tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera March 18, 2020 12:00am-1:01am +03
12:00 am
12:01 am
but i step aside i sit back now but you touch that and this must about them stamp it's not to about them because it's about what's coming to my sam to just listen to the watching and that's what they'll want. to know that's just a test. in this book it would not to be to my shows that those are good so she shouldn't have so much as all knowing that she had others not. the go to kid it was the kind of the what.
12:02 am
12:03 am
ourselves because we heard that it's it will be more reliable in also to provide the actual footage of. lunch in this life from the deployer so it will be very useful for us to have this kind of footage because we want to show our. people from our country because it will be the 1st satellite you know. so in the very beginning you know think that we'll be launching this year but then realize that they're not very good at all but so now we are hoping to launch it maybe into a need a new one but we need to fundraise more to purchase doing more though and then by the launch no one was doing with these kinds of projects in our country before so we need to learn everything by this approach. during yeah. when i joined this project it was somewhere i was told that building on
12:04 am
a cell was will be. it can be done fast and it appeared it's not true. and lots of open source to learn even you know my childhood i never saw the boat building really place really i knew that there is no opportunities to work in kyrgyzstan because that knowledge. your thinking about the. they thought about surroundings all the groups which are very. old but to me actually very doing it because he was one of the only. people who understand that it's just a. great. help and i thank you on part and was difficult part. is there is. time for many of them and. that's one.
12:05 am
12:06 am
just past the percent support. for years. from a sham not a cure at all but don't hope to join her for him a breast stroke get her on the press. just a bit. let us get out of the position might circumvent the right spirit with the. prototype to produce it and is there. but the. new prime minister can keep.
12:07 am
12:08 am
reported. what if when you go there. oh my god that we should move but what if you gave up the world at the will of the world but. once it went through you were ready to make it out. but. there isn't like so many of gender stereotypes that artists till like existing and it's very hard to be a girl to say this or one of these problems you spread kidnapping it's a so-called tradition and when a man just kidnapped girls just to marry her in these last 5 years there was 895 kids just by did nothing and most of them went on
12:09 am
a charge to. the life this girl who was kidnapped here and then was killed by they could not. she was 19 years old and she was a student on this medical college. no one could see this just very scary and even if we are telling that. you seem to we like such things to happen. you're going to name this headline little white it will make her name to me like even more still. i just hope that people won't forget about her in the years before. what does want to show you what's called a lot. more just. to go see the fact that
12:10 am
he. knew what he was is a pretty good excuse. me a national 3 years then you will welcome his new goods you want to sit in the national government for this problem you can trust to the ground which that you sent you couldn't that it would. do they want to bridge that yes they do with us through it but that's going to cause a push to just get. there which could come i'm just going to as i do not go. eat some i would say this is the deal got to do with. it that was. kind of the chicken and i will be she's the one that would do even those who was probably. going to be nice. to me she's going to be. in our country the ideal for girls
12:11 am
building like something related to space is just insane. when we will launch the satellite like even the most sexiest man even if they don't want to be proud of that the human shields their 1st crusade like because if this is the 1st satellite of our country. to many. it's just going to do so much. to. cheer most.
12:12 am
likely. just wars and. most of. them might use a base to look here. by doing this program we want to like to start this place in the soon our country and also into cars for more girls to get to wolf in this stampede. we do what we do because we all skills because we can make you. know you are really inspiring yeah with all the easy life it's so funny yeah. so. i think part of that. is that.
