tv Unfair Game Al Jazeera September 15, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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u.s. army special operations member. zimbabwe's founder robert mugabe has been on and by african leaders as a revolutionary icon and an intellectual giant and many zimbabweans have stayed away from a ceremony that pay tribute to former president they remember a darker side and blamed him for the battered economy harm which has reports now from harare. it was a chance to remember robert mugabe and say goodbye to founding father who ended a white minority rule in the country but there were no big crowds many say he was responsible for ruining the economy he was however out of at the ceremony as a principled leader a liberator and an intellectual giant who championed pan african isn't something the continent has a see much of recently. was booed by some zimbabweans angry at how
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african foreign nationals are treated in south africa. or what. other african leaders spoke fondly. africa's to own their own resources including land without interference from western nations and the honor of this goal and so on . a corner on leaders are the people. to be. under guard against negative interest.
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was given a 21 gun salute the highest of honest. the military helped keep him in power for 37 years but they also removed him in a coup and 2017 people who attended the memorial service say it was a fitting sendoff for a man who ruled him for nearly 4 decades this is 830000 seaters stadium the beginning to be in the capital but it's not even half full many people did not come to the memorial or are carrying on with their lives trying to make ends meet in a struggle or earth was controversial in life and there was even a dispute between the government and the family over women should be buried now it's been decided his final resting place will be at the national heroes acre symmetry in the capital but only after a muslim or special grave has been built that will take about 30 days. al-jazeera. or clashes have broken out in hong kong vest time it tween rival factions of demonstrators hundreds of probate protesters sang the chinese national anthem waved
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red flags and chanted slogans as opposing protesters gathered nearby a situation turned chaotic as a group started echoing each other and trading blows. but he slayton moved in to defuse the scuffles and detained several people. sarah clarke reports now from the u.n. long district of hong kong where there was another anti-government protest it's been a tense standoff the last few hours in the area where we are which is in you long it's on the border of mainland china and hong kong around a 1000 protesters marched to this particular like cation where they tried to access a park the place blockade of these streets and deny them access now other requests for the permission was denied for this particular assembly to go ahead they told the police deemed this particular protest today on saturday here in hong kong illegal but this didn't stop the protesters now at the moment the protesters have retreated but tomorrow and sunday we do expect another mass rally to go ahead this
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is one that's organized by the civil human rights front this is the organization that's led the mass rallies the ones that are attracted a 12000000 people in the streets of hong kong of the last 15 or so weeks now they requested permission the police again they deny that permission so therefore again once again on sunday that particular simply if it does go ahead will be danger legal but at the moment the protesters have said they will not back down until they're 5 demands are met and so crucial to those demands a number one you know will suffer universal suffrage to be met they want this particular protest not to be referred to as a rot and they also want an independent inquiry into the police actions against the protesters in hong kong. and watching al-jazeera life from london much more still ahead the bahamas brace for tropical storm alberto just 2 weeks after being devastated by hurricane dorian and west african leaders hold an emergency summit over the deteriorating security situation in the sinai.
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karl i want to play so we've got some quotes weather now pushing into that western side of the but it's right where we have the flooding. rains across the eastern parts of spain you still see this area now this little circulation so we have still got some rain in the forecast here is not going a little further west was pushing inland actually of course the plain but wait to see some showers as we go on through sunday further north lossie dry some wet weather there into northern parts of england pushing up into scotland northern ireland also seeing some wet weather and some rather wet and windy weather looking rather breezy autumnal across parts of scandinavia notice a little bit of snow over the high ground for good measure further east forgot some very heavy rain pushing across the baltic states into that western side of our russia further south is fine and dry we got 28 celsius in athens some of the temperature in rome over the next couple of days staying breezy across northern parts as we go on in some monday and by monday we could see northern parts of spain
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also seeing a little more cloud wanted to showers creeping in hip of the central and southern parts of spain things should start to quieten down by this stage large hadron quark meanwhile across northern parts of africa a little bit of cloud there into northern areas of algeria from time to time i just pick up the road but essentially it's looking fine and sunny. 0 world meets to arab immigrants who left the middle east and built exceptional lives over seas. weaving into the fabric of society of their adoptive countries finding success in germany and canada yet never forgetting their homeland of syria and lebanon. remarkable human stories of arabs abroad the politician and the inventor on al-jazeera.
