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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  March 28, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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we left, i way, way and the nice to for society is not interested in the individual ality, the freedom, the spirit of the young person studio b and spectate. on alex's era. the latest news as it breaks, evidence in a place like this, where people say just a few bodies have been recovered completely to the number of people missing with detailed coverage. a government policies are making it difficult for them to export on climate change has also impacted a supply from around the world to their rescue. plants showed their confidence in 1st republic bank, so all sides of which are critical to the functioning of the financial system. ah ah
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hello, i'm rob matheson with the news are alive from bill hob coming up in the next 60 minutes at least 39 people have been killed in a fight at an immigration detention center in mexico were live in mexico city. fury in france, tens of thousands of people rally against the president's controversial pension reforms. activists accused the u. n. of reaching its neutrality by 80 talks between me and mom and bangladesh on repatriated, rocky refugees. remarkably, it's emerged when the man ma delegation, travel to bangladesh. that transport was provided by the united nations and in came his remote north rift valley communities of uprooted, to make way for a military operation against suspected abandons. and i'm far as small with his fort france remain on track to qualify for next year's european championships in germany . benjamin of our power lately to one now when of our island to state top,
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after for ah, we are going to begin in mexico for at least 39 people have been killed after a fire swept through a migration detention center. the incident happened in the northern city of 3 that horace, near the border with the united states about 70 people are believed to have been in sight 28 of those killed war guatemalan nationals. mexico's president says the blaze broke out when migrants and asylum seekers set far to mattresses after finding out they'd be deported. some family members are waiting for information about their loved ones. no, ma'am, upon vienna, they forget we're human. we have feelings, but we're treated like dogs and i think your mother, we're not told about anything. our relatives could die and we'd never hear about it . now. your upload's life for us in mexico city,
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my own. what's the latest and all of this? mexican officials have confirmed that at least 39. my groups have died following a fire at a migrant detention center in the city. a few that what is on the us mexico border? this is a city that's just across the border from el paso, texas. officials have confirmed that at least 29 other men were also injured. following that fire they were taking the area hospital. watermark officials have also now confirmed that at least 28 of those 39 people who bouts away in the city of 2000. what is we're guatemala national and we've been trying to work and finding out exactly what the cause of the fire was. what it was that led to this tragedy and large scale loss of life on the border, mexico spread to president, spoke during his boarding daily press conference, and said that the fire was actually started by the migrants themselves. believe to
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have been part of a protest that they were staging after finding out that they were facing deport. people are taishan, should also note the tension have been high into that. what is in recent weeks, this is not the 1st incident. certainly the most deadly that we've seen in recent memory involving a migrant detention center with their habit. also incidence and tension between migrants and authorities, given that shelters in that, in the area already to the max. sort of pushing migrants to, to, to rush the border, hoping to gain entry into the united states. yeah. manual you're talking about the fact that these, these camps are very, very full. what are the conditions like in these centers? right, and this is not unique to the city of 2000 watt is migrate communities all along the us mexico border migrant shelters rather ard are to the break. so when situations like this happened where migrant shelters fill up. well, desperation also also starts to grow and it pushes people to do pretty extreme
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things. now mexico national migration institute has been struggling to curb this over these overcrowded conditions and detention centers along the us mexico border, but at migrant shelters and detention centers in other parts of the country. there are also been accusations of migrant authority as immigration agents using excessive force to sort of corral migrants. riots themselves are not that uncommon here in mexico either at detention centers. just last year there was a riot at a migrant detention center in the city of the one across from the us state of california, another riot in the city of stuff. i shoot out a migrant detention center. they are a long mexico's border with with guatemala. but again, nothing quite as, as dramatic as what we saw it take places you that what is in the late hours of monday. and once again, just goes to show you one of the many dangers that migrants face during their perilous journey across the mexico trying to reach that southern border of the
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united states. my. oh thank you very much indeed. as mirabella talking to his from mexico city. ok, let me take you to find out what tens of thousands of people are rallying once again against president manuel macros, controversial pension overhaul. it's the 10 stay of nation wide demonstrations. these are live scenes from paris right now. you can see some of the security forces for facing off against the some of the testers. there tear gas is being fired. anger is growing against the president after his sidestepped parliament, used executive powers to push through reforms without a vote. michael wants to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, at least 213000 officers have been deployed and the accusations are violent for his crackdowns against some protesters. ladies who are burglar amore micron has been playing devil and blind for nearly 2 months. ignoring week after
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week, all the anger and all the demonstration. and now once the law has been passed, that he agrees to meet with the unions to discuss the social agenda. and so he doesn't know what he doesn't understand, what the government doesn't understand is that today the work force refuses to move on until we go back on the terms of this law was hail to the object. dealt with what people are fighting with. we can't let this go and what adds fuel to the fire is the behavior of the government. what the police violence in particular is that, oh, well you see buses high when natasha battle is that those protests in pass and natasha . we're just looking at some of the pictures that have been coming in from the street so far as we can see, the security forces firing tear gas that some fires have been letting the streets talk us through what you are seeing at the moment. yeah, we've just had to move actually because of what is going on just a little bit further down the road as you say, some purchases happening?
