tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera September 14, 2019 8:00pm-8:33pm +03
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there was invaders will mean the imbalance but really it was really the last minute that the national has a theory callously symmetry now people are told that the. 30 days to the special prayer have to be delivered to the barbadoes this behemoth here is a downgrade is are they willing to wait for the break is a proper hail others are saying it is wrong to your body for that long african elephant no many people. within a week but then the people who say how much each of you one of those are going to cause the money be spent on something else like drugs for the love of the running water in the house electricity the people moses the video it is an unnecessary expense and right now the singing now people just don't want to know that most of the little of the big big brother their wives of all the state of israel for the attack on the 9 african nationals can't be happening in his country thank you very much. still ahead on al-jazeera count an emergency summit security failures in
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west africa. then we take a closer look at what's behind the new soybean new deal between argentina and china . and then all these of asian looking bad we have seen of systems i had across the korean peninsula and also japan but it has been fairly clear in the last few hours now we might just see a policy this cat sinking south was across the korean peninsula but it is a long time which is a pretty warm you've got 29 celsius in tokyo 35 in a socket on sunday and then as we head off into monday it's a similar picture what we are watching is this not it's possibly a tropical disturbance but even if it doesn't develop into a tropical storm it will bring some very heavy amounts of rain east and shoals of
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hong shoes that that will spread further towards the west let me add further towards the south here we've had mostly dry conditions along insua central eastern china however up towards the north and the west into sichuan in particular that has not been the case we've had some serious flooding you can see here will happen the rains came down and huge deluge over 100 millimeters of rain was reported in some areas 20000 people were actually without power for a while but the rain that she receded pretty quickly and in fact the authorities got in there and sorted things out very quickly indeed but there was a real mess as you can see with all that mud in the streets meanwhile the rain as you had through sunday and again on that south coast and unsettled in hong kong with a high of 31. we
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want your knowledge is it a reminder of our top stories this drones have to saudi aramco oil facilities circling large explosions yemen scrutiny rebels have claimed responsibility for the saudi interior ministry says one attack happened in the eastern province that attack took place northeast of riyadh that far as is said to be tamed.
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african leaders that are in hot outing to pay tribute to former zimbabwe president robert mugabe he died last week in singapore aged 95 this put it would take place in about a month's time to. find so broken out between pro beijing and anti-government protesters at a shopping center in hong kong police made arrests after breaking up clashes between the 2 sides of the baby mall probation demonstrators chanted supports the police and waved chinese flags before being confronted by other protesters set a clock joining us from hong kong sara i can just see in the background behind you there are some security forces there and some buses and so on what's been happening . well it's been a tense standoff here for the last few hours and we're in an area called the your long district it's on the border of shin's and some mainland china and hong kong we had about a 1000 people march to this particular spot where we are now the police blockade of
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this particular area as well as all the areas in the roads around this particular district to try and stop them accessing a pot in this particular assembly today or this much was deemed legal after the organizes appealed or tried to have a get sick permission from the place but the place rejected that particular request so instead the place as you can see behind me is still here and heavy presence the protestors have to there's a large group called the telegram group where they discuss their movements they've dispersed for now but certainly tomorrow we have yet another rally but as you can see these placed on taking any chances they've been here for the last few hours and they're not going home yet despite the fact there's only a couple of 100 onlookers the local residents here are now in a standoff with the police behind me so let me ask you about the rally that's going to going to be happening tomorrow if i understand it correctly the police had said that they would not give permission for the rally to go ahead do we look at does it look as though that rally will stay still take place.
