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tv   Suez The Yellow Fleet  Al Jazeera  November 22, 2019 9:00am-10:01am +03

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well kathy like to think that their national is not as i'll play as someone else's national studio be unscripted on al-jazeera. hello i'm daryn jordan doha the program out of the top stories here on al-jazeera israel's attorney general has charged prime minister benjamin netanyahu with corruption extends from 3 cases in which netanyahu was accused of bribery fraud and breach of trust are a force that reports from western. there's never been anything like it in israeli politics on the day the grinding stalemate over forming a new government and to the new unprecedented phase the attorney general was ready with his own historical 1st but. today i informed the representative of the prime minister mr benjamin netanyahu about my decision to try him under an inch manilla
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concludes 3 charges a day in which the attorney general decided to serve an indictment against a seated prime minister the serious crimes of corrupt governance is a heavy and sad day for the israeli public and for me personally. and i later shocked looking benjamin netanyahu began his battle to stay in office while indicted. tonight we are witnessing an attempted coup against the prime minister using false accusation and a systematically tainted and vice investigation. investigations began in december 26th seen into 3 separate cases case $1000.00 involves gifts including cigars and champagne worth more than $200000.00 received and often demanded by netanyahu and his wife sarah from billionaires. and james packer the charge and breach of trust the same charges apply in case 2000 in which newspaper magnate on moser's is alleged to have offered favorable coverage in return for his hampering the
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activities of a rival but it was case $4000.00 involving show the main stakeholder in the country's biggest telecom company that attracted the most serious charge bribery netanyahu and his wife accused of dictating precise elements of coverage on elevates his news site wallah in return for regulator benefits worth $500000000.00 a recurring theme runs through these indictments netanyahu is obsession with his media coverage and the alleged lengths to which he was prepared to go to try to control it that these charges were expected hasn't lessened their impact this is an explosive moment in israel's political and legal history now the focus intensifies on netanyahu future. was ahead of him a twin battle to head off any contest for the party leadership in the run up to a likely 3rd election next march and a potential supreme court case challenging his legal right to stay in office if he was a minister he would have to resign or be fired because he's the prime minister it's not clear what is clear is that there's
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a moral problem right now because it's not just that the attorney general recommended indicting him including for bribery these are things that happened while he was prime minister earlier israel's president officially gave the parliament the job of finding a member with enough support to form a government and prevent another election unprecedented and in the view of most unlikely to succeed. these are harsh dark days in the annals of the state of israel he said there may be harsher and darker days to come for its long. just serving prime minister zarif will sit out his ear of west jerusalem. u.s. embassy official david adams as given important testimony in the donald trump impeachment inquiry he described a phone call here heard between the president and the u.s. ambassador he says trump asked the ambassador whether ukraine was willing to investigate his political rival joe biden police in colombia tried to disperse demonstrators who have been marching against government plans to introduce pension
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and tax reforms going to members and students gathered in the capital but what are the most been described as the biggest demonstration in recent years. and even riot police and fire tear gas to break a funeral procession in la paz thousands of people took part in the march that began in the city of and also one side of the debate in congress over when to hold new elections. palestinians have launched a campaign in support of a journalist who recently lost his eye after he was shot by israeli forces or at an ironic was covering a protest in the occupied west bank and he was hit by a rubber bullet the palestinian journalist syndicate says over 100 john this were wounded by israeli forces since january well those are the headlines the news continues here on al-jazeera after al-jazeera with station that's a watching by fire.
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but i was having an experience which i'll never ever forget i was 19 years old at
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the time. and it was quite a surprise to find myself in russia in the middle of a war the front seat literally. numbers weren't there but don't parents i worried and i. know there's a worry in times really it was a wire in telling for us. not knowing. if and when we're going to get out and it was very worrying for the parents as well or you know. their sons or husbands and all that was going to come out because of the way the war was going but once it was over there's just a waiting game. during this conflict there was a bit of anxiety because if you're in the middle of a war trapped there you don't really know which side accidentally could hit your ship so it's quite scary times and it wasn't
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a glorious place to be obviously when you see a conflict like that and you watch it on the televisions there on the television or film war looks glorious book to be honest it is not it is completely horrific. we don't know if the israelis are going to push further from where they stopped on the sinai site further into egypt or we don't know alls we know always wish to walk in there like trapped animals. what would happen who knows. nobody could tell us. that's what we have to live with. it was in a prison as you would know it but used you couldn't go anywhere couldn't do anything. just to carry on. that's an.
