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tv   NEWS LIVE - 30  Al Jazeera  September 26, 2019 12:00pm-12:34pm +03

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death threats as a result consequently the atmosphere inside parliament became furious. son to death and appears. that i told the prime minister. this months to try. to meet with moderate taliban when i would have to come from the prime burners. to make matters worse johnson described those concerns about m.p. safety as humbug all in all it was the most angry parliamentary session anyone can remember the government accuses the opposition of running away from an election they say he broke the law over suspending parliament and fear he might do it again to the sense of democracy unraveling the whole thing is a horror show barnsley al jazeera london fighting has broken out between supporters of malawi's government and opposition groups in the financial capital blantyre hundreds of people were calling for the head of the electoral commission to resign
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when things turned violent they've been protesting against the reelection of the president meeting with a record in may 5th eighty's president is calling for calm after days of protests paralyze the caribbean nation demonstrators in the capital port au prince demanding the resignation of. is accused of corruption and failing to solve worsening fuel and food shortages. time for a short break here al-jazeera when we come back down but not quite out israel's prime minister gets another shot at staying in power despite failing to win outright and last week's election. and taking to the skies in china but with a new airport in beijing make things any easier to travel more in that state. we've seen some rather wet weather across southwestern parts of the u.s.
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recently what's a weather making its way across the plains and easing up towards central parts of canada as well as been some flooding just around arizona down towards the southwest of cool things down here as it goes through the next couple of days but still a few showers into the southwest still in parts of california could also see some of that cloud and right it's really the main story is about the heat to get up to $35.00 dallas into the mid to high twenty's across the central areas over towards the eastern seaboard and even new york still getting up to around 27 celsius and i hate saying that also with this in cloud right because at least in parts of canada similar temperatures today for seattle what tory attention to calgary $39.00 degrees celsius that since neither over the rockies that's going to set the scene as we go through the next couple days if we're lucky we have a high 5 degrees in calgary as we go through friday between some rather lively down posts then they will push their way across the primaries down across the great plains as we go through the next system rather lively showers coming through their
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season lovely weather to just around puerto rico around the dollars recently tropical storm karen is now moving away. an ethiopian woman determined to tell the world a news story about turkey. treat our source humanity is the most beautiful include cocked and i wish we can just realize that day and just the footbaths despite the challenges she became c.e.o. of tourism and head of ethiopia's land development project my ethiopia i'll just 0.
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welcome back a quick amount of our top stories here on the al-jazeera the us president says an impeachment inquiry against him over a phone call to his ukrainian counterpart is based on hopes but details of the july call with a lot of man selenski released by the white house reveals that donald trump did ask him to investigate rival john by. iran's president says there won't be any negotiations on its nuclear program so long as american sanctions remain us on rouhani accuse the u.s. of economic terrorism and his address to the u.n. general assembly britain's prime minister is challenging opposition parties to call a motion of no confidence in him which could lead to a general election. has been facing repeated calls to resign and all the supreme court said his move to suspend all of them was illegal. israel's president has
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asked long time prime minister benjamin netanyahu to try to form a new government netanyahu still has no clear path to a 5th after emerging from the september 17th ballot without a majority in the house 28 days to put together a coalition ari force that reports from western muslims. israel's president let out the caretaker prime minister to announce a result he'd been trying to avoid riven rivlin wanted benjamin netanyahu to form a national unity government with his main rival benny gantz those talks failed and instead he chose the man with a bigger potential coalition bloc to have the 1st chance at forming a government that governor decision on who should be handed the task of forming the government depends on who has more chance to succeed currently 55 supported knesset member latanya he and if the 4 supported knesset member benny gantz 10 of them said they wouldn't sit with him in their government before the announcement a 2nd meeting between netanyahu and dance at the president's home serve merely to confirm what was already clear the talks between their parties had gone nowhere
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neither man reportedly willing to go 2nd in a rotational prime minister agreement netanyahu said he would continue to push for such a deal within days the pressure is on his 1st and hearings on corruption charges a jew next week. a call the mormon doctrine of totally out of the utmost with the mandate you gave me if i don't exceed our returned a mandate to you and with the help of god that israel citizens and yourself mr president were established a broad national unity government down the line after the announcement dance reiterated that he would not serve under a prime minister facing indictment who insisted on bringing with him a large block of right wing parties the longer the process goes on the closer he gets to being charged the more pressure mounts on netanyahu to stand aside but if benny gantz his strategy is simply to wait until conditions favor him well the president reminded him that he had another option he could merely toss the ball to the knesset and ask it to find an alternative candidate who could muster 61
