tv [untitled] June 8, 2021 9:00pm-9:31pm +03
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on al jazeera o, we understand the differences, minorities of conscious across the world. are you taking out 0 or bringing the news and current affairs? ah, there. oh, this is al jazeera. ah. you're watching the news, our live from headquarters in bel. hi and jerry and obligated coming off in the next 60 minutes. jim, but finding that some of the general said, the un court upholds a life sentence for 78 year old rock from a luggage known as the butcher of bosnia 800 people are arrested in
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a global crime thing. that trick criminal organizations and using an app secretly run by the f. b i. a family walk ends in tragedy for muslims and a canadian city are killed and what the prime minister is calling a terror attack. a singing reception for president menu, calling during your visit to southern from german ashwin for salem, takes organizing committee mess on chase. the insult of counseling. the game was not on the agenda, but it was confirmed. the athletes traveled to japan. some countries with high case cases when to be ban. ah, welcome to the news our a you and court has rejected the appeal of former bosnian serb general right from a law ditch. he was sentenced to life in 2017 for genocide and war crimes,
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including the sweat bernita, a massacre done. the butcher of bosnia melodic was found guilty of being involved in the killing of more than a 1000 muslim men and boys during the bosnian war in the 1900 ninety's. the judges upheld his conviction on life sentence 26 years after the issue of his initial warrant in lie to you and then nodded. and that's why you did not. it was just meant as a me to get this in the general sentence, right? just in there for my love and find jenny, i'm the defender that me some like demo printed up in you posing a the boston it's running us in a heck. so what's the reaction to this conviction?
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well, very mixed feelings here that were a victim. so here would travel, so all the way from both now to a trans, this appeal hearing, they were of course release relief. that's a lot. it will never be walking around freely anymore. that he will be in person for the rest of his life. but there are also disappointed that he was acquitted for genocide and other parts of book, you know, rather than in brittany. he was found guilty for this genocide and so, but anytime 1995. but they say what happened before them and the years and the early years of the war was also genocide in their eyes. and they say it's not only very painful for the survivors and relatives there, but it also sends a wrong signal to the situation at the moment in the same area where people are still being glorified. conflict of war, criminals being glorified and the ideology of ethnic divisions. is still very much alive, so that was that kind of disappointment. but from the court,
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they said it was a milestone for international justice at that a long while that has been called the most the best documentary international tribunal in history with so many witnesses and documents were presented here. it's so important for the history of the conflict who had to have had this trials. so there was this, this final closure of this very historic event today here. and they have 3 decades though, waiting for a justice step. what does it mean for the victims to have waited so long for the conclusion of this process? yes, it's fairly difficult because i've been speaking to the model officer, but any who actually ruffled to be here in the hague. and i asked her also about is this closure, you know, also nearly 30 years. she lost her 17 year old son and 22 other relatives in so but anytime, but the work closure didn't come from her mouth didn't feel like clothes,
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she still felt ok. this is another chapter that has now been close because a lot each trial is finished. but it's so many orders that we meet in somebody, every day perpetrators who have still not been conflicted, haven't been brought to court because the law local justice system is not prosecuting these people. she said this is now or focus so it doesn't sound like there will be any closure any time. so. ok, thank you so much the boss and reporting from the hague. now in mirror, so you're good. she is a survivor of the threat benita genocide. he's also director of the server nature memorial center and she says the verdict is acceptable, but the fight for justice will continue. 2 out of 5 judges actually voted in favor of recognizing crimes committed, another municipalities involved outside 70 as genocide. i think that kind of changes the big picture quite a lot. it's now
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a credible and judgment school of thought, legally speaking, other than that, i mean, there was really no surprise if you knew any, if you know anything about how the tribunal works, you know, about the amount of jurisprudence and the amount of actual physical evidence. and testimony that this trial has a built upon. you know, you can be surprised. so we are where we are 5 corners away from here is a town where i was born, it's called brought to nuts. and last night there was actually a celebration gathering and celebration of commodity and it's done local, you know, and there's an entire political class that's heavily invested in ensuring that commodity legacy lives. and there's a very simple fact behind it. about 202-5000 people were actually involved in the seventy's operational severance, genocide, operation alone. so these are people who are actually invested in him being
