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tv   Canadas Dark Secret  Al Jazeera  April 21, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03

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vision and number we must meet with the e.u. and agree on transitional government and we've asked the e.u. to extend the deadline they gave for handing over power for the consultation is. a position that is not held by all sides the sudanese professional association which led the calls for protests that started in december continues to encourage the sit in in front of the army headquarters along with twenty two other parties it wants power to be handed immediately to an independent transitional government for a period of four years a proposal that shows that's not all parties are united and that forming a transitional government may not be an easy task something they'll hold on to their demands hoping for a different sedan for a future generation does it have to be. victory when there is a civilian government because through a civilian government will have a permanent constitution to preserve the rights of all yet they didn't have any rights for. it what happens now would largely depend on these protesters and those
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leading the military council for more than a week and to make it was a month ago when i was here down in little about the government and the military council is under pressure to hand over power pressure let the man even if it were really the international diplomat as well as you know we. don't want the military to deprive them of a victorious revolution you know morgan although there are a lot of. process leaders have been holding talks with sudan's military council in an effort to speed up the transition of power to a civilian government to go live now to mohamed vaal who is in the capital for us car to mohamed good to see you what do we know about these talks and if they've you get any results. this is the third round of talks between the leaders of the protest and the military council and the purpose of these talks is to make sure that both sides are you know
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agreeing on the same road map for what's next the military council wants to stay in power as a presidential council and will leave the running of the daily affairs to a cabinet made up of civilians and it gave the green light to the opposition leaders particularly to the protest leaders to form the government to suggest names and we understand that the leaders of the of the uprising are going to hold a press conference tomorrow evening to announce some names and to suggest a plan of action or a road map what are the problem here is that there is a little bit of confusion here about what exactly at stake and what the protesters are demanding i understand from reports we got today. that the protesters are not just asking for a cabinet a civilian cabinet but also for a civilian presidential transitional council is stead of a military council and this is the sticking point and this is why are so half of
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the fucking the chairperson of the african union here today the african union gave an ultimatum of two weeks one of those weeks has passed and the declaration of that announcement of the african union was for the military to leave power to the civilians now we don't understand whether that leaving a popular demand to me is that the military should move away completely from the presidential. position and leave that to the civilians or whether they should stay in that suffered a presidential council as military overseeing a government of civilians we need clarification everybody here and it's got a question about this including protesters themselves understanding from reports we've got today is that tomorrow the protesters will not only announce names for a civilian cabinet but also names and ideas and plans for a sovereign civilian council to run instead of a military council and they allow only for a limited representation from the military side that means discussions are not only
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and divisions are not only among the opposition and the parties and the protesters on the one hand about how to create a government and how to and what names to announce but also very very difficult negotiation is expected to head before the military council seats power completely whether it will cede it or not it's a big question absolutely and will be interesting to see how things develop tomorrow sunday for the moment mohamed with the latest from khartoum mohamed thank you. well still to come in this half hour two teenagers are arrested over the killing of a young investigative journalist in northern ireland. and it's a some very easter weekend nicaragua our people are reflecting on the cost of a year of protests against president of cake.
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how it'll be maybe a surprisingly warm weekend for many people in europe there's not much cloud in the sky and despite the fact is close to the north there for a northerly breeze it's not that coat in fact is positively warm from germany to cross to the british isles down through france were in the low twenty's this stands out as not being the same you told madrid at sixteen not green is rain in the south and southeast of spain where it's even colder that's certainly wet and there's rain developing here a bit of a tech if slightly colder air for part of the parts of ukraine and look at ankara there's even snow in turkey so unique streams of the south it's nothing like it should be but in the middle in the north and surprisingly will not last rather a whole weekend and probably into monday as well as sort of the circulation around space and that's are going to be pretty stormy targeting in the valley area goggles this rain and some for the just into words austria and ankara ceases sunshine but it's still twenty five in paris and twenty two in london and the sun is out so you
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know what's happening in spain in the barracks is clearly going to have an effect in the northwest of africa particularly in morocco twenty degrees in robot got a bit further to the east towards the algerian border and it's raining and now here in tunisia it will be raining and windy i suspect. like cattle are always. experience economy class like never before and qatar airways going places together.