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welcome back quick look at headlines now saudi arabia's oil production has been severely disrupted by drone attacks on 2 major oil facilities run by state owned company aramco yemen's youth the rebels say they carried out the strikes. zimbabwe's found a robot with gabi is been on it as an african icon at a state funeral outside the capital harare the giant stadium where the event was held was only about a 3rd full. and rival demonstrators have crashed in hong kong as hundreds of beijing supporters faced off against pro-democracy protests as police moved in to defuse the situation detaining several people. now and all the stories we're
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following aid efforts have been suspended in airports closed in the bahamas a storm is forecast to lash the occupied ago just 2 weeks after it was devastated by hurricane dorian at least 50 people confirmed dead and more than a 1000 are still missing alan fischer reports now from the capital. for no there's not much more to do than stand around and talk about what happened about what happens next this is a place of shelter for more than a 1000 after the horror of hurricane dorian police and army who are helping out the relief effort see the government has been cameras inside or christmas told me conditions are good it's the stories that have said. i. was crying. or washed away in the flood and in the mud.
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and. we know. but. it's so hard. when the storm hit freeport her daughter had to swim to safety. all the way or harm. and now another storm is bearing down on the place she's not sure if she still calls home there's really nowhere else to stay if you really look at it because the place is the water logged and if they're not water there's no power no water the dark clouds are all mislead hanging over the bahamas the prime minister says they're hoping the potential tropical storm will cause a few problems but people are ready but if you were to fly over those islands that were impacted you would know that many of the homes already have tops under roofs centra trying to minimize any form of leakage within the home itself so people have
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been working already late on friday the u.n. secretary general toured one of the places where displaced people are being housed and he wants this site is going to become more common to believe so this is the moment to leave 1st the present trends climate change is running faster than what we are we need to reverse this trend we need to defeat climate change the number of those. missing still stands at 1300 but new telecommunications equipment has been sent to the islands that were washed defective the hope is that better information will bring that number down there's a storm just off the bahamas the people here are hoping that it misses because it's common path towards islands that already had too much to be a fallen fish or al-jazeera a naso in the bahamas. west african leaders of planning to spend a $1000000000.00 to fight armed groups they've just wrapped up an emergency summit in bikini and say they'll develop poor areas to stop people turning to violence
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catherine so i has more from want to do this. heads of state from this i have arrived in wagga dougal there is a security crisis in the region following an inside didn't see by armed groups allied to al-qaeda and the islamic state of iraq and the levant fighters have carried out a series of attacks in book enough fassel mauritania mali chide and. they scan sign that this problem could spread beyond us to hell and to other coastal countries there's no one to q 4 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 ju 5 when dated to fight terrorism and illegal migration
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a crossbow does representatives from other west african countries affected by extremist groups like the book are also here book enough fossil has seen increased attacks in recent years until a few years ago when book enough bottles for my pred then placed on power it was removed from power line of our driving the country was largely safe but in 2016 on this street in the capital where the bugle a man stormed into that hotel and 2 restaurants more than 20 people were killed that more new man the 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 nor 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 if they came to our village and began shooting
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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 implementing what will be decided at the summit though 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 that also needs to be a development agenda these are areas that have been marginalized very extremely poor areas that have been marginalized the neglect and by governments for so long so a lot of people feel disenfranchised and they feel for us frustrated and this becomes
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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 won italy's new government will allow a rescue ship to head to the island of lampedusa and bring ashore the 82 migrants on board it's a significant change from the closed ports policy of the previous coalition government spearheaded by far right politician material. the new government took office on cheers day and as promised a different approach to the immigrants prime minister just seppi conti says several countries had agree to take the people abort the ocean viking which was why that agreement was reached bought is lee's farm in a says also said this shouldn't be taken as a sign that the government is softening its position on rescue boats you're going to dog i believe did is agree to me some this then the goody gardening defected
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that the seif porth has been assigned to the ocean by keogh be give our signed the it only because you'd appears decide the key to it here to all or to request to take most of dos migrants several 1000 people have taken part in an environmental rally in the german city a frankfurt at the start to the annual frankfurt motor show spite this year's event showcasing electric cars climate protest as a still demanding changes in transportation habits the leader of the german green parted criticize electric vehicles saying they're not powered by a sustainable palace source bought this is also make as say the future might be powered i have different kind of feel don't when it came reports on this now from frank put this is the automotive revolution a major manufacturers want the world to see of this tour of vehicles with the the low or no emissions for some frank that means 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.
