tv News Al Jazeera March 29, 2023 7:00am-7:31am AST
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is not interested in the individual ality, the freedom, the spirit of the young person studio be unscripted on out his era. it's a $1000000000.00 money, no drink operation for coal. marsha is bigger than the company with financial institutions, regulators and governments complicit. i'm always hoping what it is that, right, i'm just try that in a 4 part series. i'll just eras investigative unit because on the cover in southern africa, pittsburgh, we control 90 percent of dylan. once it's pretty falling, it's perfectly brandon. good. part one on out to sierra. ah ha. on russ crows in frogs with protests for 10,
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stay against president manuel mac rolls on popular pension reforms. he remains defiant. ah, i money in science isn't. is there a life? and also coming up i, mexico's presidents as migrants varying deportations that mattresses on my as an immigration detention center in the u. s. border. 38 people are killed. the shooter who kills 6 people at a school in the u. s. city of nashville was on the calf for emotional disorder, and legally bull weapons seized and israel's government and opposition began talks falling weeks of protest. all the u. s. president says he hopes the judicial reforms all dropped. ah,
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ah, it's been another day of protests on the streets of france. tens of thousands of people have again marched against deeply unpopular pension reforms. here is how things looked in cities from the north to the south of the country. the protests were mostly peaceful, but there were some confrontations between people and police unions and work as an angry at the president for raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 without a vote in parliament. natasha butler as a support from paris. some protesters burned bins and clash 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, my calls engine reform. it is government's decision to force you through parliament by decree, but critical down a mock may be the government is finally starting to hear that many french people
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are against this reform and against mycroft are not listening. i for the recording, raises the retirement age from 62 to 64, which we don't want enforcing it through parliament proves did. there is no more democracy in france. protests as wanted government to scrap the head at my house as the changes are necessary to sustain the countries pension system for future generations. this head nationwide strikes since the beginning of the year. and now it's hard to think of the deadline between the trade union for a meeting and the french government will lead. when the frances main trade union leaders says each time but to mediation, he form it when they need to suspend raising the retirement age to 64. thanks. what angers people most wanted over the next month or so we should appoint mediators, what so everyone can say what they want to a plan swiftly rejected by the government or pro spotted your the more we can talk
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to each other directly. the president has already said is ready to resume the union's once the constitutional court approved the new lo, michael had signed the building to law within weeks reforming the pension system was one of his campaign promises. but the changes of commer to cost as anger against them is he subsiding. natasha butler. i'm to 0. paris there's a, a people have died in mexico after a fire sweat through and my were in detention center. the president says the blaze broke out when migrant sand asylum seekers set fire to mattresses. after discovering that they were being deported, it happened in the northern city of waters near the border with united states. john holman reports of falling of ambulances. they came too late for many 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,
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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. nothing. immediately there were questions. chiefly, how did the fire start? in his early morning press, conference, metzger, his president, arrived with dancers. it was the migrants themselves. he said, 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 it would cause his terrible tragedy. protests have happened before many state migration centers. those have stepped through the doors, often described them over crowded, cruising but this time around there were more questions. how did the authorities allow this to happen to those under their care? dangly, venezuela?
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migrant says she was outside when it happened that i've been waiting for their father since 1 pm. it told me they were going to hand him over to me. then at 10 pm, we started to see smoke billowing from everywhere. everybody ran away, but they left the men locked in. everybody was removed from the area, but they left men locked and they never opened the door to the bodies 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 about shelter heads and activists of accused authorities of criminalizing them. monday night, the pressure cooker blew over. now, amid the grief the inquest will begin, john hohmann al jazeera mexico city. ari so is the us border research for human rights watch. she says the conditions in the migrant detention facilities
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often dia, these deaths and injuries are the direct result of the trends. policy is right, carried out by us in mexico. i focus on criminalizing migrants and phone seekers instead of legal process. so we've documented that human rights watch the abusive conditions that need facilities, and we understand that the migrants were protesting. 4 conditions there, there were protesting, lack of water, hadn't given any water video that i've just seen shows that show appears to show immigration official meeting locked inside of the fireplace on so completely inexcusable. also, those doors are, they don't have an easy release. there's no electronic release that the key and we know that there are physical abuse inside the detention facilities are often overcrowded. we understand that that particular attention facility is you know, in the mexican government, right?
