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tv   The Bottom Line  Al Jazeera  May 30, 2021 2:30am-3:01am +03

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been any huge group, no matter when the portuguese themselves are still having to live with those restrictions. but more things right? not to likely long into the night here in port as chelsea celebrate the 2nd title, the 1st 9 years since being fine music in 2012 manchester city friends live with saying that dream yet again on the biggest stage ah, hello there. this is al jazeera and these are the headlines. west african leaders are scrambling to respond to the political crisis. and molly, also the colonel behind a military coup that this week was named. the new interim president. i seen the greater says he'll attend the emergency talks with west african deed is on sunday. nicholas huck has more now from bunker. he will absolutely attend this meeting. it gives legitimacy and credence to this latest move made by following the
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constitutional chord that confirmed that he has been, you, president of molly. but before attending this meeting, surely he'll also announce, and you prime minister, he's asked the, the opposition, the 5 who made the civil society movement there was behind the protest movement that led to the downfall of president berg. are you ready for car kate in august to, to, to, to find a prime minister on tens of thousands of people have rallied across brazil to condemn the president's handling of the corona virus. pandemic demonstrates his cause to the impeachment of both scenarios. he's been criticized to repeatedly downplaying the risk of curve at 19. meanwhile, schools and universities and 16 provinces and ask aniston has now closed for 2 weeks to try to cut the spread of carbon 19. the health ministry reported nearly a 1000 new cases and 18 deaths on friday. that's the biggest sag in a single day since this outbreak began. busy a new variant of curve at 1900 has
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reportedly been detected in vietnam. the health minister says it's a hybrid if the mutations 1st president fight in india and the u. k. and spreads quickly by air. vietnam had successfully contained infections for most of last year . but is now batching in new ways. new tremors and eastern democratic republic of congo are fueling fears of a 2nd volcanic eruption. tens of thousands of people have already left the city of goma. dozens were killed when africa, the most active volcano narrow congo ruptured last week. people in gaza facing severe shortages of electricity and was remains cut off in parts of the besieged enclave. it's been more than a week since the seas 5 between israel and mos ended 11 days of conflict. more than 820000 palestinians had been displaced by the israeli bombardment. while those, the headlines i'll be back after the bottom line. incarcerated
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in russia's toughest prison, stripped off their liberty, an unexpected creative opportunity. singing contest like no other offer the chance of redemption. and hope for the talent and few prison lies inside and out a tailor fingers and murders on alger there. hi, i'm steve clements and i have a question with the intense fighting pause then hopefully over. is there any hope for real peace between the palestinians and israelis? let's get to the bottom line. ah. about 30 years ago in norwegian power a couple of had a crazy notion of basically deciding on their own to bring together palestinian and israeli officials to make a peace deal. in our slow, there were slow formal negotiations already going on, but they decided to do their own thing,
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and they actually pulled it off back then talking face to face was not only blasphemous, it was illegal, and america was against it. so everything was done in secret, and despite the mistrust, the frustration, and the walk out in the end, the historic awesome courts were signed in 1993. with much fanfare at the time, many people around the world thought that the deal would lead to a sustainable piece after decades of conflict. but as we saw earlier this month, the 2 sides are nowhere near an end of the violence and heartbreak of so many killed and living in fear and the offload deal, which was supposed to be a temporary fix leading to a permanent deal has expired. today we're looking at that deal from 2 angles. one is the lasting impact of os flow on the palestinians, and israelis for good and not so good. and the other is the high drama of the secret talks themselves. and the personal stories of the characters involved were joined by bartlett sheer, one of america's most prolific theater. in oper directors, he's the director of the new movie called off flow, which started as
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a play in new york written by j. t rogers, a few years ago. it's based on the true story of palestinian is really negotiations in the norwegian capital. and it comes out this week and deanna booth to a palestinian lawyer who served as legal adviser to the palestinian negotiating team back where there used to be negotiations with israel based on the aso accords . and finally, daniel levy, a former advisor negotiator for the israeli government, who is the lead, is really author of the geneva accord, which was supposed to start where the also chords ended. he's now president of the us middle east project. it's a real honor and privilege to have all of you on board, but let me start with the movie that's coming out marlott. this conflict has been raging for decades, and i don't know about your, your, you know, timing and other things. but you've got the story of all slow. how it came together coming out right now amidst real horror intention yet again in israel palestine. what drew you to this story and what drew you to sort of telling it now? well i actually, i live in new york and i happen to be friends with my,
