trumpet spoken on the phone to india's prime minister narendra modi and stressed the need to reduce tensions with pakistan its 2 week since new delhi her vote the autonomy of indian and minister kashmir trump and modi also said to have discussed etc discussed increasing trade and preventing what i described as a process what a terrible. despite the easing of some restrictions in indian m.-s. of kashmir there are still concerns about human rights abuses and a number of civilians are saying they have been targeted by indian forces during a lockdown al-jazeera spoke to 2 people who suffered life changing injuries and shall vara has more from new delhi. mohammad saw they may never regained his vision in one of his eyes he says he was hit by pellets fired by an indian soldier right off he stepped out of his local mosque both of them. everything was normal there
6:10 am
were no protests security forces chased us away and fired pellets at us one more person older than me was also injured he was discharged from hospital yesterday. mom of the queues a security forces an indian administered kashmir of targeting. he shows us his back with scars of what he says a pellet injuries. i earlier this month thousands here defied restrictions imposed by the authorities and protested against the indian government's decision to revoke autonomy. this 17 year old was one of them i mean. we had no intentions to bed stone but the police were attacked and several boys were injured including me i was hit on the right side of my body by barely. even though indian administered kashmir has been under lockdown for nearly 2 weeks. people have come out in protest in some cases the government
6:11 am
has responded with force even admitting that a few people have been injured in the recent crisis. they shot the nigger is a member of the biggest hindu group in india that supports the governing party he says the government has used minimal force during the last 2 weeks if you have an option to fire drill bullets and if you have to fire pellet guns then obviously we'll choose the letter and the supreme court of india was very clear that in order to control law and order situation you must use minimum force in the force instance and then use the extreme forces analyst. disagrees the question is that does use of guns blending of children blending of men is a justifiable self-defense by the armed forces against in 2016 the indian government said it would replace pellet guns with a less lethal weapon or on the ground in india that this is this means security
6:12 am
forces are still using them against those protesting over new delhi's decision to revoke autonomy. the fear is that if the protests continue in the coming days or months so will the pellet injuries on al-jazeera new delhi. as tension increases over the disputed kashmir region the term for pakistan's powerful army chief has been extended for 3 years a prominent opposition leader the foreign minister and the president of pakistan administered kashmir expressed their views in a talk to al jazeera special. attack on press freedoms in occupied kashmir i wish i was speaking from a moral ground moral high ground and i would be speaking from our high ground of my own government was not restricting some human rights and media freedoms in pakistan but having said that we can't equate our concerns about the curtailment of democracy in pakistan with
6:13 am
a military occupation by an extremist government by the man seen as the butcher of good run my biggest fear is. the. genocide that can take place on the inside of it we have no evidence as you. open up open up you hear did anybody stop you you went to the elysee you made people you into and we will be allow you there because why don't you attempt and try after having been here. and make a request to the indian side and let them allow you to go to sri no good to me to dealership over there will be allow you i doubt it so you have nothing to fear you have nothing to hide is that your concern that these 2 nuclear neighbors could go to war because you would be essentially on the front lines if that happens that anything can happen there can be miscalculations but before miscalculations india
6:14 am
has taken escalatory steps in february this year indian prime minister had threatened pakistan with the use of nuclear weapons and at that time we had said that he doesn't know what he's talking about but if he takes that step. then that would mean a nuclear armageddon. a nuclear winter north. but for the entire world and you can watch that special episode of talk to al-jazeera at these times on tuesday and wednesday much more still ahead on the program for you including. i remember shaking with fear when checkpoints appeared in the small village of. chasing girls everywhere. in the u.s. congresswoman denied entry to israel recalls painful memories of life in the occupied palestinian territories. after 4 decades of the
6:15 am
hands of a former nazi victims a set to the government for damages and floyd mayweather denies rumors he's about to fight an old nemesis. hello again welcome back to international weather forecasts were here on tuesday we're going to be seeing a lot of active weather and terms of severe weather here across parts of central and western europe notice the rain right here across the area well in that rain we do expect to see those thunderstorms to develop a continuation really of what we saw on monday evening so in the sun the storms expect to see some gusty winds some hail as well maybe even some localized flooding across the area now here across the northwestern part of europe we are going to see a nother system coming in out of the atlantic and this one right here is going to bring some very gusty winds across northern ireland ireland as well as into
6:16 am
scotland on wednesday for london though really not looking too bad we're going to be seeing your conditions really deteriorate as we go towards wednesday evening but windy conditions and rain could be a problem as we go towards the end of the week well here across another part of africa things are looking quite dry across much of the area temperatures are quite seasonable for this time of year we're going to see tunis at about $34.00 degrees there coming up to about $35.00 degrees and algiers with attempt a few of $29.00 and across central africa we are going to sing plenty of rain across much of parts of nigeria over the next few days lagos is going to be seeing some heavy rain as well with $28.00 degrees in the forecast across it's going to be rainy as well with a temperature of 28. well if we cannot have probably seen my government was certainly not allow britain to control the french palestine would be an outrage but then we need to find another solution before we come to blows over
6:17 am
a century ago britain and france made the secret deal that changed the shape of the middle east and so. now we can draw on the. psych's pekoe lines in the sand on just the. the growing up in the united states i learned that the 1st amendment is really key to be able to bring them up to the challenge is going to be the men and women to the resources that are available but it's an al-jazeera story to me is that we just don't tell you what the subject of the story wants to know the government is not going to do the one thing the demonstrators want to apologize for what al-jazeera does we ask the questions so that we can get closer to the truth.
6:18 am
a quick look at the headlines now and as strike in syria has now really missed a turkish military convoy traveling through opposition controlled illit province meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint and it led to move which would give them access to the strategic town the town of concha could. the new york police officer involved in the chokehold death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired a video recording showed officer daniel until they are wrestling gone to the ground on a can be out repeatedly saying he could not agree. and a court in sudan considering corruption charges against former president tomorrow bashir is heard he told investigators that saudi arabia's oil family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency the money was not included in the country's financial records. a u.s.
6:19 am
congresswoman who was denied entry to israel because of her support for a global boycott movement has spoken about life in the occupied palestinian territories as she did today was laid to offered and tree on humanitarian grounds to see her grandmother but she says she turned it down because of oppressive conditions does designed to humiliate today has been speaking in minnesota with several other activists who have faced similar travel restrictions as a young girl visiting palestine to see my grandparents and extended family i watched as my mother had to go to do human checkpoints. i remember shaking with fear when checkpoints appeared in the small village of barefooted for chasing guns everywhere i remember visiting east jerusalem with my very husband and him escorted scored off the bus although he was a united states citizen just so security forces could have arrest him all i can do
6:20 am
. as my city's granddaughter as the as the granddaughter of a woman who lives in our keep our territories to elevate her voice by exposing the truth the only way i know how as my detroit public schools teachers taught me by humanizing the pain of oppression well john hendren is live for us in washington and obviously there are very emotional recollection from her she did today about life in the occupied territories what else did she have to say about the travel restrictions. well you heard those that statement was really among the most powerful there were there were a number of people there from various organizations talking about how they had similar experiences in the congresswoman who held this news conference said that the purpose was to humanize the cost of the israeli occupation and there was story after story on omar said we give more than $3000000000.00 a year to israel meaning the u.s.
6:21 am
does but denying a visit to duly elected members of congress is not consistent with being an ally and you want to criticize president trump who tweeted out that it would be a weakness for israel to let 2 members of congress in he said she said by enlisting a foreign power to take action against 2 american citizens let alone elected members of congress mr trump crossed a line that other presidents have not crossed also rashid it's we who you saw speaking there earlier said history has a habit of repeating itself and she talked about a previous michigan member of congress who was denied a visa to go to apartheid south africa drawing a parallel there but the difference there she said was that her government his government supported him and eventually got him access to their so there was a lot of emotion there a lot of people talking about negative experiences in the whole the bottom line there was to say that this doesn't just happen to us members of congress it happens
6:22 am
to a number of people trying to enter israel every year now in the last the decision by benjamin nessie and his government the government how could it potentially impact. support among us will make his in congress for israel and also what's been the wider public reaction that the u.s. . well it's interesting in congress support for israel was usually a bipartisan thing and now what's happened is it's become politicized under trump and netanyahu whereas democrats seem more inclined to be critical of the israeli government part of that is the changing makeup of the united states we've got a lot more people from the middle east particularly in areas like minnesota and michigan but also the opinions have simply hardened as this country has become increasingly polarized with the harsh political record rhetoric that starts from the white house where we got
6:23 am
a statement today saying congresswoman rashid its lead been omar have a well documented history of anti semitic comments anti semitic social media posts and you semantic relationships that was from white house spokesman hogan gidley today so pinions have really hardened here i don't think a lot of minds are being changed thank you very much john hendren in washington that he does a france and russia have indicated a new round of talks might be on the table to end the conflict in ukraine that demand putin said that was cause for optimism jaring a meeting with the french president some home in the south of france. glad to meet putin landed at the medieval break or sol fort emmanuel mackerel summer residence on the mediterranean sea the fridge president said he hoped to persuade the russian leader to help in fighting in eastern ukraine mackerel said ukraine's new president. promised to end the conflict of food fresh russian backed
6:24 am
fighters and ukrainian forces of the no war since russia annexed crimea in 204020 the choices made by president. i think regions the situation put us spoken to him several times in recent weeks and it's a you put energy for us to revisit this issue ation to exchange and prepare future meetings in which president chinchilla merkel we hope for a new summit in the nominee format in the coming weeks the 2 leaders seem to make progress on ukraine putin told mackerel there was cause for optimism but there was little common ground on syria the russian leader rebuffed my calls demand that syria's moscow backed regime stop bombing the it lip region really there have been several attempts to attack or him may mean airbus from the area would leap that's why we support the efforts of the syrian army 2 and terrorist threats in the lip. the talks come as macro prepares to who still does from the group of 7 nations
6:25 am
including donald trump the g 7 was the g. 8 until russia was excluded in the crimea the timing of this meeting just days before the g. 7 summit is significant macro wants to highlight france's ability to talk to all sides bolster his country's standing on the international stage and despite the clear differences between paris and moscow michael says it's important to keep dialogue with russia open. even though russia is not in the g 8 today's genius even in a way it was never totally excluded because political leaders realize that they can't totally ignore russia's position as a world power. micros attempts to reach out to president putin could be a risk the russian leaders proved uncompromising in the past but the french president hopes his efforts could lead to brokering peace in ukraine and ending europe's only war. i'll just sirrah fort france.
6:26 am
russia is to investigate alleged foreign interference in its upcoming local elections in moscow it's concerned that foreign meddling has been encouraging unauthorized rallies step passing reports now from the russian capital. protest on the streets of moscow 6 weeks in a row brought an up or up and to the russian parliament summer recess. held an emergency session and set up an investigative commission. i'm sure that we must investigate financing from abroad that leads to interference in russia's internal politics we must look at the activities of some of diplomats from russian territory maybe i'm getting ahead of myself but i promise you we will have interesting findings. for the protests started in july after several opposition candidates were barred from running in local elections in my. election officials sad signatures they needed to collect were false normally these local elections
6:27 am
don't attract a lot of attention but banning the opposition from taking part motivated tens of thousands to protest police have arrested thousands of protesters and some say they were beaten and now face serious criminal charges this is like many more to take part 2 observers that may sound all too familiar blaming foreigners for anti-government protests is not only seen as a way to distract russian public opinion from the real reasons behind a protest it also put trace these protesters negatively as being used by foreigners and this could be used to convince people not to join. on his visit to france on monday president vladimir putin said protesters have a right to let their voice heard but the authorities will do everything to prevent violence. i mean you know i am a guest here and it is not a good place to say that but i have to since you asked so we all know about the events related to the so-called yellow vests in which about 11 people were killed
6:28 am
and 2500 people including 2000 policeman were injured we don't want that to happen in russian capital. while russian politicians say the american accusations of russian meddling in the 2016 presidential elections will falls there are real so it's basically the russian version of the investigation. but we don't have a person like bill or of course the hope or result we've got to compare to what he has achieved because he achieved 0 and will probably find something the parliamentary commission says it will summon journalists and diplomats it suspects of interference so far the u.s. embassy has been blamed for meddling asked how do you choose and the german channel . step fastened al-jazeera. several people hoping to be the next u.s. president will be in iowa in the next few days at a forum focusing on native american issues mostly democrats but one of the speakers
6:29 am
that will be locked chiles is running as an independent alan fischer met the native american who has his sights set on the oval office mark charles hopes in 17 months he would be walking in his dining room but from the oval office in the white house he's running for president and believes america is ready to elect a native american i am running this campaign as a protest but to win because we have to try to change me by chanel or a citizen of the navajo nation if you launched this campaign as an independent online my relatives our name is mark charles and since the launch he's campaigned mainly in native american areas for one very good reason they were alone has the power to put me on the ballot and off of the state. that is incredibly empowering to our communities which for so many not just decades centuries has been left behind and disenfranchised by this nation and said you don't have any political or
6:30 am
voting power and so you're going to be dismissed and in 2 months journey the principle plank of his campaign that from the very beginning of the country marginalize many that the u.s. constitution of we the people left the women marginalized known whites and put power in the hands of a few i'm laying out this vision of let's build a nation where we the people truly means all the people one political expert says those who feel excluded might rally around him but not running for one of the 2 big parties makes it hard for his voice to be heard that i do think though that the constituencies he would have to win right and he knows that he's going to need all of these people who are you said marginal in our society and these are people who are becoming the majority in america so i think he has the right sensibility i mean i think his message of one of we the people is the kind of message that people are interested in and perhaps why people issue partisan labels but i do think the fact that he is an independent speaks to this larger issue that we have with people who
6:31 am
look like non winners mark charles is only the 2nd native american to run for the u.s. presidency his campaign is small who says tiny but he believes he is a big message and that the u.s. is ready for something new from someone whose roots go back to before america was america alan fischer al-jazeera washington. at least 10 soldiers have been killed and several wounded after an identified militants stormed a military unit in northern bikini. the attack happened in. soon province the military said it could be the country's deadliest attack against the armed forces but in a fast i was ensured months of violence with the deaths of hundreds of civilians all more than 150000 have fled the clashes. have been subdued independent celebrations in afghanistan after more than 60 people were killed in a bombing at a wedding reception at a small ceremony to mark a 100 years since the country's formation present afra ashraf ghani promised
6:32 am
revenge for saturday's attack in kabul i saw has claimed responsibility for a bombing elsewhere in the afghan capital people gathered to mark a century sense afghanistan won its independence from the british empire charlotte reports. it's a day for celebration 100 years ago afghanistan gained its independence from britain in kabul remind us if we with. the government to do that are they right we are very happy that we became independent on this day 100 years ago and that's why we are celebrating it. i'm celebrating independence day to day i'm happy i like the flag. our children also celebrate with cricket calling it the great game it's a hangover from british colonise ation of the region yet these children are unaware of another great game played when the modern history began. in the 19th century
6:33 am
afghanistan was caught between russia pushing south and the british expanded waste from india afghans fought to retain the sovereignty but were pitted li occupied by the british to the treaty was signed in 1919 decades later during the cold war afghanistan was again stuck between 2 world powers russia and the united states in 1959 eisenhower became the 1st u.s. president to visit the country both nations called it afghanistan influence leading to rapid botanizing in a more liberal afghanistan in the fifty's and sixty's. all came to afghanistan on christmas eve 1979 and never left the soviet union invaded and took kabul within 3 days. islamic group of fighters known as the mucha who dean fought back with u.s. support 1000000 people died in the fighting until the soviets withdrew a decade later a civil war intel
6:34 am
a ban rule followers national landmarks and infrastructure were destroyed by cavil's darla mon palace. and this is how it looks today president gandhi had planned to inaugurate the building for independence day sign of how far the nation had come but again conflict intervened the spawning the event after and i saw suicide bombing killed dozens of people just a few kilometers from here many afghans are resisting celebration for another reason they feel this sovereignty is still compromised. younger. son believed thought i was lots of produce so that by the soviet union. by the go group on the us invaded in 2118 years later having spent $800000000000.00 and with $13000.00 troops in country it's negotiating its withdrawal with the taliban so if the afghan government isn't involved but those
6:35 am
talks could mark the start of a new afghanistan the afghans hope they can shake their identity without the 3 so who were into fear. a couple. more heavy rain is expected in many parts of india bringing a threat of floods northern states remain on high alert as the army conducts rescue operations like this one in the river town me more than 270 people have been killed this monsoon season with around hof of the victims in the southern state of carolina. for nearly 4 decades members of a german sect in chile were enslaved and abused by their paedophile leader after their commune became a refuge for nazi fugitives now more than 100 victims of the so-called dignity colony are set to sue the chilean state for damages latin america editor and human reports now from peril. on the foothills of this mountain range in central
6:36 am
chile lies on large rural estate. shafique was 3 years old when his parents and 300 other german emigrants came here in 1962 to establish a plummy and their leader was self-proclaimed pastor paul schaeffer a former nazi who turned the so-called dignity called me into a prison for 40 years unimaginable things happened. from the age of 8 i was beaten and abused we lived in a nightmare in purgatory in a hell that's why today i want it understood that we still live in an unjust. horst and his wife helga who was born here had no formal education and worked 7 days a week with no pay. from infancy children were separated from their parents and the boys sexually abused by schaeffer young and old were beaten and drugged to keep them docile. to govern and. almost every day someone had to be beaten for 20
6:37 am
minutes and everyone had to take turns hitting the victim with a pole the community was under permanent surveillance and kept within electrified fences but some of the colonists did manage to escape through this the forest to neighboring farms or to the nearby town of and when that happened paul shaeffer would call the local police which was in his pay there are documented cases to prove it and when that happened the police would bring the escapees right back here . lawyer winfred him for was also born in the commune i met him 6 years ago when he was preparing a lawsuit against the german and chilean states for their alleged negligence and complicity in the suffering of the colonists in may germany agreed to pay up to $11000.00 to victims as a token gesture but since chile has not agreed to settle out of court the lawsuit
6:38 am
will now go ahead in. the chilean state and where the colony began by a perverted sadistic pedophile who collaborated with the pinochet dictatorship and corrupted all the institutions in the area in the 21st century there was a slave camp before the eyes of the chilean state. horses among the 80 or so colonists who remain on the property now called villa. like almost all the men he suffers from acute back pain from years of forced labor and with no pension or savings the couple is struggling to overcome economic hardship and psychological trauma. we want the government to help us receive justice because authorities knew what was happening here and did nothing. for a $1000000.00 for each of the $117.00 plaintiffs it may help compensate they say but never erase the horrors that they still live with. you see in human.
