tv Trust WHO Al Jazeera December 17, 2018 9:00am-10:01am +03
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he pushes the limits from kenya to the antarctic. in search of answers to why we run. out jazeera correspondent. hello i'm a star in doha with the top stories on al-jazeera saudi arabia has denounced a position by the u.s. senate accusing its crown prince of ordering the mud of journalist jamal khashoggi in a statement to the kingdom's foreign ministry calls it a place into fair and senate's internal affairs and describes the killing as a crime that doesn't reflect saudi policy but canada's prime minister is telling the he's up on saudi because of. justin trudeau says his government is trying to cancel a multi-billion dollar contract to provide military vehicles by the murder of
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a journalist is absolutely unacceptable that's why canada from the very beginning has been demanding answers and solutions on that secondly we inherited actually a fifteen billion dollar contract signed by stephen harper to export light armored vehicles to saudi arabia we are engaged with the export permits to try and see if there is a way of of no longer exporting these vehicles to saudi arabia sudan's president omar al bashir has become the first arab leader to visit syria since the beginning of the war nearly eight years ago state media quite special expressing his hope that syria will recover its important role in the region as soon as possible syria was expelled from the arab league shortly off to war broke out in twenty eleven not it has shown me is the director of the center of middle east studies at the university of denver he says arab countries want to cut tel iran's influence in syria well i think they're trying to perhaps assad
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a way from his alliance with iran. the number one priority for the usada regime today after crushing all opposition to his rule is economic reconstruction the west is not going to invest in the economic reconstruction but there are very wealthy arab states that do have the resources the financial resources and so i suspect part of your gender here is to see whether. they that whether you know bashar al assad can be influenced financially. with reconstruction aid in exchange for weakening his alliance with iran you know if it wasn't for the wrongs. participation in the horrific war in syria over the last you know seven years bashar al assad would not be alive today he said he would be in power so you are on has a huge amount of influence i don't think at the end of the day that bashar assad will break his alliance with iran and switch sides but i think what's i think much more
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fundamental and i think what's uniting bashar al assad with other. arab states in the region is that bashar al assad and other leaders of the arab states in the middle east share a common national security concern and that national security concern is fear of their own populations fear of democracy fear of political change so in that sense they have a very common sort of set of concerns that they that they're trying to fight and push back against at least twelve people have died and twenty five others have been wounded in the latest outbreak of violence around yemen's port city of had data the fighting between her the rebels and saudi embassy back to government forces comes two days before a u.n. broken face five years to begin. thousands of people have been protesting in hungary's capital budapest against what's been called a slave law it's the fourth demonstration this week against the employment reforms
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of viktor all bands right wing government. britain's government insists it has no plans for a second referendum on bret's it despite reports some ministers are looking into the option prime minister to resign may return from brussels on saturday after two days of talks with e.u. leaders she had hoped just a recent deal to get it approved by parliament where it faces certain defeat the e.u. isn't willing to renegotiate. georgia's first woman president has been sworn in vowing to reconcile political divisions last month salome's are a bitch to believe defeated grigolo the shad's say in elections the opposition say were rigged away from the ceremony in tel aviv scuffles broke out as police blocked a bush and his supporters from entering the city. those are the headlines more news head off to trust.
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bad things look. good on the coffee. list which will be sure you feel just will still be just as long would you describe the group see you not see. how it was or who can then the me are sixteen if you took more time. enough to contain this gift i'd mention it at all. because if we want to protect americans from a bowl here at home we have to end it over there and one sars mers universal health coverage is the single most powerful concept that public health has to offer . we will not let the people down.
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even his own thoughts on his its own courts and beyond i don't know how suits in the average timoney read my duty can all men through the media see these on dog run is on c.n.n. fine nazi on an internet fight one seemed told me by don often bob got the mike season and i'm n c n n him on the dock it's not time to show. that off to focus i think you can see that everyone knows that there's a kind of official and high level cover up on the w.h.o. is involved and. i'm a filmmaker i have a daughter. it is important to me that she finds the world in good condition that is why i'm travelling to the w.h.o. headquarters in geneva. the american journalist robert parsons lived for twenty years now he's been writing about the w.h.o.
