the traffic really so that every single one person a people are telling me they haven't seen anything like this. well, meanwhile, there was heartache for england. as you can see there descending champions from school early to put the english on the back foot, olivia 0 gave his side a to one lead with this header. and then england strike a hurricane of the thompson level mass is just that to all that then missed a crucial penalty. france will be playing morocco and the semi finals. telepathic was out obeyed. stadium with french support is a still very much on the broadsoft or problems. are really a good job of this guy. early on is i can't bring it on all led to david's. every time i worked for a while and i was a i saw talk, was all the hall gravy wrangler guarded international calling from a report on this call with well exuberant celebrations. my football fans and france turned violent after saturdays. well, cup matches, police arrested at least 40 people in paris. officials had beefed up security ahead of the game. crowds of around 20000 people had gathered to watch in the capitol ukrainian president. rodney may zalinski says, russian forces have destroyed the eastern city of buck. morse fighting has reportedly intensified around the city and the de net screeching after ukrainian forces recaptured. cassandra, most of ukraine's southern port city of odessa is now without power. after russian drone attacks, local authorities say drones hit energy facilities and caused so much damage that only critical infrastructure remains connected to the electricity network. a purchase continued across peru, even as a new leader in a ball, was a, has sworn in a cabinet. oh, nice. as you can see, a housing forces those support supporting a predecessor pedro castillo continued demanding. his release has castillo, is impeached, and arrested. on wednesday, mariana sanchez has worn out from lima. 2 it will be a very difficult time ahead for her. she's been meeting with some members of the opposition. she is met the archbishop of lima, to show up a catholic church, which is very powerful, is behind her. she's been, we are presiding a parade armed forces. but she has to build an alliance in congress and she doesn't have one. she doesn't have a party. she wasn't built in the party. she belong to. we are a former president, brutal garfield. so she needs to build this alliance. now she's built, she's worn in a new cabinet now, martinez, man suspected of planning and coordinating attacks that killed 38 people. and molly has been extradited to the u. s. i caught, and molly had sentenced powers, old ahmed to death for the 2015 attacks in the capital. damica ahmed said he was seeking revenge for cartoons of the prophet mohammed printed in a french magazine. this is nobel peace prize. winners have been given the prestigious award the prize went to others be asking a jail, beller, russian human rights advocate. the other recipients were to human rights organizations from russia and ukraine del share, the prize, which is worth nearly $1000000.00. well, those are the headlines will be much more news for you here on al jazeera, after a very british way of torture. ah good. ah ah, the nicer 21 so sticks. ah, when as dry up in the 1950s in canyon, i just had this sort of slightly true blue be the effect that, you know, basically the brits did things the right way. ah, we thought the sort of pretty simple oil is red countries on the map and at great, you know, i presume that we british, we were the good guys and we would want to make the bad guys. but then later i discovered that when we came to our end struggle here, that wasn't, that wasn't quite truth. the momma prizing is then i'm free to movement that takes place in kenya in the 1950s. it is one of the most violent. i'm struggles in the british empire. the battle cry was land and freedom. loma lab that will adi my wagner. that will need to both sides commit violent atrocities. but it's the colonial side that is often been ignored by historians. that british might say they don't do touch, but we the ma moment, the corn federal that torture for the 1st time the leash of new documents has given us a very much fuller account as to what had been done. and why. and how the british had tried to justify and now because of the new documentation historians in britain and in can you, they're investigating how the british atrocities were institutionalized. and they would known from the top in london all the way down into kenya. it really flips the script as to who is uncivilized. oh, when the british decided to leave kenya in 63, they took with them more than 1500 government files all moped top secret. over the next 4050 years, these documents were spirited away. a tid in a facility known as how slow hawk linked to g. c h q, which is used by my fight sakes, hidden in plain sight. and when you tried to request these documents, you were told that they didn't exist blue they are in their seventy's and eighty's now, but they traveled thousands of miles from their homes in rural kenya, seeking justice. they say is more than half a century overdue. i was involved in the memo and legal change in 2011, 2012 as an expert witness. and the request or the court in the manner case brought the 100 foot disclosure to light. however, the british government deliberately settled the case out of court in order to avoid a full hearing where the details of what had happened would be reversed. they knew it, they wanted only to deny, therefore only a very small fraction of the documents were actually used. and it's only now several years on who had time to look at these documents more closely. no. can really begin to tell you what those documents reveal. ah, who in that if, if she to turn there was a colony of the british, i've been a colony since 1920 officially sort of overseen by the colonial office and the youth. so the reality is, the british came here to take stuff, not to help us out. we have a group or white settlers with 100 some even thousands of acres of land living very lavish, had domestic life at the cost of the people who work for them. the british got a little bit greedy and we wanted more land move delay when they got one, we sat on my back. why did it? yup. no more. don't get it that way. it up of cardiac over now don't if you did not horrible. i said to le bar milon, few have committed the crime and knew i love, he'll be put in prison for that reason. and that's why i said, no, this is not to continue. i am the mother to join those people who are fighting for aberration of our country board. you can not do pitifully, you cannot