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so that they're called shelters. they call them shelters that they are detention facilities. people are locked up and they were overcrowded in that particular room . police say that the person is in fire school in the u. s. to see if nashville on monday, legally, board 7, firearms in recent years. 28 year old audrey hail, a former student at the school. cale 3 children and 3 adults. police have released body count for just showing the moment hell was killed by offices. john henry 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. please get the call at 1013 shot fire . they're out there. learning the lessons of the 2022. you've all the texas school
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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. alarm sound off the officers clear the 1st floor. a. they rush toward the sound of gunfire. and close it was now with with the attacker, a former student down soon to be declared dead. it's over at 10, 27 am. 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,
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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, 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 have to do more to stop this gun violence. everything communities are ripping apart the soul of this nation. protect our children, so they learn how to read right. instead of ducking, covering the classroom 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 and b. c. news. wendy woolfolk has moved from nashville.
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fortunately, the, the main question of why that motive is still on answered at this point. we do know that 28 year old audrey hale was a former student of covenant. and so they do believe that the school and the church itself was a target. but the actual victims, in this case, those 39 year old students and the 3 faculty members were just shot at random and they were spread across the building. police. she confirmed that hale was under doctor's care, i should say, for what they call an emotional disorder. even so, she was able to legally by 7 firearms at 5 different stores in this area legally. so a lot of questions still left to be answered. tennessee, as you may or may not know, is
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a heavily gun rights state in this country. and it's fairly divided across the united states as so whether you want gun control or you, you, you prefer gun rights. 2 women have been killed in a knife, a tie kit, a must have sent in the portuguese council, lisben police shot and arrested the assailant off to ignore their warnings. at least one person was injured. authority say, the suspect is an afghan refugee and his victims work to the center. prime minister antonia costa says the evidence suggests the attack was an isolated incident. hundreds of people have marched in el salvador, demanding freedom for relatives. they say, have been unfairly jailed on the estate of emergency was declared by president naive kelley a year ago to counter gang violence. about 2 percent of the population has been detained. the un human rights commission says the arrest appeared to be based on unfounded investigations. detainees,
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physical appearance and social background. israel's government and opposition have begun talks on controversial plans to overhaul the judiciary. on monday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu put the legislation on hold, following the biggest protest, the nation's history. that in yahoo said he wanted to avoid what he called a civil war. the proposed changes include giving politicians greater powers to choose judges, opponent, say they'll give the governing coalition unchecked authority. we won't stop until what we said in the initial discussion until late stop. not pause, but actually stop the legislation and have conversations under good faith i with from tel aviv bernard smith has more. so
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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. li 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 a trends. entrenched views, one side, one, so then to it one side, once the, the, the bill to go through parliament now lupita party, they came out of the meeting on this evening tuesday evening and they said one thing they want, they want the bill to be completely withdrawn. from parliament at the moment, it's still making the process through parliament is still being tabled if it can still be debated and it caught the stroke of
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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. israel's ally, the united states has been weighing in on the control the see president jo bought and is urging that yahoo to abandon his plans for the judiciary what the time it will do on that particular long walk that yahoo has responded to biden's comments. he said, israel makes his own decisions based on the will of the people. that's yahoo! said domestic matters wouldn't be influenced by prussia from abroad, including from allies like the united states. slats on out. is there an out there guys on patrol with the congolese army alta, if we take some tara sheets men, $23.00 rebels on be international olympic committee makes the key recommendation on
