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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 25, 2023 3:00am-3:30am AST

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revealing eco friendly cindy since to come back threats to our planet on al jazeera or a pushing with one tour global perspective. mm. oh.
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holders sessa begin a critical to rwandan precedence is released from prison in a deal mediated by cattle. ah, but i won't carry johnston. this is al jazeera life from there. also coming up, be prepared to 1st track forcefully. protect our people. that's exactly what happened last night. president biden's warning for to ron or to u. s. s. tries targets iran back forces in syria. germany's chancellor steps into reassure investors as european banks take a hammering on the markets and israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu was met with protest with his proposed judicial changes during
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his visit to the u. k. ah, the hotel, rwanda manager, who saved more than 1200 lies during the genocide 9094, has been freed from prison. brandon government commuted the sentence. so that poll rosetta bettina and a deal at bro could buy cattle. he was sentenced to 25 years on terrorism charges 2 years ago. and what supports is called a sham trial, recessive. again, there is that now at the residence. so the category ambassador in kigali. welcome web reports. 2 years ago, he was sentenced to 25 years on terrorism charges. he refused to participate in the court proceedings, rights groups and observers said the trial was a sham. but guess what? i did not have household to the how the nature of the what the government because it does not. it doesn't talk to criticism on certificate to shed the right to the,
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to the system or for one of the dictatorship. that's why the system again i've been fighting for for human rights, wonderful democracy in wanda. and he had been sort of become a victim excited to nearly 20. earlier he was made famous by the hollywood film hotels lawanda. he's credited with saving more than 1200 lives during the one that 994 genocide. more than half a 1000000 tutsis and modern hutus was killed by who to militia during the civil war . the rwandan patriotic front, led by pul cami won the war into power company later became president recess a begin at became his critic. one does government accused him of supporting an armed group that wanted to overthrow the government. we have maintained serious concerns about this case,
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especially as regards political violence. but i'm groups including those that are led by people operating from develop countries. but we have now agreed on no fundamental principles and we're able to to, to move forward with the humanitarian relief recess. a beginner has belgian citizenship and was a resident of the wrath. 3 years ago he was deceived into boarding a plane into by and later repaired in rwanda's capital kick only in handcuffs rights group say he was kidnapped when the government says his sentence has been commuted following a presidential. pardon malcolm web al jazeera before this s a beginner is to travel to cattle and then to the us where he's a permanent resident, us secretary of state antony blank and his fangs. there were london government for
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freeing him. he treated saying, thankful to know paul, it will be rejoining his family soon. grateful to the rwandan government for making reunion possible. he also thank cattle for assisting my colleague steve clemens, host of al jazeera, the bottom line, interviewed rondon at president porter, got the twice in recent months. he has more on the government's decision. but a remarkable change of the turn of events. in december i interviewed president, could guy, may you said he would not be bullied into making a decision and that it would take an invasion to get paul recess of begin out of prison. in march in doha, he, i asked him, i said, hows that position going. and he said, you know, sometimes you have to forgive the unforgivable and i got goosebumps on the back of my neck. i said, wow, they are going to release paul recess, begin him. and i said to him on stage it in the interview, if,
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if you make that decision, will you give me a call? and they did. and so i think that the united states, with a lot of assistance from cutter, was able to get to an understanding with for wanda, about how to get paul recess, beginner in 20 others released without removing or pardoning his conviction. so the conviction remains on the books is sent and is commuted. he is going to go to doha soon, and then we'll move to the united states to reside there. what seems to be the key element is a change in stance. from the u. s. government about how it was approaching, present, gama, and so rather than raining recess a given as a wrongly detained person, thus invalidating the legitimacy of his conviction. i think the white house, my sources tell me the white house reached out to find a different path that would not undermine the solvency of her wand as concerns
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about security and terrorism. and the death of civilians that they felt was tied to some recessive again, as associations. president joe biden has warned iran the u. s. will act forcefully to protect americans use after the u. s. military carried out air strikes against iran linked targets in syria and retaliation. for an attack that killed an american contractor, an injured 5 soldiers that speak to an official now he joins us live from washington. d. c. allen, one boys, whitehouse saying about these strikes in relation to iran. well, the situation in syria is escalating in the last few years of have reports of more strikes towards the american bases in syria. certainly that there was the incident on thursday night where an american base was attacked. one contract and a number of soldiers were injured. in response to that, the united states launched