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my daughter, best friend in 2nd grade was the daughter of tie, rod larson and motor fuel. and so i would go and fit it. soccer matches near to people who stars in the me at the 2 people in the movie i would go and sit at soccer, matches and hear stories, a middle east peace. and from my point of view, it was extraordinary theater in a way and introduced tire to j. t rogers, who wrote the play and the film. and away we went, you know, i don't know if a lot of people know, i mean general lay people know of us. so. but when you, when you perform this in new york in tel aviv and you know, other places london, how was it received? is it received this? wow, that was a historic anomaly, but it's really a disappointment because they didn't move forward. well we, we didn't. we didn't one way or another as if we were trying to make a point about offline working or not working. we are telling a history story, a history play, as you would find in shakespeare. and we're trying to tell the story what happens
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when complete enemies can come into a room and trying to resolve their conflicts. and that was the basis. so when we 1st, when it 1st came out in 2016, most of the audiences were learning about that. but they were talking about democrats and republicans. and when we did it in london, they all they talked about was it was more about how to, how, what the larger question is of how to get hugely opposing and hateful forces into a room. and is it possible for them to resolve their differences? well, let me go to deanna and to daniel and ask them they, these 2 great individuals negotiated for their governments in the wake of os. hello deanna. let me just ask you, what did did, did i slow which was supposed to be the low bar? not the high bar, was it worth the effort back then or did it set up false hopes? me? how do you look at oslo with regard to where we are today in the role that people
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like you and daniel tried to move forward but, but ultimately we haven't moved that far forward for pounds demands. the issue of our slow is not a documentary film. it's actually a horror movie and the reason that it's a horror movie is because this wasn't just a question of setting a bar, but it has actually changed the course of history. propel tinian to the negative. what it meant was that it wasn't just a question of people coming into a room and sitting down or resolving differences as bartlett had said, but ignored in math. the fact that palestinians have been living under a very brutal military occupation and have been denied their freedom. and so the whole formulation of off low recreated history spawn history on it hadn't spawn law and it's had such that palestinians are now 4th to negotiate with their oppressor, with their occupier. rather than getting the world to put pressure on israel to end that military occupation and the lasting effects of that are we still feel to,
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to today everything from the dividing up of the land and to various areas to the establishment of the palestinian authority that isn't its own independent government to the continued settlement expansion that we see to this very day to the settler take over that we are even experiencing now 27 years later to the fact that we have a palestinian authority that is had in effect served as israel security sub contractor, these are the lasting effect for palestinians of the, of the low courts. it's not, they didn't produce anything positive. it actually produce way to produce everything negative. thank you for that, daniel. i'd love to get your take because you have you negotiated. you wrote the deal that was supposed to come after our slow and we saw the political rug in israel primarily be ripped, right from beneath it. as,
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as politics in israel moved in a very different direction. i'm just interested not only in how you see that went before, but as you look forward and just listening beyond and basically saying, hey, this is a horror story, not a documentary. how do you see, what are the pieces are that can be moved around then you think could maybe move us into, you know, somewhat a better direction. yes, thanks steve. i mean, i think that pulling of the rug was partly for the very reasons deanna just outline for us and whatever the intentionality is, all the players at the time the that i imagine the movie goes into. in retrospect, what dana is described for us is the lived reality of palestinians. and unfortunately, the flip side of that only israeli side was all slower, kind of sent the signal. you could get peace on the cheek. you
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could get this without really engaging with d occupation with palestinian writes with international law. so you know where you, the challenge today is to learn. it's not about reviving or slow. it's how do we definitively drawer a line under that. and it's important to remember the all slow was supposed to lead to a 5 year period. there was a 5 year time horizon by which all the final status issues as we call all the things jerusalem settlements borders, statehood refugees, crucially had to be result that coming up to 30 years ago. if anything has passed its expiry date by a quarter of a century, it probably stinks to high heaven and that's the reality of all slow today
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unfortunately. but when you, when you made this feel, one of the things that really struck me were that you, you brought in real palestinian actors and performers, real israeli actors and performers. you could sit a see and feel the tension between them as they negotiated this, as they were living, you know, essentially what, what, what dana and daniel were just talking about as they saw all of us. but i guess the other element that really intrigued me about the film was that it was just such a weird side show that everybody needed in that moment. and i'm wondering, and i, and i sort of say, you know, the waffles and the, you know, breakdown and because everybody needed something to happen in that moment, i just use in your insight about this. as you look at the conflict to day, do you think there's any prospect of another story out there? maybe i know it's not your your field, but wondering whether side shots like this are possible amidst real horror.
