tv News RT July 19, 2024 1:00pm-1:30pm EDT
1:00 pm
the, the, the israel has the fact so, and next to the occupied westbank in violation of international law. that's the damming verdict from you on this top port at the hey, the massive i t outage rece have it guns, global networks, communication systems, the coal for you is cyber security, from cloud strife, notoriously linked to intelligence agencies. also a has there was blood boring everywhere and yet in a certain way i felt very safe because i had god on my side the divine intervention. that's what donald trump says, saved him from death as the supporters continued to question how the secret service
1:01 pm
allowed last weekend's assassination attempts to occur. the rachel ruble live in moscow. you're watching r t international. we're covering the top new stories from around the worlds. we start in the hague, where the international court of justice has ruled that the israeli occupation of the west bank is the de facto illegal annexation. the i. c, j says israel is engaging in what amounts to quote, racial, segregation and apartheid. the record is always if you read that email, somebody hand civil restrictions imposed by is an on but a city and occupied. but it seemed very close as to what seems to be a method of discrimination based on that on in the area of race, religion or ethnic origin, a number of participants have i good. that is it has policies and practices in the
1:02 pm
occupied. but it seems that if the amount of segregation or type while the international court of justice has ruled that israel's policies in the west bank of east jerusalem har in breach of the international law and deprive palestinians of their rightful self determination that is real. by far exceeded its role of the administrator hand the occupied territories and its settlement policy amounts to an illegal unexcused sion, the cold has stated that israel has an obligation to end its presence in those areas as soon as possible, as well as these all supplements, activities it has also owed the un general assembly and the un security council to develop ways to end does rarely occupation of the west bank and east jerusalem. the judges have considered numerous factories, including the duration of the occupation, of course, almost 60 years since 1967 active and aggressive expansion. it was really supplements in the west bank,
1:03 pm
which includes construction of thousands of units. relocation of a big number was really separate to the palestinian territories under protection of israel, of course, applying his reading, domestic laws in these communities. policy of impunity regarding the settlers of violence towards the palestinians. massive lend confiscation and demolition of the houses that force eventually, palestinians to leave an equal basically to force the placement of the occupied population discrimination of palestinians is really exploitation of natural resources over the pipes, territories. the course holding tame had made on going calls for an exception from is really right. when factions, including from the ruling call ition, they make no secret of the intentions. the quotes concluded that israel's presence in the west bank and is jerusalem is illegal and most, and they the i see j's ruling is an opinion. it is known binding and wanted me to say obliged israel to act. but you have to understand that the i,
1:04 pm
c j is the world's most important international 5 view. no countries take its opinions seriously and this decision includes result and resolutions against israel at the un security council. that is an even bigger deal, even though the u. s. is likely to use it's be to power their, to shields, to protect israel. it could also lead to the international criminal court to initiate criminal proceedings against israeli officials in the west bank. and all that will further isolate is ro at paris. tate already because of its deadly offensive in gaza. we might see more diplomatic and economic pressure including sanctions. companies that now have businesses with as well. may, we assess their relationships and the positions of certain states could also shift . we now receive reaction from a role condemning the c j's ruling. prime minister benjamin netanyahu has left out at the courts, lies saying, quote, jewish people do not occupy the ro land. the jewish people are not
1:05 pm
occupiers on their own land, not an hour turn, no capital, jerusalem, not in the land of our ancestors in the west bank. no false decision at the hague will distort this historical truth just as the legality of is really settlement in all the territories of our homeland cannot be contested. and also the country's far right finance ministers, most of which has posted just 2 words on social media following the verdict, suffering t now meaning the establishment of these really roll over all palestinian territories from the river to the sea. national security minister, a settler politician, benevita has slammed the quote as and to submit to and political. you may understand now that the court's decision is unlikely to change anything on the ground except expanded as rarely presents and authority in the palestinian territories. earlier in may the icy j o that hays rel to immediately stop it's
1:06 pm
offensive and rough. uh, what happens next. we so the idea of intensifying its been boardman. so guys of south advance in deeper and deeper into rough when you the direction food, then yeah. who has said many times that israel will not allow any international entity all for in state to dictate israel what to do and what not to. which basically means that is, well, we'll continue doing why wants to do even after this rolling? right, let's most live now to alon leo, former director general of the is really foreign ministry and who served as ambassador to south africa. and that's there. great to have you on with us. the international court of justice has now concluded that is rarely settlements in the west bank and east jerusalem are illegal, and israel has violated international law. what do you make the decision which has been a long time coming after being initiated in 2022? i this says do the quote. set this by said this and every so
1:07 pm
