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tv   Schooling Koreas Grandmas  Al Jazeera  September 6, 2019 1:32am-2:01am +03

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police recruits. when he was at a police training college in wakefield a town in the north in north yorkshire the north of england it's a neighbor held constituency that voted heavily for leave in the 2016. election a referendum rather it's said to be a constituency that the conservative party thinks that it could win back from labor labor of course having lost leave support having lost supporters to the liberal democrats over time jeremy corbyn exposing perhaps he's less certain attitude towards breaks in that may shift support away from him and the conservatives feeling that with this heavy probe rhetoric that boris johnson has deployed he may win support back from the brics it party that has become so powerful and so they look at constituencies like wakefield as important turning points for their party and he said that boris johnson finds johnson on the conservative body are behaving now as if this is day one of the election campaign as i say he's lost control of
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events to an extent he's lost construct control of his own strategy he doesn't have control over whether and when an election will be called it is in the gift of the labor party he is behaving now in the only way that he can as if an election is coming and elect election that he's determined to in turn a hole in westminster thank you for that. we will look at some other news now dorian in fact the number of people killed by the storm in the bahamas now stands at 20 and it is expected to rise further it is now a category 2 hurricane threatening the east coast of the united states the bahamian prime minister here but mina says rescue operations are in full swing and he has warned against looting. in the village of blackwood in the bahamas with this report . we're in the community of blackwood on the island of abaco in the bahamas this is one of the most northern most islands and subsequently one of the worst hit areas
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by hurricane dorian again that category 5 storm that took 36 hours to make it across abaco to make it across grand bahama leaving a path of destruction this is about as bad as hurricane damage can get i want to give you a sense of what we're looking at here in this community if you can look behind me this is the home of teresa a woman that we spoke to earlier today who is picking up the pieces she's lived here for 15 years and is left with absolutely nothing and this is a scene that we're left with this is what we've been seeing all morning with people walking up and down the street some people sifting through debris others walking toward the airstrip waiting for help to arrive waiting for disaster relief to get here we have heard that the royal navy as well as the u.s. coast guard are beginning to fly disaster relief to the bahamas but we can't confirm whether or not any of that disaster relief is actually arrived here we arrived at abaco on wednesday we were lucky enough to be taken in by a family so we did have a place to stay last night but there are thousands of other people who have nowhere
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to stay there's an estimated 13000 homes that were destroyed there's another concern the shortages of food shortages of water as well as medicine this is a this is something that the united nations has already said it's a crisis that could get worse without intervention by the international community so a lot of people here are desperately waiting for that help to arrive in south africa has temporarily shut its embassy in nigeria after a series of reprisal attacks on south african businesses that process is gathered in several areas to voice their anger at foreign businesses being attacked in johannesburg and perturbed south africa has a large number of economic interests and business in nigeria many of which and i wonder police protection more than a 100 people have also been arrested for losing in lagos or south africa's high commissioner to nigeria bobby morris says the relationship between the countries though does remains strong. the relations between sort of the major is much
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stronger. than the challenges that we are facing now there's a lot of political will between the principals of both countries we have been through this before although not in this format and it is the very strong diplomatic ties that we enjoying with nigeria which contributed to providing solutions to the challenges that we face the turkish president reject type heard of honest threatening to quote open the gates and allow syrian refugees into europe unless negotiations with the us result in the creation of a safe zone in northern parts of syria turkey house of a 3 and a half 1000000 syrian refugees and is planning to return a 1000000 of them to syria and iran said turkey has been left to shoulder the burden of syrian refugees a lot more from istanbul now would see him. turkey's present project so far down threaten the west and united states with opening the doors to the syrian refugees
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who are in turkey who are fleeing war in syria and trying to find a safe haven't in western countries man the european countries he said that turkey wants a 30 kilometer deep safe zone in northwestern syria which is a debate between the united states and turkey for a while they seem they have agreed on some details but the wide p.g. is only home when score of 5 kilometer deep safe zone he said that the safe so should best stablish as soon as possible and housing facilities should rest in that safe zone so that at least 1000000 syrian refugees who are currently living in turkey can go back don said that the last day for the safe zone is the last week of september actually a couple of days ago he had said that the upcoming united nations meeting in new york is the is is the deadline for the united states to decide and turkey believes that united states is trying to gain time and is playing between the white b.g. which troop considers as
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a terrorist organization and turkey don said that it is not only turkey who should be the one carrying the burden of the syrian refugees but other countries should be in world as well and he said that he will open the doors for the serious who flee the war from syria to western countries. so that hong kong now where protests of continue despite a key concession from the government the city's chief executive finally agreed to fully withdraw a bill that would allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland china bill of course was the spark that lit the fuse of the city's summer of unrest but critics say its withdrawal is too little too late to appear gopalan reports from hong kong. a familiar scene just hours after hong kong's chief executive and now it's the withdrawal of an extradition bill that sparked a violent protest but the concession failed to peace protesters. c on thursday