chief for a wall in not only a capital of kenya, europeans and african, the smoke the streets in fear of the dreaded mammal. what it is that band of fanatics whose bloody deeds have caused a dark shadow across the face of kenya. all the mamma presume was a peasant uprising. they was standing up against the british, demanding return of their lands, and added money for independence. there was something like 25000 fighters. they were mostly individuals who had been in some way disinherited, or had their land dispossessed. they were the have nots. if you will, of african society lou, the mama begin targeting a small number of white set of families. yeah, really grew some cases of children being killed in their beds. we men being raped and being, ma did. but in the whole of that pilots, only $32.00 white civilians were killed. but thousands of black canyons were killed by the male model. among african sharon, many who really are opposed to faint don't like his violence. they think the finances are necessary. but that doesn't mean that those africans like colonialism and the british cold dom loyalists. and that makes it seem that they were pro british. but that's far from the truth. ah, who to deal with the british employ from goods loyalists. they bribed them to carry out their jo. off bt that freedom fighters. ah, so the mouth they beat assassinating these colonial collaborators, chiefs and headman mm. atrocities. settle committed by the mama against fellow civilians. what immense wall is wall. it's in a long head. the rife is still too short to mo mo, boston what do you be spared? no. because that is wall and british realize that the only way they can stop is the only way they can reserve that ruling kanyes by declaring this formal state of emergency. in october 1952, they resolved that there simply by executive order. going to put people in detention camps in these count. there's a mix of actual ma, my fight is with innocent people that have been picked up british government like to say as a conflict between good and evil. but what recent revelations have shown us together with the work that historians have done. how much of the british counterinsurgency effort was equally brutal the equally violent and that they then try to highlight evidence of what happened that our after our talks alarm a call with heavily armed troops. every province is visited in an effort to stamp out the ma moment and restore beach to troubled kenya. colony propaganda was a very important to within the ma ma struggle. and so there was that we see be used to describe them all. mo, are terrorists, savage, maniac, devil, the dns human eyes ation. if the enemy reached the point that excessive violence becomes tolerated. you're seeing, members of regiments made up of kenya, settlers taking summary justice, executing prisoners. there were bounties of individual british soldiers the how many sort of ma ma guerrillas, they could kill but the early excessive behavior by sectors am, by the charming gradually gives way to a more sinister and more worrying set of stories about wholesale torture going on in the context of what are norris, whom god posts and those of african loyalists are staffed and led by european officers. ah, at this time the prime minister, the keys, winston churchill and churchill takes quite a lively interest in what's the phone in kenya. he's very much concerned about what's happening and he wants it to you dark ah, can we on his plan is waiting on the apron outside and in a few moments time he'll be taking off for kenya. it's not so very long as it seems . you're going back from alert. no, i came back on the 1st of may. i young's dad was a billed us, so he's coming from very humble origins compared to most of the colonial officials . he's viewed as someone who has a strong sense of what is proper and what is just making me organize the floors and to get them back with. how do you feel about going to kenya? well, i feel free to ask the guy when young is appointed. i think he's very optimistic. he thinks he'll manage this. this is an interesting challenge. he's looking forward to it. within 2 weeks, if you are ready, he'll change his mind. mm. mm. young starts to investigate crimes carried out by the authorities as does his assistant who is head of the c i. d in kenya. duncan mac 1st goes after individual cases reported ad knox on doors talks to people and between them. young and macpherson start to uncover instances of major human rights abuses. i'm letting you know that they can only be done a year, mo, mo, the guy get it go. we said that it was yes. and the took lucky gora will gladly do my horrible. and i did as young with you know, you know, why did i call it? might've been the a doing and i gotten all for you. i'm, well, you are told you deal it. i obama, it deal. i mean, i mean i've only among medical knock. i'm at the memorial at walgreens. little. what black old you from a nanny? nagging a. yes. yes. yeah. glad i co manager. he had that emission ah, the case is set. mcpherson young. investigate all involve european officers, either directly carrying the alleged acts or subsequently helping to cover up and conceal them by acts of deliberate deception. these cases i presented to the ministry of legal affairs in kenya, the attorney general. but they then go into a preliminary investigation. so it's out of the hands of young macpherson, that's when suddenly they disappear. suddenly there's not enough evidence. suddenly, investigations don't proceed. mm. young begins to understand that this resistance is going on at the highest possible level. how was this happening? the british government recognizes that canyons was subject to torture and other forms of ill treatment of the hands of the colonial administration. the case that was one out of court in 2013 was really something of a pyrrhic victory. having decided to make that court settlement i, william hague, than foreign secretary, made a statement before parliament in which she essentially apologized to the county people. but like all such statements, the apology was quite diplomatic, and haig chose his words with great care. we continue to deny liability on behalf of the government from british taxpayers to day for the actions of the colonial administration in respect of the claims he made it very clear that the blame for this did not lie with the british government. but it lay with the colonial government in kenya. so he made a distinction between the 2, between london and nairobi. but we now know that from the british government to say, london had had no hand in what had happened. it was at the very