12:13 am
oh whoa that's what. i'm gonna do know that much news role to know. and i don't know. it's just that. it's just. so once you can reconstruct it through the way you feel then you can start seeing the sick. yes i magically make sure no one. else i'll send a couple of emails and she's going to write you get a reply during your absence. because let me thank you so much for being here because you know he was one of the reasons i guess it's ok just standing here and seeing so many people working in the space industry makes me feel that you can i
12:14 am
don't know very happy to. hear that. you can't really. keep telling me at 2 years things but you know yeah what is it i want you to tell you i mean you know you just curious what your biggest challenge so far. no specialist no no we don't have anything without. her start where we got your funding from is it from your government all right now our project is more popular around the world not in our country people usually don't really like our idea of comics and ones i like are why are you like so many problems in the city and you are building a satellite link right. here there is a very strong collaboration between all the countries there will be a specific cases and services just to enter their content and yeah the moment we
12:15 am
12:16 am
a movie doesn't mean you know that it's just when you're coming. with the. truck. that's been programmed so i'm i stuck my head at 1st this is the last thought when i was a sequential it's a good. it was a country with a stick b.m.g. said yes go mr let's. not be outworked new dad look at what. you're good at that you play at the most of the worst will simply be still up because i knew that i need a sign you. know because to date. i just thought it was fun to go to it's a bit of a postcard down we would you may still to do it but ok so the. issues of which. look at the mission.
12:17 am
was mostly at the. neutral lawyer in this child's but the most feared the court but other surgeon was watching some of the court are your thoughts and i'll put on the visitor shares that the morning you just rushed at a sports book and. read it it's. true but also but also line yeah for you. starts. to was more like. my own mama i'm not trust not
12:18 am
12:19 am
little come forward. to give us more sinister to we're still there. i both find the time. when you could thousands of it's going to use it no more. just. draw and. then you do you put it is there's the. sort of. store there what's going to strike. you were there was a good the opening of the court. but the most is just as walters is it's
12:20 am
nice and. so when i came. from u.k. i felt very inspired but did this in time i was very sad you are looking to the students to same age as you and da making like a small rockets and they're building it like it's schools and universities and they have so many opportunities there and you realise that interest and you don't have like anything. so we have funding and we have applied for a friend. who flew to come.
12:21 am
12:22 am
so beautiful so there's a place for him but for the going to get. to. look at. your work or for sure most of you go broke up with. a fairly sick. here is the court of. appeals lunch with the book at the bill and she is still talked with . and. i don't go through and play. for the flotilla. still with us and it was. just a way yet another. which. i feel really blessed so. that i have.
12:23 am
interesting stuff. now we're combining. it with a ground. you know. i actually feel that we are like pioneers to find like one want in like trying to find their way to do it like reach the top and it's always like hard to go there because sometimes like there's no way to go back and go away and you're like do some mistakes but for the other people who'll go there after us it will be easier that's what we're making
12:24 am
a. helping. every time i look at the space i would like my problems is so small what he did this in here says just to be creepy just looking there and to you that one day you'll be there and i can actually say that something that i helped to build in space i think just amaze. boredom with his beautiful. young there's a lot chose him as my sister and a doctor and i was just of where they should they're just going if they got. a list of things pushing them that if it was not just going to do that the question. at the place where did i just get sick that.
12:25 am
never. knew. hello the knots about where the picture generally throughout much of century about a bit of a different story to the northwest and indeed across the southwest now the worst of the weather it really has carried away now from northern spain but this is a picture of just a day or 2 ago some fairly heavy snow of course coming down really when we should
12:26 am
be thinking quite a series of that about the stalls of spring there plenty of snow which led to a few problems but look at this through wednesday it really is a killer picture and to the south of leona magickal the temperature on the rise quite steadily 20 degrees celsius more rain pushing in across more western and southern regions of the u.k. rain to the northeast could also still tons of snow across the mountains and we could well see some more snow and rain across into areas of norway you'll also notice what a blanket of snow to the north and the east coast particularly of turkey and elsewise to say the time is not too bad and it's mostly dry and fine for the next couple days and certainly beginning to feel like spring it is the coals just a few days away but more rain really just sitting there off the south coast of. elsewhere the northern africa has seen some pretty strong winds and shouts for the eastern end of the med that is clearing but really it's going to be morocco through wednesday and thursday when we see showers low temperatures. developing tools the end of the week.