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opened 150 years ago to connect the mediterranean with the red sea the suez canal is a remarkable engineering achievement. however one a vent in the storied history of suez remains largely untold how in 196714 cargo ships unwittingly sailed into war not to emerge but another 8 long years. those manning the ships were neither prisoners nor hostages most came and went every few months but they did succeed in building a baritone community like no other. with their ships left in splendid isolation and unable to leave the suez canal bay stablished their own unofficial micro nation complete with traditions sporting competitions and even postage stamps. they tried to make the best of the situation in the great better late
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a particularly wide section of the canal so-called because of its high salt content . the merchant seamen were not remotely experts on the conflict into which they landed theirs was a world of engines and curves and ropes navigation was their strength and war was alien to them yet they found themselves surrounded by the bitterest of enemies in a confrontation that was none of their making. as months 20 years their cargo ships became covered in fine desert sand which from a distance gave the flotilla a distinct yellow color as a result of the vessels became known as the yellow fleet. and i miss her i know clearly meant. science funds other. stood on its fight off its year hopes to shift north and. north and
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get more start. new and soon. in the eyes of. the british models mccourt's jihads cries of off on a non indian one from india in karachi who owns or let's. continue and confront dollars and bid on a deportees who has come out. and i do it in touchy form duyvil home from karachi. to give it all stuns me not aden yemen or. petroleum name was a branched off in diesel fuel oil or didn't involve. target before v 18 and i become bia from my get in. good kind will go to the front of his old vida fonda. or descend in dish drama
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does this kind of god. would you know today i know who was about to shrug off the boat one of your most off u.n. sponsored. before via bunch of pacom. become bunch of judeans and on to if you found fun do you know what's worse too in his words cannot find. this a bit as. in djibouti muslims are not merely conscious position if. vies i'm outta missed. my name is shawn dring i was an able seaman on
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the and the. which was a british cargo ship which predominantly sailed to australia new zealand from the u.k. . taken general caldwell there i'm bringing back vegetables fruit meat back to the u.k. album is basically wrong. on this particular journey we had been out. to australia and. back for the united kingdom. we left fremantle. to cross the. indian ocean on comin through aden. they cannot. when we arrived at the. southern end the vessels were more outside on
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a convoy of 14 ships would commence the next day phase slice through a little bit a lake and then we would progress the journey through to port site which is roughly a 24 hour journey on not mourning. whately on the convoy began to move into the base a late. this was the cold war a time of great tension between the superpowers of east and west rumors intelligence and espionage were the currencies of the day. and on the 13th of may $967.00 soviet intelligence warned of an imminent attack by israel the attack they said might begin on the syrian front where israel had assembled troops.
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egypt which at the time had a defense agreement with this syrian our eyes prepared for battle. these were extremely tense times in the region a decade earlier and 1956 the serbs crisis had seen israel invade the sinai peninsula part of egypt in a conflict that drew in the world's major powers. a large number of egyptian ground forces crossed the suez canal and dug in of the sinai peninsula israel's response was to put its own army on to a state of alert. 11 years later on the 22nd of may 967 egypt closed 2 israeli ships access to the straits of tiran a strategic waterway leading to the port of elat in the south of israel. the next day egypt also close the entrance to the gulf of aqaba to all ships carrying the
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israeli flag as well as to international oil tankers bound for a lot the rhetoric between both sides ramped up and war appeared to be imminent. but to crewman on a brief supply stop in aden now part of yemen the geopolitics of the middle east. were not uppermost in their minds. on the way home from the far east we bunkered we stopped in aden and bunkered there to pick up fresh water in oil and we picked up some supplies there as well. during this time the 6 engineer and i decided we were asked the chief if we go ashore just for a last minute bit of shopping before we go into the suez canal and up the red sea. and as a result of that we were on shore and we met a couple of british soldiers marines and they were on patrol and they said to us
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i think you to a better get back to ship because it's going to kick off around here we didn't really know what that meant so we went back to the ship. anyway we finished green in aden with the oil and water and supplies and we headed up the red sea i think it was before we went up there in sea or during this time we had a meeting with the ship's officers and the captain and they knew something was going wrong but they said should we carry on they took a vote whether they should carry on to the series can now or turn around and go back round. the bottom end of africa however where my personal vote was carry on.
