tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera September 9, 2019 12:00pm-12:34pm +03
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churchill here they were together in 1954. i'm truly very sad that it should end in this way only does my most fervent hope that this house will rediscover the spirit of compromise humility and understand that will enable us to finally took push ahead with the vital work in the interests of the whole country sitting in front of soames was another conservative rebel richard benyon who was also sacked the next day he told me of his concerns about the direction the party he loved was being taken in the attitude of some of the people. who were around the prime minister not. coming to speak about it you know yes and you know i think they have a big responsibility for the size of the rebellion last night and some of the things that were said to colleagues of mine more extraordinary. the generally held view is that the johnson administration is now so terrified of nigel farage as breck's it
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party that despises the european union but it will no longer brook any dissent it was faraj who status in british politics forced the bracks referendum in the 1st place and now it seems he is driving the conservative party to adopt his views. consequently today's conservative party finds itself at war with the european union and with itself its legacy and relationship with its most famous son the irony isn't often any one that after the 2nd world war churchill gave all of his most famous speeches in which he called for the creation of a united states of europe and working together economically and socially for the greater good that phrase united states of europe is used by brick sitters including those inside the johnson ministration as the biggest insults of all. the. new found love of the european union from those terrified of bricks it is now forced johnson into a corner and could easily lead to his resignation in the coming weeks the
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conservative party has a lot of thinking to do lawrence lee al jazeera london. coming up after the weather make your protest vote heard the mass such a people in moscow as they have their say in contentious elections. and step inside a museum honoring nature meant artistic movement that helped shape the 20th century . hello again and welcome back we're here cross the central and southern part united states we are watching the temperatures rise over the next few days actually above average for this time of year we are mid september and what we're going to see is actually temperatures into the mid thirty's for some locations dallas here on monday at 35 degrees kansas city at 32 and on tuesday we're going to be seen
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chicago well above average at about 31 degrees they're below average though unfortunate for so the canada you can be seeing some wet conditions as well as temperatures for winnipeg at 13 in calgary at about 9 degrees there where you cross central america it is going to be the rain over the next few days and that is actually going to be increasing as we go towards tuesday really not looking too bad as we are looking at a forecast map here on monday but by the time we do get to tuesday we're going to see more rain across mexico as well as central america guatemala mexico city managua all seeing very heavy showers as we end the day on tuesday there and then down towards south america since you aren't temperatures were quite warm they are beginning to come down as we go towards tuesday we're going to start here on monday at $39.00 degrees well above average but by the time we get towards tuesday that is coming down to about 30 but a beautiful and warm day over here towards rio at 30 degrees as well unfortunate one is out as it is going to be rainy and a little cooler with attempt a few 15 degrees.
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rewind returns with a new series and brand new updates on the past about is the new stock you mention useless take it. easy on the. rewind continues with saving sou'wester seeing the light 3 years later the clouds over you a rich person. it's all there for you is a little bit this is a great motivator for us to keep giving back to these communities on al-jazeera. you're watching al-jazeera let's take a look at the top stories right now the taliban has warned the u.s.
