Transcripts For ALJAZ NEWSHOUR 20240715

Card image cap



inside that over and it was already reported before and the reason why they came up to this idea is also that just a few days after jamal his ship was murdered and his body parts were brought to this place where the saudi men living inside they ordered. portions of meat on coop and cooked meat and they did barbecue that's why the police now strongly suspects that g.'s body parts were burnt as early forces have shot dead two palestinians in the occupied west bank israeli military says the palestinians were killed after they attempted to drive a car and two israeli soldiers and before name a village west of ramallah local residents say it was a car accident one other person in the vehicle was seriously injured media reports say two soldiers were wounded one of them seriously. donald trump says he has decided to end large scale military exercises with south korea in order to save the u.s. hundreds of millions of dollars austin tenants although great to cut back betrayal saying it's part of efforts to reduce tension with north korea comments came just days after the nuclearization talks of kim jong il broke down and vietnam the two countries will carry out smaller joint exercises. we think our combined defensive readiness won't be affected because we'll be having combined c'mon senta exercises and coordinated outdoor maneuver exercises will also be maintaining for defensive readiness still ahead on al-jazeera. is an ideology it's an idea you can join the anger among regional kashkari leaders after the indian government bans a separatist group. taking on ebola would report from south sudan's first line of defense against the latest outbreak. her life a sunday night and probably a good part of monday the wind will feel exceeding the strong in the british isles particularly england and wales winds over one hundred kilometers per hour as a storm a named storm for a year develops and runs through now it is at the moment still developing as a hump of cloud on the satellite picture that he's eat it will become a tight circulation and it will bring wet and windy weather overnight spreading quickly across to scandinavia the heart of it but it won't leave behind calm this but that that when he's just going to the low countries in france by this time brought some warms into some was the head of it had to austria seventeen in vienna temperature wise than to about norbit above maybe but i think the strength of the wind will make you feel not particularly good and the picture on tuesday not a strong winds rather less cloud to some at least so bit of rain there and he's i think you'd use the word unsettled for all of northern europe and that induced warmth has gone from vienna way down to eleven degrees so all the action is in northern europe which gives us quiet ish weather throughout the mediterranean that strong wind across tunisia has gone now there are still a few showers but tenchi there in the eastern med maybe touching libya but with that a lack of wind and increasing strength and sunshine what about twenty nine is. it . art. watching al-jazeera let's recap the top stories right now algeria is eighty two year old president has formally put forward his name for a fifth term in office abilities beautifully to has been facing growing protests against his rule he's tried to appease algerian saying he'll call for early elections if he wins next month's bill to. al-jazeera has a pained exclusive pictures from the home of the saudi consul general in istanbul for the murder of journalist. a documentary airing on our sister channel al jazeera arabic details how turkish officials believe an of and may have been used to dispose of his body israeli forces shot dead two palestinians in the village of before nima in the occupied west bank israeli army says the palestinians were killed after attempting to drive a car into israeli soldiers local residents though say it was a car accident the u.s. consulate in west jerusalem which provides diplomatic representation to the palestinians is to be absorbed by the new u.s. embassy for israel on monday a controversial decision to turn them into a single diplomatic mission was announced in october by u.s. secretary of state mike pompei oh the consul is been in place for about one hundred seventy five years and acts as a defacto u.s. embassy for palestinians many palestinians consider the move a downgrade and diplomatic relations it's as a partner at the truman national security project he says there is no going back on the embassy move even if trump leaves office. bear in mind that in one thousand nine hundred five the it became law in america to try to move the embassy to jerusalem in every six months since then there's been a waiver to to prevent it from happening and it was passed on a bipartisan basis so i don't think the embassy in any way shape or form will will move back to tel aviv the issue of the consulate in jerusalem once this change is made i don't imagine that it would change again but i think very importantly one part that's being missed i don't know that the israelis would object to the americans building a full fledged embassy in ramallah and i don't know why that's not something that's being discussed any change like that needs to be viewed significantly and again it just points to the direction that the trip administration is going in but again i do believe that the israelis would not object to the americans putting an embassy in ramallah i think actually in fact that they would celebrate it because one of the big issues that the israelis look at is the idea of in any sort of two state solution of splitting jerusalem and if they were at the americans were to put an embassy in ramallah it would dictate that the palestinians if they were to have some sort of capital in east jerusalem it would not be the same sort of wouldn't have the same diplomatic status as ramallah so again i think the israelis would actually welcome the idea and it's not the richest regions and europe and an economic powerhouse of italy and it has also where the country's far right party now known as the league has thrived almost a third of the region voted for the party and it's and i am of racial policies and recent elections asuna government for its migrant labor is crucial to the success of that region. a city steeped in history and as with other parts of italy their own is