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tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  May 25, 2023 1:00pm-2:01pm AST

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to the benefits as community from the minerals beneath the land. he must navigate the a jo tribal disputes above it, the witness golden light on now to sierra thanks. loved to make loans to some friends because behind the suffering millions of taxpayers. because those taxpayers never go away. there's a new one bone every single day. i mentioned it is emerging national necessities in the country as officially requesting the information of this important because it is important. we create it together because i happened to live in greece somehow. i'm a sinner, i'm a bad person that's machine on outages era. the 1st is instead of here, turn down to and launch numbers for a presidential election to produce no clear winna as presidents are gone and challenger co should all the go have to have in a run off on may 28th will succeed,
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you know, find the post for the prices below the story as it breaks on. obviously the, [000:00:00;00] the hello i'm 0 venue a. it's great to have you with us. this is the news our lives from. do ha, coming up in the program today. the most wanted fugitive and there were one in genocide, is arrested in south africa after decades on the run you fingers show record levels of net migration into the u. k. last year, putting more pressure on the government's heavy fighting. and sedan threatens a french aisle ceasefire that was meant to allow in humanitarian aid
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the penny into the musical era, global superstar tina turner who's known as the queen of rock and roll has died at the age of 80 in support. robert thread, sorry. that 1st match since the racial abuse of that plan when you see if junior is teammates and finds that the darn about joined together to show that support for the present against the head of that guy that gives rise icon on the so we begin this use our when breaking news from south africa where police have arrested the most wanted fusion to the in the 19941 to genocide. after decades on the run for against a cation that has been on the run for more than 20 years. he's accused of
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organizing the killing of nearly 2000 foot seas seeking shelter at a catholic church. in the u. k. now new figure is just released, showed that net migration reached a record 606000 people last year. foreign minister richie snack has said the number of people coming to the u. k is quote, too high, and the latest data is likely to increase political pressure on snack. whose government as pledge to bring numbers down that migration to britain in 2015 the year before the break. that referendum was 329000 people in new figure of 606000 represents an increase of 20 percent on last year's 504000 you case home secretary sweller, braverman says that she wants to see fewer than a 100000 people emigrating to the u. k. each year. all right, let's speak now to nadine bob in london. the name of start by breaking down the
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numbers for us please. why are we seeing these near record numbers and where are the immigrants coming from? the as well, yes, as he said, he's a records figure out for net migration, but a lot of people here were expecting it to be higher the price they've been talking about between 700000 the 1000000 net migration for the whole of last year. so the government might well be fairly please, but it's actually a $606000.00 is the set a 20 percent rise on the previous figure. we, what we do have a, an inkling as to some of the factors which offer example the u. k. government, grunting. she monetary and visa is the people from ukraine and from hong kong. then you've got to the, the policy post breaks. it's wherever you kind of government has these restrictions on known the european union, the citizens coming into work and
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a study in the u. k, for example, the minimum salary levels and skills requirements. then you've got the universities who have been encouraged to target for in student services students. it's coming to study here which bring in a significant revenue for the sector. many of those typically post graduate students bring dependence with them. so those are some of the factors going into it . so the, the, the position of labor party has been choosing the government of losing control over that migration. they have talked about the country being over reliance on a foreign labor. they've been in the last 24 hours putting forward some of the original ideas as to how to train british workers to fill some of the gaps. but at the moment, sectors like health care, social care, education really do need significant numbers of people from other countries in the
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here are now and so it's a very difficult balancing act. the government has to strike between a meeting, it states you the objective of bringing the numbers down. most of them say they stay away from target figure is like sort of brought them in head indicated. but doing that, wow. keeping those sectors and keeping the economy to healthy. yeah, that is exactly the question i was going to ask you nadeem about this balancing act because you explained to us very clearly that essentially the u. k. who wants to be generous to certain groups of people and wants to welcome them in. okay, that's one to it needs certain people to fill jobs and it's economy. that's the 2nd group, and 3 it is targeting more students, as you explained, how is the government going to be able to square all of that, which as you just explained, had been government policies and priorities with this other priority of bringing down the number the, the integration met, migration to the u. k. i'm sure what it is. it's
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difficult as i was saying, wish you so you're not cuz just said he wants to. he thinks the numbers are too high here that he wants to bring them down. really not going anywhere near that. tens of thousands target that to be mentioned in the past. but also, most of the headlines, the narrative over the last few years has been about the arrivals of people in small bites from frogs. talking about that being a priority to voters, thoughts that represents a very small percentage of totes and migration to the u. k. basically we're talking about people who generally been going to claim a solid and gets it here in the u. k. just in the last hour or so. but you see that has said that both those arrivals on fast and those people have jumping the queue. critics, even write scripts will points out that basically is none q for assign them c cause unless your from certain countries such as ukraine. for example, su denise,