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oh bins on fire. some have also smashed a couple of shop, say, say to police had moved in to try and clear the area i'd use take assaye. people have been moving not going to try to get out of the out of the way, but hopefully we can stay with you for a while. now what we see note today, that recent process on these small incidents of violence, they don't really represent the protest move. well, just been by and not that peaceful day, but the french terry minister has said that he has set up security for today. 45 days, some 30000 police officers to pull across the country. 5000 to hire a key in paris. natasha the the pension reform that where that's at the heart of all of this is being examined by france is constitutional court does every probability that it is likely to become a law. what are the protesters hoping to achieve by staying on the streets? as you say,
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a prison micron could be signing this bill into law in the coming weeks. but what the demonstrate to say is if they keep coming out, if they keep the pressure on the government, then the government will have to scrap the reform. that is what they want because they believe that this reform is unfair. and just the penalize is poor. people more than what the french president says is that this reform is necessary to sustain the pension system for future generations. so you really have 2 sides of a entrenched barrett. i mean, it is hard to see how the deadlock could be broken when the permanent trading in liter though, has a federal perhaps what the government do is spend the reform temporarily these parts of it. and we could perhaps have some independence mediation for the government to say, fall, i rejected that. so as i said, you know, it's very hard to see what will happen in the future. one of the issues we need to point out is that the, amongst these demonstrations that are people who have been described as, quote black blog, anarchists, as one of the titles has been given to them. who are,
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they are predominantly for another reason. they are just a centrally against the establishment or say, do, to what extent is there a risk that these demonstrations are getting derailed from the people who are genuinely have a grievance about the pension reform towards the protests and the violence that we're seeing on the streets which are really being led by other groups we know with most protests and frauds, we see this over and over again. the protests, all lead by trade union say, all peaceful movements, but you do have some smaller groups who come into the movements who are i'm t establishment or who just want to make trouble and cause violence. and that's often the focus often ends up being all back, but they all represent state of the greater movement. and in this particular sense, for the pension reform protests, i don't think that they're necessarily going to detract from the message that many
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of the most peaceful protests is have. and that is that they want this pension reform scrap. nevertheless, the violence is, of course and issues an issue for the people who come out to protest. and he's also an issue for the french governments as they have the scenes of violence on the street. no good for them either. that is why they've stepped up a police presence. the police though, both have been accused by some protesters or using a brutal tactics or as this goes on, of course is more good for anyone that has been there have been caused column on all sides. both politicians and to the trade unions under we'll say protesters, he just wants to come out to the streets and have their message. is there any sense of how, what kind of impact this is happening on a manual mac homes political futures a well, i think there is no doubt that it's not good for the french president. he is on the increasing portion, not only from the streets and the continued protest and demonstrations,
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but it will say politically because the french government pushed through this pension form by decreed by fostering opposition and peace. and, and no makers who all very angry indeed, let me then feel that they are not being heard. hi, good democracy in a way has become a shout that somebody would you hear loss on the street? not person micro will say he is use the constitutional tools available to him in order to push through a law that he believes is important to the country. he said, is my duty to do to push through this law because it's going to help future generations have a pension and a pension they deserve. but no doubt, this is damaging for president michael. i mean, he is very much, it is very much his reform. it was one of his presidential campaign thomas's, so the pressure is on him and the focus is on him as well. a lot of expertise in this protest, all my banners against him. a lot of anger against tyson. natasha. thank you very
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much. we can hear the noise building up behind you was to leave it there for the moment. this natasha boffin sophie, to this from fans. we're gonna stay with these pictures for a little bit. these are pictures from the streets of paris there on an estimated $200.00 or so demonstrations which, where planned to take part across the country on this particular day. i think this is the 10 stay of process that we have seen against this pension performed. but as a natasha was mentioning before, and we've also seen as small groups of so called honor guests or anti establishment groups who have been taking part in these protests as well. there is some suggestion that they are the ones who are in the main leading b violence that we have seen involving the security forces. you can see they are just sign on your screen at the moment. security forces backing off and from the crowd there to create a little bit of space. but the, in the main, the, the protest in the demonstrations that we have seen over the last few days have,
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as natasha was saying, been predominantly a well behaved. it is only had been, has been individual oh certain elements. and occasionally that we have seen this kind of violence that we're seeing at the moment on the streets of paris as and natasha was talking about. they government had moved this through the national assembly without a vote. it was using a special power called $49.00, and it wasn't because it wasn't clear that they had the numbers to pass it. but it is likely that that bill is going to be passed by the constitutional counsel, but it probably will happen about mid april. while north korea's liter qindzhong, and as i say, scientists to increase the production of weapons grade nuclear material, it released images of what appeared to be new tactical nuclear warheads. the developments come as the u. s. and south korea are holding their biggest joint military jose, in years, rob mcbride was on board. you assess nimitz,