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my sense of what offers in the story were telling is that it was meant to be the beginning of a process which was forwarded almost as soon as it started. so the larger idea of getting people in the room to talk is good. but there are 2 things about also one is the, the principle of getting people in the room to make changes is incredibly valid. no matter how you look at it. but the real differences, great leadership, are there people among the leadership who are willing to make the kinds of sacrifices that are necessary for real peace? and without that ingredient, as well as the oss love, the idea of off low. there's no, there's that it's not going to work. so that's where it's not just one side of the other. and we don't try to argue that in the film. it's, it's, there's a huge, huge human rights issue and huge question that has to be addressed right now. and we're only telling a history story, we're not pretending to say something specific about now, except that there was at least a glimmer of an effort to make
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a change. well let me, let me ask you one of the, the people in that film that intrigued me. the character that was being played with yoshi bailing and israeli politician who kind of kept this secret from his boss for quite a while. daniel levy daniels here. daniel worked at the right hand of us. he bale and daniel, are there any yoshi valence brewing in the israeli political system today? deanna, are there any palestinian leaders and we haven't had elections for you know, over a decade mahmoud abbas just delayed elections again. are there, are there any stars rising that would that would give us an opportunity. say well we've got a chance for reset because they're different people. but daniel, are there any yoshi balance? well, of course individuals and leadership matters. there are no. you'll see. paintings is the short answer, but the longer on so raised those things also tend to be contingent
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under circumstances over 0 accountability for israel, and the maximum. impunity for israel circumstances guaranteed, unfortunately by american policy international policy in particular, american policy. under those circumstances, you'll see bailey's others are unlikely to emerge. and the crucial thing here is, remember that those folks coming to a root. and i think that the palestinian side did not necessarily represent what it was supposed to represent or place hand strongly. and the israeli side could have been more forward leaning more courageous, but crucially, they come into a room against the backdrop of a power relationship. and if we don't understand this in the context of an occupying power and an occupied people, and if we haven't addressed that a symmetry where no flow happened, the bushes administration,
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but just on something very unusual. visa be israel, a loan guarantee. the gulf war had just sent signals to israel. i'm most crucially . the palestinians had been through the 1st intifada, which deanna can speak to much more than i in a way the piano stole some of the close of that into bottle. but crucial here is, does the powerful party have a reason, an incentive structure to drive towards compromise them? right now israel does not have unfortunately because of the impunity and indulgence it is recorded. in john, i'd love to hear what you think is brewing in the palestinian political system. but listening to daniel, it seems to me that that is the rationale then on the palestinian side for violence to basically create cos that become hard for israel to, to, to accept and of force action. am i, am i wrong?
