Doha. Welcome to the news grid the e. U. Holds a Donor Conference four million miles where he just because still six hundred thousand of them are stuck in refugee camps after fleeing the current state is just back from bangladesh after reporting from the camps he will be joining us in studio to give us those firsthand accounts of such a harrowing situation. On the grid every seven seconds a girl under the age of fifteen is forced into marriage sole ready that is too since i started the sentence well be looking at the issue particularly in west and Central Africa as the summit begins in senegal to try to stop this practice of Child Marriages. Thousands of Political Prisoners are behind bars in egypt and while we hear about the dual citizens who made it out after lengthy campaigns to free them and some International Support many others continue to languish in jail and remain nameless and faceless harding connect with us for the hash tag aging and its what we will take you to the worlds newest big Cricket Ground it seems. Not the most likely event but after two decades of waiting and hundreds of thousands of dollars raised by the club record unity so much time for that first born to be. Here with a new screen live on air and streaming online through you tube Facebook Live and. Dot com when they reenter crisis has found a voice in europe this monday with the e. U. Cohosting Donor Conference on the crisis along with Kuwait Holding that in geneva ahead of the conference the e. U. Reiterated the need for an end to the violence and that includes the miramar authorities ceasing military operations as we said almost six hundred thousand range of muslims have fled to neighboring bangladesh the un high commissioner for refugees felipa grandy he commanded bangladesh though for its efforts to provide a safe haven for the ranger as i think we should all do join you in thanking bangladesh and their leadership of its Prime Minister for having given an example to the whole world. Keeping the borders open to a population affected by a very serious violations of human rights and protection issues so in a moment weve got mohammed germ germ joining us here in the studio to discuss that on the conference and as i said his own recent experiences reporting from bangladesh first though Tanveer Choudhry still there is this report from a camp and talks is bizarre. Will depend on todays pledging conference to be held in geneva cosponsored by the European Union and u. N. Agencies now things have considerably improved in the refugee camps since the big late august when things were very chaotic it was the Host Community who were the First Responders then the presence of a lot of aid agencies in base camps. In a Field Hospital sanitation and water facilities as well now despite all the good effort led by the aid agencies and bang of those government a lot of the basic and essential needs in this camps are still not been met we decided to talk to someone not knowing i refuges here this them if they know about the conference most of them have no idea about the conference but they said the food they are getting is not adequate there are nearly six hundred thousand new Rohingya Refugees in bangladesh according to a new un now most of them are woman children and infant at least sixty percent of them are children the aid agencies and then of those government needs to have a Long Term Strategy a sustainable strategy for the Better Living conditions schooling as well as health and security we know that most of these refugees are not going back to me on my own that dreadful about what is going on there any time soon unless there is a Long Term Strategy many of them will suffer in the camps we have seen camps from earlier years havent improved much hopefully in the Donor Conference theyll be a positive outcome to address the issue of refugees as well as members of the Host Community so his mama gem juno a good friend of the show joining us in studio to talk about a quick wit on the Donor Conference first of all money is great but as i pointed out in that little read little bit earlier it may nothing unless there is actually an into funds on the ground thats absolutely right and lets talk about the money for a second because you know publicly the folks that were at the Donor Conference and they are. Say theyre encouraged that its good that they got where they got to today as far as the pledges but its still about one hundred Million Dollars less they want to get to today they want to four hundred thirty four Million Dollars just to meet the most basic needs for the next six months of this rwanda population that is fled me and more they got to around three hundred forty million now ive spoken to some of the aid workers that are there some of the members of different u. N. Agencies theyve said that they hope that in the next few weeks other countries will be pledging money but this is a privately disappointing for them its worrying the fact that these aid workers the aid agencies humanitarian groups have been screaming from the rafters theyve been sounding the alarm bells as much as they can and still they have not been able to meet that amount that they need to meet that they needed to meet today ok so lets talk about what you saw what we put it this way we saw your pictures and the stories you sent there and they were quite extraordinary but i wonder. Do you think they told the real story is it is it just that much more intense when youre there look i can tell you that if he had been there was a senior camera man with this network and i what we wanted to do is we wanted to showcase what was going on there by allowing people that experience such horrific atrocities to express themselves so that our viewers through to hear what has been going on in myanmar in the voices of these people who have suffered so much have been traumatized so much. What we saw there was suffering and pain and trauma on a scale that is so massive that im still having difficulty getting my head around it and the other aid workers and journalist that we spoke with that were there as well they expressed the same thing look ive been covering various refugee crises displacement crises for going on seven years now and ive never seen anything as horrific as this its just im sorry i just i was listening to about also watching the pictures that were getting there because holding. Your children holding dead bodies and walking through it. So im a little