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one of the world's largest warships, taking part in those exercises in the seas to the south of the korean peninsula, c u. s. aircraft carrier limits, launches it, warplanes, enjoy tax the sizes with the south korean navy. it's part of annual drills that are being scaled up again this year, following a 6 year low and comes and made escalating tensions with north korea. calling in to the south korean port of booth on the show of force is intended to demonstrate america's commitment to its allies. the u. s. and republic of korea alliance is prepared to adapt to new challenges and threats to ensure the security of future generations of koreans and americans. large scale air drills have been held using the latest fighter jets, as well as nuclear capable bombers from the u. s. air force, live fire exercises have been showing off the combined fire power of the allies, armor and artillery. such drills enraged north korea,
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which says they could provide a cover to launch an attack. some people might dabble with the idea of a preemptive attack or a strike against north korea, but it's, it's realistically impossible. and even more so with nuclear weapons, the north has been showing it sango with a range of missile launches from the heaviest and latest intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the mainland united states to small the short range, ballistic weapons, as well as its most advanced cruise missiles and even an underwater drone that it says could produce a nucleus, an army. on tuesday state media released images of li that came junglin inspecting what it says on new tactical nuclear weapons and technology for mounting warheads on ballistic missiles. undeterred,
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the u. s. is due to hold more naval drills with both the south korean and japanese navies. we all want more friends. so it's very important that we integrate and are interoperable with all our allies in the western pacific that seen as important in tackling growing threats both on the korean peninsula. and beyond that, the return of this powerful aircraft carrier group is sending a strong message not only to north korea, but also to china, which has been rapidly building up. its military might, especially its navy. the u. s. seems to be stating in the clear as possible term that it remains a significant presence in the and o pacific. robert bride al jazeera boost on south korea. no more had on the news r, including another american town. more is the victims of a school shooting that killed 6 people. will tell you why. of each in thailand made famous by a hollywood movie could become
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a paradise lost. that is $42.00 time african champions. algeria come from their place annex africa calculations tournament. we're going to tell you how they did. it's kelly of late in the program ah, plans by bangladesh and mia law to allow some war. he refugees to return home are being met with skepticism just over 5 years ago. tens of thousands of our here escape to military cracked alan mia mark and now remained stateless and of the un is accused of breaching its neutrality that's out of the mouth. it's boats were used to transport delegates from miramar to bangladesh for talks on repatriation. odyssey was diplomatic editor james bass. reports from the un headquarters in new york, bangladesh says there about 1200000 ringo refugees living in camps in the country, bangladesh. his foreign minister has told me that in recent days of delegation from
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the military regime in myanmar met bangladesh, he officials to arrange a pilot scheme to start returning some of the earlier the come prom at that period relatively. ok. but if did go back your sip, if the garbage they can help stabilizing the situation after all, del man, but people. remarkably, it's emerged that when the myanmar delegation traveled to bangladesh, that transport was provided by the united nations to un agencies, the world food program and you and hcr provided boats. the insignia were removed for the journey and is reported that there were weapons on board hidden under tarpaulins. when i spoke to the un special envoy for me and mar about all of this, she restated the organization's longstanding position that no refugees should be sent back until there are conditions which are conducive to their voluntary dignified and safe return an hour. we are not satisfied that those conditions at
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their, at the spectacle. i tie the generals who carried out a cou, now seen 2, at least on one occasion, have a navy. and that navy is the united nations that must worry you. well, if they had consulted me, i would have stopped it. but nobody consulted me, myanmar pro democracy activists and human rights. campaigners say they're very concerned about recent events. the use of un boats would appear to be a breach of the organizations neutrality. and they say the un shouldn't be doing anything to facilitate the return of refugees because conditions remained to unsafe . james bays al jazeera of the united nations and from cox's bazaar bangladesh, tiger charter explains why romanian refugees simply don't trust me and was military and their intentions still far from their dreams of returning home. more than a 1000000 refugees are stuck in the hills of cocks. bizarre mohammed,
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bella lost everything when he left me and mar, and he doesn't believe it's military leaders are serious about helping people like him to return. buddha led it as if they have no real intention to take us. it's all a show where appealing to the international community for justice. if justice prevails, only then will we go back to previous attempts to repatriate refugees. since 2017 have failed and talks to attempt another, have been suspended since the me on mar, military staged a coup in 2021. many refugees believe the political situation in myanmar is too volatile for them to go back. now. la chandeliers, ended alexander licky. we faced many difficulties here like limited rations on essential food items, lack of proper medical care, et cetera. so we do want to go back, but only when there is peace. royal seen is a ruffian, ga journalist who documents events in this camp. there are so many challenges that
