tv France 24 LINKTV March 29, 2019 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT
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six decades. it wasn't a third time lucky for the british prime minister theresa may mps rejected her brexit deal once again this friday. this effectivelyly means unknown deal exit from the eu is increasingly likely in two weeks time. the european union has called for an emergency summit on the tenth of april over in london meanwhile hundreds of thousands of pro brexit supporters. took to the streets. eric okay reports.
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not so fast great britain is sliding closer to the edge of a no deal brexit. or perhaps no breaks it at all. nearly three years after the country voted to leave the european union and on the very day was supposed to do so. british lawmakers have refused to resumes divorce deal for the third time. two hundred and eighty sixix the news the last. three hundred and forty fall so the new. the man whose habit. addressing lawmakers immediately after the vote. defeated theresa may said she feared the house was reaching the limits of the process. framing the future of parliament's brexit strategy as a catch. twenty two this house has rejected no deal it has rejected no brexit. on wednesday it's rejected all the variations of the deal on the table.
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i'm today it has rejected approving the withdrawall agreement alone and conontinuing the process on the future. well she insure the government would continue to work towards an orderly brexit. the future of the country's departure is more uncertain than ever. on friday lawmakers voted on the withdrawal agreement which deals with the terms of britain's departure but not on the portion addressing future ties with the european union. they now have just two weeks to tackle both issues ahead of the e. u.'s deadline. last week the european council gave britain until april twelfth indicate a way forward or risk leaving the e. u. with no deal at all. an eventuality many fear will sow the seeds of chaos for people and businesses. for more on a bridge that we can go across to our correspondent dave keating in brussels for us dave. good evening that you commission president on toast because call for an emergency summit on the tenth of april what is the point of this gathering.
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with the points will be to tryy to find some way in which the e. you can grant a long time extension -- two article fifty giving the u. k. more time -- the potential difficulty with that is that the u. k. in order to get the long term extension will have to run a european parliament election in may. also the e. was gonna need some kind of guarantee from the u. k. that something can change during that time -- during the time of the long term extension i it wot be enough j just for the uk to decide it wants a long term extension they're going to have to actually. offer sometething that could change so that c could be a s sd referendum it could be they're changing their minds to say they want to hahave a permanent c cus ununion. or it could be a general election but something has to change and that you need to know that by thehe eighth of april if they don't get that kind of indication from the u. k.. than that tenth april summit is
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going to turnrn into a crisis summit at which they will be bracing the economy is on both sides for the impact of a no deal brags that. deep given up to so much discord over in london at the house of commons could we see any wiggle room from the e. u.. given that we are starting a no delays in the face. it's difficult there are so many different. voices about this on the eve twenty seven side really france is playing a very hard line here they are not excited aboutut the ididea of a long term extension. and they certainly are not excited about the idea of the u. k. seating meps and the next european parliament now we had heard talk of a twenty in one month extension -- or something going to around maybe april twenty twenty had also been floated but just tonight i'm hearing people saying that those ideas for a very long time extension.
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are a non starter that you've does not want the uk to be hanging around that long. there really are talking about something more like a couple months six months maybe to the end of the year now the u. k. would need ten weeks to organize a second referendum. and it would need six weeks to organize a general election so i really think that's the type of time period we're talking about and the original talk about a very long term extension with the people here are not excited about that. they want to hear concrete leave from the u. k. what could chains and exactly how long they need to make that chance. we'll see what happens dave i thank you very much for that day keating reporting that from a brussels for us. now with uncertainty around a brexit reigning supreme british nationals living in the e. u. f. had date residency status thrhrn into doubt here in france. many have decided to opt for french citizenship tatiana sort
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of what's. after three decades in france susan and graham savage celebrate as they officially become french citizens to the full set. their choice but also their way to senend t the messagege acrose channel because they've d decidd to leave us the big european family yeah. without speaking a word of french the couplee uprooted ther lives in england in the early eighties to move to lives -- in central france to become farmer. indeed the bottom all of tn applications for citizenship by british nationals have increased almost fivefold since the brexit referendum in. twenty sixteen debate that british nationals are worried about the potential administrative procedures. but at thee moment we don't know but visas to live in france might be for client merits bebefore moving within the u. ws very easyy. and 201820% of the applications for citizenship in this region of france were submitted by british nationals. around a one a million people took to the streets of the algerian capital today demonstrators are calling on the
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eighty two year old ailing president abdelaziz bouteflika to step aside. to protest which have now entered this six week have largely remained peaceful as of october. for the sixth consecutive friday hundreds of thousands of protesters gathered in the streets of algiers to cruise through the end of president abdelaziz protest because rule. the crowd was made up mainly of young people and families. the eager for a new generation of political leaders to modernize the country which has long been dominated by veterans of his independence war. twenty years is enough to get out. a jury has many candidates who are competent to take on the jo. why would the regime start for them in their own country? our young people deserve a breath of fresh -- it doesn't deserve this we deserve to live in peace.