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the lead. welcome back here's a reminder of the top stories on al jazeera fighting has intensified around the libyan capital tripoli the death toll in the battle for the city has now risen to two hundred and. egyptians are voting in a three day referendum that could allow president sisi to stay in power until twenty thirty and protesters in sudan are continuing their demand for a civilian government in the country. police in northern ireland have a arrested two teenagers in connection with the killing of a young investigative journalist and a warning of what they call a new breed of terrorists threatening the area so as this shooting is added to concerns about the stability of the region's twenty one year old peace deal burnett
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smith has more now from london bury. the murder of lyric he has been a shocking reminder here of what life was like during thirty years of violence between irish republican and british communities while the signing of the good friday agreement twenty one years ago brought peace there is still a lot of frustration in what remains the poorest part of northern ireland where is the music that doesn't going to get us and they were killing more innocent people get us anywhere. it's just took this senseless there's nothing can justify it even if you don't agree with a agreement nason justifies technically or mickey's like it. riots began in this pro irish estate in london derry on thursday as police raided homes looking they say the pattern bombs and other weapons the might be used in a march planned for easter monday lire was hit by someone who fired a gun apparently randomly towards
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a crowd of onlookers the twenty nine year old journalist had been named as one of the thirty under thirty in media by forbes magazine and had signed a two book deal to write about the. in northern ireland it has shocked people who thought they were on shock a local politician named mccown lives in an area with the highest unemployment in the u.k. almost half of working age adults in derry don't have a job young people who are living in poor circumstances and they're not getting any better they can't see any future in which there's a decent job for they are angry at the situation and which they know growing up in this it's understandable in the inevitable that some of them are going to see an outlet for their anger and frustrations in taking up the cause. to find the syria historically and worst of they see it has been abandoned by their elders the police officers here say they've noticed a palpable change in the community as people often cooperation following the murder
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the police also say they're dealing with what they're calling a new breed of terrorist two years ago in northern ireland power sharing of ministration between pro british and pro irish parties broke down and that's left a power vacuum which groups opposed to peace could be trying to take advantage of bernard smith al-jazeera dairy. police in paris have detained the more than one hundred twenty people after another saturday of yellow vest protests the arrests follow violence between police and demonstrators many of whom are angry at the huge donations pledge to repair the cathedral of not about so no one has more i. a saturday of fire and fury for the twenty third week in a row yellow vest protesters came out in paris as well as other cities across the country. this was one of the most intense day of confrontations between the crowds and the right police in the mix it was driven by outrage over the nearly one
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billion dollars donated by some of france's wealthiest families and corporations to repair the not. days after a blaze nearly destroyed the famous building but the message here france has bigger problems to solve. it's about decency all these donations could help friends people but it's so short sighted. all this money is going to save those old pebbles and stones it's not right something's not right i think it is just it's shocking given the current situation whoever is giving to know about may be a good thing to do but perhaps it's not the moment to do this kind of thing the inclusion of an accused group such as black bloc have led authorities to place paris and other major cities on a state of high alert throughout the day protest as lit fires on blocked off streets destroying vehicles parked in the vicinity others attempted to break into
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buildings was released responded by firing tear gas at the crowds and using water cannon to disperse them. if the government had hoped that protesters would take a break over this holiday weekend it was not the case. the movement that began last november originally over. fuel price hikes and the high cost of living has not gone away the said spread into a broader movement against president a man well back home in his attempt to reform the economy michael is expected to announce a series of measures in the coming week that includes tax cuts for poor households the protest is anger at the wealthy has flourished in recent days partly stoked by the not to the fire but also as michael himself who is seen by them as a president of the rich in a deeply divided society sunny diagonal al-jazeera. in nicaragua they're marking
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easter weekend the first anniversary of mass protests in the country initially people rallied for social security reform then against president daniel ortega more than three hundred people were killed and tens of thousands of fled the country now a year later nicaragua is reflecting on the cost of the crisis john home and has more. it's an especially somber easter weekend. those here are remembering not just the events of two millennia past but those more recent far more local. in this town a bastion of the opposition during the first months of naked i was crisis street barricades went up and running battles with security forces were regular site some are still struggling to come to terms with the human cost of it all i think. it's really hard to speak about this from his position is about what the people of nicaragua have gone through even the love of life is leaking away because of so
