Skip to main content

tv   Imran Khan  Al Jazeera  September 15, 2019 11:32am-12:02pm +03

11:32 am
a huge concession out of beijing but observers say this may have been given a little too late but protesters are not budging they say there are 4 are their demands and they are refusing to give in so for now these little remain from years . crews in indonesia still trying to control wildfires that are sending a haze of smoke across the region companies are accused of setting the fires to kill land the haze has now spread to neighboring singapore with the city's air quality deteriorating to unhealthy levels for the 1st time in years. staying in indonesia and the country is struggling to deal with refugees escaping conflict and poverty and africa the middle east and elsewhere in asia many say they've been left in limbo for years waiting for documentation so they can be resettled for him $100.00 ports from jakarta. they came to indonesia in hope they could start a new life in australia new zealand or canada but many say they're now stranded.
11:33 am
fled the war in afghanistan and 2015 he and his family live in this makeshift shelter without water electricity or basic sanitation and little food. if i had money wouldn't have come here my wife has been sick 3 years ago she got fever i was in hospital for 5 days she leaves but. i have no money to buy but their food. mohamed is one of 400 refugees sharing the small space in ca to do this in west jakarta up to 26 men live in this room using cardboard boxes and plastic sheets to make the floor more comfortable to sleep on unable to work or study they sit and wait for transit papers or permanent assistance but as conflicts in africa and the middle east continue frustration levels are rising the refugees have been demonstrating your front of the un refugee agency for the past several weeks many of them have come from afghanistan pakistan sudan eritrea somalia and iraq.
11:34 am
7 yet many blame the authorities for not doing enough. but if you're not protecting those in what are you doing here you are supposed to protect all the refugees treating them equally. indonesia is home to $14000.00 refugees a decided but is not a signatory to the un refugee convention which means it only acts as a transit country but the australian government has tightened its borders to refugees from indonesia and cut its international funding to migrants the un refugee agency says charter school resettlement on limits. direct assistance isn't going to be the answer because everyone needs to be able to have the tools to take care of themselves and this is why we're working with the government the government of indonesia here to try to find ways under the indonesian laws for refugees to
11:35 am
have the ability to take care of themselves so they don't always have to depend on handouts rights groups saying no single group is responsible for the backlog what i think is very important in order to. bring all the parties together civil society business sectors and also government agencies as well as the refugees but it is about the refugees want their voices heard having come this far they say it's their only hope for healing mohammed al jazeera jakarta . still ahead on al-jazeera it's all to play for going into the final day of all solheim cup peace so we'll have those details and. the danger is in the grip of an extinction epidemic within dying species disappearing at record levels can it be stopped before it's too likes one i want
11:36 am
a student to gates indonesia's crisis on al-jazeera. al-jazeera where every. peace between ethiopia and eritrea has meant to park area's future for the iraqi people here are some of it because we have to create farmland for our souls for arabs it's a matter of survival. i'm a veteran shows us how the iraq coping with life on the edge of the border. my ethiopian on al-jazeera. the.
11:37 am
welcome back over the next 10 days the hundreds of thousands of people will be heading to the frankfurt mars a show that is the same like most auto shows these days is electric vehicles but it's not the only green technology on show john mccain reports from frankfurt. 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 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. that means putting customer choice at the heart of its green plans in urban areas
11:38 am
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 type can't 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 with high growth rates but i think from 2025 to 2030 the basic 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
11:39 am
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 electric revolution is just a stopgap this is the technology of the future they say hydrogen fuel in 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 defender whose only green variant a plug in hybrid will be available from next year generally though this year's
11:40 am
event seems more about showing it's the electric car which is charging ahead dominic al-jazeera at the frankfurt motor show. and now it's time for sports. thank you very much english premier league champions manchester city have suffered a shock 32 defeat to norwich city the team nicknamed the canaries were flying high after goals from kenny mclean and todd cantwell gave them a 2 no lead after 28 minutes in the 2nd half netted as paper fell to their 1st defeat of the season. in some moments with an attack where the world and the leader would trade never give up. their return to the equaliser room when the game but would doesn't happen congratulations to them. that's good news for the league leaders liverpool who beat newcastle united 31 chitra villains actually gave the visitors a shock lead at anfield but to study them on a gold and
11:41 am