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for me. into the sun through for for a. bass in a president you had me into hadn't via and as i did become machines i did you know for golf could know my vast notified of it indoors and on innovate it. would assign a duty to. does this were to show us tried kamu to get. the views invite of a shift to shift a log and i go round faced as all get 20 fifth's inches for the year ziva vida do is kick out of the of the violin would have to go shift over and in don't go and it's kind a little bit of conduct among artists says in tamil and succeed. on to yes and tom. could not fit. enough to not have. to shift his somalian boughts knots an hour from. off to my not to model
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resident. some to talk. less than a month afterwards shipping was barred from the straits of tiran israel launched a series of attacks on egypt and positions triggering the $96076.00 day israeli war which drew in not just egypt but also syria and jordan it was monday the 5th of june 1970. i was on watch when all of a sudden we had an amazing noise of a jet engine and as we looked up. we see in
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a formation of sri fighter planes coming across from the sinai side just above much tight and flew between ourselves the last 4 ships 3 planes crossed they immediately climb show high altitude and as we looked at them they began to do what we now know was a means of blowing up the wrong way. at the airport or the air force base.
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we could see it it was less than a mile and a quarter way all binoculars we watched the jets bombed a long ways fish and then they israeli warplanes which were a pot all by the hangars was then attacked those 3 awful nation of syria israeli jets one state dropped their payload they came back and crossed towards sinai again again very very low on must fight and then across battle the sinai no sooner had they gone down another wave of survey came in and did exactly the same and we watched these formations over the next couple of alephs every 4 minutes 5 minutes they would be comin across do an option is what's damages sacred
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to the egyptian air force base which they literally obliterated. off. while the war was going on where you just sister saw everything that was going on because it was only a mile from the is merely rampal it's a resort applying. we shore are very big so let me know at times we stayed out on deck and we was just watching the the battle going on shore saw it around grand mayor and the surrounding areas we watched it with a trace of bullets go to red bullets we could there would be explosions gharyan and
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also but the catalyst there was said to us you know you play should be careful so we still watched it so we really didn't sleep much when i was 6 days. 6 days after the war began mr aziz ceased israeli tanks and troops attacking egypt's sinai peninsula reached this it was canal israeli troops stood in the eastern side of the waterway gyptian forces were massed on the western side in a standoff that gave both control of traffic on the canal. the egyptians reacted by
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closing the suez canal their goal was to physically prevent israel from having access to the canal so all ships were scuttled to make the canal impossible passenger ships would be allowed to complete their journeys but cargo vessels could go no further than the great better laid bare they were instructed to drop anchor and wait for further developments this decision brought together 14 ships of different flags for british 2 west german 2 polish 2 from sweden one french one czechoslovakia and one bone garion and an american vessel war and politics at. unwittingly assembled the young fleet. we became trapped because we. very soon afterwards within a matter of days that address been sunk it seemed to us training open or close on
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it at the northern entrance and as we understood it the that probably done the same thing to the south of us so the audio of us making in the sky something like that sunny to the south seemed to good to know that there was probably no possibility whatsoever. there was news suddenly navigations there was no internet no telephone tone and i thought and misty's the only thing that we had was that the main ship's radio but you could communicate all over the world with. the nfl dot business law stop by the egyptian authorities to stop us using them because let's face it we could possibly have sent in a lot and formation as to what was going on so we bought and allowed to do that and to stop us from doing the we had a policeman and boarded ship and his job was to look after the interests of the
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egyptian authorities and ensure that we did not use the trade you. shortly after we were there the captain of our ship thought we do need to get in touch with these other people and he made it his business to get in the lifeboat because the light boat was our taxi we lowered the ship's guy who got in our taxi and went right to all the other ships and suggested to those people where to make the best of this possibly con. the all agreed that this would be a really good idea from following on from not then they came up with another a new. amber of unique ideas as to why they could best improve life for everybody on the lake. when it's the life boats manned by one of the officer aboard the ship went to the israeli side and i think that they were taken. by the
