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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 29, 2023 1:00am-1:31am AST

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to pub in casinos to play pokies every day, sometimes playing up to 15 hours, strength drawn to a world that seemed both exciting and soon at work. the grandmother of 6 had access to company funds. she began transferring money into her personal account, starting with small amounts every week. if i didn't steal, i couldn't fly. she only stopped when she was called by that time she'd stolen more than $260000.00 or $64.00. when i went to prison, it's just crazy about a man to wash my fame impression. unflinching question is war with lawanda, imminent rigorous debate? people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment. black labs don't really matter in the police will join me mark on my hill for up front. what out is here? mm. mm.
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classes break out at rallies across from so on the 10th day of action against president microns unpopular pension reforms. ah, of the book, this is al jazeera alive from london, also coming up at least 40 people will die in a fire at a migrant detention center in a mexican border facility. said to be caused by a protest over deportations. nashville police release body can video of officers confronting the shooter who killed 3 children and 3 adults, the latest us school attack and their skepticism in israel, over benjamin netanyahu, posing his judicial overhaul as governmental opposition. parties begin talks on a potential compromise. ah,
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ah, tens of thousands of people who marched across france in another day of strikes and protests of a deeply unpopular pension reformed police, have ramped up security and deployed 13000 officers, nearly half of them in paris. these were the scenes earlier in the french capital where there was violence between protest system security forces. unions of workers are angry at the president for raising the legal retirement age from $62.00 to $64.00 without a vote in parliament is become the biggest crisis of a manual. my chrome, 2nd term, the touch of butler reports from parents. some protest is burnt beans and clashed with police in paris during a demonstration that was otherwise peaceful. thousands of students and public sector workers once again in the st. angry with french president emmanuel macros, pension reform, and his government's decision to force it through parliament by decree was good on
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the mac. maybe the government is finally starting to hear that many french people are against this reform and against makram for not listening. as the reform raises the retirement age from 62 to 64, which we don't want and forcing it to parliament prince did, there is no more democracy in france. protests, those want the government to scrap the reform my house as the changes are necessary to sustain the countries pension system for future generations. this head nationwide strike since the beginning of the year. and now it wants to see how the deadline between the trade unions are needed. and the french government will end when a frances main trade union leaders says it's time to mediation is for met when they need to suspend raising the retirement age to $64.00. thanks. what angers? paypal most want then over the next month or so, we should appoint mediators, what so everyone can say what they want to a plan swift rejected by the government office by the director more,
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we can talk to each other directly. the president has already said is ready to receive the unions. once the constitutional courts approved the new low macro had signed the building to law within weeks, reforming the pension system was one of his campaign promises. but the changes have come at a cost as anger against them is he subsiding, sasha butler, i'm to sierra harris. gabriel attends is an associate professor from the university of paris. he's been taking part of the process. he refused the idea, pension changes are essential to pay for an aging population. i get it balancing a budget is not something you that you can just do way magically. yeah, it is something you have to to pay attention to the look we've been demonstrating for. so long, and it doesn't feel like such a single issue movement. we care about the pension issue because in truth, in france, we have an unemployment problem for people past their past 60. once or 60,
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it's really hard to find a job, an employment for a 6 year old and up is $35.00, is 65 percent actually true. so that's, that's the 1st issue. and also would you like we've been contributing, we've done our port, inflation is you know, complicated. 15 percent. politics is all about doing the right thing at the right time. this is, this is a horrible time. and this is yet again, a reform that will distribute wealth in a way that doesn't feel fair to french ball. who, as you know, we care about the quality, ah, least of 40 people, most of the migrant, some glass amola and honduras who have been killed after fire swept through a detention center in mexico. the president says the blaze appears to have broken out when migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses after discovering they were being deported. it happened in the northern city of thea that horace, near the border with united states john holman reports calling with