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people right now have no official root of trying to come to the u. k. so that all human has tended to distract from what's happening to the big picture on the net migration, which is our 2nd both students. it's involves nurses. it involves people in hospitality. and so there's a big debate right now between the government and big business here in the u. k. as to what the strategy should be. nadine bubba, thank you very much for all those explanations and breaking down the number of christina rotten steiner is the chief of the u. k. mission of u. n. migration. she joins this slide from london on this so so, so what's driving immigration to the u. k? i mean, the team is told of some of the groups of people, but why are there, for instance, more people needed to fill jobs in the u. k. and why they're more students or immigrating to the u. k. now, than before, i thank you for that. so i would say that overall we have seen an increasing number, but it's important to keep a long term prospective. the u. k. like other high in some countries have seen an
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increasing number of the migration, but it is not one that's really going up very much all the time. but what we have seen last year is it increase because of separate events that have happened to the one ukraine event sitting in hong kong. we've also seen an increase the amount of due to students, but the case came to bring into the country. sort of this sense accumulates huge, but i would say in the long term, the population, the foreign boom population, in the case, very similar to that of other countries. i'm high income kind of do something has remained relatively the same. but what we do see is that there is a shortage in many sectors, particularly in the health care sectors. and this is also what history then some of that increase. but i think we should really look beyond the numbers and look at the benefits of migrant spring because the huge to the u. k. economy and also the society or so if i can. exactly. that's what i wanted to get you to talk about because i main stream political argument in the u. k,
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especially within the conservative party is the immigration, is a drag on the british economy. right? that immigrants take british jobs, that they cost the country, money, etc. what do the numbers actually tell us on that? the good folks, all the numbers tell us that the migraines, as the immigrants of working age as they contribute 3 times more than what the u. k . government spends on them. so think this is really important to remember also what we see lots of high income countries as an aging population. so if we don't want to see people working longer and taking the pension later we, these companies will need migrant labor. so it's really important to, to have a great balance narrative because i feel in many countries this, we're talking about migration is something negative, but it is a fox of life. it is very much needed for the economies of the countries. and it's important to explain this to the population. and what's really interesting in the u . k, the polls show that people actually called positive and my migration to understand
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the benefits. so it's really important to remain calm and balanced about this and talk about the benefits that migrant spring and very much also focus on how can we make sure that benny at the migration benefits all the countries that receive from the migrant so that the protective also the countries of the region, well, so as we speak, we are seeing pictures of the small boat crossings, right? that we've talked about so much on al jazeera, the migrants people who are fleeing often and sub saharan africa, afghanistan parts of asia. and they travel across europe and they cross the channel onto the small boats trying to make it to the u. k. where do they fit into this picture as well? their cost of, of, of people who are right and, and the people who need protection. i think that's really the most important thing to remember that people do not take such desperate journeys unless they really felt
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it was needed. people fleeing conflict and we can see that by the national that the nationalities who arrive. so we need to make sure that to be able to travel and say somebody groups and very few of these exist at the moment. and this is why people, unfortunately taking these dangerous journeys. so i went, coal was from, we'll say somebody believes to be established. so that people can travel safely. krista wrote in steiner, a chief b u. k. mission of un migration. thank you so much for joining us on the program today. thank you for having me. returning to our breaking news now from south africa where police have a rest of the most wanted fugitive in the 1994, a london genocide after decades on the run is name for getting sick. kind of shimmer is been if you to do for more than 20 years. he's accused of organizing the killing of nearly 2010 sees seeking shelter at a catholic church. good faith. they were human. liza is an attorney and political analyst. he's with his life under one capital,
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kigali shed some light. put some context around who this person is to our attention to be 0 is the zip codes you might use uh, is an important uh, uh person in the, in the project. and the gentleman, i guess, is what you need, he possible is that the heating or use of april. i've seen that so you know, as somebody that just that stuff and know that the sees he brings the past the who because why getting to the started? i don't, i think mine there's never been cubed when they inflict church. so what it might be by, you know, by bringing to work in a church, you bricks, the press, the whole, the i'm a hospital. ok. so she's in the church and the subsequent
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waiting for that spot to which is why do you by the that because what they have so should say in the church speaking back to their hosting that but yeah, i'm going to try to be cool but i'm yeah, this is april grace and my to simply the church and then open the door to people. you're going to check and it's getting worse. you are getting churches. so that's an important aspect of this, the teachers and the guys whom i pointed. barber shop for a very long time. how then with the city, how, how did he manage to be a fugitive for more than 2 decades? being one of the most the most wanted fugitive left because it was because they had netflix, the pretty big. then it went to people so but the who the when,
