tv News Al Jazeera April 1, 2023 3:00am-3:30am AST
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songs and chance for the holy month, johnny, this song touched the hearts of all arrows. for amazon songs on al jazeera, the journey from childhood into young adulthood is speckled with tribulation. for youngsters like reamer, autism is another challenge to add to the mix. pronged with a loving family and a caring friend. she bravely lives, learns and chases her dreams as she finds her place in the world. oh, see me as i am a witness documentary on al jazeera. ah, former us president donald trump is expected to voluntarily surrender to face
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criminal charges next week, but the current president remains tight lipped mohammed ah, ah, hello, i'm carry johnston. this is al jazeera alive from z o. also coming up, mexico's president is met with protests as he visits the city where 39 migrants died in a fire. earlier this week, stampede during the distribution of food aid in pakistan kills at least 11 people. plus the un faces criticism for participating in a pilot project to repatriate your hunger refugees of bangladesh. to me and my ah,
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former u. s. president donald trump is expected to appear in a new york court on tuesday. the 1st former president to face criminal charges the case against him involves a hush money payment to adult film star stormy daniels ahead of the 2016 election. trump was formerly indicted on thursday and is expected to plead not guilty to the charges miss expected that trumpet. voluntarily surrender, meaning he won't be arrested. he will be processed as a defendant. he'll be fingerprinted and have mug shots taken. you have the charges against him. read in court, enter a plead and be released with another court date. he won't have to post bail legal experts say he still at least a year away from actually going to trial. so he could be in court during the 2024 presidential election. the u. s. does not bar people from running for office over legal cases. he's also facing multiple other investigations by the justice department, district attorneys in manhattan, and in georgia. and
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a new york attorney general. it's possible we'll end up in court again in one of those cases. with joining us live now from new york is gabriel is on this a gabriel? a lot has happened, but i imagine it's all starting to sink in. now. there sure has been a lot that's been happening over the last 24 hours or so since this indictment was handed down at this very hour, it's all quiet outside the manhattan district attorney's office. right now it's a little after 8 pm here in new york on a friday night. it's important to point out now fit while this case initially centers around the hush money payment, allegedly paid by donald trump, to a former adult film star. it's not so much of that, that is the crime because that is not a crime. it's how he allegedly, or potentially paid that money. that is what is at the center of this and it
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revolves around 2 things. number one is i, did he a, is they are investigating? did he break any sort of new york, a business laws on business documents and forging any sort of documents, even if he did that it would be a misdemeanor. but beyond that, it would potentially be a felony if he knowingly did that on order to hide another crime, such as campaign finance laws that potentially were broken up. donald trump denies any wrong doing. he says that his lawyers will fight this to the very end in court as long as it takes a handful of protesters came out friday at trump tower new york. as news of the former president's indictment filtered through about 6 kilometers to the south outside the manhattan district
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attorney's office. the anticipation among the world's media is also building as a date with history draws closer. but back in florida, donald trump's plain remains firmly on the tarmac, the man himself staying behind closed doors, through most of the day a, leaving his supporters to do most of the talking for him. i think these charges are not legitimate charges. i think what is happening right now in our nation is very sad and i feel that the direction that we are headed is very dangerous since the manhattan district attorney's office, confirmed trumps indictment over hush money payments to a former adult film star speculation has amounted over how trumps arraignment will play out? they've got nothing and its potential effect on the country. trump's lawyers say they'll vigorously fight the charges and framed the indictment as political persecution. it's believe trump will surrender on tuesday,
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and it's expected he will arrive here at the district attorney's office, where he will have his photograph and finger prints take him. he will be in walked down a long hallway to make his 1st court appearance at an arraignment. when he is free to leave, the big question then is, will trump come outside to address the media? one person, apparently unwilling to be drawn into the debate. current u. s. president joe biden. ah. because of the bargain. basement. oh, no plumbing outside the district attorney's office. the weight is on now just days away from a former president to show up and surrender to face a judicial system that is waiting for him. and gabriel, for this coming arraignment than the security preparations must be huge.