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well this isn't the 1st time the civil human rights front which organizes this particular march have had their organized or their permission rejected by the place that was denied on friday in the court of appeal but we do expect a number of people or large groups of people to still mass in central and around of course by by which is the main kind of area where they've been assembling the recent months we do expect them to go ahead the protesters have i have said on saturday i have said that would join that particular rally so again we expect police presence to be on a large skyla to address those protesters now we've had the extradition bill withdrawn by kerry lamb but these particular protests is what ward i said they've got 5 demands they want universal suffrage they want the police and the government not to refer to these protesters as rawson's if they refer them as writers they. don't get heavier penalties i also want to a particular an independent inquiry into the violence of the accusations of police violence on these protests is the last 15 weeks until those demands are met these
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protesters have said that will continue demonstrations in home serve thanks very much leaders in west africa are holding an emergency summit in book you know faso on top of ism on top of the agenda is a review of the g 5 sought help it's a security alliance formed to combat the sharp rise in cross border attacks from groups but what exactly is the g 5 and why are they being accused of failing to secure the region became a fossil child molly and mauritania formed the group in 2014 but over the next few years attacks from ohio and i saw affiliated groups have risen dramatically in 2017 with the help from france a 5000 troop italian was set up but so far it's failed to make a major difference hundreds of people have been killed and tens of thousands displaced since the beginning of the year this week alone at least 30 people died in attacks in northern book enough aso catherine sawyer reports from the capital ouagadougou. the heads of state who are attending this extraordinary summit are
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basically talking about ways to effectively walk together to deal with this security crisis but we've also been speaking to security analysts who say that a joint strategy that already exists is not quite progressing as fast as it should and this is because mainly of all this conflicting interests by individual countries and different regional organizations as well and also competition for visibility and resources funding which is also a big problem here so they're saying this honest we've been talking to that there needs to be commitment there needs to be a political will if these countries are to walk together to effectively deal with what is a crisis and the health. heads of state from the sahara are arriving whether dougal there is a security crisis in the region following an inside inside by armed groups allied to al-qaeda in the islamic state of iraq in the live band fighters have carried out
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a series of attacks in book enough fossil mauritania mali child and. they skin son that this problem could spread beyond this hell and to other coastal countries before we have said that there needs to be a link between development and security if we develop the affected areas there will be security and if we provide good security we can develop those areas this summit has been organized by west africa's regional bloc and has brought together presidents from the same help countries called to 5 mandated to fight terrorism and illegal migration a crossbow does representatives from other west african countries affected by extremist groups like the are also here brooke enough fossil has seen increased attacks in recent years and you look you years ago when book enough bottles former president plays humm. was removed from power. the country was safe
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but in 2016 on these 3. men stormed into the hotel and 2 restaurants more than 20 people were killed not more new a reminder of what happened here. the attacks have spread to the east and north of the country about 500 people have been killed and nearly 300000 displaced. like ben know who's hosted by well wishes in a town about a 100 kilometers away from where the leaders are meeting she fled from her home father north 2 months ago you know it wasn't they came to our village and began shooting everywhere we fled with our children we walked for over 50 kilometers we came here with nothing. the leaders in were good to say the only way to help millions of people like bill maher and her children is by working together
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implementing what will be decided at the summit will be the hardest part we've been here in book enough for about 2 weeks and spent a considerable amount of time in the north one of the regions that have been badly affected by this security problem where troops have been deployed to deal with this armed groups and we've been speaking to many people who tell us that a military intervention on its own is not a viable solution there also needs to be a development agenda these are areas that have been marginalized very extremely poor areas that have been marginalized a neglected by governments for so long so a lot of people feel disenfranchised and they feel 1st frustrated and this becomes very easy for armed groups to target particularly young people recruit them into their ranks and also gain the support of the local communities so people have been talking to say that these people who are affected really need to be empowered if this battle is to be worn. searching for more human remains in the property of the