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ambulances. they came too late for men in the fire, at a migration detention facility in the mexican border city of what is had already claimed dozens, many of them guatemalans, some venezuelans, o desperate relatives had nothing to do but moon. wait for news. okay, your mother said, now you can have a relative die and they don't tell you he's dead went oh, nothing. immediately there were questions. chiefly, how did the 5 star and his early morning press conference, mexico's president, arrived with dances. it was the migrants themselves. he said that a storm to will give it this had to do with a protest that they started. when they found out they will be deported. they put mattresses of the shelters, dorsey, and set fire to them. they didn't think because terrible tragedy protests have happened before mexico state migration centers. those who step through the doors
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often described them as overcrowded prisons. but this time around there were more questions. how did the authorities allow this to happen to those under their care? dangly, venezuela? migrant, so she was outside when it happened that i've been waiting for their father since 1 pm told me they were going to hand him over to me. then at 10 pm we started to see smoke billowing some everywhere. everybody ran away, but they left the men locked in. everybody was removed from the area, but they left the lock and they never opened the door. so that was where the detention center is located, has become a pressure cooker in recent months with large numbers of migrants and asylum seekers staying there before a push to get to the us shelter heads and activists of accused authorities of criminalizing them on monday night, the pressure cooker blew over. now, amid the grief the inquest will begin. john home and i'll just eat
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a mexico city. are you still is the us border research of human rights force? they say the united states as a duty to help migrants? i think it's quite likely that the number of those individuals would have been allowed to resettle united states and certainly a number of the injured are reported being processed in the united states. now, i think as we speak but. 5 but yeah, folks are being government persecution, torture all kinds of insecurity and violence, sometimes climate change related disasters. you know, it's important to remember that a lot of these circumstances, a lot of the country, you know, a lot of the instability that people are meeting are related to us involvement in their government and politics over the years. and us emissions re polluting the environment and so us has a responsibility to broaden this protection system to include these folks police in
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the us say the person who opened fire in a school in nashville on monday, legally board 7, firearms in recent years. 28 year old already hail a former student to the school, killed 3 children and 3 adults in the attack, $200.00 reports. audrey hale slowly pulls into the parking lot of covenant school. the shooter fires through a locked glass door to gain entry. in combat gear, armed with one assault rifle and toting, another hail wanders the halls of the christian school looking for victims. it's a tale of horror told through the surveillance footage released by nashville police officers badge cameras capture the response. police get the call it 1013 shots fired. they're learning the lessons of the 2022. you've all the texas school shooting where police wasted, precious minutes is a gunman. fired on children. let go. these officers act fast. ah no boy, room by room is fire,
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alarm sound off the officers clear the 1st floor a. they rush toward the sound of gunfire and close it was now with the attacker, a former student down soon to be declared dead. it's over at $1027.00, a. m 14 minutes after police received the call in that time hail his gun down 39 year old students in 3 staffers in their sixties police. a hail had amassed an arsenal. we determine that our grade, bald 7 on from 5 different local gun stores here legally to will result weapons. president joe biden who fought for a federal assault weapons ban that congress passed in 1994,
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only to watch it expire 10 years later. once again, calls for another ban of the weapons, hail used to kill resonation. we all these families more than our prayers. we owe them action. you know, we had to do more to stop his gun violence. everything cuties apart ripping apart the soul of this nation. protect our children, so they learn how to read, writes that duck cover class with there is almost no chance of passing another ban . this is the 2021 christmas card picture of the congressmen who represents the nashville district, where it all happened. andy ogles, posing with his family bearing assault weapons, a portrait of intransigence, and the effort to change gun laws in america. john henderson al jazeera, israel's arrival political factions of how'd a 1st round of talks after the government's delay delayed plans to overhaul the judiciary. on monday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu had a pause in the controversial mood on the biggest protest in israel's history.
