tv NEWS LIVE - 30 Al Jazeera June 18, 2020 10:00pm-10:34pm +03
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the government close to bankruptcy many say such initiatives will not be enough to deal with what prime minister warns could be a major crisis. the united states supreme court allows young undocumented immigrants to stay in the u.s. in a major setback for donald trump. says al jazeera live from london also coming up. i don't think he's fit for office so i don't think he has the confidence to carry out the. scathing revelations about donald trump from his former national security advisor in a tell all book. baghdad demands that turkey withdraw its troops from northern iraq
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after a week of military operations targeting kurdish forces. and france is accused of consistently discriminate she gets back people as calls for reform grow. to begin in the united states where president donald trump has lashed out at the supremes court after it blocked his plans to strip hundreds of thousands of young people for protection from deportation he said horrible and politically charged decisions are being made against him by the country's highest court in moved in 2017 to end the obama administration's deferred action for childhood arrivals daca program projects around 700000 so-called dreamers who brought to the u.s. illegally as children many of them are celebrating the decision outside the court in washington. wow what
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a decision and let me say this in these very difficult times the supreme court provided a bright ray of sunshine this week with the decision on monday preventing discrimination in employment against the old u b t q community and now with this darker decision to mean frankly the court's decisions were surprising but welcome and gives you something. that the laws and rules and mores of this country and be upheld well the decisions amazing i am so happy these kids their families i feel for them and i think all the america dress well president trump has also been dismissing revelations in a new book from his former national security adviser as pure fiction john bolton
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you quit last year accuses the president of asking fellow leaders including china's premier for help to get him reelected bolton also alleges large gaps in trump's knowledge of world affairs the white house is trying to block the book's publication claiming it represents a threat to national security. champ is clearly ethically unfit and intellectually unprepared to be the president of the united states that doesn't seem to matter to the republicans in the united states senate didn't seem to matter to john bolton he chose royalty over lot over patriotism and and and so he's going to make money off of his book again as it will make a judgment i'll be meeting with the chairs to make a judgment on fisher joins us live from the white house allan trump and bolton have a similar political outlook could bolton's comments affect the the president's
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reelection chances. well you've got to remember are 5 months away from the presidential election donald trump support always around 4445 percent he has a core of supporters they really don't care what other people see about him john bolton's comments undoubtedly will be used by the by campaign it's something they can hammer away between no and the election here is one of his hand-picked senior advisers saying that he thought that he was trying to secure his reelection by asking the chinese to enter vien that he was happy to a very criminal investigations if it would help the leaders of the countries of turkey and china that he was willing to praise mohammed bin soundman the de facto leader of saudi arabia after the killing of jamal khashoggi if it took attention away from the media looking at trump's use of personal e-mail on government business so all of those things they can hammer out but really donald trump support
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will will still be at roughly 4445 percent and what happens between now and the election will determine whether or not he wins over floating voters this makes it much more difficult john bolton is someone that has been around republican politics for a while there are many republicans who are very upset with donald trump and there will be many who will watch his interview he's done an interview with one of the big t.v. networks which will air in primetime here in the united states on sunday we got a little bit of a sneak preview of that on the morning shows this morning and john bolton said he didn't think donald trump who's been president for the last 3 and a half years is fit to hold the job. you described the president as erratic foolish behaved irrationally bizarrely you can't leave him alone for a minute he said conspiracies behind rocks and was stunningly uninformed he
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couldn't tell the difference between his personal interests and the country's interests i don't think he's fit for office i don't think he has the competence to carry out the job there really isn't any guiding principle that i was able to discern other than what's good for donald trump's reelection and is it possible that donald trump will manage to block publication of the book. well it's not having a good run in the courts of the moment is the law and. the difficulty is that the books i mean we've been reporting on it know for almost 24 hours you've got the gist of most of the book i've been plowing through it there are copies there i managed to get a digital copy last night i've seen hard copies here they've been sent out to the stores not just here in the united states but worldwide the jew to the shelves or choose the amazon are still taking orders they're going to take it to the courts we know that but they have a difficulty donald trump is saying everything in his lies stories that have been