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they are, it's going to be unprecedented. it involves the secret service, the f, b i the new york police department, as well as security officials for the court and the district attorney's office. they've been preparing for this for well over a week now, anticipating a potential indictment. now that, that indictment has come down and now that it appears that donald trump will be arriving here at this office. you see behind me as early as tuesday. now all of the preparation goes into motion. a lot of it, we see we see more police officers outside the district attorney's office. throughout the day we've seen some barricades up, but it's still fairly quiet. a lot of the security preparations that are taking place are happening behind closed doors in anticipation for that big day of tuesday . of how are they going to get a former president who always travels with significant security to this district attorney's office, to surrender to authorities and then have
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a court appearance. and then how do they get him out of here? safely, especially since trump himself has been calling on his supporters to protest and there could be counter protests of anti trump folks as well, taking to the streets. add that up with the unpredictability of trump. for example, will he want to speak to the media here? as i mentioned in that story, we simply don't know at all that up and that's why they're just incredible, unprecedented security because of all the unknowns that could happen on tuesday. indeed. okay, we'll leave it there for now. gabriel. thanks so much for that update. ron phillip koski is a former federal prosecutor in the united states. he says, trump may find it difficult to stick to the bail conditions. i fully expect, given what we've seen so far, the judge to order him that if he's going to remain out on pretrial release,
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he cannot not try to attempt to harass, threaten or intimidate any of the witnesses, such as stormy daniels, michael cohen. any of the prosecutors, especially alvin brag or the judge. and that's going to be a pretty big mine field for him. not to be able to, to post on social media or to denigrate them and rally speeches. because that's his bread and butter. i would have said that the new york protest was going to be minor if anything at all, tracking them as i do i, i follow on social media, many of the rabble rousers in new york. but the announcement today of the georgia congresswoman green going there to spearhead this protest that's really energized the right on social media like i haven't really seen since prior to january 6th. so i think that she could draw a significant crowd and could bring in a number of people from outside the city of new york in there on tuesday of and he
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is now angry protest to surround, to the mexican that president under a manual lopez open a door as calm as he visited the city with 39 migrants died in a fire this week. before i began inside a detention center here that was very close to us. border investigation is underway into y. 68 mail margaret's appeared to be left locked in. this cell, while the fire burned 5 people have been arrested. let's get more from john holeman now in mexico city. so john, how is this all playing out for the president who was visiting the city where the tragedy happened? that we heard much from him? we haven't heard a lot from him and actually he was visiting the city not to talk to the survivors not to visit the hospital that they were in. but for pre arranged meetings with government officials naturally didn't go to the hospital. he didn't meet with those
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survivors. so i think that tells you a bit about how he's trying to handle this. perhaps avoiding giving it more publicity after having had to talk about it. all of this week is also blame the united states, partly for the situation with this and said that they should be giving more money to countries or can to avoid the root cause is migrating the people having to take this pathway up through mexico and then try to get the united states see it out. what is, is right on the border with the states. i suppose the big picture here though full mexico and this happened on mexican soil under the care of met. can migration officials is with this change. anything this country is one in which is priority for some time now has been really to stop my grants getting any further. they have a relationship of isley mixed her with the united states. and part of that relationship is mexico trying to stop my grants from getting to the united states buddha and recent times deploying the national guard under president lopez over the
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door to try and stop that and having these detention centers not just didn't see it on qualities but in different parts of the country migrants we have gone for the doors of those detention centers so that basically they resemble prisons. they talk about over crowding, pool sanitary conditions and poor food being given to them in those places before they're being shipped back to where they came from. the president did say on friday that they'll be a national commission set up to investigate and look into the human rights of migrants. whether that would just be lip service would be something that really changes mixed because focus on how they deal with migrants is of course, yet to be saying, john holman, in mexico city forest, thank keith to pakistan. now where at least 11 people have been killed and dozens injured in a stampede, hundreds were a queuing operative food distribution site handouts in karachi. and i,
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its herron aid has been a lifeline for many in pakistan as the nation struggles through a deep economic crisis. and to modern has more oh, hales, fusion and panic, injured and dead are everywhere. money and food has been distributed to poor a tradition during ramadan. the stamp broke out as this site in karachi was overwhelmed by crowds of desperate people. melanie's m, i did it aloud, disabled, but get a dead. those behind us didn't stop, they kept pushing. i was crushed to the last thing i remember is that my sister fell on me. i tried to find my sister, but i couldn't. when the crowd cleared, i saw both of them. my sisters lying dead, women and children were killed as the crowd got out of control. thereupon other stampeded food distribution centers this week, but this was the deadliest site in york. i locker lock i had not been money was