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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 x 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 to already see that are on a small scale have a high growth rate but i think from 2025 to 2030 the basic sales of electric vehicles will climb very rapidly also in absolute numbers not just in
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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 and it got even today the ultimate billet gesture is a very important part of our country's economic success and it's above all an industry which the plies jobs and their full security for hundreds of thousands of people for some people the electric revolution. this is just a stopgap this is the technology of the future they say hydrogen fuel in most of 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 landrieu the defender
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who's 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 the front foot motor show. well there's more on everything here al jazeera dot com and of course you can get more analysis on our top story significant attack on 2 key saudi oil facilities this carried out by 2 c. rebels in yemen. and just a few more details on that top story saudi arabia's oil production has been severely disrupted by those drone attacks on 2 major run oil facilities that are run by state owned company around co yemen's who's the rebels have been battling a saudi led coalition for 4 years now say they are behind the assault in a telephone call with saudi crown prince mohammed bin soundman us president donald
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trump vowed to support the kingdom security and stability zimbabwe's founder robert mugabe has been honored as an african icon a state funeral outside the capital harare the giant stadium where the event was held was only about a 3rd full current zimbabwean president and the same man and god was said quote our motherland is in tears. rival demonstrators have clashed in hong kong as hundreds of beijing supporters faced off against pro-democracy protesters a group started heckling each other and then began trading blows police later moved in to defuse the scuffles and detained several people. italy's new government will allow a rescue ship to head to the island of lampedusa and bring ashore the 82 migrants aboard prime minister decepticons he says several e.u. countries agreed to take the people aboard the ocean viking ship it is a significant change from the closed ports policy of the previous coalition government which was spearheaded by far right politician my test but italy's new
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foreign minister says it's not a sign that his government is softening its stance on the charity rescue boats. i believe there is a great misunderstanding gardening the fact that the sea forth has been assigned to the ocean to give a sign that only because utopias decided to adhere to all of the requests to take most of those migrants. and several 1000 people have taken part in an environmental rally in the german city of frankfurt the start of the annual frankfurt motor show despite this year's aventura casing electric vehicles climate protest as a still demanding changes and transportation of its leader of the german green party is criticised electric cars saying they are not powered by a sustainable power source. what brings you up to date with all of our top stories we'll have more news feel a bit later on join me for that in about 25 minutes time i'll bring you a quick update but it's time for the listening post that starts now.
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this documents is an official cia memorandum dated september 19th 17 and it's innocuously titles discussion of the chilean political situation but its contents what it exposes is pretty incriminating. on the 14th of september mr holmes met with edwards the owner of the independent newspaper. mr edwards expressed the following view on the chilean political situation. until 2017 all of this
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paragraph was brought out redacted meaning that for more than 40 years oh steve edwards the owner of the most influential newspaper in chile and made kept to a story that yes he did meet with the director of the cia richard helms here in washington d.c. and ok he did talk about some other day in this election but no there was never talk of hoopla thing not true. years later these now did cause a fight cia and white house documents prove that's exactly what he did and that the cia financed the newspaper funding and medical deals negative coverage of the a and the government and the positive coverage of the dictatorship that followed i must sell a piece of rope i was born in chile and i'm going to tell you about why maybe 50 years on we still need to talk about and recorded all.