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we have his in, in the cable, right? no, like dal is lack of integration. there's lack of like the old days or no abilities and visited his father, who just was on repair. so all of that he would use the one to go back home and with the dignified dumb sippy and security me on murder, tens the sole authority to verify those who can return an issue, identity cards to them, based on evidence of past residence, rowing i do not have citizen shape in their home country, men mar and also unrecognized as indigenous. their only issued with so called national verification card, identifying them as bengali muslims. but most rowing, he left all their possessions behind or their homes were burned down or looted. so that cannot produce such proof of former residents and rights groups say, myanmar has done little to support ringing of citizenship to instill confidence in those wanting to return home. john v trogie al jazeera, cox's bazaar. we're going to bring in human rights activist and genocide,
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expert long saline. he's from me and mom, but he's living in exile in the u. k. is the coordinator of the free rocking get coalition. he's joining us on skype, from kent in the united kingdom. thank you very much indeed for being with us. what do you see as the main stumbling blocks to this plan to try to repatriate something you well, it's like it forcing genocide survivors. so from our shreds back to the, at the concentration or debt cans, while the ss was still in charge. and so, you know, i mean, then the biggest elephant in the room is the genocidal regime. back drove in the last wave in 2017, and almost 800000 refugees across the border. after having burn hundreds of villages in the kill unknown number of ruins, you're a villagers, they're still in power, and they're committing like a similar atrocities against other minority groups. and united nations said,
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particularly the un resident coordinator and his team inside and as well as the nobel peace prize winning wolf food program. reportedly collaborating with the out with this regimes attempt to, to use the ruined repatriation as public relations campaign and to play k b and the chinese and b g. that is, you know, that are wanting to show that they are being constructed in burma. and also they are also helping the babies because china is trying to woo bandler days away from india us next. and so i think there are a number of major issues that the most important issue here is the yeah, the un complicity in the you know, the military's crimes against humanity and just let me, let me ask you about that. forgive me for, i'm tired interrupting. you but that's us, a very significant allegation that you're making against the urine. there is an
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argument on that, for example, in order to make any sort of headway and bringing eventually bringing rockingham back to their homeland that they have to be negotiations that talks have to be held . and there is an argument to suggest that that is precisely what the u. n. is doing that it in the best way it can is to bring both sides together in order to be able to have those talks. when you talking about complicity, is there not an argument that the u. n. is simply trying to maintain its neutrality and find a way through this? no is emmie, the, the united nation said, you know, you have a high commissioner for refugees. is the principal you an agency mandated to protecting and the refugees, you know, and what the u. n. is said, that has been doing not just is this is not an isolated incident. you and has been involved in this reader issue since $979.00, and a when the 1st the accident that took place, that with $16000000.00 us dollar
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a package, a hatched in geneva headquarters. now the u. s. i she, us, but it has, you know, grown by, you know, hundreds of times and so i and also i think that this isn't simply the m u. n. resident coordinators office in rangoon i got failing to discharge the un separate principal responsibilities like you know, upholding principles of human rights or non reform off or like a not forcing refugees back to the country of origin where they suffered a design. nothing less. it's the, it's a, you know, the, the highest level over you and who are grassy is, is with fossil. you're antonio gutierrez, when he was head of the u. n. a. c. r. was that the face to face tool by the burmese president at the time thing saying that that muma military intended to either live, we are evac of forced out that 2000000 refugees of built
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a segregated cans. and at the end, the num, our military at the time, wanted the un to support in. and then gutierrez was promoted to be the secretary general. and then if you look at the rolando situation, go vienna. ok, i've, i've no interaction because i want to keep this with regards to the ring gear. refugees, particularly, what do you think is motivating this decision or this attempt at least by bangladesh and me, and more to find some sort of program for bringing people back to their, to their homeland. if what you say appears to be that they said this is a very hollow gesture. what do you think is driving it? why do you think it's happening now? well, i think my bed is desperate. let me say desperate to get 1000000 ruined refugees of it soil because it is become an economic burden. and because i don't, i also failing to meet the pledges to sustain and the lives of 1000000 refugees and
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you know, and so roy, the bangladesh, she authorities to try everything in their power, legal and illegal and moral and immoral, emmy essays. you know, they're like a 60 cases of black running down to a hinge, a refugee cans over the last 2 years. and in terms of with respect to me and my regime and it, it, it, it has suffer a major legitimation crisis since the coo and it's trying to use the ruined her issue repatriation issue as a way to play k china and to see if they can woo, the internet or international humanitarian organizations to collaborate and thereby establish or reestablish vantage intimacy in the eyes of the international committee. let me send it over. a 100000 bro. hinders who have been put in
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camps that the german foreign office officials who visited those places called concentration k. since 2012, they're still there. after 11 years manzona, you're going to have to forget all the rates are up to you again because unfortunately we are running out of time. but we appreciate your being with us and i'll just in a thank you very much. thank you. many israelis is still angry over the government's plan to overhaul the judiciary. on tuesday, i most have benjamin netanyahu would oppose on the controversial move, falling the biggest protests in israel's history. more unrest is expected. and netanyahu said delane, the judicial overhaul below, for discussions with the opposition to avoid what he called a civil war. but opponent save the proposed changes, will give the governing coalition unchecked authority. susan is natasha on it. there is still a lot of anger on both sides and suspicion. the opposition is saying not only