12:27 am
a journey both dong. there's a very forever there's a lot of the rocks and beautiful beautiful really you have to be very patient and. i was introduced to. my father and my most only. king for how the. story to discover the source of one of the most expensive commodities sent from heaven on al-jazeera. p. 20. 8 has brought us peace of mind importance and now we can grow old invest. money and do many things that we could do previously feel what happened to wall. time is coming we will
12:28 am
build. put the seal on the back to reality because. the team because they see this meeting. i believe the future of the plaudits and put it to you is really really bad but we must cease from being the supplier of rubbish it is to. that end exporting rarely read it but then for the. 2 or but it needs. both to enjoy the finest cup of tea in the world. the more so wonderful herb in the wood at the chinese feet. off the gods. problems would be nice and that would. create
12:29 am
a beautiful cool. bed to watch the illusion one consumers to go back to quality in bed up and through on who would be reborn. preet t. read the same enjoyment as if big to do the deed about predict what use will people still on the. back and ship old problem either. one of the really special things that work in progress here is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much empathy and contribution to the story of this region better than anyone else. but it is particularly because you're a lot of people that you vote on political issues. people believe tell the real story i just meant it is to do in depth journalism we don't feel we have
12:30 am
a good audience across the globe. today on up front is it time to log off from an increasingly scandal plagued facebook last iconic tech pioneer jaron lanier and is the crown prince of saudi arabia really going to execute the country's most famous cleric. i'm in the hot sun we've all heard about the saudi crown prince is alleged involvement in the murder of a saudi journalist but what about the clerics and activists he's rounded up at home i'll speak to the son of imprisoned saudi shake out up but 1st with facebook in the news again for failing to grapple with russian meddling in legal data sharing and
12:31 am
hate speech is it time to just log off the author of the recent book 10 arguments for deleting your social media account right now certainly think so this week's headlines from new york all for virtual reality pioneer and iconic computer scientist jaron lanier. jaron lanier thanks for joining me on up front the new york times just published a bombshell report revealing that facebook knew about russian meddling in the u.s. elections fail to penalize then presidential candidate donald trump for posting racist content. compromised its uses data privacy and tried to smear its critics as anti semites to quote from the times headline facebook strategy was to delay deny and deflect you know facebook i'm sure you've probably interacted with does any of that surprise you what's your reaction to this report. well. i'm not entirely surprised by the report of the some of the details are surprising and
12:32 am
shocking i think from the facebook point of view and from zucker bricks point of view he is always in what he perceives as a life or death struggle either facebook controls the world or it dies he doesn't perceive any kind of in-between outcome and so therefore there's a kind of an ethic of anything at all is allowed because it's either survival or total domination or total death and so if you perceive this all or nothing world which i think is a false perception then you lose all sense of proportion obviously and given the crises plaguing facebook which go back to the 2016 us election and beyond all mark zuckerberg the chair and c.e.o. and sheryl sandberg the c.e.o. are they still the right people to be running facebook right now or is it time for them step aside well one of the peculiarities of facebook is that it's the only public corporation that's large and is effectively controlled by one person
12:33 am
and it in a sense that's an oxymoron a public corporation should have a powerful board it should have power powerful shareholders and the fact that there isn't governance is the 1st issue that it's a one man shop is really really not ok it's not ok for the world it's not even in the spirit of capitalism i think it's really anti market it's anti-democratic so you should study the side and make it more democratic and capitalist. i think it would be good for the world if he stepped aside but the point is that there is no mechanism for him to do so. he year last year mark zuckerberg said facebook's mission is to give people the power to build a community and bring the world closer together given these recent revelations given your own research in this field do you buy that. well you know from my perspective having participated in the creation of the internet in the 1st place it's the internet that brought people together and yet whenever facebook shows up somewhere it seems to incite intercommunal bloodshed because the very
12:34 am