people are fiercely protective of their identity and customs so much so that protecting these was one of the foundations for the likud party. where the league has always been important in terms of right wing parties and identity terry a movement it's an experiment into right wing politics we are battling for an identity and cause for defending security and against illegal uncontrolled immigration and the issue of immigration is always close to the top of the party's agenda there is a history of the extreme right here in verona back to the days of when it was part of the republic of salo during world war two and nazi puppet state these days it is the league that rules here and they found the fervor of near fascist organizations here problem is that their anti immigrant rhetoric collides with the reality and that is that migrants are very much part of the success of this wealthy region. it's heavy work making motorized outdoor tools in this factory the assembly line chan's out lawnmowers and tractors one of the many industrial operations that defines venet off as a powerhouse i had a look along the shop floor reveals how diverse the eight hundred strong workforce is the factory could not keep up with demand or maintain its leadership in the market without italian workers i don't think it about politics we take it about the business and when the business come into the matters integration is something that you have to do because you want a wonderful product you want quality you want to fish and sea and you cannot have it without integrity whatever going to work is your environment. but while ten percent of the region's population is made up of migrants and immigration political parties have flourished. the immigrant labor force is indispensable in venit so especially in small to medium sized businesses more so in this region than in any other two also has one of the oldest populations in the country which needs domestic employees from this workforce despite this immigration strategy has worked for the leak in this region turning fear is into slogans has proved profitable for the politicians in terms of votes but some businesses are asking without the immigrant workers would we still be making a profit. al-jazeera beneteau talks of playing the afghan taliban in the u.s. special envoy for afghanistan sound like hills odds continue on monday and the two sides have been meeting in qatar as capital for talks aimed at ending the seventeen year war in afghanistan a taliban spokesman says negotiations are in a very important and sensitive phase and both sides must be careful and cautious moving forward after days of increased tension between pakistan and india kashmiri leaders are criticizing the indian government's crackdown against separatist groups . mali is accused of supporting an armed resistance against india hundreds have been arrested and leaders say their work for the disputed regions most vulnerable children will now be affected so iran has more new delhi it's an early start for these students in shouldn't go they come to this religious school from some of the poorest families in the region this hot drink and snack is perhaps the only opportunity to eat or the cold winter morning. many live in isolated villages and farms so it's a chance to see friends and catch up before classes begin however they may not be able to study here for much longer. the government has banned jamaat e islami that runs this religious school and many more like it in the region it says the group supports armed resistance against india and is a threat to the country's stability. student and there says it's a disappointing setback to his education. i want to do something in my life that benefits everyone i wasn't very religious and wanted to know how to pray correctly i was embarrassed that i couldn't answer questions about my feet this has changed what importantly the school has taught me social skills are to be polite speak to strangers and my elders with respect. late last month the central government banned jamaat e islami arrested scores of its leaders and sealed off their homes in indian administered kashmir there's been widespread anger in the community many feel muslims are being deliberately targeted and accused of being sympathetic to so-called terror organizations it's an accusation people here deny and say the government in new delhi is vilifying them for their faith and beliefs. regional politicians and are challenging new delhi you can derail an idea they're not is an ideology it's an idea you can't just so you know in a democracy it's a battle of ideas if you try to imprison everyone you can imprison the idea it is going to for the really need the people of kashmir. this former head of india's external intelligence agency believes about the islam being kashmir has links with armed groups in pakistan the fact is that the german been bad news for a long time. and whether there was a need to ban there i mean there's. a government to decide. but. the bad had needed to be picked up that should have been runs on time ago this hasn't been arrested and speaking exclusively to al jazeera tells of his concerns because of the if. bernard did whole system will get stated and it will be a disaster for the needy and lot of people especially on the phones and we're doing jamaat e islami hindi is the original group from which to mark the islam broke away from the former centers across india like this and they're not bound with tensions running high the concern for the indian government is how to regulate groups that offer an islamic education in indian administered kashmir without alienating an already disillusioned community so whole raman al jazeera new delhi as late as opposition leader says he'll be back home on monday to leave new protest against president nicolas maduro on white house has wrapped up a tour of latin american countries seeking support to topple majority it was last in ecuador about is now reportedly headed back to his whaler i know has appeared on social media calling for venezuelans to join the protest the government is threatening to arrest him if he returns. aid agency doctors without borders has suspended ebola treatment in parts of democratic republic of congo after two medical centers were attacked now there are concerns the disease will spread to neighboring countries including south sudan hundreds of people have died from the bowl in. august