6:39 am
polls. yet another major crash takes place. we'll have the stories. all the our. business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together.
6:40 am
business updates brought to you by qatar airways going places together. sport now with santa. thank you very much mary a moment to see united have dropped the 1st points of the english premier league season that they drew one all away add to wolverhampton will pull
6:41 am
a paul could have a one it to for them but he missed the 2nd hole fennel tea the draw means united to have 4 points from 2 games already going a soul she has now failed to beat will the hunton in 3 at 10th in all competitions as united boss well you ventus begin and there is syria a campaign this saturday against a palma but it remains on clear where the new boss and i will be in the dugout the 60 year old has been diagnosed with pneumonia he missed training on monday as well as a pre-season friendly over the weekend sorry only in june following a season at chelsea in which he won them the europa league. german football champions by munich have completed the signing of 50 from barcelona the brazilian has joined on loan but by and have the option to make it permanent for fix the
6:42 am
price of 133000000 dollars struggled since joining us now from liverpool a 492000000 last year. because of violence importance and its history is the club that comes with a certain responsibility at every competition with expectations to win big titles each season and obviously the champions league is among them so i'm here to work hard learn to give my all and do my best to help my teammates win important titles . a little known defend playing in northern ireland's women's league is in the running with the likes of mrs la time for him which for a fee for a ward. who plays for cliftonville a ladies' is a nominee for the waldo goal of the year award for this strike officially hold the award fans vote for the winner online or the prize was established in 2009 and since and could join an impressive list including your ma christian or nada and all
6:43 am
of issued. winds are there more core calls for indy car to stop race in the us pocono raceway in pennsylvania after another huge crash there on sunday it happened on the opening lap of the race at the oval circuit at 5 cars were involved but there were no serious injuries thankfully one of the drivers felix rusin 5th that was hospitalized but has since been released have a look at the on board the camera shot that and you get a real sense of just how terrifying it would have been. for many feel the track of pocono is too dangerous justin wilson died there in 2015 last year with cancer was catapulted into a fence leaving him paralyzed from the waist down. other day i spoke to andy card
6:44 am
journalist john he believes that it's the indy car regulations not the tracks the create in dangerous situations i don't think you know is any more dangerous than any other oval track on schedule it does bad karma in the last few years with 3 major accidents now and i think it's a product or. more of a modern racing itself and then you know it's. cars that is going to be as equal as possible and nobody can create space so it's a very scrap you end up in situations like that were cars run close proximity they can touch you when indy cars touch with open wheel and you're about things now i think it's a product of the form of racing fans and if you read comments after any race whether it's national are going to go for the one they get upset when they don't get close race and the cars the regulations or the it's nascar or indy car the cars
6:45 am
have been regulated so that no one can gain. and yes it's created incredibly close and slightly worse which time the same time it's going to consequence the cars running this close together again from dependence and flow mayweather jr has denied that he said to fight manny pacquiao in saudi arabia it follows a video that surfaced on social media on sunday in which the boxing legend said the fight is happening here is that video i want to say thank you it's an honor to come to saudi arabia to say don't you guys talk about the mayweather patio v.m.s. saudi arabia floated when he made with a moment when they were expand that video was shot earlier this year ahead of the promotional trip to saudi and that he was specifically asked to mention paki out how of a confirmed that there are currently no talks for the fight to happen. and that's it for me back to mary thank you santa well that wraps up the news al but i will be
6:46 am
back in a moment with much more of the day's news a full roundup of the top stories coming up very shortly stay with us i'll see you in a bit. it looks ugly it sounds ugly and scares people from america's high streets to mexico's on the wild recalled hardesty side and who controls the other side people in power follows the smuggling route and test the ease of acquiring untraceable weapons on american soil the weapon that was designed for war and it took you about 5 minutes
6:47 am
to buy at least you tonight america's guns arming mexico's cartel on al-jazeera congressman are you interested in stopping crime. we understand the differences and the similarities of cultures across the wound. so no matter where you call home al-jazeera will bring in the news and current of times that matter to you. al-jazeera. in the next episode of techno the teen shovels to the part of the amazon. where we are now should be grateful to investigate illegal gold mining mercury had a very unique characteristic of binding the goal for a minor it's almost like magic and the technology being used to expose its devastating impact and so what we end up doing is imaging a forest in very high fidelity 3 d. techno on all just 0.
6:48 am
all jews iraq. with every. rising tensions in northwest syria as turkey condemns a government as strike that narrative missed its only convoy. hello i'm in london you know with al jazeera also coming up on the program a new york police officer is fired 5 years after the chokehold death of an unarmed man it which led to the black lives matter movements. evidence that sudan's to
6:49 am
depose president a model bashir received $90000000.00 from the saudi royal family as his corruption trial gets underway. and. the palestinian artist exile since the start of the israeli occupation has gone to his final wish to be buried in jerusalem. syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of concha couldn't this happened just hours after an asteroid missed a turkish military convoy just a few kilometers away this is one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian and turkish government forces during the a.t.o. wall as a new honda reports now from beirut. a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind this air attack close to
6:50 am
a turkey. military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that's in the harbor town of more ak and like the rebel controlled town of honshu a whole a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the front lines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army were sent in massive force amounts to the front lines and and the 2nd we have seen to be mourning the turks armisen mess of calm war 2 hunchy of an order to established. and prevent the. cutting of highway
6:51 am
that highway will allow the syrian government to collect cities under its control and revive trade but many population centers like lie along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. a syrian regime did not enter haunch a clearing and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime from entering college and as usual the syrian regime targeted the turkish convoy turkey is a key guarantor in this region as part of the deescalation equipment and we do not expect it to give up the airstrike may have been a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as
6:52 am
a violation of existing. agree with and cooperation with russia and turkey is deployed with the troops seems to have been its old message to syria and it's back to russia not to any further but many are asking are both sides just posturing or will this sharp escalation and tension to the proxy battle it limp into a different kind of war so what they're beirut and one of the story syrian opposition forces is saying that a russian general has died in a long range missile attack targeting a government ad base the rockets were launched on the military airbase in the syrian port city of attack you it's believed the general was the supervisor of operations on province moscow is yet to comment on this strike. a new york city police officer who choked an unarmed black man to death during an arrest 5 years ago has been fired eric garner was suspected of selling loose
6:53 am
cigarettes when police approached him his death sparked protests over race and police force and inspired the black lives matter movement. reports now from new york. the video of the moment new york city police officer daniel choked unarmed black man eric garner trying to arrest him by years ago police say garner a 43 year old father resisted arrest as he was being choked. he is heard saying his last words i can't breathe. is death led to the black lives matter movement and months of protests throughout the country against police brutality against blacks federal and local authorities never brought criminal charges against a police officer but an internal investigation found the chokehold did not conform with department arrest procedures on monday police commissioner james o'neill said the officer would be fired and this case the unintended consequence of mr garner's
6:54 am
death must have a consequence of it soon therefore i agree with the deputy commissioner of trials legal findings and recommendations this clear that daniel pennzoil can no longer effectively serve as a new york city police officer eric garners daughter was happy the officer was fired but said it's injustice her father was killed in the 1st place i will do everything in my pollock's and so never see another arak ana i don't even want to see another video of the person being choked out because this was supposed to happen to him and it's not supposed to happen i should not be here standing with my brother father less i should be here with my father but that's only also got away from me i also have a 17 the police union blasted the decision saying the officer was just doing his job trying to arrest an uncooperative suspect anyone that has been a police officer know every 2nd counts when you're getting possibly thrown
6:55 am
through a plate glass window your responsibility is the a self the person you are trying to arrest and everyone else while there is disagreement if the police officer should have been fired. all sides seem to agree on one thing that 5 years was way too long to reach a conclusion in this case now the police commissioner is saying that in the future the department will decide much sooner on disciplinary action against any police officer accused of wrongdoing gabriels al-jazeera new york the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometer the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty but washington formally withdrew from the landmark 1907 pact with russia this month. has more now from washington the u.s. department of defense has announced that it has in fact gone ahead and tested a land based cruise missile this would have been banned under the intermediate
6:56 am
nuclear forces treaty that the u.s. had signed with russia but let our earlier this month the u.s. said that they were going to withdraw from that treaty because they said that russia had been violating the terms of the agreement now that's something that russia denies so all we know is this test took place on sunday in the afternoon in california and the military saying that it went more than 500 kilometers and then accurately hit its target again the more than 500 kilometers is the key because that sort of testing hasn't been done in decades because it had been prevented by the treaty that says you cannot test land based cruise missiles that have a range between 502-5500 kilometers so the u.s. said that they were going to take this step they say they're going to have more tests in the future the big question now is where they're going to try and put these land based cruise missiles we know that the secretary of defense has hinted that he'd like to play some in asia china reacted strongly along with the u.s. allies say that that was not a good idea but this again he said it will take time before any placements are made
6:57 am
this is a 1st step but it is a 1st step that the u.s. has now taken. now to developments in sudan the former president bashir tell investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency which were not included in the country's financial records the revelation came during the shares 1st court hearing on corruption and bribery charges since he was deposed by the military in april and when morgan reports from khartoum. he was once feared and guarded as the head of the country now sudan's former president armadale bashir is under a different guard as he appears in court to face criminal charges which include illegal possession of foreign currency and bribery investigators say they found more than $130000000.00 in his house days after the military deposed him in april. presenting the head of a country to trial proves that there is a rule of law in the country and that no one is above the law this message is not just for the ousted government but the incoming government the case will resume
6:58 am
next week we can't tell you what the outcome will be but we can say that we are assured that the case is going in the favor of the defendant the court heard that bashir admitted to receiving $90000000.00 from saudi arabia he also admitted to receiving millions more from the ruler of the united arab emirates. during his time as president bashir is sent sudanese soldiers to fight alongside the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen but investigators say the former president said he doesn't know how the money he received was spent nor did he follow up on excuse he was also charged in may for inciting to kill protesters in demonstrations that started in december over the rising cost of bread which quickly turned into a nationwide anti-government movement those charges are yet to be heard in court charges not addressed are charges that are brought against him by the international criminal court which involve work crimes crimes against humanity and genocide the transition military council that ousted him said that they will wait until
6:59 am
a transitional government is formed and an independent and impartial judiciary is set up and that body will be the one to determine whether the former president should be tried for these crimes and if he is whether he's guilty or innocent. more than 300000 people have been killed in the western region of darfur since 2003 and more than 3000000 displaced international experts say there are many reasons as to why bashir isn't likely to be handed to the international criminal court. recent research demonstrates. warrant of arrest released by the international court would do not really. provide incentives for a peaceful solution to the current transitional government that is composed also by many who are the of lee participated allegedly of course in the mosque because that late seems that those are 3 so we should start asking the question on
7:00 am
whether to just claim the i.c.c. could bring to sudan would it be a plus sagal justice but after 30 years in power with immunity from any kind of prosecution for people in throw down the corruption charges are about to start to justice then atone for the more going on to their attitude. is more still ahead on the program for you human rights concerns of a helicon injury suffered by kashmiris at the hands of indian security forces. and the us government delays its ban on china's huawei but $46.00 other companies linked to the tech giant and think penalized. hello again to welcome back to international weather forecasts we are seeing a lot of weather here across parts of southeastern australia all dealing to a winter storm that is making its way through right now now that storm system is
7:01 am
going to be entering into the tasman sea but behind it we're still going to be picking up a lot of cold air pushing across parts of tasmania as well as into victoria here on tuesday as well as into wednesday in the heart of the versions it is going to be turning to snow in the overnight hours so watch that very carefully but we're going to be seeing those temperatures during the day rebound to about 10 degrees for hobart maybe 14 degrees over here for melbourne or for perth you can be seen quite nice conditions winds are coming out of the north these days. dry fuel and plenty of sun with a temp to there of 22 degrees for the north in the south island of new zealand over the next few days things are going to be getting worse we're going to be seeing a lot of rain we're going to see a lot of winds as that storm system approaches out of the tasman sea high elevations snow is going to be a problem as well as you can see on the south island right there for christchurch though it is going to be a day of 13 degrees and as we go towards wednesday those temperatures drop to about 11 and auckland at 13 degrees there and then very quickly across parts of japan it is going to be quite rainy over the next few days it's not going to stop for many
7:02 am
areas but for tokyo we do expect to see $29.00 degrees few in sendai a temper of 24. trust is fundamental to all our relationships we trust banks without money talk to us without really. talk what happens to trust you know out. as more want to citizens of us by these conflicts to occur the question that comes. can we trust. the 1st of a 5 part series great question of the neutrality of digital the trust me i'm an algorithm on it.