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but when it comes to again, on this issue of leadership, we have to understand that this is a one way occupation. it's not, i'm not occupying televi by not occupying israel. it's the israelis who are occupying palestinian territory. and that's why it's so imperative to stop getting out of this mindset that somehow there needs to be 2 equal parties or that there are 2 parties. it's one party, it's one party that's doing the, occupying another party that's on the receiving end of that occupation. and, and so if we're talking about lack of leadership, the lack of leadership comes from the fact that there is no israeli leader that is willing to and it's military rule. and there's no international leader that's willing to force israel and military rule. and so when you have this situation and you have an framework in which palestinians are left defenceless, left with it, with israel taking over their, their land, taking over their lives. of course, people are going to go out and defend themselves. and this is why it's so important for us to really make sure that we understand this context. this isn't about
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getting to people into a room and shaking hands and then throwing away old old, old anger, et cetera. this is about an ongoing military occupation. the denial of freedom and it's a one way occupation that israel could easily undo if it took a decision, a political decision to do that. but it's never taken that political decision. and sadly, the international community has never taken that decision either. it's abdicated it's responsibility. and somehow turn this into a, both sides is them. there aren't 2 side, there is one side. i want to come back to barton a moment. but what you just said is that there's a, you know, a lot of negligence and dereliction internationally. let me just ask you about the by the administration has come in succeeded the trump administration succeeded jared, questioners work on the abraham accords and others. and you know, daniel levy and i have known each other for decades. and i've always wondered when the moment would occur when israel,
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when israel palestine issues were less of strategic consequence to america, they may be of moral consequence. but when you see other arab states now normalizing with israel, with this problem not solved, deanna. does that mean that this is going to essentially be, you know, a permanent ulcer that gets unresolved? no, i don't think so. like we've seen that with the trump administration. they tried to, we palestine under the rug. they tried to do away with it. they made sure that arab governments ended up normalizing with israel. but let's be clear, these are our government. these are not the air people. and we still see around the world as we saw with, with the recent bombing campaign that israel carried out against, against the gaza. strip and the and by the way, in the shootings that were happening in the lock them off, that we saw that there are millions of, of supporters around the world's pushing for palestinian to be free and pushing for
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palestinian liberation. so they may try to think that they can sweep it under the rug, but of course this simply continues to raise its head. i think that what we're beginning to witness is as the, in the worth of what my friends were beginning to see. the cracks in the wall were beginning to those cracks, travel up the wall. and it's, i think, just a question of time before we see that international public opinion and the shifting policy. daniel, what you and i talked about facts on the ground for years. in fact, on the ground to day are there is a raging conflict. i thought i talked to senator chris murphy just the other day and, you know, he admitted that our tools in our leverage in this conflict are, are, are thinning and getting smaller, not larger. how do you see the facts on the ground? what can be moved? well, i somewhat dispute the idea that american leverage is spinning. i think american willingness to use its leverage remains as limited as it ever was. i think you
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spoke about the strategic significance to the us. i think in that respect things may well have shifted. i think the strategic significance today is much more difficulty for a biden administration. seeking to say, hey, america is back and america is back means we stand up for international law values, human rights. and yet this is how we treat the palestinian situation. this is how we treat israel, denial of palestinian right? i think that's a very bad look. and then there's an internal domestic political moving the conversation from the shifting especially inside the democrat party. what i want to make clear is you asked about normalization. and here i think something important happened under trump, which has changed much,
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hasn't changed. trump took the normal playbook, which wasn't working. and he said, i'm actually going to accelerate. this is really sense of impunity and take it to a place where these railways actually started telling themselves we've law. it's just a matter of reading the palestinians, the terms of surrender. partly that was the normalization of course, which would never designed, of course, to help the palestinians situation what those did was again it, it accelerated these trend inside israel and what israel has woken up to the ana suggesting in this latest round of findings, it's not just about gods with what happened in east jerusalem? what happened inside these read it so with the palestinian citizens of protest in the west bank, palestinian refugees and others in jordan coming to the border the attempt to desegregate an atomize, the palestinians, and defeat them has failed. and the failure of the oslo process means the if
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we have a circle back to something, and i believe we will, it's just as likely, if not more, to be more of an equal, right. struggle about what this one physical space is ro is created. looks like perhaps on south africa than it is going to be 2 parties like holes. lo, negotiating separation, that's a full line which has shifted. only just ask you bart, whether in your discussions with mon, i'm sure i'm sure you're still speaking with her. does she herself think that was a completely unique moment or did she think that there is a role for players that are outside of the classic formal negotiations camp? because you know that the process is not yielded much success. i do think that diplomats in general, like, like mona, are always seeking ways to create other solutions rather than force. but that's, so that's the thing that they've always spoken to me about. but they were trying to
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be facilitators have changed. they weren't trying to pretend it was up to them to make the change itself. thank you, but generally just ask you about the palestinian side in negotiations for a moment. i'm. i'm sure you work with cyber comp deletes. i barracka who died this past year of coven. daniel introduced me to him in ramallah years ago. and i think that the, the question is, is there, i remember talking him, he was just sort of seemed exhausted all the time with the middle east piece of business as he called it, of, of this ongoing process that would never have an end. you know, as negotiator, looking at the new new team of folks that are trying to move this forward, do are there, are there ways to enhance their power? in this process, we used to have a cor tab. there used to be other nations. it involved. is it better the mike, should the united states pull back and let other stakeholders come in? what are your thoughts about answering up palestinian leverage in this process?