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israelis and sent back to london so at all costs we stead of the israeli side but there was an occasion and the early days when women died that a memo came from the egyptian side to say that any of the any of the boats sailing side the perimeter of the ships in the canal will be shot upon. a couple of months past we've been told that the international red cross. were trying to talk to both parties egyptians and israelis. about what they could do for the crews who were trapped. the captain had decided that if we could keep a skeleton crew on board. then the rest of the crew could be repatriated. on the egyptian authorities and the israelis authorities allowed and then call it
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all from athens through to cairo. i was one of the skeleton crew of the young man i was 20 was a seaman an old the captain swung to the dot. in the event that. the canal would open we just needed sufficient crew to mount the vessel and take it out to port side on the mediterranean side. i didn't really. understand or appreciate what the dangers might have been at that point i just saw well ok. undy only this i don't know about no money i haven't got children or old age you know it yet it should be me that stays here for half a lover or however long it takes for this conflict to end i had no idea it was going to end up the way it did. as the
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guns fell silent what to do with the 14 cargo ships stranded in the middle of the canal became a problem that neither egypt or israel was willing or able to resolve. the sailors on board seemed destined to be passionately marooned in this isolated desert waterway communication with the outside world was tightly controlled with radio calls restricted to medical emergencies. the ship's owners made a decision to rotate the crews so after 4 months or more each merchant seamen would be replaced even though there was little work to do apart from basic maintenance all the sailors continue to receive their food wages.
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coming up in part to be other fleet crews devised different ways some quite ingenious to improve conditions on board. the way had a lot of big games spinella mexico 968 i think and so the ball the ships decided to of a many element thanks and of course they are gonna start that all off all sorts of things. this powerful social network is sculpting signed by society and regulation is playing. but a scandals begin to unfold they witness is that we should not be in this position. they want is to launch extreme content as they can get. to gauge how i think sway against profits and how the rules are being written. and signed facebook on
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a designer. hello i'm darren jordan doha with the top stories on al-jazeera israel's attorney general as indicted prime minister binyamin netanyahu for corruption netanyahu is charged with bribery fraud and breach of trust and connection with 3 separate cases he faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of bribery alone. remember the polluted investigation against me erode the public's faith in the system they should worry every citizen we have to put an end to this the public has the right to a clean investigation that seeks the truth and only the truth the only way to restore the public's faith in the system is to establish an outside independent committee
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that investigates the method that puts an end to this it is about time to investigate the investigators. u.s. embassy official david holmes as given important testimony in the donald trump impeachment inquiry he described a phone call he overheard between the president and the u.s. ambassador he says trump asked the ambassador whether ukraine was willing to investigate his political rival joe biden well david helms told told of the moment when he began sensing the priorities of the u.s. embassy in ukraine a changed beginning in march 21000 the situation at the embassy and in ukraine changed dramatically. specifically the 3 priorities of security economy and justice and our support for ukrainian democratic resistance to russian aggression became overshadowed by a political agenda promoted by former new york new york city mayor rudy giuliani and a qadri of officials operating with a direct channel to the white house police in colombia have tried to disperse demonstrators marching against government plans to introduce pension and tax
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reforms union members and students gathered in the capital bogota what's been described as the biggest demonstration in recent years. when the riot police a fired tear gas to break up a funeral procession in that path as thousands of people took part in the march the began in the city of al to coincide with a debate in congress for the winner to hold new elections. sri lanka's newly elected president got a boy of rajapaksa sworn in his brother mahinda rajapaksa as the new prime minister from i'd also given him the finance minister role it's the 1st time in the country's history the 2 siblings have held both top political jobs another brother has been appointed agriculture minister those are the headlines the news continues here not just the era of the undesirable state that's watching by. b.l.o. fleet was