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made up we have peter navarro who describes it as washington political revenge porn he's donald trump's traded visor we've got the press secretary saying look there's classified information in the book and it shouldn't be published and that's the argument that the department of justice is going to take to the courts we think to morrow to say this is why this book should not be published the problem is the courts very rarely side with the government in these sort of situations not least there's a say because things there are out in public john bolton meanwhile he walks away knowing that he didn't give evidence when democrats in congress want a deal from him about how donald trump run foreign policy to his own benefit instead he pocketed a check for a reported $2000000.00 went off and wrote his book and cause the start of the controller see we've been seeing over the last 24 hours alan fischer thank you very much right now to the supreme court ruling on dreaminess let's go live to she had
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a chance in washington d.c. is she i want to give us an idea of the reaction that the news about jacka. despite covert 19 and the importance of self isolating a few recipients to gather outside the supreme court. the general sense of surprise as well as relief that lives have been in limbo for so long now 700000 people who have spent most of their lives in the u.s. always facing this this possibility the underdog will trump the executive order signed by president obama could be reversed and they could be sent to. the amount the u.s. feels of their homelands which have very little to do with now they are very relieved they feel that there's enormous weight but their shoulders however there's a sense that this isn't over this was a judgment based on a procedural procedural matters that the trumpet ministration simply haven't explained when it decided to reverse the executive order why
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a program which so many people depended on should be reversed and in fact because this is an executive at all junk a very easy to sign an executive order right now reversing it but he says he wants a legal and political solution to dhaka there's also a sense there has to be said despite the tweeting from donald trump there's a certain amount of relief in the white house and in and in congress that the republicans i'm told from don't have to deal with the reality of sending 700000 people back to places which they don't really know who some 100000 people are such an integral part of the american fabric of american society back so you get the sense there's a bit of relief that as well and all trump is already trying to use it in his tweets to rally his base and saying you see this is why you need another 4 years of me so we can we can have more republican more right wing supreme court justices assman things out of the democrats we had chuck schumer expressing emotion we had best tweets from barack obama whose executive order initially was what was originally when talking to the doctor recipients here was i don't know much time for the democrats either they have
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a point as always look the democrats had both houses of congress and the presidency and they refused or didn't pass comprehensive immigration reform and apos to citizenship which isn't the still leaves daca recipients in limbo to an extent and i was talking to one doctor recipient gabriela and it was particularly scathing about obama who of course had the nickname deporter in chief. for us in the immigration community obama was supposed to be hope but what he did in his administration was deported so many of our people and with that kind of push that deportation is ok or it's an option and yes he gave us doc but that that's nothing that is protection for now but we need to citizenship and doctor does not give that . many tweets from donald trump about this but one of them was do you get the impression that the supremes quote doesn't like me and that's an interesting tweet considering what's to come that's still on the docket we're waiting judgment on whether the new york prosecutor or
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a committee in congress will committees in congress can get a hold of donald trump's don't trust financial records from his accountant and from his banks and there was a sense that the supreme court wasn't terribly keen on congress well they might be called all congressional overreach but they they seemed relatively ok with the idea of prosecutorial the ability of a prosecutor to get hold of the old adult financial records that's still to come so the ultram has that to set back in the supreme court this week already meanwhile our decision was very quickly just in the last hour or so another setback another revealing setback perhaps facebook has taken down the trump campaign post which they say contravenes the guidelines on the hates and hate groups because it used to defamation league said was a symbol used by the nazis to the note political prisoners in concentration camps an upside down triangle it's quite the day for of course what i was talking about earlier there's the whole john bolton for all go to what a week for. she have a chance to thank you very much indeed.