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late dictator stross no skulls and bones were discovered there last week squatters found the remains of 3 people buried beneath a bathroom police are investigating whether the remains belong to some of the people who were killed or abducted understory regime. as china's trade war with the u.s. drags on beijing's building on another alliance with argentina the south american nation assigned a deal to export millions of tons of soybean meal which will give its economy a much needed boost but argentina now faces the challenge of meeting the needs of both superpowers reports want to sell its. the deal has been years in the making but the trade dispute between china and the united states has created a fresh urgency for both superpowers to look the new partners. argentina is the world's biggest producer of soybean meal with about 43 percent of the market much
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of it will now be used to feed china's estimated $400000000.00 pigs i'm going to use the citizens without. signing of this protocol establishes a solid legal basis so the convergence of these 2 huge markets. and the light from argentina the deal a boost to an economy in recession so it will get us will retorted this is an historical cheeseman we have worked hard for us for over 20 years we have wanted to open up this market and we know it will be highly valued by the argentine 3 sectors argentina already exports soybeans and also china and its agricultural sector is pushing for more you know the governor wants another step and argentina has to try to sell products of higher value that's the challenge that argentina has in relation to china to try to improve in deep in the sale of these products which it is doing. china to meet its food and energy needs has invested heavily in latin
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america's infrastructure roads railways and ports the key is to have something that both china and the united states wants that they used to get from one another but no longer do because of their trade disputes but then don't risk offending either superpower politically because things change and nobody wants to put future trade deals in jeopardy. however there are still administrative hurdles to overcome and some caution over getting too excited. argentina is an important food producer but it doesn't have stock and it doesn't have investments because as everyone knows the economic situation here is delicate and to try to expand export capacity at the moment is impossible there's no credit and we can expand export capacity then there's the united states to worry about recently resolved a 10 year trade dispute with the u.s. over meat exports it's a major trading partner with substantial political influence in what it sees as its
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backyard but the but i mean. i think the u.s. state department has made various moves trying on countries in latin america to be aware of increasing its trade with china. but he also warns the current trade dispute is merely a skirmish in a much bigger war to come the technology and intellectual property rights for the satisfaction here of the deal just done this still uncertainty over the next moves to come from beijing and washington. schreiber al-jazeera one of cyrus over the next 10 days hundreds of thousands of people will be heading to the funk foot motor show in germany this year's theme like most auto shows these days in electric vehicles but it's not the only green technology on show was done and it came the ports from fine food. this is the automotive revolution a major manufacturers want the world to see a vista of vehicles with the the low or no emissions for some frank thought means
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a chance to make a knowledge to nostalgia emphasizing how persistent an iconic design can be but above all this year's event is about the mobility electric vehicles the b.m.w. that means putting customer choice at the heart of its green plans in urban areas a battery powered electric vehicle might be the solution and we have great solutions there with our b.m.w. i 3 with our many electric and next year also with our b.m.w. i 3. what's noticeable is hybrid cars are less prominent this year compared to previous ones hidden behind all electric offerings like the new porsche tai-chi and while a 6 figure sports car like this is clearly not designed for the mass market some analysts say the dominance of fossil fueled cars will soon be over 3 already see that are on a small scale with high growth rates but i think from 2025 to 2030 the basic
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sales of electric vehicles will climb very rapidly also in absolute numbers not just in relative terms the importance of the auto industry to germany is clear when motor exports are threatened so too is the country's economic growth and although as a whole germany is not technically in recession right now this is the one sector where alarm bells are ringing which explains why the country's political leaders feel the need to drop in. the automobile industry today the automobile industry is a very important part of our country's economic success and it's above all an industry which supplies jobs and therefore security for hundreds of thousands of people. for some people the electorate. evolution is just a stopgap this is the technology of the future they say hydrogen fuel in
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motor vehicles that everyone can drive. and yet for now the power of the petrol or diesel engine is still apparent such as here with the new land rover defend whose only green variant a plug in hybrid will be available from next year generally though this year's event seems more about showing it's the electric car which is charging ahead dominic al-jazeera at the frankfurt motor show. and you can find much more in the websites the address for that is al-jazeera dot com that's all just little dot com . this is all just here these are the top stories drones have hit 2 saudi aramco oil facilities triggering a large explosions yemen's who think the rebels have claimed responsibility the saudi interior ministry says one attack happened in the eastern province the other attack took place northeast of riyadh the fires are said to be contained. a