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kerry faced the media to explain why it took so long to give in to the protesters demands and that she had beijing's full support as true of the whole process the central people's stuff men took the position that they understood why we have to do it they they respected my view and they supported me all the way. since june violent confrontations between police and the mostly young protesters have become an almost daily event against much opposition the government tried to push through the bill that would have allowed suspects in hong kong to face trial in mainland china i think she needs to. possible charges or the other demands. gesture to acquit. if she has done these you know just all of them do you know 3 months earlier none of this happened the other issues include voting rights since beijing appoints hong kong's leader to an election
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committee and more pressing for many in the city an investigation into police conduct during the months of protests as people go about their business here on where day the city's not convulsed with protest you could be forgiven for thinking that life in hong kong is going back to normal but there are constant reminders everywhere that this is a city on edge. hong kong operates under a one country 2 systems model enjoying freedoms on thinkable in other parts of china but in recent years there has been an unprecedented interference from the central party in the city's affairs. says many of the protesters feel the government puts beijing's interests ahead of their needs and they warn the city's autonomy and their future is at stake we believe it is an attempt to say to us that of course it will not work we have seen 3 carry landslides we have seen through the lies of this government and we will not back down not even one step a clear message that the end of the extradition bill this not mean an end to the
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city's unrest the bigger pollen are jazeera hong kong and japan at least 30 people have been injured when a train and a truck collided in york a hama city emergency workers say it happened when the truck into the railway crossing of the media report the truck driver was pulled from the wreckage and was taken to hospital the cause of that accident still being investigated as google's agreed to pay a record $170000000.00 fine for violating children's privacy regulators say you tube which is owned by google illegally collected personal information about users who were under the age of 13 and did it without parental consent the tech giant then use that data to target advertising the settlement is the largest ever in a children's privacy case in the u.s. and in addition google says it will make changes to privacy rules on twitter in a fried is the chief technology correspondent of the news web site x. ers and she says there are too many loopholes and you choose current system which
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allows information gathering on children. basically what we're talking about here is programming that's clearly designed for children but isn't labeled as kids' content and therefore has targeted advertising and you tube saying they're going to take 2 big steps to try and address this one they're going to insist but you know we'll see how strict they are that content creators label content that's intended for children and then also that they're going to use their own machine learning and artificial intelligence to try and decide and surface and notice what is children's content and then you know take action to not serve targeted advertising against that type of content and the issue right now is that there's tons of kids on the main you tube site there's a separate site called the you tube kids but that's not where most kids content is watched u.s. authorities just don't have the ability to find these tech companies any amounts that really make
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a difference i mean obviously $170000000.00 isn't nothing but it's not very much to google and it certainly is a drop in the bucket to the amount of revenue that you tube is bringing in we see much more significant finds when europe takes action but even still the finds themselves tend not to be the deterrent that one would want so really what you have to look at are the changes to their business contacts to see if this is going to make any sort of difference the new research indicates why women in the united states more likely to develop alzheimer's only 2 of those with the disease are female and understanding why is key to improving the treatment process distance so let me has the story from new york. margaret alexander didn't fully realize what she was up against when her mother 1st began to exhibit symptoms of alzheimer's disease even though she had seen similar symptoms in her aunts they had the same kind of symptoms they were forget they would get confused disoriented and repeat
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just like mom now a member of the family is always with the 96 year old the one time that cause us the greatest concern is when she walked out of the apartment at my in her nightgown . it was a rapid decline for a woman who had raised 2 children been active in her church and worked outside the home a factor now known to help stave off memory loss one new study shows the average memory performance for non-working women between 60 and 70 years old declined twice as fast as women who were working outside the home 2 thirds of people living with alzheimer's in the united states are women experts used to attribute that to the fact that women tend to live longer than men do but new evidence suggests that's not the entire story and in fact women's brains are different. the latest research on the subject presented by the alzheimer's association shows that women
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with the disease have higher levels of brain metabolism compared with men which may account for their superior verbal memory performance what they found was that the tao protein is much more likely to accumulate in these areas in women and this is important because this area is really prone to spreading the disease though a protein related to the disease tends to spread more quickly contributing to what appears to be a faster decline in women but there is an impact on detection knowing that the disease can present differently and progressed differently in men and women the medical community doctors need to recognize that in part maybe be more sensitive to the differences between how women present with early disease versus men it's useful information for families too but it's reassuring to have that information because without that information you don't know what to do as those with a parent or sibling without simers oh say i got a are themselves more likely to develop the disease christian salumi al-jazeera.