way it functions is by grabbing people's emotions and the easiest ones to grab are the negative ones the fight or flight emotions and so it tends to reach passions and then put those restrictions into the cycle until they become ever worse and then you start to have the routing here crisis crises in south india crises in rural africa so we see bizarre 3rd. powers coming coming into play that are displacing democracy in countries as different as sweden and brazil what else do they have in common other than facebook you know that that's all they have some of course in britain which is owned by facebook and it's interesting you raise the issue of the rohingya and the ethnic cleansing the new york times did draw attention to that in their piece and say facebook ignored people who warned them about ethnic cleansing and their role in it the 2016 election of course is really brought this argument to the fore about facebook's role in politics as it were there's been
12:35 am
a lot of debate and controversy over facebook say these allegations are untrue they're inaccurate about their role in elections or whether they knew about russian meddling etc do you believe there is evidence to suggest that facebook had a measurable impact on the outcome of the u.s. presidential election on the outcome of the brics referendum that actually change votes i i would say there's enough strong evidence and enough consensus of enough people with enough different well intentioned and well informed perspectives that we should finally to say what the american intelligence establishment has said and what many others have said is that yes yes facebook did change the outcome of the american election and facebook's property wazza did change the outcome of the brazilian election. probably played a role in briggs it probably played a role in many other events in the world in recent years while and it's interesting you say that the problem is much broader than facebook its social media itself you say that there are 10 arguments for deleting your social media accounts right now
12:36 am
that's the title of your book so we don't have time to get into all 10 what do you know top 2 arguments for why people watching to get off of social media. well i would say 1st of all there could be some good form of social media the problem with social media right now is that it's designed to manipulate you and so if you enjoy free will if you enjoy being an honest person in the world you should not be using present day social media the business model of face work in other companies like twitter is anytime you connect with another person that's financed by some 3rd party you don't know about he's trying to manipulate you in some sneaky way so it's this giant manipulation machine by design every penny they earn was earned because somebody thought they could manipulate somebody else another one is the 10th argument which is the spiritual one which is there's effectively a new religion that's being promoted by facebook and some of the other tech companies which is that people are just information machines were modules and were
12:37 am
all being connected together into a giant computer through these companies and this giant computer will be this super intelligent ai that will be better than humanity and will inherit the world and so it's essentially a new kind of religion and if you practice an existing religion or if you're an atheist whatever you are you're gradually being sucked into this other tech religion and it's a crappy religion i mean it's a silly religion and you might not be aware of it because it happens gradually and so i'd ask you to examine very carefully with your buying into this this bizarre new way of thinking and if you want to learn more about that you can find it in the book and just to check jar and do you practice what you preach do you participate in any social media yourself oh god no i would. have an accountant one of those things i do fine without any account on facebook or twitter or any of the rest of you actually don't disappear if you delete your accounts some people might say that if everybody in the arab world for example had listened to your advice in 201-2011
12:38 am
deleted their social media accounts we would have had some of the revolutions in the middle east we may not have the arab spring because in many ways those revolutions in egypt in tunisia they've been dubbed the facebook revolution the twitter revolution that's what they've been called yes so he is what happens every time somebody uses platforms like facebook and twitter to effect. positive social change where they're saying well we can make our country better we can we can achieve this or that the algorithms in the background take whatever those people have done and they broadcast whatever information those people have given the text the images everything and they're looking for engagement from the broad population and what they do is they discover where the most engaged print is and the most engaged is inevitably with those people who are inflamed by it and then those people who are angry and and irritated scared whatever they'll zoom in on them and then they'll incited incite it introduced them to each other and then the whole tool will be find itself for the most and gauge meant which inevitably is with the
12:39 am
people who are the most angry the most in secure the most jealous the most afraid and then it becomes a tool for those people and certainly what you have is to make it a recruitment tool for isis so you start with something that helps the arab spring you end up with something that's optimized for isis you say that these are not just social media companies they are behavior modification empires and that when he uses behavior is turned into an empire for rent a lot of people say you basically are questioning free will you're saying that we actually lost our ability to make free choices we've been so do you is there actual evidence for that because a lot of people say well actually no it's fashionable to say we're addicted we're not really addicted to social media research is that unicef research is oxford university said you know we're actually not addicted to social media in the way that you say we are in your book. well the last person who can recognize an addiction is the addict right and so from a technical point of view social media addiction is similar to gambling addiction
