Board. 7 million voters turned out for the elections in afghanistan. Ballots are counted with former World Bank Executive and Opposition LeaderAbdullah Abdullah as the front runners, with zemzem ahmed. Protesters for and against the Albuquerque Police department spoke at a town hall meeting. Police are under scrutiny after officers shot and killed a homeless man. The Justice Department launched a criminal investigation into the shooting. The findings will be released on thursday. Those are the headlines. America tonight is next. Im Thomas Drayton in new york. Remember you can get the latest news online at aljazeera. Com. 370. Clearly this is a most promising lead. And doubts whether the deep ocean will ever give up its secrets. Drilling for oil in southeast florida and the anger growing in this coastal paradise. Would we drill in the grand canyon . Is nowhere sacred . Hope for the future. Good evening, and thanks for being with us. Im joang. A joie chen. The search for malasia air 370, what theyve learned since the start of the biggest aviation mystery ever, the latest reports of pings which could be led to the black bosms. So many boxes, so many disappointment already. America tonightamerica tonights sa. I know in my heart phillips with god. Its been a month since malasia air 370 went missing. A month without answers for the wife of a new zealand man who also was on board. Im taking it minute by minute. I cant think yong beyond that. Ive got a threeyearold who says, when is datay going to scie between the u. S. Navy ping locator heard two separate signals. This would be consistent with transmissions from both the flight data recorder, and the cockpit voice recorder. The first signal lasted two hours and 20 minutes before it was lost. The ship turned around and picked up another sphal for about signal for about 13 minutes. Following the reports of the underwater sounds the malasian Authorities Say they are hopeful. In ladies and gentlemen, the last report is the most promising lead we have had. I ask those in the International Community to unite in their prayers and not give up hope. Still u. S. Navy captain Mark Matthews warns not to be too optimistic in the search for the plane. Theyre drained. We would like to tell the families we found the location. But until we can reconfirm we should not be very optimistic, we should be measured. Now the ocean shield, an australian ship, depths of almost three miles off the coast of australia. If search teams can pinpoint where the signals are coming from a teen sea searc deep sea search can begin. More accurate sonar and potentially mapping and looking at the ocean floor. Search crews from 14 countries initially began scouring the South China Sea where the plane was last detected. After several false leads the search area expanded to include the waters off of malaysia. Search crews have since been crisscrossing waters off the west australian coast. Four weeks after the plane disappeared from kuala lumpur to beijing. It is critical to locate the black boxes. America tonight traveled to south florida, the keys to understanding what happened in any aviation accident, including flight 370. There are two black boxes just like the set we saw here. One for data, the other for cockpit voice recording. Designed to locate a crash, they can only run on batteries for a month. And that time is up. Without the black boxes, we may never know what happened. What youre telling me is we need this to know an answer. Without this were never going to know. Its really important that we find this, stop speculating, focus on finding this. Families are holding vigils for the passengers. Although its uncheer whether the signals have clear whether the signals have anything to do with the missing aircraft theres a renewed sense continues. Sarah hoye, al jazeera. We hear that phrase cautious optimism over and over. Jay, can you talk about the significance of the chinese reporting they have heard pings . How trustworthy is this, how convincing that this might really be a lead . I think from the beginning, most of the experts were a little dubious. Because the chinese were searching in an area that was separate from the rest of the parties. And they happened to have a reporter on board. And they were using a stick hydrophone on a stick that they just stuck into the water. And then suddenly they are hearing pings. Many people believe this is probably more for chinese audience consumption. And theyre not taking it very seriously. Hydrophone on a stick is not a way to listen for these pings. Because of the conditions in the ocean that have a different temperature layer up until about 300 feet. What they call the thermocline, below that is where the pings are going to be. You will never hear it at the surface. One of the other big statements of the weekend had to to do with the notion that some sourcing suggests that the aircraft did turn to the south, tolt to the southern indian ocean, in a way that clearly defined as a way that had to be done by somebody who intentionally wanted to do it, somebody on board who wanted to escape detection. Is that more clear evidence of something . Actually, the pings that the australian ship the ocean shield has been reporting that they are using the special u. S. Equipment in order to reproduce, and to search for the debris, and the actual wreckage, that is actually buttressed by this information about the aircraft being flown in such a manner as to suggest human interference and a deliberate effort to avoid radar. When the calculations were first paid by inmarset that indicated that the aircraft went down in the Southern Area of the indian ocean, there was some question in my mind, at least, as to how they had gone through some of their assumptions that were necessary in order to come up with this location. And i always wondered, when did the plane turn south . All the pictures we saw only showed it moving to the west. Now were learning that apparently they had this information. Because the most interesting thing is that this new routing that they are talking about that the pilots actually took line up perfectly with the pings that this australian ship is now going after. So all of it is beginning to point to this area and give us hope that this is, indeed, where the plane is located. It would just make you wonder why we didnt hear earlier about why this aircraft turned or at one point it turned and at what point it leaves the full coverage of the radar through that region, through the governments there. My under yes. My understanding is the malasian investigators actually traveled to indonesia and spoke to the military counterparts over there, the radar counterparts, and they claim they didnt see the aircraft. But whether they did or not, through other sourcing of other radars that they have been able to look at, they have pretty well convinced themselves that this aircraft flew west southwest off course then it turned towards the northwest and proceeded up and around indonesia up to the west thereby avoiding radar. And that definitely indicates nefarious influence. Some influence, aviation analyst jay rollins. Thanks. When we return, a Hidden Treasure and a hidden threat . The peoples getting sick. Wake up. Before you kill the creation of gods gift. Whats at stake in this lush paradise and why the history of southwest floridas oil industry may prove more powerful than protests. The stream is uniquely interactive television. In fact, we depend on you, your ideas, your concerns. All these folks are making a whole lot of money. You are one of the voices of this show. I think youve offended everyone with that kathy. Hold on, theres some room to offend people, im here. We have a right to know whats in our food and monsanto do not have the right to hide it from us. So join the conversation and make it your own. Watch the stream. And join the conversation online ajamstream. The latest quest for oil as Energy Companies eyeing one americas most cherished wild lands, the everglades. Its been long assumed a treasure of oil lies below them. An abandons of chee clean water. America tonights adam may reports. No drilling. No drilling. No drilling. Airs dying. Waters dying. The peoples ge getting sick. Wake up before you kill all creation and gods gift. Thank you. Reporter one by one then stepped up to the microphone to voice their fears and tell their stories. My brother died last year of 51. My sister died the year before at 50. Im 49 years old. And i just got out of the hospital with a lung removed. I dont want my kids to die like my family did. Get em out. Reporter so it went for more than four hours at a recent hearing of state and federal officials in southwest florida. The reason for their anger a plan to drill for oil next toll everglades to the everglades wilderness. What do we want. With when to we want it . New techniques are making it possible to drill in areas where it was once difficult. But many see the resulting waste water will be toxic. I just hope people realize this is about clean water. Reporter among those in the crowd pamela and jaime duran. They live more than a stones throw from one of the proposed oil wells. Its a thousand feet to where it is. This is it youll be able to see this pretty clear, hmm . So the well will be about there . The well will be in line with that tree i say about 400 the beginning of the pad would be about 400 feet from here. This is part of the watershed that needs the everglades. Jaime is living in a paradise. The little piece of paradise, we thought this would be a lovely way to retire. Limb piece of paradise. You dont hear anything, you hear crickets and thats about as loud as it gets at night. Reporter if an oil well does go in next door it will mean noise dust and dozens of trucks passing the durans every day. But worries them most, millions of gallons of waste water laced with chemicals will be injected back into the ground. They fear it will poison their water supply. If theres a spill it will eventually get to this water well. Reporter and this is water you cook with. You drink. We cook with and drink. You bathe in. Uhhuh. You feel pretty confident right now the water is good. Yes. Through . If the well goes through theres a possibility that this water may be tainted. Reporter but they say that