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should this judicial overhaul be suspended, it should be scrapped entirely. they say that this is whittling away at israel's independent judiciary. the attorney general has said netanyahu should not be participating in discussions about a judicial overhaul due to his corruption trial. the attorney general says it's a conflict of interest. so porter say like the opposition, they also are going to be holding protests in the coming days. they said judicial overhaul is needed and that they are the majority and they won't allowed their vote or the state of israel to be stolen from them. on monday, as there was a mentor, there were many protests and there was a state of paralysis in the country because of this strike a committee within the cannot it advanced a bill that would give the government more control over the selection of supreme court justices. it's can now considered on the table at the can asset, which means it's poised for a 2nd and 3rd reading. and the concern by the opposition is that the vote
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a vote could be held at any time. netanyahu's coalition is saying that there are no plans at this time to take this bill to a vote. however, you can see there's a lot of suspicion among the opposition. many people are saying this is like holding negotiations with a gun to the head. still had an old, is it a tough measures? a recon gangs in el salvador, but how's it come at the expense of human rights and sports? this fellow russian player policies. so with hello there was dot in south american is more heavy, rains come from north western areas of the continent in particular, ecuador,
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where we saw that devastating landslide in the south. the heavy rain spreads across into bolivia and north western areas of brazil. flooding happened in minute, we could see more of that as the rain continues to fall. but for the south of this much dry, a picture for chilly northern parts of argentina that is set to change on wednesday, you can see that rash of thunderstorms developing, stretching out to more eastern areas of brazil. rain is expected for in rio through to the we can now for central america and the caribbean, the launch the quiet picture. this island still basking in the sunshine. if you spotty showers here and there, but more in the way of clear skies, we are seeing some heavy rain put into north eastern areas of mexico is its could see flooding from that torrential rain. it will affect monterey, knocking the temperature down to only 18 degrees celsius on wednesday. that rains expect it to be felt in mexico city over the next 2 days, knocking the temperature down here to more in the way of sunny spells by saturday. now sunshine isn't the story for the u. s. west coast,
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we got that powerful system bringing more heavy rain and snow to california that to weather update. ah, the landmark case has been sent shock waves around the world. it's enormous phenomena and see started, and paid the way for the potential to penalize climate. inaction will wake up call for the government. this is really something that can make a turning point or 3 weeks. the citizen, using the mold to hold governments and corporations to account if they don't want to do it by asking, then let's go to court. the case for the climate on a jesse hulu, [000:00:00;00]
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with blue with ah, the want you all to see it out. reminder, our top story is this are at least 39 people have died in a foreign, a migrant detention center in northern mexico. dozens of all those were injured and take her to hospital. the fires reported to have started in restrooms, protests as a back on the streets in france, demonstrating against president emmanuel macros. pension changes are com,
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wants to raise the charlotte area institute to 64 walkerson transport aviation energy. when students have gone on strike, this is president invited members of the coalition government to talk some plans to over hold. the judiciary managers really are still angry over the controversial legislation. some people are calling for promise of benjamin netanyahu, his resignation. we're going to return now to the protests in france against president emmanuel macros, pension reforms, the pension system has a surplus of billions of euros, but it is predicted to be in the red within 25 years. the protests that are facing all areas of the french economy, airlines have been asked to cancel. hundreds of flights trains have been halted. nearly 2 thirds of teachers are on strike. that are calls for nationwide strikes and other industries as well as threats to block ports. protest like this hadn't been seen in france since the so called yellow vest demonstrations in 2018 bay cost the country billions of dollars shaving
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a 10th of one percent off its economic growth. we're going to bring in chris young . yeah, he's executive director the to lose school of economics and he's joining us now from to lose. so thank you very much indeed for being with us and al jazeera, what kind of impact is this having on france's economy overall, in your opinion? where the defense, you put the capacity of time to do it, you couldn't be given to be the case. i mean you click on this policy contaminates, this can be both on the up. i mean hike the show of the seminal type. you need to, to sub so you need to do all these people will be able to be nice was know when you know and so it's ok to mention,
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but my call we go back and whistle shoot, you know, i was having to look back briefly at that kind of history of events like this, there was one back in 1995 and november that have resulted in i think the impact was about 0.2 percent of gdp grove, this is all coaching it as part of gdp. there was one in 2007 against the impact. again, the impact against gdp was minimal. the yellow vest it was a tens of one percent. my question to you is this, given those circumstances, given what appeared to be fairly limited impact some french g d p? is that what is to be driving president macro to make this choice is that a risk that he is prepared to take was no community issue. whether it be not even even always passed. then i believe that, i mean,