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chileans will tell you can't really understand the history of this country without understanding the history of women and the farming. if you need a modern equivalent think of the murdoch media empire only its much older but in the 19th century when the edwards family amassed a fortune bunking mining agriculture. the family used economic power to shape key moments in china's political history to give you an idea back in the 19th century the edwards played a major role both until the civil war and the pacific war with bolivia and peru to protect their business interests there was one the only family in chile a handful of families owned the country can still do was set them apart with the newspapers. the thing about edwards family line
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is that they understood the way in which the link between politics and economics operates like a sort of. that hit is the media yes i mean. it's much more than a newspaper it's a political institution that brings together an ideological and economic group one that campaigns and influences public opinion in ways from a point of view that defends its interests given. what american real has always been the most important paper in the country very conservative in its editorial perspective and closely linked to the country's political and business elites and it's had significant political impact throughout chile's recent history including wars economic affairs and coups.
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the most solemn of orders and it was on it's not just al mercurio there are 3 means papers and some to go and a regional chain that followed a similar trend to that of many newspapers and that in america powerful influential business minded families who set up a powerful media outlet in order to achieve the next level in a flat up that had other melding for us and. by the 1960s the next level of influence they had was family were looking for was no longer to be found in chile so they look more to the united states to its government and to a central intelligence agency the cia. political winds are shifting socialist movements were gathering momentum across the continent and in chile presidential candidates some other agendas and left wing ideals pledges agrarian reform or nationalization world redistribution capturing the popular imagination who thought
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they stood to lose the edwards family certainly but also the u.s. government as the documents showed we now know that as early as $960.00 fool the cia was injecting money into quote anti communist propaganda. and it's other people's emotional d.c.s. and i still wonder who would have support for a year in there to rein it in. the united states and the cia started bankrolling a campaign that was essentially against any leftist movements in chile in the 1960 s. this us aid helped with their campaign to undermine support for the left wing groups led by salvador and in terms of their growing presence on the political stage both at the poles and in social terminals and even. through his news coverage and opinion pieces and. some other day in this candidacy. but in
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september of 97. again the won the election. he became the world's 1st democratically elected marxist president. as left wing supporters took to the streets to celebrate ousting edwards jumped on a plane flew to washington and sat down with 2 americans who would shape the future of chile u.s. secretary of state henry kissinger and director of the cia richard helms. what was proposed about meeting has been consistently denied for years because these documents declassified decades later reveal chinese media mogul was asking the cia for support in a military coup. and that support came in the form of money the money that was passed to accrue to sustain. abuses of
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truth the propaganda of fomenting violence and the creation of a cool climate the money came from the cia. as the director of the national security archives cheney documentation project in washington d.c. peter kornbluh has made it his mission to get to the truth on chile using the freedom of information act it's been a trip budget process that in $27.00 teams paid off. so you have a document in which kissinger actually calls over to the cia and says the president has just approved the proposal for a sporting career at the amount of $700000.00 the president wished to see the paper kept going and the amount stipulated could be exceeded if that would be usefully served that purpose i can't think of another time when i have seen. nage
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meant by the president of united states of covert propaganda operations in another country and here is the living proof of nixon's personal involvement in making sure that the cia kept elma korea go. classified documents all carved here in washington d.c. show that president nixon himself directly authorized funding for and made to the tune of $2000000.00 a serious amount of money in the 1970 s. enough to keep a paper that was in financial difficulties alive and more importantly shape public opinion the cia essentially passed money physically to members of the edwards group. bags full of money and the cia bag man if you will in the cia station santiago was named jack divine. and he was.