7:03 am
i'm back in and out is there just a quick look at top stories now and as strike in syria as narron mistake takesh military convoy traveling from opposition controlled endlich province meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in atlanta a move which would give them access to these for teaching town a concha can. a new york police officer. involved in the choke call death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired a video of the incident shows officer daniel until they are wrestling gone into the ground during an attempted arrest. and a court in sudan considering corruption charges against former president bashir as he told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency and money was not included in the country's financial records . on all the stories we're following the leaders of france and russia have
7:04 am
indicated a new round of talks might be on the table to end the conflict in ukraine a democrat said that was cause for optimism jaring a meeting with emanuel macron at the french president summer home in the south of france there are reports of blood to me putin landed at the medieval break or sol for what emanuel might crawl some of residence on the mediterranean sea the fridge president said he hoped to persuade the russian leader to help in fighting in eastern ukraine michael said ukraine's new president. promised to end the conflict of food fresh and russian backed fighters and ukrainian forces of the new war since russia annexed crimea in 204020 the choices made by president. i think rechange the situation put you there spoken to him several times in recent weeks and it's so you put an issue for us to revisit the situation to exchange and prepare future meetings and was president. we hope for
7:05 am
a new summit in the nominee in the coming weeks the 2 leaders seem to make progress on ukraine putin told mackerel there was cause for optimism but there was little common ground on syria the russian leader rebuffed marcos demond that syria's moscow backed regime stop bombing the it lip region. there have been several attempts to attack or him a mean air bus from the area would leap that's why we support the efforts of the syrian army to and these threats in the lip. the talks karmas macro prepares to who still leaders from the group of 7 nations including double trump the g 7 with the g 8 until russia was excluded in crimea the timing of this meeting just days before the g. 7 summit is significant wants to highlight france's ability to talk to all sides bolster his country's standing on the international stage and despite the clear differences between paris and moscow michael says it's important to keep dialogue
7:06 am
with russia open my local or federal law here if you're prepared. to go even though rusher is not in the g 8 to jesus even in a way it was never totally excluded because political leaders realize that they can't totally ignore russia's position as a world power. micros attempts to reach out to president putin could be a risk the russian leaders proved uncompromising in the past but the french president hopes his efforts could lead to brokering peace in ukraine and ending europe's only war. i'll just sirrah fort france the white house is saying u.s. president donald trump is spoken on the phone to india's prime minister in a random odeon stressed the need to reduce tensions with pakistan 2 weeks since new delhi a vote the autonomy of indian administers kashmir trump and no deal also said to have discussed increasing trade and preventing what they described as cross
7:07 am
border terrorism. or despite the easing of some restrictions in indian administered kashmir there are still growing concerns about human rights abuses a number of civilians say they've been targeted by indian forces during a lockdown al-jazeera spoke to 2 people who suffer life changing injuries and has more now from new delhi. mohammad saw that men never regained his vision in one of his eyes he says he was hit by pellets fired by an indian soldier right off he stepped out of his local mosque building and. everything was normal there were no protests security forces chased us away and fired pellets at us one more person older than me was also injured he was discharged from hospital yesterday. mom accuses security forces in indian administered kashmir of targeting. he shows us his back with scars of what he says a pellet injuries. earlier this month thousands here defied
7:08 am
restrictions imposed by the authorities and protested against the indian government's decision to revoke autonomy. this 17 year old was one of them i mean. we had no intentions to bed stone but the police were attacked and several boys were injured including me i was hit on the right side of my body by barely. even though indian administered kashmir has been under lockdown for nearly 2 weeks. people have come out in protest in some cases the government has responded with force even admitting that a few people have been injured in the recent crisis. they shot the nigger is a member of the biggest hindu group in india that supports the governing party he says the government has used minimal force during the last 2 weeks if you have an option to fire real bullets and if you have to fire guns then obviously we'll
7:09 am
choose the letter and the supreme court of india was very clear that in order to control law and order situation you must use minimum force in the force instance and then use the extreme forces analyst. disagrees the question is that does use of guns blinding of children blaming government is it a justifiable self-defense by the armed forces against in 2016 the indian government said it would replace pellet guns with a less lethal weapon or on the ground in india that this means security forces are still using them against those protesting over new delhi's decision to revoke autonomy that the fear is that if the protests continue in the coming days or months so will the pellet injuries on al-jazeera new delhi. united states has delayed its total ban on hallways access to american supply is
7:10 am
the move will allow the chinese technology giant to continue buying some components from the u.s. in order to fulfill existing contracts has corresponding can really help at ports. and unexpected reprieve companies are dependent on wild boys so agree move time to wean themselves off that means for now u.s. companies will not face penalties for still doing business with the chinese telecom giant but the reprieve is temporary just 90 days been plenty of discussions with the president the president has made clear in his announcements yesterday that he's very concerned about more dealings with who are way the trumpet ministration blacklisted way in may but almost immediately postponed the punishment something it's done once again as u.s. businesses in rural areas scramble to replace weiwei equipment they depend on to provide service but we're not going to do business i don't want to do business at
7:11 am
all because it is a national security threat but huawei is pushing back on that claim arguing this decision made at this particular time is politically motivated and has nothing to do with national security these actions violate the basic principles of free market competition they are in no one's interests including u.s. companies but the trump administration and u.s. lawmakers have long accused while way of backdoor espionage resolving those concerns has made huawei a bargaining chip in the ongoing trade war between the united states and china on sunday trunk tweeted discussions to resolve that dispute are going very well still trumps economic advisor signaled a deal between the world's 2 largest economies is far from imminent low level discussions between the 2 sides are expected next week if those deputies meetings hand out as we hope they will and we can have
7:12 am
a substance of renewal of the gosh ations then we are planning to have china consing usa and meet with our principals to continue. negotiations earlier this month the u.s. labeled china a currency manipulator for the 1st time since 1994 but last week delayed until december expected tariffs on products made in china like toys and electronics u.s. consumers like to buy during the busy holiday shopping season still the u.s. is not easing up all pressure on china the commerce department has announced it's adding $46.00 affiliates of huawei to a list of companies banned for working with american businesses as both democrats and republicans in congress urge the white house to maintain its hardline stance kimberly health at al-jazeera the white house on the palestinian artist. has been laid to rest in occupied east jerusalem from which he's been exiled since the start
7:13 am
of the israeli occupation in 1967 his family way to gain rare israeli permission to pull out to himself to be buried at home how the force it has. the whole church just outside the walls of jerusalem's old city an old man has come home they're here to mourn come all blatter born in jerusalem in 1902 his childhood spent in the streets and alleyways of the old city but his life and his work as a leading palestinian artist marked by his inability to return if you can and your magical principle blotter was in beirut in 1067 when israel occupied east jerusalem apart from one brief visit in 1940 he remained in exile from the city that inspired him fusing the geometry and spirituality of christian and islamic art into his own abstract style throughout my career the experience of light had always been centered to my word perhaps it is the light of truth full of the pie and beams to
7:14 am
recapture all. under israeli law palestinians who outside of east jerusalem when the occupation started was stripped of their right to come back to their homes since blotters death nearly 2 weeks ago his family has worked to get rare israeli permission for him to be buried in jerusalem it was a dying wish why no that's what the man said when i was surprised knowing that it would it would not be a lot well a bus going through formalities and fighting and even promises saying no that he did so. he said when no he was on what is it that i something new. last week there was a memorial service in berlin where the latter had been living and working since 2012 he also lived in italy lebanon rocko the us and france
7:15 am
a long and rich life ending where it began as much as this final journey to come out has been full of deeply personal significance the family statement also made it clear that this was a political gesture they say the palestinian right of return is a sacred one especially for jerusalemites for whom this holy city is a vital part of their lives and their arrests. but throughout his absence a small part of cum all blotter had always been here in an alleyway near jaffa gate in a florist shop a faded painting high on a wall given to the florists father a barber nearly 60 years ago by one of his customers that customer an 18 year old come out blotter ari force at al-jazeera occupied east jerusalem now several people hoping to be the next u.s. president will be in iowa in the next few days a form focusing on native american issues democrats but one of the speakers will be mark charles is running as an independent outreach there is alan fish and met the
7:16 am
native american who has his sights firmly set on the of this mark charles hopes and 17 months he would be walking in is there any room but from the oval office in the white house he's running for president and believes america is ready to elect a native american i am running this campaign as a protest but to win because we have to try to cheat me by chanel or a citizen of the navajo nation if you launched this campaign as an independent online column i wrote is our name is mark charles and since the launch he's campaigned mainly in native american areas for one very good reason they were alone has the power to put me on the ballot in all 50 states. that is incredibly empowering to our communities which for so many not just decades centuries has been left behind and disenfranchised by this nation and said you don't have any political or voting power and so you're going to be dismissed and months journey
7:17 am
the principle plank of his campaign from the very beginning of the country marginalize many that the us constitution of we the people left women marginalized known whites and put power in the hands of a few i'm laying out this vision of let's build a nation where we the people truly means all the people one political expert says those who feel excluded might rally around him but not running for one of the 2 big parties makes it hard for his voice to be heard but i do think though that the constituencies he would have to win right and he knows that he's going to need all of these people who are you said marginal in our society and these are people who are becoming the majority in america so i think he has the right sensibility i mean i think his message of one of we the people is the kind of message that people are interested in and perhaps why people issued partisan labels but i do think the fact that he is an independent speaks to this larger issue that we have with people who
7:18 am
look like non winners mark charles is only the 2nd native american to run for the u.s. presidency his campaign is small who says tiny but he believes he is a big message and that the u.s. is ready for something new from someone whose roots go back to before america was america alan fischer al jazeera washington. for the latest on everything we're covering al jazeera dot com also plenty of analysis that takes you behind the headlines also you can watch us on live streaming if you want. just a quick quick recap of the top stories now syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in the last rebel held province of idlib giving them access to the strategic town of concha couldn't well this just hours after an ass strike now really missed a turkish military convoy a few kilometers away it's one of the closest direct confrontations between syrian
7:19 am
and turkish government forces during the 8 year war a new york police officer involved in the chokehold death of eric garner in 2014 has been fired a video recording showed officer daniel wrestling gone to the ground gone a can be had repeatedly saying he could not breathe his death sparked protests over race and police use of force and inspired the black lives matter movement. has reaction from new york one of eric garners 6 children spoke after the decision was announced and she said that the family was very pleased that it was the right decision to fire the officer daniel penta layo but they said while they were happy with it that it should have happened 5 years ago they thought that the officer should have been fired almost immediately after the death of eric garner now on the other side you had the police union came out and just absolutely blasted this decision the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with
7:20 am
a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty washington formally withdrew from the landmark 1087 pact with russia earlier this month alleging moscow had been violating the cold war era treaty. of course in sudan considering corruption charges against former president bashir has heard he told investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him illions of dollars during his presidency the money was not included in the country's financial records. the united states has delayed its total ban on always access to american supplies the chinese technology giant will be allowed to continue buying some components from the u.s. in order to fulfill existing contracts washington accuses the telecoms and phone manufacturer of building a backdoor into its 5 g. network the chinese intelligence services. all hail the algorithm is the program coming up next and then more news from doha after that stay with us rewind returns
7:21 am
with a new series. i am playing updates on the past about dizziness documentaries because one bad memory. rewind continues with holy land grab by with compelling onion the oven the onion the quickest path to the heart of the food the from the bill that they were holding on by their fingernails to the 2 state solution to bake it is still barely possible on al-jazeera millions of people across india miss out on medical but a hospital train is delivering doctors and hope to those most in need one i want to east towards india is a lifeline expire on al-jazeera. trust is fundamental to all our relationships not just with our family and friends we trust banks with our money we trust doctors without really personal information. but what happens to
7:22 am
trust in a world driven by algorithms as more and more decisions are made for us by these complex piece of code the question that comes up is inevitable can we trust algorithms. from google searches to g.p.s. navigation algorithms are everywhere we don't really think too much about them but increasingly governments corporations and various institutions are using them to make decisions about us who gets public services who gets to nod how people are monitored and policed how insurance is challenged. i want to start here in australia where an algorithm used by the government has resulted. more than 400000 people being in debt to the country's welfare system centering it's been called the
7:23 am
road at scandal. back in 2016 a decision was made to fully automate a key part of the astrology and welfare system the part where the earnings of low income people are compared with the amount of government money they received the government says they do this to ensure the right amount of financial assistance has been that all the data matching algorithm officially called the online compliance intervention had been in place since 2011 any discrepancies previously flagged by the system were investigated by a government employee 1st with automation all human checks were removed the government had instituted an algorithm that essentially said let's match 2 lots of data together and mash them together and see if people have a dead cert some of the math was just bad just plain wrong like it was french a pill or mashing the cells together in the cells to actual is a generalist who's been reporting on the road at story since it broke she's also an
7:24 am
activist one of the chief organizes of the not why did ross roots campaign often people didn't realize that this was automated in the 1st place and it wasn't till we started getting people talking together on social media on twitter that we realised. actually it's the government has found it was almost like a 100000 people have been gaslighted into thinking they're done the wrong thing that it was their fault and they're outraged when they realised that there was a fault in the actual algorithm in the car and the australian government disagrees we are doing aren't. we are. and we are recruiting money for. more checks is a bit of an understatement the old system resulted in around $20000.00 discrepancy notices a year but in the early days of the new automated. system that jumped 220008 week.