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much pain so much barbarity. easter week this year who's exactly on the first anniversary of protests against nikken i was long term president daniel ortega he labeled those against him as boiling who inciting terrorists pointing to the death of policemen. and his response was brutal concepcion portal's may says her brother darwin was killed by a sniper's bullet that she says was just the start of her family's troubles. in the ten months since he's been called we've had death threats been followed harassed and i don't see any change from the government. yet. there's been an ongoing crackdown against human rights groups journalists activists and even demonstrations since the crisis began the government's effectively banned street protests in the kid i was so religious procession slight this one one of the only
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ways that people can come out and express what they feel about the situation. here that meant a coup for peace. we plead with mr than a lot of data misses reciter modi's you and her brother souldiers stop the repression stop the gruesome fiction and killing over i want people you have mothers and children to you have wives and family that you love it's never too late it's time to free ourselves from days. before looking to the future though it was time to remember the day. they're with us responded those gathered here john heilemann. messiah. saturday is the twentieth anniversary of the columbine high school shooting in the united states twelve students and one teacher were killed when two teenagers carried out their planned attack in colorado there have been many other school
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shootings since then but little change to the gun laws as alan fischer now reports . it was until then the watched school shooting in american history a nation watched twenty years ago as terrified students run for their lives the lucky ones could hug their parents but twelve students and one teacher never would they died when two students took their guns and their rage into the corridors of their high school and columbine became new in the world over among the community it's among the american people there really was at the time a sense that ok maybe maybe this will be a change maybe change will will come from this and there was quite a popular appetite to see it happen but the colorado shooting brought copycats and contagion it wasn't the first mass school shooting but somehow it became a fresh starting point and a heart breaking list that grew every year. for junior tech with thirty two people were killed. sandy hook in connecticut where twenty children were shot dead and
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moved the president to tears the majority of those who died today were children. beautiful little kids between the ages of five and ten years old. roseburg in oregon parklane florida and many places in between eleven more school shootings eleven places that said enough eleven places changed forever. but not in the we many hoped in australia after a mass shooting where thirty five died they changed the laws in scotland where children were gunned down in a school in dunblane the change the laws and the recent attack on to mosques in new zealand brought an almost immediate change in gun laws so this new generation to really are the ones that are going to be the ones to bring change because they've grown up knowing nothing but the fear of school shootings their entire life columbine was twenty years ago. people who were born after columbine are now voting
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and that matters because they don't want this fear for the next generation they had a memorial service for columbine this week they wanted to send a message of hope and strength to the community which has lived with the tragedy every day for twenty years and the other places that no must also live with the same pain the same scars alan fischer al-jazeera and you can find out much more on that story and everything else that we have been covering on our website the address al jazeera dot com. now time for a reminder of the headlines on al-jazeera clashes have intensified close the libyan capital tripoli as forces loyal to the warlord holly for have to continue their campaign to take control of the city after us forces are battling the un recognized libyan government south of tripoli in the town of casts have been guests here the
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world health organization says at least two hundred twenty people have now been killed since after us forces launched of their offensive more than two weeks ago. our air force is providing fire support ground operations the enemy is trying to fling call forces from the back but they have failed in the face of the strength of our thought is and the experience of our forces you just become a war of attrition so districts controlled by the illinois. egyptians are voting in a three day referendum on constitutional amendments that could allow the fattened sisi to stay in power until twenty thirty if approved the cc's current term would be extended by two years any could stand for another six year mandate after that the changes were also given the power to appoint judges and members of a new senate for civilians and three soldiers have been killed in an attack on the communications ministry in the afghan capital kabul
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a suicide bomber targeted the building before gunmen opened fire on it and tried to get inside it took the security forces several hours to bring the situation under control the taliban has denied responsibility for the attack police in northern ireland have a rested two teenagers in connection with the killing of a young investigative journalist and they're warning of what they call a new breed of terrorists threatening the area politicians have called for calm after thursday's shooting added to concerns about the stability of the region's twenty one year old peace deal. and police in paris have detained more than one hundred twenty people after another saturday of yellow vests protests the arrests the fall of violence between police and demonstrators many of whom were angry at the huge donations pledged to repair the north of them cathedral it's the twenty third weekend in a row that the protests have taken place by those other top stories i'm going to have more news for you in half an hour coming up next it's the listening post.