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a hero because they actually have to look themselves in the mirror every day and go on living. knowing that they've actually followed a mass murderer that they've committed rape, that they've committed murder that they've taken part in. force will deportation, forcible deportation. so, you know, that's why it's, it's not, i'm not, i'm not an optimist when it comes to that, but hey, we're not about to enter a dialogue with these people. what we are telling this narrative is based on facts, is based on forensic evidence. it's based on dna technology, all right. what they're saying is based on, on myth, on outright lie. and there can really be a denial of, you know, we cannot really haggle about the fact i cannot speak for mothers who have remained alone or having lost their entire families, you know, their livelihood for me. once again, this is not something that i this is something that. busy i have expected life goes
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on, we will go on fighting much his legacy in this country. we will ensure that or try to ensure within our lifetime that the injustice that he impose in this country's address hundreds of suspected criminals had been arrested after they revealed plans about drug shipments and carrying out killings on what they believed was a secure messaging system. but the operation doug trojans shield was secretly being run by the f b i. paul brian and report global police rates have included the italian mafia, asian crime syndicates, drug cartels, and illegal motorcycle gangs. more than 800 arrests in 16 different countries, the criminal gangs thought that that communications were encrypted and secure. what they didn't know with the devices called anom had been developed by the f b i. in collaboration with australian and european police,
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the criminals using these devices believe they were secretly planning crimes far beneath the radar of law enforcement. but in reality, the criminals were not underneath the radar. they were on it. criminal gangs today rely on secure digital communication. on the plan was a real slow burner. the 1st handful of compromised unknown devices were quietly supplied to criminals in australia, around 18 months ago, and built up a solid reputation among the criminal underworld. then when law enforcement knocked out the rival encroach athens guy e z c networks earlier this year, more than 12 thousands of the compromised anom devices were in circulation all around the globe. multi $1000000.00 international crime. empires were now openly visible to the f. b. i and police and the criminal communicated in 45 languages about things like dr. again, drugs, arms and explosive ram rate, 80,
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and guess decks armed robberies. and last but not least, contract killings. the coordinated rates around the globe have found more than $32.00 tons of various illegal drugs. hundreds of firearms and weapons have been recovered and nearly a $150000000.00 in cash encrypted currency has been ceased. the 3rd mobile phone encrypted medical phone network to be compromised by law enforcement within a very short period of time. and i expect others coming. so who can you trust? there are still criminal networks in existence. there are other elicit communications networks still operating. but when police, she's called this operation a watershed moment in global lauren enforcement. it's difficult to disagree, pull brennan, i'll just era my car has joining us from washington, d. c. and we heard from the f. b i a little earlier on. what more did we learn? about this operation, what we learned about the origins of that, and that's back in 2015 in san diego,
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which is why the f b. i help that news conference in that city. then there were risks made of manufacturers of an online application that was being used by criminals, with the knowledge of those who designed it. those executives of a company that did that were arrested. and then in subsequent months, a number of other similar companies were closed down and the f b i together with australian police realize that there was a vacuum in the market. and hence they developed this app called on, which was 1st applied in australia. this would appear to be because of privacy concerns and because u. s. law enforcement had to get all the warrants in place to be able to carry out what is essentially surveillance on these criminal entities or alleged criminal entities. so it began in australia, ran out as a test then, and it was one single alleged criminal who was given the 1st device he lived in australia at the time,
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then moved subsequently to turkey. but over subsequent months, that device or the application was provided to more and more criminal organizations until it reached about 12000 individuals working for some 300 criminal syndicates. so this was a massive slow operation. and the only reason that would appear to have come to light now is because one of the search warrants ended. so the was revealed in court clearly the f, b i and other law enforcement agencies concerned now that the criminals would know about this particular thing. and hence, around the world, the effects have not been made public. mike the, the f b i is tilting this as a great success, but there is also a conversation going on about the tactics used by the f b i and whether privacy was breached. well