7:25 am
more than a 1000000 letters have been sent out by the algorithm sometimes disputing government payments from a fall back to a city and what was even worse was they systems were imposed on paper with intellectual disabilities with homelessness with. chronic health issues paper where no one barely literate or not literally all people who didn't know how to use a computer people who were living in remote communities without access to internet people who just had no bloody clue how to deal with this sort of administrative bureaucratic bum what. david begnaud was notified he correctly declared his income from a teaching job while he was on a disability pension back in 2011 his. ready $4088.00 innocence was rather disease it's leveling an accusation toward you that you've somehow done the wrong thing unknowing head on want to details. and i was told i couldn't have that and the reason was that the computer looks at my post move
7:26 am
and then sources a piece of information another person here another person in the business and they can't provide all that to me as a comes in to many places and it was simpler but in other words the older rhythm is inscrutable it's totally normal even the start don't really understand it broken can you tell me how much evidence or how much notification to send only provide you proving that there was a day when you provide me with anything other than this election and the thing that i. finally my text message came. to say hi the money is doing today. the fact that you couldn't get any concrete evidence about this is how we have calculated your days here is what you hear of the hours you work. that really i found. it sure
7:27 am
any confidence that i had in that the government will do the right thing the fact that they couldn't prove to me that i owed them money. really concern me so you never find that you're seeing a letter in the mail that is generated by an ai that essentially says the government wants to let you know that we under paging by you know 5000 dollars or that you should have been eligible for the services that we didn't tell you therefore we're telling you now and we can back pay nobody gets back pay in fact you're only eligible for like back pay i think it's 6 weeks government services that the government can robo dating back for many many is automation computerization algorithmic ties ation if that's even a word they're always sold to us is such a positive thing all upside no downside as a strong use department of human services put it computerized decision making can reduce red tape ensure decisions are consistent and create greater efficiencies for recipients and the department the problem is how the challenges system that has no
7:28 am
effect no name and no besides the bottom of your letter say you know i'm in charge of this. good afternoon welcome to the department of human sense like on a good day you couldn't up sitting on hold for a couple hours to speak to a human the real question is how does it come about that the government has over pay people but billions. because really. the criminal waste is occurring at the end of the government's line it's the government that's doing this otherwise you're saying $100000.00 citizens have made mistakes that's the case then the system is too difficult for people to negotiate so i'm not here shaking my fist at technology it's not digital fall it's not computers fault this system has been you know designed you know quite explicitly you know by government
7:29 am
governments responsible for its failures and governments are really responsible for the hell they're putting all sorts of welfare recipients through unfairly by issuing them. this is something i heard from virtually everyone i spoke to about wrote it they said we're not against technology it's not like algorithms are all bad it's the people and the institutions designing these codes we can't seem to trust and this really gets to the heart of our relationship with algorithms there are often complex hidden behind walls of secrecy with no way for those whose lives are actually impacted by them to probe them because they've been kept off limits. despite all the criticism and even a formal inquiry is trolling government stands by its algorithm and automation in the welfare system. we do have compliant i mean. we counted $300000000.00. through that. work
7:30 am
and we will continue with. there are at least 20 different laws in australia that explicitly enable algorithms to make decisions previously made by ministers will start we don't really know the full extent of how these are being applied but there are places around the world where the use of algorithms are even more widespread. like here in the united states where algorithms are being used to make big decisions across everything from the criminal justice system health education and him. point the united states has a longer history of algorithm use than many other countries silicon valley is a big reason for that of course but also there's much looser regulation here on how private companies and governments can collect and use data before they're studying the effects of algorithms on american society one thing is clear often it's poor marginalized to get the word steal. my money my way now probably in new york state to me we've been ginning you think she's the authority on everything to do
7:31 am
with the board of mating inequality actually the title of one of the books the genius says america's poor and working class have long been subject to invasive surveillance and punitive policies she writes about prison like poor houses of the 19th century the bad conditions with thought to discourage undeserving poor from supposedly taking advantage of the system. what i see as being part of the digital poorhouse are things like automated decision making tools statistical models that make risk predictions about how people are going to behave in the future or algorithms that match people to resources and the reason i think of them as a digital poor house is because that the decision that we made in 820 to build actual poorhouses was a decision that public service systems should 1st and foremost be moral
7:32 am
thermometers that they should act to decide who is most deserving of receiving their basic human rights the genius studies into the automation of public services in the united states points to developments in the late sixty's and seventy's along with the civil rights movement came a push for welfare rights people are forced to live in the most inhuman situations because of their poverty african-americans and unmarried women who have previously bought from receiving public funds could now demand state support when they need. well technology was touted as a way to distribute financial aid more efficiently it almost immediately began to serve as a tool to limit the number of people getting support so you have this moment in history where there's a recession and a backlash against social spending and social movement that's winning successes that and discriminatory treatment and there really is no way to close the roles
7:33 am
they can't close the roles the way they had in the past which is just to discriminate against people and that's the moment we see these tools start to be integrated into a public assistance i think it's really important to understand that history i think too often we think of the systems us just simple administrative upgrades sort of natural and inevitable but in fact there are systems that make really important consequential political decisions for us and they were from the beginning supposed to solve political problems among them the power and the solidarity of poor and working people in the only 970 s. close to 50 percent of those living below the poverty line in the united states receive some form of cash welfare from the government today it's less than 10 percent in public assistance the assumption of many folks who have not had direct experience with these systems is that they're set up to help you succeed they are
7:34 am
not in fact set up to say help you succeed and they're very complicated systems that are very diversionary that are needlessly complex and that are incredibly stigmatizing and emotionally very difficult so it shouldn't then surprise us that a tool that makes that system faster. more efficient and more cost effective furthers that purpose of diverting people from the resources that they that they need having algorithms make decisions such as who gets financial aid. it's money that the government has caused concern among many different groups but what's causing a full on panic facade is the fact that algorithms are being used to actually make predictions about people one of the most controversial examples is the correctional offender management profiling for alternative sanctions it's a bit of a mouthful but it sure is compass and it's an algorithm that's been used in courtrooms across the country to assist judges during sentencing now of course
7:35 am
algorithms caught way up arguments analyze evidence or assess remorse but what they are be useful is to produce something known as a risk assessment school to predict the likelihood of a defendant committing another crime in the future this school is then used by judges to help determine who should be released and who should be detained pending trial and how the judge has to consider a couple factors here there's public safety and flight risk on the one hand but then there are the real costs social and financial of the tension on the defendant on their family on the other now historically what happens is the judge looks into this defendant's eyes and tries to say ok you're a high risk person or you're along with person i trust your i don't trust you now what algorithms are helping us to do is make those decisions better the compass algorithm was brought in to offset balance out inconsistency is in human judgment the assumption being of course that
7:36 am
a piece of code would always be less biased and less susceptible to prejudice however compass has faced several criticisms primarily accusations of racial bias inaccuracy and lack of transparency in 2016 a man named eric loomis sentenced to 6 years in prison took his case to the wood sconce and state supreme court his allegation was that the use of compass violated his right to due process it made it impossible for him to appeal his sentence since the algorithm is a black box impenetrable unquestionable. eric loomis didn't get very far the supreme court ruled the use of compass in his sentencing was legal the verdict tell about revealed the ways in which the ever increasing use of algorithms is being normalized the court had a funny argument saying that nobody knows where these decisions are coming from and so it's it's ok you know it's not that the state has some particular advantage over
7:37 am
the defendant but that everyone is at this sort of equal playing field and it's not that there's an informational advantage for one side or the other to me i find that somewhat dissatisfied and i do think that in these high stakes decisions particular in the criminal justice system we don't just want to have an equal playing field of no one knows but i think we need to have an equal playing field of everybody knows we need to have this transparency built into the system for the record equivalent the company that sells compass software has defended its algorithm it points to research commissions that the company meets industry standards for fantasy and accuracy. what a compass most of the privately developed algorithms meet acceptable standards for transparency is another question even when they are used in the provision of public services algorithms are often closed to the public they cannot be scrutinized regardless of that sharon says that in certain cases he would still be comfortable being judged by a group bust algorithm so i do think it's true that many of the people in the
7:38 am
criminal justice system are the most disadvantaged and the reality is they probably don't have a lot of say in their futures in their fates and how these algorithms are going to evaluate them. and whether this would happen if more powerful people are being judged by these algorithms i don't know now me personally i would rather be judged by a well designed algorithm a human in part because i believe the statistical. methods for something risky in fact are better than humans in many situations and it can at least one as well designed eliminate a lot of these biases that that human decision makers often exhibit the united states has a massive racial discrimination problem and public services that's real so it is really understandable when agencies want to create tools that can help them keep an
7:39 am
eye on frontline decision making in order to maybe identify discriminatory decisionmaking and correct it the problem is that that's not actually the point at which discriminated discrimination is entering the system and this is one of my huge concerns about these kinds of systems is they tend to only understand discrimination as something that is the result of an individual who is making every actual decision. and they don't these systems are not as good at identifying bias that is systemic and structural the promise of algorithms is that we can mitigate the by sees that human decision makers always have you know we always were always responding to the way somebody looks who's we somebody x. and unifi try as hard as we can and if we really have these good intentions of the try to just focus on what matters i think is exceptionally difficult now that again
7:40 am
is the promise of algorithms the reality is much more complicated the reality is that algorithms are trained on past human decisions they're built by fallible humans them selves in so there's still this possibility that that by sees creeping into the development and application of these algorithms but certainly the promise is that we can least make the situation better than it currently is one of the things i'm really concerned about about these systems is that they seem to be part of a philosophy that increasingly sees human decision making as black box and unknowable and computer decision making as transparent and accountable. and that to me is really frightening because of course computer ringback decision making is not as objective and is not as unbiased as it seems at 1st glance we build bias into our technologies just like we build them into our right we teach our technologies to discriminate. but on the other hand people's decision making is
7:41 am
actually not that opaque we can ask people about why they're making the decisions they're making that can be part of their professional development and i think this idea that human decision making is somehow unknowable is a sort of ethical abandonment of the possibility to grow and to change that we really really need as a society to truly address the systemic roots of racism and classism. and sexism in our society so it feels to me like you're saying will never understand why people make discriminatory decisions so let's just let the computer make it and i think that's a mistake i think that's it a tragic mistake that will lead to a lot of suffering for a lot of people ready. so
7:42 am
going back to the question that started us on this journey can we trust elders that's. the biggest thing i've learnt from speaking with the genius of many of us is that i've actually got to question. it isn't really so much about whether algorithms are trustworthy it's more about the quality of the data that feeds in egypt it's of those designing actually. human biases human imperfections that's what we see reflected in our algorithms and without better oversight we risk reinforcing our prejudices and social inequalities. fuck you off to the algorithms are programmed to shame that the past is the future that we want as well and by the past that's up to the things the value of stigma and bias and stereotypes and rejection and discrimination and really what we need is to create systems that allow for. future scenario is that and different from the all
7:43 am
of course we can build better tools operant tools and i see them everywhere that i go but what makes a difference about good tools about just tools is building those tools with a broader set of values from the very beginning so not just efficiency not just cost savings but dignity and self-determination and justice and fairness and accountability and fairer process and all of those things that we really care about as a democracy have to be built in at the big. getting from step one in every single tool . we're actually getting our hands on the data we're analyzing the data. now one thing that we've done is we try to make as much of the state of the old bulls possible so encourage people to look at. this and one of our one of our projects is called the stanford open policing project we release lots of data to promote
7:44 am
justice system we release code for people to play with the data and i encourage everyone to look at that and try to understand what's going on and. you know maybe they'll discover a pattern that solves my biggest piece of advice is to never underestimate your influence on. you know you might be finding some machine. some computer system that you've never been able to mate let's say but his him. didn't huge homeless suffering but you know words can make up scared your voices combined can make senate sin quote sit up and pay attention to gather we can shape the way these tools are created and the way it's an impact does as a political community if we want better outcomes from these systems we have to we have to claim our space as decision making and decision makers at these tables.
7:45 am
and we can't do that if we think that these technologies are somehow gods they're built just just the way we build our kids we build these technologies and we have a right to be in dialogue with them. thank.
7:46 am
you. building a new life on an entirely beach living off the sea and. a dream shared by so many but so few make it a reality. a family business led by a woman with a flair for cooking and a zest. i didn't catch on al-jazeera. is resistance.
7:47 am
people are grabbing social and political issues by the horns. and time to sing creativity. and protest to challenge and change ideas. controversial a witness documentary on al-jazeera. just one of his main highways. as much water as possible from the mountain above. a nationwide blackout left millions without power or water supplies. but this water is not portable the health ministry is recommending people treated with chlorine but with none available. hopes that boiling it 1st will make it safe for her family to drink. says the increased consumption of untreated water in the last 3 weeks is making an already catastrophic situation worse. we don't have the precise numbers yet but we know
7:48 am
that in the public and private hospitals there's been an acute increase of cases of severe diarrhea that require hospitalization including children under 2 years of age which can be fatal local and international public health experts describe the crisis it's a complex humanitarian emergency. this is al jazeera. hello i'm adrian forgotten this is the live from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes the battle heats up in a key town in syria's province with accusations by turkey that its military convoy was attacked. a court in sudan his evidence that former president omar al bashir
7:49 am
received millions of dollars from saudi arabia. a new york city police officer is fired over his deadly handling of an unarmed man which led to the black lives matter movement. and power play in its early days after the ruling coalition collapsed the prime minister's future remains uncertain. is condemning an airstrike that narrowly missed its convoy in the last rebel held province in the north syria and russian warplanes have been pounding the area turkey's foreign ministry says that the attack violated agreements with russia which is a powerful ally to syrian president bashar al assad's damascus says that the convoy was heading towards khalid shaikh hoon to protect rebels but ankara denies the accusation syrian government forces claim to have taken control of a checkpoint giving them access to that strategically important town. to hold the
7:50 am
reports now from beirut. a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind this attack close to a turkish military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that in the town of. more eck and like the rebel controlled town of hunch a horn a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the front lines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army were sent in massive amounts to the front lines and and the 2nd we have seen today morning the mess of calm war 202 established. and.
7:51 am
cutting 5 highway that highway will allow the syrian government to collect cities under its control and revive trade but many population centers like lie along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. syrian regime did not enter haunch a clearing and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime from entering college and as usual the syrian regime targeted the turkish convoys turkey is a key guarantor in this region as part of the deescalation that we meant and we do not expect it to give up the airstrike may have been
7:52 am
a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as a violation of existing agreements and cooperation with russia and turkey's deployment of troops seems to have been its own message to syria and its backer russia not to advance any further but many are asking are both sides to. posturing or will the sharp escalation in tension turn the proxy battle into a different kind of war. beirut syrian opposition forces say that a russian general has died in a long range missile attack targeting a government base the rockets were launched on the a member military airport in the syrian port city of latakia it's believed the general was the supervisor of air command operations on province moscow has yet to comment on the strike meanwhile thousands of people are fleeing adlib province with more expect you to leave the region according to the response coordination group operating inside syria more than 140000 people have been displaced in just over
7:53 am
a week up to 10000 have left the last major rebel stronghold since sunday with most headed towards the turkish border more this we're joined by while i was in washington d.c. he's served as a serious syria advisor to samantha power the united states ambassador to the united nations and barack obama good to have you with us what's your take on this attack on the turkish convoy. do you think it could have been deliberate or was it accidental and who might have fired upon it. thank you it's going to be very difficult to ascertain whether this was deliberate or not but most likely in my assessment it is because by all indications the turkish forces and allied syrian opposition groups the syrian national army were heading toward the southern edge or the frontline of it looked province to try to. slow down the government.
7:54 am
advances into the province and i think the syrian regime probably in coronation with the russians carried out their strike as either a warning or they intended to hit the. military convoy the turkish checkpoints in that part of syria the result of a deal with russia will turkey respond could the situation escalate you know the turks have very limited options they are facing both the regime and the russians alone while they're also worried about the potential of $3000000.00 refugees spilling over into their their country and obviously they're dealing with the kurdish situation along the border with syria democratic forces so they're going to be very very hesitant to engage in an all out confrontation and i think they're going to seek to at deescalate now publicly they can adopt a harsh stance but behind the scenes i am certain that they are trying to work with the russians to convince the regime to slow down their income encroachments into
7:55 am
areas that are close or at. the checkpoints ultimately turkey's in the no win situation that it's going to have to back down isn't it ultimately i think so so what is russia's long term strategy in the area. you know i mean i think you have to just look at the history of the conflict the russians provide air cover and strategic support and intelligence to the syrian forces and its allied militias to squeeze out the opposition from every pocket so they will pummel the area with air strikes with artillery they will then advance on the ground of either regime forces and that's their strategy it's a complete and comprehensive military victory in syria regardless of the civilian toll or man flick and this russia bear any responsibility for the hundreds of
7:56 am
thousands of people who are who are moving now towards turkey's border of course i mean it was putin's policy that led us to the initial so-called european migration crisis of 2015 where over 100000 syrians were forced out of aleppo that the russians began to pummel with the regime and that initiated a chain of events that we all know that led to hundreds of thousands of syrians and other migrants going into europe and some would say even let us to reg's it because it instigated the fear of europeans of the you know so-called invading foreigners so russia bears at a minimum the same culpability in all of this as the assad regime and their iranian supporters while it's good to talk to somebody thanks indeed for being with us the u.s. has tested a ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty washington formally withdrew from the $1007.00 pact with russia earlier this month alleging that moscow with already been
7:57 am
violating is the u.s. plans to test an intermediate range ballistic missile in november more now from a serious pretty cool hated washington. the u.s. department of defense has announced that it has in fact gone ahead and tested a land based cruise missile this would have been banned under the intermediate nuclear forces treaty that the u.s. had signed with russia but let earlier this month the u.s. said that they were going to withdraw from that treaty because they said that russia had been violating the terms of the agreement now that's something that russia denies so what we know is this test took place on sunday in the afternoon in california and the military saying that it went more than 500 kilometers and then accurately hit its target again the more than 500 kilometers is the key because that sort of testing hasn't been done in decades because it had been prevented by the treaty that says you cannot test land based cruise missiles that have a range between 502-5500 kilometers so the u.s.