injection process will not taint your well. Its tainted others. Its tainted water in pennsylvania, in ohio, in new york. Reporter the deu durans along with several others have got. Ten together to fight the oil wells. They turned their front yard into a giant billboard. Were worried about the three month old next door. If the water is contaminated and you bathe a baby in that kind of water whats going to happen five years down the road for this child . We need clean water, clean air. Its not political, its a human rights issue. Everybody deserves it. Reporter its not just humans the durans worry about. It would be a mile from the Florida Panther National refuge. The last sanctuary for these endangered animals. Theres days ive been out here doing research where the cheetion and i we have seen colleagues and i have seen the female mother panther and ten foot alligators sitting right by there. A local environmental group, took us to one place the panthers room, a place roam a place where cameras are rarely allowed. Right now were just down the street from one of the proposed well sites and oddly enough the government is spending hundreds of millions of dollars to restore the evergrades. This used to be a Housing Development and now its being given back to nature. Southern Golden Gate Estates was going to be the largest subdivision in america. Home to half a mill people but when the development failed some of those nearly extinct panthers moved in. The government has deemed this land more than 50,000 acres as vital to the survival of the everglades ecosystem. Its animals and plants depend on keen water. An oil accident just to the north could be disastrous. Lets say just north of this there was a Chemical Spill or industrial accident and it got into the water up there, would that affect this area as well biologically speaking . If that water was moving and there was a major disturbance quite likely that would have implications downstream. This is a pretty special place. The current search for oil isnt the first time this land has seen a rush to exploit its natural resources. Lets head up here. This is an amazing spot and an amazing organism. What is its technical name . This is the bald cypress, an old growth cypress tree, been here for almost 500 years. The logging limit lment that came here removed logging element that came through here removed nearly all, mostly had theyre hollow like this one. Reporter now its oil not lumber thats attracting industry to this unique landscape. But what a lot of people dont know not even in florida is that theres already oil drilling going on in the greater everglades. This area isnt open to the public. The National Park service gave us a special tour. Inbound marker six, marker six. About 25 miles from the newly proposed wells, several existing wells, pump away, day and night. Theyre located deep in the heart of the Big Cypress National preserve. So they have Drilling Operations taking part here on National Park service territory. Yes. And how many oil wells are here right now . Approximately seven, eight. Don hargrove oversees oil and gas operation inside big cypress. The new wells will use some of the same technology into these, including injecting waste water into the ground. If you were to see dozens of operations scattered throughout the greater everglades area could the ecosystem handle that . It depends on the operator, it really does. Overall how do you think this operation is doing . I think theyve done a very good swrob over the job over the years. There have been reports of leaks on some injection sites across the states. But here the Parks Service has regularly tested the water and says it has never seen any evidence of contamination. Hargrove says at the worst these werls a short term eyesore. Reporter have there been environmental problems related to the drilling so far . If any impact on the surface, any pad constructed and anything, you can consider that as an impact. However theyre usually temporary. Theyre not there forever. They are removed and restored at some point. Believe it or not legs than 40 years ago, this used to be the site of an oil drilling operation. All the equipments been removed and its been turned back to nature. Some say this is proof that oil drilling can be done in an environmentally responsible manner. Others say it should have always looked like this. You may wonder why drilling is even allowed on National Park land. Well the rights of oil under much of big cypress and to some 800,000 acres across southwest florida belong to descendants of baron collier, the Collier Companies are behind the new plans to drill. We left several messages with Collier Companies but they went unanswered. So we came here to their headquarters in naples. She said they had no comment. In previous documents residents collier said the proposed oil wells will be safe. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection greez. Agrees. In a statement they told us the wells meet their requirements. Designed to protect fresh water aquifers. As for the panthers, they say the u. S. Fish and Wildlife Service didnt have any objections to the proposed drilling. The durans arent buying it. They dont believe the thirst for oil deserves risking their paradise. Still has at least one significant hurdle to clear, getting a permit from the federal epa. If that happens, the durans arent should you what they will do. They have already talked about moving. People get upset when the rain forest goes but were letting the everglades go. This is a spatial place to go. Would they let oil drilling in the grand canyon. Where are we going to stop, is there anything sacred . Reporter and those against the oil drilling just got a minor victory. A state Advisory Group looked over the facts, heard some testimony and came out against it. The opinion doesnt hold any legal weight but is giving environmentalistists some support. How widespread is this oil drilling . It is interesting, a lot of floridan denied know this. Theyre exploring, asking for permits, dozens of different area. A lot of renewed interest there because people are saying theres a possibility of making a lot of money there. It sounded a little bit like fracking with the natural gas, is this the same thing . Yes, sounds like it. But the environmentalists say there is no fraking. There is Common Thread with fracking, thats the injection of some chemicals into the ground that has environmentalists worried, because of tomorrow night im going to have part 2 of my report on the everglades war. Were going to sit down with jennifer hecker, with th one of the nations most respected environmental group. Theyre considered nonhazardous if they are associated with oil and gas activity. So we talk a lot more about the environmental concerns, a lot more about these chemicals. My full interview is coming up tuesday on america tonight. Well look forward to that, adam may, thanks so much. Next on our program, an unexpected welcome, the Community Standing up for migrants and what they think about the fight for protect the border land. Along the border we have more to fear from Border Patrol than we do from bordercrossers. Aljazeera america presents a break through Television Event borderland. Six strangers. Lets just send them back to mexico experience illegal immigration up close and personal. Its overwhelming to see this many people that have perished. Lost lives are relived. All of these people shouldnt be dead. Will there differences bring them together, or tear them apart. The only way to find out is to see it yourselves. Which side of the fence are you on . Borderland only on Al Jazeera America [ grunting ] im taking off, but, uh, dont worry. Im gonna leave the tv on for you. And if anything happens, dont forget about the new xfinity my account app. You can troubleshoot technical issues here. If you make an appointment, you can check out the status here. You can pay the bill, too. But dont worry about that right now. Okay. How do i look . Thanks. [ male announcer ] troubleshoot, manage appointments, and bill pay from your phone. Introducing the xfinity my account app. Now a snapshot of stories making headlines on america tonight. Legendsary actor Mickey Rooney was 93 years old, died yesterday. Afghan Officials Say it could take six weeks to finalize the tally but it is cheer there was a large turnout for the historic president ial elections, violence killed nearly 2 dozen people on election day. And 100 days, thats how long three of our al jazeera colleagues have been in custody in egypt. To protest the continued detention of baher mohamed, peter greste and mohamed fahmy. A fourth colleague Abdalla Al Shami has been on Hunger Strike since january. Oscar pistorius took the stand in his own defense. Pistorius is accused of shooting and killing his mold girlfriend reeva steenkamp. You lori janlori jane gliha hase story. Reporter olympic star oscar pistorius, off camera, from the stand he offered an emotional apology. There hasnt been a moment since this tragedy happened that i havent thought about your family. I wake up every morning, youre the first people i think of, the first people i pray for. I cant imagine the pain and the sorrow and the emptiness that ive caused you and your family. I was simply trying to protect reeva. Reporter with a hesitant voice pistorius paused, in his statement, he quietly mutt erd what happened the night he pulled the trigger and killed his law student girlfriend, somebody he thought was an intruder. I can promise the night she went to bed, she felt love. Ive tried to put my words on paper many, many times but no words would ever suffice. The paralympic Gold Medalist known as blade runner reveals he takes antidepressants and sedatives and is often to scared to sleep. I have terrible thoughts about what happened that night, i wake up and i smell smell blood and i wake up to being terrified. Reporter in front of a room filled with spectators, pistorius spoke of his childhood being exposed to crime and house breakins. And its no longer a gun that helps him feel safe. Firearm again or be around a firearm so ive got a Security Guard that stands outside of my front door at night. Reporter and court adjourned early today because of pistoriuss emotional state but it will continue. Normally