this every individual send this one punch in the, in the face it was say was, it was accepted. it said it can be between the harlow. therefore, i think it was a, the 1st of all they say every day is what people want to be develop. the guy used to face the guy told us that in the last page for a not to be you said last, the need for it, the right to reverse all that section that lead to it says the donation for the bodies. yes. if this one do the ones that do it because of the way that they buy, the default is the right to do or
1:08 pm
the, to the account with the content on the serious decisions though, because with the majority was the con, you'll know, so it was very very difficult that the big to see why he's way georgia is that these hearing on fine, well 1st i'm going by girl jack, but here's what it is. now listening is of the lease that any we don't get the original be officially the days and you press the do with us, the office in lights and so on. so it's not the, the big number one i do on the use. the agenda use for the ambassador is the judge said israel's policy is could be equivalent to segregation discrimination even apartheid. these are official statements, or are they likely to have an effect on the global opinion or perhaps increased as well as isolation? is it is,
1:09 pm
i would advise you to go 1st, if it is likely delivery, but usually bonuses dawson is no different. well, effect all the voices. you will see that as a result of this very we have the woods. what so is, what is the size of the east breakdown need that the school we'd be, we'd ignore and i do in the last 2 hours says that it was in the ceiling. the, let's repeat, the regents. the 2nd question is how in the world was slow. i see the word on like is what is taking it seriously. this the old um
1:10 pm
is in the, in the shop will just be sure to do the full, the full the closest start to do was it has over these issues on the issue of the, the 2nd mass. all the issue is that what is the position? oh, not getting any decent becky to any tvs what he's doing that. so instead of the for off all the, all the, the national community and there is already a certain moment. so they the national between very nice people,
1:11 pm
complicated and the load wisely. everybody is really ambassador to south africa in the early 1990. so i know that you're personally aware of how that countries suffer from apartheid. do you see similarities with the situation in palestine? i would say that they do use the us who is now 9 in off model. oh a i would say that it's very difficult to compare because this was international specialist was very slow and especially versus the united states versus bureau. so there was no c, b, b, b, all the full function. it was the old email that you the either states the state of the sub page one. gotcha. that seems to send me over, especially in the last few months. it's changing, woke up please. all right,
1:12 pm
cool, can i be by this time coming back to the destination? and the pin was still got pc folder categories, including the last page, read the ross in bed. jill australia called the the assumption balances list. it says, organizations is miles on this such a mess. so you know, the each dodge, we simply the, the national situation is also each letter states that was to say, the piece and copies us. ok, we're gonna leave it there alone. layout, former director general of the is really foreign ministry and, and bassett, or to south africa and best or thank you for your time. thank you. as well as rails
1:13 pm
defense is not impenetrable. this admission comes from the idea of some spokes person. he was put to blame a ron for an overnight suicide drawn attack near the us embassy in tel aviv. we will say that i want to emphasize that the defense is not impenetrable. iran the supports that are funds and arms. it's progress as in the region up from gaza picked up today and samaria leave them 11 on cornel syria and again and, and after that goodness happened last night. maybe not the side of the the top was followed by an explosion as smoke filled with the street, which is characteristic of that type of hovering munition. as well as the single say the holiday 8 people are in the hospital that's according to is really media. the idea of says it's still investigating humans, the militant group has claimed responsibility for the attack. so saying that use a new drone capable of bypassing interceptor systems
1:14 pm
the full scope, writing in the m and the on fulls is carried out to qualitative military operation . which consisted of targeting one of the important targets in the occupied. yeah. for area so cool. ms. riley televi. the operation was carried out with a new drug named yes. a which is able to bypass the enemies into set to systems in great falls under the texas. yeah. the operations successfully achieve its goals. this will have a hard for me to ron university professor. so i had mohammed mirandi who says the who, the strike until a beef raises the stakes in the regional conflict. it shows that the, as brand new regime does not have the sort of technology that can prevent such strikes. and it also shows how rapidly the military capabilities of the sort along with the west coast with these this advance, how advanced the from yeah, man now has become a major. yeah. our. and the reason,
1:15 pm
despite the decade of genocide carried out against you, i mean with the help of the west. uh uh, the so what are you using moratti's carried out years of, of some really barbaric strikes on the country. and the americans helped to impose a starvation siege in the red sea. but despite all that we see now, yeah, man has effectively defeated the us navy. in the red sea, a ships destined to is ready ports of our blocks or their sunk. and ships that want to leave is where the regime for if they cannot go through the red sea either despite the us and the british attempts to facilitate that movement then. yeah, man, or i'm sorry, a lot has said repeatedly that this will continue until the genocide completely stop. the millions of people around the world have been stuck staring at the
1:16 pm
notorious blue screen of death. but ironically, not here in russia. i'm in the global cascade of digital outages, the most sanctioned country in the world has not reported any issues with its services and systems. and this resilience has been attributed to the so called import substitution strategy that's made russian more self sufficient. the kremlin says everything appears to be working without a hitch. well fridays, global problems started with a slot update by americans cyber security firm. a crowd started crunch strikes that affected microsoft windows users. the issue rapidly snowballed into an avalanche that struck many digital systems. while the western world has been hit, the hardest us airlines including united, delta american and the legion cancelled all flights in the u. k. the sky news channel interrupted it's broadcast airports in berlin, amsterdam, prague and madrid have reported delays as chickens had to be done offline. our lines across asia and the pacific region have also faced issues in india. some