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my. iraq has told turkey to pull its troops out of the north of the country and stop bombing comes after turkey deployed ground troops and carried out air strikes on kurdistan workers party or p k k targets on sunday and tuesday iraq's foreign ministry summoned the turkish ambassador on thursday saying it was a violation of sovereignty and marks a serious escalation of its decades long conflict against the p.k. often focused on kurdish areas in southeastern turkey similar fulton is in baghdad and says it's not just the turkish ambassador who's been summoned. at the same time the ministry of foreign affairs is also some on that uranium ambassador over similar operations that have gone on in the north and that is quite unusual because iran is a country that is seen as wielding quite
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a lot of influence over past governments here in iraq and someone in the iranian ambassador is quite a departure from previous foreign policies and it signals that the new prime minister must try to create some sort of equivalence in treating all of iraq's neighboring countries in the same way insisting that they have to respect iraq's sovereignty now let's remember what happened during these operations we had 2 separate events going on in the northern kurdistan region and one was an attack by turkey which consisted of both air strikes and the ground incursion and on the iranian border with iraq we also had artillery strikes against an area called in and in fact we heard today that those strikes resulted in at least one civilian casualty as well as other people being injured so some morning they are in an ambassador is quite quite relevant but also significant step now it remains to be seen how much effect these decisions will actually have because let's remember the
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dad does not control these areas they're controlled by a semi autonomous kurdish regional government in the north the federal government does not have any troops to really enforce its request that these attacks on northern iraq stop so the diplomatic channel to try to request the neighboring countries to respect iraq's sovereignty is really all that the ministry of foreign affairs here can do but those areas under the control of kurdish parties and those kurdish parties although they have not officially said so are likely to welcome these operations because they target the p.k. k. and the kurdish authorities are very much also likely to be keen to see the depart from kurdish areas. still to come. here and he has a new president after a constitutional crisis caused by the death of his predecessor. in amsterdam and there's a waiting list. for 16 years at least before you get
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a chance but how's the dutch housing crisis made by that great a virus pandemic that will billions in investment. how we have seen some very heavy rain into parts of central and western europe lots of clouds showing up on the satellite we have got a good thundery weather across much of england and wales associated with this area of low pressure lightly packed ice a boss here so what we call a flabby area of low pressure and that's why the thunderstorms have been moving very very slowly this is the same in london as you can see on the sign there welcome back i think it's a welcome back to the rain along with the shoppers we have got that wet weather staying in place nothing
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a little further north which as we go through friday will see some western weather continuing over towards eastern passes well into poland running right down into rumania still pretty warm there in moscow temperatures getting up to around $26.00 celsius with a chance of wanted to showers as we go on into the weekend it will cool off a little into moscow as we go through sas stan that rain will turn heavy for a time heavy showers continuing there just around that western side of russia 3 belarus dry weather starts to make its way back in across the british isles but wet weather will sweep in through the 2nd half of the weekend it should turn dryer in place to say as we go into next week they stay striker's a good part of northern africa want to showers around northern areas of algeria with more showers for west africa. if you were in beijing looking out the pacific ocean you'd see american warships. as they're somehow tireless aiming to replace america and around the world college
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chinese are not that stupid these guys want to dominate a huge chunk of the planet this sounds like a preparation for our 1st president george washington said if you want peace prepare for the coming war on china part one on a jazzy. amount of top stories here now to syria president donald trump has lashed out at the u.s. supreme court after it blocked his plans to end a program that protects immigrant children from deportation. the white house is trying to block the publication of a damaging new book by transform
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a national security advisor john bolton's book alleges that trump pleaded for help from china to win reelection in 2020. and iraq has told turkey to pull its troops out of the north of the country and to stop bombing comes after ankara deployed ground troops and carried out airstrikes on the kurdistan workers party or p k k targets on sunday and tuesday. they will protest against police brutality have shown it's not just people from ethnic minorities in the us who are mistreated now a report from france's human rights commission says black people a push to the bottom of the country society says police must be better trained to handle racist disputes potter has spoken to one man with a grievance against offices. mohammed baqir wants answers from the police he wants to know why his 14 year old son and 2 of his friends were arrested accused of stealing kept in custody overnight in paris and released without charge seen here
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in a video after they released the boy said that during their ordeal they were subject to racial and homophobic abuse one says he was slapped across the face police were searching for a suspect who was one meter 60 tool so why arrest my son who was so much taller they only stopped him because of his face because the only thing he has common with the suspect is the color of his skin french police have a history of abusive arrests young people of african heritage a 20 times more likely to be stopped by police than others for an identity check according to france's human rights watchdog campaigners say that officers often act with impunity. the protests over george floyd's death in the united states have reignited debate over police racism in france and inspired similar demonstrations calling for justice for other matter or a young man who died in police custody in 2016 this mural in central paris pays