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church. experience. on. a stage ought to be a matter of concern for only a few sessions in tents outside of. hello i'm richard gilbert and you're at the listening post here are some of the media stories that we're covering this week the case against julian assange is journalism at risk or is it just personal we'll examine the legalities the politics the way the story has been reported and we'll go down under to see how it's been saturday and i mean julian assange and donald
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trump and obstruction of justice the mother report the full version finally comes out in washington and poland the catholic priest who has many media empire packs a political punch when the news broke and julian assange was forced out of the ecuadorian embassy in london last week the debates set off on the airwaves online and in print went to the core of what constitutes journalism a sound just supporters denounced his arrest as well as the prospect of his extradition to the united states as an assault on freedom of information a potential threat for journalists around the world who expose secrets others maintain that wiki leaks traffics in raw data not news stories that is sanjay does not deserve the legal protection real journalists get in this legal case the devil is in the details of the indictment the fact that the u.s. department of justice chose not to charge a sanch under the espionage act as so many had predicted but under another statute
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the compute. fraud and abuse act look beyond the law however and you'll find that there is no escaping the politics of this story and the mainstream media's own role in it our starting point this week is a long. long standoff with international authorities is finally over he looks like. he has aged more than seven years this is a story about wiki leaks journalism and the long arm of american just reaching all the way into the u.k. and ecuador. the issues are complex and the mainstream media coverage leaned heavily on official talking points . why did you revoke the asylum. what did he do.
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having kicked julian assange out of its embassy and revoked his asylum in the ecuadorian government played on the media's appetite for the messy details the dirty laundry. in his underwear makings and scuffles with security guards we have to understand the government which. for many years eventually throwing away from him they needed to be a good explanation as to why and this part of that explanation they started spinning the media narrative by essentially linking to the media in the details and bets off a sundress personal life. and many other factors i can't really blame the media for repeatedly using the film clip of us i was being dragged out of the embassy with
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this big gray beard. like a very miserable failed prophet or something and i can't blame them for you know writing about how he treated his cats that's the way the media operates with does bother me is that they allowed the impression to spread and dated for hacking he was indicted for helping chelsea manning general specifically for allegedly offering to possibly crack a password that's not. whether what julian assange did can be described as hacking or not depends on who is doing the describing the headline in the department of justice his press release made its position clear according to a sanchez lawyer though what her client did was to try to protect his source. but the indictment specifies does it not that was communications between us and chelsea manning in which is alleged to have helped manning get the information out of the
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defense department computer system if that's true how problematic would that be for a scientist so the point i think is important about the charges is that while the accusation is about compute conspiracy to commit computer crimes or in india a headline hacking if you look at the factual allegations what it amounts to is a discussion about how chelsea manning can protect her identity while accessing material she already had access to. material manning had already provided wiki but a savage was looking for more telling his source curious eyes never run dry. what happened next is central to this case manning had security concerns fearing that if she went in for more she would be traced the sand suggested a different route into the system by cracking another password thereby covering manning straps his lawyers say he was simply protecting his source others don't see
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it that way. journalists often tell sources to you know hide their you know identity by using signal to communicate by using tor to access various things into the internet browser but what journalists are not trained to do what they don't do is they don't help crack passwords this is where assigned cross the line that all other journalists wouldn't do they wouldn't try to crack the password. for those following the wiki leaks story there was an assumption that any case against a savage would fall under the espionage act which criminalizes the acquisition and publication of classified documents by that standard all the other media outlets that published the leaked material could face the same legal consequences as a set but by basing its case on the hacking allegation rather than the dissemination of the documents and by filing the charges under a different law the prosecution can argue the charges against essential carry no
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implications for other news outlets. seems to me that what they're doing by using the act in question here the computer fraud and abuse act. is that the d.o.j. is trying to distinguish sounds from other mainstream media journalists and organizations such as the new york times and the washington post who publish the information ascension and wiki leaks wiki leaks furnish them with is that how you see this that is absolutely what the d.o.j. is attempting to do which is to distinguish between what julia songe is alleged to have done in terms of his communication which elsie manning and his publishing activities which cannot be distinguished in any way shape or form from the new york times the guardian to. all of these media organizations did but if you look at again if you look at the factual allegations of what they actually accused him of. those acts are the same acts that journalists engage in all the time. julian