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. until a few years ago every monday the opening day of the world hold for something that was a sumptuous reception at the w.h.o. given by the director general that was the great centerpiece where everybody bed and talk to. it was it was a very good situation for holding everybody together in an informal setting. now more than ever it has that sort of thing to spend replaced by private reception at they are organized by industry. and i'm particularly pleased to have the two ministers of health industry spends a lot of money for them is just part of the cost of doing business. it's a way of making correct contact with the people who back in their home countries have made. the decisions. that.
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the suffering of millions of human beings. will be only the many many thousands of lives. but. who has positively changed everything smallpox was completely eradicated which was the first time ever that a disease was why you don't save each one thousand million dollars on vaccines and care of the sick and iron. according to robert parsons the w.h.o. is infiltrated by the industry from the very start. this one's in english this is the canal francisco examiner anyway i was not happy with my coverage because it made them look. less them good. ever since the one nine hundred fifty s.
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studies have shown that smoking damages the health but for decades the w.h.o. does little to oppose the backhoe industry. got fired out of kalak aircraft that. you know as i work on a raffle that's right but i am always surprised the majority of politicians take no action against tobacco advertising for decades. nothing is done to check the profits of the tobacco industry until charges are brought against it by its victims and by the usa. gradually the tobacco companies are obliged to publish their internal documents. their strategies to combat the w.h.o. are made public one example is the boca raton action plan from the year nine hundred eighty eight senior figures at philip morris met in florida and drew up a number of sophisticated strategies to limit the power of the w.h.o.
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the first and most important this organization has extraordinary influence on government and consumers and we must find a way to diffuse this. w.h.o. gets under pressure variants. back to back a companies have operated for many years with with the deliberate purpose of subverting the efforts. to control the back of the. instant. the water. the calls. it's also from three thousand. dollars or so. nominal to three things all the right organization formed in an honest on can only hope the stalls for three to talk industry. one of these institutes is led by the american lawyer paul dietrich philip morris
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finances it with two hundred forty thousand dollars a year at the same time dietrich is a consultant for the regional office in america when his double role becomes known dietrich moves into the finance industry. he won't agree to talk to me in the w.h.o. report on the strategies of the débâcle industry six other consultants are mentioned the british toxicologist frank sullivan for instance claims that passive smoking doesn't harm your health his study on the subject is financed by philip morris. in the year two thousand sullivan's collaboration with the tobacco industry becomes public but he still continues to advice. i mean with two department leaders commenting tobacco under the auspices of the w.h.o. we have zero tolerance approaches i said the director general says the tobacco industry is our number one and we wear that badge very proudly is franks i live in
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still. absolutely i mean we i would anyway have a they can't because the names of all those persons are well known through the documents but that nadal event and inside to the average for example in two thousand and two let's say. not so not that i'm aware of as well too and again the policies that are in place now is that all consultants no matter whether they're working in tobacco control or infectious diseases or anywhere in the organization have to sign a declaration of interest but this means a lot of trust the interesting bit they should be reviewed trust i think that you should trust you trust you can't just start by already being suspicious of all the people and their capacities to do things ok thank you so much. and also. they always say ok we had
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a problem and there were single persons who were corrupt this was the sullivan. and so on. but i always thought it wasn't really persons and now it's over or could you say that segments of. it would have all the tobacco company documents which show how major corporations operate and the pharmaceutical companies or the chemical companies do not operate any differently their obligation to their shareholders completely overwhelms any consideration of public health so these are the people that are involved in the h one n one push. swine flu h one n one is presented by the w.h.o. and in the public media as a huge threat wrongly as it later emerges. if you've been diagnosed with probable or presumed two thousand and nine and one or swine flu in recent months you may be surprised to know this the odds are you didn't have
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a two thousand and one flu in fact you probably didn't have flu at all. many countries including germany italy france and great britain concluded secret agreements with pharmaceutical companies before the swine flu incident which obliged them to purchase swine flu vaccinations but only if the w h o issued a pandemic level six alert. the world is now at the start of the two thousand and nine influenza pandemic. reason. fun right now and i. made yarden. sun over. the in. the me but i pushed it.