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when defends or what i can do for it comes to some sort of crap between the fronting. got you on this lee? i do think this a trip to the village. i love to speak to you yesterday about some of the sisters sent in to you and in europe, the for most of the networks where they protect each other and some government protective. so for example, the french government liberated for basically a single rather because the, you know, because of these networks of things. and so then it puts in a row. but the neighboring country, he said, is the, the actual moment in time. what caused you to see especially eastern india? i can do right if i can. and jennifer myers also, there was. so these are really important and sending a signal to people, you couldn't go to these for producing positions welcoming for kings of let's see. uh, to understand that the,
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the book is also going to come sooner or later. so i think there's a moment at this time. yeah. and where. ringback can you to, can you describe the investigative work over such a long period of time that goes into a capture an arrest, like the one we're seeing today, right. to run the general say, did you keep track and use that? well, we uh 40, i'm just the diesel across the world. but why are you sending bateman's? i'm just good guys. you my was on the basement the cold size and, and we've been waiting to close this door. so it's up suddenly to united mints and these by the prosecution was taking some coffee. sure. this was when the whisk i'm told you the brown g e o depends on the corporation of the government where it's personally now unfortunately,
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governments of this was how sometimes they don't have political leads to try and get rid of these people. so we're very big. the girlfriend, i mean uh then this because we lost some keys where both are known by the government and the countries are reluctant to look up to them and, and bring them to justice. did they get paid? they were home elisa, thank you for joining us at such short notice. we just found out moments ago about this information will speak to you again. thank you as well. there's plenty more head on this news. our, including china, is saying that the us and its allies are conducting a, this information campaign after western nations accused of spying. and we speak to security and list about reports of a deal between russia and bellows on tactical nuclear weapons. also in sports, one of the biggest names in mixed martial arts could soon be entering the boxing ring for who will be here later. this hour with more on
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the fighting incident is threatening of fragile ceasefire aimed at allowing in much needed humanitarian aid. a fighter jet was shot down and undermined northwest of car to him and artillery fire has been reported near a military base. this in these army and the rival paramilitary group, the rapids support forces had been locked in a power struggle for more than a month. saudi arabia and the us broker the ceasefire, which began on monday, him a morgan joins as life from under me on hit him a d. b. it's too early to say that the cease fire is broken. where are we right now? and what's the latest on the ground in terms of the flight? well, one thing that we can definitely say is that the ceasefire that was signed between the to the needs army and the rapids support forces is not being fully implemented . now. today is the 3rd day of the ceasefire,
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and we weren't able to hear recognizance planes flying overhead. that's a violation of betsy's part that was signed. we can hear the sounds of heavy arts and they were in the distance here in the city of under might have lost here which direction that's coming from. that is also a violation of the ceasefire. now on, on wednesday, the residents in various parts of the campus and for to here in the city of on demand, in cartoon city say that they were able to hear heavy artillery in the west. some parts of some city residents were advised to stay indoors because of the heavy gunfire between the rapid support forces and the food in these army. now a fight to jet crashed yesterday as well. and they said in these army says that it was not because of the iris stuff using surface to air air, marseilles like the rest of the claims, but rather due to a technical error which we do know that one of the pilots was captured by the rapids support forces and the face of the 2nd pilot is via to be clarified by both sides. pricing is still very much ongoing in various parts of the capital and in
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other parts of the country as well. the army says that the reset attacks the cities of to nina and is that in j, that's in west star for centrals are for, and there was some parts of the country despite a ceasefire. so both sides accusing the other of violations on the ground. people saying that yes, this is a bit calmer compared to him tuesday and wednesday, but they're not sure that this these far as actually holding because of the gun fires. they've already heard over the previous days and because they can hear the recognizance planes and the flights of jets overhead. right. the ceasefire as you've described, isn't completely holding. i think it's a little early to say it's completely broken. we're always operating in this gray area that you've been describing says for pretty much 5 weeks. now the point of this latest ceasefire, and if my math is right, it is the 7th ceasefire we've seen and 5 weeks of fighting was to allow the people of sudan, and especially in cartoon to either leave the city or at least be able to go out for, for food and all the basics,
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how is that going of the well humanitarian corridors were supposed to be opened for a to come into the capital here, as well as 2 other places like these are for region in the west. now we understand from minutes, resources that aid was able to come to the capital product to, to why the so you'd know what is the mid 3 air base or the flight suggests belonging to the. so denise army having taken a taking off from. but the thing is, it's not been able to reach those in need. it wasn't, it hasn't been distributed yet to the people in the northern parts of the capital up to where intense pricing has been ongoing between the reception visit. and these are me, it hasn't been delivered to her to the city itself. and that's lovely because of the pockets of violence that is happening here in the capital. the situation is quite desperate. people say that for them to need, they need safe passages to be able to leave the capital. and they also need to ensure that access to hospital. that is one thing that a lot of people have talked to us about the issue of access to medical assistance.