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recommendations the president has made his initial choice but it's no breakthrough israel's political stalemate goes on air force at al-jazeera westerners. hamas members of held a special session of the palestinian legislative council to stand with hunger striking prisoners dozens of palestinians in israeli jails are on their sixteenth's consecutive day of an open ended strike there protesting the presence of reportedly cancer causing mobile phone jammers in prisons in. freeing our prisoners from the israeli jails as a national political humanitarian and religious jussi before we call on the palestinian resistance to do its peace to defend their prisoners and try to accomplish a prison is what. egyptian rights groups saying security forces have arrested about a 1000 people since anti-government protests began last week amnesty international is now calling on world leaders attending the un general assembly to confront egypt's president abdel fattah el-sisi more protests are planned in egypt for this
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friday relief efforts have been stepped up in pakistan where a magnitude 5.8 earthquake has killed at least 37 people and injured 1000 others dozens of homes and businesses have been destroyed come all higher reports from other poor in pakistan administered kashmir. dispute the aftermath of a 5.8 magnitude earthquake homes roads and other infrastructure damaged or destroyed. 3rd got to get the earthquake was sudden and so severe we had no time to get out of our house the next thing we knew part of the roof collapse and we had to a skate from a side door we built our house 8 years ago and now it's gone. head unsung will age a 20 minute drive from the city of mead poor people are still in a state of shock so it's good the cream on our village is a risk 300 houses now some are gone and others have sustained major structural
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damage people are now sitting out in the open. then relief workers are sent in to carry out research and rescue operations head sadly david retrieve. the national disaster management go to d.j. through the warning about. everyone to remain in the fall for the earthquake was felt in most parts of pakistan. and you can see a trail of destruction and people now go no where did they leave. to go back to their homes. meet poor bugger tony administered kashmir a series of mass shootings a push democrats in the u.s. congress to call for a bill on gun restrictions including a possible ban on assault style weapons but while the majority of americans support the move it's unlikely to become law how does a castro reports now from washington d.c. the death of a 24 year old mother shot with an
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a k $47.00 style rifle at an el paso wal-mart in august was explained by the surgeon who tried and failed to save her life she was protecting a child and so she was actually shot in the back and through a shoulder she had this hole the size of a baseball at the top of her lungs so clearly investors were essentially nonexistent if this injury had been caused by a small fire she may have had a chance of survival but there is absolutely nothing i could do to fix that kind of devastating injury. wednesday's hearing before the house judiciary committee was meant to build support for a possible nationwide ban on assault weapons the firearms of choice of mass shooters in the us have no purpose but to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible i want killers to rapidly repeatedly fire bullets at their human targets without stopping to reload so our weapons are designed for maximum
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bloodshed assault weapons were banned in the us between 19942004 today an estimated 16000000 such weapons are in circulation within the country recent polling shows that between 56 and 70 percent of americans want congress to ban assault. protestors against gun violence have regularly descended on the nation's capital to urge lawmakers to take action. i want them to know that if they don't take action while i was going to be out was there to be at stake they were going to die it is the epidemic that we had to get really have to figure out we have to just and right now but a ban on assault weapons is still unlikely republicans who control the senate have bulked at more moderate measures like expanding background checks for gun buyers the powerful gun lobby has argued for focusing on mental health instead it is very clear when you look at mass public shooters what you see is much higher rates of
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untreated serious mental illness and there's the matter of the sheer number of guns in americans hands nearly half of all the guns in the world that's a fundamental difference between the us and new zealand a country that rapidly responded to the christ church mass shooting by restricting gun sales and buying back weapons but in the u.s. where the right to bear arms is guaranteed by the constitution a mandatory gun buyback would be highly controversial with some gun owners valuing their. i would never comply. castro al-jazeera washington. now to what's being described as the clearest report yet on how climate change is overheating our planet's oceans and glasses the u.n. intergovernmental panel on climate change says the rate of ocean warming has doubled since 1009 $103.00 and will continue to rise oceans absorb 90 percent of the world's excess heat marine heat waves of also doubled in frequency the $980.00
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s. the i.p.c.c. it says sea levels will rise affecting hundreds of millions of people in low lying and coastal areas before the end of the century the report predicts marine life will decline further and it details how glassy is no cover an arctic sea ice will continue to melt well greenpeace scientists are building a case to protect more marine areas al-jazeera is nick clark as an amazon reef in the south atlantic ocean off the coast of south america. yes we're on board the greenpeace ship esperanza where scientists are investigating a newly discovered area of reef we're about 600 kilometers from the mouth of the amazon in that direction and about 130 kilometers from the shore french guiana and scientists here on board a conducting all manner of research from the seabed to the surface hoping to bolster the case for protection of the world's oceans to the chuen of 30 percent by the year 2030 the team here following closely the publication of this report which