a 2nd off my heart strikes all matters rectified for the reds it's a foot thick tree in a row for you can clubs men liverpool are the only team left with a 100 percent winning record the season they now have a 5 point lead over man city after that surprise loss against norwich they were also wins for manchester united southampton tottenham and chelsea neymar has put months of transfer rumors to wrist and made his 1st league appearance of paris st germain the season after a failed move to barcelona in the last transfer window the brazilian paid his 1st match for the french champions as they faced strasbourg and scored a spectacular last gasp goal to seal a one no win p.s.g. the standings italian champions events us have welcomed back their coach maruti of society the italian was back on the sidelines after missing the opening 2 matches of the season with pneumonia but it wasn't a happy return for him as you very well held to a goalless draw by fiorentina cristiana rinaldo came close but his bicycle kick couldn't quite find its mark have lost
11:42 am
a top spot in city after interval and he defeated it in is a one no in the late game. in spain barcelona have beaten valencia 52 in lowly gets a move to 4th in the standings earlier ed and has are finally made his debut for real madrid having joined in the last transfer window from chelsea the midfielder recovered from a muscle injury to come on in the 2nd half of the $32.00 legal win against. rail nearly blew a 3 goal lead helped by to cut him ben from our goals but held on for the win the result lifts them up to 2nd in the table. but. you know it is true that the 2nd half was very difficult for us especially at the start when your opponent schools a goal just 3 minutes into the game it changes a little bit but i have a good feeling we've got the 3 points after a phenomenal 1st i think we had it all play goals commitment but we must play like that for 90 minutes as soon as we play like that for 90 minutes it's going to be
11:43 am
very good for us you know england's cricketers are in a commanding position of the day 3 of the final ashes test against australia they've now extended their lead to 382 runs having bettered all day on saturday joe denny fell just 6 runs short of a maiden test century ben stokes made 67 as in been close on 313 for 8 they need to win this match to level the series although as holders australia have already done enough to retain the ashes and we've spoken about the fact that we desperately want to win this test match and finish the series is. really at the same time of course we're proud of what we've done and the fact that we're taking the time and you know that was the primary goal of why we came here. so ticked off has been fantastic and been really proud of the way our. group are feeling like today they discontinued a common. pretty good so i reckon the usa have gone
11:44 am
a level with europe after day 2 of golf's solheim cup europe had held a one point lead going into saturday afternoons 4 balls at the u.s. 12 of the matches this was britney ultimate and any park getting the better of suzanne pettersen and with the school's level at 8 all the usa needed just 6 wins from sunday's 12 singles matches to retain the trophy. we got up to a poor start or down early and really fought back. up square. square was kind of all over the place we had the opportunity maybe a couple times to make. it to go ahead with the more commanding lead in and i mean carlotta made an amazing $5017.00 square the match ending and 18 so a little bit all over the place but i feel like marina and i worked well together today we played well so africa has been celebrating the life of rugby star chester williams who died of a heart attack last week at the age of 49. peace
11:45 am
funeral was held at the newman stadium in cape town with friends singing hymns and songs williams was the only black player on south africa's famed $995.00 rugby world cup team he was one of the faces of the new south africa when the springboks won the trophy on home soil in front of nelson mandela just a year after the country's 1st democratic elections it was a very giving person choose to remember it was to go to visit very respectful remember him. i was a manager. he's respect he's their insurance and he's determined discipline has just taken sebastian has taken the lead off to day 3 of the rally of turkey you have to accept 20 minutes. at the top of the standings off the stage 13 but it is a bad day for a championship lead authentic who broke down on the side of the road he was forced
11:46 am
to withdraw from the race. and we'll leave it there for now we'll see you again later for more sport. and that's it for me. martin dennis will be in this chair in just a couple of minutes with more of the day's news stay with us. in the heart of the amazon the libyan family has put them lives in peril to harvest brazil nuts. that can sing the congo to the capital is an even more dangerous challenge. risking it to believe me out. on al-jazeera. the centuries it was the remoteness of brazil's indigenous communities that
11:47 am
protected them from the rapacious outside walls now is what shields those who are encroaching on protected indigenous territory starting fires and threatening the residents of the county who would not had their 1st contact with the outside walls in 1978 and what are you. talking had a native language translated for us into portuguese remembers it well she says they brought diseases that decimated the community got but that me a couple you know we had a lot of land and we lived peacefully now you live with fear that are very few firsts the invaders are coming closer it's difficult to gauge why a place so remote so tranquil should not to so much to the rest of the walls the indigenous people who live here always realize this but now as the smoke fills the skies and the ashes pollute the river the rest of the world is beginning to realize it's too rewind retire ends with a new series and brand new updates on the past about to see this documentary this
11:48 am
by will compel the cooling onion in the onion the sweetness boxed so hard and through the company to go on to remind continues with cambodia's often in business . this is actually totally crazy scene and just analogous to pick up full treats from his internet they now con out and we could just drive off with them. on al-jazeera. saudi arabia cuts oil output by almost a half following drone attacks on key oil facilities. the us secretary of state blames the wrong for the attacks on aramco despite claims of responsibility by yemen's hoofy rebels.