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assange has time in the public eye has been tumultuous back in two thousand and ten when wiki leaks made its trove of classified documents publish it came under attack in washington primarily from the american right well and prosecute anybody that led to undermining the war effort and would that include going after wiki leaks. yes since then opposition to wiki leaks has grown to include voices on the left julian assange lost many of them over material wiki leaks made public prior to the two thousand and sixteen election revealing e-mails from inside the hillary clinton team that damaged her campaign to the apparent benefit of donald trump by the following year ecuador was under new leadership. the president who granted a sand asylum was replaced by lenin moreno a more conservative figure who wanted better relations with washington there was also the shadow of the sexual assault allegations from a sanchez time in sweden
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a decade ago that case is what led him into the ecuadorian embassy in the first place and while the investigation was dropped two years ago it remains a key. argument for those who wanted to send out and into court however none of that is material to the d.o.j. these legal case it was always built around the manning leaks and the question of whether what julian assange did was an illegal form of political activism or in fact journalism that served the public interest the accusations that he is not a journalist because he does not serve the public interest i find them quite ridiculous it's just impossible for a journalist create a coord the mainstream consensus feel to qantas journalists on that the finish and having journalists with access or additional documents which down allow us to see how lot of the narrative. i think of columns important journalistic practice i have
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complete personal discussed for joining i would never be a fan of his but if they had charged him under the espionage act for the mere receipt and publication the materials and nothing else i would have had to a standstill behind him if only because i don't want the government ever being the one to decide you are a journalist who's entitle to first one protection or not i'm less interested in the debate about who is a journalist and who isn't than i am in the question of was this an act of journalism that is constitutionally protected and there's no question in my mind that the song was to gauge the very valuable fact some of this is a bit strange some of it is is arguably bad journalism but what he's being indicted for was an act of journalism that was perfect. for discussing other media stories that are on our radar this week with one of our
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producers johannah hosts joe there's a tasty little julian assange and wiki leaks angle in the release of the unredacted version of the mother report into the trumpet ministration and allegations of russian collusion in the two thousand. u.s. elections will get to a center in a minute but first walk us through the way the u.s. media have been covering this story well three weeks ago when trump's hand-picked attorney general william barr first released his four page summary of the four hundred forty eight page imports the president insisted that he was pretty much cleared of any wrongdoing so it looks like the media had some reckoning to do after a few years of relentlessly pushing the collusion story but as it turns out our summary was selective at best but misleading at worst the report is actually far more damaging to trump than bar initially let the public to believe especially when it comes to the issue of obstruction of justice which mother said trump tried repeatedly and it's worth remembering that back in one thousand nine hundred
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seventy four during that watergate investigation obstruction of justice actually enough to lead to president richard nixon's resignation so the us media are understandably all over this story ok now walk us through the julian assange role in this well miller's report accuses the wiki leaks founder of lying about the sources of those thousands of democratic national committee e-mails that his side published in two thousand and sixteen the report provides some pretty compelling evidence that a son in trying to hide the identity of the russian sources who gave him. d.n.c. e-mails openly implied his source was seth rich a d.n.c. staffer was murdered in washington in two thousand and sixteen now the miller report also provides evidence a songe was in touch with his contacts in russia even after rich's death so he definitely has some explaining to do ok thanks joe we're turning to poland now and the story of a catholic priest and his radio station that lie at the heart of the country's politics for nearly thirty years today has been preaching and broadcasting from the
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pulpit his station does not attract particularly large audiences and the content can be inflammatory however politically about the punches far above its. weight anyone running for office in poland knows that the current populist government included today is such a divisive figure his many media empire is so polarizing that one journalist has written a stage play about this story it opened a few weeks back and much like read sick and self it's getting mixed reviews and listening posts flow phillips now from poland on the tangled web of politics power the priesthood and the press. thank you. december twenty fifth the twenty fourth anniversary of rodeo maria best. job you know it to do it does a year bill but it does the job for.