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a series of missile strikes towards militia thought to be linked to the iranians in response. and joe biden, when he was in canada and the last couple of hours at a news conference, he talked about the situation and gave a warning to iran. i'm also grateful for the professionalism or service members who were so ably carried out this response. and to make no mistake, united states does not, does not emphasize seek conflict with iran, but be prepared for us to act forcefully. protect our people. that's exactly what happened last night. of course, given was, was the question will be, know whether or not there is going to be a father escalation in the area, whether the americans will respond or whether they will try and suck the oxygen out of the area and try and come everything don't. there's also questions to be asked to about the americans, why the continue to have trips in syria. there's no one years,
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relatively un resolutions. there's no legal reason for them to be there. of course, they moved in at the time of the battle against the ice or caliphate. and donald trump, who was the president at the time, said the soldiers will stay there to take the oil as he put it. so there will be questions and particularly after these attacks, why the united states are still in syria at this point. i don't thank so much for that update. us stalks have closed hire despite us self among european banks, led by deutsche bank shares in the german giant, close down 8.5 percent and made ongoing fears of a crisis in the banking sector. jaylen chancellors shall says, try to be assure europe that the bank is profitable. dominic cane explains what's happening with deutsche bank and the market. what's behind this is what jargon is strictly is called c d. s credits default swaps. that jargon translates to the cost of insuring against the possibility that
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a bank might default on its debts. and that is been caused by what has been happening in recent weeks. not just this, what we've seen, the value of shares tumbling in institutions like deutsche bank. but what was happening in switzerland, in so far as could histories, is concerned. and then you b. s. this idea, the cost of insuring against the risk that large european banks might default on their debts. it's all about confidence. there appears to be a real short fall in confidence in the financial markets about the overall strength and stability of the european banking sector. that's why we see the share prices real. the value of shares really tumbling in recent days and petty for, as an economist who predicted to the 2008 financial crash. she explains how the costs of living crisis is fueling the banking problem. the fact the matches we had
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an overall lack of confidence in the financial system, and that's been exacerbated by the determination of central bankers to rapidly wrapped up interest rate at a time of the cost of living crisis. at the time when you ukraine has been invaded, we were, there's a war going on. all of this has n, as in, you know, has problems and create problems for the economy. both in contracting demand, but also in inflation. and what central bankers are doing are adding to the burden of inflation by increasing the cost of borrowing. and that seems to me to be at the root of this in this instability. that's in my view, the wrong economics. it it's, it's an attack or working people who are not responsible for the rise and inflation . the right. inflation has a lot to do with commodity markets,
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deregulated commodity markets in energy, in grains in you know, basically in oil gas and food. and those markets are global markets. they are dominated by speculators, that that's where the cause of the inflation is. and of course, the war in ukraine protests against the french government's ability to raise the retirement age of forced the british king to postpone his state visit the french president to my own. mccrendon says it would lack common sense for king charles to visit in the middle of the demonstrations. hundreds of police were injured is more than a 1000000 people took to the streets across the country on thursday. i thought about the reports from pears, streets littered with burnt garbage and broken windows. as the clean up began the day after a pension reform protest and the city descended into chaos. paris is mare said she understood people's frustrations,
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but criticized some of their methods. you'd oscar will called in the violence that we condemn that i condemn, distracts attention from the main issue, which is that most french people want the withdrawal of the pension reform. some protesters and police clashed in several french cities. overnight. police union said more than 400 offices in the country were injured thing. charles was due to visit paris and just a few days, but seems like this and more plan protest. her prompted beliefs, a palace to postpone the trip. at any you summit in brussels, prison macro said the king would be welcomed. another time you michael yonder, september sauce, we would have liked common sense if we had held a state visit for his majesty the king and the queen consort. in the midst of the protests and given the esteem and the friendship, we feel for his majesty the king and the queen consort and the british people. i made the decision to call him this morning and tell him what the situation was.