11:49 am
thanks hello and welcome to our jazeera live from doha i'm martin denis also coming up in the program to new zealand's head to the polls on sunday in the country's 2nd presidential election since the 20 levon arab spring. herself to 6 days in the mediterranean sea dozens of african migrants stepped forth on dry land initially. thanks. but 1st the u.s. secretary of state might pompei who has accused iran of direct involvement in saturday's drone attacks on some of saudi arabia's most important oil facilities this is what he tweeted tehran is behind almost 100 attacks on saudi arabia while rouhani and zarif pretend to engage in diplomacy amid all the calls for deescalation iran has now launched an unprecedented attack on the world's energy
11:50 am
supply there is no evidence the attacks came from yemen but the rebels say they are behind those attacks on the world's largest petroleum processing facility in a kayak as well as on an oil field in could ice and that's force riyadh to temporarily cut production by around half that the u.s. president donald trump he's called it an attack on the globe. well economy he spoke to the saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman saying that he would guarantees saudi security a sum avenge of aid begins our coverage. the world's largest oil processing facility went up in 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 hooty rebels with a capacity to process nearly 7000000 barrels a day of big plays a pivotal role in iran because operations and the oil fields in her race which produces a 1000000 barrels a day also came under attack. state media carried
11:51 am
a statement from the interior ministry and said the fires were brought under control saudi arabia has been leading a coalition against the who he's 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 look at 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 who these 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 the thing
11:52 am
that they've been doing over the last 4 years as bomb bomb bomb would he find his tactics have evolved in the last few years and their drone attacks have become more frequent accurate and long range as conventional air defenses struggle against multiple small drones some see aerial attacks on oil facilities as a possible game changer in the conflict a drone like this can be assembled from $10.00 to $15000.00 or explosives this provides a unique opportunity to partners in military and in this case it's also more concerning because you will want to target facilities that have a huge impact besides the physical damage the hoodies also seem to have time the attacks just a saudi aramco announced it is moving forward to sending 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 like not only. ready to move from one.
11:53 am
yes saudi aramco 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 capability as from the war in yemen this would give investors a moment to pause some of the job it is there. let's get more now on the view from washington d.c. here's our correspondent gabriel elizondo. the reaction from washington to this attack really took on 2 forms we never heard publicly from president donald trump on this on saturday but the white house confirming that he did speak to the crown prince of saudi arabia and really just trump was offering his full support to saudi arabia and the crown prince saudi arabia self defense trump saying that the u.s. would support saudi arabia and also saying that this is attack was a threat to the global economy but then you saw
11:54 am
a very strong statement again from mike pump aoe the secretary of state later on saturday if there be a twitter in this statement just really pointing the finger at iran directly so a different tack from the president who just so support for saudi arabia stop pompei o basically coming out and saying this was an attack by iran and iran will be held accountable for it just shows the 2 different messages that are really coming out of washington on saturday on this support for saudi arabia but also pointing the finger directly at iran important to point out the pump a 0 did not give any or provide any evidence at all on. where he comes up with the idea that iran was behind this we'll be watching that closely in the coming hours and days to see if the state department or defense department anyone else can give any is any evidence on this but clearly 2 big strong messages coming out of washington on saturday support for saudi arabia and also mailed
11:55 am
threats to iran threats that they are behind this according to the u.s. . but yemen's who the rebels have been using drones increasingly in combat this small the cheap to produce and capable of evading radial systems the who these of use drones to avoid saudi arabia's patriot missile defense systems and allowing the rebels therefore to file a ballistic missiles well into the kingdom unchallenged sound is vols the oil fields a pipeline network of. in a prime target saturday's strike on the cake facility being the biggest in the most daring to date and the rebel sec knology is becoming more sophisticated with their drones now able to reach targets in much of saudi arabia and the u.a.e. but we've been speaking to brett velika of it who's a drone expert and a former member of u.s. army special operations. drone strikes in this case hit deeper into saudi
11:56 am