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has the most to lose after donald trump canceled a secret meeting with the president blamed a series of recent taliban attacks for his announcement. british prime minister boris johnson is expected to again ask parliament to approve a snap election on monday as he seeks to break the box a deadlock johnson seeking a new mandate to get out of the e.u. by the end of october with or without a deal. and the u.s. says it's delivered enough from urgency supplies 444000 people to the bahamas since hurricane dorian hits the un's warning that conditions on the worst affected islands are rapidly getting worse. areas around the japanese capital are assessing the damage from a powerful typhoon at one point i phone i left 900000 people without power record winds of 270 kilometers an hour work recorded in the nearby city of chiba flights were canceled and train lines closed for several hours. and what has become
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a familiar pattern a day or protests in central hong kong that they can peacefully has ended in chaos police fired tear gas to disperse people who blocked roads set barricades on fire and vandalized a metro station earlier large crowds rally without incident at the u.s. consulate some holding signs calling on president trying to liberate the chinese controlled territory to view the pollen as more from hong kong. this is one of hong kong's main shopping districts usually a very busy place on a sunday night and as you can see it's been brought to a standstill with white police over you're blocking the road they chase the protesters here from the financial district and try to disperse them using tear gas among the shoppers and the crowds on a sunday night gone long ago we saw people running with small children without any protection away from the tear gas so instead now just protesters here confronting the police will be are seeing as regular shoppers and regular people trying to
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confront the police off them why they're using such excessive force when there are people who have nothing to do with the protests this has been a constant or a fein and this has been the next step in the protests that we are seeing where people want police accountability for their actions this is in stark contrast to the protests restart earlier today when thousands of people marched to the u.s. embassy calling on the u.s. to push through a bill that would give them greater powers to safeguard hong kong's autonomy. israel's government is trying to push through a plan to install cameras and polling stations during the upcoming election the bill must now go before parliament ahead of the vote on september 17th opposition groups say the move is a political tactic to intimidate israel's arab population but prime minister benjamin netanyahu says it's the only way to prevent voter fraud. election problems must be resolved before the election when do they want us to fix
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it after the election there is no need for special arrangements no need for special training no need for special equipment any monitor confirm with a cell phone this is what happens in our entire public sphere everyone films everything is uploaded in the shop was filmed by cameras so the polling stations are the only places where you can film cameras or polling stations or for clean elections it's simple it's fear it's transparent and it's right. there is a moscow are waiting to hear the results of a regional election that was overshadowed by weeks or protests the city council poll is normally low profile the crowd wider attention after many opposition and dependent candidates were blocked from running so it wasn't reports. has become the face of a new protest movement in moscow the 31 year old lawyer was banned from running in the election for the city's regional parliament and has been arrested several times for organizing protests even though her name is not on the ballot she still had to
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the polling station the opposition let. decided that a so-called smart that's a vote against the ruling united russia party of president vladimir putin would be more effective than boycotting the elections altogether but. it's a protest vote it's not a vote for your candidate we go to the street was a protest and now we won't and protest it is a form of protest to show that we disagree with the politics of the current story. sunday's election follows weeks of some of the largest protests seen in russia for years tens of thousands of demonstrators urging the government to let her and other independent opposition candidates run riot police reacted by arresting 106 protesters have been sentenced up to 5 years in prison president putin justified the arrest by saying protesters broke the law because they didn't have a permit. he also doesn't see a problem in banning belief and the opposition candidates. in some countries there
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are 30 or 50 or 100 candidates because of their work does not change from this it's not quantity but quality that is important i think that we have decent candidates but some russians say that despite a decades long rule of the united russia party something could change because of the protests. i'm voting for the 1st time my life why i don't know i think before i did not fear my importance i did not think you can change anything now it appears that we cannot prove. in most cases a protest vote against united russia will be a vote for the communist the 2nd largest party in russia this may look like a democratic election but a few things are missing most importantly the names of independent opposition candidates on the ballot papers while the outcome of the rain to no actions are not expected to make much of a difference if the opposition strategy what is so-called smartphone is successful it will give a signal to the government that opposition is growing just before the polls close
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the opposition's call to participate in the vote didn't seem to have been heeded similar to previous elections turnout was only around 20 percent stop. moscow. british airlines pilots have begun an unprecedented strike action that will ground most of the carrier's planes for 2 days is likely to disrupt the travel plans of as many as 300000 people company and its 4300 pilots had been locked in an increasingly bitter pay dispute the pilots union wants to share more of its profits but management insists that staff get world class pay and benefits. spanish maritime rescue crews have saved more than 30 refugees and migrants who were found on 3 janie's floating off the coast of the canary islands near morocco they include a pregnant woman and children and have been taken to a grand canaria week ago 200 people were rescued trying to make the crossing from north africa to spain. at least 14 people have been killed during fighting outside