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for three good minutes are not stopping to must if you can just kind of going to do nice to get the. most. swine flu makes considerable profits for the manufacturer. and first quarter net. profit in the quarter rose to one point seven. billion us dollars from one point five i try to arrange an interview with the person responsible for swine flu at the w h k g fukuda he was often on television at the time but i get an appointment with the official press spokesman eleven countries officially reporting three hundred thirty one cases of influenza a h one n one infection with ten. well the contract between pharmaceutical companies and government well you have to
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be aware of this of course you have to be aware of everything that's going on and it is extremely easy to after the fact say well maybe not have done y. and a should not have done b. however think about the opposite what would have happened how the influenza killed fifty percent of the people it infected and there was no vaccine. and then momentum and then they latch oh no no no. that's a good. program to. make i meant. to eat them or not we are not a joke but and i meant no going to see another year another year in low amazing. michael not a control upon them me included ran it on his solo in a maze there in a totally but it went out on a group but he says here edge of a canard. at the time i'm pregnant and i am
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airports crowns and all forms of travel public media exaggerates with words and images the danger resulting from swine flu. is how a man would be in order to get so locally gondolas pretty good that among those whom can be there. he said i did i don't like guidelines that there were below him is it could they have declared to condemn make a level six also with the zero at the finish no. i meant to. say that is the. media center be and tell you that saying two years ago it did you deal. and then me. so this is. this was removed
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before. people. you know shown his art they're missing the are going to the farm industry in so far as see i'm a good and fair try to get at the hard day but if you're going to know if you liked all of. it is a lie by its neighbors to the. us all but instead of just us of course would like to have a vaccine tomorrow we would have wanted to have it yesterday in two thousand and nine is a member of the w.h.o. swine flu working group previously she had worked for the french pharmaceutical company trans jean the press spokesman doesn't allow me to interview her so i try to approach her directly at a conference i asked miss kinealy why the criteria of severity was deleted from the definition of a pandemic phase. to do do i know the experience of. the
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twitty they treat their objective. and that's it it was. their. value. or something of it. so i think they. expand upon sitting at the do. object if you. don't want to. create it. i will. because the quote was not we want to let it. marcum sakhi so dr norton i don't have. enough. to do do. we do it was asked for. don't talk. it's going to show that men know we did. dissent and give us an office and have to do
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business after van in and funny land on and get. even if you're. interested. in and. the w.h.o. working group on swine flu consists of thirteen external consultants to report conflict of interest neil ferguson declares consultancy fees from glaxo smith kline baxter and rush the manufacturers of the swine flu vaccines and medications not a problem for the dollar. in two thousand and seven albert osterhaus loses his voting right on the dutch health commission due to his conflicts of interest he declares to the w.h.o. that he has shares in the pharma company viral clinics which is suspected of profiting from swine flu he also declares that he is the chairman of w.i.
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describing it as a group of independent scientists in fact it is partly financed by vaccine manufacturers. i can tell you the most scientific meeting today organized that is now being spun the sponsored by industry and rightly so industry is making the vaccines it's not the national institutes that are making the vaccines any longer industry is doing i very curious. at the moment i'm working more with the private sector as well so i started still consulting from time to time i used to vacuum with as you scientists against influenza yes on the channels that particular organization because i saw it you declared this is a conflict of interest i know it's not a conflict of interest but i declare also what might be perceived as a conflict of interest in him and you have to be very careful so at least if you say that and of course people can hold it against you yeah but at least i can always say and i've always done that say hugh you are you at least you show what
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you do it was written they are independent group of scientists yes when i looked under bedside as saw today that it's funded by all vaccine for it you assess no no it's not funded by some money comes from from from vaccine produces but there's money coming from many other sources as well and that's the same with w.h.o. and a lot of other you know organisations as long as you are transparent and show what you're doing it's fine i think how is that percentage of funding i don't know exactly but there is there is a substantial part of the funding comes from elsewhere from meetings comes from comes from european projects come from and there is a percent just coming from industry as well and that's completely transparent so it's fine to bring it up again but for me it's reach over. i don't get any hard figures from. either without any facts without transparency i can't make any progress here. i hear good news and i hear. that.