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a convoy of merchant ship stranded in the su is cannot but the 967 arab israeli war to survive their crews lived in the cargo of food this ships were carrying. we dead on up abundance of things that we of edible stuff that we heard us cargoes on the ships remember the ships came from all over the far east nashville area that come from vietnam hong kong fill up in that come from a shale here in the world loaded with old salts of goods and about the same time as i was there the companies the ship warned us and said look the whole this cargo is going to be a construct of total loss it will not be used again you know there was things like a robot and t. i mean there's thousands of tons of tea and cases of the there's thousands of tons of rubble and bales of all of them but the stuff that was good for us in the canal
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we were told that we could use so we had that have always knew better than that and in the hutchison lee had found all sorts of books is full of clothes. you know like one of the ships had been to vietnam and it was full of prolongs the shelly and ships they were all full of frozen meat stuff like that so we didn't go we didn't go short with this you know the way they were all the stuff was handed around the leak you know so there was really no problem at all when. if your ship if you was on. the american ship as an example and you didn't have any fresh fruit because you could get skinned scabby if you don't it and then the issue is you still can dish it out in the middle of the lake with down
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all the time so your captain would have spoke to my captain and said look can you send some can you give me some of your cattle because we can't miss it's about sustaining life so we will go and open the hatches down below open the fridge is get out for carcasses of lamb go and open the fridge goes to where all the apples lay it all boxes of apples on it pays to get them all. canned fruit you know which have been produced in australia to camden to ship and back to the ute to europe to the u.k. . are like paul would be down in the water basically to its goals what we would put in to take to your ship to give you and then you would want to thank us for that. so you would say well look the only thing i go is whatever
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take that back. and dutch change you can change. the. diamond on the can all after a couple years the car goes with and the holes of the ships was deteriorating and in particular on they ships had to come from australia they had they had frozen food disk it was costing a lot of money every day to keep the phasers going to keep the stuff coal they also had lots of things like poles and children and they realised that you know there was a limit as to how long they can afford to keep this these these color goes beyond reasonable condition the dead osc far a mission to try and ship there was a colossal on the daleks ondrea and get them shipped from there but there i
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understand that they actually authorities would not follow that dolphin. so the decision was made to try and get rid of that stuff we had with no option but to dump a lot of the side special fed the fish if nothing else you know. as munster did 2 years maintaining those ships became increasingly difficult temperatures in summer would touch 50 celcius winter desert nights could be bitterly cold engines needed to be regularly service to ready for the eventual day when the ships would be released fuel supplies were also limited with no prospect. of replenishment.
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the far more throws a. shift in stunt. that motivates on my vehicle the floor on the voyage on the thus far on the valves govern the ship i'm striking father on the water a. little bit of use of a shift and stand. my father gave me once of. the most amount of shift of muscle i can. the so i'll sit on the bus up for the job at all for those of us on the ballot absolutely. on 10 descends on figure living as on some calm. victory for the machine it does seem to be for the trust fund than the house the farm come to us avoid this for us 50 so. there's a very heated moment i'm odd and i go. i'm saying if on the farm you're going to be
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mostly the money for them it month so get outside i'm still designing ponder the occurred in the house the phone then that come out our office know. my responsibilities and board the ship were to ensure that all the electrical apparatus and electronic operettas on board the ship was kept and 1st class working order because we expected to be either the canal anyday. so had we gone to another port from the canal the ship's deck officers would have expected all the electronic equipment electrical equipment to unload the cargo so even though we were in the canal i still had to do what we then called routine duty to ensure that everything was checked that it was working and it was in good order.