1:17 pm
flight schedules and boarding passes had to be written by hands. meanwhile, in japan mcdonald suspended about a 3rd of its restaurants on disney land, separate problems in both paris and hong kong and the list of impacted companies that keeps growing. alexi lou cascade cyber security expert at the moscow base, the positive technologies i take company says he expects more consequences to follow, to begin to go this way. so you, but so of this is yes, may be inside these because now we cannot get as late as of the long it happened, but mention about delays of these airplanes. and some flights of you know, worry about some problems to be is it may have to go the why says the different guns this, but so now we don't have information about the so dangerous situation. for example, v is a some, um, uh, international. so magical, a very sensitive some data sense so,
1:18 pm
so it cannot be worried that in mind you use is because of these uh, updates this new piece. and so, uh, software the uh, in uh, some of the wiring before he went back to networks and production systems. but you sound cases is good in case that we need to avoid any updates if he is all saying the chair and his out. they need their, uh, resolved any uh normally you know what i do so no, but i see just i've each id us your business and company of so easily. man is there. uh, i do processes. crowds tribes shares have a pleasure to buy almost 20 percent. the company's ceo has blamed a bug in their update that hit microsoft operating system as well, ruling out any foul play or cyber attacks. this is not as secure as the incidental
1:19 pm
cyber attack. the issue is being identified isolated and the fix is being deployed a crowd strike previously made international headlines during the 2016 us presidential race. the company became the torres for a spreading false claims that russian hackers helped secure donald trump victory over hillary clinton. the firm was hired to investigate the democratic national committee email league, and it was clicked to blame russian actors, but later admitted actually had no concrete proof in a separate report. in december, 2016 crowd striking alleged the russians caused losses for the training and military by hacking their artillery app. a statement that was later retracted. american conservative talk show host and a former advisor to the bush and clinton administrations. steve gill says, crowd strike has a lot of questions to answer any time you have something this big and there's no explanation other than we were just doing an update. you know, it raises suspicions and,
1:20 pm
and concerns about what's really going on in the lack of transparency, the crowd strikeout rates under, in normal situations. i think there needs to be great transparency of what happened, how it happened, and more importantly, how they will prevent this from happening going forward. one of the issues with crowd strike is not only the cosy relationship with intelligence agencies and with the democratic party, but also the revolving door of people inside and outside government intelligence agencies. been with crowd stripe, making big money on the private sector side and then getting the intel and the influence that they need when they go back into a government or, or kind of go in and out. i think again, the whole process needs to be examined, not just with crowd stripe, but other defense department agencies, other major companies that are, that are using their inside sources and then profiting from them. once they leave the government. the a violent riot has broken out and the burger city of leads after social services.
1:21 pm
we're formerly to the number of children in the care of local authorities, of the internet of images here that show the aftermath of the classes during which police reports to retreat from an angry mob, a double decker buses set on fire and a swan car flipped over this the officer police say they are dealing with the ongoing situation and advise people to stay home when we got a chance to speak with marks, angles, lennon and su editor alexander mckay, who describes of the long running root cause behind this unrest. riots such is this uh, more common than you might expect in britain, and they happen in many different communities. there's been riots in across acr over the last few decades in multiple areas. all of the other thing that
1:22 pm
they have in common is that these rights take place in poor areas. there are large numbers of people in this country who live in his deposition, where they have no real hope of life getting any better. they view the pharmacies as their enemies and they uh, from their life experience they all correct to do so. um and when is a situation because which causes the clash between the pharmacies and the local population. it can escalate quite quickly into a, a, a full scale riot. and so again, the well successive governments of created in britain is millions upon millions of people who have no hope of a better future who feel no sense of ownership full control over the lives of that communities. and they, they see the politicians postering on the world stage about the role of britain and
1:23 pm
the needs to defend what every day is the key of stomach claims they are defending in ukraine, whilst all around them, the, the communities and the towns and the cities fall to pieces, so it's not a migration question. it's a question of how the, the desperation relates to the decline and decay of a lot of british communities and the feeling of anger and hopelessness and sometimes nihilism. that a lot of communities traps in right that the whole donald trump has formerly accepted the republican nomination for the us presidency on the final, the anthem parties. national convention. he was speaking just days after surviving an assassination attempt from describe at the moment he was wounded in the ear during a rally. i said to myself, wow, what was that? it can only be a bullet and moved my right hand to my ear,