7:58 am
said that they were going to take this step they say they're going to have more tests in the future the big question now is where they're going to try and put these land based cruise missiles we know that the secretary of defense has hinted that he'd like to play some in asia china reacted strongly along with the u.s. allies say that that was not a good idea but this again he said it will take time before any placements are made this is a 1st step but it is a 1st step that the u.s. has now taken. sudan's former president omar al bashir says that he received millions of dollars from saudi arabia's royal family during his presidency he told investigators the fun's wanting clued in the country's financial records revelation came during his 1st court hearing on corruption and bribery charges since he was forced from office by the military in april al-jazeera civil morgan reports now from khartoum. he was once feared and guarded as the head of the country now sudan's former president bashir is under a different guard as he appears in court to face criminal charges which include
7:59 am
illegal possession of foreign currency and bribery investigators say they found more than $130000000.00 in his house days after the military deposed him in april. presenting the head of a country to trial proves that there is a rule of law in the country and that no one is above the law this message is not just for the ousted government but the incoming government the case will resume next week we can't tell you what the outcome will be but we can say that we are assured that the case is going in the favor of the defendant. the court heard that bashir admitted to receiving $19000000.00 from saudi arabia he also admitted to receiving millions more from the ruler of the united arab emirates during his time as president bashir sudanese soldiers to fight alongside the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen but investigators say the former president said he doesn't know how the money he received was spent nor did he follow up on its use he was also charged in may for inciting to kill protesters in demonstrations that started in
8:00 am
december over the rising cost of bread which quickly turned into a nationwide anti-government movement those charges are yet to be heard in court charges not addressed are charges that are brought against him by the international criminal court which involve work crimes crimes against humanity and genocide the transitional council that ousted him said that they will wait until a transitional government is formed and an independent and impartial judiciary is set up and that body will be the one to determine whether the former president should be tried for these crimes and if he is whether he's guilty or innocent. more than 300000 people have been killed in the western region of darfur since 2003 and more than 3000000 displaced international experts say there are many reasons as to why bashir isn't likely to be handed to the international criminal court. recent research demonstrates. warrant of arrest released by the international court would do not really. provide incentives for
8:01 am
a peaceful solution the current transitional government is composed also by many who are deeply he said allegedly of course in the massacre is that late since the $1003.00 so we should start asking the question on whether the just weak claim the i.c.c. could bring to sudan wouldn't be a plus saga of justice but after 30 years in power with immunity from any kind of prosecution for people in thought then the corruption charges are applied to scottish justice then a ton of them were going under they were. down from on as the secretary general of the international association of democratic lawyers he says that omar bashir must also be tried in sudan for human rights violations and done for. well actually. i'm i hope that it will be possible to. also try these aspects human rights
8:02 am
violations in sudan it's of course very difficult in a crisis situation like this when regime is toppled then another government comes in it's very difficult to set up an independent justice but if such a trial. can be conducted in sudan it's i think much more to be preferred than a trial in an international court because we've seen that the international courts are not really a very big success and so the local court is of course almost always much closer to the evidence well the whole question there is whether the international court to the international criminal court could have an independent view on that. and. from my experience the international criminal court hasn't proven that it really is independent from i would say geo political interests at this stage. and so if saddam is capable of conducting such an independent
8:03 am
trial possibly with international assistance and help it would be very important because international law anyhow for see the principle of subject janet which means that the priority should be to the local court because the local court is always in a much better position to assess the evidence to look at all busy the elements of the context of the crimes that were committed the local court is in a much better position the question there is of course will the new sudanese government be able to set up an independent judiciary that offers all necessary guarantees if yes it would be much better to have a trial in sudan that to have a trial in an international court hearing the news after mansehra still to come on the program. i remember shaking with fear when checkpoints appeared in the. tank thing guns everywhere the u.s.
8:04 am
congresswoman denied entry to israel recalls painful memories of life in the occupied palestinian territories plus a palestinian artist exiled since the start of the israeli occupation is granted his final wish to be buried in jerusalem. tonight a drop the 1st points of the season details coming up a little later in sports. the white house says that u.s. president donald trump has spoken by phone with india's prime minister. and stressed the need to reduce tension with pakistan it's been 2 weeks now since the delhi revoked the autonomy of indian administered kashmir discussed increasing trade and preventing what they described as cross border terrorism new delhi has eased some restrictions in the administered kashmir but concerns about human rights abuses remain a number of civilians say they've been targeted by indian forces during the lockdown spoke to 2 people who suffered life changing injuries. reports.
8:05 am
mohammad never regained his vision in one of his eyes he says he was hit by 5. right after he stepped out of his local mosque. everything was normal there were no protests security forces chased us away and fired pellets at us one more person older than me was also injured he was discharged from hospital yesterday. mom of the qs a security forces an indian administered kashmir. he shows us his back with what he says. this month thousands here defied restrictions imposed by the authorities and protested against the indian government's decision. to revoke autonomy. this 17 year old was one of them. we had no intentions to bed stoned but the police were attacked
8:06 am
and several boys were injured including me i was hit on the right side of my body by belly. even though indian administered kashmir has been under lockdown for nearly 2 weeks. people have come out in protest in some cases the government has responded with force even admitting that a few people have been injured in the recent crisis. is a member of the biggest hindu group in india that supports the governing party he says the government has used minimal force during the last 2 weeks if you have an option to fire real bullets and if you have to fire guns then obviously. the supreme court of india was very clear that in order to control law and order situation you must use minimum force in the 1st instance and then use the extreme forces analyst. disagrees the question is that does use of
8:07 am
guns blinding of children blending of men is it a justifiable self-defense by the armed forces against in 2016 the indian government said it would replace pellet guns with a less lethal weapon or on the ground any given this means security forces are still using them against those protesting over new delhi's decision to revoke autonomy. the fear is that if the protests continue in the coming days or months so will the pellet injuries on al-jazeera new delhi with tension high over the disputed kashmir region our correspondent and some of the job that spoken with the foreign minister of pakistan administered kashmir to get his thoughts on the situation. why because fear is. the. genocide that can be on the inside of it we have no evidence as
8:08 am
you. open up open up you hear did anybody stop you you went to the elysee you make people you into and people will be allow you then why don't you attempt and try to having been here who will. make a request to the indian side and let them allow you to go to the negative to me to be to ship over there with the allow you i doubt it so we're not going to fare we have nothing to hide and you can see more of that interview in talk to al-jazeera program at these times on tuesday and wednesday 0 the u.s. congresswoman who was denied entry to israel on the social visits has spoken out to leave a critic of israel policy israeli policies against palestinians in a supporter of a global boycott movement against the country was laid off a private visits to see how grandmother in the occupied west bank boss she says she
8:09 am
turned it down because oppressive conditions designed to humiliate is what she had to say about witnessing life on the occupation. as a young girl visiting palestine to see my grandparents and extended family i watched as my mother had to go to do human eyes in check point i remember shaking with fear when checkpoints appeared in the small village of beverly forecasts same thing guns everywhere i remember visiting east jerusalem with my then husband and him as courting the court and off the bus although he was a united states citizen just so security forces could harass him all i can do. as my fifty's granddaughter as the as the granddaughter of a woman who lived in occupied territories the elevate her voice by exposing the truth the only way i know how as my detroit public school teachers taught me by humanizing the pain of oppression john hendren is live for us in washington d.c.
8:10 am
joan what else did she have to say. well when should rashida to leave and now she was not going to see her grandmother in the palestinian territory over the weekend at the palestinian grandmothers trended on twitter ready but it's apparently a common story in vatos what it's leaving and iran omar the other member of congress who is denied entry into israel wanted to share and they held a news conference inviting a number of people who had gone through similar kinds of experiences in one omar shot back at the trumpet ministration after the president urged israel not to let them enter their country she said by enlisting a foreign power to take action against 2 american citizens let alone elected members of congress mr trump crossed a line that other presidents have not had the event was to highlight the human cost of the israeli occupation and rashida to leave went on to say that history does have a habit of repeating herself she told a story of
8:11 am
a congressman from michigan who decades ago was denied a visa to enter apartheid south africa she said the difference was in those days the state department and the president were willing to fight for that member of congress he eventually did gain entry in which he was trying to highlight is a new kind of partisanship that exists here in the united states how much impact jonah they having on the decision makers in the why the u.s. public. well public opinion on these issues seems to have changed the israeli palestinian issues didn't used to be so partisan years ago but with the fiery rhetoric coming out of the white house and the makeup of congress changing where you now have muslim members there there has been increasing partisanship on both sides but there's no sign that there is any coming together here i don't think a lot of minds are being changed the white house put out a statement doubling down on its position spokesman hogan gidley said congresswoman
8:12 am
rashid it's a leap and omar have a well documented history of anti semitic comments and went on to say israel has the right to prevent people who want to destroy it from entering the country so the white house is not changing its position president trump and benjamin netanyahu both have upcoming elections so perhaps not a lot of changes going on here but there is a lot of fiery rhetoric john many thanks indeed i was there as john had reporting live from washington a white new york city police officer has been filed over his role in the death of a black man 5 years ago eric who was on the 20 approached by police on the city's trees died after he was put into a choke hold his death sparked protests over race and police brutality that inspired the black lives massive movement zeros gabriel is on the reports now from new york. the video of the moment new york city police officer daniel pentel a choked unarmed black man eric garner trying to arrest him by years ago police say
8:13 am
garner a 43 year old father resisted arrest as he was being choked. he is heard saying his last words i can't breathe. his death led to the black lives matter movement and months of protests throughout the country against police brutality against blacks better all and local authorities never brought criminal charges against a police officer but an internal investigation found the chokehold did not conform with department arrest procedures on monday police commissioner james o'neill said the officer would be fired and this case the unintended consequence of mr garner's death must have a consequence of its own therefore i agree with the deputy commissioner of trials legal findings and recommendations this clear that daniel pennzoil can no longer effectively serve as a new york city police officer eric garners daughter was happy the officer was
8:14 am
fired but said it's injustice her father was killed in the 1st place i will do everything in my pollock's and so never see another ever gonna i don't even want to see another video of the person being choked out because this was supposed to happen to him and it's not supposed to happen i should not be here standing with my brother father less i should be here with my father but that's really all took that away from me also have a 17 the police union blasted the decision saying the officer was just doing his job trying to arrest an uncooperative suspect anyone that has been a police officer know every 2nd counts when you're getting possibly thrown through a plate glass window your responsibility is to sell the person you're trying to arrest and everyone else while there is disagreement if the police officer should have been fired. all sides seem to agree on one thing that 5 years was way too long to reach a conclusion in this case now the police commissioner is saying that in the future
8:15 am
the department will decide much sooner on disciplinary action against any police officer accused of wrongdoing gabriel zonda al-jazeera new york i weather update next here on the news then some russians politicians blame this protest in moscow on foreign interference we'll tell you what they plan to do about it. my relatives our name is mark charles amount of the people the native american who wants to be the next u.s. president. and floyd mayweather beats down rumors that he's about to find an old nemesis in the middle east details coming up later in sports. hello again welcome back to international weather forecast all of the next few days plenty of rain is in store for the southern portions of china as well as over here
8:16 am
towards taiwan you can see the satellite image the clouds are already there and they will continue as we go not only just tuesday but also into wednesday over towards taiwan particularly in the southern portions of taiwan we could be seeing anywhere between 20250 millimeters of rain falling across that region so we're watching that very carefully hong kong you'll be in and out of the rain with a temperature of $32.00 degrees well it is going to dry down here across parts of southern indonesia across much of that central area over the next few days most of the heavy rain is going to be a problem across parts of thailand over the next few days so we're going to be watching areas anywhere from a central and northern parts of western thailand with bangkok being on the edge of the rain with a tempter a few of $34.00 degrees maybe dropping down to about $31.00 but over here towards been achi all the way over here towards call import it is expected to be very heavy rain few with attempt. $31.00 degrees and heavy rain is going to be a big problem here across parts of central india over the next few days and that is
8:17 am
going to extend over here towards the north as well in this area we could be seeing anywhere between another 202300 1000000 reason as we go towards wednesday and kolkata expect to see the rain continue with a temperature of $32.00. well if we cannot have palestina my government was suddenly not allowed britain to control french palestine would be an outrage but then we need to find another solution before we come to blows over a century ago britain and france made this secret deal that changed the shape of the middle east and so. now we can draw on the. psych's pico lines in the sun on just the. news is happening faster than ever before from different places from different people and you need to be part of that you need to be able to reach people wherever
8:18 am
they are and that means being across all social media platforms this is where our audience lives as well as in front of a t.v. they're on the smartphone they're on the tablet they're on the computer. and that's the way al-jazeera is of all into the true media network. it's good to have you with us hello adrian for going to here in doha with the news hour from al-jazeera the headlines turkey is condemning it as trite that marilee missed its convoy in the last rebel held province in the north syrian regime of russian warplanes have been pounding the area meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in it live
8:19 am
a move which would give them access to the strategic town of qom shakoor. a court in sudan has heard president obama alba shia tell it best to gauge is that saudi arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency the money wasn't included in the country's financial records bashir is on trial for corruption. at a new york police officer involved in the chokehold death of an unarmed black man in 2014 has been fired a video recording showed officer. wrestling eric got out of the ground got a can be heard repeatedly saying that he couldn't breathe. it's only his prime minister is expected to address the senate on tuesday after over a growing government crisis is that they can't take could be on the cusp of handing it is resignation of the coalition between the far right league party and the populist 5 star movement collapsed a few days ago to serious audio gago reports from rome. it was never a partnership of equal measures held together by an independent prime minister
8:20 am
italy's 2 populist parties the far right the and the anti establishment 5 star movement comfortably wedded to each other in a coalition of convenience. between the 2 the dominating force had always been the league with its strident anti immigrant policies and heavy reliance on its leader. combative personality and to prove popular eclipsing the 5 stars presence in the coalition. taking advantage of his surge in popularity only 2 weeks ago salvini took a gamble and announced that his party's alliance with 5 star was over the leak put forward a motion of no confidence in the government and salvini called friends actions that could make him prime minister call it hubris or a nail time intervention the move hadn't quite worked out as salvini had hoped instead the 5 star movement and the opposition democratic party began to talk
8:21 am
openly of forming a coalition among themselves leaving salvini out in the cold his supporters call him the captain but his latest venture has left him adrift faced with the prospect of losing power back down and said he would be prepared to stick with 5 star with perhaps a cabinet shuffle but his one time allies the damage had already been done. but it won't be an easy ride for 5 star either their decision to go into coalition with the far right party has cost them half of their supporters a humiliating defeat at this year's european elections and the league has overtaken the 5 star movement to become the most popular party in italy the contrie is going to write in just moments to population economic reform terms once market reforms and the fast movement have always been embracing leftist konami policies so i don't think it will come back in a political approval from the masses of italians who are somehow demanding new
8:22 am
elections it is a bitter breakup for 2 parties which will always ill suited for each other a fight for italy's identity between the far right and more centrist forces and with a weakening economy close to a recession the country cannot afford any worsening of its political turmoil in the months ahead. al-jazeera rome. a rescue ship with 107 migrants on board has rejected an offer to leave italian waters and sail to a spanish port the open arms charity vessel has called on the italian coast guard transport of migrants to land it says that those on board are too distressed to make another voyage the ship has been stuck at sea since rescuing the group off the coast of libya 18 days ago. the leaders of france and russia have indicated a new round of talks may be on the table to end the conflict in ukraine bloodier putin said that there was cause for optimism during a meeting with mario mccraw the french president's summer home in the south of
8:23 am
france more than 13000 people have died in ukraine since fighting broke out in 2014 . following russia's annexation of crimea russia says it will investigate alleged foreign interference in upcoming local elections in moscow it's concerned that foreign meddling has been encouraging all the rise rallies step vasant reports from moscow. protest on the streets of moscow 6 weeks in a row pradhan up to up and to the russian parliament summer recess. held an emergency session and set up an investigative commission. yet. i'm sure that we must investigate financing from abroad that leads to interference in russia's internal politics we must look at the activities of some diplomats who are based on russian territory maybe i'm getting ahead of myself but i promise you we will have interesting findings. the protests started in july after several opposition
8:24 am
candidates were barred from running in local elections in moscow election official said signatures they needed to collect were false normally these local elections don't attract a lot of attention but banning the opposition from taking part motivated tens of thousands to protest police have arrested thousands of protesters and some say they were beaten and now face serious criminal charges this is. many more to take part to observe as it may sound all too familiar blaming foreigners for anti-government protests is not only seen as a way to distract russian public opinion from the real reasons behind a protest it also put trace these protests negatively as being used by foreigners and this could be used to convince people not to join. on his visit to france on monday president vladimir putin said protesters have a right to let their voice heard but the authorities will do everything to prevent violence. i am a guest here and it is not
8:25 am
a good place to say that but i have to since you asked we all know about events related to the so-called yellow vests in which about 11 people were killed and 2500 people including 2000 policeman were injured we don't want that to happen in russian capital while russian politicians say the american accusations of russian meddling in the 2016 presidential elections will falls there are real basically the russian version of. what we don't have a person like bill or of course hope will result be better compared to what he has achieved because he achieved 0 and will probably find something the parliamentary commission says it will summon journalists and diplomats it suspects of interference so far the u.s. embassy has been blamed for meddling as have you tube and the german channel. step fastened al-jazeera moscow at least 8000 people have been moved to safety from
8:26 am
villages on the spanish holiday island of gran canaria because of a wildfire 16 planes and 700 firefighters attacking the blaze which has flames as high as 50 meters the fire which started last week is advancing on several fronts temperatures strong winds and low humidity all and 34 square kilometers of land have been burned so far. the salvadoran woman at the center of a controversial abortion trial. it's been acquitted of all charges evelyn hernandez was charged with murder after giving birth to a stillborn baby in a public toilet she says she was raped didn't know she was pregnant salvatore has strict abortion laws and women who have miscarriages have been accused of murder in the past supreme court judges and all the retrial after overturning her initial 30 year jail sentence. the united states has delayed its total ban on always access to american suppliers the chinese technology giant will be allowed to continue buying some components from the u.s.