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the libyan capital or lord forces battle soldiers from the un recognized government of national accord 8 of hop stars troops died along with 6 soldiers and said here southwest of tripoli at least a 1000 people have been killed since october launched an offensive to capture the capital and april. 4 and a half years of war and yemen have forced millions of people to leave their homes camp in the province of aid now says more than 600 internally displaced families but their situation is becoming increasingly desperate as atory gate and the reports. that. this is what passes through classrooms are about how. it has made new chaz and just a handful of. a 1000 school age children live in the camp but most don't turn up to class. we need to build a school we need cheers
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a body or an to get to for students because most of the students run away they want to work because of the living conditions here. out of about camp in the province of aden opened last year since then more than 3000 yemenis from the cities of ho data unties have arrived they were forced to leave their homes because of fighting between hooping rebels and forces loyal to yemen's internationally recognized government backed by the saudi amorality coalition in recent weeks fighting around the port city of aden has caused a further 60000 people to leave their homes camps like this one a struggling to cope and people are feeling increasingly desperate they're mad i don't i'm glad i'm a senator please stop the world after years of fighting we are starving the water has been cut off the temperature inside our tents is so high we have to such that the trees we've had enough. the camp provides basic health care but it doesn't have
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the resources to help yemenis with complex medical conditions oh my. god i have a hole in my heart so i want to get medical help but unfortunately i couldn't afford it it is too expensive i've been sick for the last 2 days i want to the hospital and they gave me temporary medicine i felt ok for a while and then i relapsed again no one here can help me hunger thirst discomfort and distress a part of every day life in this camp for some it's all they've ever known victoria gates and be al jazeera more than $100.00 bush fires are burning into eastern australian states prompting warnings of a sin verifier season as the southern hemisphere goes into summer fires in queensland and new south wales many of which are out of control have destroyed at least 20 properties arts of new south wales are in the grip of an intense drought and firefighters don't expect any relief from the hot windy weather until wednesday
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. and thousands of people have taken part in the country's 1st gay pride march and ended peacefully despite the online hate speech in conservative county rallies would provoke attacks more than a 1000 police officers were deployed to help prevent any trouble. as big has overcome rather russian. death in an epic 5 set match to claim his 4th u.s. open crown the spaniard had to dig deep eventually claiming victory 756-357-4664 brings the spaniard grand slam tally to 19 just one behind his great rival roger federer who holds the record and while the women have served up 4 different grand slam winners this season. doll federer and novak djokovic continue to. the centenary of an eye catching architectural movement is being celebrated in
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germany the house and speired more in a modern art futuristic furniture even class palaces and his dominant hand reports and a museum has opened in the city where it all began. mentioned by a house here and immediately people think of places like this and the movement whose freethinking revolutionized architecture certainly that's true in at the new museum housed within what's called the black box which itself is envelop by glass something people here hope will wow all who see it i wonder to be surprised after they crossed with laughter with their quality of the whole point of space and also to be constructed when they enter in the black box and then they go to rethink the made world of power out of a laugh and one of the defining aspects of the house is that for many people it has many different definitions from its inception in the world of architecture through
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modern art to furniture design and all of it encapsulates the freedom of expression as this concept enters its 2nd 100 years here the 1st 100 exhibits that were shown in the 1st bauhaus are preserved offering us a window on an era when the founder of the school. encouraged his students to abandon old teaching styles and to embrace the new daughter is one of the curators here she says part of the museum's task is to show bauhaus was a living breathing entity and not just something that can be treated as a piece of history there are the famous names and there are the famous iconic objects but there are also there's also very rich production of the students here who are maybe less known but who where the center of the palace in the south when the movement began germany was emerging from the ruins of the 1st world war and beginning life as
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a democracy now its latest democratically elected leader has come to pay homage to talk like you have enough to go on even 100 years after its founding it was still feel today the fascination of the power has. project ideas because architecture art and design influence us today in the way we've built in the way we live in and shape our world for generations of acts and artists ball halls has been a watchword for cutting edge design now true to form it's hope this new museum will show that to its best effect dominant campaign al-jazeera decile. the headlines on al-jazeera the taliban has warned that the u.s. has the most to lose after donald trump canceled a secret meeting with them the president blamed a series of recent taliban attacks and u.s. eckersley on peo says the negotiations are dead at least for now it was the case