pistorius would have been the first person to testify on behalf of the deference. But he was the on behalf of the defense. A scientists had to go first because of a personal conflict. At the very end of march one of the assessors became ill so there was a hiatus of about a week. In this type of case, south africa, there is no juries, two assessors or the assistants can help with that judges decision. They have to wait for this person to come back to cord so they can continue to proceed. Its a very different thing. The United States is really decided by the judge with the input of his assistants . The two assistants can have some input on this. They are legal experts. They can weigh in. Its completely different than in the United States. Its important that these people are there and the judge has all the facilities and people they need in order to help out. Very interesting. Lori jane gliha, thank you very much. Yes. Borders installations under the u. S. Mexican border, allocates 362 million for border fences and towers much of them in the harsh desert terrain in arizona. But not everyone agrees with his emphasis on security. As Al Jazeera Rob Reynolds reports, the citizens of this community are tired of being in a militarized border zone. It is Early Morning in arivaca arizona. Formulate kilometers from the line separating u. S. From mexico. Agents with sniffer dogs check each vehicle but at this border unusual. This is a newer model sedan. A group of citizens monitoring the monitors. Checkpoint and the heavy handed presence of the Border Patrol in the area. Possibly one male one female, white. Lisa jacobson helped organized the checkpoint monitoring. Many people in the inthis community believe that our community has been treated as if we live in a war zone. The customs and Border Patrol agency tell al jazeera checkpoints remain a highly effective tool in our efforts to secure our nations borders, unquote. I have to go through two Border Patrol checks every day of my life which you know gets old after a day or two. Stacy hatton is a nurse that lives in aravaca but works 50 kilometers away. They can ask me anything i want and irhave no rights. I dont think thats what any of for. This is not the freedom, not the right to move around freely. The well armed agents dont make mike keller feel any safer. Along the border we have more to fear from the Border Patrol than we have from Border Crossers. Carlotta says the Border Patrol traumatizes her grandchildren. It is very upsetting every day. They dont understand whats going on, why do we have military people with guns and stuff . Reporter theres not much to see in aravaca itself although the town of 600 is surrounded by a majestic desert landscape but the townspeople are used to doing things their own way. People here are not only monitoring whats going on at the Border Patrol checkpoint, theyre also finding ways to help desperate migrants wowtd breaking the law. This is an emergency food pack. Volunteers stork water and food packets to hand out to hungry migrants. And keep a first aid kit. If you have blisters, you cant walk, you get left behind in this desert and you die. More than 2,000 migrants have died crossing this desert since 2001 according to local officials. Alex says its only human to help people in need. When they come to your door, and they do here, and they havent had water for a long time, theyre dehydrated some of them are crying, some of them badly. Eat. Its just i think a persons responsibility to do something. To help somebody. About a third of the people in aravaca have signed a possession asking the government to dismantle the checkpoint. But the Border Patrol told al jazeera that as far assists concerned the checkpoint isnt going anywhere. Rob reynolds, al jazeera, aracava, arizona. Coming soon on Al Jazeera America presents, a new series, border land. Average americans confronted with the realities of immigration. Over the weekend thousands of immigrants took to the streets on a push to make president obama to put a hold on deportation. President obama saying the government will only go after undocumented immigrants who have committed serious crimes. But his position raises questions that that reality is otherwise. Since the president took office there have been nearly 2 million deportations, 66 committed only minor infractions, 20 of the cases involved people who committed serious crimes. We are joined by david martin, a former deputy general with the department of homeland security. We appreciate you being with us. Thank you. This does appear pretty strike i given what the president has said about his commitment going after criminals and gang bangers. This sort of indicates that is not the case. These are quite minor crimes for the most part. Well, the president s statements i think were not given in full, in that introduction. Theres a more careful list of the overall priorities and it certainly includes people more recent Border Crossers against whom case will be made even though they dont have a criminal offense. The emphasis is on crimes, some of the shorter straiments emphasize only serious statements have emphasized only