morgan as more from the town of south sudan close to the congolese border. it's taken almost four days to make it to south sudan from a refugee camp across the border in the democratic republic of congo but before she can return to the home she left more than a year ago health workers have to check to make sure she doesn't have the ebola virus. i heard there was an abode outbreak and that it kills i also heard that if one person is infected in the family everyone else can get it to you i've seen the pitches of those who died from about and i was afraid that me and my children got infected so i took them and i returned to south sudan. because outbreak first declared last august is the worst in the republic's history more than five hundred people have died and for the three hundred have been infected most of the cases are in areas controlled by armed groups making it difficult for aid workers to reach and if they do provide treatment. a crippled camps near the epicenter of the epidemic more south sudanese are choosing to head home. people arriving from the neighboring democratic republic of congo are screened for ebola at fives like this one in the center of a people arriving from uganda which is also considered high risk country are also screened but others are getting through without screening because of challenges at the border. agency say between fifty and one hundred people are arriving in south sudan every day but not all crossing points have screening sites and not all screening sites are easily accessible which is raising fears about the potential spread of the disease the screening site there located between the border areas between the r.c. in south sudan and uganda and south sudan they are extremely hard to reach due to complex security situation and extremely poor infrastructure so these two are the major challenge that we face in terms of. gaining access and maintaining access for continued. prevention and preparedness activities the authorities in a say they are trying to raise awareness to make it easier for people to get screened we have been advocating so much for people but you can. see to make sure that the usual fishel channels where the screaming points should not be come to those points i would walk over still in the fields most of them used to moves on but the challenge but we keep getting that we really need to use the offshoots because we don't have all the capacity to set up and screaming all those porous borders has been screened and assured she's well but it claims more victims in the democratic republic of congo and fighting continues to cut off access to border points in south sudan there are concerns if the disease spread aid workers here in a will have to step up from a position of preventing it to one of containing it he will morgan al-jazeera the arab or state. recap the headlines now on al-jazeera algeria's eighty two year old president has formally put forward his name for a fifth term in office of jealousies beautifully cast and facing growing protests against his rule is try to appease algerian saying he'll call for early elections if you when's next month's vote. at least twenty two people have been killed after a tornado hit the u.s. state of alabama rescue teams are searching the wreckage of homes and businesses destroyed in lake county where than ten thousand people are without power we've done everything we feel like we can do the same in your area is just very very hazardous to put anybody into a disappointing time debris everywhere and it is just his or his made previously this evening just some mass damage to structures residences in the area or his foreign minister sergey lavrov has and qatar as part of a tour of gulf countries its first stop before he goes to saudi arabia kuwait and the united arab emirates russian state news says he will focus on energy investment and regional issues including syria yemen libya and palace time out of there as obtained exclusive pictures from the home of the saudi consul general in istanbul after the murder of journalist. a documentary airing on our sister channel al-jazeera arabic details how turkish officials believe an oven may have been used to dispose of his body israeli forces shot dead two palestinians in the village of california may and the occupied west bank israeli army says the palestinians were killed after attempting to drive a car into israeli soldiers but local residents say it was a car accident talks between the afghan taliban and u.s. special envoy for afghanistan make clear continue on monday the two sides have been meeting in qatar as capital for talks aimed at ending the seventeen year war in afghanistan a taliban spokesman says negotiations are on a very important and sensitive phase and both sides must be careful and cautious moving forward. venezuela's opposition leader says he'll return home on monday to lead new protests against president nicolas maduro on why do has wrapped up tour of latin american country seeking support to topple the door oh it was last in ecuador but now reportedly is headed back to venezuela i know appeared on social media calling for venezuelans to join the protest the government is threatening to arrest him if he does return or so the headlines keep it here on al-jazeera much more news to come inside story is next. with a new leader in brazil comes changes to how we deals with parents and the u.s. brazil's vice president is playing an active role and president asked you not to talk to the press but you're still talking the president just told me to be careful the vice president of brazil talks to al-jazeera. managing this that is going kashmir tensions remain high between india and pakistan but could there be another all out war between the countries and this peace in this disputed himalayan region even possible this is inside story. hello and welcome to the program. sandwiched between india and pakistan kashmir has been a flashpoint between the two nuclear powers since one nine hundred forty seven both new delhi and islamabad claim all of the region each control's boss of it after three wars in the past seventy years a cease fire agreement was reached sixteen years ago but it has been regularly violated last week there were fears india and pakistan were on the brink of a new war india strikes in retaliation for a suicide bombing that killed at least forty indian troops in indian administered kashmir