bit lost for words actually im trying but no im not you know i cant do this i went to the philippines after typhoon haiyan a few years ago and saw incredible destruction but its different this is man made this is this is people forced into this yes and. The atrocities that we were hearing accounts of from from these refugees that have fled were of such horrific nature that we were concerned when we were speaking to these people about asking them too much about it because it might make them relive the trauma that they had are that they had already been through look youre talking about seeing severely burned babies in these camps that are that are being carried by their parents and not getting access to the kind of medicine and medical care that they need youre talking about women that have been brutalized and raped that are not getting the kind of counseling that they need women that have lost their children we spoke to resume a bedroom her baby was thrown into a fire in front of her eyes and she was gang raped by members of the military and she wasnt getting medical attention she wasnt getting counseling now aid groups did reach out to us after that story aired they are trying to help her and her husband but the stories that we heard just the five stories that we did from there we heard these accounts echoed so often and from so many people and that really speaks to the magnitude of this and one more point id like to make is that everybody on the ground we spoke with there be they recent arrival refugees be they refugees that have been there for years or aid workers or medical workers all of them said that they do not think that this is going to end or get better anytime soon. Thank you mohammed thats the kind of insight which we just we dont get otherwise i thank you so much for that and if you missed mom and report on the range of mother the one he was talking about the one who was raped and then have baby was thrown into the fire well head to aljazeera dot com and you should really have a look at that if you didnt see it its not an easy watch i will say that. But its one of those very powerful stories which stays with you long after youve seen it so if you search for this mohammed if you search for a survivor the video report was there and also just this one as well mohammed was on the stream recently discussing this very topic along with his cameraman benny who he mentioned before it is the top story at stream aljazeera dot com with want to check that out as well got rave reviews on social media as well i went first and ok lets move on shall we president ial and parliamentary elections in iraqs kurdistan region will be delayed we have learned Political Parties fail to present their candidates for the november first polls obviously because of the ongoing conflict with the Central Government remember kurds voted to secede from iraq on september twenty fifth baghdad opposed the referendum and sent troops to take control of the area and then last week well that happened to iraqi forces captured the oil city of coke and other territory which was claimed by the kurds so were going to talk to you now is a Kurdish Affairs analyst and researcher at the middle east Research Institute joining us from washington d. C. And we thank you for your time part of me feels this is no surprise that this is actually happened with regards to the elections because the kurdish government has been left in absolute disarray since the Iraqi Government moved in. Thats absolutely true i think the kurdish part of a Kurdish Party or crucially theyre sure about in the state of disarray and also after they lost almost like forty five percent of the territory that they had controlled thing since two thousand and fourteen i think the awful line is that the kurdish parties fail to submit their candidates for the parliamentary and the and the president ial election but actually the underlying causes that matter deeper i guess it is all about without repercussion the current and intended consequences of the referendum the regional pressure the International Pressure on the k r g lee leadership because the referendum was supposed to consolidate the legitimacy of the positions of the. Kurdish parties but obviously that backfired and there mind their legitimacy but you know what happened to not just the kurdish government but the Kurdish Forces the peshmerga in the lights because it seemed certainly from this distance that they just folded was the iraqi army just always going to be just too strong for them. Are thus true i think the symmetry of power between the Kurdish Forces and the iraqi army was was quite obvious in addition the Kurdish Peshmerga selected a centralized and organize it leadership and command and its obvious that the Kurdish Peshmerga run by different Political Parties they do not respond for the k r g a leadership that resulted in some kind of very uncoordinated movement and also ordered by some local commanders who decided to retreat from kirk org which engineered the total collapse of the Kurdish Forces in the disputed areas into in part the jewelry incurred cook live and i dont know where you sit on the on the whole idea of independence and im not sure thats actually relevant i just want to really know if you think that this can move forward at all there is such at least in the words there was a lot of determination from the kurdish officials saying we will keep fighting and we will get our independence but its hard to see it happening isnt it. True i think for the moment i think. There was lots of miscalculations by the k r g a leadership by things they failed to read and understand the horrors geopolitical that they are in also they refuse it to the to listen to the black friend as long as the United States who kept saying that you should not go ahead with this referendum that the timing is really bad and also is ill prepared so obviously they did not do that i think that a friend of the kurdish state would for generation if not for for ever certainly you know the said bank will not make the kurds to give up the idea of statehood and their independence but i think it will be generational you know fight ahead of us. Interesting stuff given saeed thank you so much for joining us to talk about the kurdish issues in iraq so why dont you get in touch with us content you know is going up on screen if you not had quite a few comments on me in mar already when will there be International