serious crime but those with minor infractions. There is a significant dispute over what is a minor infraction. The New York Times story made it clear minor traffic infractions, driving under the influence. Some would regard that as a much more serious offense and there have been incidents. In terms of overall deportations there have been a significant increase, last years of the Bush Administration going into president Obamas Administration and quite a bit of criticism from the hispanic and asian communities that the president is deporter in chief. That is quite true, there has been that criticism. Congress under the enforcement during the bush years and the deportation level reached pretty much the current level, about 400,000 a year. In the final queer of the Bush Administration its stayed at approximately that level. For those that complain about the president s policies they need to look a little more carefully about the overall system and where it comes from. Congress prompts the funding, its been popular for congress to provide a lot more funding for Border Patrol and enforcement. Once that money is appropriated , those are laws, they have discretion in how they do it but they cant simply say thank you very much to congress for the money, were simply not going to spend it. It would be a very difficult precedent if that happened. People would push their programs through congress, maybe for Environmental Protections or Consumer Finance protection, if the president simply had the discretion to say well im not going to honor it, that would be a problematic way to run the government. Clearly though there are a lot of political implications in all this whether the president is playing to a certain audience, an audience that would like him to go after undocumented immigrants in a harsher way. Well, perhaps, although the message has been clouded. And i think thats a little bit of the problem and why were having difficulty getting Immigration Reform right now. An ultimate successful Immigration Reform package i think is going to have to be built on some assurance about enforcement commitments for the long run. If we could assure more peeb people more members of congress of that, a Legalization Program that would provide a secure status who make up most of those poignant stories in the New York Times articles, those who have families in this country. I think there needs to be legalization for long term residents combined with some smart, effective enforcement measures that will be consistently enforced in the future and we have to have that kind of a conversation as a country. Professor david martin, he professor of international law. Thank you for being with us. Ahead after the break, the slaughter of 100 days, remembering the horror of rwandas genocide, looking ahead on our program, others on a long journey to a new world and a new life, as we are driving america. I told my kids, you born in this country, you are citizen of this country and when i got the citizen of this country i told them, i am now, i am the top of the world. Celebrating what it means to be an american. We will begin a special look at immigrants, on the road to a brighter future. First stop chicago where a former iraqi boxing champ steps into a different ring, driven, tuesday on america tonight. Im actually quite nervous. As u. S. Forces prepare to leave afghanistan, fault lines brings you an eye opening look at what life is really like under the taliban. From girls attending school, to enforcing sharia law. They rely on the local population, and so they need to win the hearts and minds of locals to be able to fight. Then immediately after, an american tonight special edition, explain how you were able to get access to the taliban. Fault lines this is taliban country then, an american tonight special edition only on Al Jazeera America consider this the news of the day plus so much more. We begin with the government shutdown. Answers to the questions no one else will ask. It seems like they cant agree to anything in washington no matter what. Antonio mora, Award Winning and hard hitting. Weve heard you talk about the history of suicide in your family. Theres no status quo, just the bottom line. But, what about buying shares in a professional athlete . Real perspective, consider this on Al Jazeera America this marks the 20th Year Anniversary of the rwandan genocide, a slaughter of 100 days that left over 800,000 from the tut sis dead. The rwandan genocide remains even today, vivid in his memory. He tries hard to forget. I love my country. I have a connection to the land to the beauty ecosystems, remaining gorillas in the wild. Genocide. I was going to school. I had friends. We used to hang out and play soccer. I had a lot of dreams. I was 16yearold kid in rwanda. On april 6th in 1994. The president s plane was gunned down. And we started hearing stories of some massacres. First you dont believe it. It was how can that be . I was old enough to know what was going on and i knew obviously the historical tension between the ethnic groups, the hutus, and the tutsis. My father was hutu and my mother was tutsi, although she didnt live