12:40 am
and if you've ever talked to somebody with a gambling addiction you'll see the same things oh i'm not addicted i just know how to be lucky i have a system. and it's a very similar process facebook's own published research that went through academic peer review shows that they can alter people's emotions without the people understanding and being able to be consciously aware their face what did it to them there was a famous study in which they made masses of people sad without those people's consent and nobody understood that it was happening to them to say that you can be aware of that is a fool's game you cannot be we know that you cannot be and just to be clear of the 5 big tech companies google facebook amazon apple microsoft you say it's google and facebook that are doing the most damage to our behavior and our lifestyles not amazon which has been in the news this week for lots of criticism over the way it's got money out of government apple microsoft you say it's google and facebook is that right. well look there are plenty of reasons to criticize us on microsoft and
12:41 am
facebook and for full disclosure i have a relationship with microsoft now and for even full disclosure i've sold a company to google i actually really like big tech companies i'm not sort of anti-corporate or anti tech companies however what distinguishes google and facebook is that they rely almost solely on the manipulation machine for their money they don't have any diversification they're absolutely addicted to it like picture states are addicted to oil and so it does in my view corrupt them now the things i'm talking about these when appeal ations are all the tech companies engage in them to some degree but not totally so there might be additional reasons to criticize the other tech companies there probably are but it's for is this particular issue of running a mass mental manipulation machine for profit that's really google and facebook and then i. you know you make me feel good or you make the argument very strongly in your book you're making the argument very eloquently today but do you worry that your connection to microsoft which you said full disclosure of being
12:42 am
a research remark so didn't undermines your argument all parts of one of the quote unquote rivals you're one of the companies you'll say isn't as bad as google and facebook doesn't undermine you in some way well i love silicon valley i'm a creature of it and i want us to be better and i feel that being a loyal opposition being able to say what we're doing is wrong we need to change is my d.d. . it's a it's a and i used to be rather lonely doing this there weren't too many others but in recent years it's actually become much more acceptable and common for people in the tech industry to criticize the tech industry and i think it's enormously healthy so . i don't think we should rely on people like me who are within the tech industry to be the sole critics or the sole agents of change that would be a problem but i think it's crucial that there be people inside the industry willing
12:43 am
to call the truth but i think it is really sorry but as an industry insider as someone who was there for the start of the internet and you say you love silicon valley you want to see improve on the one hand some people say your supporters will say see even john lennon is saying this and he was there from the beginning he's he knows it inside out others might say hold on that makes jaron lanier a hypocrite because he made his name in this field he made his money out of it and now he's criticizing everyone else who's still in the business you know i was one of the earlier people to criticize what we're doing i started writing critical essays about this i wrote an essay in $92.00 saying if we keep on going we're doing there might someday be these bots that would do battle with each other to influence people and could throw an election so i mean i think we're hear about this for a long time does it make me a hypocrite for sticking with it possibly but you know what if that's so use what i'm saying to your benefit. read the arguments if they're helpful if you find any power from them use and i really don't like whether i'm like who cares if i'm
12:44 am
a hypocrite i'm just one person and i'm not running for office i'm not asking you for anything what i can give you is a perspective that you will get from many other places of how an insider saw us make these terrible mistakes and it sounded like an offer you turned on you would have to leave it there thank you so much for joining me on the front. thank you so much for having me. the new york times reported this week that shortly after journalist jamal khashoggi was assassinated in turkey a member of the saudi killed team instructed a superior over the phone to tell your boss but bosses believed to be saudi crown prince mohammed bin salam who back at home continues to crack down on his critics one such critic is the prominent muslim cleric. who's been held in solitary confinement for opposing the government and is now facing a possible death sentence joining me to discuss his situation is some are allowed are a saudi citizen who is now living in the united states and fears returning he's