Sanctions how long can the refugees but also a few people who has said this weve got a canadian who says this and also on Facebook Live said what can we do to help now we covered this a while ago and used it and im going to have a look at some point and im honestly as i have another look as well be to go back to the archives and well well tweet it and put it on our Facebook Page because we did a connect segment a while ago about the best ways for people to help because a lot of you say this when youre watching the me and nonstories how can we help donating to n. G. O. S i guess and the like but well well have a look for that and well try to post it a little bit later on do send us in your thoughts theres twitter theres the Facebook Facebook dot com slash good whatsapp as well as there plus an uncivil five one triple one four nine now duct is in syria say more and more children are simply dying of hunger particularly in eastern guta which is on the outskirts of the capital damascus a region that has been under siege since two thousand and twelve with very few aid convoys even allowed in. Has our report. Lete. A baby has only a glimpse of life was in a war torn syria born a month ago in beseech east and she suffered a severe case of monetization at better to a local clinic doctors trying to save her but it was too late and on sunday. Die. Unless this is our fifty year round of see each basic health and Nutrition Services we are facing many cases of among the truth we are understaffed but our biggest problem is that we cant get medicine and nutrition to save the children seven month old hussein is another facing monitor. We understand to he has developed Many Serious Health Conditions and needs immediate treatment but doctors and charities are struggling to get him the right food and medicines if aid is delayed many like her saying may not live very much longer. So that is it had to lead to we have serious cases here life threatening you know many children are suffering from malnutrition. Panicking parents are now rushing to the few hospitals still operating in east and. When they get there they find hospital staff struggling to cope and its not only the children who are affected most pregnant women in eastern are also under nourished and could face life threatening Complications International aid organizations have been asking for free and continuous access to mislead areas like is that something the Syrian Government with jacked saying those areas are not safe and although the u. N. And many countries have accused the government of starving people into submission no steps have been taken to end this lead which is whitening the lives of hundreds of thousands of people as a man but im just here. Gaziantep. Now human Rights Groups are urging the french president emmanuel micron to stop ignoring abuses by gyptian president of the father l. C. C. These leaders holding their first meeting in paris today where they are expected to focus on security but activists are saying france should stop selling weapons to egypt since twenty fourteen cairo has ordered ten billion dollars worth of french weapons Human Rights Watch is calling micron to put pressure on sisi to end his governments violation the agency accused egypts president of presiding over the countrys worst human rights crisis in decades it says egyptian authorities have arrested or charged at least sixty thousand people for various offenses anything from illegal public gatherings right up to murder of had done hundreds of preliminary death sentences and sent more than fifteen thousand civilians to military courts Human Rights Watch also accused Security Forces of routinely torturing political detainees lets talk to david chase are following this one for us from paris thats pretty serious stuff certainly that Human Rights Watch has put out there its hard to see that coming into the general conversation between these two president s on their first meeting. Well its the age old dilemma and thats why this press conference was held to shine a spotlight on that difficult dilemma for the french president Emanuel Mccraw he is after all supposed to represent the values of the heart of the European Union and clearly hes be talking to a man at lunch in the elisei tomorrow where there is what they describe as an epidemic of torturing going on by the police and Security Services inside the egyptian jails on top of that theyve also brought in repressive laws against the nongovernmental organizations the n. G. O. S which means essentially they can hardly operate inside egypt at the moment now listening to Human Rights Watch was one particular individual and that is the daughter of an al jazeera journalist mahmoud a sane whos been in prison and in solitary confinement since being arrested while going on holiday in egypt last december his only crime it appears was that he was working for al jazeera now i asked. His eldest daughter for her response to the phrase used by the Human Rights Watch about the fact that theyve been disgraceful indulgence by so many french governments of oppressive government but particularly about our own father who has been suffering more than one hundred days i believe on solid chicken farm last i hear exactly what effect it was having on her dad. Such a cool farm and usually results in huge. Huge effects physically and emotionally and mentally i remember my hearing though the visits the very first early visits up my sister and my you could get from my dad was it was my dad is that they were saying like my dad he was confused he was so depressed he was he was keeping forgetting stuff because he spent his spend days and nights without really seeing anyone without being allowed to get out of the very very tiny prison cell and david what about president sisi himself i guess looking at from his mistake of his first visit here to meet this significant european leader what do we know of the relationship between the middle between the countries. Yes we had a statement from the early say palace saying that essentially the talks will focus very much on security as a whole and on Regional Security now the problems of course are theres a islamised insurgency developing in the sinai with which is seen many many casualties and theres also the problem of the amman and the problem of egypts neighbor libya where there is essentially a vacuum of power once again so these are very serious issues for manual macro he has particularly