with us. I remember being such a horrible home of hate for tutsis. I was tall and lean and considered a tutsi. They were killing tutsis that day. There were neighbors coming around the neighborhood and knocking on the door and referred to me as the tutsi boy, they didnt refer to me as jeanne, but as a tutsi boy. It was their way to justify and kill me. I was in the bushes, it came time to leave. I made one call to my mother, i did not think i was going to see my mother again. We were ready to cross the border, there were a lot of refugees, i didnt recognize this place, like how is of can this be even possible . My and my brother jeanne paul, the scale of it, there were like a Million People in one camp and in a refugee camp when somebody used to do when somebody would die, they used to take a hand made blanket and they would roll the bodies and then they would lay them on the road. Tonight, there are more than because we spoke good french, the reporters wanted to hire us, as translaidors and all of a sudden, life was started coming to normal. I was helping these journalists capture the conditions of the camps. I remember one of the cameramen allowing me to look through the viewfinder. He was showing me how to actually operate the camera. Looking through that viewfinder i realized the power of the camera, the ability to be able to show the world what was happening in rwanda. Thats where my fascination to work to tell stories, we came whe wakened when i was a teenager in the refugee camp. Then the situation wasnt a story anymore. They were packing to go back to their lives. Before they left they allowed us to use their Satellite Phone and i was able to call an uncle of mine who lives in england. He thought we had all died. He told us please get out of there, you can come to england and live with me. My brother jean paul refused, wanted to go back into rwanda to look for our mother. We didnt have enough money for a plane ticket so he gave me his money. My brother made several trips to look for my mother. Six years after he found her. As i was celebrating our mother being alive, jean paul contracted malaria and in three or four days he died. When i went back to rwanda after six years i had my own fears because my last memory of rwanda was, dead bodies. But the idea of being able to see my mom again was a lot stronger than any other feelings feelings. [ crying ] through my mother, i was able to see certain things, and learn about stories of hutus and tutsis getting back together, trying to figure out how to live in the same villages. The government because they couldnt prosecute all the cases, they revived this traditional Justice System called gachacha. Gachacha is based on, rather than punishing somebody, make him a member of the community by forgiving him. Its a shame that i had to go through what i went through in order to get here. But looking back, at 20 years and away ive personally become. If i had not gone back to rawntd and reconnect, i feel like i should rwanda and reconnect, i feel like i should be angry. I dont have nightmares anymore. Ive forgiven and that has helped me to have a better life. On his life. A church reborn, hopes this celebration could be the sign of a new chacht. New chapter. On Al Jazeera America when science intersects with hope. Im hoping to give someone a prosthetic arm for under 1000 inovation finds oppurtunity a large earthquake would be an inconvenience rather than a disaster. And hardware meets humanity this is some of the best driving ive ever done eventhough i cant see. Techknow our experts take you beyond the lab were here in the vortex. And explore the Technology Changing our world. Only on Al Jazeera America this takes guts. And finally from us tonight a sign of some change and challenge in catholic church. Months since argentine pope francis,s statement about same sex marriage. Manny duchamp in cordoba. An unprecedented baptism. Umauzul, the same child of a same sex couple known to receive the catholic sacrament. Just so happened that he accepted us. Which gave way to social change. But the Roman Catholic church has said yes to the baptism of a baby girl of a lesbian family. The childs god mother is argentinas president , christina fernandez. The president sent an aide as her official representative. Four years ago, president fernandez signed a bill legalizing same sex marriage and adoption in the country. It came when pope francis was an argentine bishop. Since his papacy, he has seen more tolerance to day and lesbian people. We want a wedding for the two of us. The couple are requesting a ceremony in the catholic church. Kilmeny duchart, lrnlings. Thats our show for tonight. Tell us what youd like to see in our program. Good night. Well have more of america tonight, tomorrow. Ukraine cracks down on prorussian protesters. More than 70 people arrested in overnight raids. Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera America. Live from doha. Also ahead 50,000 people made homeless by the storms in the solomon islands. Now aid workers warn of disease. Going hungry the u. N. Cuts food rations to syria because donors havent delivered on their promises