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one thing. today the pharmaceutical industry is part of the health system just like the government's. politics are losing power and that's also reflected in the financing of the. in the one nine hundred ninety s. all countries froze their membership contributions in the wake of the financial crisis. today and organizations foundations n.g.o.s and industry contribute almost forty percent of the w.h.o. its annual budget the second largest source of finance right after the usa is the bill and melinda gates foundation. thirty years ago and starting microsoft there was we had a very ambitious vision
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a computer for everyone. now i join you in seeking to achieve an even more important vision which is good health for every human being today the w.h.o. relies on voluntary contributions like that from the gates foundation but these are often linked to conditions from the w h o's annual budget amounts to about two billion dollars coca-cola spends twice that much on advertising alone and the hospitals around lake geneva spend six billion dollars a year. when it was founded the w.h.o. could decide how to distribute its funds itself now seventy percent of its budget is tied to particular projects countries or regions. if the w.h.o. receives funding to fight malaria for example it can't use that money to combat it
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mona. says will put it in very precise words at present w.h.o. . the operational capacity of culture to deliver a full emergency public health was called. what does the director general of the w.h.o. think about that. i want to ask her what constraints she is under. i think you're right adored by millions pakistan's most famous critic to arrive just prime minister on a blaze of national celebration. now one hundred days into his leadership people in power asks whether delivering on promises will be as easy in practice as it was in
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the theory. right now the nation is not feeling confident right now people are disappointed with the bombing in minus one hundred days on al-jazeera one of the really special things about working for al-jazeera is that even as a camera woman i get to have so much and put in contribution to a story i feel we cover this region better than anyone else would be what it is you know it's very challenging given the particular because you have a lot of people that are divided on political issues we are we the people believed to tell the real story so i'll just mend it is to deliver in-depth journalism we don't feel inferior to the audience across the globe. when the shots came from the holiday and we heard critics we heard some noise. this was no no sniper alley is one of the most dangerous intersections in saudi but. it didn't come in through the front entrance was what happened to the people who were
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shot they came into the wrong and the nightly part of took pics of the furniture to . say that's get the hell out of sarajevo holiday and hotels on al-jazeera. hello i'm the stasi attain doha with the top stories on al-jazeera saudi arabia has denounced a position by the u.s. senate accusing its crown prince of ordering the murder of john les jamal khashoggi in a statement the kingdom's foreign ministry calls it relations interference in its entirety of the fed as it describes the killing as a crime that doesn't reflect saudi policy but canada's prime minister is telling the he's up on saudi because of. just internet he says his government is trying to cancel a multi-billion dollar contract to provide military vehicles. the murder of
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a journalist is absolutely unacceptable that's why canada from the very beginning has been demanding answers and solutions on that secondly we inherited actually a fifteen billion dollar contract silly and by stephen harper to export light armored vehicles to saudi arabia we are engaged with the export permits to try and see if there is a way of no longer exporting these vehicles to saudi arabia sudan's president omar al bashir has become the first arab leader to visit syria since the beginning of the war nearly eight years ago state media quite special is expressing his hope that syria will recover its important role in the region as soon as possible syria was exparel from the arab league shortly after war broke out in twenty eleven. at least twelve people have died and twenty five others have been wounded in the latest outbreak of violence around yemen's port city of data the fighting between truthy rebels and saudi amorality backed government forces comes two days before
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a un brokered cease fire is due to begin. thousands of people have been protesting in hungary's capital budapest against what's been called a slave law it's the fourth demonstration this week against the employment reforms viktor all bans right wing government britain's government insists it has no plans for a second referendum on bret's it despite reports some ministers are looking into the option prime minister to resign may return from brussels on saturday after two days of talks with e.u. leaders she had hoped to sweeten had deal to get it approved by parliament the e.u. isn't willing to renegotiate georgia's first woman president has been sworn in in to reconcile political divisions last month salome defeated grigorieva should say and elections the opposition say were rigged those are the headlines now it's back to trust who.