12:45 am
a senior fellow at georgetown university center for muslim christian understanding . for joining me from boston the saudi authorities had your father in prison last year and charged with over $35.00 different crimes including corrupting the land connection to a terrorist organization and offending them what's your response to the saudi authorities and to those charges well it's the same operation going on is going on actually for dissidents brode for those who disagree at home for journalists economists public figures in general so my response is that the charge is actually represent how the state would crack down on any different view and on any person who disagrees and saudi prosecutors in september of this year called for your father's execution to do you think they're serious about that that they would really execute
12:46 am
a cleric as prominent as your father salma out well do you think those who went to the saudi consulate were serious to take the life of the prominent journalist and veteran saudi. it's i mean it's the same mentality it's a pattern it didn't it did not start with my father did not start with it's a pattern that we have it with we have seen through the past one year and a half since the crown prince came to power they did everything in their power to just silence others to crackdown on dissent to just do impulsive policy. some might say yes it is a power your father was arrested imprisoned published by the saudi authorities in the past who in the 1990 s. when he was
12:47 am
a quote unquote islamist rabble rouser his critics said many would say why he's being imprisoned with m.b.a.'s the saudi government under any prince or king has always taken a very dim view of people who oppose the government is so it's rotarian is always tyranny. trying to ask and demand political reform is never something that you should be punished for political reform that my father and others spoke for. is actually the solution is actually the path towards civil liberty will come up to the political reform in a moment just to confirm many say your father was arrested in september 27th because he refused to publish a tweet to his $14000000.00 followers at the request of the saudi government that supported the saudi led blockade of qatar which full disclosure owns this channel owns al-jazeera english is that true it's a trigger it's true because after he tweeted when he when he heard about the constellation between the qatar and saudi government he tweeted
12:48 am
a lot between their hearts for the better of their people few hours after that tweet he was arrested that was the trigger that's of course the direct reason that he was arrested in september 2070 but there is. long yes yes history and relationship and just to be clear before we get to that long history was your father being paid by the qatari government or anyone else in qatar because that's another accusation sometimes thrown against him by supporters of the saudi government has never paid and you know what if they if he was in any at any point paid by their government or was conspiring by any conspiring with any foreign agent they would have a lot of evidence to prove they would show it in this state they have all his evidence they didn't show anything and if you if you read the just amber and i'm against him of the charges it's very prosperous you know when muhammad been so mom
12:49 am
told bloomberg last month that 1500 saudi citizens were arrested over the last 3 years because he the crown prince was trying to quote get rid of extremism and terrorism without a civil war a lot of people especially in the west will hear that and say he's got a fair point they've seen hate preachers extremist clerics coming out of saudi arabia for years and they think very often the prince wants to lock some of these people up to try to shut down extremism what's your response to long so all that says it's not accurate he is tail in the he's attacking the very moderate voices that actually spearheaded the campaign against terrorism for the past 2 decades my father for example was the one who are. called called a spade a spade he pinpoint terrorism and he called it and he demand justice against all terrorists in saudi arabia he was actually spearheaded the campaign really along with the state at the time that the state benefited from the old his campaign and his. firsts your father is spoken out against terrorism as you
12:50 am
say including against the $911.00 attacks against osama bin laden himself but the fact is that he was once a hero of good lardons the late al-qaeda leader even fight in your father's farm on the outer as his ideal personality you praise your father for in lightening muslim you. you accept surely at the very minimum that whatever he says now he was once a quote unquote extremist well you know what in the eighty's bin laden like so much of their oil family and he was very close to them those who actually gave all the platform those who push the jihadi agenda at that time those who run who ran the show at that time those who should be responsible my father was a popular cleric he was admired by everybody the royal at the time he was respected by the royal family by the people but just in time a lot of hours just to be fair and get our facts right when billard turned against the saudi government when he'd already carried out the world trade center attacks