8:27 am
in order to fulfill existing contracts the extra 90 days will help american companies when themselves off far away products or shinton accuses the telecoms and phone manufacturer of building a backdoor into its 5 g. network the chinese intelligence services. afghanistan marks 100 years of independence president ashraf ghani says that his government is committed to eradicating and destroying i saw the armed group has claimed responsibility for days attack in kabul which killed 63 people shot at palace reports. 100 years ago afghanistan gained its independence from britain in kabul reminders are everywhere. we are very happy that we became independent on this day a 100 years ago and that's why we are celebrating it. yes i said i'm celebrating independence day to day i'm happy i like the flag. children also
8:28 am
celebrate with cricket calling it the great game it's a hangover from british colonization of the region yet these children are unaware of another great game played when the modern history began. in the 19th century afghanistan was caught between russia pushing south and the british expanded waste from india afghans for to retain the sovereignty but were patiently occupied by the british to the treaty was signed in 1919 decades later during the cold war afghanistan was again stuck between 2 world powers russia and the united states in 1959 eisenhower became the 1st u.s. president to visit the country both nations called it afghanistan influence leading to rapid botanizing in a more liberal afghanistan in the fifty's and sixty's. all came to afghanistan on christmas eve 1979 and never left the soviet union invaded and took kabul within 3
8:29 am
days. islamic guerrilla fighters known as the motor who dean fought back with u.s. support 1000000 people died in the fighting until the soviets withdrew a decade later a civil war intel a ban rule follows national landmarks and infrastructure which. choice like kabul's darla mom palace. and this is how it looks today president gandhi had planned to inaugurate the building for independence day sign of how far the nation had come but again conflict intervened to spurning the event after an iso suicide bombing killed dozens of people just a few kilometers from here many afghans are resisting celebration for another reason they feel the sovereignty is still compromised the young. son believed rather stunned has lots of this so that by the soviet union. by the united states of america. the u.s.
8:30 am
invaded in 2118 years later having spent $800000000000.00 and with $13000.00 troops in country it's negotiating its withdrawal with the taliban so far the afghan government isn't involved but those talks could mark the start of a new afghanistan that dance hopefully they can shake their identity without the threat of war or into fair. kabul. place 10 soldiers have been killed and several wounded after unidentified faces stormed a military unit and more than bikini afonso the attack happened in. soon province the military says it could be the country's deadliest attack on the armed forces the key to fossilize into months of violence the deaths of hundreds of civilians. demonstrators in indonesia's west papua region have turned violent protests as public facilities block roads they're angry at what they say is police abuse against ethnic poppy and students if you have forms the western part of the island
8:31 am
of new guinea has been disputed since the end of dutch rule under schapelle reports . as protests spread across 3 cities and top one thousands took part to show their anger. in monaco the capital of west papuan protesters blocked intersections by burning tires and brought some areas to a standstill and they set fire to the local parliament building. earlier in the day a protester named alfred explained his reasons for participating in this is racism against pop when people pop when students were attacked and arrested only because they were willing to raise the indonesian flag or the incident he's referring to happened over the weekend on independence day rumors spread on social media that ethnic pop and students living on java island had damage the indonesian flag. their dormitory in surabaya was surrounded by a group of people who were recorded chanting kick them out and other anti west
8:32 am
papuan slogans. rather than disperse the crowd police fired tear gas and raided the compound on saturday. more than 40 ethnic pop when students say they were subjected to racial abuse as they were being detained. after being held for nearly 9 hours the group was released without charge. this incident clearly disturbed the unity as a nation the government ordered a thorough and fair investigation of the incident and those who had violated the law we will pursue anyone who used this incident for their own interest. in the past indonesia's government has blamed separatists for stoking violence in the west papuan region which has been home to a low level armed rebellion by indigenous pop once for decades in the 1st day of. job always doesn't he good policy by giving amnesty inside.
8:33 am
prisoners however in the recency do listen forget about you know how to preserve. as a human or human rights. the latest allegations of police abuse are likely to add to their list of grievances and or chapell al-jazeera several people hoping to be the next u.s. president will be in iowa in the next few days at a forum focusing on native american issues most democrats but one of the speakers will be charles who's running as an independent alan fischer met the native american aiming to change the face of u.s. politics. mark charles hopes in 17 months he won't be walking in his dining room but from the oval office in the white house he's running for president and believes america is ready to elect a native american i am running this campaign not as a protest but a way. to try to change. a citizen of the navajo nation he launched his
8:34 am
campaign as an independent online my realtor's our name is mark charles and since the launch he's campaigned mainly in native american areas for one very good reason native america alone has the power to put me on the ballot in all 50 states. that is incredibly empowering to our communities which for so many not just decades centuries has been left behind and disenfranchised by this nation and said you don't have any political or voting power and so you're going to be dismissed and. journey the principle plank of his campaign from the very beginning of the country marginalize many that the us constitution of we the people left women marginalized known whites and put power in the hands of a few i'm laying out this vision of let's build a nation where we the people truly means all the people one political expert says those who feel excluded might rally around him but not running for one of the 2 big
8:35 am
parties makes it hard for his voice to be heard but i do think though that the constituencies he would have to win right and he know that he is going to need all of these people who are you said marginal in our society and these are people who are becoming the majority in america so i think he has the right sensibility i mean i think his message of one of we the people is the kind of message that people are interested in and perhaps why people issue partisan labels but i do think the fact that he is an independent speaks to this larger issue that we have with people who look like non winner mark charles is only the 2nd native american to run for the u.s. presidency his campaign is small has a source is tiny but he believes he is a big message and that the u.s. is ready for something new from someone whose roots go back to before america was america alan fischer al-jazeera washington. palestinian artists come all below has been buried in occupied east jerusalem the home from which he'd been exiled since
8:36 am
the start of the israeli occupation in 1967 his family worked to gain rare israeli permission to build. himself asked to be buried at home harry forces reports. the whole church just outside the walls of jerusalem's old city an old man has come home they're here to mourn come all born in jerusalem in 1902 his childhood spent in the streets and alleyways of the old city but his life and his work as a leading palestinian artist marked by his inability to return you can and your magical principle was in beirut in 1067 when israel occupied east jerusalem apart from one brief visit in 1940 he remained in exile from the city that inspired him fusing the geometry and spirituality of christian and islamic art into his own abstract style throughout my career the experience of light had always been to my
8:37 am
word perhaps it is the light of jerusalem that pie and to recapture all. under israeli law palestinians who are outside of east jerusalem on the occupation started with stripped of their right to come back to their homes since pilasters death nearly 2 weeks ago his family has worked to get rare israeli permission for him to be buried in jerusalem it was a dying wish why no that's what the man said when i was surprise knowing that it would it would not be a lot like going through a formalities and fighting and not even promises and saying no that it so. he said when no he was on. the today something new. last week there was a memorial service in berlin where the latter had been living and working since 2012 he also lived in italy lebanon rocko the u.s.
8:38 am
and france a long and rich life ending where it began as much as this final journey has been full of deeply personal significance the family statement also made it clear that this was a political gesture they say the palestinian right of return is a sacred one especially for jerusalemites for whom this holy city is a vital part of their lives and their arrests. one of.
8:39 am
8:40 am
you're responding 6 continents across the. aisle to syria's corresponding sleeping beauty story state you'd never. know if you. were at the brazil garage in the town or palestinian refugee agency or through did world news. again touch schools his son. thank you very much man to say nice would have dropped
8:41 am
the 1st points of the english premier league season they drew one all away to wolverhampton will pull a pug could have a want to go for them but he missed the 2nd half final to the draw means united the half full points from 2 games or the going assault has now failed to be to all the hunton in 3 attempts in all competitions as united boss or you ventus began the syria campaign this saturday against palma but it remains unclear where the new boss sorry will be in the dugout the 60 year old has been diagnosed with pneumonia he missed training on monday as well as a pre-season friendly over the weekend sorry only joined in june following a season at chelsea in which he won them they are plagued. german football champions by munich have completed the signing of a new from barcelona the brazilian has joined on loan but by and have the option to make it permanent for fix the price of 133000000 dollars struggled since joining
8:42 am
us now from liverpool a 492000000 last year or so it is. because of violence importance and its history is the club that comes with a certain responsibility at every competition with expectations to win big titles each season and obviously the champions league is among them so i'm here to work hard learn to give my all and do my best to help my teammates win important titles a little known defend playing in northern ireland's women's league is in the running with the likes of lionel mrs la time for him which for a fee for a ward. who plays for cliftonville a ladies is a nominee for the world a goal of the year award for this strike officially called the award fans vote for the winner online or the prize was established in 2009 and simpson could join an impressive list including your ma christian or nada and all of issued if she wins.
8:43 am
are there more calls for indy car to stop racing as pocono raceway and pennsylvania after another huge crash there on sunday it happened on the opening lap of the race at the oval circuit at 5 cars were involved but there were no serious injuries thankfully one of the drivers felix rusin face that was hospitalized but has since been released have a look at the on board the camera shot that and you get a real sense of just how terrifying it would have been. for many feel the track of pocono is too dangerous justin wilson died there in 2015 last year with cancer was catapulted into a fence leaving him paralyzed from the waist down. other day i spoke to andy card
8:44 am
journalist john he believes that it's the endicott regulations not the tracks that create in dangerous situations i don't think you know is any more dangerous than any other oval track on her schedule while it does bad karma in the last few years with 3 major accidents now and i think it's a product or. more of modern racing itself and anything else. carson designed to be as equal as possible. when nobody can create space so i was very struck you end up with situations like that were cars run close proximity they can touch you when the cars touch you know when we announce your book things now i think it's a product of the former racing fans and if you read comments after any race whether it's national are going to go for the one they get upset when they don't get close race and the cars the regulations or the next nascar or in the park the cars have
8:45 am
been regulated so that no one can gain thing and yes it's created incredibly close and slightly worse which time the same time it's going to consequence the cars running this close together can from together saying that floyd mayweather jr has denied that he said to fight manny pacquiao in saudi arabia it follows a video that surfaced on social media on sunday in which the boxing legend said the fight is happening it hears that video i want to say thank you it's not going to come to saudi arabia to say don't you guys talk about the mayweather patio v.m.s. saudi arabia floyd money made with a moment when. may were they to expand that video was shot at is this head of a promotional trip to saudi and that he was specifically asked to mention paki out however he confirmed that there are currently no talks for the fight to happen may with them pacquiao squared off at once back in 2015 the american winning the
8:46 am
unanimous decision. and that's so useful for me we'll have more later on sunday thanks dude that's all from the news but i'll be back in just a moment with more of the day's news and see them.
8:47 am
hard. when the news breaks. when people need to be heard and the story needs to be told pretty remarkable too to valerie it died last week and crossing from mexico to the united states with exclusive interviews and in-depth reports we're committed to both the fish and the life or is it shipped to al-jazeera has teams on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and live news. talk to al jazeera. what guarantees ready will you give to the people will be attending the minimal workshop we listen i'm supposed to explain apologize for someone who is also a terror right we meet with global newsmakers and talk about the stories that matter
8:48 am
on the old a 0. 0. where every. battle heats up in a key town and syria's province with accusations by turkey that its military convoy was attacked. again this is al jazeera i'm adrian finnegan also coming up a court in sudan his evidence that former president omar al bashir received millions of dollars from saudi arabia. relief the mother of
8:49 am
a stillborn baby is found not guilty and his mother. and a new york city police officers fired over his deadly handling of an unarmed man which led to the black lives matter movement. turkey is condemning it asked right that narrowly missed its convoy in the last rebel held province in syria's north syria and russian warplanes have been pounding the area to accuse foreign ministry says the attack violated agreements with russia which is a powerful ally to syrian president bashar al assad damascus says that the convoy was heading towards calm. coolant to protect rebels but i'm corrode denies the accusation syrian government forces claim to take control of the checkpoints giving them access to that strategically important town. to hold a report style from beirut. a syrian or russian warplane is believed to be behind
8:50 am
this air attack close to a turkish military convoy it was making its way through the opposition controlled province of idlib turkey says it was heading to one of its observation posts. that in the harbor town of more ak and like the rebel controlled town of hunch a horn a few kilometers away it could soon come under siege and syrian government forces and their allies advance the syrian foreign ministry is accusing turkey of trying to stop the army's advance and providing support to what it calls terrorist groups turkey's local allies the so-called syrian national army were recently seen heading to the front lines to help fight the government's military push the nation and army were sent in massive amounts to the front lines and and the 2nd we have seen today morning the mess of calm war 2 hunchy of order to established there and prevent the . cutting of highway that highway will allow the syrian government to
8:51 am
collect cities under its control and revive trade but many population centers like lie along the road the town used to shelter up to 100000 syrians before the military escalation started in april many of them had been displaced from nearby hama province it's now empty as government troops and their allies are a few kilometers from reaching its center. syrian regime did not enter haunch a clear and fighting continues in the vicinity of the city the turks have sent reinforcement to prevent the syrian regime. and train car and as usual the syrian regime targeted the techie's convoy turkey is a key carrying tool in this region as part of the deescalation equipment and we do not expect it to give up the airstrike may have been a message from syria to turkey whose defense ministry has condemned it as
8:52 am
a violation of existing agreements and cooperation with russia and turkey's deployment of troops seems to have been its own message to syria and its backer russia not to advance any further but many are asking both sides just posturing or will the sharp escalation in tension turn the proxy battle in into a different kind of war. beirut syrian opposition forces say the russian general has died a long range missile attack targeting a government air base the rockets were launched on a member military airport in the syrian port city of latakia it's believed that the general was the supervisor of air commando operations on the province moscow has yet to comment on the strike. thousands of people are fleeing province with more expected to leave the region. according to the response coordination group operating inside syria 140000 people have been displaced in just over a week up to 10000 have left the last major rebel stronghold since sunday with more
8:53 am
headed towards the turkish border while. served as a senior syria adviser to the u.s. ambassador to the u.n. and the president barack obama he says the airstrike near the turkish convoy and it lip was most likely deliberate. by all indications the turkish forces and allied syrian opposition groups the syrian national army were heading toward the southern edge or the frontline of it le province to try to. slow down the government. advances into the province and i think the syrian regime probably incarnation with the russians carried out their strike as either a warning or intended to hit the. the military convoy you know the turks have very limited options they are facing both the regime and the russians alone while they're also worried about the potential of 3000000 refugees spilling over into
8:54 am
their their country and obviously they're dealing with the kurdish situation along the border with syria democratic forces so they're going to be very very hesitant to engage in an all out confrontation and i think they're going to seek to at deescalate now publicly they can adopt a harsh stance but behind the scenes i am certain that they are trying to work with the russians to convince the regime to slow down their income encroachments into areas that are close or at. the checkpoints. sudan's former president obama says that he's received millions of dollars from saudi arabia's royal family during his presidency but he told investigators the fans wanting clued in the country's financial records revelation came during his 1st court hearing on corruption and bribery charges since he was forced out of office by the military in april hibbard morgan reports now from khartoum. he was once feared and guarded as the head of the country now sudan's former president bashir is under
8:55 am
a different guard as he appears in court to face criminal charges which include illegal possession of foreign currency and bribery investigators say they found more than $130000000.00 in his house days after the military deposed him in april. presenting the head of a country to trial proves that there is a rule of law in the country and that no one is above the law this message is not just for the ousted government but the incoming government the case will resume next week we can't tell you what the outcome will be but we can say that we are assured that the case is going in the favor of the defendant the court heard that bashir admitted to receiving $90000000.00 from saudi arabia he also admitted to receiving millions more from the ruler of the united arab emirates. during his time as president bashir is 10 sudanese soldiers to fight alongside the saudi u.a.e. coalition in yemen but investigators say the former president said he doesn't know
8:56 am
how the money he received was spent nor did he follow up on excuse he was also charged in may for inciting to kill protesters in demonstrations that started in december over the rising cost of bread which quickly turned into a nationwide anti-government movement those charges are yet to be heard in court charges not addressed are charges that are brought against him by the international criminal court which involve work crimes crimes against humanity and genocide the transitional council that ousted him said that they will wait until a transitional government is formed and an independent and impartial judiciary is set up and that body will be the one to determine whether the former president should be tried for these crimes and if he is whether he's guilty or innocent. more than 300000 people have been killed in the western region of darfur since 2003 and more than 3000000 displaced international experts say there are many reasons as to why bashir isn't likely to be handed to the international criminal court. recent research demonstrates. warrant of arrest released by the international court would
8:57 am
do not really. provide incentives for a peaceful solution the current transitional government is composed also by many who are the of lee peace it may allege of course in the massacre late since the 1003 so we should start asking the question on whether the just weak claim the i.c.c. could bring to sudan wouldn't be a plus saga of justice but after 30 years in power with immunity from any kind of prosecution for people in throw down the corruption charges are applied to scottish justice then one atone for the morgan under there to. the us a sense of the ground launched missile with a range of more than 500 kilometers the test would have been banned under the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty washington formally withdrew from the landmark $1000.00 ac $87.00 pact with russia earlier this month alleging that
8:58 am
moscow had already been violating it the u.s. plans to test them into b.d. a range ballistic missile in the event pretty culhane reports now from washington. the u.s. department of defense has announced that it has in fact gone ahead and tested a land based cruise missile this would have been banned under the intermediate nuclear forces treaty that the u.s. had signed with russia but let earlier this month the u.s. said that they were going to withdraw from that treaty because they said that russia had been violating the terms of the agreement now that's something that russia denies so what we know is this test took place on sunday in the afternoon in california and the military saying that it went more than 500 kilometers and then accurately hit its target again the more than 500 kilometers is the key because that sort of testing hasn't been done in decades because it had been prevented by the treaty that says you cannot test land based cruise missiles that have a range between 502-5500 kilometers so the u.s.