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it's the first protest since the algerian army chief on tuesday called for a constitutional process referred to isis all school wanted to do the kind of the h. t. rowe prpresident unfit for office. the prototesters have rejectedee ministry's intervention. they see the proposal as a way for the politically leap to keep a grip on power. and instead won to bring down the entire establishment they see as corrupt and out of touch. i came out today to say no to article one oh two we are against renewing the regime. we want to become a real democratic country through a transitional period. we want a new algerian government elected by the peopl. president b. two f feca has faid to placate algerians by dropping his bid for a fifth term in office. sure is mounting as new age book he allllies have dedeserted himr the past week. and what is the biggest crisis
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of his twenty year rule. now it's been nearly a year since the first march of return protests on the gaza border every friday thousands of palestinians have been gathering at five points. calling on israel to end the blockade and retururn territory lost d during the war r of ninin forty eighght tensions are h hih for the anniniversary marchch tomorrow over the course of this past year a hundred ninety palestinians have been killed. and over twenty eight thousand injured transmitting full correspondents on the ground in gaza find the support. the line comes to this clinic three times a week. they only want to gather to take care of people who have undergone amputation after surgery. yeah okay who did you go on a long.
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how do you? maligned has seven children for the past year he's banned them from joining the march. for ten fearing they might come to harm. he's been just once himself on the last fourteenth of may anniversary of the palestinians next by catastrophe. it was alsls the day that the us embassy officially moved to jerusalem. israel's repression of the protesters killed dozens and injured hundreds. more in wasn't at the front lines of the protest nevertheless he got shot. i shiver when i first arrived at the shifa hospital they were already so many wounded people between five hundred and seven hundred people and at least twenty martyrs he arrived at the hospital at one thirty in the afternoon and had to wait until late at night for his operation. it was too late the doctors amputated his leg three days later for many wounded people have priority over me their condition was much more critical than mine. these were people with bullet wounds in the chest and the abdomen. had to undergo surgery as fast as possible. but you know that's the way
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things go it's funny. delta condemns the use of explosive bullets by israeli snipers. hello the king of the slow so but in many cases the initial injury was a simple entry and exit bullet wound l like somethg which causes tissue tearing. them up to it but then we realized all these tissues it couldn't heal normally because of toxic elemements present witn the bullet a also the tissue ces die and gangrene -- sixteen forced amputate. with former land hand moved. more i no longer wants to protest at the border. except perhaps on the anniversary of israel's creatat. and now also the installation of its us emembassy in jerusalem. maybe all join the march on me fourteen because f for me t thas an important dates but other than that now. others though haven't been pushed off by their injuries like the apple entire family. hi man has been injured three times kelley l. once. the bullet went through mock woods foods just had a police
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officer has been shot twice. and they're not alone within this family and gas and no less than twenty people have b been injured during the marcrch. for ten six year old mohammed is one of them. he was hit i in that year by ter gas. injured or not every friday they go back to face israeli soldiers even if it means hobbling there on crutches -- as an emergency fighter and go and my son doesn't go either who will go. and once it is he's going to get the message to the world that is self sacrifice isn't a big deal. the message has to be sent by whatever means possible. to remind the world that we have right not enough in the half of the family -- militants for how mass the other half of fatah. the two opposing palestinian factions. what unites them in protest worsening living conditions in the gaza strip? the israeli egyptian book k. means citizens must go without essential provisions. shot them down as i don't