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and the filmmaker and i have a daughter it is important to me that she finds the world in good condition. and i can tell you the most scientific meeting today organized that is now being spun the sponsored by industry and rightly so the industry is making the vaccines it's not the national it's just their obligation to their shareholders completely overwhelms any consideration of public health universal health coverage is the single most powerful concept that public health has to offer. people. since i can't get to speak to market jan i meet one of her close advisors. a sink it's simply a wrong perception to sink that can be an external independent review because then you have to say who is selecting these independent experts and who is
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controlling their independence and who is controlling the independence of those controlling the independence. of course he's right but he's wrong you know he is mixing everything up because this world is as it is and you have to do what you can to make sure that the independence of the science is as good as possible it will never ever be perfect he's quite right that he should be talking about his own i mean he is from switzerland he came straight from switzerland which is a country that is completely locked into a partnership approach and he's in charge of partnerships. so i know. this was very keen that any companies could.
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is contributing to the. the risks of radioactive contamination in public. data. in the w.h.o. downplaying the dangers of nuclear radiation hazard for example keeping silent about a rise and fire my cancer. it's difficult to find anybody who is allowed to talk the mayor off matsumoto. is also a doctor and has founded a convalescent camp for children from camp dominated area he was. was at the limit i knew something but isn't it talking about a. son or she working out there so when i was governor that would help me at the.
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conclusion i will commit you know. you know when you are. should i think you need to look at you are much easier with all. this. do you call the one hundred that keep you were can you go to. your dorm or. it would or going to using the interview with it well it must. as a result of experience after turn of all the recommendations for iodine my revised in the year nine hundred ninety nine under the supervision of the british scientists key favor stock and member of staff at the w.h.o. .
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when i started my program mr riccio within a few weeks i learned that there was a claim that there was a large number of thyroid cancers in children and this ended up in the mission to minsk. astonishing number of children who had been operated for thyroid cancer quite young children so to see as we did on that day. i think it was eleven twelve maybe cases in one place at one time or having been operated was really quite extraordinary. he took it from there. better russian colleagues i was too short papers in the journal nature to draw attention to it after the papers were published w.h.o. me to withdraw the paper from nature. read a paper published with about five or six other people all agreeing on this position
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and crys lost me to redraw that paper from publication. after the being published who were dry so at the bridge oh it geneva yes they threaten me. yes you think you is my career he said your career will be shortened if you don't do this. and was a charge. did you have any contact with us w h o f that's a typical accident you know much a lot of them and doesn't all this resident of the go karting is gonna and will you show me that the total you must know what i think you'll still get us as far as it goes they should have it on twenty and told us to name out that they're not legal i say stay here. when you know i was
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a successful tended to my stuff. then there were so horses of a smother then i was and all. that and all said so john that either i made my study is so you have them under that or they misunderstood well beach about it musta and then they just threw up they could just as soon as they all. come out of the door and they misunderstood what i had no all or nothing at the catalyst. i still find it beyond belief that naoto kan was convinced at the time that no radioactivity would emerge after the accident. just one day after the accident a monitoring station of the organization c t b t o recorded raised levels of radioactivity two hundred kilometers from the nuclear power station. i mean.
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i. think. maybe what i'm on. and she doing it is take i take. it and all. there is you don't buy that got a monkey and we. gave them on of in that vehicle and i thought he bet. they're glad there was a little more of the survivor there to win as you got a gang of money for mike to see my dear mother move with the. dick when i meet their listen i'm all i got up and i not been wrong so no they were right there. and that's when it is going on all settled down of the devil so they move which isn't going to fit the. bill mother so you know whether it's going to do sort of
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dual boot do you know the letters in the studio cooks but who is right in plain thinking of this and honestly can see it so i just got out of the window and saw you with an awful scene put him on what was a call to you so if that's what that night got up close and the next income was you know. what do you think today about iodine intake i asked a nuclear accident well again it's more than what was said in the video. people are not taking all they don't want as if the over the top unease authorities have not said that that should be there and they have distributed are you going tablets prepositional them but have not yet asked anyone to take them taking i don't like tablets in the absence of i don't read radiation because actually for you you need to mash i don't mind taking high time to the exposure and i stand by that from today's point of view was the exposure given at that time in most
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affected areas or not you know again that's almost five years ago and i can't remember the process from day to day and certainly we would have adopted though our recommendations based on the information we were getting but there are these guidelines and it's written in yeah you should take i have been within the first six hours after a nuclear accident. that's in the air and it's also clear that it was not given in . it's own to affect i mean that's something you don't have to look up it's obvious ok. i really think you are wasting your time on this topic and then we should move on to other topics because i only have until twelve o'clock is it that you can say something critical about the japanese government i. work on the basis of facts and if i don't have the facts and the information
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fingertips i'm not going to speculate. but in general is it possible for i made it out to criticize nations and i'm not going to say anything more about this what she does with war no this was a general question not in relation to. well let's move onto another topic ok is it getting much difficult for you now that w h o has travis. who says w jones was trust that you. and the new york academy of science book this one. comes up with an estimate of nine hundred eighty five thousand deaths but that is worldwide between nine hundred eighty six and two thousand and four and of course that makes a dramatic contrast with what the establishment says which is still around fifty deaths and possibly four thousand cancer is. a final total.