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spokesman for the who says they used many drones in the attack and had help from within saudi arabia not bother to go in with our joint unit carried out a massive attack with 10 drones that targeted 2 ironical facilities in a peak and clear ace east of saudi arabia early this morning these attacks are our right and we warned the saudis that our targets will keep expanding we have the right to strike back in retaliation to the air strikes and the targeting of our civilians for the last 5 years. african leaders are in harare paying tribute to zimbabwe's former president robert mugabe who died in singapore last week at age 95 where gabi ruled the country for 37 years until being ousted by his own army in november 27th seen his burial will take place in about a month's time after a muslim liam is billed national heroes acre in hockey fights have broken out
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between probe aging and anti-government protesters at a shopping center in hong kong police made arrests after breaking up clashes between the 2 signs at the mall probation demonstrators chanted support the police and waved chinese flags before being confronted by other protesters. west african leaders are attending an emergency meeting on terrorism in book enough aso heads of state are looking at ways to deal with a sharp rise in cross border attacks involving groups aligned with al qaida and i sold cheney 0 while on sunday hold its 2nd fully democratic presidential elections since the 2011 arab spring $26.00 candidates are in the running including prime minister use of charge head and a media mogul and whose leading opposition this despite being in prison is awaiting a verdict in this trial for tax fraud and money laundering and he was refused bail those are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera in about half an hour
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after inside story by for now. spreading diseases and misinformation anti vaccine campaign plane for a rise in preventable diseases in the developed world why is there a growing mistrust of vaccines and what's the cure this is inside story. hello and welcome to the program. diseases that were once eliminated back
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preventable illnesses such as measles are spreading especially in europe and north america the world health organization and the european commission joined forces to tackle the issue of the 1st global vaccination summit that. it's nearly 20000000 infants were not immunized last year many of them live in developing countries with for access to vaccines but there's concern at a growing movement against vaccines in the developed world a lot. more than certain parts of the world people are dying due to one that of vaccines here people are risking their lives and those of others by refusing them some playing the prevention game you prefer instead to play with fire the world health organization says vaccines skepticism is one of the world's 10 major health risks health officials say vaccines save up to $3000000.00 lives each year but in
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the past 3 years 7 countries have lost their measles free status including 4 in europe albania the czech republic greece and the u.k. the w.h. says the increase in measles is due to the spread of misinformation on social media about the benefits and risks of vaccines. let's bring in our guests in our mahanta brusca we have dr lee hearn his dean of the university of nebraska college of public health and a former senior administrator of the u.s. centers for disease control and prevention in brussels heidi larsen director of the vaccine confidence project professor at the london school of hygiene and tropical medicine and the lancaster data gatherer biologist and lecturer of lancaster university welcome to the program dr hunt isn't it interesting that we're talking
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about the growing influence of the anti vacs are not in a desolate country in sub-saharan africa but in some of the most advanced countries in north western hemisphere. no not at all least in the wet and warm and you know in some back seem to have the bends the really the funk you know public health. and people most long in the many in the army and back bankable leaders and then a lot of misinformation low and the people being worried about. whether they need a vaccine at all i'm not surprised at all of them backing her and that at least the version of it we see in the united states and. i do we're talking about countries that. vance's in science and technology where you would expect some sense of consensus about the safety of vaccines but that does not seem to be the case well the consensus is and more in the scientific community and not. necessarily the
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broader community having said that. not all of science around vaccines is 100 percent certain and that's part of the challenge that we're dealing with there is a. significant amount of science that's quite certain but there is some that's there's some level of uncertainty and risk and that when people as we just heard aren't focusing on the threat of disease as they shift to the risk of the vaccine. is this sense of uncertainty about what those vaccines where is the medical community what was the established of politics that should be sending a reassuring message to people. i think that the authorities are already doing their best to reassure the general population as best they can and the problem at
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the moment is that more and more people in the developed world are getting their news via unofficial china as they're using social media applications and they're using general internet searches to get information about things and they don't necessarily see the public health messages that are coming out there i also think as the last contributor mentioned it's to do with the perception of of risk i'm sometimes asked if i can guarantee that such and such a vaccine for instance is 100 percent safe and we can never guarantee that because no medicine is ever 100 percent safe even something as simple as an aspirin can be deadly of tikkun wrongly or taken into higher dose so it's no more nor more or less safe than many other things that we do in our daily lives late driving a car getting on an airplane and so on these things are not 100 percent safe either but many of us do them all the time because the risk is acceptable and the general