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a young man with a big afro if you looked at him you would have thought he was a foreign exchange student during the age of hippies but in fact he was an undercover cia officer in one of his 1st postings. as an agent and he was responsible for carrying this money for meeting with periodically with the helmet for real people with the divine thanks for talking to us here in the think it's a pleasure you touched down in chile in the 1970 s. during the again the government you put in charge of an important brief and medically a project a key part of the cia operation in chile at the time can you tell us about your specific role in this post is an extraordinary assignment was my 1st assignment a lot of them are my job is actually to help keep the funding. because the agenda government. who is 3 would say putting the screws on the home according to
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my 1st major test that i can recall was trying to find funding so that public order could tended to continue to obtain the paper did that actually print the newspapers so this is on the record as cables written by me asking for a fairly large several several $100000.00 to support the the maintenance of running the paper mill mccourty it was for the whole market you want to preserve it. with high integrity as a journalistic about this so you were on the ground in chile you were reading a medical and you were seeing what was happening what do you make of criticisms then that during the 3 years of president and administration and medical do you. used propaganda to the neighborly mislead readers let me put it in the context of the time i think blocking. the i.n.d.
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government at the time it is. participation in the government in the context of the cold war. was an important thing to do the we know from other reporting that the russians really looked at chile as an experimental case where you could use the voting box to bring communists the power in the hemisphere there was a sentiment among those of us watching that the i.n.d. government was in the process of falling of its own weight his policies were so wrong footed that it was they were the architect of the economic problems that they were confronting. that albacore you would be critical of. is is not surprising i you know understating the power of the media. not just to report on stories but to produce them creating stories and this is where the bottom line is a nobody of course once they hear this on the left i ended created most of the
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stories i mean economic policies are very hard to justify today and. at the end of the day when i stand back where brought down the brother record it was softer art it was a barely fall government economically. ringback that's the story of journalist and it is there so it was. at the time somebody says thank you very much for joining us here in the past he was working for make good on and says that without cia money the paper would never have been able to tell it not because president you know there was explicitly censoring the press but because his government was tightening the screws on him and financially they were in a loony apple related near certainty and the government wanted to close down and marketing but they couldn't just send the police in shut the paper down so what they did was to found all its accounts they blocked its newsprint supplies they
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took away all public sector advertising as a result the paper was then in serious financial trouble so the people who did want to know what could do to survive did what they could to find funding for it among them the u.s. government this was a fight between 2 armies income but one of the methods the poor in my opinion unlawful by draining the life out of one of the other wanted to provide it with a life like you to get your limited new year in israel according to bit is the art of the cia offered that lifeline however for victor that read of edwards' unofficial biographer that cash. allowed and unleashed a propaganda campaign that would lead to you in this town full and the thousands of deaths that followed you wouldn't they want to hack the n.s.a. thank you lithium but it can for instance amongst various interventions there was the financing of a general strike particularly truck drivers and the transport industry which
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paralyzed the whole country and mccall you played a key part as a spokesman for this movement showing how the country was supposedly falling apart at the seams and the code you have been generating fear around communism ever since the bolshevik revolution itself. from a very early stage edwards mcclure was the grandfather of augustine edwards identified this revolution as something very dangerous and makoto has always been furiously anti communist always. carried out an anti communist campaign deliberately spreading panic we're talking about the cold war the early seventies i mean it was the communists are coming to kill your kids that kind of thing the establishing of a totalitarian state where all freedoms would be taken away and many people bought it. we have cia documents from the spring
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of 1973 in which the cia station chief identifies emma choreo as one of the key entities in chile that is pushing for instability and confrontation in order to instigate military action in chile no discussion of democracy nothing peaceful violence that was the purpose. september of 1973 i in there was overthrown in a military coup led by general. mass open air prisons. or houses disappearances in the 1000.