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we have been in front of the world health organization headquarters in geneva for seven years now and it is a permanent peaceful protest. the other major mission is that the world health organization has never considered anything except cancer. as a health effects through committee so minister. as much as an inch of the mist if you use the bus your admission yes you me here right. because it has used students. who really have an issue. in the democrats' thoughts on. school. and yet they are already here. for. the rest of. us.
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in prison by the church to. rescue people. eventually gets. to be of german disgusting. since january we know that there are other diseases one of the diseases unfortunately. it's caused us killer disease in fatality diseases other than cancer there's a book maybe you heard about it of the academy of science which was reputed by the new york academy of sciences because it's so when sound but that's not true yes if you read the account of the statement from the new york academy of sciences and two thousand and eleven or twelve they were puting it at the board and let me give you this this is from the journal of radiology monitoring review ok the york academy of sciences which talks about all the flaws in that ok ok so i should also if you
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something in her book review by independent to you. yeah yeah. ok we read this and then we meet again. hello this is me and frank what does it mean exactly that the new york academy of science repudiate the chairman bill book the editor tells me that the academy never repudiated the book he permits me to record the phone call but later he withdraws his permission is in the able to speak freely either. perhaps the publisher of the chernobyl book can help me. or a good morning the original contact person at the new york cademy of sciences you know agreed to publish the book and then there was
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a big truck to the new york academy and they didn't think it was a good idea and i suspect that they were pressured by the nuclear industry but i don't know for sure. how the influence of the nuclear industry. the international atomic energy agency. was to promote to safe and peaceful use of atomic energy. the w.h.o. is concerned with health these are different priorities but the two organizations are working closely together. for
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example together with other u.n. organizations they are compiling a report on the health consequences of her novel. i'm a critic. and they. tended not to invite critics for their two reports one of. the thing was that the would be whole series of going on between w h o and i a. quite senior levels very senior levels. and they would. pre-determined what the line they would take. that's why they had a w.h.o. stroke. meeting in riyadh two thousand and five. to put the line across this is a this is what we're going to do the trouble was that many many people came.
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near out works at the w.h.o. she's responsible for the risks of radioactive contamination i deliberately make an appointment to see her in paris the press department won't get in the way here to make sure she agrees to see me i don't tell her what i want to talk about until we first meet. because like a lot of them said we've seen that there have been one. or the. one that's come on. this is because they love one of their own. and then their money out of one million this is it but this is because they are looking at a broader part of the population of one view that you think you can hide one billion but seriously yes but do you seriously train a course you have more thoroughly different as to how can you seriously believe that accident caused fifty deaths not only needs it but it's still under websites.
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so we wrote the other report. and the initials are t o r c h which is torch we said right away that we expected somewhere between thirty and sixty thousand altogether worldwide future death because the plume from chernobyl went right round the world. the northern hemisphere and whiles the concentrations were low far far away it doesn't matter because the road many many millions of people there are six hundred million people and europe alone. and they were all affected even again is that still the faith that's you'll see even cain if he hadn't mentioned also had that it awfully kewl in the soviet union.