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smaller demonstrations were held on tuesday, including a mansion televi. netanyahu says delaying the judicial overhauled will allow for discussions with the opposition to avoid what he called a civil war opponent say the proposed changes will give the governing coalition unchecked or 30. we won't stop and tell what we said in the initial discussion until late stop it. not pause, but actually stop the legislation and have conversations under good faith. i don't believe that. i with you as president joe biden says he hopes netanyahu walks away from the law, like many songs were real. i'm very concerned. i'm concerned that they get this great. it cannot continued on grow. and i go to made that clear.
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i hopeful, hopefully a prime minister will act in a way that he's got to work out some genuine compromise with netanyahu has just responded to that. please saying he appreciates biden's commitment to his country, but israel does not make decisions based on pressure from a board broad. but a smith in tel aviv has more on the negotiations. so those talks started on tuesday evening. they've ended now and they've said they're going to go sit back around the table tomorrow. you've got the oppositional one side, made up of representatives from the iowa, pete's party and ben guns his party. they were the prime minister in defense minister and the govern before benjamin netanyahu came back into power last year. and then you've got representatives from benjamin netanyahu. le, could party. now how those 2 sides are going to come together and reach some sort of compromise is going to be very challenging because they've got such entrenched,
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entrenched views, one side, one. so then to it one side, once the bill to go through parliament. now, la pd party, they came out of the meeting on this evening tuesday evening and they said one thing they want is they won't the bill to be completely withdrawn from parliament at the moment. it's still making the process through parliament is still being tabled. is it can still be debated and it could at the stroke of a pen the next day become law. so they want it out upon withdrawn from parliament completely. there's no indication that he's going to happen, but will be one of the talks in one of the demands in the talks as they continue on wednesday. if you all's been held in the occupied westbank for posting and man killed by israeli forces, and my lola died off to being shot in the stomach during and it's really rate in the city of nablus. last month. he was buried in his hometown of the wasa, israeli forces of killed $91.00 palestinians in the occupied territory this year. so to come this half hour, they were only allowed back last year,
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but to arrest already threatening the marine life of the bay made famous by the film, the beach. how this mamma beat bowl is bringing back a taste of the ice age. byron, australia, the poetry ah, hello. hello, i think you may well see a rain at times for all parts of australia this week. we got north wesley cloud and started to push in across sir wu wei, and we will see some wet weather setting in here as a result of that ego. good rash of showers across a good part of west australia, down towards the southeast, looking rather disturbed. here as well, still some heavy arranged just around the blue mountains, pushing farther northward, up towards brisbin, down towards a southeast eastern parts of victoria. also seeing some of that wet weather which
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will spill out into the open waters. as we go through 1st, i still want to shout coming back in behind, but it should be somewhat try for much of new south wales and victoria showers continue just around the sunshine coast and the where to whether that will continue . there is a central and now into southern parts of w, a at vast h. moving through perth, we could do some rain here. we'll see some wet weather, grassy started to push its way into south australia as well at rainbow, grassy make his way towards new data. but not too bad for new zealand. over the next couple of days, a good deal of autumn sunshine coming through temperatures into the mid upper teens . here some of the temperature they're into were to pan a little bit of rain. it's eastern parts of japan, warm and dry for northern parts of china, but to the south is very wet. ah. around 3 quarters of sub saharan africa's cultural heritage is on display in
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western museums. it didn't happen overnight. we were robbed over time. the 1st episode reveals how europeans colonization remove tens of thousands of artifacts, and the uphill struggle to reclaim restitution africa stolen on episode one blunder on al jazeera lou. ah, welcome back. reminder the top stories here all al jazeera have been more clashes as tens of thousands of people marched across france. and another day of strikes and protests over deeply unpopular pension reforms demonstrate as an angry
