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tv   News  RT  November 30, 2023 2:00pm-2:31pm EST

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the law should be there, go the, do you need medical supplies, you need them to buy arctic, so you need them the most basic uh tools which now have been coming in to some extent. but the way from the, you know, a start description of the health prices in gaza from a w h o spokesperson talking with r t. as the organization previously said, disease could kill more people and got the them bombs that you have. and i wish you a brief, but i was, i should do. we need human rights institutions that are so flawed. they can be used as a tool, as by those that's paid to privatize international organizations for their own needs. this thing is precious foreign minister addresses an o s. c e council meeting. questioning the relevance of an organization he says has
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been subjugated 5 western interest. plus the end of an era, as henry kissinger the controversial us diplomat to orchestrated ad manipulated international conflict dive age 100. the coming to you from moscow. this is our to international with the latest and world news today. i'm here. all is about great to have you with us. the w h o warns the health needs in gaza may increase dramatically, pointing out that more people could die from diseases, then bonds, the organization spokesperson told us exclusively about the dire health situation in gaza. in those, the text you mentioned the 54 or 5, some of the 60 people killed. but i'm 16 if i have to because right i have actually
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been killed in the medical staff have been killed while on service. the risk is a, with all that is the current situation, the, the up to the lacking of, uh, hygiene situations that destroyed the want that and sanitation system destroyed a waste, the collection system that diseases spread easily. we have already seen an increase of respiratory infection. something which we normally see in a month has, has multiplied a expect, especially within children. does a risk that other diseases spread highly. the problem is on top of this risk that the savannah, the system is destroyed. so we're lacking, and so of course the police didn't in a hard, he's on the ground, the, the read press send or he'd be the ministry of health. the lacking the most important, it's advanced tools, a laboratories destroyed to really get to the ground of any infectious disease outbreak risk. so it's a double take on the one hand to higher risk or the other hand less names or non,
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no means nearly to check to survey and hence also the controls. and that means you need medical supplies. you need empty bioethics, you need the most basic uh tools which now have been coming in to some extent. but the way from the, you know, and in jerusalem 3 is really civilians have been confirmed, killed and at least 6 others wounded in a mass shooting a mos claimed responsibility for the attack. stating it was a response to the unprecedented crimes that are being committed and occupied palestinian territories. local police say the 2 gunmen who carried out the a task force shot at the scene. a warning disturbing images are head this cctv foot. it shows the moments of the attack. 2 gunmen are seen jumping out of a car and opening fire at a crowd of people at a bus stop as they tried to sleep, just low,
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it's later to off duty soldiers and an armed civilian in the area of return. fire towing to shooters, according to police. the idea of has confirmed that 2 more is rarely hostages, have been handed over to the red cross by him off. that's as talks are ongoing to prolong the truth, which is now into it's final day. let's cross 5 to journalist mojave nigi from the west bank city of rama la months, or schuman from the con eunice in southern, gaza, and nickel yoon and robbie berman from tel aviv, robbie, let's begin with you. earlier. we did speak to the relative of a hostage that was released recently. his mother has returned home, but he is still waiting for his father to be fried by how much. first let's have a listen. my mother was released by my father in many other ways, not released yet. and we need to do whatever needs to be done in order to bring them home. its almost is going to whatever they can to make our life
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miserable are very cool. they don't live for us to see them. and then this is an acceptable because read through the new in the you many turn and we're going to vision. supposed to be human to turn for everyone. what just for one side. and finally, the group know, pursuing some us, you know, this is really there. we don't know who's alive. we both know. when did we stick? we don't know anything about their conditions are held in the government, tried to support us and make our life easier, that we could focus on decent goals and to bring them home. and then we do whatever we can you know that to bring them home. the reason i'm doing these interviews is called the old one. you know the people are released, but the majority of the people were not released yet. and he must do what ever need to prevent the return. robbie, what's the latest on more releases from hostages?