8:59 am
said that they were going to take this step they say they're going to have more tests in the future the big question now is where they're going to try and put these land based cruise missiles we know that the secretary of defense has hinted that he'd like to play some in asia china reacted strongly along with the u.s. allies say that that was not a good idea but this again he said it will take time before any placements are made this is a 1st step but it is a 1st step that the u.s. has now taken. the salvadoran woman at the center of a controversial abortion trial has been acquitted of all charges evelyn hernandez was charged with murder after giving birth to a stillborn baby in a public toilet she says she was raped and didn't know that she was pregnant salvador has strict abortion laws and women who have miscarriages have been accused of murder in the past. i also asked that justice and freedom be done for the 17 other women who have been locked up in similar cases my future is to keep studying and achieve my goals and weather update on 0 then powerplay in its early
9:00 am
days after the ruling coalition collapsed the prime minister's future remains uncertain. and we meet the victims of powerful pellet guns used by security forces in india to minister kashmir. hello again welcome back to international weather forecast all of the next few days plenty of rain is in store for the southern portions of china as well as over here towards taiwan you can see the satellite image the clouds are already there and they will continue as we go not only just tuesday but also into wednesday over towards taiwan particularly in the southern portions of taiwan we could be seeing anywhere between 20250 millimeters of rain falling across that region so we're watching that very carefully hong kong you'll be in and out of the rain with
9:01 am
a temperature of $32.00 degrees well it is going to dry down here across parts of southern indonesia across much of that central area over the next few days most of the heavy rain is going to be a problem across parts of thailand over the next few days so we're going to be watching areas anywhere from a central and northern parts of western thailand with bangkok being on the edge of the rain with the tempter a few of $34.00 degrees maybe dropping down to about $31.00 but over here towards. all the way over here towards call in port it is expected to be very heavy rain few with a temperature of $31.00 degrees and heavy rain is going to be a big problem here across parts of central india over the next few days and that is going to extend over here towards the north as well and this area we could be seeing anywhere between another 202300 1000000 resign as we go towards wednesday and kolkata expect to see the rain continue with a temperature of 32. the weather sponsored by i can't tolerate this. well if we cannot have palestina my government was suddenly not allowed britain to control french palestine would be an outrage but then we need to find another
9:02 am
solution before we come to blows over a century ago britain and france made this secret deal that changed the shape of the middle east and so. now we can draw on the. psych's pekoe lines in the sun on just. about again this is al jazeera let's remind you of the main news this hour turkey is condemning an asse trike that narrowly missed its convoy in the last rebel held province in syria's north syrian regime and russian warplanes have been pounding the area meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken them troll of a checkpoint in
9:03 am
a move which would give them access to the strategic town of khalid shaikh cool. because in sudan has heard the president omar al bashir tell investigators that saudi arabia's royal family gave him billions of dollars during his presidency money wasn't included in the country's financial records while the ship is on trial for corruption and the salvadoran woman at the center of a controversial abortion. trollers been acquitted of all charges evelyn hernandez was charged with murder after giving birth to a stillborn baby in a public toilet she says she was raped and didn't know she was pregnant. 20 soldiers have been killed and at least 40 are still missing after an identified fighters stormed a military unit in the book you know the attack happened in. sume province the military says it could be the country's deadliest attack on the armed forces. has endured months of violence with the deaths of hundreds of civilians. a white new
9:04 am
york city police officer has been fired over his role in the death of a black man 5 years ago eric gone who was unarmed when approached by police on a city street died after he was put in a choke hold his death sparked protests over race and police brutality that inspired the black lives massive movement. there are reports now from new york. the video of the moment new york city police officer daniel pentel unarmed black man eric garner trying to arrest him by years ago police say garner a 43 year old father resisted arrest as he was being choked if he is really. he's heard saying his last words i can't breathe. his death led to the black lives matter movement and months of protests throughout the country against police brutality against blacks better all and local authorities never brought criminal charges against a police officer but an internal investigation found the chokehold did not conform
9:05 am
with department arrest procedures on monday police commissioner james o'neill said the officer would be fired and this case the unintended consequence of mr garner's death must have a consequence of its own therefore i agree with the deputy commissioner of trials legal findings and recommendations is clear that daniel pennzoil can no longer effectively serve as a new york city police officer eric garners daughter was happy the officer was fired but said it's injustice her father was killed in the 1st place i will do everything in my power let's of so never see another erica i don't even want to see another video of the person being choked out because this was supposed to happen to him is not supposed to happen i should not be here standing with my brother father less i should be here with my father but that's really all took that away from me on. the police union blasted the decision saying the officer was just doing his job trying to arrest and unquote. operative suspect anyone that has been
9:06 am
a police officer know every 2nd counts when you're getting possibly trained through a plate glass window your responsibility is the a self the person you are trying to arrest and everyone else while there is disagreement if the police officer should have been fired all sides seem to agree on one thing that 5 years was way too long to reach a conclusion in this case now the police commissioner is saying that in the future the department will decide much sooner on disciplinary action against any police officer accused of wrongdoing gabriel zano al-jazeera new york a u.s. congresswoman who was denied entry to israel on the official visit and spoken out rashida to leave a critic of israeli policies against palestinians and a supporter of a global boy called movement against the country was laid off a private visit to see her grandmother in the occupied west bank bus she says she
9:07 am
turned it down because of oppressive conditions designed to humiliate her here's what she said about witnessing life on the occupation as a young girl visiting palestine to see my grandparents and extended family i watched as my mother had to go to do human eyes in fact checkpoint i remember shaking with fear when checkpoints appeared in the small village of beveled and fork our tanks and guns everywhere i remember visiting east jerusalem with my then husband and him as courting that i scored off the bus although he was a united states citizen just so security forces could harass him all i can do as my city's grand daughter as the as the granddaughter of a woman who lives in occupied territories the elevate her voice by exposing the truth the only way i know how as my detroit public school teachers taught me by humanizing the pain of oppression. the white house says u.s.
9:08 am
president donald trump has spoken by phone with india's prime minister and stressed the need to reduce tension with pakistan it's been 2 weeks now since today revoked the autonomy of indian administered kashmir from promoting discussed increasing trade and preventing what they described as cross border terrorism meanwhile new delhi has eased some restrictions in indian administered kashmir but concerns about human rights abuses can continue the number of civilians say that they've been targeted by indian forces during the walk down to 0 spoke to 2 people who suffered life changing injuries reports. mohammad may never regain his vision in one of his eyes he says he was hit by pellets fired by an indian soldier right after he stepped out of his local mosque. everything was normal there were no protests security forces chased us away and fired pellets at us one more person older than me was also injured he was discharged from hospital yesterday. mom of
9:09 am
the qs a security forces an indian administered kashmir of targeting. he shows us his back with scars of what he says a pellet injury. earlier this month thousands here defied restrictions imposed by the authorities and protested against the indian government's decision to revoke autonomy. this 17 year old was one of them. we had no intentions to bury stone but the police attacked and several boys were injured including mean i was hit on the right side of my body by belly. even though indian administered kashmir has been under lockdown for nearly 2 weeks. people have come out in protest in some cases the government has responded with force even admitting that a few people have been injured in the recent crisis. is
9:10 am
a member of the biggest hindu group in india that supports the governing party he says the government has used minimal force during the last 2 weeks if you have an option to fire real bullets and if you have to fire guns then obviously we'll choose the letter and the supreme court of india was very clear that in order to control law and order situation you must use minimum force in the force instance and then use the extreme forces analyst disagrees or the question is that does use of guns blinding of children blending of men is it a justifiable self-defense by the armed forces. in 2016 the government said it would replace pellet guns with a less lethal weapon or on the ground any given this means security forces are still using them against those protesting over new delhi's decision to revoke autonomy. the fear is that if the protests continue in the coming days or months so
9:11 am
will the pellet injuries on al-jazeera new delhi over tension high over the disputed kashmir region our correspondent asama been job and spoke with the foreign minister of pakistan administered kashmir to get his thoughts on the situation. my biggest fear is. the. genocide. that can take place on the inside of it we have no evidence. open up open up you here did anybody stop you you went to the elysee you make people you into and people will be allow you then why don't you attempt and try after having been here. and make a request to the indian side and let them allow you to go to sri negat to meet the readership over there will be allowed i doubt it so we're not going to fair we have
9:12 am
nothing to hide and you can see that interview in full on talk to al jazeera immediately after this bulletin and at these times throughout tuesday and wednesday here on out syria italy's prime minister is expected to address the senate on tuesday over a growing government crisis which is at the county could be on the cusp of handing in his resignation after the coalition between the far right league policy of the populist 5 star movement collapsed a few days ago so they are going to go reports now from rome. it was never a partnership of equal measures held together by an independent prime minister italy's 2 populist parties the far right the and the anti establishment 5 star movement comfortably wedded to each other in a coalition of convenience. between the 2 the dominating force had always been the league with its strident anti immigrant policies and heavy reliance on its leader. combative personality and to prove popular eclipsing the 5 stars presence in the
9:13 am
coalition. taking advantage of his surge in popularity only 2 weeks ago salvini took a gamble and announced that his party's alliance with 5 star was over the leak put forward a motion of no confidence in the government and salvini called friendly actions that could make him prime minister call it hubris or a nail time intervention the move hadn't quite worked out as salvini had hoped instead the 5 star movement and the opposition democratic party began to talk openly of forming a coalition among themselves leaving salvini out in the cold his supporters call him their captain but his latest venture has left him adrift faced with the prospect of losing power back down and said he would be prepared to stick with 5 star with perhaps a cabinet shuffle but his one time allies the damage had already been done. but it
9:14 am
won't be an easy ride for 5 star either their decision to go into coalition with the far right party has cost them half of their supporters a humiliating defeat at this year's european elections and the league has overtaken the 5 star movement to become the most popular party in italy the contrie is going to write just moments to population economic reform liberal terms wants market reforms and the fast movement have always been embracing. if tests economic policies so i don't think it will come back in a political approval from the masses of italians who are somehow demanding new elections it is a bitter breakup for 2 parties which will always ill suited for each other a fight for italy's identity between the far right and more centrist forces and with a weakening economy close to a recession the country cannot afford any worsening of its political turmoil in the months ahead. al-jazeera roam the leaders of france and russia indicated
9:15 am
a new round of talks may be on the table to end the conflict in ukraine putin said that there was cause for optimism during a meeting with. at the french president summer home in southern france but reports of ladysmith putin landed at the medieval break or softball emmanuel macros summer residence on the mediterranean sea the fridge president said he hoped to persuade the russian leader to help in fighting in eastern ukraine mackerel said ukraine's new president. promised to end the conflict food fresh russian backed fighters and ukrainian forces have been no war since russia annexed crimea in 2040. 4 says made by president selenski i think really changed the situation putin has spoken to him several times in recent weeks and it's an opportunity for us to revisit the situation to exchange and prepare future meetings concerning presidents
9:16 am
alinsky and chancellor merkel we hope for a new summit in normandy format in the coming weeks the 2 leaders seem to make progress on ukraine putin told mackerel there was cause for optimism but there was little common ground on syria the russian leader rebuffed my calls demand that syria's moscow backed regime stop bombing the it lip region we. have been several attempts to attack a base from the area of a lip that's why we support the efforts of the syrian army to end terrorism threats . they're. the dogs calm as macro prepares to whose delete is from the group of 7 nations including donald trump the g 7 with the g 8 until russia was excluded in crimea the timing of this meeting just days before the g. 7 summit is significant wants to highlight france's ability to talk to all sides bolster his country's standing on the international stage and despite the clear differences between paris and moscow michael says it's important to keep dialogue
9:17 am
with russia open. even though rusher is not in the g 8 today's genius even in a way it was never totally excluded because political leaders realize that they can't totally ignore russia's position as a world power. micros attempts to reach out to president putin could be a risk the russian leaders proved uncompromising in the past but the french president hopes his efforts could lead to brokering peace in ukraine and ending europe's only war. i'll just sirrah fort france russia to investigate allegations of foreign interference in its upcoming local elections in moscow some local politicians say that foreign meddling is encouraging and all the rise dryly is a parliamentary committee has now agreed to set up a special commission police violently broken up large demonstrations of opposition candidates who are banned from running in the election. at least 9000 people have
9:18 am
been ordered to leave villages on the spanish holiday island of gran canaria because of a wildfire 16 planes and 700 firefighters are tackling the blaze which has flames as high as 50 metres a fire which began last week is advancing on several fronts due to high temperatures strong winds and low humidity. it is good to have you with us hello adrian for going to hear what the headlines announces there are turkey is condemning it as strike that narrowly missed its convoy in the last rebel held province in the north of syria syrian regime and russian warplanes have been pounding the area meanwhile syrian forces say they've taken control of a checkpoint in it lip a move which would give them access to the strategic town of qom shakoor. a court in sudan has heard former president omar al bashir tell investigators that saudi
9:19 am
arabia's royal family gave him millions of dollars during his presidency the money wasn't included in the country's financial records al bashir is on trial for corruption. the salvadoran woman at the center of a controversial abortion trial has been acquitted of all charges evelyn hernandez was charged with murder after giving birth to a stillborn baby in a public toilet she says she was raped and didn't know that she was pregnant. i also asked that justice and freedom be done for the 17 other women who have been locked up in similar cases my future is to keep studying and achieve my goals 20 soldiers have been killed and at least 40 are missing after as yet unidentified fighters stormed a military unit in the back in a faso it happened in nice and blue in sume province the military says that it could be the deadliest attack on the country's armed forces which has endured
9:20 am
months of violence with the deaths of hundreds of civilians a new york city police officer has been fired for the chokehold death of an unarmed black man you look at the city police commissioner james a deal made the announcement based on the recommendations of a department disciplinary judge eric garner died in 2014 of his death led to the black lives matter movement which calls for racial justice officer danielle penn's alayo was recorded on video with his arm wrapped around god his neck russia is to investigate alleged foreign interference at its upcoming local elections in moscow some local politicians say that foreign meddling is encouraging on all the rise rallies a parliamentary committee has now agreed to set up a special commission at least 9000 people have been ordered to leave villages on gran canaria due to a wildfire 16 fades and 700 firefighters are tackling the blaze. there's the headlines more news for you here after talk to al-jazeera next.