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with little to do apart from maintaining the vessels the crews could only look on at events around the. israelis continue to occupy the sinai peninsula and despite a widespread condemnation from the international community showed no signs of leaving. over the next 3 years clashes continue to east of the canal some involving aircraft and heavy artillery along the ceasefire line in the sinai both sides suffered casualties in what became a political stalemate. at this time the suez canal remained closed to all traffic in both directions. while heavy clashes continued in the region east of the canal the world was focused on global politics the cold war was at its height and the fate of 14 ships stranded in a white section of the su is canal was not an international priority. the plight of
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the yellow fleet had slipped off the news agenda months dragged on and the 14 ships remained a dying company great britain make the crews realise that their best option was to create a spirit of international cooperation and a stark contrast to events in the wider world friendships were formed as well as the great to better and bake association. we were very much a community because there were only 27 people on board our ship and many of the other ships had we just screwed like that the company didn't have a full compliment which would have been about 70 personnel on board a ship but we were down to 28 though it was necessary then to make friends with all the other ships with the american ships and the swedish ships and the polish arabs and the other british ships so it was very important that we got in touch with then and made
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a good relationship with them. not long after the ships arrived they stopped at this but they called it they got it but oddly association the concept was developed by one of the last of the blue funnel ships on the muscle of the swedish ship cholera and they thought this would be on a good idea to set something up for the welfare of the crews and just give them something to do. i was contacted by mr jim starkey who was a captain on at one time on board the port of a cargo and he suggested that we all should get together to form
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a group called the great better lakes association. which i was very happy to join and in joining that i got there a nice tie with a little lanka round it in the 14 ships which was a very proud of and i got a badge for my car and regular correspondence from all the people who'd been in the lakes at that time. anyone could join the g.b. elliott anyone who went to the canal and indeed over the years i must have been like about a 1000 people who had been there. and they were all invited to join the g.p.l. there was diplomats in those. agents of us all sorts of people you name them a lot lots and lots of the media crews come out to have to interview and especially with senior politicians and the senior politicians was created god did time for us to cana. i have a whole lot of them other things that we didn't like can things that both like to
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see changed every day and these questions nobody went to the head of government and you can look at that we got an unsound from a lot so and so a lot since and you know it was quite good not to spank. the g b l a continued through the time that their ships were stuck in the canal and those poll sorts of things organized via through the media we had a limp big games being held in mexico 960 to think and so the pool ships decided to of a many ellen picks and of course they are going ice that that whole last hole saw something .
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below what as if you like the i give my nod because a muslim us mountain and thus the sense of them gives out some of the. want to avoid a of. a motor quest come on mom. far from giving city people hope for the buzzy good of the beyond your facade is good for them. that's what i was going. on for you did it if you got flow hero medallion. from the cup he's about mythology and of myth of the from the observer duggan's a go none of you have one go under but there is money in the middle job you're not with your money on the medallion given all supply gotten. to some people in your mouth i decided it was it but i won't say gold it will not be able to sleep if you . die in front of it.
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when they started this g b l e mail home with a little bit difficult at times for the crew on there developed some stumps the idea was that we did not belong to israel but didn't belong to egypt who had a community on a road and this was trying to set an identity we had a little in stamps and over the years there was hundreds of those stumps developed by they could use they were made initially just drawn by hand and the cadets on the ship would quit color them in their various colors with felt and bands would have a hand. but after that then i know in my time we had we did them either on a piece of a little linoleum all we did them on like i don't know is a robot with a cut that they could stump the monkey shit and those stops were sent on to the
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mail going back to the u.k. and they became quite international a new one and i clicked item because of the fact that some of those stamps went just white america celia all of them britain germany france using those stamps which were homemade we would never show any show off if the mail would go home just using those. so there's 2 other ways we did it we put on egyptian stamps as well along with our own stamps and the egyptian authorities would find those and send them on down gyptian postal authorities or we would put on a g.b. l e stamps and then give them to do a command but who was going to germany all the states whatever and he would push them at home.