12:51 am
and he published his famous fatwa against americans and foreign invaders etc in the mid ninety's he was still praising you about know his not his actually just use in my father's popularity to get into his audience as your father was never a fan of below no he was never a fan of that he did not even consider bin laden a scholar or a shift but he clearly has evolved in his views over the years i think it's fair to call it what but he was never violent they were violent but he's evolved his views let's say in this very crude words from a more conservative position to a more liberal position i think westerners would put it as special and socially socially so for democracy or not muslims around sectarianism or his attitudes towards gay people is it fair to say that if your father was left undisturbed by the government unable to preach unable to talk to his 14000000 followers and tell about history news he could actually have. a more reformist impact on the saudi population the muhammad bin so much yes vitriol and that's why i haven't seen
12:52 am
a man attack him because he could pull the wrong end under the quote unquote reformist agenda it could expose so the reformist agenda that the state now is saying it's pushing for so on muhammad bin salma jamal khashoggi and his gruesome death at the hands of this team of saudi assassins in istanbul do you believe m.b.'s muhammad been sold on the saudi crown prince gave the order to kill jamal khashoggi. well you know what gave the attorney general the order to seek death penalty against my father for similar views of that of cheese whole actually there are reports even of that and there are torture in so do prison while i'm speaking right now turkey and just said it was reportedly dad ended torture in saudi arabia. man
12:53 am
a do we she's also reportedly dad but we're not sure why you believe the crown prince is responsible for these deaths. were ordered that whoever so that will actually will be responsible for the death of jamal khashoggi abdullah when jamal khashoggi was on the show a lot from back in march he said he didn't quote want to be the next fall model i would i'm referring to your father being in prison at the time tragically he ended up meeting a fate worse than your father's dare i ask do you know worry what will happen to you how much of a threat do you think there is against you as a saudi citizen now living in the us criticizing the saudi authorities while well i thought some point i thought it's very difficult for the state to use the long arm to reach dissidents approach and those those who just did not present themselves as dissidents. and me. but now after what's happened.
12:54 am
i think everyone is i mean that message actually the state sent is that everyone is a threat in everyone we can we should be one everywhere so it's very very dangerous and we have seen you have to do i get threats like every hour every day on twitter i get threats from different parties yeah and i believe you have more than a dozen members of a family insider who've been banned from traveling as true so they can come and see you and you can go and see them yes. one last question abdulla you've been here in the u.s. since the summer of 2017 before your father's arrest back home in saudi arabia do you have any message for donald trump for jared crucial for john bolton for these hard core supporters of m.b.a.'s and the saudi government here in washington d.c. well if you want to perpetuate a good relationship that lasts longer and for the best interest of both parties we should do that with these people with the saudi institutions if one individual
12:55 am
was impulsive was really down juris there are many alternatives we have seen that even within the royal family there are so many royals who could or could understand the reformist agenda the real reformist agenda could allow for a margin of freedom for the people could could protect the basic rights of the saudi people so what's the n b a b s a gender and his team is it producing is actually the environment there establishes that could establish. an environment for terrorists or flourish and to live up to the louder we'll have to leave it there thank you so much for joining me on that front that's our show up front will be back next week.
12:57 am
when the news breaks the word awful was lots of opinions of getting weapons going or presentation and economic development when people need to be heard but top leadership of the world were of the potential for barack you a bar of weeks before the public good potable going to al-jazeera has teams on the ground the syrian army seems determined to defeat the rebels and continues advanced was this is a good day to bring you more award winning documentaries and life means. the minute you need those than you. you know it then you're. saying what the one you know but
12:59 am
1:00 am
and current affairs that matter to you. it is a big number this is a very unique situation in this economy. an emergency package of up to a trillion dollars is announced to boost the u.s. economy ravaged by the corona virus outbreak. mothers and this is al jazeera live from doha with continuing extensive coverage of the outbreak including enforcing a lockdown crackdown people are being kept off the streets around europe. a dire warning in iran that many more people will die if they keep ignoring advice to stay at home. and panic.
51 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on