taken an interest in libya and these will be the main focus of their talks of course its very important to realize that egypt is the number one customer for the french arms industry as you pointed out in the lead in to this report Something Like as you said ten million ten billion dollars of the money has been used to buy french weapons now that will be first and foremost in a manual macross mind but he has stood very much as a president for human rights for freedoms right across the world and i think that after we saw what he did with the with the russian president putin when he came here he will raise these concerns he will make it very very clear that he is worried about those developments worried about this epidemic of torture and i think in the end well see Something Different perhaps from the on on the years where they just expressed concern and did no more and continue to sell weapons to egypt this time i think emanuel mackerel would have to step up to his values and im sure that in the end after lunch well get a statement from the nice a saying these concerns about the the number of arrests and the conditions in the egyptian jails would have been forcefully put over lunch in the early say to president r. C. C. Interesting all right thank you david chase is in paris there with. Studio david talked about. Jim most of the three hundred days john expand on this because its theres history here right and mahmoud as we know is not the only one especially from aljazeera its one of the actually the one of the worst countries for journalists Reporters Without Borders recently called egypt the biggest prison for journalists many of those arrested and later released though they have dual citizenship so like irish student ybor him he was just released this week after spending five years in jail he was arrested during a crackdown on protesters in two thousand and thirteen and then Mohamed Soltani he is another one hes a gyptian american and was in a gyptian jail for nearly two years he now speaks out against the Egyptian Government and for the thousands of nameless and faceless prisoners who do not have International Governments pushing to get them out there is there are people we remember people that are oppressed we remember people who are facing oppression and will continue to be their voice and throw their free one prisoner who is not a dual citizen but does have quite an active social Media Campaign is shock on ziad he is a photo journalist and he is still in jail and has been for five years he has not been sentenced and is still waiting for a trial his supporters use the hash tag free show khan to help garner support and push for his release and our very own aljazeera one hundred mohammad he spent four hundred and thirty seven days in jail many of them in solitary confinement by her is egyptian and was arrested with two other al jazeera journalists both who had foreign passports this is what everybody told me that you are lucky because you have a an australian and a canadian egyptian with you. Meaning that i have for news with you because we have other drug arrest like ok and we have told us what more to say in other egyptian journalists who are in jail now and most of them have been there since two thousand and thirteen and then of them had a low suit or some most of them have like a pending lawsuit and theyre not out and i think the only reason im out this is because i have some foreigners with me that i was n. B. C. s i have a big news and News Organization are standing behind me i think thats the only reason i even when i was able to get some newspaper there was an article i was like some people even some of those i was working in the state own newspapers they were saying like so to have your egyptian your only crime crime has a gyptian and for us egyptians which is really disappointing i want government is putting us in jail and not standing for us and thats the whole thing that really makes makes us makes me very sad that my government put me in jail and not helping me or like protect my rights and as David Chaytor was saying al jazeera journalist Mahmud Hussein was also detained by egyptian authorities while he was on holiday last december hes been in prison now for exactly three hundred and seven days if you want to know more about our journalists who have been or are still detained or about egypts Political Prisoners you can search for that on our website at aljazeera dot com they thank you for that yet mustnt forget colleagues past and present who have been accused of these things when simply all that done is today in a moment actually in a few seconds if you want your own facebook life youre going to take a look at an app which residents of Rio De Janeiro are using to keep safe from shootouts thats coming up in a moment and then more on the hundreds of refugees who are refusing to leave the manis island tab even though a strain officials plan to shut it down next week. Welcome back as we look at the weather across the levant and western parts of asia see the clouds moving through the black sea giving some showers and certainly across more western parts of turkey were going to see some rain developing of the next twenty four hours otherwise the winds are still come out from the south so temperatures still looking pretty respectable there now across more Central Eastern areas the temperatures just edging backwards little bit so thirty two for baghdad as a maximum thirty three there for kuwait city and through into wednesday again fine weather conditions across this region further towards the east of the northwest the flow bringing temperatures down on marty the highs of just twelve degrees here in the Arabian Peninsula so looking fine this is the time of year here in doha where the rather be comes up salute the beautiful thirty five degrees light winds couldnt ask for much better on the other side the pincher little bit warmer than that with a little bit lifted dust around still a bit of a breeze here thirty eight in mecca and then heading through into wednesday temperatures up at thirty nine lets move down into southern portions of africa the famine of clarity at the moment little bit of a convergence line the wind coming together from two Different Directions so a cloud in the chance of one or two showers cape town that should be dry and fine should be a nice day and your husband too with the maxim here of twenty five degrees. As we embrace new technologies