territory than previous strikes and that takes incredible sophistication it's very interesting that you know this attack happened with that level of sophistication we haven't seen before what we don't know the exact type of drone in the attack we can look at previous who's the strikes to point to drones of iranian origin and specifically a drone known as the cost of $1.00 the cost of $1.00 was created by the iranians and provided to do these back in 2015 but what is interesting about it is publicly the range of that drone is only known to be up to 150 kilometers we're talking about a location that was over 500 kilometers which means that they're getting additional help in some way from the iranians to be able to push the range of this particular drone that is basically used meant to be a suicide attack type of drone the problem is that they assumed that they were vulnerable i mean that's they're looking at intelligence indicating that potentially the drones can't reach that location they're there they're not
11:57 am
implementing what is known as counter drone technology which is technology that's available today to be able to detect and identify even automatically destroy these drones before they're able to hit these pieces of critical infrastructures more of these critical facilities like this one need to start implementing an attack especially if we're talking about a situation now where half of the saudis oil production is being stopped because of it i mean that is has wide ranging economic consequences that are supposed to just the physical damage less than 4 hours from now the polls will a bit into niftiest 2nd presidential election since the arab spring they thought the success of the 2011 revolution many faces seen this in chanted the country's new democracy and stephanie deca reports from the capital chain this. for 20 years feisal has been sitting in this exact same spot in tunis is ancient medina creating souvenirs engraved with tunisia's past but the future is far harder to
11:58 am
hammer out militant ideas with been going downhill since 2011 and everything politicians are arguing and we pay the price what used to cost $1.00 dinar is now 10 or more mate used to cost team day now now it's $30.00 we ask him if he will vote in sunday's election. maybe. he voted many times before he tells us and that's been more than enough for him he doesn't trust the politicians. 36 year old abdul harder feels the same disappointment he will go to the polling booth on sunday but in protest exemption for commercial police just i will cast a blank vote so no one else can use it many of us are not satisfied the presidential elections were brought forward by 2 months after the death of the late president 92 year old. it's the 2nd major elections to be held here 8 years after mass protests forced the ouster of strongman zain aberdeen ben ali there are $26.00 candidates
11:59 am
among the prime minister and defense minister a former president a couple of lawyers and even a media tycoon who is currently in prison they represent a cross-section of political social and religious ideals and asians have a lot of toys and that's a real difference and before the protests broke out here in 2011 which is in decades of single party rule tunisia is often cited as the only success story of the uprisings which swept across north africa in the middle east from 2011 but it's not that simple 1st of all i mean having. the democratization process succeeding and this is happening. in the middle of the middle east and north africa this is this is an exception we cannot deny that at the same time what can democracy provide in terms of economic demands that's the major challenge so it's a mixed story we meet a group of ladies in the medina they too aren't happy with what's been achieved in the last 8 years economy security corruption the main issues everyone highlights
12:00 pm
after the revolution everything had to change but nothing has changed everything is actually worse infrastructure for instance we just had terrible floods here the economy before everything was covered up but after the revolution it's now out there to see tunisians go to the polls on sunday if no candidate gets over 50 percent of the vote there will be a runoff in november many will tell you that is an almost certain scenario parliamentary elections will take place in october the next 2 months could reshape the entire political landscape and determine what tunisia will look like moving forward stephanie decker al-jazeera tunis. we've got lots more to come here about including behavior ends mountain massive relief for their compadre it's left telling this after the worst hurrican the. last plug in power front has made gains green with high end electric cars.
12:01 pm
we got some pleasant solve some weather across a good part of north america big some places a cloud over towards the eastern seaboard eastern parts of canada as well but the heat still there a lot of dry weather temperatures typically getting up around the mid twenty's high twenty's maybe even the low thirty's for some you can see there is some wet weather just lurking around the middle antics that is pushing up towards the genius heading up to maryland as well little bit of wet weather to just around the other made west further west as generate tribe we have got some surrey heavy rain coming in across the pacific northwest through b.c. that western parts of canada seeing some very heavy rain well we do also drawn towards this very well.

44 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on