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we've visited the hospital here in the city of on demand on wednesdays. and this is what we saw normally and why to but creep brings her mother to rebuild. alice has sent her twice a week. but since the starts of fighting, getting access to hospital with the needed facilities has been difficult since the stump of the will, the health facility which is a dialysis and closed, we went to another hospital and started the but they were only able to decent their leases for 2 hours we tried several others, but the call to move generally has no power running. this is my mother's 1st dialysis in 2 weeks to most of the patients in the dialysis word here in a no hospital in under man city have travel to get here. the 5 things let to most of the 29 hospitals and how to unable to function health care facilities have been under pressure since the spots of the conflict. somehow had to turn away patients
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because they don't have the space or medicine to treat them. others have close their doors out of fear of being caught up in the fighting or because of damages to their building. this hospital is one of the few remaining providing reno treatments to patients. but the staff say they may not be able to do so for long. yeah. patients who come in need dialysis 3 times a week can only get one session and even the dialysis is changing here due to a sure what to do next needs. we don't have enough diet lies or occupational kidneys today is the last day for us to treat the kid the patients. we don't even have the troops and gloves. there's nothing left based on the medical staff are in short supply volunteers help from the hospitals operations. so i don't know, oh hi, i'm here because of my sense of responsibility and nationalism. this is my country and this is a least i can offer the people who come here are friends, brothers,
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neighbors. and even if we don't know them, we're all the same blood. so we all need to stone together. a ceasefire assigned between the wearing parties is meant to open him many terry and corridors for those in need of medical assistance. but the fighting continues, threatening to make a dire situation even worse. he but morgan ultra 0 on through mine of the russian state media report. a deal has been signed to station tactical nuclear weapons and bella roost. defense minister cert, gotta show who says the decision was taken after what he called a sharp escalation on russia's borders. president vladimir putin made the announcement back in march when he said a storage facility will be completed by july. the spring and richard whites about this is a security analyst expert on the rush at what the strategy is true geostrategic analysis consultancy. he joins us from washington,
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d. c. thanks for being with us practically. what is the benefit of this for russia? not much in the purely military sense. russia already has a 1000 says nuclear weapons. so some of them are, are already deployed on the ground or on airplanes near where the bellow roosted. so these are likely to be located. so it just, it adds a couple more locations to what russia already has, but it's not say, the major chains that could have happened if the russians had kept their nuclear weapons and to the, as they tried to do in 1960, which, but they've given them an entirely new scope of operation. so if it doesn't give russia a significant tactical advantage in this war, why they doing it
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a it's political stage knowing we've seen many of the russian theory of victory, how they're going to when this mass and you frame, rely and involve several tellers of one of which is to intimidate the west into backing down and, and, and it's, it's, it's support for ukraine. so it's done in russia. the russian government is the highest levels. presidents with non down, well issue statements warning of the risk of new players. or if nato does not take care of their give patriots to ukraine, gives f sixteens to brain food in reference to giving of depleted uranium munitions to ukraine. so it's a way of just reminding the west that this brushes a great new their power and that the west, better be careful. or we could stumble into a nuclear war. you know,
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that's the main reason they appear to be doing this. it does help them. it's frank and ties are control over those. um, since if the weapons are there, that's another reason why i am a valid rosa's security is tied to russia. but i think the main reason is this part of this intimidation and campaign by which the heard should get to wish that if i could jump in, do you feel that is still working for russia? this strategy of nuclear intimidation, as you call it, is this still working for russia as well as it did in the 1st few months of the war? you could feel, you know, back 810 months ago you could feel the jitters, right around europe and nato, and the us and the western military deciders. when russia was saying, hey, we could use our tactical nukes. and now, and now they're still making these threats. and there isn't nearly as much of a nervousness in western capitals when they do. yes,
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you are correct. so that in the initial phases of oh are we you know, on the right the ukrainians. so you did for a ne, down know, 5 song over their country to protect them from russian aircraft. and missiles on the west adamantly wouldn't do that because of the risk of coming into confrontation with russian fighters. and this is, you know, it's constrained like the west in the clean, initially there, there are no western or foreign troops in ukraine. aside from the 2 volunteers from the western side, the west has been hesitant about giving the valor roost. singers patriot time, ours then net tanks and the latest areas is best experience, but you are right. some barriers has been declining. um and this but no rush. it continues the strategy, i think that's why we're not seeing new starts slowly execute it. so it's more of a present. you get up to to think right about that, is that right?