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how opinion in my court will be quite can be from the meeting, 40 years of pinion issue said he couldn't, you don't have to go to the 4th time. if you did this project, i believe it was quite to meet the question of, of with regard to the, the necessity of raising the pension age from 60, to 64. in your opinion, how important is that to the, from the french economy when it's looked at, we don't need an ition issues that want to create the condition and due to the french, but tradition do the punch. p one lot is you're off to the one which isn't worth it . seems that you know,
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most people want to get larger kind of even cheating work. but of course the good like getting working if you. ready well, we would have more that's, it can be and so the trade off, i mean, it really came into each question. it needs to be my question to determine what the best, what, what should we do with the. ready ready expectancy when we should posted into that, into your own body and team that confronts more people to get more of that should be a delta given movement. we have your movement of the bottom focus on which is in progress. so then some kind of in here and maybe people that they can the same time get more and much of which in width and you know, that's just very briefly they, there has been
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a very strong feeling amongst the demonstrations that we have been watching over the last few days, against the way that in manual, michael and his government have been handling this, that it seems to have moved from the protest against the pension reforms to the fact that many french demonstrators believe that they have simply been ignored by the government. has this moved these protests into a totally different territory? do you think to probably be better yaki trust to know that sacrifice, but in this case, the pension, we have the impact, the school, you know, climate change, we should be 100 to meet you for what the benefits of the future innovation pension climate change back to just finished, whether, whether the patient is ready to do something for the benefits of the future nation than most people say, you know, we want,
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we want to know and that's the priority. and so definitely in this country i t to organize a democratic. ready what you've done when, when you do call them each, we want to know something for the future generation, the you darren, the vote. and so sam, so you can cut the trip to organize a dog and i different way to. so if you should enough that going into a common problem is democracy, democracy, the detective ship of the department that shoot to have to go and the bookcase pension in climate change. we actually have too much if you read this to make the decision,
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they wouldn't be just shocked me. what maybe the consent form should really interesting to get your thoughts on this christian calling and thank you very much indeed for joining us. and i'll just come police in the us a release to body cam footage showing the moment a school shooter was killed. it happened at a private christian school in nashville on monday, officers shot and killed the attacker who was armed with at least 2 assault style weapons and hand gun 28 year old, who was a former student at the private elementary school, killed 3 children, and 3 adults, people have been paying tribute to victims of the school shooting a makeshift memorial has been set up outside the school. let's go to a white house correspondent, kimberly hoggard at. kimberly, i understand the president biden is calling for a ban to 2 of forgiveness calling on congress to pass his assault weapons a band. how realistic is that in the light of what's been happening? yeah, the u. s president, continuing to call on congress to in his words do its job. this is something that
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has been echoed by the press secretary korean john pierre. and that's because the u . s. president is limited and what he can do through executive order is in other words, it's the u. s. congress that makes the laws in the united states. and so what we've seen is the u. s. president putting in place executive orders. this recently is little more than a week ago when he was in california, passing at executive order to increase background checks and promote better storage of weapons. but he's really limited in scale and scope. it's the legislation that has the teeth and he remembers back when he was the u. s. senator. there was an assault weapons ban that was put in place in 1000. 94 was in place for 10 years, and he and others say that it really cut down the number of mass shootings in the united states, but it was allowed to expire. and since then, as many argues that the number of mass shootings, the united states, such as we've seen and nashville, have really been ticking up. and so that's why he's calling in congress to put in place once again,
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something very similar. what he's looking for is legislation that would increase universal background checks bound the assault weapons such as we've seen it used in, in nashville. we know that the shooter allegedly used a as semi automatic rifle and also ban high capacity magazine said, what we're hearing from capitol hill is that there simply isn't a political will. in fact, what we're hearing is that there's not be appetite to do it. and that essentially they've gone as far as they can go. that's our white house correspondent, kennedy hawker, kimberly, as always, thank you. elsewhere those governments keeping in place the emergency measures implemented a year ago as part of a crackdown and powerful gangs. the strategy is popular, but critics have a heavy handed tactics. come at a cost to human rights. john holman, as this report, ah, if there was an image for of salvador across the last year, this would be it. about $65000.00 people,
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nearly 2 percent of the adult population thrown in prison. the country now has the highest incarceration rate in the world when i'm a little while i 27th of march, march the anniversary of the state of emergency which started it. all police arrest in people or mass. trying to break the grip of the countries to a powerful gangs, the m. s. 13 and burial 80. they been terrorizing communities across the country for years. the strategies been unsophisticated. the flooding of gang controlled neighborhoods with police and army, and the rest. but most in el salvador seemed to agree that it's worked liberating communities like le company ada, formerly a notorious gang stronghold. either this is anna bilmar. finally heading to a house in the neighbourhood that she bought 15 years ago, but could never live in. yes, the umbrella, i have always prayed to god. lord, i want a house where i can live in england where no one will butter me and the lord has