rarely do we stop to ask what is the price of this progress what happened was he was started getting sick but there was a small group of people that began to think that maybe this was related to the kind of exposure and the job and investigation reveals how even the smallest devices deadly environmental and health comes we think ok well send our you waste to china but we have to remember that air pollution travel around the globe death by design at this time on aljazeera discover a well from winning programming from around the world. Documentaries we were running away for our life from a brutal regime the kills its opponents debates and discussions were getting comments on what the International Community should do how worried should we therefore me that this guy has the new kid on a scale of one to ten can challenge your perception. Aljazeera. Yes. Headlines from al jazeera dot com and whats trending is a look at some of the interesting titles they want as is about the attack in syria the Harvey Weinstein of islam anyone Something Interesting and different to look at also that one assassinating kim jong un could go wrong that was up at number one yesterday and still very popular as well the lights up lets call from the gulf crisis as well as Rex Tillerson continues his tour around the region that is whats trending this monday at al jazeera dot com. More than six hundred Asylum Seekers and refugees are refusing to leave the mannus island Detention Camp in papa new guinea a center is run by the Australian Government and is due to close next tuesday officials plan to cut off access to Drinking Water food medical treatment and electricity but the refugees themselves dont want to be relocated to alternative Accommodation Centers because they fear they will be attacked by the local community and are thomas is following the story from sydney. Its very difficult to get accurate reliable information from amazon and on the roof partly because australias policy towards the media is near silence the minister involved here does give the old into the but by and large the day to day activities on man aside and the rw are hidden from view when we ask about whats going on we get the same stock standard reply the government here is not going to give they say an ongoing commentary in terms of what is going on the government here doesnt want the refugees to become a big political issue there is the odd protest in support of refugees there was one in sydney over the weekend but only a couple of hundred people and they happen every couple of weeks and thats the sort of numbers they get most australians dont know whats going on because theyre not being told about it journalists are banned i went to pepper new guinea in june to cover the elections that my media visa specifically said i was not to visit man assad and that trip but i asked for will not eventuate said the letter given all of that we have to rely more the refugees themselves are saying that communications on the island are very limited but the refugees do have access to some smart phones and the rason now after four years quite well established social media groups that theyre part of you can see one here on the phone with the telegram app they photographs the comments here against the closure of the prison ironically on madison and theyre protesting that they say because they think the conditions outside the prison will be worse for them than those inside them being moved to Transit Centers or living in the community and many people whove already gone to those places have been beaten up by locals in Papua New Guinea there on the Health Care Facilities outside many of these refugees got Serious Mental Health problems you can see here some of the antidepressant pills that one refugee says he has been taking so they say the conditions outside are far worse than they were inside what the refugees consistently say they are. Wants is a new life somewhere adapted to taking refugees australia well many have given up on that new zealand the usa perhaps some have been resettled in the usa under that a bomb an era deal but not many and the refugees still in Papua New Guinea its very unclear as to whether they will join those people in the us or whether they will be left to languish could start from Andrew Thomas there isnt seeing some of that behind the scenes news gathering now more news group also communicates with refugees on manners using whatsapp of course another encrypted messaging app behooves the chinese from iran and has been detained on minister for years and he said he is refusing to leave because he fears for his own safety we dont want. The tensions. Because. Its very. Tough but the experience the local people attacked when the refugees. Make the situation really hard so we dont feel the tension. Go in one must take action. Take us to a safe place time to see whats happening at the live wall here in studio fourteen and its to resume the british Prime Minister who is speaking in the house of commons at the moment there is an ongoing debate as they stand up and down thats what theyre talking about briggs it of course were going to stay in london then head over to the shard and that is where Maryam Namazie is with more international news. Thats right we begin in the philippines where the government has declared victory in its five month battle against isolate fighters in the Southern City of murali a fence against the mountain left more than one thousand one hundred people dead and sparked fears of a of i. C. L. Gaining a foothold in the region the defense secretary says the final forty two fighters were killed in a gun battle with his troops. This of the last group or for stragglers. In the one building and so the. There was a five firefight so they were finished number of the number of militants inside. Japans Prime Minister has promised to tackle the threat of north koreas military actions fresh off a decisive election victory genes are also page to take on the challenge of japans ageing population and spend more on education and childcare aves Ruling Coalition maintained a two thirds hold on the lower house after sunday snap election means he could become the countrys longest serving Prime Minister argentinian president marty a marquise governing coalition has emerged a clear winner in midterm elections and what was widely seen as a referendum on that green is Economic Reforms but its also resulted in a political comeback for