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we're coming up to the top of the hour here on al-jazeera another pull us in on the way just reaction to barstow ensign's speech in wakefield in the north of england that and the rest of the day's news in just a moment. with the plummeting bath rate and families moving to the cities south korea's rules schools are shutting down one on one east meets the grandmas who is saving these schools finally getting an education on al-jazeera. driven by
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outrage and spanning generations the rohinton demonstrators gathered on the very day a widely criticized repatriation agreement between the governments of bangladesh and me and more was to begin the anger was all too apparent and the fear was palpable if you don't like we're so afraid that if they send one of us back to myanmar today tomorrow they'll send back 10 and the day after tomorrow they'll send back 20 idea if we were given citizenship in myanmar and there would be no need to take us back there we would go back on our own we must remember the rancho among the most persecuted minority use in the world. as a weapon of war leaves the very deep ascott those. scars so rule that the victims men and women can barely talk about it. they are the only witnesses who can help bring about justice. 0 follows human rights campaign is in libya investigating
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right since the 2000. unspeakable crime on al-jazeera. i don't want to lecture to but frankly i can't see any other way. the british prime minister promises not to delay brags that despite multiple setbacks in parliament. hello i'm kemal santa maria this is the world news from. the other headlines
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chasing green glass one of the architects of president trump's middle east peace plan is leaving the white house also al jazeera gains exclusive access to an iranian nuclear research center as president rouhani says more commitments to the nuclear deal will be scaled back on south africa shuts its embassy in nigeria following violence triggered by attacks on foreign owned businesses in johannesburg . i hate banging on about brakes that that's what the british prime minister just said as he spoke in the past hour at a police training center in the north of england johnson again insisted he will not leave is for an extension to the brags that process claiming he'd rather be quote dead in a ditch he says staying in the e.u. is a waste of money and although he doesn't want to call it an election he sees no other way forward it has been a whirlwind 24 hours for the prime minister as he faced defeat in parliament and
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the resignation of his own brother from his party let's take a listen to some of what boris johnson had to say. we either go forward with our plan to get a deal take the country out in october 31st which we can or else somebody else should be allowed to see if they can. keep us in beyond october 31st and i have to tell you i don't think that would be the right way forward and i think if people really think that this country should stay in the e.u. beyond october 31st then that really should be a matter for the people of this country to decide i don't want an election at all i don't want to lecture at all but frankly i can't see any other way the only way to get this thing done to get this thing moving is to make that decision do you want this government to take us out of tabor 31st or do you want jeremy corbin and the
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labor party go to that crucial summit in brussels october the 17th effectively hand over control to the e.u. and keep us in beyond october those threats discussed some of this with china correspondent in westminster so johnson heads banging on about briggs that i think a lot of us would agree that we all got a bit sick of it and yet that was the crux of the speech in the end wasn't it a sort of a trip to to yorkshire or a campaign stop almost but in bragg's it just takes over. and it will be the crux of every speech and every campaign stop to come people talk about nothing else but breaks it in politics now that's been that's been the case for the last 3 years there is an election coming it's all but unavoidable numberous johnson knows that even if he has no control at the moment over exactly when he's put himself and his party on an election footing anyway this is day one of the
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campaign welcome to wakefield leave voting constituency in the hands of labor in the north of england that the conservatives think they can win back and it will be a breakthrough election so forget about no more banging on about brakes and it's all about brakes it's it was boris johnson yet again i think for the 3rd time this week making public statements essentially setting up a contest that he wants to see when it comes which is a contest between himself boris johnson and his party bent on delivering bricks it at all costs versus jeremy corbyn who now looks much softer on breaks it who has backed this legislation that would force the prime minister to seek a another break sit delay from the european union who boris johnson will say will do that and undermine and. breaks it indefinitely that's the contest he wants to set up. johnson did take quite a few questions from the media was actually surprised at the number he took and i
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would say 5060 percent of them were all about this one issue of trust. almost exclusively and it's been you know another tara de forest johnson this on the basis of trust because his own brother joe johnson a university's minister in johnson's cabinet cause a conservative party m.p. announced today that he was going to give up his job and give up being a conservative party m.p. without saying so in brackets because he doesn't trust that his brother will avoid a no deal breaks it it's said that he used to think that boris johnson really wouldn't engage with a no deal breaks it apparently recent events that caused him to think otherwise of course it was a gift to labor and the opposition to be able to say look if he doesn't trust it his own brother doesn't trust him why should anyone else well the all 4 of the 1st questions asked essentially the same thing and the remaining questions were also about trust when he stick to the election date october the 15th if it's granted him
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or would he change it when he promised that he wouldn't go and ask for a delay in other words can he be trusted to do what he says let me bring in now the voice of joe johnson boris johnson's brother this is what he said and. joe doesn't agree with me about the european union because it's a it's an issue that divides families in the vides everybody but i think joe would agree is that we needed and sort this out and i think joe certainly would agree and i think he said as much the softer news is that this government has exactly the right priorities when it comes to dealing with the issues that really matter to the british people and i'm talking about making. money improving. and improving our education. my apologies that was of course boris johnson talking about his brother joe but a clear crisis of trust. strategy his own central campaign promise now in doubt the
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head of a minority government and election is coming all he can do is prepare for it and hope that he'll win china holland westminster thank you. judge boris johnson was also meeting the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu earlier today when he was still in london the pair said they agreed on the need to stop iran from getting a nuclear weapon netanyahu is office had already said the 2 leaders would discuss how to repel quote terrorism and iranian aggression a trip to london was only announced on wednesday as he boarded his flight netanyahu told journalists the meeting was perfect timing to increase the pressure on iran speaking of which iran's president says his country's energy program will now operate quote without limits to hans preparing to step to take its 3rd major step in scaling back its commitments of the 2050 nuclear deal that's after the u.s. impose new sanctions on tehran for the 3rd time in a week the u.s.