1:24 pm
brought it down. my hand was covered with blood, just absolutely blood all over the place as i immediately knew, it was very serious that we were under attack. and the one movement proceeded to drop to the ground below. as for continuing to fly, there was blood pouring everywhere. and yet in a certain way, i felt very safe because i had god on my side. the probably one of the most noteworthy parts of that speech was when trump actually thinks the secret service, even though they have failed to deal with a very, very serious security threat. this is something that has really upset
1:25 pm
a lot of from supporters. and as we're going to be able to see now on the screen, you're going to be able to understand why, because it's just incredible that trump walked away from this situation with his life. actually, you can see just how close that bullet comes to essentially killing the former president going through his head. but just basically what trump calls divine intervention essentially is him just happening to move his head at that very time. i mean, so it's really understandable why trump supporters would be upset that the secret service wasn't able to deal with that, that threat. and also the fact that according to investigators that are currently working to get down to the details of what exactly happened, the secret service agents at the scene saw the actual shooter on his rooftop position about 20 minutes before he started shooting at trump and another wyoming senator says that he was told that the secret service had identified this would be
1:26 pm
assassin as a suspicious person around one hour before the shooting took place. so there are a lot of questions that still need to be answered in terms of why was there a failure to investigate? all right, he spoke for 90 minutes at last night didn't hey, it was basically a campaign we launched for him and it appeared like what he was speaking about domestic issues, to the for. but in terms of internationally on the crisis, what's a rough thing across europe? for instance? what says if you, how is he going to solve that? well, trump, of course, promised that he himself would be the solution. he talked a little bit about us interventions into situations around the world, primarily against russia, that took place under different administrations, the georgia conflict, ukraine when crimea decided to have a referendum and become part of the russian federation. trump said that the us isn't going to get involved in any of that kind of stuff under another trump administration. i will end every single h,
1:27 pm
a national crisis that's occurred. the administration has created including the horrible war with russia and ukraine, which would have never happened to vice president under president bush. russia invaded or georgia on the president obama. russia took the crimea under the current administration. russia is after all of ukraine under president rob. russia took nothing. a couple of things, a trump mentioned there should be clarified like the war in georgia where this started after the us back president of the country decided to attack the republic of south of city, of one of the countries former territories. that declared independence. and there were a number of russian peacekeepers in that area. and as a result of this attack, a lot of people were injured and killed as well. of course, we also know about the 2014 euro, my don,
1:28 pm
who dates all that took place and ukraine, that was backed by the united states. it ended up causing a number of ukrainian territories at that time to declare independence. and then they were attacked by the neo fascist, got back to governments that was in power after a year of my done took place. of course, after russia launched its military operation, 2 of those regions decided to vote to become part of the russian federation. done yet, skin lugens, along with another 2 former ukrainian territories is up at osha and care funds. so of course the ukraine conflict as a whole continues to go on. but trump is promising that in the 1st 24 hours of another, trump presidency, he would resolve that entire situation. and what about the other global actors? he's going to have to deal with some of the, the friends, photos, etc. if he takes power without touch the pump. well yeah, he came down very hard on around in his speech, accusing them of trying to continue to develop nuclear weapons. even though we have
1:29 pm
to remember that it was under trump presidency for that the 2015. i am around nuclear deal was actually scrapped. right. and it's only after that that to run began to enrich uranium. but of course, according to the uranium government that's only for peaceful purposes, not for the development of nuclear weapons. another part of his speech had to do with north korea. he said that it was an accomplishment of his that he was the 1st us president to set foot on north korean soil during the time of the tons, with the leader of the dpr. take him john own then trump said that that's part of an overall policy. he has that the us needs to be friends with any country that has nuclear weapons. i got along very well. north korea came, jo no, and i got along very well with them depressed, aided when i said that, how could you get along with it? well, you know, it's nice to get along with somebody has a lot of nuclear weapons or otherwise is to the old days, you say that's
1:30 pm
a wonderful thing now they say, how could you possibly do that? no, i got along with them and we stopped the missile launchers from north korea. now, north korea is acting up again. but when we get back, i get along with them. if you'd like to see me back to, i think he misses me if you want to know the truth. that of course, raises another question about something that trump has been public about for a very long time that he views china as an opponent, a competitor of the united states. and that's a country with a lot of nuclear weapons. so donald trump's making a lot of promises along the campaign trail, and if he gets elected, we're gonna have to see if he can actually follow up on all the republican national convention has wrapped up. it's still being dissected around the world journalist and the conservative political commentator tough across and spoke at the event. and it's okay not washington's elite for ignoring the will of the american public for all the best moments of that.
12 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on