his predecessor Cristina Kirchner whos won a seat in the senate. In south africa the sentencing of two white farmers who forced a black man into a coffin has been perspire until friday the suspects threatened to burn victims alive and were found guilty of attempted murder in august the assault again winds right attention after mobile phone footage of it went viral thats it for now more from london a bit later lets get back to kemal thanks mary in twenty five minutes time another full bulletin from merriam in the team in london now a summit in some ago its focusing on ending Child Marriage in west and Central Africa region does have one of the highest rates of underage marriages in the world because harker correspondent met a child bride in similar goals to get your what. And there was twelve years old when her mother asked her to marry a man as old as her father. She ran away from school and hid in the village but her mother insisted on the wedding. Ceremony was arranged and then they became pregnant before she ran away. After abandoning her child of a thirteen year old worked as a prostitute. Pregnant again she is now in hiding in a safe house in the capital. So my home im not angry with my mother anymore she did what she could be tough she was young when she married my mother was just doing whats best for me. Young girls and marrying old men is the norm here twenty thousand underage girls married for cuba its better to be married early rather than to deal with the shame of an accidental pregnancy little ritual little. Marriage saved all by marrying her off. But the pain of losing her daughter is evident. Of course i miss my daughter she says i want her back. And they misses her too but shes not ready to return home if she gives birth to a girl shell call her after her mother she promises to guide her and help her choose the right husband if its a boy hell be free to choose whoever he wants to marry. For and day life for girls is harder and unforgiving. Hawkeye aljazeera get to i cynical. So just to be clear Child Marriages any formal or informal union where one or both parties are under the age of eighteen thats how the u. N. Defines it but it means globally seven hundred million women have been married off as children and aid groups say that that number could reach one point two billion by the year twenty fifties there were only talking thirty two years away if nothing is done about it and as i speak one girl under the age of fifteen is married every seven seconds to one just then and as i keep speaking and watching the clock here in front of me on average another child has been married under age i can lets talk to some that im about as executive director of the Civil Society group girls not brides committed to ending Child Marriage and joining us via dakar from skype to tell us about the conference who well i guess what scale is is and how many big groups so theyre trying to actually make a difference whats great about this conference is that its bringing together some of the biggest Decision Makers if from countries across the region so we have minister is and the conference was opened by the Prime Minister of senegal but it also brings together Civil Society youth religious centra dishnet leaders and donors and so its really recognizing the fact that tackling Child Marriage is going to mean working in partnership with Decision Makers but also with a wide range of other groups who can really make change happen for girls no coincidence that is happening in senegal because were saying west and Central Africa is a large problem that we know its a global problem but it is particularly large there can you enlighten us as to why. Well six of the ten countries in the world that have the highest rates of Child Marriage are in this region so its clear that it is a significant problem here. Fundamentally Child Marriage happens because girls are seen as being inferior to boys so this is that this basic gender inequality is something that we need to tackle if we want to see a change but Child Marriage is exacerbated by the fact that many families are poor and marrying off a daughter can be seen as a way of getting rid of another mouth to feed its its often just whats been done for centuries and so its just seemed to be that the normal thing and often in situations of insecurity and see if theres war or famine or displacement charm marriage can be seen as as as offering girls a sense of safety but what parents dont necessarily realize is that within the context of a marriage girls can face so much violence whats the answer then i know thats a huge question but is it is it education is it actually you know turning it into an offense which can be prosecuted as a little bit of both. What weve what weve found is some really trying to look at Child Marriage as a holistic problem and that requires a holistic solution but thats whats really going to make the change what we need to do it is really four sets of strategies one is a power and girls working with girls directly so that they are aware of other options and for their lives other than just becoming a child bride its working with families and communities so that they dont see Child Marriages being the only option and then they start realizing that Child Marriage is actually detrimental not only to the girls but the communities as a whole its making sure that services are available and that means schools but also Health Services legal clinics exceptional for unmarried girls as well as girls who have already been been married and if its also making sure that there is i mean they were laying legal and policy framework so the appropriate laws not just on age of marriage but also on things like birth registration in Marriage Registration and appropriate appropriate out in use for girls who have been married to to seek redress so its really combining all of these strategies that will that will really change the situation look to me on that on thats an important topic im glad you could talk to us about it thank you that you want to when hes team travel to bangladesh last year to investigate the problem of Child Marriage there they found almost a third of all bangladeshi goes marry before they are fifteen years old they also found a young man whos made it his lifes goal to end Child Marriage so theres some good news there one east of course in the documentary section at aljazeera dot com and when you find that edition you also find a