pakistan responded shooting down a fighter jet and detaining its pilot who was then returned to india as a gesture of goodwill but indian and pakistani forces have also exchanged heavy gunfire along the borders of kashmir killing at least seven people we have the latest from both sides first in delhi. maintaining the status quo has been a conundrum for india and pakistan that no one seems to have an answer for many others suggest that while kashmir seems to be the main issue between the two countries the de facto line of control may become and perhaps is the best possibility of a long term border between the two countries but to have that conversation islamabad the new delhi need to speak to each other and as far as india is concerned new delhi has had a problem with pakistan over the last seven decades the country has been ruled by one military dictatorship after another civilian governments have rarely lasted long enough for new delhi to have a conversation with them and new delhi will not discuss issues like this with an elected military officials the nearest that these two countries ever got to speaking to each other about trying to resolve the longstanding issues and kashmir was in the late ninety's when the present position their business sheriff was in charge of pakistan that fell through very quickly and then also analysts suggest how about the people of kashmir on both sides of the line of control their aspirations their wants and their needs should be considered will they be in the future is only a question politicians can ask and then for india the real concern is that no matter how far the negotiations go there are always non-state actors and militant groups or terrorists as they call them that are sponsored as far as new delhi is concerned by pakistan and it only takes one incident like that and pull warmer in mid february to disrupt the status quo it's a complicated political jigsaw that has yet no answer but inside story i'm still robin in new delhi. combat heydays following events from islamabad. danger in britain india and pakistan remain a den or dime high once again or did the issue of kashmir were just come to the forefront and india has blamed buggers don for committing an act of getting them over forty over its shoulder and located in forty while mom bhagavan said that they had no evidence to suggest that the attack was gathered out from bloggers on saying that the regular you didn't die during the indian and ad d. i tag go in there gosh meeting with indian nationality buggers on going to new to maintain their days in their dangerous issue and i didn't do excited much to get that across their day boil to talk about all outstanding the future however india had already a good read by august on under their shimla agreement signed off for the water in one hundred seventy one that orders through to marjorie said good bye lad drily the problem is india did not want a third party intervention could try and sort out their dispute and add that same time if you are just a dog group august on bringing up the issue of getting them the bugs on the prime minister imran khan had already made and opened all four to india dead bugs on a drilling to discuss all outstanding issue an order dissolved there's a dispute the boiler seems now in n.p.r.'s court according to most analysts here and so fall their signature coming out of new delhi showed their did nor deescalation on the way it has come all hard for inside story from islam a lot. let's bring in our panel in new delhi prem shankar john journalist and author of the book a smear nine hundred forty seven the origins of a dispute in london victoria schofield historian of the conflict and in lahore via skype central asia security analyst ahmed rashid welcome to or mr john i mean judging from statements by officials from india and pakistan they don't seem to be willing to further a scale of a crisis so now what is next. you're right that i don't think there's any desire whatever escalate the crisis anymore because fundamentally the first of all the the attack in peru imo was something that came out of the blue. and so all that the indian prime minister did was it took full advantage of it because he's facing an election in six weeks six weeks to two months and beating the beat of the sort of patriotic drum heads to get votes he's been doing that with his usual sort of. flare for the last fifteen days and. we've had these two attacks but counterattack i think it served its purpose and now i think we've had a very soon that the poor dates would be announced victorious it's fair to say this particular moment of this is a going to be a turn chapter and from now on was going to be back to normal. well it's always difficult to get as you say back to normal with the dispute over jam and kashmir what you tend to have is a halt a period of deescalation a period of status quo on easy an easy situation some violence and then potentially another flare up and this is why i think it's important to focus not just on deescalation but on what might be the next step which inevitably has to be actually putting heads together and working out how in year in peace and the inhabitants of the state can can live together peacefully to to resolve the issue. we have seen flare ups in the past is there any sentiment this time that this could be different it could be conducive to first political talks between iran. and not enjoy mahdi. one hundred one and i agree with that there would be a major escalation but what i am worried about is that this level of of escalation that we have already could be maintained for another two or three months by the indian side because. prime minister modi is seeking election and it suits him to have a. pakistan that as an enemy there it doesn't suit the pakistanis they are facing a very severe economic and political crisis they want an end to this as quickly as possible but unfortunately i don't see. prime minister modi really are asking for a quick resolution or even just to go back to what was the theater's quo before which was not particularly conducive to want to circumvent but at least it was not on putting the two countries on the edge of war. primm could be using this whole crisis to his own advantage but isn't there a burst of this could further spin out of control and he would and up facing one of the biggest political crises of his tenure well that's precisely why he i don't