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being distributed among the poor to day a large crowd had gathered which resulted in a stampede efforts to control the crowd, made things worse. some people drawn to a nearby stream, others were trampled underfoot to be muddy. inflation is at a 50 year high and families are struggling to survive. the cost of basic goods like flour of sort, noey 50 percent this past year. families of the dead say they're tired of political infighting and or demanding solution. millions of women have been forced to leave their homes to get some free food. why? because of the governments, the prime minister. keep blaming for melita iran, contra. every thank con is not responsible. he is response broke, there is no gas, no electricity, no water. everything is so expensive. they should die of shame. police of off the area. they've already arrested several people. the organizers are being blamed for failing to inform local authorities about the event, but so long as pakistani families remain in dire conditions. more tragedies like
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this one could be difficult to avoid. benton monahan al jazeera, the international monetary fund has approved a $15600000000.00 loan, few crane is aimed at helping keep maintaining economic stability as it battles the russian invasion alone, that will be spread over 4 years. it's part of a broader $115000000000.00 international support package. in return, ukraine will have to implement fiscal reforms and step up anti corruption efforts. will ukraine has marked the 1st anniversary of the recapture of the town of boucher more than $175.00 dead bodies were found there in mass graves and torture chambers . he blames russian forces for the killings, but moscow denies this. speaking as a function to mark the anniversary, ukrainian president when a mess lensky vow to defeat what he called russian evil. a 2nd
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degree rarely employee has been detained in connection with february train disaster . 57 people were killed in a passenger service collided head on with a freight train. the man detained was on duty as a station supervisor at the time of the accident. he's been charged with disruption of traffic safety, causing death. the stationmaster was arrested in february and charged with negligent homicide. a 1st tornado has struck the city of little rock in the us state of arkansas engine, dozens of people. the twister shredded roof tops up rooted trees and destroyed a small shopping center. tens of thousands of residence without power. it comes a week after thunderstorms on the tornado, mississippi. kidding. 26. people. storm warnings have been issued. parts of missouri, kentucky, and tennessee. or so to come on al jazeera, i,
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we look at why some doctors in india are posing a free health care bill under we'll tell you what's next for jail. i think in most of his stories of he loses his bids for parole. ah, april on out his era from 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 in kazakhstan. 25 years since the good friday agreement and the decades of violence, we report on how bricks it is forging new reality in ours. in the lead up to date al jazeera, explore the environmental significance of action, and inaction, paraguay holds general elections with corruption and organized crime. high on the
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agenda can the ruling colorado part the hold on to power. april on al jazeera frank assessments justice means to give them the basic human rights, not only in the camp, but also inside the myanmar informed opinions. 5 administration are very concerned about this development especially, or what it means for china's power on the world stage. critical debate. only both the legal report, a spirit in depth analysis of the days headlines inside story on al jazeera lou. ah,
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he without 0 reminder of our top stories this. donald trump is expected to appear in a new york court on tuesday. the 1st to form a u. s. president to face criminal charges is expected to plead not guilty to accusations related to a hush money payment to adult film start stormy daniels. angry protests is surrounded mexican. the person address my known as abra doors car. she visited the city with 39 migrants, died in a fire earlier this week. if i began inside a detention center, 5 people arrested. it focused on at least 11 people have been killed in a stampede. at a ramadan food distribution center. monitoring aid has been a lifeline for many as a nation struggles with deep economic crisis. the u. n. is facing criticism for participating in a pilot project to repatriate rocking refugees from bangladesh to me in march. and
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there's been further controversy after lead communication with the old un boats were used to transport action to officials, to bangladesh in march on diplomatic editor james bass, raised these issues with the un special envoy on me and my we have made it very clear that that of any attempt at return is not about closing camps, no moving people. it has to be based on the international standards and best practices. and we have always stressed that the conditions in the rock kind has got to be conducive to voluntary save and dignified return. and a, we are not satisfied that those conditions are there at this particular time. but joseph, the voluntary save and dignified return. and oh, we are not satisfied that those conditions are there at this particular time. but right now, you have officials from the military regime who have gone to bangladesh and they
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are organizing a pilot project to return people to see you and support them. well, a currently a, u. n a c r is in charge of that, ah, and so, so i think they, they are the best people to un boats to transport. members of the military regime to bangladesh. they took off the un insignia, they apparently had guns on the top hole ins as they went there. i mean, this sounds like an appalling breach of un neutrality. was it a serious mistake? you are what they have already said. i accept to, to support them. but that journey on un boats does have, i think, serious repercussions for the perception of the un. the generals who carried out a qu, now seemed to, at least on one occasion, have a navy. and that navy is the united nations, doesn't this put you and staff at risk?