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that when the taliban tried to gain negotiating advantage by conducting terror attacks inside of the country president from made the right decision to say that's not going to work we're going to walk away from a deal if others try to use violence to achieve better ends in a goetia it's not right it's not appropriate killed american and it made no sense for the taliban to be rewarded for that kind of bad behavior but his prime minister boris johnson is expected to again ask parliament to approve a snap election on monday as he seeks to break the deadlock jonson seeking a new mandate to get out of the e.u. by the end of october with or without a deal. and the u.s. says it has delivered enough from urgency supplies 444000 people to the bahamas since hurricane dorian hit us warning conditions on the worst affected islands are rapidly getting worse. areas around the japanese capital are assessing the damage
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from a powerful typhoon at one point typhoon left 900000 people without power record winds of 270 kilometers an hour were recorded in the nearby city of chiba flights were canceled and train lines closed for several hours. a peaceful day a protest in central hong kong has ended and chaos demonstrators set barricades on fire blocked major roads and vandalized metro station earlier large crowds rallied outside the u.s. consulate asking the white house to support their cause. british airlines pilots had to get president and strike action that will ground most of the carriers planes for 2 days it's likely to disrupt the travel plans of as many as 300000 people the company and its $4300.00 pilots have been locked in increasingly bitter pay dispute and spanish maritime rescue crews have saved more than $30.00 refugees and migrants who were found in 3 days putting off the coast of the canary islands. i saw the
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headlines keep it here on al-jazeera another bolton is up next stay tuned for rewind. with a plummeting birthrate and families moving to the city of south korea's rule schools are shutting down one on one east meets the grandmas who is saving the schools finally getting an education on al-jazeera. hello and welcome again to rewind i'm elizabeth purana here on rewind we're drawing on a decade of award winning documentaries and finding out how the story has moved on since today be revisiting a moving series which followed doctors working against the odds in the south
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african township of soweto and once home to nelson mandela so what it was at the forefront of the country's anti-apartheid struggle back in the 1970 s. hundreds died when student protests were put down with tear gas and live ammunition yet more than 25 years after the end of apartheid so what over maine's a dangerous and disadvantaged place at chris hani but i've been at hospital one of the largest in the world and known locally as bada maybe 70 percent of all admissions are emergencies many of them gunshot wounds about as ophthalmology department the st john i hospital treats around 50000 patients every year many of them victims of domestic violence bullet wounds and car hijackings back in 2009 al jazeera aired a series of films on the work of bottles medical teams and today we've chosen to focus on those eye doctors facing
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a. via workload with insufficient responses here is saving so what seeing the light . so went to a south africa's most populous township and home to millions of eyes just. sent john's iconic as part of a massive chris hani paragon of hospital also known as baron and is the biggest i hospital in the southern hemisphere. many of so it has poor and indigent utilize the services on offer. we serve a huge population here are the greatest the waiters probably at least 2 and a half 1000000 we don't know the exact numbers and we know it is they are hospital we've been here since 1955 and be part of bearer and we have a good reputation we have a lot of social violence motor vehicle accidents and it is then also gunshot injuries that come to us in our main function was to do catch a surgery here we are overwhelmed on a daily basis by all the trauma that we get there. dr rob daniel is
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a few weeks away from completing his 5 year residency at st johns and he will be moving into private practice and i think that. this is the screening for that the function of which is to filter out to needs to be seen today and really to pick up the most urgent problems and really to treats small problems that can be sorted out in a short period of time and the loser. on a typical day rob can see between 2 and 300 patients. for stress and so i mean this is africa there's always sort equipment is always a problem. most of us have our own equipment just to get through. the barracks we check the same day because if there's any problem then we want. to be able to
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just pick it up right away oh you've got a date for today you can go to the main clinic you've got to follow the struct discover my clinic and people with trauma will see them the said and we organize a card for them and then there's a scene in the mine and they don the bottom shift up says. patients are referred from the screening room to the main clinic they can wait most of the day in the queue. to be day we talk to patients that come and see a c o m e people the beaches or something at the city's was. this. is the time tested. a repeat patient 43 year old polish led into the clinic by his friend pulls blindness was caused by untreated diabetes his wife couldn't accompany him as she
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is the family's only breadwinner she supports poland that full children leave to go to point also his rights are retreating that essentially try to make it comfortable it's another to move a private home without trying to get a new visual improvement street car. but unfortunately is taken a turn for the worse story called stuck to him and connor a senior doctor to get a 2nd opinion on polls cases and it's a big book solutions you know the elites coming out good going to 6 i was able to supply 90 or so we have to look at some that with. that knowledge the eyes of. god is going to become very bad. so let's say the best option for you really have an operation where we would remove the our. hair understand.