think there's going to be any more it's collision from the indian state as far as more these concerned he has got what he wanted out of it if it goes any further now first and foremost. we will not see he was able to portray india as a victim after the poor are made to act but it is skill and one counter-attack that's ok with the rip responded to what they did but a second one now would would would serve no purpose whatever particularly because the pakistani to attack our air strike was so carefully on was designed not to take human life and in fact there have been as far as i know almost no loss of human life on either side and it served his political purpose very well i doubt very much if he would like to rock this boat. he's a very fine orator is going to take full advantage of this and what i've seen is now he's picking on the on the opposition and saying why did you see this every day of the opposition makes a remark saying that look you up late just like here for elections are back you are at the national so that's the game today victoria against the backdrop of the domestic politics particularly in india and with the upcoming elections do you think that more you will have to wait until after the elections to decide whether or not he will be talking to the pakistani counterpart. yes i did i didn't see anything happening before the elections and i think those premonition had a right that it's going to be used as an election ploy basically to drum that patriotic drum it is arguable whether it might get out of control but one hopes not and there will not be any further escalation but unfortunately it's going to be some months until we see the outcome of the election before i think you ever get an initiative or an acceptance of a meeting between moody and prime minister imran khan with the russia this is a conflict there has been pitting two neighbors to support powers india and pakistan for almost seventy years but the whole issue is about kashmir do you think that to more of both leaders decide to start political talks about a way out of the crisis where should they start. well we've already got a blueprint which was in two thousand and seven when. prime minister manmohan singh from india and president musharraf from buck's son owners to agreed on a settlement at that time and that september never came into being because of the political crisis in pakistan and the musharraf government and rebel so there is already a formula there which could be taken up i think one of the tragedies of in the last few years is that modi has refused to have a back channel in which a trusted aides of pakistan of bucks county leaders and indian leaders would talk to each other when this. when this plan came up in two thousand and seven it was largely due to back channels not through the official foreign offices all the political governments of the of the two sides but a very secretive back channel when moodie was proposed to have this back channel by former prime minister nawaz sharif he refused and i think you know at a time like this when tensions are so high something like a back channel is very much needed. prem we've seen commentators and analysts saying that the problem with modi is that he has always been describing this as an issue coming from pakistan when he forgets the fact that this has become more of a homegrown problem where the indian government and the big party in particular have been ignoring the discontent which has been simmering for quite some time in the customer region. i think you're basically right on this and i would put it only slightly differently this is not merely a discontent that has been simmering the discontent had pretty nearly vanished when the when the did the road between she no good and. and with about was opened i was there was present i saw it i would say that the line of control it had value after that the amount of the number of militants coming across the border dropped sharply we went ahead and we had the the framework agreement that has just been referred to and really by two thousand and thirteen this thing had almost completely died out. you have to understand that the morsi government is not a normal government it is a government that got that came to power with thirty one percent of the vote you know then the just because the entire opposition was was was fighting each other and this came as a huge surprise now what they need to stay in power they have a horde transformative agenda that india must be taken to get totally transformed from being a weak. west loving sort of. governing to the muslims kind of country to a strong in the country as it used to be a thousand years ago now that kind of transformative. the gender that kind of ideology has no relationship to facts or history they're in the middle of this and they now feel that they're very close to it didn't need to win this election for another five years to change every institution in the country and bring it in line with their thinking so that there's no nor in terms of stick to it isn't left in but police in the bureaucracy or in the euro don't you see that as a that is that is that agenda very good this is so i see your point but isn't that the very important sense of the problem and this is going to be my question to victoria when a party builds its agenda around. do national is an anti muslim sentiment we see in it's backfiring now in the indian administered part of kashmir. well i think it's absolutely backfiring and this is one of the problems and actually one of the tragedies of the state of german question is history is that you've got a government as mr prince says that is so antipathetic all to the idea of secularism and without secularism why should the state of german kashmir want to stay within the indian union given its past history and i'm personally very surprised at the way that the government has handled kashmir in these in these recent years because it's really created an entire new generation of local kashmiris one can talk again about the involvement of pakistan till the cows come home but now what you've got is an indigenous movement you look at the kashmir is out on the streets you look at the hostility the use of pellet guns to quell crowds only makes the kashmiris feel they're being treated like cattle or this is not the way to win hearts and minds which was the mantra chanted twenty years ago by the indian government and