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president to minute micro for raising the legal retirement age from 62 to 64. without a fight in parliament. at least 40 people have been killed in the mexican city of theater virus after fire swept through a migration detention center. 28 of those killed with wasa. martin, mexico's president says the blaze broke out for migrants and asylum seekers set fights of mattresses after discovering they were being deported. at police of the u . s. a release body comforted, showing the moment officers confronted the shooter who killed 3 children and 3 adults and the christian school in nashville. on monday, they say the attacker had legally bought 7 firearms. in recent years. a danish owned oil tanker was missing in the gulf of guinea, off the west african coast after being boarded by pirates on saturday. the ship was a time swallowed anchor. 250 kilometers off point noise in the republic of congo, a region to toys for pirate activity, or communication channels with the oil and chemical tanka on just
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a reformer. our down, the 60 man crew are all reported to have taken refuge in especially designed safe room on board. am $23.00 fighters of retaken the town and east democratic republic of congo. contradicting early reports that they'd withdraw the arm group had agreed to pull out of 4 different towns and villages last week on condition that government forces didn't return to the area. fighting, displaced more than 800000 people in the past year. and 23 is widely understood to be backed by neighboring lawanda, which denies supporting the green marcum webb has more from socket in east and d r. c. we've heard multiple reports has been fighting around town and west. so in the last 24 hours. now this follows a series of withdrawal rules when 33 said that withdrew from about 4 different towns and villages last week,
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including some villages just near where we are now. up in the hills around the town of saw k. now this is meant to be part of a peace processes involve regional government. one of 23 is condition for withdrawing, that they would only hand over to the regional east african forces not to congress the governor villages into moved in way and 23 moves out, but the burned into the small in number. they're not well resort. been reported by multiple residents in news areas. the m 23 still actually controlled the road blocks in the area and also the group which occupies the hill much of the time. and congos army is accused of supporting congress denies it. the fighters from those on great have moved back in to some of these areas now in more so further to the north
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where they've been fighting within the last 24 hours when i'm 23 pulled out. last week resident told us that the armed groups came back in and 23. as for them, re taken the town, tenured, all socrates of ordered hundreds of people in the northern rift valley to leave their homes. the military says is planning to raid suspected arm groups are accused of killing villages and stealing livestock. beatrice lemon. taylor is one of those whose been displays from her village in some bureau county. i given to you. my name is beatrice lemming. tilla. i currently live in was saw in some barrow county. we moved here from poor a village with my family. we left poor because of attacks by bandits at my area, holly middle, oh, well, number one thing. we arrived at the center 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
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there's a police post where government rangers 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 $41.00 cannot stay with even a got tamela or a cattle only because they will take them all. i got like a big middle out letter w we're running they do with all life at poorer 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 we have lived with them as our neighbors. but now they come to kill us, burn our homes and steal our lifestyle. going a little bit of a, your not at the band. it's want to take our land and that is why they're causing so
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much trouble. they want us to flee from our homes, like when this attacks began, the government disarmed us, leaving us with no weapons to defend ourselves. and i never got one left with anger . yeah. my girls were praying to god help us. we have suffolk 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 play exists as neighbors. again, the 2 women have been killed in a knife attack on a muslim centre in the portuguese capital. lisbon, at least one other person is being treated for stab williams, least of shot an arrest. the alleged attacker, after he ignored their warnings and advanced officers. local media says he's an afghan national man, his victims for staff, the center for minister antonio. acosta says all evidence indicates it was an isolated act. now a day after being sworn in as scottish national party leader homes, a yusef has been formerly elected as scotlands 1st minister, who leave these semi autonomous parliament following the shock resignation of his
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predecessor nicholas sturgeon last month. but as the dean barber reports formed the parliament's home in edinburgh, the s m p still appears to have a long way to go to achieve its full aim of independence from united kingdom. he's got the backing of the scottish parliament, that's the easy part. but as holmes, the use of settles in, scotland, spurs, minister, selling his vision for the nation may be tougher, told. i've always believed that leadership is about running towards and embracing challenges. rather than shying away from them, we might not be able to achieve everything we want all the time and all at once. but every day and office as an opportunity to make things a bet better than they were yesterday. ah, just down the road from parliament, john carlo de soto runs a fudge making business with his brother. the phone's been in the family for 3 generations. john carlo would rather scotland stay in the family known as the united kingdom. and he wants the scottish government to focus on countering the hom,