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certainly it is as the f b, i says, probably the greatest criminal thing operation in living memory. but that all those issues of privacy that defendants are likely to be going into. now the f. b, i had indicated that it had taken legal precautions every single step of the way. and this is why it started in australia. it would appear to allow the f, b i to be able to get its legal ducks in a row, so to speak, to be able to get the search warrants all the necessary legal requirements to do what is essentially hidden surveillance off individuals and organizations that the f b, i had completely entrapped in terms of what they were doing, so they will be discussion, no doubt, that will come before the course when the defendants appear before the courts. we do know as well that a grand jury has been and paneled within the united states, 18 individuals will appeal before that grand jury. now in those discussions,
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which are of course secret, there's likely to be a lot of debate about privacy concerns. despite the f b i's saying that this is a major, major achievement. thank you so much. my kind of reporting from washington d. c. once more had on the algebra news hour, including us, vice president, rising mexico seeking help to curb migrant numbers at the border. we talked to the head of a pharmaceutical company, madera, about the lessons learned from the cove in 1910 and a couple of 1st timers are heading to the semi finals at the french open house coming up later. ah, but 1st the french president and 91 of my call has been slapped in the face was visiting a small town in the south. the 20 the
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man was reportedly shouting down with macaroni before he swung the slap, french media reporting 2 people have been arrested. natasha butler is in paris with more on the incident. he was there on a meet and greet. he likes to go and meet the public. he went up to a fence and you see this mad reach out with his hands. you can even hear the sound of his hand on a minute, micro cheap. as you can imagine, micro security quickly bundled him away to safety, and 2 men were arrested. one we understand is the perpetrator, the minute slapped, the french president the other, the person who filmed this incident and then posted it on social media. we understand also from reports in french media that when the man slapped the french president that he shouted out the slow good, which is usually associated with the far right groups who have yet yet to know whether or not it would be confirmed that this person had any links to any
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political party doesn't seem so at this stage, but those 2 perpetrators do risk up to 3 years in jail and a very hefty fine indeed. what amount of micro has continued though with his visits of this town, he is not a stranger to this sort of incident. he has not been attacked physically in the past, but he certainly been verbally abused when he visited towns. but he does, as i said, i like to meet the public. he does like to go and chat to people, sometimes that ends in the key to debate, but i was very much part of it. but so now somebody who likes to try and talk to all people in all sorts of situations. but of course, they're sort of violence, bring things to another level and you'll have to will now have to see whether or not he'll be able to continue with the sort of open meet and greets and towns as he continues on what is called a tour from because he's actually a sort of pre presidential campaign, tour of the country. us vice president comma le harris is meeting the mexican
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president to undress many lopez of red door. they are discussing vaccines, sharing economic relations on migration. the biden administration is seeking mexico's help to curb the spike and migration at the us mexico border. it's been overwhelmed by the number of migrant children and families from central america arriving at its southern border. john holeman is joining us from mexico city. so what have we heard so far? well actually the man can, for a minister, is just put out a statement about what was discussed in the meeting. they didn't come out to take questions, president lopez or bro dog or the us vice president. and in the statement, i think it talks a lot about economy, about human rights. one of those things obviously very important. 80 percent of met exports actually go to the united states. but i think what everyone was really watching this meaningful was the talk about migration. the number of migrants that goes from central america, countries like on us and salvador, what tamala,
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countries, suffering poverty, suffering gang violence. i'm recently suffering to huge storms, which have really upended the lives of so many people and caused them to try and see can new life in the united states and go through mexico to get there. that was one of the, the prince blames this meeting is president lopez over the door said before it kicked off. so in this statement, the interesting thing about that probably the most interesting thing is saying that the governments have agreed to set up a specialized group to combat the traffic of people, the smuggling of people into the united states, presumably and to have a high level meeting there's no date for that yet on security. so basically saying that they're going to be working closely together on this theme of trying to trying to stop people smuggling and presumably as well the flow in general of people trying to get to the united states. and remember that yesterday in guatemala,