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trade unions won't emmanuel my quarters, scrap the pension reform, they say it's unfair and will hurt poor workers. but mcgraw says it's necessary to sustain the retirement system. a stand off that seems unlikely to end soon. his after butler al jazeera paris, at least $34.00 african migrants and refugees are missing after a boat sank off the coast to nicea is the 5th shipwreck in 2 days. according to officials there, the coastline of swags has become a major departure point for migrants heading to europe. benjamin netanyahu is on an official visit to united kingdom. you had a meeting with prime minister, she sumac and democracy on the front row. you do break the law and last night or talk between the leaders are taking faith
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against the backdrop, with process against missing your his trip. when he, israeli, is in the you, k and the border against his government. judicial changes turn the holiday following events about history. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu knows that where he goes these days, protests follow, and london is no exception. pro palestinian protested, but also the course. anti netanyahu protest as people like these who believe that the policies of his right wing held to a nationalist helper orthodoxy. government is leading the country towards what they describe as autocracy. this is not, and all of them in the continuation, this is the end of the democracy. i think there is no legitimacy for what they're trying to do. he came here to london to re focus international attention on iran, something he been in the central issue. israel, he wanted prime minister soon to join a coalition of countries that would work against the rounds up and to expand its
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nuclear program. what he didn't want to talk about under any circumstances is what these people very much do. want to talk about controversial plans and his government has to push push through judicial reform in israel that they say is an abuse of power, but would undermine the judiciary. and the supreme court that would have the power to the government to appoint judges. i'm that personally they say is essentially just a way of healing him prime minister netanyahu from the west consequences of corruption charges against it. and you cannot have a democracy without the law. and the legislation that has been proposed to not if you do still report it is the destruction of the legal system. as we know, i did hear history will not forgive. you reads one banner here on the crowd jobs shame. benjamin netanyahu was welcomed inside downing street, much less so, just outside. joe hall, al jazeera london. so that head on al jazeera and economy in ruins. we speak with
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pakistan is struggling with the soaring cost of living on the homecoming for dozens of ukrainian children. we've been captain russian control territory. ah, it's a $1000000000.00 money, no drink operation for coal. marsha is bigger than the company with financial institutions, regulators and governance complicit. i'm always offering. what is this? is that right? i've described that in a 4 part series. al jazeera investigative unit goes on to cover in southern africa, pittsburgh, we control 90 percent of government. once it's fully falling, it's perfectly brandon, good. part one on al jazeera, examining the impact of today's headlines. this was probably one of the deadliest disasters in the history of setting the agenda for tomorrow's discussions. this is
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the one that's been hitting cities, sharing personal stories for a global audience. can you talk a little bit about what life is like for african eliminate programs that open your eyes to an alternative view of the world today. on now to sierra in north korea, supreme leader kim jones sister is emerging as a likely successor one. 0, one east investigate north korea's most powerful woman. oh no, just the europe. oh the me.