9:21 am
on the move. to see. this deceiving scenery hides one of the world's most dangerous flashpoints. a brewing and ongoing conflict between 2 nuclear drive over. the ridge on the right is in india and the one on the left is in pakistan. the 2 neighbors have fought 3 wars over kashmir and the latest crisis has once again highlighted 72 years of failure in finding a solution for. the stage was set all british wrote
9:22 am
after the 2 countries gained independence from british rule in 1947 the most western majority kish we decided to extend to india that did not sit well with the local population in pakistan and the 2 countries and their militias had their 1st war over schmear in 1988 a un resolution and later mutual agreements formed a cease fire line of what's now called the line of control. on the 5th of august prime minister there in there more the government made a dramatic decision it modified the partial autonomy in the part of me to do overseas. to stem anticipated protests india locked down the region with additional troops reinforcements and severed all its outside links were informed that the internet. that caused a predictable uproar in neighboring pakistan to schmear islamabad strongly disagrees with new delhi the insistence that the constitutional changes on an internal matter. in response pakistan's bottom and decided to create but then dia
9:23 am
downgrade diplomatic ties and test ban bus and train services. but it has also revealed an internal split inside pakistan's political system as to how to respond . the united nations has urged all sides to refrain from changing the status of kashmir and pakistan plans to take the issue to the un security council with the help of its ally china which also has a claim on a different part of the disputed kashmir himalayan region. the tough talk has direct impact on millions of people on both sides of the so-called line of control the unofficial border which separates the 2 sides. the question now will pakistan be able to neutralize the union move in diplomacy defuse tensions with powers such as china get involved and if so what could this mean for you today 3 important people on the pakistani side the country's foreign minister the president of
9:24 am
pakistan administered kashmir and a vocal opposition leader give their views on talking all that they are. the son of former prime minister benazir bhutto and former president asif ali zardari is the chairman of pakistan peoples party he is critical of both the indian and his own government i wish that i while condemning the human rights abuses in. mean or the attack on press freedoms in occupied kashmir i wish i was speaking from a moral ground moral high ground and i would be speaking from one of the high ground of my own government was not restricting some human rights and media freedoms in pakistan but having said that we can't equate our concerns about the tail mentor of democracy in pakistan with the military occupation by an extremist government by the man seen is the drop. over the the people of kashmir i mean
9:25 am
no matter our own flaws no matter our own weaknesses we have to we have to talk for those who cannot talk for themselves and at the moment there is a top. the media back out in occupied kashmir the whole political leadership in occupied kashmir whether those who used to boycott the electoral process and advocated for a freedom movement or those who took part in elections who served as chief ministers even under the b j p's own government all have been rounded up and put under arrest so it is who is left to talk to the people of kashmir if the people of us are this me to not talk out if the people of pakistan and i don't see eye to comprehend that i don't wish my government was i was fighting more passionate case a more convincing case more powerful case but that case is strong according to sadar masood han the president of pakistan administered kashmir do you think pakistan has a case pakistan has a case and the people of jammu and kashmir have
9:26 am
a case in fact india has committed aggression in the recent weeks against the people of jammu and kashmir they have invaded the territory. inducted additional $180000.00 troops to brutalize kashmiris so do we have a case of course we have a case and everybody knows that the indian or quite bushmeat has been under occupation for the past 72 years and india has made this fresh move colonised the territory of kashmir do we have a case yes we do because the issue of german bushmeat is on the agenda of the united nations security council and we have a case because there are several resolutions which have mandated that the future of the jammu and kashmir dispute should be decided in accordance with the aspirations of the people of jammu and kashmir to a referendum to be supervised by the united nations do we have a case yes we have just as india has
9:27 am
a strong strategic ally in the united states pakistan needs allies to highlight their case as well in foreign minister recently visited beijing and. don't hold but support from the chinese government as a 1st step toward it was necessary to consult with our allies. someone who stood with pakistan consistently and is one of the p 5 members that china i with the delegation to meet with the chinese he to ship and i have come back satisfaction that it be complete and to stand and indorse a point if you considered the indian action as unilateral. unlawful. and they feel that the matter should be result under the un charter and according to the a pickable security council resolutions they have
9:28 am
endorsed what if you concerned about the peace and security of division. during the muslim festival of the in a rare show of bipartisan solidarity rushing and prayed that kashmiris on pakistan side of the border. but internal divisions remain in the political opposition is critical of how the government handled india's constitutional changes. do you agree that pakistan should be doing more and do you think that a divided opposition in the ruling party sends the right message i don't think that the division between the ruling party and the opposition sense the right message or 2 or that there's a sense this this that the action taken is too little too late for example we see that the government of pakistan is following not leading but it's not a time for us to be nitpicking we in the opposition have extended a movement to need to extend our support to the people of kashmir and do whatever we can in our limited capacity but there is also concern on the pakistani side as
9:29 am
well i've spent the day at the line of control docking to ordinary kashmiris who feel that pakistan perhaps has not done enough and that is something that was shared on the parliament floor by the opposition as well where the prime minister said that you know if they like them cannot go to war how what would you tell them that will suffer satisfy them that by going on is doing all it can over the kashmir issue again with why am i here. to give a message of solidarity i represent the government of pakistan and i am here with the permission of the prime is to pakistan i discussed it with him last night and he said by all means you must go and show solidarity he himself is coming what else can pakistan do if you share the feeling of kashmir that they feel let down what else do you think that the government can do i do share the feeling that they feel it and i would don't necessarily want to 12 on the criticism but as i said earlier . i think that the people of kashmir are looking to leadership and they are looking for the prime minister of pakistan to speak to the motions. and to speak to the
9:30 am
crisis and take concrete actions not react not 5 days later decide to take any reciprocal action with india which is unfortunately what we saw in this situation but would have preferred immediate action would absolutely have preferred for more of a consensus for more bipartisan approach i mean the prime minister chose to. arrest the former prime minister mr new washer reese daughter right in the middle of this crisis these are very divisive tactics of the prime minister of pakistan who are not i don't choose to dwell on those at the moment but i believe it's important is for us to all speak out for those who can put those who can speak out for themselves because they can come before your cameras because they're not been allowed because they don't know how they relatives are doing whether those relatives are living abroad where israel and relatives are living in other states of india they don't know how their blood relatives are doing in kashmir so that's
9:31 am
a human that humanitarian crisis that's a genuine concern of the president of pakistan administered kashmir do you think by a fan has done enough with the people of pakistan and the government of pakistan the parliament to focus on for the steps that they have already taken and the solidarity that they have expressed with the occupied territories particularly its people so we want to thank them they have started a process of initiatives let's watch how india response or chooses not to respond and then the response of the state of pakistan would develop so i don't think that these are the final word and yes it is natural that the people in the street should expect more but as you must of heard from other government officials that pakistan firmly believes that there should be a diplomatic and political solution we do not go down the path to war mongering we do not want to stoke. war hysteria as india has done
9:32 am
so pakistan is showing restraint and responsibility but at the same time it is proactive it is reaching out to the united nations security council other international forums and there would be additional measures which would do strict or punish what india has done the people of pakistan stand shoulder to shoulder with the people of kashmir as far as. domestic politics is concerned at the various political parties obviously have their differences but when it comes to the issue of kashmir we all stand united and whether it's the prime minister the opposition leader or myself in my speech in the national assembly we time and time again emphasized the fact that we are willing to stand together and stand united for the people of kashmir india says that it is proof that pakistan was harboring terrorists and groups which are a threat to the indian state how do you respond to that when india says that it is
9:33 am
in response to what pakistan's. this is india's hobby horse this is. false wooden fabrication that they have been selling to the rest of the world yes there was a time when. the we called them freedom fighters they used to go across the line of control because we were being killed this was in the early 1990 s. but since then. i mean after particularly after 20032004 that practice came to an end and india has practically sealed the border with the millions. really afraid of north these 250 militants as they call them militants but millions of kashmiris who come to the square us and streets and chant the slogan very loudly go india go back leave. they have freed of this peaceful powerful
9:34 am
political movement which rejects india's strict and occupation so what i'm saying here that this suits them to sell this narrative to the entire world which is what it about the threat of terrorism which was faced with pakistan also pakistan has faced that madness and it has. grappled with this madness and is succeeding in opposing terrorism and dismantling terrorist networks be a fairing that to die work. world attention from the across the deals that are being committed. in indian occupied kashmir the indians might undertake if forth like operation and then. sort of push their wentz and distort it went into the heart you know this was a cross border terrorism you know the pull woma. to that stage trauma that they did
9:35 am
in february they would try and create some kind of a situation to die wirt. attention and that is why we think that on that predicts they might do something stupid what they have done already that was. for the rash move in our view and. people tell the world that it's a responsibility the divisions that we see in pakistan do you think that could be one of the reasons why there hasn't been. a rallying cry so to speak for kashmir as pakistan wanted even your allies such as the united arab emirates has said that it is their ambassador says that it is an internal matter for india i'm grateful that the oh i see contract group position to statement i am i'm note i see that the prime minister is reaching out to world leaders i don't expect every world leader to take a stance but is important to to to reach out and to advocate for what is for what
9:36 am
is going on why do you think that pakistan's version of events is not being heard don't go by india's explanations or interpretations because you would recall that when president trump had offered mediation india had said that it's a bilateral matter they didn't say that it was an internal matter that the german pursue dispute was and was a bilateral matter and here i ask when they took these unilateral measures did they ask pakistan the other party to the dispute or the people of jammu and kashmir let me tell you that the international response is evolving it is developing. china was quite forthcoming so was turkey i was in norway i find support within civil society swedish foreign minister has expressed her concern european parliament the british parliament some of the major british political parties they have sent communications to the united nations secretary general and the president of the
9:37 am
security council it's great the international response to this according to many international observers has been muted at best the united nations secretary-general . both sides refrained from stimulus status of kashmir the american ambassador went out and said that it is an internal matter for the indian government so is the pakistani government running out of options diplomatically to try and come to some sort of a city not at all i think the options are just beginning in fact india by being obstinate and not accepting pakistan's offer of a bilateral engagement to resolve this issue through peaceful because he sions. miscalculated it's an evolving situation pakistan is watching the situation carefully and so is the world the statement of the sector general of the u.n. is a very balanced and
9:38 am
a very correct statement he has said that this issue to be resolved under the u.n. charter and applicable security council resolutions i think that's a very encouraging statement the support offered to pakistan by china that they are with us all the way. is very encouraging and by mr man one is reaching out to world leaders i'm contacting different foreign ministers with our i spoke to the quickly for mr this morning he was based supportive very encouraging so it is building up and many countries. european countries when i spoke to the high representative of the european union. fredricka more greedy she was confused on the. humanitarian issue you know the the human rights violations it doesn't matter how many countries stand with us it doesn't matter who believes us what
9:39 am
matters is what is right and what is right is that the 70 years the people of kashmir can promise that they will be able to decide their own destiny is for 70 years we've been told that the people of kashmir will have a referendum and they will choose we are and we are saying that allow for the people to exercise their democratic rights so if the world believes in democracy if the world believes in the freedom of choice then the world should support the people of kashmir the people of kashmir on the right side of history. what gives you hope that it is not going to be the status quo this time around when you go to the un security council and your allies that something is going to change. pakistan has no choice and the people of jammu and kashmir have no choice india has altered the state to school. because it has invaded and it is trying to annex the territory and it is brutalizing because we did was already committing crimes against humanity and human rights violations india is now taking them to
9:40 am
a different level this is an existential threat i like to say for both the people the people of pakistan and bushmeat we have no choice but to go back to the united nations security council and yes there is a real polity but we want to do diplomatic diligence to alter that because nothing is a given. despite india's clout in the international community there's a communication blackout. journalism not being allowed in. the news is not filtering out the absolute confusion uncertainty one is hearing from 40 years on a turning of. non-availability of medicines my biggest fear is. the . the genocide. that can take place on the inside of it we have no evidence as you. open up open up.
9:41 am
here did anybody stop you you went to the elysee you make people you into and people will be allow you that because why did you attempt and try after having been here to. make a request to the indian side and let them allow you to go to sri negat to meet the dealership over there will be allow you i doubt it so we have nothing to fear we have nothing to hide it seems that pakistan is running out of options on this i don't think that we are running out of options i don't think that that you can change. the fate of a nation by changing what's written on paper the people living within kashmir they have more in secure today as they were before they don't know what's going to happen in the future not only to the citizens of kashmir in fact the citizens the muslim citizens all across india the minorities all across india are suddenly more and secure it's not only kashmir that had special status that protected their land
9:42 am
from being bought out from by people living in other states of the indian states believe that as well so this undemocratic attack on the people of kashmir will have severe consequences it will have severe consequences on india and india this choosing to move away from a 70 year secular democracy to pose a fascist extremist and the government to be in india you have a regime which has the hashish mentality you know that not the approach that they have is that our us has been guilty you know this is the political wing of the out of service. and that is of great concern to pakistan innocent people. being attacked. killed raped mean and threw the pellet guns you know losing i thought we say that this is a disputed territory so who has an x. the we haven't is there a fear that this could lead to an escalation where it would go to
9:43 am
a point of no return to nuclear states we think of war is not a solution it's through suicide vest and newbie interruption our response even favorite was defensive in nature we were not aggressive so we are going to conduct our case diplomatically. politically and we will look at the legal options we will see besides go to ground what options to be had is that your concern that these 2 nuclear armed neighbors could go to war because you would be essentially on the front lines if that happens the anything can happen there can be miscalculations but before miscalculations india has taken escalatory steps in february this year indian prime minister had threatened pakistan with the use of nuclear weapons and at that time we had said that if he doesn't know what he's
9:44 am
talking about by if he takes that step then that would mean a nuclear armageddon. and a nuclear winter north. but for the entire world and there would be outflows of refugees and there would be a global recession and so on there are many consequences that would be there for the entire international community i'm a great believer in democratic peace theory i don't believe that democracies go to war but i also know the neither india nor pakistan are a functioning as practicing democracies at the moment it's an extreme situation it would leave lead to works. extreme reactions i hope that would not happen because pakistan as i said earlier believes and the people of jammu and kashmir firmly believe that you cannot have a military solution to the gym with a sure dispute you will have to explore political and diplomatic avenues president
9:45 am
of pakistan administered kashmir thank you very much for talking to other there thank you it's been a pleasure to talk. scholar and lawyer. thinker. under politician. radical and prisoner in a 2 part series al-jazeera world tells the story of one of the most enigmatic figures in saddam's turbulent history. whose influence is still felt on events in
9:46 am
the country today sit down i'll to robbie's life and politics on al-jazeera the latest news as it breaks. up. with detailed coverage no one is willing to return home to me on my own without the benefit papers and the security guarantees from around the world the challenges facing the new prime minister. negotiate a new bricks that feel in 90 days a deal the e.u. says cannot be renegotiated. major. to be sure you know not responding 6 continents across the globe. al-jazeera is correspondent and bringing the stories they tell youyou have. nothing
9:47 am
to lose by the letters. were at the mercy of the russian camp for palestinian refugees under serious fluid in world news. downs drives here every day generations of tibetans continue to be abrasive need to their cultural heritage it's a reminder of who they are or whether. this is a suburb of the idiot capital new delhi tibet so be refugees here since $964.00. 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 the some it's not enough. i was raised in france. these are my grandparents. these are my parents
9:48 am
and this is mean. fighting both isis and us on. this 2nd of a 2 part epic tale.

113 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on