least been economic with the truth. and some would say, distorting the history the leash of new documents and has dropped disclosure, has given us a very much fuller account of what macpherson was trying to do and how he was being obstructed. for the 1st time, we began to get a really clear picture of how the executive in nairobi deliberately suppressed evidence. the key mechanism in this process was something called toughness complaints committee. it was set up towards the end in i. e, 53, by the close of his friendship in nairobi to handle complaint seagate government officials, cases of alleged assaults, rapes murders, particularly in a rounds home guard posts. but in fact, i would describe the governor's complaints committee was a kind of kangaroo war crimes tribunal. it was 3 or 4 officials who basically decided which cases were worth investigating and which worked. when you look at their fives, you find that there are individuals minutes. and in those minutes, there dismissing case is out of hand, no case, decision not to prosecute something along those lines. what they're doing is talking to local district commissioners, local district officers who are the allies of the people that have committed crimes and blocking investigations by following the advice of the people that are committing the crimes and your covering up the crimes. it's asking them to mark their own home work the governors could thanks. committee dealt with more than $550.00 cases of those that are investigated at less than 10 percent ever come to court. so the end of the day, i think you'd comes inclusion that the governance complaints committee successfully suppressed nearly $300.00 cases. if not, we'll what's particularly shocking about the complaints committees that there minutes, the direct evidence, the cases were being suppressed, were being sent all the way up the chain to the governor, to the colonial secretary in london to follow secretary allen. and exploit is fully informed, and for the 1st time we can show that from the documents, we know we're passing across his desk. and the clued in secretary reports to cabinet. so we have to assume the cabinet must know something. they can't know nothing. the colonial secretary he was that he presented to oh for how my guest is government. so i don't know how it separates british government from kenner, colonial government, the law one and the same. therefore denying that their british government is not responsible is she hypocrisy. but that's not helen would see that if you forces your troops accused of human rights abuses, that is in a sense, something that can be weaponized by your enemies. it's going to get in the way of ultimate victory. and what matters this to win the war against mamma? it doesn't see of kindness us people who have rights that deserve to be protected as people who was dignity. it's a barrier farm. ah youngest frustrate said that 70 k says he's uncovered of major abuses of human rights have not been prosecuted young feels as a complete smack in the face against the flu and he submits his resignation. ah, i then goes back to the u. k. where we're the colonial a secretary, they craft are much more torn down pressings, bmw, italy glosses over the, the software that he had uncovered. i'm on the complexity of the colonial regime in the atrocities i was being committed. ready ready mm receive new documents inasmuch disclosure as transformative. and it gave us really fresh insights on what had actually happened in kenya. the resignation letter is extraordinarily powerful and that young makes no bones at home about his concerns about the lack of the rule of law and interference by the executive in nairobi. the reason he gives her resigning is that he has been entirely obstructed by the colonial government in attempting to reform the way justice is done in cain. yet he is furious. he's understood that he has been deliberately maneuvered ah, ah, one of the key unintended consequences of young's expectation is to empower those who wish to take a firm. a line against mamma. tortures would now become run by the state in institutions in a controlled and measured way. this would be far, far worse, and in the car. how does the team from a smaller league draw the bigger crowds? why does the irish flag fly holleys at the scottish club? what is it about celtic that has the world over here in the mall? politics in football fan with some of the oppressed in the funds who make football on al jazeera with right now cons and public confrontation, young people across the u. k. and pissing their bodies on the line to force attention on the issues that matter to that climate. change is a symptom of the system breaking down when every other group fails, die with action was the very last open for democratic societies or one that allow for there to be debate. no politician in this country has ever shut down in arms. today people have generation change on al jazeera, all blue. oh, hello, i'm this nancy. hey, and donna hall with an update for you here on out. as sarah, morocco's atlas lines of beach and portugal, one knelt to qualify for the world cup semi finals. there the 1st african team, as well as the 1st from the arab world to reach the find the for when it was hack was in casablanca for that match it absolutely electric. i really wanted to make her city the biggest city of morocco casa blanca, and nowhere is the celebration, birger and greater village here. that's it. those color red, green and white that you can see across the food in the traffic a while defending champions france. meanwhile, have ended england's wealth cap, hopes olivia's euro gave his side a to one lead with a heather. in can strike a how he came, had a chance to level not as a tool that missed a crucial penalty. and other news protests continue across for, even as the new leader, deena bar, walter, has sworn in her cabinet. police are out in force. as though supporting her predecessor pedro castillo continued demanding. his release. costio was impeached and arrested on wednesday. ukrainian president vladimir lensky, says, russian forces have destroyed the eastern city of backwoods. fighting has reportedly intensified around that city and the jeanette screeching. well, meanwhile, most of ukraine's southern port city of odessa is apparently without power. after russian drone attacks, local authorities say drones hit energy facilities and caused so much damage that only critical infrastructure remains connected to the electricity network. a martini and man suspected of coordinating attacks that killed 38 people in mali has been extradited to the