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for the 6 day about hostage exchange, so far it has been over a 100 hostages released, but it's still about a 140 in captivity. i'd like to build on what that person who was interview with the family member said, and that is people in israel or mocking the international community, or criticizing israel for not letting you monetary and aid in the gaza, claiming that some guidelines might die due to the lack of humanitarian aid, when they're not criticizing, come off, which is preventing the red cross from going in there, checking you on the prisoners and giving them the medication that they need. it's a little bit of a soccer. see that his relatives are sneering ad for obvious reasons. just a little bit ago about 20 minutes ago i vehicle pulled off and they pulled the curtains back to give them privacy. i think it was members of the family of either a meet um or maya was released today. when do we know they're 12 people that will be released today? 2 of them have juices and ships with russia. and 2 of them are my and i'm need to myers 21 and i meters 40. my was the person the young woman from the dance festival,
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the rate festival. she had one of the 1st videos that was released by hamas to try it out for their p r. we. busy to show them how you managed terry and the are that after killing and raping people the festival. they brought my into the gaza and they had her arm taken care of with mental ross to try to fix the fracture. she was laid out today along with a meat. she being 21 and then me being 40. they're expecting here at the hospital a little bit later tonight. so i want to make the governments position perfectly clear as the hosted release post continues. when almost stops releasing hostages, we will stop the calls and we will resume our campaign against how most well, mohammed are today, mahmoud abbas met the us secretary of state anthony blinking. can you tell us a bit about their meeting? yes sir,
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our boss submit to secure federal was set up on the blinking hearing from a lot was the 5th. we think since 7 october, i know um the according to policy not seen that often shows are bugs demanded from blinking to extend documenting buses, filed and garza, and to avoid the civilians are getting under the structures and to allow very story of more a return and if i need some supplies to the proceeds of the simplest, most of the policy is for most and does have to soften garza and also to stop that . is there any escalation in those back against? the senior official says that our boss's, it's been about a report of the board to blinking about the inside, the violation against the students and those. but at the end of the slip and the blinking, i agree that it's just a to, to an extent that says 5 and goes off to you and monster over to now we've gathered some of the reactions in gaza as the true still falls. let's have
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a list and 1st enough know, hello my family and i were happy, the whole neighborhood and people happy bought the truce. the aggression against guys that had stopped for a while then also for life and everything else had stopped. i want the word to stop the unjust zionist occupation of the security. no loved ones illuminating us and displacing us before the war. we were happy now homes with our neighbors and the people of our neighborhood when our homeless women from one place to another, to school shelters and destroyed houses, the interview, the so you've been to get this situation is very, very bad. and this truth will not help until the people of the north can return to their homes. this truth isn't this riddles. interest is not ours at all. the truth was declared, i came to check on our house and what has happened, everything is destroyed. and all the people have loved their homes. they can't even find food, but the best suited my message to the world is to think about us. we want to leave like that. not that they leave and we don't, we are
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a peaceful months or can you give us a run down into how things are inside garza right now? and it's just the scene in that is this 45 2nd video of the one of these really just missed the bus. who was basically, the thing is really government sending the message, spitting them that they had killed his wife and 2 children with thousands of all the victim of this. that's what you cannot cover. the 7th though, is there any government? apologies, we will get a better connection with him next time. let's go back to tell a v for the moment. um, nick, we've seen the relatives of hostages gathering at the square today again. can you tell us a bit of how people there are feeling right now,
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a relatives that all of the hostages there are desperate hearing what the ones that already returned to his wrath telling and the story. so for just the frightening, they hear that, that the house, the, just, the went on there at torture. and then it was sometimes even sadistic, though long, especially on the 7th of october before people are seeing that some of them were wrapped. and the oregon to their thoughts and it was that sometimes in front of the children that they saw how their parents are murdered. and that's why the people here saying we want it as fast as possible our relatives back home because be afraid that they will not survive. and also there is a lack of communication and the food there, and that they children growing. so and it tremendous trauma and that the people here, the just asking the government do whatever you want,
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whatever you can just add this thing and bring them back. but it's at nathan y'all and she's at work had been that they also have pressure from the rights being the government at the front of that. then you know that some of them are fanatics and they want and then you out to lunch again the world, the guys up and they don't care that there is still hostages there. and let's take at least and what to send. you all said that i really don't want to, excuse me, we will continue this war until we achieve the 3 goals to release all of our a book to use to completely eliminate thomas and to ensure that gaza will never face such a thrust again. so in this route, there are people that they just want to destroy how much of these rarely are me, real eliminated these threats and that these relative not the leave on the, the, the neighbor and plus through this neighbor which terrorized them for many decades