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vice president campbell, i have, is, had a simple message for people don't travel, don't go to the united states, mexico and the president, obama, president trump, and now under president biden, has actually acted as a sort of extension of the us border wall if you have it on the banks of the river on the south of mexico, that it's been quite a present, especially at times of pi migration of police and the national guard to try and stop people getting a cross. they would probably have talked about that as well and not continuing. so the us vice president that there to tackle the issue of migrants traveling from central america you're saying. but what about all the mexicans who are also immigrating to the migrating? fuse me to the us yet, that's something that wasn't, that wasn't put in this statement from the mich confirmed minister, where he did put aide, as well, in terms of economic activation. sorry for the south of mexico, and that's something that president, nope, is over the door, has long been saying that that needs to happen as well,
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to start mexicans from poor areas, and particularly in the south, the country from migrating to the united states. now there's more than 300000 mexicans were detained in the us border, the court, the us border under last fiscal year on the statistics from the customs and border protection agency of the united states. we were actually in one of the areas that she's very high migration, a state called mitchell khan, and that state has cartels and vigilance groups fighting over it. the government, especially in the areas where that is happening, is weak. and there's also actually the vigilantes admitted to us on camera, they said, yes, we're getting guns from the united states, a smuggled over the border, intimate scope. and that's how we all my cells. different cartels have told me that in other parts of the country as well. so this is all cyclical things. guns from the us, arriving violence in different parts of the country. people leaving in waves,
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we saw mitchell county ghost towns where people everyone had gone. we also interviewed with people at the us border that said basically, i've been threatened by the gangs, and there's no way i can go back. there's a lot of people right now from which we can in those other parts of the buddha. over parts of the country there at the u. s. buddha. so those are all issues that are going to have to be discussed. maybe in the high level security meeting and come to terms with okay, thank you so much john holeman reporting from mexico city. now canada's prime minister has called the killing of a muslim family. a terror attack motivated by hatred, a man his wife mother and teenage daughter old, died when they were deliberately rammed with a pickup truck on sunday. relatives of the family have called on people to stand up against races around islam, a phobia zane, basra b reports a sidewalk like any other in canada. now the scene of the country's latest hate crime and another makeshift memorial for the dead. all of the victims
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in this matter are members of the same family. the deceased include a 74 year old female, a 46 year old male, a 44 year old female. and a 15 year old female, 19 year old male, the sole survivor remains in hospital with serious injuries. we believe that this was an intentional act and that the victims of this horrific incident were targeting. we believe the victims were targeted because there is land, mac, faith, candidates, government has been worried about race based and religious attacks for years. let me be clear. this was an active asperger perpetrated against muslims, against londoners, routed and unspeakable hatred. this activists are phobia, this active, unspeakable hatred, must be followed by action. compassion, actually, kindness, actually, humanity, actions, sallow, dirty mc justice above all love. the family was out for an evening stroll when the
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suspect nathaniel feldman drove his pickup truck at them. as they waited to cross at an intersection. he was wearing a body armor style vest when police arrested him at a nearby shopping mall. their lives were taken in a brutal, cowardly, and brazen act of violence. this killing was no accident. this was a terrorist attack, motivated by hatred in the heart of one of our communities. our monthly moment. high profile attacks by extremists have happened before. last year, a volunteer caretaker was stabbed to death outside a mosque in toronto in 2018 also in toronto, a driver killed 10 people a year before. 6 people were shot dead at a mosque in quebec. this latest attack comes days after protests over indigenous schools took a dramatic turn. demonstrators in toronto tore down the statue of egerton ryerson,
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the architect of the residential school system that racially abused indigenous communities for more than 100 years. the discovery of the remains of $215.00 children in a mass grave at a school run by the government. and the catholic church has spark nationwide anger . but it's feared there's more to come. we know that there were probably lots of sites similar to kamloops that are going to come to light in the future. and we need to begin to prepare ourselves for that. canada is trying to deal with its legacy of mistreating 1st nations communities. amid a surge in right wing extremism targeting minority groups. a 2020 study funded in part by the canadian government. warned of the growing and unprecedented influences of white supremacists hate groups and militias. inside canada zane basra v o 0 tough current of virus restrictions are being lifted in colombia carbon football