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tribute to both men tens of thousands of people have taken part in rallies for troy in the country. there was the death of george floyd a death that directly echoed the death of my little brother in france and it must be said what's happening in the united states the exact same thing happens in france today our brothers a dying. this activist says that until friends faces its colonial legacy racism will continue to thrive because. we need a radical change a break with the past and our system which was built on racist foundations linked to colonise ration and slavery. some police officers protested in paris last week to say that accusation. of racism undermined that all source in ability to keep the peace but others say it's time the force was reformed. for 20 years the police have been increasingly militarized there's
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a growing divide between the police and the community so what we need is to get everyone around the table to talk to find out what citizens want and need in their police force to feel safe. as in the us generations of people in france a felt shot out of a system that's supposed to protect them with more anti racism protests planned the hope is the change might come natasha al-jazeera paris. the french president emmanuel back home has made his 1st overseas trip since the coronavirus outbreak him at the british prime minister boris johnson in downing street on a visit marking 80 years since shoulder goal appealed in london for the french people to resist nazi occupation the pair briefly spoke about brics it agreeing on the need to speed up negotiations. a landslide in the ivory coast has killed at least 13 people it happened on the northern outskirts of abidjan many residents are missing and the search is underway for survivors after
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a slip in the early morning regions had 3 times as much rainfall as normal in recent days. but it is a new president it varies day she media has been sworn in he was declared winner of last month's elections as the ruling party candidate but the opposition alleges that there were voting irregularities he's taking office 2 months early after the sudden death of president jiang currencies or a heart attack last week marking webpage in nairobi and says people are watching to see what the new president may change. everything going to be a was for an end at a ceremony in a football stadium in the capital reason he's being sworn in now is following the sudden death of his predecessor currency who died last week the government said he died from a heart attack although many people believe he actually died from covert 19 own currencies it didn't have any policies to try and slow the spread of the coronavirus indrani within recent months there have been watering events continuing
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as usual political rallies in the lead up to a controversial election last month thousands of people are gathered together and so one thing people are waiting to see is if this is going to change under the new leader looking at that ceremony today no sign of change it's all there is no social distancing people sitting next to each other in the stadium hundreds of soldiers parading in a military parade so so far no change of policy there and the other thing people are waiting to see if it will change is through in these record on human rights in these particularly in the later part of a 15 year rule is come under widespread criticism for growing reports of political killings torture and crushing of all dissenting voices tens of thousands of are indians have fled the country journalists rights activists and so on political opposition many of them are in exile and now every sunday show me has been a key player in the ruling party the ruling party which is responsible for
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a lot of these things that people are waiting to see if his new leadership will amount to any kind of change of direction. or not. has been nearly 10 years since the un called for a major cleanup in nigeria's niger delta but a new report says little has been done investigation by environmental groups found cleanup work had only begun on 11 percent of contaminated sites decades of spills of course severe damage to the delta in 2011 the un warned the cleanup could take 30 years there were companies shell is one of those blamed for the damage but says it has acted on the recommendations and quote actively supports the clean up process. china's top decision making body is considering a draft of hong kong's controversial security bill that's caused weeks of protests a standing committee of the national people's congress is reviewing the bill over 3 days chinese officials say they want to implement the girls without delay the
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legislation sparked a new wave of pro-democracy protests but it was announced in may. argentina is expected to extend coronavirus restrictions around the capital the bulk of new infections are being detected around where desire is argentina appears to have weathered the pandemic better than its latin american neighbors which are now the center of the pandemic a nationwide lockdown was imposed on march the 20th it has gradually been loosened and is now only active in certain areas argentina has reported on $35000.00 confirmed cases and around $900.00 deaths 2 years ago has more just north of the capital but as irish. we're here in the in greater when our side is home to 12 and 13000000 people this is a neighborhood that has been completely isolated because the increase a surge of corner cases in this area people are being disrespected of a coming into this neighborhood and this is has been
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a strategy by the argentinean government since it imposed a lockdown 3 months ago security forces were on the streets controlling people and asking them to stay in their homes and isolating areas like this one where there's been a surge in coronavirus he says there's been a surge of coronavirus cases in recent months in argentina and that's why the government is considering extending the quarantine imposed 3 months ago it was one of the 1st countries 11 america to impose a lockdown and that's why it has prevented the spread of the disease at least in argentina president a lot of the 5 members on wednesday went on voluntary isolation because there's been a surge of criticism of argentina's. political class his popularity has been running high over his handling of the pardon that makes but it argentina's economy that has a many people who are worried argentina is on default if you go through with foreign creditors it's also handling double digit inflation in this country and the