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population need to get the message that vaccines are an acceptable risk and that the relative risk of not being vaccinated is actually much greater if you if you don't vaccinate your child then the risk of your child contracting measles and then suffering serious side effects as a consequence is viral greater than any time that there might be from an adverse reaction to a vaccine was the harm this perception. and we're talking about is this something that has to do with a lot of debate that was lost in the late ninety's when the doctor said there's an established coalition between vaccines and developmental disorders. to some extent but that is that study were burned. and the author of the study was far from that of our complete ortler publication so it's partly it's part of it but it's not the whole issue you know i've been putting my dad around privilege and potentially why. where are you going to tell
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him not. and as we heard from our theme folly they don't. do you good now to focus on misinformation they issued and you have the whole risk perception changes at that point when your child isn't dying of it and yet when our generation. were lining up to get that back it was sending them out in the summer because the program would get critical you don't see that in the united states and more you don't see the impact of it syria or meet in the us and. say well why was evacuated and your sense late breaking that social contract that we have that. back and to protect our whole community we have to all get back. to a sink to build consensus in the community you need to in
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a way or another to have the. boys however this is what they will tell you doctors the medical community is creating an environment of fear and describing them as demons. how do. can you build bridges between the different communities. well i think that the sensationalized media are all are creating a kind of vaccine populism in a sense of how they're creating you know there's the public and then there is the you know the elites but there's actually quite a spectrum of people in fact the majority of people arbitrate between the 2 ends of 100 percent confident and the anti a now there are the serious absolutely and aggressive efforts which is a very small but vocal and sometimes aggressive growth but 80 percent of the people
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on the metal i would say are asking reasonable questions so i think it's really important that in terms of building bridges we don't lose that that population that when they have questions they're not feeling. a looked down upon for asking the question that we make every effort for those who are very much. open to questions out open to or discussion that we engage and we make that extra time that's needed we need to build a resilience in this group that are somewhere sometimes on the fence because if we don't help build their resistance they're much more vulnerable to the misinformation that is out there or do you have a concern that if the until vaccine campaign continues to build momentum the very notion of immunity would become from eyes of we would see. diseases that would
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eradicate it come back. in theory that's possible for any disease where vaccination simply stops but in the case of measles it we it doesn't take very much of a reduction a toll in order for measles epidemics to start taking hold again because it means it was this is so very very infectious it's the most infectious it we nor and it has a rep factor which is a statistic we used to to estimate the number of cases of the number of new cases that any one case will give rise to something like 15 so any any measles case will produce another 15 cases in an unprotected unvaccinated population and at those levels of infectiousness in order to have heard a minute we have to have extremely high levels of the population vaccinated and well in excess of 90 percent no currently at the moment we're just teetering really on the on that borderline currently in in many developed countries so it's fairly
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likely that museums welcome back and of course we have seen the united kingdom and other countries lose their muses fee status as a result the world health organization is urging social media firms to do more to combat misinformation on vaccines what do you do about it where you start with not giving people focus information and that's really what we're calling for by working with faithful can painter ethen instagram to say take the false information of whether it's not scientific facts take that away and then get give people a real choice but a well informed choice by showing them really what the evidence in the dating is ali we're talking about 2 different angles of this story which is the medical aspect which is convincing people that vaccines are good for the kids and for humanity and the one which is purely legal about the need to combat misinformation what do you think should be the top priority now. there's a lot of reasons why we're back. back in misinformation and i want to go back to
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our commentary about let's not lose the majority of people in the middle where we can potentially sway that may help with that information i'd like to start at the point of recognizing that except for this group of acting terrorists and that number of countries. here in the west bank seeing as then the people love their children as much as anybody else and if we can approach them from that aspect and if we can approach them from the trust aspect we can help get them back to make it and helping the create misinformation by making social media a lot more responsible is absolutely the way to go in new york city actually we started seeing the media being a lot more responsible about their messaging and about social norming that we get our kids back maybe because we love our.
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