link through to a reporters notebook from tony rashid who was involved in that program and almost became a child bride herself fascinating sobering reading for you at aljazeera dot com. Lets go off the grid know how leah what youre taking us today were going to peru because its census its a census year in peru where the government gathers information about every household in the country but on saturday there were several reports that census workers were attacked all of them were women this has sparked public outrage the most violent attack happened in the capital of lima a female census worker was interviewing a man and his home when he refused to let her leave and then he raped her a suspect has been arrested the government though said that volunteers should have been protected. Since when this united still nothing this was a National Census he didnt have to end up like this there should have been appropriate measures in place to guarantee the safety of the process the suspect easing jail and were going to request he stays in jail so he doesnt walk free and hes a beautiful river but the outrage outrage kept growing after the victims brother said that the peruvian Statistics Institute asked him to keep quiet. The institute did nothing they told me to say nothing to stay quiet that they would take my sister to the hospital so not was it done i mean the time want to get to the bottom of this and the paper tray to shoot it right to jail it would get the National Institute for a statistics has issued a statement saying quote the i and condemns this unfortunate act in extends its solidarity with the victim and commits to give her all necessary support but this was not an isolated case another woman was beaten by another man while doing her job as well thats her here being helped by First Responders some were harassing other volunteers on line these men here have been posting pictures on facebook of volunteers while they were actually in their homes asking friends what should my next move be another man tracked the volunteer on facebook and asked her if she was single the government confirmed the man that posted that is actually a cadet in military school and they said quote that the most serious sanctions to this crime will be applied following a thorough investigation now more than sixty percent of the census volunteers are women and these cases only begin to highlight how frequently women are abused. Say here she writes that lima is the fifth most dangerous city for women and that their silence instead of having an immediate investigation this other user here she summed it up in saying that quote the interviewer was attacked than the interviewer was raped and that followed by jokes online about raping volunteers now if you want to get in touch of this about the story if this is something that is common in your country want to hear from you as always you can use the hash tag aging get the thank you about the u. S. City of las vegas is looking to rebrand its motto off of that deadly mass shooting three week. Ago fifty eight People Killed remember city tourism officials believe the slogan what happens here stays here no longer really feels appropriate meanwhile there is a unique Art Exhibition inside a church in the state of new jersey trying to highlight a countrys history with gun violence this is from gabriel is on. Panic at a concert in las vegas as a man kills fifty seven people in the worst mass shooting in United States in modern times the gunman owned forty seven guns and had twenty three of those firearms with him at the time of the shooting United States of america has a obsessive. Attraction and love for guns in a way that other countries just dont have and thats why she helped put together an exhibit at one church to help raise awareness to gun violence through art and in this piece tissues on each piece of tissue a name and age of someone killed by gun violence in the area so this is a tissue for a lot grows read greek is they someone was murdered the day before the exhibit opened she was thirty eight years old. The tissue you know evokes grief so to me it just kind of is a way of helping people its a kind of that to the human aspects of the violence in our society the artists at this exhibit are all from the local community their pieces take on different forms like this piece a fence with stuffed animals attached to symbolize a makeshift memorial at a crime scene but look closely and the message is clear while the exhibition is taking place in a church the reverend said stopping gun violence in the u. S. Will take more than prayer simply praying i think as an institution its not sufficient and so we have to work with other people of goodwill and to to model peace in our own lives and also to demand a change that we simply cant go on the way weve been going on the art exhibit is called loving arms of course its a play on words arms being what we used to hug or embrace somebody but also arms being weapons as well the message here that this world needs more love and less violence one church were trained into gun violence has become an art form for peace gabriel is on doe aljazeera jersey city. Once again if youre watching on Facebook Live or got a story for you in a moment about a school in mexico giving gifted students a chance to use their talents i mean and you will be along to tell us about the two decades Long Campaign thats finally delivered an International Cricket stadium in rwanda first though a quick look at the weather. Its here to talk sport i love going to visit a Cricket Ground yeah even when its empty its just you know it with everything you can sort of soak up this one wont be empty its a long its an ambition is taken close to two decades to realise but this week rwandas cricketers can enjoy playing at a ground that rivals any in the world the first game is just taken place at the stadium in gali and the venue will be officially open this coming saturday when i visited rwanda and only twenty sixteen you can see here that would be stadium is still a field and there wasnt a single grass wicket for the players to use anywhere else in the country now is a cause that the global Cricket Community united behind and combined with the hard work of local players more than a Million Dollars has been right well under the cricket bells hope you can follow the transformation or over social media this week things from australia england and east africa will be playing