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possibility of recession has people here in poor neighborhoods like this one extremely worried. the number of homeless people in the netherlands has doubled in recent years job losses due to the coronavirus have made the situation worse and restrictions mean the target to build tens of thousands of new houses won't be met this year step reports from the hague not mundell suddenly found himself among a growing group of homeless people in the netherlands the 30 year old weight of could no longer pay his rent after he lost his income due to the govt 19 pandemic and landed on the street now he's staying in a shelter it's really hard because especially for my age it's like you're not earning enough for a free sector. but i need to march to get social housing and. in amsterdam and there's a waiting list like for 16 years at least before you get a chance on
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a house the netherlands needs 1000000 houses in the next 10 years while construction companies have been able to continue to build despite covert $1000.00 restrictions they say the target of more than $80000.00 pounds a year has become difficult or sort of all. in the main reason is the lack of land in the netherlands approvals take a long time sometimes up to 10 years before a project can be executed with the corona crisis this has only become worse the dutch do what they do best making you land like here where island is being created but developer say the only way to meet the huge demand is to build outside the cities and convert green areas they promise sustainable and climate friendly housing we need a lot of houses 1000000 is a lot for the netherlands we have 7 and a half 1000000 right now so we need actually an extra big city and you can place
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that inside of the boundaries of the current cities the government has yet to respond to deplete to invest billions of dollars in the next few years but a titian's didn't immediately reject the plan to sacrifice green areas. the netherlands used to have adequate social housing and a number of homeless were low but miscalculations by the government and the far reaching privatization of the housing sector after lead to a serious housing crisis well developers urged the government to infest the question remains one houses will become affordable again social housing has been rapidly disappearing from big cities that's because corporations sold hands of thousands of houses for high prices in recent years turning cities like amsterdam into places mainly for the rich not a city now that can no longer afford you never know how things are going to happen and you can lose your job every day. but you can also lose your house every day and that was something i was never aware of developers say that one 3rd of the new
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projects they hope to build with government support will be for social housing but now says he can't afford to wait he can't stay in shelters much longer and needs a roof of office had now stepped fasten al-jazeera the hague and a quick mind you can catch up any time with all our news on our website al-jazeera dot com. top stories around syria president donald trump has criticized the u.s. supreme court after it blocked his plans to strip hundreds of thousands of young people of protection from deportation he said horrible and politically charged decisions were being made against him by the country's highest court moved in 2017 to end the obama administration's deferred action for childhood arrivals or daca
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program that protects around 700000 so-called dreamers who were brought to the u.s. illegally as children. i cried tears of joy a few minutes ago when i heard the decision of the supreme court on darker these wonderful darker kids and their families have a huge burden lifted off their shoulders they don't have to worry about being deported they can do their jobs and i believe i do believe this someday someday soon they will be american citizens. the white house is trying to block the publication of a damaging new book by trump's former national security advisor john bolton who quit last year accuse the president of asking fellow leaders including china's premier to help to get him reelected trump has dismissed the book as pure fiction. iraq has told turkey to stop bombing and pull its troops out of the north of the
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country it comes after turkey deployed ground troops and carried out air strikes on kurdistan workers party or p.k. k. targets on sunday and tuesday iraq's foreign ministry summoned the turkish ambassador on thursday saying it was a violation of sovereignty. the french president in one year in my corps has made his 1st overseas trip since the coronavirus outbreak in that british prime minister boris johnson in downing street on a visit marking 80 years since childhood appealed in london for the french people to resist nazi occupation china's top decision making body is considering a draft of hong kong's controversial security bill has caused weeks of protests the standing committee of the national people's congress is reviewing the bill over 3 days chinese officials say they want to implement that a little or so without delay to say with us the stream is up next.
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hey there welcome to the stream i am josh rushing sitting in perfectly ok from the comfort of my own home today because a covert 1010 we're talking about can trump get reelected we're going to look at the poll numbers we're joined by an excited panel of guests and what i'm really hoping you're going to do if you're watching this on you tube live is you're going to join us in that chat box over there and hopefully get some of your comments in during the show in real time. when the 1st things i want to do is go to a poll here this is from 538 which does a lot of polling combining a polling site is called help popular is donald trump and if you can see on the
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