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you want the thing out to remind you about top stores this. the man who saved more than 1200 lights during the ones in genocide. and despite the film hotel, the one that has been released from prison us secretary of state antony lincoln has to be returned in the government for freeing port recessive again and cut off for assistance present. joe biden has warned iran the us will act forcefully to protect americans off to the us military or without air strikes against a rounding congress, syria, retaliation for an attack on american face. and banking stocks have fallen in europe led by concerns deutsche bank could default on its dead. german bank shares end of the day down the 9 percent many focused on is are struggling to put food on the table as a domestic economic crisis is made worse by higher global prices. the governance is
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negotiating with the international monetary fund to unlock the $1100000000.00 bailout for the i. m f is insisting on reforms. i said, bake has more from the whole desperate for flower, the government announced there will be free distribution of it for those in need. and boxed on is in the middle of an economic crisis. inflation is at 40 percent. basic food prices have more than doubled. why the wages have stayed the same? it's the worst economic crisis since the countries independence gaze over the agreement. the prices have gone up by 300 percent before a $100.00 a month used to be enough. but now even if you get $200.00, you need to borrow money. we can't buy flour, sugar, so many things. and that's why i'm here buying clothes for my children. we can't afford new ones that delegating the hor stands as a reminder of more affluent times during the moral empire. i time before british rule, when this regions act put, accounted for nearly a quarter of the world economy. the people passing through it to day or more
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focused on the price of basic foods. prices that sometimes change over night. we're lucky bod. what a ha, the situation isn't very bad. i curse. those that are running the country from last to i get the price of flour has almost doubled. we don't want your fear. flower just lower. the prices focused on is we spoke, we don't want handouts, they want stability, the government to control the economy and food prices. your ha, johnny, even getting one meal a day. it's very hard. my husband died a month ago. i had to take my 2 children out of school to work. the prices have gone up so much for the poor. it's unspeakably difficult. swapped pompey, the nation, is now importing more than it's exporting. and it's still waiting for an international monetary fund package. but the i m f want reforms, but some say that government needs to do more reach. not just that you would with the americans. will you go to the sol? didn't japanese hope brussard the m f. then our associate look at all the things
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that you've not done. why are you not doing your own job for be after now? look at introspect on roku at ourselves. that what is it, what we're doing wrong? what does it that we are do that so many pakistan is from hebert, who garage e are talk to poor are not able to get jobs are not able to and make and meet that are we done in this country correctly or not? an estimated 8000000 people are unemployed and boxed on foreign currency reserves are only enough for a month of import. when you speak your people here, it's clear they're struggling. those are previously h to me other day. now i find it difficult to eat once a day. families have taken the children out of school, others put up, going to the doctor, all to save money to feed their families. and with the political turmoil in the country, there appears to be no end in sight with those in the red light. as i beg, i'll just era the holbrook, a son, the u. k. and e, you have formerly signed off on a post briggs. it deal to overhaul in northern ireland trade rules. u. k. lawmakers
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overwhelmingly endorsed a crucial part of the deal on wednesday, known as the windsor framework. it aims to reduce the number of checks on goods arriving in northern ireland from great britain or force. it has more formidable. in acting a deal at the u. k. in the e. u. both hope will man the relationship frayed by breaks its main unresolved question. the status of northern ireland. britain's foreign secretary james cleverly welcome, the e. use chief negotiator morrow savage to london. to sign the winds of framework, we've now found a way to move forward. we found a way to unlock the full potential of what is a very strong and important partnership between u. k. and the you. it's a british ports like liverpool, where it will be implemented most directly designed to address the anger of northern islands unionists and westminster. conservatives who said rules governing shipping from the mainland undermined northern ireland status as part of the united
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kingdom from a prime minister barak johnson's briggs at the left ineffective customs border between mainland britain and northern ireland. mandating strict checks on goods sent there under the new agreement that will still be the case for goods destined to end up in the irish republic. they will be subject to a so called read channel of cross c trade. but for a shipment of goods that is guaranteed to remain in northern ireland, it will go through a green channel requiring just one piece of documentation. the idea is even a mixed shipments of goods from various supplies to various customers. could be treated in this way. drastically reducing the barriers that have kept familiar products of northern irish shelves. but that doesn't mean that this focus post briggs attention has been resolved to everyone's satisfaction. some species of trees and plants for now still won't be allowed in northern ireland. because if you plant safety laws, the eyes for the right 515, the nose let 29. but the bigger issue is political. despite the overwhelming