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done by bricks it trying to make it easier for people even just to come over like make it easier for businesses. and it should be like life factions on things like planning goods and stuff. you know, businesses, i think we suffer from these things. yusef said he's going to concentrate on things like improving childcare and public health services. this couple are expecting their 3rd child support is at the scottish national party. they agree, independence can wait. you know, of the westminster scene or their same peek yet about as independence and you know, they're let another thing slate. so i think maybe if we get other things in place, fashion, then mc and belton and for independence, step away from picturesque parts of the capital. like this and you'll get an idea of the challenges facing hums a uses. for example, a recent survey showed 4 percent of scottish households use the food bank in the year to march 2022. that's more than anywhere else in britain,
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apart from northern england. not surprising then that the 1st minister has said the cost of living crisis is his top priority. but even here in working class, leave, some people say independence should not be relegated to the bottom of the pile. i chapter their class chapter the cas. yes, nicholas 13, can i have it done business by the time again, as i english success, yusef says he'll need to convince many more people. independence is a good idea. some may be beyond convincing and the half of the area, and then i just professional liason. of course, nobody is predicting scotland will break away any time soon. but the government hopes improving the economy could prepare the ground for another go at a referendum. the dean barber al jazeera edinburgh. u. s. officials are accusing the founder of the now bankrupt crypto currency exchange f t. acts of conspiring to bribe chinese officials. sam boatman freed has been charged for directing payments
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to unlock his frozen accounts in china. the accounts held more than $1000000000.00 of crypto currency. the 31 year old banker already faces multiple charges including stealing billions of dollars when f t. x collapse last she, if there was made famous by the hollywood movie, the beach and now may or bay on thailand's west coast is under threat again. the piece of paradise became so popular that the authorities were forced to ban tourists to stop environmental damage. we opened last she imp conservation, to say the beach is marine. life is already in danger. victoria gates of the reports. for nearly 4 years thailand's maya bay with its towering cliffs and calm waters, had no tourists. the government closed it in 2018 because visitors had caused ecological damage. under pressure from tour operators authorities, we opened the bay last year. the conservation is say, marine life that thrived in the absence of tourists is now under threat again. we
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have counted the highest amount of activity of shark wood, which is $161.00 shark at a given time. and that is in november of 2021. and after it was reopened 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 you will let people go so it will destroy it. definitely. so i really appreciate the, the way that the close the bid for the swimming probably does. because to save the meter, the boats that bring visitors to my a bay now have to dock on the other side of the island to avoid damaging coral reefs. and the $375.00 visitors are allowed in per hour. if you can create and come
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up with the new emit up my dad b as on nature reserve as a strict network reset for chak, i think that each actually going to bring new ah tourism scheme as well. and are we going to benefit from that? oh, conservation is se 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, the damage russian space council is safely back on earth. after making an unmanned return from the international space station, the saw you spacecraft departed under remote control 4 months after suffering, a major coolant league. it touched down in kazakhstan several hours later. officials blame the leak on a tiny mi, troy the puncture the capture was external radiator, the 3 astronauts who is supposed to return a little now, staying on the i assess for another 6 months. now it's a traditional taste,
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there's been loss for 4000 years now. modern genetic technology has brought back the flavor of woolly mammoth. the mammoth meat ball has been created by australian sciences using laboratory grown cult should meet, is made using the genetic information from long deceased mouths with a bit of elephant and sheep to fill the gaps. meat ball has already been dubbed the elephant in the dining room, but so far, nobody has been allowed to take a bite. with new technology, it means that the food that we can have doesn't have to replicate what we've had before, can be more exciting if it has better flavor profiles, monitor better nutrition, part boss. and so we wanted to create something that was totally different from anything you get now. the 2nd reason is that the mammoth has traditionally been a symbol of los magnets. we know now we're white out because of climate change. and we wanted to draw attention to a different future. ah
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