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lays out in stark terms how the oceans are warming the dangers of sea level rise which could affect hundreds of millions of people and the impact on bio diversity in earlier we spoke to search plane from the french center for scientific research and he gave us his assessment the concern is 1st of all very personal news that i i grew up we've a world we've a certain scenario we were certain vision of the world and then we were certain wildlife and i'm always a little bit sad thing that i will leave to my daughter i've got a daughter she's pretty young she's only 20 years plus and so i will leave that we're a very different song to what i get and so it's a personal sense of the 1st before scientific i would say since early on that in the context of the i.p.c.c. you get to worry about larvae i've been able in several centuries and 1000000 to adapt to different and then suddenly changing that habitat transforming that heat
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out and so the end of these these are the end of those 4 and we don't know exactly but clearly they'll be strongly affected yes the climate is changing and yes our finances changing yes we are getting into over temperature and this is this is this is going to change our or our rabbits this is not going to be all the changing the wildlife this is going to change all saw the agriculture of this is going to change also where we living and then our lifestyle. playing them well it's evident that the oceans of the world are taking a direct hit when it comes to the climate crisis it's also clear that research and science like which we're seeing here on board the esperanza it's crucial if we are to mitigate the worst effects of climate change now what china expects to be the busiest airport on the planet in a few years is open for business dashing is the 2nd the airport in the capital long suffering passengers in beijing hope the giant new terminal will make their journey smoother matheson takes a look. in beijing this is known as the 11000000000 dollar starfish the new
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deicing international airport just south of china's capital raising i declare this airport open. the timing of the official opening is significant coming just days before the 70th anniversary of the founding of the people's republic of china the airports expected to handle $300.00 takeoffs and landings every hour on at least 4 runways and 72000000 passengers every year by 2025 china aims to make dashing the world's busiest aviation. b.g. we want to make beijing international airport and work class convenient and easy fish in new to work to the country u.s. plane maker boeing says the number of china's wealthy middle class who are most likely to travel will double within 10 years it says that within that time one in 5 airline passengers around the globe will be chinese and boeing wants to build the
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airliners they'll fly in predicting the chinese market will eventually be worth around 3 trillion dollars and that some market the world's airlines and plane makers want access to but orders are threatened by the trade war between china and the u.s. and it's not clear how that will affect boeing's order book china's government has been encouraging national airlines to buy domestically produced aircraft they're already big orders in for short haul planes but one company is waiting for certification for the long haul aircraft and that analysts say means that china has global ambitions for its air industry there are other issues to china's military controls about 80 percent of china's airspace in the past civilian flights have been blocked with little or no warning and that's led to major delays or flight cancellations and a lot of frustration for air passengers at this point you. have
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a very different attitude safety of the capital and of the country come 1st but you see much. less of these kind of arbitrary closings which may have some meeting to the military but if you're trying to get from shanghai to beijing you just don't understand china's leaders will be hoping the new airport has so beijing is open for business and take the pressure off the overcrowded capital airport china's air travelers will be hoping their flights take off on time rob matheson. beijing. stuff a quick check of the headlines here on al-jazeera the u.s. president says an impeachment inquiry against him over a phone call to his ukrainian counterpart is based on a hoax but details of the july call with a lot of me as a lenski released by the white house revealed that donald trump did ask him to
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investigate rival joe biden for the so-called whistle blower the one that didn't have any 1st last or 1st rate or. second tier information from what i understand you have to figure that out for yourself. but i've spoken with leader kevin mccarthy and the republicans many of them and we were going to do this anyway but i've informed them. all of the house members that i fully support transparency on the so-called whistle blower information iran's president says there won't be any negotiations on its nuclear program so long as american sanctions remain on rouhani accuse the u.s. of economic terrorism in his address to the u.n. general assembly. britain's prime minister is challenging opposition parties to
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call a motion of no confidence which could lead to a general election boris johnson has been facing repeated calls to resign after the supreme court said his move to suspend parliament was illegal israel's president has asked binyamin netanyahu to try and form a new government the prime minister still has no clear path to a 5th term after emerging from the september 17th ballot without a majority he now has $28.00 days to cobble together a coalition and i asked members of held a special session of the palestinian legislative council to stand with hunger striking prisoners dozens of palestinians in israeli jails or on their 16th consecutive day when open ended strike there protesting the presence of reportedly cancer causing mobile phone jammers in prisons. president is calling for calm of the days of protests paralyzed the caribbean nation demonstrators in the capital port au prince are demanding the resignation of john l. murray's he's accused of corruption and failing to solve the worsening fuel and food shortages those are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after
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my ethiopia station that's a watching by foot. it's industry stunt before. and under. and women. the bright lights of. our. culture. lifestyle. are.