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receive my salary because of the blow came. every forty or fifty days i get not even 40% of my salary it makes up less than two hundred euros its crimes. you can't even buy a t. shirt. trousers or shoot. as i listen to what. she had collects the shell casing from tear gas bombs to make crutches. but a year after the launch of the movement israel doesn't seem ready to cape the gas the residents demands. tensions at the border could continue for some time -- no death a johnny is a fixed for this a great mass of it then it might continue years andnd this. this university professor a member of the committee behind the marches organize ation no longer hopes for a p palestinian statee which would live side by side with an israeli. one he backs a one state solution for both peoples. a state that would stretch from jordan to the mediterranean i will be called palestine nobody though is in in a position -- to
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beautify old what's a good eliminate the other if they can live in peace one state that would show the palestinians -- who was governor if you do it in the world and they are l living with the jewish as we used to live before? that's not bad it's a good idea yeah. an option which neither israel nor gases ruler how mass is likely to warm tea. the palestinians hope that the determination and the weekly protests will one day gather enough steam to loosen the stranglehold on the gaza strip. the filmmaker and yes now that has died in paris at the age of nineteen t the pioneer of francs new wave of said minds by generations of filmmakers. the phototographer turned filmmaker often blurred the lines between fictionon and documentntary style of filmmakig actually mine is broken takes a look back at her career [inaudible] please. visit. and this. was a keen observer of life in all its fullness and she loves
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to travell att eighty eight yeas old she embarked onn a journey and a friendship with street artist is yet to create faces places. a march to johnson county is across from. but it has been a cinematic feminist icon since the sixties when she establilished herselfls a new wave director amidst a sea of men. the first major success was clear the psych assets the story of a single making her way through paris as she waits medical results. as fiction with an at times documentary static it felt fresh and daring. in nineteen eighty five vitacost the young something bonez the physically independent which tragic mona insult twenty law or vagabond in english. body was enchanted by her character'r's commitments to freedom when i left the in using it. she's like a gypsy. she never r consent. the section was lima but it was never content r resting on n our
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lalaurels michaelson experimentg with the tools and mediums available. alongside fiction contest fuss lovato for free she produced numerous documentaries which often charted the impact o of changing society's on individual lives. provider once said that she wasn't famous but rather loved in the world of cinema agreed. in two thousand seventeen she received the door prize at cannes for her collaboration with g. s.. one year later she jubilantly accepted an oscar for her lifelong contribution to cinema. and just last month she accepted a similar award at the berlin film festival what she premiered held by a a grhical docucumenta. but it may have been n niny but she worked and played rigight tl the end. wewe can now goo acrcross to lon and bring in delphian been as they all thought off the cinema off and use of none of that. good evening thank you very much for joining us on the program today how did not the style of filmmaking change over the years
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given that she had a career that spanned. over six decades. well you see. our star. made s se she starts to experiment. not knowing exactly what she was doing.. yeyeah all shehe the but i thine was always. on your r way. how? about men he ladies [inaudible] art is. all right in general. she whenever she met bowls. were interested d in just. to a and startrted out withoutu. not sure o or any [inaudible]
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bye bye. the ttc walker. it meant that she you for all right. is. and may bring up. we what t did -- your movies that are shown in. you have a very wide a rainy. yeah thank you that's whatat peoplele. should remember her or die. and and you know what she and grace. when you're doing? any. arms now on his vow that hahas obviously inspired -- you know generations of filmlmmakers w wn your opinion as she inspired the most. french right thahank you.
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in fact on and makeke [inaudibl] she movies. your right admin. and by the momenent [inaudible] well. anyone doing anything to wear out yeah. where are the arare? what s she's d done so i could l you that young yeah? yeah mom not for long. this is where it is in the way they need me yeah -- anything. goes -- when?