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. and the horrors of disturbance of october are just too much frightening for many of them. and that's why they're asking the government that to eliminate some of the but from the other hand, you have still defend that with that, they want their loved ones, they come. so soon, these riley governments will need to decide what it is doing. you know, and that's journalist mohammed, not you from the west bank city of rama la months, or schuman from con eunice in southern gaza. and they call you and, and robbie berman from tel aviv, thank you. all rushes for administer has spoken at an o. s. c e meetings saying the organization is on the brink of the best accusing it of being subjugated by the e. u ads. nato is that you have now we've shared with me, but i was, i should do. we need human rights institutions that a so flawed. they can be used as a tool by those pertain to privatize international organizations for their own needs. insidious and will. how can this kind of, i see,
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serves the interests of european security and cooperation? the situation today is a direct result of attendance by our neighbors in the west, which is up to use the i see to aggressively push their own selfish interests. it was for destroying the fundamental principle of consensus and the very culture of diplomacy. so it's clear to any unbiased person, i'm sure that it is impossible to seriously and sadly resolve europe and security issues and such a climates in the capital of the west. and well, there is an obsession with crushing any chance for a revival of the i see to see what they have already created, the european political community, exclude in russia and dela rosa, this draws another line of separation across our content. elizabeth and breaks up the i c area. you want to basically pull circuit level definitely that and then his awards there. and he brought up examples to support each and every argument. this is after all, the world's largest regional security group, but he no longer sees this as an effective organization fee also, so that he sees always feel observer is going to elections with prepared
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conclusions and also that they have. fortunately, the score and adage has have a broad base east west cooperation besides those unprecedented sanctions that will soon put on most go over the conflict. and you're afraid he also brought up house for example, it was a wire specialist the 1st year on frequently. so from the city of open skies, which is actually lowered confidence and security and the west, it doesn't care about any agreements outside of nato, the same nato as to reminded the foreign ministers there. that bomb the, this law the, that's her and ukraine and georgia against russia. and also she once again reminded the foreign ministers sitting there. that funds while on an iron glove merkel themselves admitted that the key of agreements for example, which is or a stolen tactics for, to build the military capabilities there. so his question is, what is the point of this organization? if it only serves their interests, is that for me, but it is security to west and elite. so i've made
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a short sighted choice in favor was made. so over the, i see that true intentions were again made clear when washington and brussels rejected russia's proposals on legally binding security guarantees for europe in december 2021. but they didn't even engage in a dialogue with us. on january 28th, 2022, i sent a message to the foreign ministers of europe. and the us calling for an explanation on that position of the obligation not to strengthen one's own security at the expense of the security of others, which was adopted at the i c e summons. nobody answered the question, but, but you see it instead we received responses from the e. u foreign policy for august, and the nato secretary general is the scott at around the issue. yes, that's what the position of the west was. no one cause what our presidents or prime minister assigned to the i see the only night so can provide legally binding security guarantees the continues to be and the plants roles suffering the greatest consequences of the united states gambling ukraine before while refusing our
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economic partnership. the deliberate prosperity to the european union for decades. let's go in and once again, sort that live off had to remind the foreign ministers there. that it was the key of regime that started human rights violations all the way back in 2014, with germany's concerns as you put it because it germany consented to the fact that as for the level of put a nazis seized a power there. so at the moment sir, did land rover, doesn't see a future with you always see, he says that it is in drift in jeopardy. and he says that that is because of a western states and their actions. by the way, this meeting was not attended by you crane. and also as the only allowed to the list way in the and poland didn't show up over in protest, of course, or the lab rooms near presence there. so that's there. i bought a from the o. s. c meeting and was for a good lever. i've had to say there an independent journalist lucrative a believes. there's still a chance for dialogue within europe. in 2021,
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i should make phone calls and said ok, let's start let's, that's a project of a treating and get back consent. don't to sit on ski photos by saying, i'm going to put it in the constitution, which only make it the result is what everybody's no, it's a special operation. that's the only way to talk to nature. and now is the fact that, of course, russia is winning this war in the sense that you crank in the window. so everybody needs to talk through your opinions, understand that they still reactivate stupidly like they did now today of this morning at the conference. but people know, i mean, turn key, how does that include speech today at d, y, c, on the plane already this morning, the sending, you know, we need to talk, we need to be deep, dramatically cautious that the solution is not in x joint 18 each. so
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that are still some good points and i think this to massa knows it too, and he would he would be ready probably to continue talking in before see if the organization com could come back to which is funded by the american politician and a controversial nobel prize winner henry kissinger has passed away at the age of 100. the german born diplomat shape washington's foreign policy for decades during the cold war and remained a prominent voice on the political scene up until his dress or earlier r t contributor tar read. talked with my colleague nikki aaron, about kissinger's long ad to most to us career. hey, henry kissinger has been cool. many things is quite, quite the cause of the social and contradictory legacy isn't it? is been how it is a pace maker has been condemned to the will mancha. what's your view on how we will go down in history? 3000000 civilians in the different covers and over more operations and for an