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i doctors have to have reasonable eyesight you can do a commodity if you've got poor vision because whatever we do reusing a license to see the pathology in the eye to make a diagnosis we see more and more of that bts now can cause blindness in a variety of ways trix earlier in diabetic patients they do get demi stew their blood vessels. sometimes they develop new blood vessels which could over the back of which believe they can get hemorrhage and. that's what that's the more obvious he said new blood vessels growing in normal but vessels which were leaking and bleeding and this race had a huge bleed and that bleed created a cloud that you couldn't see through that's why he had the surgery done yesterday . we have to draw that it tonight's the next time this patient comes if somebody else easy middle is he knows what we've seen at the last because it would be ok to go read a book and you feel good. when. we deal with people in
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terms of their life. vision is the most important sense which you have to not have that so the. how all the old laws of the old how old are the. long term. looking new ones abroad. if you go back to old losses obviously they're not going to be set up for the new lens that we put inside you are so that could well be the reason. why it's not seeing well in the distance but at least we look for a reason on the farm. for more money. rob nixies a 75 year old woman who presents with cataracts. a simple operations over store has stocked but there is a 2 year waiting list at the. because the that's right so really relates
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to a 60 percent of 6 year olds 70 percent of 70 year olds and song. know about us on this. political fight here who keep going can't go get it it. comes and they go. big smile. that. they put drops in your eyes. oh there's the old saying that the eyes the window to the soul. we doctors and mean we deal with people on a very personal basis which is fundamentally based on trust the comfort which a patient feels by us caring for them that's what gives us a lot of a job satisfaction. brought thats it.
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another day there but. yeah i've been. for some doctors it's another day seeing patients on the benches while for hemant it's a pediatric clinic which brings its own particular challenges. was wrong. good for you. can suck it they don't like to be touched are you going to try to guess that when they awaken with a plea for. some sweets. so you're just going to be patient with their in the very youngest kids who use things like hundreds of thousands just to get an estimate of what their visions but. there. are set you see that.
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right. there that you mean really can see me. 80 percent of all sin city put comes from the ice and also the way you view the wall perceive the world comes from my eyes basically i mean these are kids that i clearly know some of them you can do something about someone in your country and a good developmental problems you know where you are walking along the route is it that she follows the boy probably has a neurological disorder it follows he will be referred to a barrel full for the test like no you know i show you the small streets he doesn't to gun see there you know see if you can see large objects pretty gutsy the smaller ones you know. guys a lot of the bigger than almost anything davies got some sort of a symbol you know. today's
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pull surgery dory will be removing his eyes and inserting. the silicone ball into the empty socket to stop the pain that also in his blind eye is causing him. sorry for something so very sorry this is painful because of his blindness paul has never seen his young son he has. my love my my oh my son the last one i do. i don't know you so what 10 miles i'm going to hear and. i'm getting in my ear whether more i'm looking for a. camera doing what's called a restoration. basically or move the corner and put in a silicon bowl to keep some volume to the orbit they closed. on the ice block 3 opted to. give him a final solution and delivers a rush right now just cutting rather content tava. the work we do here the things
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we think. are like life and world you've given us the exposed to so many different conditions. right so that's. where we put the silicone bowl in our now we're just going to close up we're going to close the sclera in the country when we're done. really well there are a lot of problems like complications due to the success of this russian. i should be filing polish it should go on tomorrow she. lose. the doctors at st john's i can only volunteer their free time to operate on a few of the thousands awaiting cash back surgery. called the mercy list this gives sign.
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