they've done the exact opposite with the russian listening to pakistani officials over the last few days they seem to be completely in denial about their responsibility for what's happening this saying that we have nothing to do with. it is not claiming responsibility for the i do think that the pakistanis are typically will have to make major concessions for this issue in particular to go forward. well let me just say one thing in addition to what victoria said which i agree with very much is is that it's very dangerous for india to hunt this kind of level of antipathy amongst the kashmir population not it did this is not anti-gay i can hear them growing because of bucket start up because of pakistani militants coming across the border you certainly got a situation in in indian kashmir when the militant the local militants who kill themselves carry out two side attacks have become the heroes of the day now this was not the case before in fact when but it's done for sending in militants in the early ninety's there was a lot of resentment from question here is that why are these foreigners coming in telling us what to do know it seems that the kashmiris themselves so fed up that they're willing to lie or not is their own militants i and i certainly yes i mean at first but i thought his concern buxton has never faced a government in india which would which was not willing to talk every government in india had to talk to parks on it some level of the other and often about the kashmir issue this is the first government that box that is faced with that refuses to talk and consequently there is an element of brinkmanship on talks on side as well to try and force the pace of talks with india now to do that both sides have to compromise and i think one of the ways that one compromise obviously is that some of these groups that are resident in pakistan should be disbanded fully. and not just promises made but disbanded fully but on the other side is that is that mean to talk for india to talk to because for me good speaking about. the compromises miss a prime the general kashmir is a. typical example of what happens when a government alienates its own population don't you think this is about time for the government to reach out of the kashmir is in german and kashmir give them one biggest say and run in their own affairs for for both parties to turn the top. decades of animosity and death of course. of course it is of course it is i've written nothing else but this ever since the death of good honey in fact i began warning about what was happening in south carolinian in april two thousand and fifteen and i've been in touch with people in south. and i am a poor at that at the lack of sensitivity in them with the government the move the government given to an agreement to move to say the p.d.p. government and then he did it. from the beginning in compete bad faith in order to make a fool out of them of the most of the p.d.p. to destroy its control in the valley and create chaos that's exactly what the succeeded in doing and they had no intention right from the beginning to ever allow kashmir good to have autonomy to ever allow the the government to function they did not want the vision to cooperate with the with the p.d.p. in kashmir and did not want to talk to the who did it the deliberately. deliberately stopped broke all. contact and communication with the rich in the most insulting manner possible with the intention of degrading them denigrating them interest needed so that you get a vacuum there that the vacuum is now being filled by these extreme militarist is young and extreme militants and and and i agree with you that this is not in the control of either pakistan or india there could be another suicide attack in e d. in kashmir and mr modi would see it come from pakistan and in order to get get votes then that beast another roar here and then another and another confrontation i'm terrified of that is that there are three parties to the dispute no not to. victoria two thousand and eighteen was described as one of the worst years the. president of the level of violence five hundred people killed the international community is calling for india to further investigate humor why it's abuse why does it leave the region. well can i also add that putting german kashmir under governor's rule what message does that send to the inhabitants i think that has to be taken taken into account and mr prince says this this idea of cooperation and allowing the p.d.p. to function just never happened i think where where it leaves us is that you have to have as a say some leadership which has the vision to see that this actually can in danger not just the inhabitants but the whole region maybe the whole world if if there were ever to be a nuclear exchange if there's to be one more attack how can you know we've now are seeing a deescalation but that after the next attack will be that same deescalation or will the two countries resort to war and that's the sort of scenario we've been looking at really for the last thirty years we go back to the cargill war in one thousand nine hundred nine the attack on the delhi parliament in two thousand and one the mumbai attack in two thousand and eight these are all landmark occasions when thank goodness both countries withdrew from the brink but who knows what will happen next time. a mother she just spent many years writing about jew political implications of conflicts kashmir is a conflict for starters seventy years ago because of the hasty and historical background different ethnic and religious backgrounds the two countries still determined that the have the absolute right to control all of kashmir the us nuclear powers and in a further confrontation in the near future could just mean further destruction what could be the best possible scenario for india and pakistan. to end this conflict where the person prime in the same row khan has offered talks and talks about terrorism and that is precisely really what modi had asked for back in two thousand and fourteen when he first addressed the u.n. general assembly he said that you know that he canceled talks at pakistan and said only only talk to pakistan would be about terrorism now if the two sides are if but son is prepared to discuss terrorism as emraan carter said i think this is you know one plank towards building up a consensus for a dialogue. if if if and you say there