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is also offering a 15000000 dollar reward to anyone who can give washington credible information about the oil shipping network which is run by iran's revolutionary guard. as we didn't reach our desired result the atomic energy organization will now immediately start what he with the technical needs of the country in the field of nuclear research and development we will put aside all commitments made in the field of research and development all kinds of new center fuses and everything we need for enrichment. and well al-jazeera has been granted rare access to the only nuclear research facility in the iran where the controversial 20 percent enriched uranium is being used with this exclusive report now from the teheran nuclear research reactor. this is the reason iran says its nuclear program needs 20 percent enriched uranium to keep its 1st nuclear reactor working. the center of the
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5 megawatt reactor does all the work its source is a number of chemical elements which scientists here call a fuel assembly before it came into use in 2009 iran had to import 20 percent enriched uranium from argentina you know i go back to this reactor originally used 90 percent of fuel in the past produced by an american company but it was realized reactors likeness could work with 20 percent fuel as well so they change all reactors in a way to use 20 percent field including our reactor in 1903. but since iran began producing its own uranium rival powers have objected they're concerned that with that technology reaching those higher grades of enrich uranium above 90 percent would mean being able to produce a nuclear weapon would be achievable during this tightly supervised visit officials repeatedly state iran's government is only interested in nuclear energy and not arms several nuclear scientists have been assassinated and employees here hide
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their identity for safety the higher quality chemical elements or isotopes iran says it needs are made here they've arrived through an underground tunnel from the main reactor by the radioisotopes are produced here in these cells when they're sent back from the reactor it is cuts in seoul number one and sent to the episodes according to the type of radioisotopes and the process continues that in some cases we have to extract the main material from the original material the isotopes then come here for further purification they are all then packed in special containers and sent to medical facilities in iran and to other countries. these radioactive isotopes can be used to detect blood clots and to treat and kill cancer cells and officials here say they're used to treat more than a 1000000 patients in iran each year the international atomic energy organization regularly visits the site and says iran has been complying with the 2015 nuclear
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deal agreed with 6 world powers until now it stopped after the united states withdrew from the group last year and impose additional sanctions on iran officials here say the european signatories have yet to uphold their commitments and say that's why iran is scaling back on its obligations but there's another reason to this reactor was built in the late 1960 s. but the nuclear agreement that was signed in vienna 4 years ago means that it's improvements were put on hold now its future could very well determine whether iran stays in the 2015 agreements the future for this nuclear program of growth or neglect and politics over the nuclear deal aside it's that that may determine what steps iran takes next door such a pari al-jazeera at the tehran nuclear research reactor but jason greenbush the u.s. president's special envoy for the middle east has announced he plans to resign he
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says he'll step down in a few weeks after trump unveils his long delayed peace plan which is expected sometime after the israeli election on september 17th is that expected to return to his family in new jersey more from a white house correspondent kimberly helped. according to president donald trump's twitter feed jason greenblatt is returning to the private sector it's unclear if he'll be returning to work with the trump organization where he had worked previously prior to joining the white house team we do know that he is considered one of the architects of donald trump's middle east plan when the president's called the deal of the century a really given this departure raises questions about the prospects of this plan and any potential success in resolving the israeli palestinian conflict this is work that has been done in secret for months along with the president's son in law jared cushion or we do know one aspect of the plan has a large economic component raising some 50000000000.

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