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adventure that america had over his tenure when he was are, you know, orchestrating some of these operations. literally 850000 people 250-0000 civilians were murdered during the carpet bombing of us louse and somebody else. he also, ironically that he got the never peace prize for, you know, during the vietnam era. when actually he extended the war in vietnam. he also, you know, had his hands and a lot of other different countries in latin america, south africa in bangladesh. and he's temporary, indonesia, you had trouble the legacy of civilian deaths around his policies that he tried to shape. yeah, she said they killed hundreds of thousands of people. what are your thoughts did, isn't it that is of the owner of the nobel peace prize? absolutely not. and so i just kind of part refused it at the time. but if you go
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back to the paris a piece, of course, he actually said secret tables to washington that undermined the as a whole piece accord talks then so that extended the vietnam war, he was actually responsible for thousands of more. americans died at hundreds of thousands of in these things we to understand because since you had to understand he was very anti communist. and in his view, the socialist president, it was duly elected in chile, at the time, had to be removed. he nixon concluded on a secret too. it was carried up in the ca and, and then that installed to shake. thousands of people were tortured and murdered and political opponents were killed. and so there was a bloody legacy after that and it was actually a fascist regime. the one posit, of course, was china that was opened up during the cold war, but that was very, very much to fight against them the soviet union. they needed commerce and economic ties with china that were positive and they didn't need another front of
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possible hostilities. perhaps the one positive thing he did do was open those doors with fishing that forge then a future. although now that that's been a bit rocky with the current administration, the biden resume, but you know, we'll see what happens. now let's cross lecture dr. mitchell had both rows, professor of political science at hell one university to zone deeper into kissinger's, controversial legacy doctor, welcome. so henry kissinger has been called a war monger by some and a piece. baker by others. where do you think he falls? as a matter of fact, if we look at him, we look at the states man. a statesman creates events. there was a peace makers and i believe in the saying, bless it or the peace makers, compared him to other politicians. politicians just react to events compelled him to the current. the secretary of state blinking, blinking is,
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was a jewel like kissinger. but how did the act 2 different situations, individual east lincoln is now convening in the war council. a you a jewish war accounts, and he's right. now, what do you think of his current ability to the address of the philistines? no credibility towards why henry kissinger was a jew and he invented the shuttle diplomacy during the 1973 war between israel and egypt. a, you know, something t one, the good, the ability of the egyptians. and he was me, da, just objected mid ga to because he's back troubles when i teach at the political science and international relations. big less good example of eh,
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this short of diplomacy is henry kissinger. he was the one who messed the minded, the foreign policy. uh, do you as far as the policy for decades this this moment in july he was in china and he was the person to advise to of several of the this he was v o a he is due to this moment. i mean, when he died, i mean, um, he was a objective mid ga to between the 2 sides of the i'm in united states, the democrats and republicans own administration, regardless of the a fuck you orientations. big trusted him. why? because he was pragmatic, keywords or use, he was inspired. he was inciteful a. he, as i said, he's
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a statesman, not the full edition. he had to forecast what's going on and the possible values. and he was highly respected. uh, his legacy is taught in uh for the policy support. i don't really agree with the mike. what he could do for me can you do sizing him calling in controversial uh his uh, legacy was marked by dease making and he was successful. i mean, one of the key indicators, this is the novel prize in 1973, as mentioned in the as a report. so what do you expect of such a problem? and then if you're going ahead, you was the advice of national advice is a security advisor in the u. s. a. he was, he invented the back charles of police making 2 of the words. so i don't call him
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anything but a piece make. but despite everything, you just a listed all his accomplishments that were, could be seen by somebody. there were many military interventions by the united states that he over saw that ended up in catastrophe. how do you think that part of his career actually impacted the world? ok, let's, let's talk about the catastrophes. the main criticism, again, is just center was this road where the family of orange in cambodia and the now what happened he got the peace prize for his peace making role in the now it was pivot the in, in the, in the piece making in be now so the, his big focus point of criticism is his focus point of
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a piece making. so i don't see him as a provoking, uh, war sport. it has been in get up towards i don't see him this way. yeah. the criticism came from a, standing by the carpet bombing of the vietnamese and the people in laos. how do you think that will be looked on in history or was it? if we go back to the, from you who would you be? and they were terrace, and eh, the heads of the, from your voice was executed. he was a prosecuted and executed for his war crimes against humanity. so at this stage, we are talking about the wards. we have to care about terrorism so that you don't believe one person for the atrocities of war that he was not
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the decision makers when it comes to a military intervention. he was a v, a heads up diplomacy. but the decision of war and peace is not his age, the president, because in the presidential system is just a 2nd 3. he's not the minister. you know, in, in the parliamentary systems and city police venture system we quarter administrative when he gives you the following policy. but in united states it is prevention system, secretaries do not make foreign policies. the following policies uh, made by the president. and that is dr. michelle bolcko's, professor of political science at one university. thank you. thank you. and that's all for this hour. but for the latest freaking news and 247 coverage cut
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over to r t dot com. thanks for turning in. we'll see you back at the top of the hour the the,
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