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well, if they had consulted me, i would have stopped it. but nobody consulted me. a report by the campaign group. ethical consumer is accusing farm, manages in spain of routinely abusing migrant workers. allegations include unpaid wages, forced labor and demanding sexual favors for employment. one half of europe's fruit and vegetables come from southern spain. report is calling on supermarket chains that bite from those farms to take action and demand. workers' rights are respected . a clear carlisle as a researcher, it ethical consumer and an author of their report. she says the workers are often undocumented, and many are young women recruited from north africa when the, when the brian conditions are nothing like that told they can be, they often live on farms where they're given cookies or they're restricted from losing that passports might be confiscated. day to day they're working on the heat
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for hundreds in very hot conditions with very little safety condition, equipment underpayment of wages is very common. union busting is very common at work and covenant stream, lead time speaking out, or making sure that a key issue is that as being the massive kind of passing the buck between different people, you should all be working together to create change. you know, the authority point to retailers repay the point of government, it keeps on passing round, whereas actually, you know, supermarket are profiting from ration and they do that or need to taking accountability for it. i think it's easy when retailers because one step removed patients be saying, you know, it's not our issue is we can't do anything about it. i think that also probably a bit of naive t from many of us about what goes on in europe. and particularly when it comes to migrant workers, undocumented migrants often the most secret society people really content blind di
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to what is actually very blatant expectation for mover influences. andrew trait and his brother have been released from custody romania and placed on the house arrest. have been investigated over human trafficking, rape, and forming a criminal gangs sexually exploit women. 2 men have been in detention since the end of december and you hated describe the soldier. this goes following of millions of most the young male fan astride by private doctors in the northern india state about the sun as entered its 15th day there protesting against new health legislation, which guarantees free healthcare patient say the crisis is affecting treatment. having to tell reports from the city of diaper patients are lining up a job was largest government hospital. they say the ongoing doctor strike is making treatment harder to get dressed and there aren't any doctors and hospitals when we
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come to gorman facilities, patients are not treated properly. doctors do x rays and even to this surgery, but they don't know when they can do it. doctors and largest on state approved testing recently passed has debit. houses of them have hit the st, demanding the act, be repeated. private facilities have close disrupting medical services. patient said they're being forced to queue up in overcrowded government hospitals or go to another state, georgia. so on state already spent more than the national average on public health and treatment. and government hospitals like these large, the 3 the right to has act. next we have a legal rights making it the 1st legislation of finding doctors actually for private hospitals to treat emergency cases, even if patients cannot afford it. they believe this will increase bureaucratic interfering emergency when sort of got, how can the government to find an emergency that's for the doctors to decide. i'm
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said the government should ask us to help them make a law. yeah, the act looks like it's been copied from a developed country which has good health care infrastructure. the government says the actual expand existing health, gaskin and increase access to the poorest people any longer love me. sometimes poor people don't get treated and either government or private hospitals. that's why it's important to give it to them as a right. so they won't die because they didn't get treatments. if the governments covering costs up to $30000.00, what's the issue? the government says it's open to discussions but will not be the act patients hope the deadlock is resolved soon. for now, the plan to broaden has access has resulted in restricting it, at least temporarily by the name of the largest era, jap, or northern india. former south african at paralympic in oscar pis stories has been denied parole and or stay in prison for at least another year. he serving
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13 years for the murder of his girlfriend, real estate camp on the south african law. as doris was eligible to apply for parole after serving half his sentence for on friday a parole board found he had not said the minimum term, but quite they deliberated. and tim dove arrived her term. a particular decision which was largely guided by like out of his clarification order from the supreme court, which stated that to mister, restored us, has not yet reached the minimum detention period. and the, when the parole board went through that they didn't gave him what to call a fed profile for august 2020 form. meaning that he will have to a pig again m m n and next year. and there, there will then a look into the profile a, make a decision in terms of his placement. but for now it was a matter of saying he has not served them in the month detention permit. italy has blocked the microsoft backed artificial intelligence system, chat, g p t,
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data protection authorities say the services being investigated for failing to check the age of its uses. chat g p t is designed to interact in a human life way and can be used to answer difficult questions and write articles. that's it for me. for now news continues harold, artist, here after inside story. ah ah hello, we've got some gorgeous spring sunshine to enjoy the cherry blossom in south career in japan. fine and dry here, high pressure in charge or the winds. lights is settle and its sunny still a few showers down towards southernmost parts and we will see something of a change as we go on through the next couple of days as our $26.00 and so low
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twenty's there in japan fi. and i 22 for beijing as well, but increasing cloud will to start to push its way in as we go into next week. bringing some outbreaks of rain in that rain will be heavy at times, particularly as we make our way into monday and tuesday, big dropping temperatures as it clouds over. and that rain does set in rain setting in 2, across some parts of the philippines over the next hour. so some live the showers just pushing back in here. but the possibility some localized flooding the usual seasonal downpours around the equator, indonesia sinks. and while the wet weather over the next few days, now we have seen some very wet weather recently across northern parts of india, particularly towards the northeast. now that wes a weather orange, one is in force here, pushing out of west bengal, leasing into bangladesh. the far north east of india. still some sherry range is peppering the far north of the region. us round the foothills of the himalayas and still unsettled for northern pass pakistan.
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