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it's a waning asset. so there are other, i think there are other means that help the windshield victories just through the exhaustion and oppression. and they keep the battles line 10 years. then, just as the west in afghanistan in syria and elsewhere will lose interest. and russia will kind of feel, but it's, that's a lot harder and longer process than simply frightening the west with the nuclear war image. richard wides, thank you very much for joining us. thank you for having me. and the wagner group is hand in control. if i moved to russia's military, the head of wagner made the announcement on a visit to the eastern ukrainian city. earlier, he gave an interview saying, once a 1000 of his troops had been killed in this battle, which lasted 9 months, went on to criticize russia's military leadership and said that strategic objectives had failed. is that you will, if you create in forces head, figuratively, $500.00 tanks at the beginning of this special operation. now they have 5000. if
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20000 people knew how to fight. now 400000 people know how to fight. what, how have we demilitarize you cream? now it turns out that we, on the contrary, hell knows how have militarized ukraine in the us and south korea or holding their largest ever joint military exercises marketing 70 years since the start of their military alliance. the drills are set the last until mid june. from mcbride has more from pushy on city and south career. these exercises are being staged to box the 70 effective, the 3 of the alliance between south korea and viewed. i could states which came into being after the fighting has ended in the korean. besides the exercises, according to solis, defense, fitness freaks they are among the biggest exercises that have ever been staged
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at the very latest jet fighters. those career is always an good by these exercises saying that they are a dress rehearsal for both. i'd also complaining about the fact that you all taking place so close they say to the heavily fortified d n c b. ready but according to the south, with increasing threats from jung gang with a noise continuing to be fellow pits, nuclear missiles, these drills has to be staged a sites. that's a deterrence against the question. you're going to put it on order uh clean, which is training is conducted with the aim of enhancing the alliance and joints operational capabilities to implement peace through strength. this is the largest scale training in h us approximately 70 of the most of on south korean. and us units are enrolled into that, to move into and a half 1000 troops. and over 600 pieces of equipment will you for it's part of your career, says demonstrations of military might such as these give it to the legitimate right
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to do. 2 so if it's nuclear arsenal, dismissals, rough mcbride, i'll just say around po, chunk city, south korea still ahead on that was a 0. firefighters baffled a huge fire that could destroy several buildings in australia, as most populous city. and in sports, find out what happened when a tennis player lost his temper and then his rackets during this match and print the color, we have some live the storms across southern parts of here, of eastern areas. if you're upon settle this where they can sit for a lot of plaza, around the eastern space, pushing across southern france. i was out some pushing into the eastern side of here, but up towards the northwest. we have some very pleasant sunshiny very different conditions. this is where the weather is simply so best we have clear sky,
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say lots of sunshine coming for no great temperatures. it has to be sad because around the area of high pressure is when it's coming in from an old sleep, when ne, the direction but 20 celsius, less not to chevy that for london getting up to 22 in power. so the dry weather that will squeeze a little further southwards at east west as we go on through friday for the batch around 18 celsius the in london, but at least the wind shouldn't be too strong, so i don't feeling bad at swordfish. i was there looking across the balkans easing over towards the black sea. the kids do still see some wet weather. quite a bit of frightening the full cost over the next couple of days across the good pots of spain and portugal, one or 2 of those shot, was also affecting the finals west of africa. well, they said there was a volunteer. we had no deposits. and as you're saying, some very heavy, right hands and big and sundry down, pulls into west africa, pushing up towards the house all the way into became fossil for thursday.