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the future of russian and belarus. ah, hello, the weather's looking a little life across parts of the middle east at the moment, the curl of cloud spilling out of the caucuses, running right down some parts of the arabian peninsula. but it is tending to push its way further east was trying to clear through across the ripened potential that is generally dry. we got a few showers just clinging on to the far south, maybe down towards yemen. selim, end of the red sea where to weather when she was still in place there into afghanistan. and boy, we got winter whether they're into a good part of to care to for celsius, an anchor. a couple of days ago, work at 10 or 11 celsius warmer than that. so that is something of
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a shock to the system that snow. try to pull his way out of the way as we go one through thursday, by thursday you might catch your chair. we're to a central part of saudi arabia, your chair, we're to just around southern parts of central africa pushing across west africa. the son of course, making his wife by the north to the showers about where they should be north, that it is generally dry, little breezy, and is a cool breeze for each it. kyra around 26 houses with the winds coming in from the north main while we have some wet weather straight right across central parts of africa. heaviest downpours have of course, to the south that wanted to show us right to south africa. ah. join the debate. we know that the sector seems empowered by the government and stand by the government today. they are the government offices. how security is also a global health security on it online. at your voice,
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there is no right to defense. there is no right to protest. we can't just keep relying on aid, there has to be some work toward a sustainable economy. at the end of the day, it is ordinary objects that are paying the price. this tree on al jazeera lou. ah, welcome back to watching al jazeera mind. if our top stories is our tens of thousands of people have marched in cities across france for 10, stay of mass strikes against pension reforms. unions and work is on. angry on to the president raised the retirement age without a vote in parliament that people have died in a fight and sign
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a migrant detention center in mexico residence. as the blaze broke out. when migrants and asylum seekers set fire to mattresses off to discovering they were being deported. lease in the u. s. have released body count footage, showing officers confront a shooter who killed 6 people in a christian school in nashville on monday to say the attacker had legally bored 7 firearms in recent years. and thousands of syrians have gone missing during the countries prolonged conflicts. now the united nations is pushing for answers. syrian families have long been calling for a mechanism to find their loved ones. are diplomatic, get us a james base has a story from you on a headquarters, new york. after 12 years of war, the united nations estimates there are about a 100000 people missing in syria, detained or abducted. their relatives don't know if they're alive or dead. now, the united nations is preparing to set up a new body to investigate. the cornerstone is the establishment by the general
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assembly of a new international institution to clarify the site and read about of the missing and to provide support to victims and their families. i urge all member states to act, and i call on the government of cd and all parties with the conflicts to cooperate . it is essential to help syrians healed and remove an obstacle to securing sustainable peace. wafaa the stuff welcomes the idea of the new institution. she hopes it could bring her family news about her father ali, who was abducted by armed men in 2013. i spent the past 9 years and 8 months of my life. talking about the moment i lost my dad and, and, and it's still very, very difficult. i mean, it changed, it seems our life for a very changed it. it shattered us. you know, i, i live alone in germany. i have my mom and my sister in canada. i have another
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sister in the us. we were 70 and then that moment when my father was frisky, this appeared by deb day by the gym in 2013. that's from the end, the tor ever. so i spent, i spent, and i still spend the every day of my life trying to find an answer for one single question. is my dad a life? the fact that the syrian government seat in the general assembly meeting was empty is pretty telling the u. n. already has a commission of inquiry on syria, an international impartial, independent mechanism, as well as the teams led by the u own special envoy and the un high commissioner for human rights. and yet, on the issue of the missing the government of syria has not cooperated with any of them. many diplomat sphere. the aside regime will also ignore the new body which the un hopes to have up and running. in a matter of months, james bayes al jazeera of the united nations the political party of former me
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on my lead on san sushi has a cease to exist are to being dissolved by the election commission. the national league for democracy party one elections in 199020152020 was removed from power in a coup. in february of 2021. failed to register under strict new electoral laws brought in by the military genta, sir. she herself has been detained since the crew. to nessie and authorities have started turning off water supplies at night in parts of the capital, tunis and other cities. it's an attempt to reduce consumption as the country is suffering from a severe drought, tennessee, as low on water reserves and crucial dams are well below capacity. the shortages are adding to an already 10 situation was by high inflation and economy.