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we are definitely part of the reform process the reason i'm sitting here is part of the reform process. the reason i've actually. to really be gauged and be part of this conversation is part of the reform. known for. the past. an unfortunate. where we lost. people head and we have not changed. our approach and it's changed them brain now and this is the. right heart of it.
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but i mean you have to reason that and i. got a man and. i'm not going to open their minds. so i think the yeah go me oh no so for of treason what do you know you. didn't know vision we're going to meet a book written and not the one ending we don't want it. if we want to is a good twist to come and visit then we need to build our infrastructure and where are these infrastructures we need to build these conversation happening for real this time around within this period of time how do we need these sites are accessible they're not.
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so today we are hunting to look for sites that can be removed not just as a tourist attraction but also coming to development and coming between teach mentor and learning about history and we're also trying to see if that if we were going to do this and if people were going to come and find sites how would how easy would it be. i think at least as a huge potential in terms of his heritage to develop and to rebuild to revitalize the urban communities which is crucial because we are going through repetitions for mission in during this period we're just about to lose our own identity because it's our own tradition and achates picture there is
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a mirror in the reflection of ourselves in our past. i mean finding these buildings is a challenge so it turned out that the mistake they make about the heritage buildings. g.p.s. location doesn't really match with the engine so that should that's one reason we want to do the resource mapping then we won't have to do this you know you want have to go out to a scavenger hunt to see how deep they were down even for that purpose after the cold winter. and it doesn't measure. getting up. i'm going to check all ph. they could take a bigger place this is the best thing i did last year for daily. paper daily. chuckle daily the actual daily has out about every one of those the static that you
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can buy. your products and be in and i will not let you go business with as i say i married a man i don't know so i never said i would says let's send the letter we need to but i meant. going to both of them still believes. in them i'm looking for. 7 beautiful not because i sure don't want. to know what i don't know but still.
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this is a letter that oh it's just i don't remember the. mo. so the move was made out of libya. such as is a mage soon. so you can get the chicken you think. ok you. did it you can get it it was legal. to have a. choice. to do is it going to be national just not is the domain decision was intended to make oh did land now just an ocean or she. was happy that it did not go. there's so much history and so much culture that we hop that we have not preserved and we have not used. we're
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losing them we're losing them in the process of modernization and the process of growth and that's it doesn't have to be that way we can always a grow that we can always go on along side of protecting our history and really really using it for something much more than what it was originally designed for. which was. a big you know right. which. is a tremendous music and a bus going to get a bus at night and then now that we're going to jump. in again and it would be shifted to maturity and the 2 reason to leave. our stories have never been told by us and often think it'd connection has never
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been done completely by a tibet's themselves it was always has been someone else telling our stories telling our cultures telling our or our history telling our lifestyle. for us it's about to continue taking on drugs space and seeing that really need to tell our story and we need to make sure it's still a threat because it's ours. and . i grew up with 2 journalists in the house my parents so information was the news to me stuff like favorite body and they were talking about it so i grew up in a space where you know. you counts not but before.
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because my mom was active and highlighting muslim moments rights that i was being taught and communicated while i was growing up by the time i was a teenager and really knew how to balance it out and know that when to call off something to be something to address this is really happening you know from a very gender perspective and i need to address it versus this is just that and out of authentic you know knowing enough understandings. that i don't gender dynamics works. my biggest challenge is the resistance to the transformation. we are green through transformation and there is that painful near where the status quo the comfort zone
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is going to go away so say to you we're not doing business as usual we're going to change because we're going to get better that's that why they need to have this conversation about the because. they're going to get. the simple answer yes we would be happy if you could promote us. coming to office the 1st. piece they tried to explore was if we understand how things have worked before. and it was very. quick for me to recognize that especially with the private sector how to talk and to recognize that a lot of was being done but nothing was coming out as fruitful and consented to move again to talk to know.
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which which part of our foreign country is a truism is going to be an economy current and it's going to have to bring impact so i took a lot of actions around that that a lot of our stakeholders were not very happy about and doing the soul the newbie in the house asking this question doesn't come off as. a nice. gesture you know people would say is it because you're a woman is that because of your new into the government system and if i look at it from that perspective i would start taking it very personally i see this not so much about. what they are in prison right now and that's the transformation. i take from that perspective and. i believe that buy there was me be here as a woman are not this is agenda would have been a fair business that's. not
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to not come in we didn't describe any meeting and i got a bit in the muck out of. the minute you might want to get the game and just let me know then it makes the economy. pretty much a very disease like. one of those states that i'm a taking a break today but it's pretty. crazy schedule. i. i. do think i'm having good. mental and a list at all times and.

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