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i'm sure does she yeah -- you can reach in a night. she was in our mindsds. any -- - number. when she came back? around in the seventies. and then he than it is and she remains are very. in music. she then went t back to you on your h. e. n. date [inaudiblble] oror not. she that's what i meant when i thanks you are [inaudible]
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nice. to anyone hey brexit confusion continues reign supreme over in london businesses. increasingly worried that's right the rejection theresa may's plan in parliament yet again increasing the prospects of the no deal brexit this thing for it so much about. industry across the board is has called the government to avoid that i come from the beginning something that could lead to terrorists. custom checks and other barriers to trade. reaction from business groups after today's vote in parliament was predictably. had a german chambers of commerce declaring that the chaos is absolute. we saw some really frustrated take from the head of the british institute of directors keep business lobby. the merry go round continues to spend but the fun stopped a long time ago. we are running out of words to express how sick business leaders are of being stuck in this spirit stopping limbo. the inability to make any decision is doing lasting damage to enterprise. the pound is also slumped
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following that vote in parliament. it had lost about one third of 1% against the dollar today. now trading at about one dollar anand thirty cents still on trak for its biggest monthly loss in five months. turning to today's trading action marketing us trending upwardrd the s. and p. five hundred sett to post its best quarterly performance in more than n nine years. investors also reactcting to the us china trade talks which wrapped up earlier in the day in beijing. they're optimistic that an end maybe insight to the country's costly trade dispute. the twenty one hundred meanwhile monday also saw some sligight gains that section because a weaker pound mean stronger exports from any of the companieies listed on the index. gegeany's trarade sensitive dax also finishing the day a above e flat line. the biggest story on wall street today though is left. the ride hailing companies gone public giving investors their first chance to bet on the future of the growing sector. it also includes over. their share prices surged so far in the nasdaq about 20%. i think by the fact that the company still hasn't turned a profit since it was founded
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seven years ago. colombian rutland row has more. it may not have been the first ride hailing company but left is now the first publicly traded. one lifts initial public offering is a big moment for the tech industry it marks the arrival of a new generation of silicon valley darlings on the public markets. next in line is -- bus which is expected to make its debut on the new york stock exchange in the coming weeks. leftft open t the floodgates for uber obviously but it's not j jt right trtrain that should beneft from that there are other unicorn companies that are coming up to go public so within ththat you have slack you have pinterest yeah postt mates again the aggregatete value of compans that are prepared. to go i po is overer a hundred billion d dolls that's a hunundred billion dolls of high growth value coming to markets. ride hailing companies have been growing fast but they've been losingng money just as quickly. last yeaear uber reported losses of one point eight billion dollars while lifts lost n nine
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hundred and eleven millilion dollars. both companies are yet to turn a profit as they face stiff competition and struggled to keep prices low. that growth though comes at a cost so -- whether that's in the form of invesesting in additionl services whether i it's a form f subsidizing rides -- those expenseses pile up and that's wy these companies can't make mone. uber and lift off facing a rough ride but that doesn't mean that doomed for failure. of the unprofitable companies have pulled off successful ipos in the past and have seen that stocks performed welll. arms a and took more than four years to ten its first quarterly profits. it's now the most valuable public company in the world. canada's economy grew by the largest amount in eight months in january about a quarter of 1. that's according to a government report it's a good sign for the world's tenth largest economy which had contracted in the two previous months. country's manufacturing sector propelled the gains well the mining oil and gas sector saw 3% decline.
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here in france the city had to lose is the historic home of airbus. but it's not the only part of france at to benefit from china's order earlier this week of three hundred aircraft. i'm a maxwell has more. neumann d. it may be better known for seafood on site -- but it also has agrarian aeronautics industry. someone hundred businesses are hoping to reap the benefits of china's order of three hundred abbas planes. like this company that produces had set the pilots. the chinese deal could mean harding double or even triple the number of soft. over the next three is. i'm really happy. because it brings more work more people in your the company prides itself on producing the most technologically advanced headsets. a reputation that a manager hopes the deal will help spread. i read that the it's given us new contracts your paternity to get our name out. so it's good news means more jobs more work for people who
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are in the shop. the aviation industry in normandy employs twenty one thousand people and revenue last year totaled three billion euro. fifa delaying represents the region's indndustry. as a whole and it didn't have alreready got a hundred and sevn notice and thirteen hundred new jobs across normandy in two thousand and nine this is set to grow nice of the zebras why. from the abbas production plants to its suppliers and subcontractors. or looking for a two piece of the pie. a deal estimated to be worth up to thirty billion euros. finally for me it's a good a time as ever to be the ceo of an oil company. bp chief executive bob dudley earn fourteen point seven million dollars last year that's after bp's profits doubled. making a solid recovery after a decline in oil prices. it's an actualally would have bn higher if the board of directors had an exercise its authority to limit dudley's compensation. shareholders across role of express concerns about pay levels at b. p. and other energy companies. but clearly it it's still pays
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handsomely to being a business on and and still i mean those efforts only showing limited -- limited amount of success seems lilike indeeeed -- thank you vey much for that cool cool steiner there was a look at the day's business news gonna take a quick break stay with us more to come. we're live from paris
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03/29/19 03/29/19 [captioning made possible by democracy now!] amy: from new york this is , democracy now! >> last week my attorneys and i filed a claim against harvard. i am asking for the return of my enslaved ancestors images. in the complaint is more than images, complaint about it is a history lesson. in specifically, it points to
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