is no dialogue and talks to not take place i fear very much that the whole region is going to be affected the fact is that this split between india and pakistan is now very much dividing the region of course all the regional countries are said we don't want war but they're lining up on one side or the other and. the really big fear is that how will this affect relations with china with russia with the united states and the arab countries thank you and. i have these tensions worse than. i i don't think we will see any quick resolution thank you very much indeed. prim. and victoria schofield thank you very much indeed for your contribution to the program . you can see the program again by visiting. discussion. you can also join. a face can tell a story without touching a single. and knowing it's. a simple touch in for. the un convention manatee in-flight witness through the lens of the human eye. is what inspires us. witness documentaries on al-jazeera. is know one way of telling the story a key thing is to write and to be respectful best al-jazeera is great we have to get to know the person fully test. facing protests over his rerun algeria's long ruling leader buys time the promises political reforms if he is reelected. i'm richelle carey this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up a tornado hammers the u.s. state of alabama killing at least twenty two and leaving a trail of devastation. exclusive pictures of the saudi consul general home the throw more light on the murder of children and the cover up plus. back. towards a sanctuary we meet the chimpanzees getting a new lease on life. algeria's eighty two year old president has formally put forward his name for a fifth term in office a bit of flicka has been facing growing protests against his rule he's tried to appease algerians promising electoral reforms in. he wants next month out has the latest. demonstrators marched late into the night in protest against health care is longtime arena abdelaziz bouteflika al jazeera contant apparently fairy fi this picture is posted on social media showing hundred. s. . earlier students told the president it's time to go the protesters want to the constitutional court to stop with a flick of standing for a fifth term in next month's election in response to the protests beautifully because campaign manager it signaled the president will not rule for long if he wins a post election where in one year there was some. doubt i pledge to organize early elections to be set up by the independent national conference i pledged not to be a candidate in the last election. before that announcement police fired water cannon in the capital as crowd swelled the protests have been echoed in places like france thousands demonstrated in paris on sunday as well as in other cities we are all mobilizing through for example today being many be going up against the fifth mandate but also against the system they have taken our country away from a president but to feel his eighty two has used a wheelchair since suffering a stricken twenty thirteen and is rarely seen in public to recently travel to switzerland for medical checks on saturday he sacked his veteran campaign manager possibly a tactic to calm the growing protest movement the day before tens of thousands of people took to the streets in the capital and in towns across south ceria the protest represent the biggest challenge to put to flick israel since the twenty fourteen election which was denounced by the opposition but analysts say this is different to the protests during the arab spring i don't think there is the anger and hostility against the president which you saw in egypt that he did hope. to heal the wounds of the civil war he has he has brought some measure of prosperity but he can't buy off the votes is because the economy is is is crumbling. in algeria half the population is under thirty and calls for protests on social media have resonated particularly with young algerians to struggle to find employment but now that anger is sustained in the protests barbara and get out to syria now because a research fellow at the french school for advanced studies and social sciences she's in algeria and says the government is out of touch with the demands of the people. on the religion science and the idea that they will organize on to the base of the elections fake transitions as those who are transitioned they will control from the top is a way to get in time and to think that. that protesters we will be tyrants and get home get back home on the positive sides there's no interest in elections whatsoever curiously people are out talking about general strike about serial there's a million so they're not talking about elections or another candidate america a candidate even if it's not bush who wins the election so there's a sort of disconnection between delusion and the people who actually currently they want to organize their old political life you know they have been marginalized from the opie show boys you call life in sixty two is indeed the end in the din dependency of the country and now they are singing it from now we can do we want to be in control want to get back control back over our political life and that's why they are not targeting only would see a car but asking for the system has the will to to lead and that's why also they have been so happy to be able to take the streets. in the unity in philly that are easy and also in self control they have been able to do so without any balance now to the u.s. for at least twenty two people have been killed after a tornado hit the state of alabama rescue teams are searching the wreckage of homes and businesses destroyed and lee county it is fear the number of dead could rise more than ten thousand people are without power. we we've done everything we feel like we can do this evening here he is just very very hazardous to put anybody into a disappointing time debris everywhere and it is just his and his mission previously this evening just some mass damage to structures and residences in the area i got in the car with four of my kids. my wife lives with two more going to my mother in law as we were just trying to get out of this area right coming up around the corner as i was making a live right up there around thirty eight. this old area right here. is very much it is gone russia's foreign minister sergey lavrov says in qatar as part of a tour of