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pirates have boarded a danish owned ship in the gulf of guinea of the west african coast vessel was attacked on saturday while at anchor 250 kilometers of point in law in the republic of congo, a region notorious for pirate activity. all communication channels with the oil and chemical tanka down, but the 16 strong crew have reportedly taken refuge in a safe room. more foreign troops arriving in the democratic republic of congo to boost the fight against the m. 23 armed groups calls from regional leaders for the rebels to cease fire and withdraw, haven't stopped the violence. and as mark, web reports come and forces the facing accusations of using another alms group to 5 pm $23.00. just 2 weeks ago, fighters from the n 23 armed group held this hill top and then democratic republic
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of congo, government forces fought them off. it were booming. saki from colonel showed us around. he told us it's from here. the 1023 fighters showed the town of san k down below. most of the people here run away, but now a few coming back to collect crops and take them to town. now, when you might look, we cannot go further than here because the rebels are not far away. we used to go up into the hills to bring cassava and other foods. but now you cannot go there because you will meet the rebels cup. con guys, army said he's been fighting rwandan soldiers here under the guise of the m 23 armed. great landed denies backing and 23. the government forces say that they're the ones that are holding the si, fi own. and 23 is not. they want to show us some of that position. with the recent fighting near the town of widely reported to be between m $23.00 and an armed group
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. congos armies widely believed to have supported arms, groups in its fight against them 23. the army denies it. they say that withdrawing their reinforcing in other areas. m $23.00 playing a game and misleading regional leaders and the international community. regional leaders ascending troops under the banner of an east african force. randian soldiers arrived earlier this month. he hasn't stopped the fighting more than a 100000 people have been forced from their homes as m 23 advanced over the last year. some of the people in this camp from the town of new shockey, which is one of the places the n 23 says it's handed over to the burgundy and troops. nancy lee said, we know the east african forces are there and move shockey, but we also know that collaborating with them $23.00 is fighters on nearby. this is why we refusing to go back was kick off without a shot. back up in the hills,
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the colonel took us to the armies most forward position. a few 100. burundi and troops meant to control the territory beyond here. but he says m 23 fighters is still hiding in houses across the valley. many people here question why the government hasn't done more to enable its own forces to stop him 23. now they're wondering if more foreign forces will actually help malcolm web al jazeera look pango, democratic republic of congo. the international olympic committee has recommended that russians and bell russians be allowed to compete international competitions on the neutral flags. they were banned after russia's invasion of ukraine. last year, the committee stopped short of announcing a decision on athletes participation in next year's paris olympics. russians and by the russians have been competing as neutrals in some sports. in the most recent
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series of consultations, the olympic movement, stakeholders reiterated the firm restriction of any political interference in the autonomous authority of sports organizations. to decide on participation in their competitions. this clear and strong reaction to political interference was considered necessary because if governments took over the decisions regarding which athletes couldn't take part in which competitions, it would be the end of world sport. as we know it today. u . s. officials are accusing the founder of the now bankrupt crypto currency exchange f t. x of conspiring to bribe chinese officials. san bank men freed has been charged with directing payments. unblock his frozen accounts in china. a held
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more than $1000000000.00 encrypted currency. the fatty one year old already faces multiple charges including ceiling billions of dollars when f t x collapsed in november. now it's shanghai fashion week and chinese could sure is being showcase alongside the wells top designers in one of ages. biggest fashion fairs being held in a venue that was used as a major quarantine facility just a year ago when the city was undercurrent of ours lockdown florence. larry takes a look. the chinese fashion industry's most glamorous event is back in full sled the shanghai fashion week. is where the who's who of control come together to showcase the best of the country's design and dressmaking talent to, sir, you, follow her in. this is the 1st year after the pandemic and economy is recovering all women and very confident that we found whole class was here. a used to rely
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mainly on the overseas mafia belonging, richie, yes, we made adjustments, and now we focus more on the chinese market. the national exhibition and convention center has been transformed to host a 1600 brands. nearly all of them local. it's hard to imagine that just over a year ago, this building was a very different place. construction crews walked round the clock to build isolation woods. in a matter of days ago, it was transformed into a quarantine center and hospital with 50000 beds. it was one of more than a 100 quarantine facilities in shanghai last year. when cove at 19 infections searched the whole city was placed under one of the strictest locked down in the world, which was only lifted after 2 months since then. shanghai has wrought back to life scenic site, such as the bund or waterfront. i once again packed with people and so much honor, so young, high, experienced, so much last year. it's
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a international cd. tourism is a big industry for shanghai. this year. the economy is still on its way to a full recovery, or to be honest, i think it's only about half of what it used to be the 3 day fashion fair. the 1st, at full capacity since the pandemic is not just a display of shanghai, fashion, industry ambitions. it's a sign, the city is back in business, florence louis algebra. a damage russian space capsule is safely back on earth, off to returning without a crew from the international space station. the saw use spacecraft to parted the i ss on the remote control for months off to suffering. a major coolant leak. it touched on close to the russian space center in kazakhstan. officials banged the leak on a tiny me to roy that punctured the councils. external radiator, the 3 astronauts who was supposed to return on the caps, who was staying on the ice.
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