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if that's possible? i think that we need to move away from the to dreaded word piece process. and instead, be focusing on different mechanisms to hold israel to account to, to make sure that israel pay the price for continuing to deny palestinians their freedom. and this is why what we're seeing now, instead of people who are rushing to get involved in peace process moves are instead people who are trying to push for boy cuts of israel divestment from israel and economic sanctions to be placed on israel as well as the old israel legally accountable through the international criminal court. i firmly believe that we tried that route of the peace process and all that it yielded was a level of both sides. is them. and in fact, rather than both sides of them, it was mostly that palestinians had to swallow whatever it is that israel was doing, and simply accepted and were now not at that stage anymore were at a stage now where people are saying, you know,
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if is enough we live for generations under israel's military rule. it's time for us to have our freedom and if it means pushing for boycotts divestment sanction, that's the route that we're going to be taking. and it's just a question of time before we see that this palestinian leadership either fall or ends up end up taking on that same language and pushes for divestment the same way that the amc did in south africa. daniel, i want to get the last few seconds to you to see if you were to change any of the elements as you look at the real mass that we're looking at the world as it is right now, not the world. we like it to be. what would you change to get us into a different course? what we've been talking about, which is accountability and cost free occupation on these railey side. because the alternative to violence isn't always negotiations. you're not always in a negotiation because you can negotiate the sensation of all guilty. but sometimes the alternative is non violent protest. it generating,
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acquiring leverage. it's sanctioning a site that is violating what it should be held to under international law. last, the crucial missing ingredient. moment hopefully, in another period, it will look different, but that's where we're stuck right now. maximum. impunity breeds bad behavior and bad strategy, which is also bad for israel. well, fascinating conversation and sobering. i'd like to thank you all for being with us in newton, massachusetts deanna bu, to former legal advisor to the palestinian peace negotiations in london. daniel levy for me is really government advisor and peace negotiator. and with me here in the studio bartlett's year, the director of our slow, the feature film, which premieres this saturday may 29th on h. b o. c. it. so what's the bottom line? if anyone were to come around today talking about a durable piece where palestinians and israelis live as equals in freedom and safety, people would ask them, what do you smoking?
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but that's exactly that kind of far out thinking by a few people in norway that may also happen. call me weirdly optimistic, but why can't something like that happen again? it was such an out of the blue event at the time and it came with violence on the ground was raging and neither side wanted to think about peace or the other side's rights. sound familiar? i don't know if another office is achievable, but what i do know is it morally, we can't allow the status quo to continue. and that's the bottom line. ah, news. news. news, news. news,
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down on june 25th join us for lloyd coverage at the historic us court case reaches a conclusion june on the jersey. oh i knowledge, cooney the and interim president is summoned to an emergency echo of the regional book decides on a response to the political crisis. ah, hello there. i'm the se, hey, this is out there like from also coming up the 10s of thousands of purchases take to the streets of brazil, calling for president, joy hamilton.

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