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bodies dumped at sea the result a culture of fear and repression repression that spread to the media a new total crackdown on the press with an exception i made and the other 2 papers it opened and i'm not going to my mom. that's where most chileans got their news from during the 17 year they tape the ship that followed. where barbara hayes a young journalist at the time got her start our without a paper political yes i was really interested in political journalism but by then it was clear that there was absolutely no chance of being able to do that under dictatorship not in elmore coolio not anywhere else you have to realize that in those years a clampdown on the media was brutal the information we'd be able to gather even those of us who studied journalism would be very little and there was a lot of self-censorship around aside from straight up censorship the editors and
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publishers of the media were only too aware that there were certain topics that could not be reported and they would be constantly summoned by the government's national directorate for communications which controlled anything to do anywhere on this to control our thought them. in july of 975 so when they want to make movies more liberal papers published a headline that still lives on exterminated like rats the rats were the 190 members of the me and the revolutionary left movement and on opposition training for a counter coup. according to. libyan internal fight which ended in a bloodbath the real story the chilean secret police heard disappeared. i asked because they are so but the story of the 119 and why i. covered it the way they did so people do it or if you're a journalist and you're given
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a story you take that story to your paper and it gets published there was no prior knowledge of anything i mean we had the judicial inquiry that took place 30 years later that exposed. the story came to journalists from argentina and it. published in an argentinian paper then over time it emerged that everything had been fabricated but nobody could have known that at the time we. did was to quote the official source of that's what they publish and what they really want to go. one of the 119 disappeared by chile's secret police whose mere member martin. his sister gloria told me she's been campaigning for justice ever since one of her and i was baffled was well this is the notorious front page of lhasa gone exterminated like rats it was painful really very painful it's probably
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difficult to imagine what it means to know that your brother has been arrested the authorities to spend a year denying it and then to be faced with this information was extremely shocking . even though it was officially denied his death become a possibility after a few months and with that report we knew it was true and it said yes they killed them best still killing them that killing us and they will carry on. saying kill guess until they pull of the adios in a better the more i say so in a. letter i opened the one video. a lot of anger indignation and at the time a lot of impotence because it was just impossible to counter those arguments these were official truths that were established and distributed in the media there were
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practically no media you could call on to disprove any of this even though we the families of the disappeared tried with every single one of the media organizations in chile there's not a single media outlet at the time who can say they didn't know they didn't have a chance to find out about it. because all this information all the information to disprove this government information was delivered to all media for i think i'll go . into the other night many decades all the way not to let a documentary on and make real growth in a dictatorship and yet in all those things i was the rules paper was fit. to national t.v. . but i'm aware of what the boy. cost it see the end but in toronto it in motion of those me
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a little as you will not get it took another 6 years for the film to be proved cost late at night on a on t.v. an independent channel that day and they could use t.v. listings left that slot blank more than food she years after the military coup the film's director found that daring to question him a coolio was still to the doing of it as well you know live alternately the censorship operation against the film came from officials at chile's national broadcaster from within the directors board it came from within because in my earlier generates fear among those who want power because america is also a means to being an empowered kid in a bull in the neck and i think i think of that i think of it because i mean if you go to the one thing i would have if they were there not only for myself but i'm for . and when in the world to think it was the 1st step in a series of attempts to expose the role of augustine edwards and their medical you
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during the dictatorship many people knew but it's one thing to talk about and another to show good evening to. you tonight you said with an innocent girl you listen to this little bit i mean anything. the 2nd day to instill. fear in the well it has become an immigrant the problem is that in my call you and i will stay in edwards of the victors of history and the victors don't apologize apologize for what we call for a coup d'etat and that's what we have. apologised for wanting a new liberal state that we now have winners don't say so. this is the basic article so to demand this from the victors of history strange why should you demand this and why should they apologize if they want on all fronts a matter. of printing and a lot of big oh yes the mounds have been made legal ones in
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20132 groups representing families of the disappeared to go was denied was to court for his role in covering up human rights violations it was the 1st time charges had been brought against the civilian for his or her role in the coup nothing came of it. today and google still dominates the media market and when i was dean edwards died in 2017 but he and his paper remains officially unblemished. where we've been legally challenging these cases for more than 40 years what happened during the dictatorship was an ability to cover up any dissent anything that could have been construed as a criticism of the establishment of the power elites throughout history there are instances of this kind of lies and distortions of reality last when else
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. this is a memorial to the thousands of people who disappeared during the pain of. a symbol of the chilean states a chance to confront a brutal past but not everyone wants to do that we tried not for weeks but for months to get an official response from a limit on. legit crimes against journalism the paper commits ensuring that tun but to no avail and says if i'm at a corner is taking a story it's own story and trying to bury at sea.