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the the, the rip hotel is the hotels that i've ever stated. and the biggest box you have ever seen. how does sprout taken out dishwasher really loved it when it was built. even when it was been a major toners have the conflict in northern ireland in the late 20th century bills last,
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you wrote more hotels analogies here. the the the, you're watching else a 0, a reminder of our headlines this. our police in south africa have arrested the most wanted fugitive in the 1994 were one and genocide. after more than 20 years on the run, against a kyesha is accused of organizing the killing of nearly 2000 foot c seeking shelter of the catholic church. official figures show annual net migration to the united kingdom reached a record. i have 606000 last year. prime minister rich sumac has pledged to bring down those numbers and russian state media reports a deal has been signed to station tactical nuclear weapons. and villarille's
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defense minister survey show who says the decision was taken after what you called a sharp escalation on russia's borders. let's get more in our breaking news. the rest of the most wanted fugitive in the 1994. we're one and genocide. now can web is tracking this from the roby. can you markham, tell us, i know this news broke just a few moments ago. tell us all the latest everything you know at this stage the. it was 22 years ago that susan was chi summit was charged by the international criminal tribunal for london. he's been on the run ever since. we know that he was a police inspector and mulanda before 1994 and the court prosecute to say, during the 1994 genocide, he supported due to militia and he's wanted the genocide crimes for his role. as he mentioned in the killing of 2000, daphne sees in a church international criminal tribunal for one that was criticized,
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delivering one sided justice of a cases against 22 munition leaders and those that supported them. and it dropped all of its cases against the rwandan patriotic front, dissolved in 2016 at its 2 a 6 and handed over to another 4 sex up by the un to be international residual mechanism for criminal tribunals in front of that. cool. the chi center is now expected to send files malcolm lab reporting from nairobi. thank you very much. we will continue to get more from you on this throughout the afternoon, or authorities in australia or investigating what sparked a massive fire inside a heritage listed building in central sydney. more than a 100 fighters baffled to contain the flames which erupt it from a 7 story building. parts of the apartment complex collapse and at least one vehicle has been destroyed. and the blaze has since been contained us. and china
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has denied allegations by western intelligence agencies and microsoft that a state sponsor the hacking group has been spying on critical us communications networks. china is foreign ministry calls the allegations a this information campaign for which there was no proof, a group known as volt 5 food is accused of targeting the us territory of guam, which contains several military facilities. microsoft says it believes the hacking was aimed at disrupting communication networks within it. with asia, as tina turner known to millions of fans as the queen of rock'n'roll has died after a long illness. she was 83 years old. she dominated charts around the world with tracks including we don't need another hero and private dancer. and jordan looked back at the life of a global superstar who to those who loved her music was simply the best tina turner saying about broken hearts and lofty dreams with equal parts,
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gusto and cynicism. but her 1984 hit. what's love got to do with it? gave the little girl with the big voice a 2nd chance it start them. and with a musical icon status, the toner was born, animate. bullock in 1939 to a family of poor farm workers in tennessee, a sing, or since childhood. she had a few early hit on rhythm and blues radio, but books 1st taste of international fame came in the 19 sixty's when she and her husband fronted the ike and tina turner review their rendition of the song proud mary was the reviews biggest hit, the
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like repeatedly abused teen up physically and sexually throughout the marriage teen of flood, i could 1976 and filed for divorce. she spent the following decade trying to rebuild her career. most record labels didn't want to work with turner. as a mother in her forties, she was considered too old for pop stardom. however, capitol records took a chance and by the end of 1984 turners album, private dancer was at the top of the charts, the toner, 13 grammy awards for a private dancer, the saying on the charity record, we are the world and had a story role in the film mad max beyond the thunder dummy today is my search limit
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. turner was now of bonafide global star per concert. julie sold out on 6 continents turner tour until she was 70 her final concert celebrated her 50 years in music. the she published for memoir, produced a broadway musical about her line. if they're still given me awards, it's 81. unless that does something right and was inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame. twice. turner married her long time partner in 2013, finally achieving her dreams of musical success and true love. still ahead on elsie's 0, it's for the new team will be playing european football next season for who the contact is here with that in
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the election commission has released the official results of last week's general election with move forward claiming a majority, 151 seats put, tie another opposition parties in 2nd place with a 141 seats. set it as a facing mounting pressure to endorse the move forward. party leader as prime minister tony chang is in bangkok and looks at how the flight to the top job might play out. this could be the moments a new government was. heads of
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a policies making up a majority block in the lower house, signed a memorandum of understanding the full front deleted with move forward. that pick to prime minister. the man at the moment swamp itself is everywhere. he goes. there's one major obstacle, 250 military appointed senators. don't like him nearly as much as his teenage bands . the struggle of politics elected versus a pointed is being cleared and that there's a new consensus moving forward and hopefully that we have enough number that reflects that in any functioning democracy. and the people that comes out come up with a mandate from the people, has the right legitimacy to govern. but time politics is a tough business alliances, easily broken, an allies, a band and is full, its main coalition partners per time. if the senate refuses to induce peta,