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we were not using cancer mortality figures but rather the incidence is because as you know most of the concepts can now be treated in therefore there will not work the associated i don't know whether you have not these but our health risk assessment is only with the log of but i mean if one side of the experiments belong to a year this is kind of anticipating that those estimates from i.e. are not on the best of their science which is the case i don't think they were there to represent any interest i mean it was criticised that there was no. radio biologist also no scientist who published critical articles on has effect of
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nuclear energy but when you need to do difficult pour it is not a question of printing an activist the from the left when an act is to from the right wing is a question of science what's happening is that there are groups outside that they want to use those us events to say you see nuclear energy is easy is bad is it is dangerous why with long to stop the use of the nuclear energy which is a different cost doing anything it could also be the other way around that nokia industry. tries to not to tell the whole truth about it has impacts. really i have no doubt for sure we are dead and we are doing the best that we can and with this report of everybody who recognise that there is a need for i. have institutions in the good sense i mean with weight. and powerful institution it would be the best for all of us and i will
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fight for that for the rest of my life. convenes public health officer and i think my record credits that if we need to fight and not afraid. a scientist in the united states this past spring maybe observation that this generation of children. is the first generation in modern history. there's not going to be as healthy as their parents. that should not be. what do i do with this knowledge now go out on the streets together with independent who are just go home again. and i at the end now is there any real and . margaret chan carries on.
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right it's over to you folks who would like to start the round of questions. is it on to you ok lilian frank over in media it's a question to dr chan we have just learned that area. and climate change global health challenges but i'm asking myself how can we meet them if they're constantly losing power important donor nations they want to week. one could even compared to the titanic i would say so isn't it your responsibility dr chan to step down before the end of your second term an audit to signal to the that your organization your ship is sinking
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you as an excellent question if i tell you that picture as an organization only thirty percent of my budget is predictable funds other seventy percent i have to take a head and go around the world to beg for money. and when they give us the money they are highly linked to their preferences what they like it may not be the priority of the big show so if we do not solve this you know. we're not going to ask that to be as great as we whack.
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the big breaking news story it can be chaotic and frantic behind the scenes. people shouting instructions if you're trying to provide the best most accurate up to date information as quickly as you can. it's when you come off on being stupid to realize you witnessed history in the making. getting to the heart of the matter how can you be a refugee after you while it borders between five safe countries facing the realities that's from the very beginning of. providing context housing is not just about four walls and a river here their story on talk to al-jazeera. hello again welcome back to international weather forecasts we're here across the eastern med and also parts of the we are going to see some rainy conditions over the next
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you days here's a storm system that is coming in off the med bring some very heavy rain to parts of syria over here towards iraq and also into the eastern parts of turkey no higher elevations will be seeing the snow there down towards baghdad is going to be a rainy day here on monday with the time to there of about fourteen degrees but as we go towards tuesday clearing skies few and we do expect to see a high temperature there seventy in kuwait about twenty one degrees there well across the middle east looking quite nice not a lot of weather to talk about so let's take a look at those temperatures will have seen about twenty four degrees an upper dubuisson about twenty six not really changing too much as we go towards tuesday. down here towards a lot you may see a passing shower or cloud by the time we get towards tuesday afternoon with the tundra there of about twenty nine degrees and then very quickly as we make our way down here towards the southern part of africa now looking down that towards the southern part we're going to see cape town at twenty six durban is going to see a hot day for you at about thirty two degrees a lot of clouds and rain up here towards the north harare and of clouds in your
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forecast maybe rain as well tempter there of about twenty three degrees but rain showers over here towards madagascar with the temperature there about twenty seven degrees. xenophobe violent and beating the drum for an ethnic civil war in the heart of europe. al-jazeera infiltrates one of the continent's fastest growing far right organizations and exposes links to members of the european parliament and marine le pen's national rally pratique generation eight. part two of a special two part investigation on al-jazeera. medieval western society it was a feudal society so detailed to keep the law and assume most of pope ended his speech some people stood up and so god will sit down and the entrance to the city was
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woodruff and they killed people in the streets in their houses and in. the crusades an arab perspective the sold one shot at this time on a. in a rare outburst saudi arabia condemns the us senate for accusing the crown prince of jamal khashoggi his murder. hello welcome to our jazeera live from doha i'm martine that is also coming up. so dan's president bashir becomes the first arab leader to go to syria since the conflict began in twenty in the.
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