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world leaders from un member states a parent to take their seats for this year's general assembly and rouhani and president trump will attend a time growing tensions between the u.s. and iran he just will multilateral efforts provide solutions to a global refugee crisis escalating laws and climate change before it's too late so join us for extensive coverage of the un general assembly on al-jazeera. few. the latest news as it breaks while the lunar lander
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has been tossed over shows expect to receive images from the all but up with detailed coverage dangers remain for black blood the stronger the phrase the volcker for not a war through the eastern 3rd of hurricane dorian. from around the world his body will lie in state for a few days then he will be the age at the national hero seen a change in the capital. there is a huge group of people at work behind our screens and the power they have is massive that urge to keep swiping through twitter feed that's designed the way we all click i agree to the terms and conditions that scientists and most of us never even give it a 2nd thought and actually that's designed as well as ali riggs explores how designers are manipulating our behavior and the final episode of all hail the algorithm on a. music
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stand the differences. and the similarities of cultures across the world. al-jazeera. hello i'm maryam namazie in london with a quick look at the headlines now saudi arabia is shutting down half of its oil output after drone attacks on 2 facilities according to the wall street journal yemen's hoofy rebels have been battling a saudi that coalition for 4 years say they were behind the strikes as on a binge of aid now reports. the world's largest oil processing facility went up in
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flames after a drone attack amateur videos captured the fire and smoke at saudi aramco has uptake unit it was targeted by drones belonging to yemen's routine rebels with the capacity to process nearly 7000000 barrels a day of big plays a pivotal role in iran because operations and in the oil field in her race which produces a 1000000 barrels a day also came under attack. aramco has not made clear the extent of the damage and its impact on saudi oil production but state media carried a statement from the interior ministry and said the fires were brought under control saudi arabia has been leading a coalition against the who is in the war in yemen since 2015. the rebels say they want the world to see that they have a list of targets which they can hit in the kingdom of god some. attacks are our right and we warn 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 saudi arabia accuses iran of backing the hoodies
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a charge denied by the rebels some believe the saudi response to the drone attacks is going to be more of what's been happening during the war in yemen this would probably help them project their what they've been doing in yemen as something legitimate especially given the international report about the violations and about the at truscott is committed in yemen i think the saudis would continue to think that they've been doing over the last 4 years as bomb bomb bomb would find his tactics have evolved in the last few years and there drone attacks have become more frequent accurate and long range as conventional defenses struggle against multiple small drones some see aerial attacks on oil facilities as a possible game changer in the conflict like this can be assembled from $10.00 to $15000.00 or explosives this provides a unique opportunity to target the military and in this case it's also more concerning because you want to target facilities that. besides the physical damage
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the hoodies also seem to have time the attacks just a saudi aramco announced it is moving forward to selling a part of the state oil company the stock listing has been on again off again but attacks like these will not help investor confidence to bring in billions of dollars to diversify in the south the economy the prime minister has been historically. so. the idea over what is being. done to students. who is no ordinary company it's the engine of saudi arabia's economy and a source of power for its rulers it's also the crown jewel of the saudi crown prince's ambitious plan to diversify the economy but with seemingly expanding strike capabilities from the war in yemen this would give investors a moment to pause some of the job it is their. zimbabwe's found a robert mugabe has been on it as an african icon of his state funeral outside the capital harare at the giant stadium where the event was held was only about
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a 3rd full current president amisom and i said our motherland is in 10 is that's a quote from him. rival demonstrators have clashed in hong kong as hundreds of beijing supporters faced off against pro-democracy protesters the group started heckling each other and then began trading blows but he's later moved in to diffuse a scuffles italy's new government will allow a rescue ship to bring ashore the 82 people aboard prime minister just epic conte says several e.u. countries had agreed to take the men it's a significant change from the closed ports policy of the previous coalition government several 1000 people have been taking part in an environmental rally in the german city of frankfurt at the start of the annual frankfurt motor show despite this year's aventura casing electric vehicles can protest as a still demanding changes in transportation habits well just their world is next with the story of 2 remarkable success stories from arab immigrants and germany and
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