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guitar. the move is being made even as the number of infections and deaths remain high. a nighttime curfew will be removed while bar schools and universities will all reopen. it's happening after more than a months of mass protests against the government. alessandra and cathy is joining us for the latest from bogo to us. so how is the government's explaining this decision? alessandra, look very, and the government essentially is saying that the economic, social, and political moment in the country did not allow them to continue keeping in place restrictions both at the national level and at the local level, evidently more than a month of daily protest and part of many people on the streets has also meant that there have been agglomeration, which in turn have possibly been responsible of a continuation. i'm extension of this 3rd peak of the i'm damning so far,
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the worst since the beginning of this credit crisis here in columbia. many doctors, though, of course, are launching the alarm, saying it's not the time to reopen, saying that the real risk here is the total collapse of the health system right now . in the capital book with a number of other cities intensive care units are close to a 100 percent hospitals like the one where we are having a very hard time finding people, finding beds for people, not only intensive care units, but also emergency rooms are absolutely full behind me, you can see a couple of field hospitals that were set up at this particular hospital in the south of boca, at, to find me more a bad to have more beds available. there are 25 more beds available here. dose are
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also a fool. so a very, very complicated situation, but at the same time the government is saying, look, the situation, the economic situation here is so bad for the people that we just need people to be employed. again, we need to get the economy going. we're simply not in a situation where we can impose restrictions. again, it seems like a major paradox. and that's what many doctors also believe. other doctors say, look, we've been dealing with this for more than a year and a half. it's time to find a balance and we're gonna have to see in a couple of weeks if this was the right bit. yeah. so how would you gauge public support over this move? well look, if you talk to people on the street in bogota, they will tell you that to the time for them to be out and work as now that day,
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they're not able to remain at home. so a lot of people definitely agree with the decision made by local authorities and by the national government. i guess that the key here will be for people to take care of themselves using a mask at all times, especially when they're close to other people. and you know, just be sure to maintain the limits that still exist on the number of people that can enter a restaurant or bar. but it's definitely a very tricky and very worry. so decision a given given how bad the level of infection continues to be here in the capital, bobo time across the country. thank you so much on a sandro for that reporting from bogo tom. we'll continue the, the conversation over the current of ours pandemic, and speak to new bar. and who's the chairman and co founder of where they are now.
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he's also the ceo of flagship pioneering, and he's joining us from boston that's over in massachusetts. thanks so much for speaking to us on al jazeera. so, flagship and eurasia group have recently released the really important report on the pandemic. and the lessons learned when you look at the scale in the magnitude of this pandemic, what do you think are the lessons learned? well, thanks for having me. there of course, is going to be a lot of time to reflect on what we can take away, but it's not too early to start. and one of the things we realize is that there's a lot of things that we thought could not be done. that actually have been done, i'm speaking about the development timelines of vaccines, the production scale, and now we have some new work to do to make sure that the vaccines are made available throughout the world. and that's a significant ramp up and logistics challenge that we are working towards. but at the same time, we also realized that are underlying health systems across the world. whether in
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poor countries or rich countries, we're completely unprepared to deal with this type of an infection. and, and i think it's time that we really think carefully about what we need to be planning for in the future. if all we did is plan for yet another pandemic. and then if it doesn't come in 10 or 20 years, take our guard down as we had done before. i think it will be a real shame, particularly for all the lives lost and all the damage done. it would really be a difficult experience to have just gone through and then to completely throw all the way. that's why we put out this report. that's why we're having these meetings the next today and tomorrow i had a g 7 to really start a discussion around shifting our focus from just health care, which is really sick care to a notion of health security. and that's where we think is one of the new avenues that has to be opened up as we think about the future, right. one of the call that you making the report is the call for prioritizing.
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