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majority in the u. k. parliament this week, northern islands, democratic unionist party, and some conservatives against d. p isn't satisfied that the measure allowing the assembly in belfast to challenge changes to you law that will apply in northern ireland goes far enough and it's still refusing to go back into the power sharing administration. nonetheless, a deal announced with great fanfare. less than a month ago is now ratified and moving ahead. removing the main obstacle to e u. u. k. progress in other areas like scientific cooperation are 4 sit al jazeera, livable the final day of a week long up public hearings into israeli rights abuses has wrapped top united nations in geneva. the commission is examining the allegations by both israeli and palestinian officials and focusing on the shrinking space for civil society. it's heard from human rights act to this ger listen, though is who been subjected to
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a witness to tax restrictions and harrison's while the authorities and others. thousands of ukrainian children are returning to their families after saying they were held in russian control territory. keith claims more than 16000 children have been illegally deported to russia. last week, the international criminal court issued an arrest warrant for russia's president for ledger, the overseeing the practice. moscow denied the allegations. laura conner pulse. i this young girl says hi, dad, from a van this put children for russian controlled territory. there were uniting in kia a moment. he's been anticipating love. these children are among dolphins who've been reunited with their parents. they're working as ever. so the sonata giovanni, our mission, the rescue mission, as we call it, ended today. we returned 17 children who were deported to the russian federation.
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many ukrainian parents and russian controlled areas said they felt pressure to send their children to what they thought was summer camps. but instead they say they were places to teach russian patriotism. oh, we went to school because they would call and text my grandmother saying if she didn't send her child to school, they would send me to an orphanage. my grandmother sent me to school. we studied there for about 2 months, maybe less, and then we were told that we can go to a camp for 2 weeks. won't leave me your mother, she was deceived. then in turn, we were deceived, as well without any signatures. i was asking my mother how could they take the child away? i didn't sign. i didn't sign anything. how? my mother told me they entered the house. these big guys came in with assault rifles. it scary, especially when a small 3 year old child is running around it's scary. ukraine's government says morgan, $16000.00 children, have been deported to russia to be placed in institutions and foster homes. while
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moscow and 5th it saving ukrainian orphans or unaccompanied maintenance from the horrors of war. last week, the international criminal court issued an arrest warrant for russian president vladimir putin for the illegal deportation of ukrainian children. russia denied the allegations and then issued criminal charges of its own against the i. c. c. for ignoring putin's immunity as head of state. under international law, we're backing here of children who have been reunited with their parents have been promised support and count flaming while they recover from their ordeal. laura han al jazeera and you can find much more on our web site. the address for that is al jazeera dot com. what's it for me, for now? the news continues herron al jazeera after inside story to stay tuned difficult. ah
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ah, here's your weather update in a minute 15 while the city of zeros in pakistan's baluchistan province. us know for the 1st time in march and 15 years it's about $5.00 to $10.00 centimeters on the ground. they're quite the site. now most of the action on saturday is around the capital territory and punjab province. but that is spilling over into punjab state in india. as some thunder downpours there, so i think that could damage some crops. also seen thunderstorms through carola and towel. now do states in southern india on saturday. now off to indonesia, it is a very soggy forecasts for southern sumatra. island really right across a java island. i think we are running the threats of seen some flooding here. now in this part of the world, temperatures have been very high. northern vietnam,
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china's hon. none islands seen temperatures about 40 degrees. things are cooling off a bit. but really where the concern is, is southern china, just dallas with rain here, some spots more than a month's worth of brain. and that continues also funneling in to taiwan as well, but just saga conditions. it's a washout any way you look at it on saturday. but more quiet for japan, we did have some thunder. downpours in tokyo that pushes away, but still some showers and a mix on saturday. enjoy your weekend or susan, take her ah, there's a wave of sentiment around the world if you will, that she won't accountability from the people who are running their countries. and i think often people's voice is not heard because they know part of the mainstream news narrative. obviously we cover the big stories and report on the big events going on. but we'll say, tell a story to people generally don't have a voice. and then whenever chance with a question.

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