on that fantastic venue this is the new pavilion that will double as a Community Center with hiv Testing Facilities and classrooms and this really the picture that sells tells it all that sells well the project is all about giving a sporting opportunity to young rwandans well this will give you an idea of whats wrong as cricketers have been prepared to do to make this happen last year the National Caps and eric decent has him on a subject himself to a nonstop fifty one hour net session they broke a world record and helped raise vital funds to give his team a home and it was erik who faced the first ball at the new stadium. Local people coming up what i was very very happy seeing. As. Run up to get that information. Seen a lot of people turning up watching big able even the people that did not have cricket but after seeing the buses coming to the new ground being like or that the incoming will do just what. They were joined i was really happy with just to give you some concepts cricket in rwanda was born really out of the countrys darkest chapter nine hundred ninety four genocide there resulted in the deaths of an estimated one billion people many rwandans forced into exile into neighboring countries like uganda and kenya where cricket is played and that is where some picked it up and brought it back to rwanda and its now the countrys Fastest Growing sport with close to ten thousand players regularly involved lets talk now to out of the shale is inca gully hes led the effort to build the stadium ill be this was a project your father started to try to help reconcile the country through sport how has it been for you this week finally seeing some cricket played at this new venue. Its been a wonderful week so its pretty. Nice relatively stress though its a hundred people flying. And with the opening four days away. Theres a lot going on going to go on it but today seeing the wind and be can your around ninety swimmers amazing amazing because thats a match they would normally i think it ultimately represents how politics game is its cop but also from from the news they expect the wickets held up nicely at we dont even open that we must act. Three or four hundred people here over the weekend and even say it must be a hundred people and its not some modern ace its great to see the ground being use and although this feels like the end its its just the beginning and this really seems so vain been a global asset really sort of captured the imagination of the whole cricketing world yeah id like to think son its not a cricket stadium in the conventional sense its as well as well as a provide complete cricket facilities its really about the community sense of the free h. I. V. s thing and really short of maps in mind the benefit of this facility to the local community the people that play cricket but also people outside of the. Its a Great Community and so its really its a humbling to see how so many people have supported our projects and the future just really brought to cricket why not but im also really interested to see how how many people we can help you see this city is a hook and what are your hopes now for that the future for one in cricket now that they have this amazing sense of. The future is really really bright and todays victory would suggest that its a city state its the state it was officially open on saturday i think youll see a lot more interest in the local should be to see him in the game. More than there is already the fact that the president is opening the facility will well at least. Grow the game that way but also you see more support coming from the i. C. C. And out of matter they can host of any International Matches means that they can retain some of that i. C. C. Funding this route so for us we look up i say you know its not a rwanda although i tried to see if its arms but. You know that there might be you know aspiring to be like afghanistan its partly. That what we what we just are its it lets hope the feature is as broad as you suggest ill be thank you so much for your thomas a fantastic story lets finish up the clippings shed far and wide on social media today a lesson in never celebrate sincerely this is what youre watching is a penalty shoot sounds install and it was lots at nineteen all of the time and this miss looked to decided the outcome the caper went off to celebrates and for the ball to bounce since the net has to be said may include it some are questioning the veracity of the clip but lets hope it is as good as it looks you can get in touch with us using the hash tag a. J. News grid tweet me at and they are on the School Sports im back with plenty more and the eight hundred g. M. C. News hour lets get back to come i think that if i love the fact it was nineteen or the first place that that will do for you news great heres that i get into well see you back here tomorrow as thirty fourteen fifteen hundred hours g. M. T. Stay. I provoke its a oh is it allison when theyre on line we were in hurricane winds for almost like thirty six hours these are the things that new york care has to address or if you join us on sat im a member of the ku klux klan but we struck up a relationship this is a dialogue tweet us with hostile intent stream and one of your pitches might make the next shot join the global conversation at this time on aljazeera the sams in archaeology graduate from iraq hes also a part time going to billings Pergamon Museum which includes a reconstruction of the famous ishtar gate in babylon most of the people hes showing around came to germany as refugees this is just one of several berlin museums taking part in the project called a Meeting Point and as well as bringing people together one of its aims is to emphasize the contribution of migrants right up to the present day to western culture Violet Office and then get here build because ive been here for some time i can help them with lots of things that moves us forward to me the great thing is its not just about museums about forming a new life here part of life is culture. In a country beset by poverty and lack of infrastructure. Sometimes we risk our lives in taking these roads lets gather saving lives is a dangerous job the vaccine talks only good when four hours there are patients waiting for his mother who must be in pain lives earth risk a week ago one of the gang stops some vehicles on the road at that can be a good one for them risking it all guinea at this time on al jazeera