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fast forward 6 years egypt and syria decided to launch a 2 fronted coordinated attack to regain the territory they lost in 1970. the arab israeli war of the tober $973.00 saw egyptian forces crossing the suez canal and re entering this sinai peninsula shipping companies had been denied access to the suez canal watched events unfold with interest with egypt in control of both
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banks of the canal they saw positive signs that the waterway would after 6 years of closure finally be reopened. sailors of the 14 ships of the yellow fleet could only watch on hoping the canal would be reopened and their ships finally allowed to complete their journey however escape from their desert seclusion would take time engineers spent 2 years removing sunken barricades at both ends of the canal 80 years had also taken their toll on the ships and for the majority traveling under their own power would prove impossible only with the help of tugs and cranes could they be moved the exception was the 2 german ships on the 7th of june 1975 they started their engines set a northerly course and set sail for homburg with their cargo of metal and minerals in doing so they set a record for the longest sea shipping voyage in history 80 years 3 months and 5
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days. for digger. this. from an out when the harbor of the minster learned. of there not been. these 1st in. the biden trip or so of ford's or below it and then by did visit soem of. the. of them 5th. niemand of them shift evasion. deal a da in. the piece at some d. so in stuart van seen when how. much often it will lessen the new overpass that's kind of for a lot of the shift again. ties
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lunar. new the. the. the. the. the. limit of the when you. 2 2 put the of. the.
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the the the the in. when i come i call it so. as can now never left my mind edwards had such an authentic upon me that it became part of my life the experience that i had on the lake and they carry it through every day every week and every year somewhere in my mind i would think of my time and it's those canal and mostly it is very very good at the experience for a young person of 23 years of age to be and such a dangerous environment. to turn the dangerous environment into one where we could have recreation and to a certain extent enjoy a sales force an experience not to be missed and i would not mess been in the
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suez canal under any circumstances either greatly to my life and i think it helped to make me as a person. has their own world meets to arabs. left the middle east but forge successful careers in other parts of the while. the lebanese kind of on the just tend to brazil.
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the norwegian of the industry. unusual journeys leading to unexpected. doctor and the oil man on al-jazeera. al jazeera wherever you are. however the heavy snow and the rain that was falling in this part of iran has moved eastwards and the forecast takes it almost over the border you've got snow for in the high ground afghanistan and beyond right on the ground and possibly even in
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pakistan behind the find of that cold i come across the caspian produced a thunderstorm within sight of terror which is now at 9 degrees the most the most part the sun is out there and further west in the levant the sun is out in fact still quite warm 21 in beirut and 30 in ankara thank you is doing well but the tide is rebuilding in iran and that marjory's bit more rain all started pounding the heart of sea level what rain we have seen in the last 2 or 3 days anywhere from bahrain sasser the u.a.e. and our man there's been significant in this area the same distance on its own rainbow sorts of things that's cleared away now you might get a shower maybe in the edge of iran this cloud might produce something maybe in saudi otherwise look if any dry picture and a warming one high temperature $26.00 in dire is an improvement in riyadh from $19.00 to $22.00 the sunshine more than scott that's an improvement is a federal breeze down the coast of amman though and that takes its several times the horn of africa where showers could well develop.
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i remember the 1st time i walked into the newsroom and it felt like being in the general assembly of the united nations has the so many nationalities. just that we all come to different places but it's one that gives us. the ability to identify
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the. other side of the world but we can understand what it's like to have a different perspective and i think that is a strength for al-jazeera. 50 years ago britain forcibly removed the inhabitants of this tropical haven and least it's to the u.s. military. for 5 decades geragos islanders have preserved their culture in exile and they're now escalating their struggle to return home. but their fate still lies in the hands of their colonisers. another paradise i witnessed a documentary on a. white supremacist violence is on the rise in america he was involved in this whole and a ground network 8 full time speaks to the victims of recent attacks when he shot me i turned around printing that he would kill my daughter and asks how an ideology of loathing has found its way into the mainstream can you trawled through line
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between the rhetoric of president trump in the conservative media in america to what happened here in el paso license to hate on al-jazeera. one of whom we are witnessing an attempted coup against a prime minister. a defiant benjamin netanyahu denounces charges of corruption and says he'll carry on as israel's leader. of welcoming peace it'll be you're watching al-jazeera live from doha also coming up let's just say a different channel and operation and the lesson is to pray and one that was domestic and political in nature. donald trump's close ally goldman some look is accused of running a domestic political era for the u.s. president in ukraine.

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