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fulfilled. it is a man with homicides down. and gang members seemingly fleeing for the hills of around 90 percent of the population approve of president night. and kelly, the architect of the strategy is and he's doubled down on it, building a new maximum security prison to fill with more suspects. doll hastily and the arrows to release all these terrorist gang members who are being transferred to the terrorism confinement center. currently, 4000 of them had never come to return to the communities to the province neighborhoods and cities of our beloved el salvador. but at what cost does it come? due process has been repeatedly violated, say civil organizations, the majority of those in prison, yet to even face troll. those arrested don't have the right to a lawyer or even to be told why they were detained. many have been sent to prison of the mass hearings, often without evidence presented. it will not though the government isn't using
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investigation or intelligence doris heaton of just that from when acute to someone else and only was phone call or that a policeman doesn't like the parents of a young person and the youth capture people and take them away. the salvadoran authorities rumps her by the criticism with congress. they just extended the emergency measures for another mum, nancy pam will say, oh, we need to continue fighting the criminal structures. we need to give better service to the salvador and families to guarantee their lives and property. notice our b of the years under the yoke of the gangs. many the population will support that. but not those waiting outside of salvatore prisons, hoping their loved ones will be released. john holman, out to cedar. a danish own oil tank has been boarded by pirates of the shores of the republic of congo. the ships, owners say armed men boarded the vessel, a 140 nautical miles west of fun. while on saturday, all 16 crew members on the machine, a reformer sought refuge in
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a safe room. but communication with them has been lost. us officials are accusing the founder of the now bankrupt crypto currency exchange f t x of conspiring to bribe chinese officials. sam bank when fried, has been charged for directing payments to unlock his frozen accounts in china. accounts held more than $1000000000.00 of crooked a currency. 31 year old banker already faces multiple charges including stealing billions of dollars. when f t x collapsed in november last year. he needles horses have ordered hundreds of people in the north rift valley to leave their homes. the military says it's planning to read. suspected on groups in the area, beatrice lehman. sheila is one of those who's been displaced. i give meaning food. yeah, my name is beatrice lemming to laugh i currently live in was saw in some barrow county. we moved here from port village with my family. we left poor because of attacks by bandits at my area away with them. oh,
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well number one thing we arrived at the centre village, but it is too congested. our we set up shelters which are easy and cheap to construct. but life is very hard. we came here because there's a police post where government ranges help. we share what to the food we have as we leave here. the bandits came to that home and to cattle, oregon. they're taking anything from a homestead, including 41 can not stay with even a goat or a cattle, only because they will take them all. i got like a big middle letter w we're running they do with all life at parra, was initially very good because part of the place we have leaved with our livestock . and we also farmers, we lived peacefully until recently. we had a market where different communities would trade by the talk started after a present from a neighboring ethnic group was killed in our community. and that started the conflict. what of what? we have lived with them as our neighbors,
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but now they come to kill us. we're been our homes and still our lifestyle. going a little bit of a your not about the band. it's want to take our land and that is why they're causing so much trouble. they want us to flee from our homes, like when this attacks begun the government to some dis, leaving us with no weapons to defend ourselves. and on a lot of our no one left with anger, yell, i guarantee you were praying to god to help us. we have suffered for so long. we pray that the bandits in the caves are defeated by the government forces, and we will go back to our homes and maybe we can coexist as neighbors. again, the women only have m like mary on thailand's west coast, was made famous by the movie the beach became so popular that authorities bank tours for 3 years to stop the environmental damage. now conservation of say, the gains made are in danger of being undone. victoria gayden, the reports for nearly 4 years thailand's, my ebay, with its towering cliffs and calm waters,
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had no tourists. the government closed it in 2018 because visitors had caused ecological damage and depression from tour operators, authorities reopened. the bay last year. the conservation is say, marine life that thrived in the absence of tourists, is now under threat again. we have counted the highest amount of activity of shock with wishes, $161.00 shark at a given time. and that is in november of 2021. and after it was re open for a year, we have an average number of around a $20.00 to $40.00 sharks per day. so it, we have seen and decrease in the abundance the re, plenty corals, the home to nurseries of fish, including juvenile shocks, strict limits on the number of visitors aim to minimize damage to the marine environment and swimming is banned. yeah, they have to save it if he wavered, let people go. so if we will destroy it,
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we definitely are. so i really appreciate the, the way that the close, the beats for the swimming probably does. because to save the need, her, the boats that bring visitors to my a bay now have to dock on the other side of the island to avoid damaging coal reefs . only $375.00 visitors are allowed in per hour. if you can create and come up with a new image of my garbage as a need to reserve as a strict nets erisa for chak, i think that each actually going to bring new ah, a tourism scheme as well. and are we going to benefit from that? overall conservation is say efforts to reverse damage have been remarkably successful, but they warn, if not maintained, the paradise tourists are coming to find could soon be lost forever. victoria gate and be al jazeera. so for the sport is flora rob, thank you so much. france remain on track to qualified for next year's european championships in germany. they meet ireland to make it she wins from to benjamin