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they could form a different coalition with parties backed by the ministry. that might be hard for the supporters, but would give them easy access to the reins of power. in the beginning, they are forming together with move forward. if move forward, so you should we bring the country to this whole, this us back nation. the said at least like the option is a minority government led by the generals who sees power and a military coup in 2014. that administration would almost certainly be immediately toppled by a vote of confidence. but with the senate support could keep type politics in a deadlock, for at least a year on the importance of the unelected sentence hasn't been lost, don't protest as picketing outside the parliament building. they want to make sure the senate has listen to the people's voice. oh, how high. well, how many, how about items? if they play outside the rules, i think people who are not here will feel very upset and will be ready to come out
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on the streets to protect democracy. and that is a posing threat. this is quite a mile the well, but hey, purchased it. it was just 2 years ago, the thousands are protested. stone based case trying to get into a problem. and there's a real concern that the senate has defined the will of the electorate. that kind of social unrest. tony chung out is 0. right. it's time failure, sports coverage with ro pack who's doing this for whole serial. thank you very much . la legal present, heavier to of us has apologized for his criticism, overall budget club, and this is junior, and he has have hate house at the spanish league for filing to take action against races of the presenting and has been targeted with the several times the season i do it just and reports a united show of support from the players of royal madrid. whole squad,
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reuben issues juniors number 20 shit. and if the game against royal, by calling on the clubs thus much since they present in fluid was racially abused valencia on sunday. well, venice has missed this game through injury rail fence shunted his name. and the 20 minutes seems that we need you to get a better feel of use from a supporter. let's see if it's a ration abuse. in this case then issues has been targeted with abuse multiple times the season. this week it resulted in the plas thing, the spanish league belongs to racists, legal presidents have yet to pass reinstate. by criticizing vinicius, each of us has no apologize for the dental. they will kind of been doing. people have to say, sorry, because the message that i wrote and what i was trying to say a large number of people, especially those in brazil, did not understand how so i didn't explain myself very well simple. my timing wasn't right, but i have no intention of attracting vinicius,
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disliked to step aside, could prove to be a tipping point in how spain deals with football racism. a risk of being made in valencia was sanctioned with a fine and partial stadium closure fitness uses received backing from across the football in world. i think it's so bad the actually it looks like it is going to force change. so i'm hoping that they will be something positive to come from it, because then i think it has taken a central story, not just in spain, but across europe and around the world. even the united nations is taken on venice uses case it's planning to provide new guidelines on how to prevent and counts that racial abuse in sports and much more indeed needs to be done to eradicate racial discrimination. and it needs to start with the listening to people of african descent,
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meaning fully involving them and taking genuine steps to effect upon that can sense in the rio de janeiro, a sub where he grew up. then he says, will remain a hero and a role model for how he plays and what he has to say. on the richardson l g 0 of the english premier league proudly l. as manchester city drew 11 at bryce's, ending in front of 12 successive league waves. this was city's fast guides since being crowned tompkins. and as this tradition that are part of this price, in this case, welcome the team out with a god about us, the leak might already be one box man city. so website to you to play full applies high through the full sky. why into the sports for the f i, comp and champions make photos of ice fire i still side and giving city a 25th minute leave the hard to price it all. start with something on the mark that required a drawer to qualify for the right click and i'm going to come up with that because it's an incredible site from the power line. so i can forward rather familiar with and see. so it didn't show they got the point, they needed to make sure they go to your next phase and find
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a school by so one by just the city, one sided, star concrete, 6 pulses afraid the league down with a guy is a guy and it means i will try and do it for the very 1st time in their history. that's why i celebrated and, and siding in some style for what is a really remarkable achievement for a club already promoted into the english, probably just 6 years ago. i know sort of great tassel achievement for that man of that manager. it's highly advantage auto back to these data, but he already dekaiser mid season. having previously managed the point inside shut out on year by the beginning, i didn't feel good and they didn't my focus on the target on the goals. i had to analyze the player samuel analyze and to understand the new league, a new county. i me a legacy totally different than the city. ah. then you clean a ukrainian league. good as well. next was back to the city will sized instead of
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in the champions league final wednesday. so the, as having trouble with the final of the coffee time you entered were facing failed to in riley themselves. probably going to pay a final to look for to with the right to a conference fund on during the 7th. it was fancy that who opened the story through the origin senior and for the nicholas gonzales off to just 3 minutes. but then it says are in origin time soft laptop must be the store twice in the space of 8. so minutes he's now school 20 the goals for the fees and it will competitions into it into $1.00 to returning to the current. sorry, it's hard to sort of pounds is have made it to the started to count florida for the 1st time since 1996. matthew took school the less than 5 seconds. the guy used to give his team, i feel free way to either the catalog or harrison it completed. i for nothing serious, sweet, for the purposes that will for you ease or the vegas old like old. it's out of stalls in the championship, decided that similar feel of being the underdog and trying to prove people wrong