gulf countries it's his first stop before he goes on to saudi arabia kuwait and the united arab emirates russian state media says that he will focus on energy and bassman and regional issues including syria yemen libya and palace time of qatar and russia are emphasizing the strength of their relationship qatar has invested billions of dollars into the russian economy and it recently finalized an eleven point five billion dollar deal to acquire nearly twenty percent of russia's state oil company rosneft relationship has stepped up since qatar was blockaded by saudi arabia the u.a.e. egypt and bahrain in two thousand and seventeen russia has consistently called for an end to the crisis through negotiations an october russia and qatar signed a number of agreements on military and technical cooperation abraham rather is so see professor in conflict resolution at the doha institute for graduate studies he joins us here member going to be bringing their remarks from both of the foreign ministers live on al-jazeera shortly but let's kind of talk about what is it that you think russia is trying to accomplish in the middle east in qatar is the first stop that will give a. number of points on. that one probably the most important for him at the moment is see the other. and particularly regarding the. state of you know lib as the talks with turkey they're not going well as the statements showed up and you know in the past few this is so lover of his coming to the region in order to try to get some help guarding the what's called the constitutional committee that they're trying to establish with regards to the post war reconstruction in syria and also which is very important for him as this was clear and the russian foreign policy in the past few months trying to focus on that it then of syria to the arab league and for that i think he's trying to get some support from arab league members countries like qatar of other gulf states so qatar is an important partner for russia at the moment that's what i said well what about that what it what specifically. to cut can qatar and russia do for each other well in the past two years actually the relationship has been strengthened significantly. and that's because of the qatar blockade the crisis that qatar has with the. other gulf countries because of this qatar to try to why didn't that saw options mainly in not only relying on the united states though it consolidated its relationship with the united states in the areas of security and economic squab peroration and also. you know on sales but also in not only consolidating its visual they was but trying also to open other options for themselves as a result of the blockade of like a exact says kind of exotic and qatar's reach and relations with other people exactly and for that qatar reached out for. russia and the russia is a trying also to take advantage of this crisis and build something for itself. because remember let's keep in mind that the goal of region historically has been treated as an area of the you know us as a as a us ally so russia historically the have a role in the gulf and especially if we go back to the days of the cold war when the gulf was on the side of the you know the u.s. so for that reason we have china we are seeing that russia is seeing an opportunity because of the cut out a crisis they can do to something to hold and cut the russia has consistently advocated a peaceful resolution to the crisis which is in line you know with the cut off of the bat in order to deal with this crisis through negotiations and peaceful resolution to the crisis so russia is speaking the language that qatar would like to see you know qatar for that is will coming this you know russian role in the crisis for that we are seeing that issue because improving and we will hear from the foreign ministers and if it ever have thank you very much you israeli forces have shot dead two palestinians in the occupied west bank israeli military says the palestinians were killed after they attempted to drive a car into israeli soldiers at capernaum a village west of ramallah but local residents say it was a car accident one person in the vehicle were seriously injured media reports say two soldiers were wounded one of them seriously. al-jazeera has obtained exclusive pictures from the home of the saudi consul general in istanbul after the murder of journalist. a documentary airing on our sister channel al-jazeera arabic a shedding new light on his death and how his body may have been disposed to show she was killed inside saudi arabia's consulate last october has more from ankara these pictures show a furnace a tenderer all when that was built by a turkish constructor in the garden of saudi consul general residence in istanbul just a few hundred meters away from the consulate general building where she was brutally murdered and according to. by the turkish intelligence his body parts were this member in the general building we heard from we heard from the police department and the persecutors office that. by departs carry it in languages and bags to the residence building close to the slate and according to the police as i said into thought for two thousand and eighteen and the police from the suspect that's his body parts might.

Related Keywords

Jerusalem , Israel General , Israel , Qatar , Istanbul , Turkey , Alabama , United States , Afghanistan , United Kingdom , New Delhi , Delhi , India , Tel Aviv , Brazil , China , Yemen , Austria , Arab League , Al Qahirah , Egypt , Syria , Russia , Bahrain , South Sudan , Mumbai , Maharashtra , Village West , Sudan , Ecuador , Italy , Ramallah , West Bank General , West Bank , Libya , Vienna , Wien , South Korea , Lahore , Punjab , Pakistan , Lee County , Doha , Ad Daw Ah , Iran , Algeria , Islamabad , Congo , Vietnam , Republic Of , United Arab Emirates , Togo , Uganda , Ahmed Rashid , Ta Izz , Germany , Tunisia , Mali , Saudi Arabia , North Korea , Peru , France , Venezuela , Italian , Americans , America , Sudanese , Saudi , Turkish , Algerian , Venezuelans , Pakistani , Israelis , Afghan , British , Israeli , American , Algerians , Russian , Britain , German , Gulf States , Pakistanis , Morgan Al Jazeera , Nawaz Sharif , Nicolas Maduro , Raman Al Jazeera , Imran Khan , Abdelaziz Bouteflika Al Jazeera , Richelle Carey , Prem Shankar John , Emraan Carter , Sergey Lavrov ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.