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poverty. up stage, captain kilian and barbados were the only goal of the match. it was a barn unit players 1st game with the sides and frances opening match of last year's world cup in cutter lake lou are on 6 points from 2 matches. after fridays for neil thrashing out of the netherlands, ireland set forth in green the netherlands did manage to bounce back in their match against gibraltar on monday. nathan, a case scored twice while memphis de pi also got on the score sheet to lead host the netherlands to a 3 nail when against 10 men. gibraltar, it's 1st win of coach ronald human 2nd spell in charge of the team who sit a 3rd in the group. to time african champions, algeria has secured qualification for the 2023 africa cup of nations tournament in ivory coast. the desert foxes visited new chair and pulled off a one know when an early baghdad benet juggle,
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settled matters for the algerians. they won 4 out of 4 and qualifying and join house ivory, house and morocco who have also secured their places. the new president of rugby africa says a mind set to change is needed to ensure his continent gets the backing. it requires gone. as herbert mensa was elected earlier that month. while the continent is home to world champion south africa. no other african nation has ever won a game at the world cup. mensa believes that with the right support, more african countries will be able to compete at an elite level. rugby is the 2nd largest sports in the world, and it is such a wonderful game that provides an opportunity, be tall, short or whatever else may be changing. the mindset of governance is, is, is a big thing. and then faith changing the mindset. oh, well, rugby, i think africa, zoe suffolk, whether it is economically socially of being the place that people disparage. i'm not saying that well, rugby does that. i'm not saying that i governing bodies,
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but we do have to get their focus in their concentration on the fact that for the last 20 something years. this is the way that africa has been looked at. other schools are looking at africa differently, the m b, i understand is investing millions of dollars per year in africa to try and encourage and develop the game for football. we've just seen the president infant tino luanda, involved in something with a massive program to invest in academies that use the development of where it's wrong. and we really need world rugby to do the same. if we can convince them that a stronger african means stronger rugby, stronger rugby means more people will watch the game or people watch the game is more revenue comes in ultimately for the governing body. it's a mindset for us here in africa and for the donors outside to really look and say, we haven't done. and it's time for us to sit up and do more tennis now and greek. a
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2nd seat stephan assets passes through to the last 16 at the miami open. 24 year old completed a 3 sat twain over christian garen sits of his had to dig deep in this tide contest . the greek one 1st set 63. but he dropped the 2nd, sat to the chilean 646, his bounce back from, sat back to take the decide exec 6 for healthy, caring. catching off francisco, it's aaron, dolo martinez, stan 15, felix o. j allison to reach the last 16 in miami number 25 seed last to the canadian in their previous 2 meetings saran, dolo will cease lorenzo san ego next womens world number 2, arena sub olenka is 3 to her. a 5th, a quarter final of the season. the australian open champion needed just over an hour to beat 16th as see the barber fridge, a cobra in miami, the bell rushing, swimming 74th rent,
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soleah crossed out in order. fine. ah . former us open champion, bianca and dressy. we had to be wheelchair off the cord after hurting her left ankle. the canadians gone in to katerina alexandro via dances to finally we shall face to time a grand slam champion. petra, give it about the dallas mavericks are still in with a chance of clenching a playoff spot in the n b. a western conference luca don church finished with $25.00 points, 6 assists, including this incredible pass across the width of the court. today. first he made a jayden, hardy, the mountain mobs went on to steal much needed way against the indiana pacers of what you saw him at times with craig. i think he saw me a version i been when he saw me. i think you'll be able to get it from you, but he did. so i got to knock this down. i got a mike ago, so it was a crazy burst. so and japanese baseball sensation show, hey, attorney is expected to earn a records. $65000000.00 the season,
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the highest for any major league player and a single year. 28 year old signed a $30000000.00 contract extension with the l angels. last season. the rest of his earnings will be from endorsements. autonomy is often likened to babe ruth because of his ability to both pitch and hit at the same level. he led japan to victory at the world baseball classic last week. okay, that is all your support for now back t rob far. thank you very much indeed. yeah, i'm gonna be back in a couple of minutes. we're more on all these stories including 39 people who have died in a far no migrant detention center in northern mexico. stay with me, phil. ah
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ah. a april on al jazeera tortilla and syria al jazeera reports on how earthquake survivors are hoping. during the holy month of ramadan, one, a one east meets the young russian men refusing to fight hooton's war in ukraine as they seek safety and has extend 25 years since the good friday agreement and the decades of violence. we report on how bricks is forging new realities in ours. in the lead up to a day, al jazeera, explore the environmental significance of action, and inaction, paraguay holds general elections with corruption and organized crime. high on the agenda can the ruling colorado party hold on to power. april on al jazeera, there's a story being spot fantasy where being sold, the notion that we can offset all the cars we generate,
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does carbon offsetting actually work. what these being done isn't worth sitting. the problem is net 0, just the catch raise. net 0 mission. that's there. i mean, you know, climate neutral, poly re examines the myths on delusions in the struggle against climate breakdown. all hail the planet episode won on al jazeera, i ramadan, my time of spirituality reflection and gratitude raised the flags old the flames. every column with al jazeera world. well, how leo, how he reveals the stories behind some of the arab world songs and chunks for the holy month. giovanni, this song touched the hearts of all arrows full ramadan songs on al jazeera. ah,

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