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again. and we know what we have in there. we know how to play. we know the right way to play. we know what makes us successful and, and being in it with the guys and seeing the belief and seeing just the calmness to us is, is really something special for what you have c heavyweight champion francis and go to is free to basil. but you bought st. mega far to get into lots of tysons, gary, despite recently joining mixed martial lots promotion, the professional fight is lead. the 36 year old has been an in demand free agents of the failing to agree a new contract with us today. besides with the p, a felt earlier this month, the car to find the don davis as the speaking to our deserves. so how many as we listened to what francis wanted, and we created the custom deal for him as a fast growing creative company. the professional fighters league is not one size fits all. we don't do things just our way. we listen to the fighters, what they want to achieve and create a deal for them. so if i can just get confirmation from you,
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you'll saying that process the spot is contract. vfl will be able to assist you. not choosing boxing. not only can i confirmed that he will do that is exclusive to p, a failing, and i may, but he is free to box and he will box in a big way and 2023. the power in the fighters is good for the special fighters, right? so is they race or profile that's good for us? so we'd like to bring francis to the mid east in 2024. and we're here at the tar. and we're also in other countries and a nice talking about staging his 1st pay per view flight back in 2 years in the mid east. obviously the us see a big, big name in the sport. how confident tell you that you can rival the usc as the number one brand and mixed martial. and it may is growing 600000000 fans, but that fan base is doubling every 7 years. is only 300000000 fans 7 years ago. there is room for more than one leader in the sport, so it's not us versus them is when, when,
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when and i keep saying that over and over again. what we did last week is fighters when they have another option. i'll just you of see and fans with because they have another option. not just to of say, i wanted to do m m a j called you on just a couple months ago. the global sensation in crossover. so when you look out for 2024 are 1st to pay for view events, francis and jake headlining those. what more could it have? i found one as well. so you just start as fire because a man has made a rather abrupt exit from the legal are open. the and it was left uh, slightly missed by a martin. cool. but didn't go his way in the mass. you get spreadsheet or your own sort of fee is the well the $53.00 managing to break his racket and leave a hole in the pause chair as a consequence the that was immediately disqualified from the told him it was always put for them all nice and so, all right, right. who beth, that their role. thank you so much for all that sports coverage. and now before we
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let you go, i do want to return to one of the main stories. this our, the death of the queen of rock and roll tina turner. she passed after a long illness at age 83. and i want to bring in music producer, a cfo, my booth, a from pretoria in south africa and the cfo. as a music producer, i think you, you know, you're one of those people who have a, a special way to look at this because of course you're in this field is create a field yourself as an artist, what does she mean to you? a good afternoon. good morning, i don't know what time it is that i have, you know, i must say 50 that i may have so rest impeached. you know, do you not, you know, it was a very special human being to all of us. she has inspired many of us in the music industry, in particular, a young generation of the scene. that's because she spend generations of f for most seamless and so on. even after the age with many of the young people who would not
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probably have been for me. so as a music producer, i was privileged to have met gina when she came to set up the car. and it was very much inspired and motivated by how she carried us out as a fit for me. ok. and and with that said, i, it is very said that we, we have to speak about gina when was celebrating the coincidence today and to speak about to have us. so i wasn't aware that you hadn't met or do you have a favorite scene to turn the story you can share with us what comes to mind when you hear her name? well, you know, you know, just to know was a very trusty human being. we already speak about how well dedicated to us to have crossed. one of the things is that in kentucky incidentally, this morning on break you the way speaking about hedley how beautiful legs she had
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forehead age. she was just, i mean she was this person bit all of us look to to just buy it. oh i young girlfriends and say you could look like 2 now. then i would marry a slab. look, i'm going to be honest. it's not the story. i always expected, but ok point. well, taken the most, most of it, but everybody would boot is speaking about, do you not if you know, you know, the way she she loved, you know, the way she was at the legs where it's just something that everybody modeled and i was not a function to that, and you know, most artists do not reach a level of global appeal, global start, and where there are as beloved in south africa, where you are, as they are in their country, you know, their home country. obviously, she was an american artist and her career started there. what would you say as a musical producer, when you look at her career,
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what would you say explains her appeal outside the us as well? i think was she has a, you know, an approach to music. um, she appealed across no races. had music was not confined street. i took it a group of people, for instance, even though she was saying what i would have called. so music get it but a particular time but had run, she approached to the music, gave me that edge of a rock and roll off just which is the way appreciated music all over the world. and i think batch george able to appeal across, you know, across the globe and the, and the key up to now was just one of the odd to tell me what i saw. it's on the 16th, the majority of the people who with a way away from a boy, they thank you so much for making time to join us on the program today. we appreciate your insights and share in those stories about tina tennessee. so thank you very much. that's it from me,
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several venue for this news hour. and we're back with more world news and after the free or reject the most progressive constitution ever proposed for any nation. and there's 3, yes or no. cheating voted to know the big picture. us was a question that goes into the very foundation of security until the cost of its relationship with indigenous people,
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so why they didn't give us admission to say not only has their education been

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