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december twenty sixth the twenty fifth anniversary of reading. the opposite. of president. gerry project over. december twenty eighth the twenty seventh anniversary of dr morris by the moments just. after this course of the. service ship i saw just advisor should. the prime minister the president the leader of the ruling party who paying their respects to one. tabby and with. the result of it is degrading that leader as the prime minister ministers of the polish government drive like crazy to the other side of poland all because it's what for the retake we should. there they
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are all holding hands dancing and singing celebrating gradual marina's and a very serene it's unacceptable in the twenty first century that one individual. can hold such power it's incredible. time to overemphasize the role today issued to plays in polish society according to a recent survey just seven percent of poles do not recognise his name and that's in large part thanks to the media conglomerate he created what started as a single radio station in the small mediæval town of torrent a three hour drive from the capital warsaw has since grown into an empire rather maria was followed on to the airwaves by t.v. trump a daily newspaper nash genya a media college a mobile network as well as a publishing outfit in part set up through his foundations in part through his
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religious order the order of redemptorist. when the station made its first broadcast in one thousand nine hundred one it found fertile ground coming just two years after the fall of the anti clerical communist regime for some the catholic church served as a rallying point for others it was their saving grace. for the guest a call for many people father retic offers a haven and creates a community to be here if you've interviewed them misha still should because what is what it was among his listeners are a lot of elderly people looking to find their living in the modern world sometimes the speed of today's world terrifies them. that i just visited a prostitute father would say give simple answers to all their questions hallelujah and let's move on. or give them a sense of security. the
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main reason why he is so well known and so relevant is because he provokes a very contradictory emotions his feel logical program which is also political creates a sort of sect in the polling. church. if i'm read your mother your listener i know straight away what my views are from i will vote for who my enemy is. there is a myth around father rejects wealth that has been propagated for many years even by public t.v. supposedly he drives a luxurious car apparently he was buying a helicopter that all of this gossip conjures up an image of a media mogul behaving in luxury in reality yes father riddick is a media moguls because he owns a multimedia operation but he is in fact a poor man he lives in a cell in your. behind me is the heartland a father of six media empire the sign he reads which means well turns out if you're
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a journalist not so much we tried to talk to by the red sox all of our requests were rejected according to a spokesman with sick when he speaks to media other than his own outlets and due to years of bad experiences with the media neither he nor anyone associated with this organization was made available as ridiculous self as said if you want to learn about us follow our media we don't need to speak to others it. became evident when our producer tried to talk to parishioners leaving great exactly church if you think. this sort of hostility can also be seen and heard in retakes media. is to my own media my own style of shoes a whole new world of these kids that you know wished i thought of the father with six contempt towards the european union is well known and i remember his statement in december two thousand and eighteen that the european union is actually the
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soviet union and he regularly makes comparisons between the two in that same month he also said the european union is like a gas chamber it is a commodity. there is a huge show on both red you maria and t.v. it's called unfinished conversations the guests on the show are openly answer semitic homophobic xenophobic. spacek to snare the priest on the show recently he said the satan possesses homosexuals and fights against us meaning that homosexuals are on satan side someone isn't satan so it's natural to ask what is their right to live without it looking at all of that you can ask. dr scott. father riddick and the priests in his order do come across as having a disrespectful attitude when it comes to gay culture but it's actually the listeners that are outraged you get listeners calling in incensed by this so-called
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homo culture and it's often the fathers that are then trying to tone down the statements. some of the output has sparked so much control to see the journalist martin college has written a play about riding in there and the potentially dangerous impact it could be having on some of the station's most avid listeners as well as on polish society and culture more generally its title. is a play on words of a traditional polish christmas carol god is ball has become enemy and sport. roger maria's most important symbol for building an identity is searching for an enemy that can be blamed for all misfortune. for the roots it is not just roger maria's leader he's the face of the operation today might even describe him as a trademark has become so powerful that no one in the roman catholic church can
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reprimand him no one can say hey stop this is not the vangelis he's too strong. one of the elements the play touches on is this close when a. between pulpit patrick has him power and politics in the past poland's elders within the catholic church did express their discomfort with with cigs involvement in politics though it did little to stop and when the conservative lore and justice party returned to power in twenty fifteen a new honeymoon period began. or joe without father rejects participation in helping to build a unified strong electorate and i looked at her things just like him thanks to the ideology he pushes on the airwaves the kind of indorsement the leader of the law and justice party received would not have been possible if the british eight preclude she'd be one of the. police commission believes they know the question.
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is for mired in a two thousand and eighteen press collected data on government spending and it showed that since october two thousand and fifteen father read six initiatives have received at least eighty million polish lotty twenty one million dollars from various ministries and companies it's a huge amount of money that's on the panels. for his followers this is money well spent for his critics would say is less priest more businessmen profiting off his loyal audience and the politicians who crave his support the very same politicians who go to great lengths to make life difficult for news outlets they don't like. venture forefathers that is to say that he has upset you so. controversial king of the pulpit proselytizing politics not just press.
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finally back to the julian assange and wiki leaks story one media outfit that has come to us and his defense is in the land of his birth australia it's not the state on broadcaster a.b.c. or any of the papers owned by the murdoch. it's the juice media production company based in sydney whose satirical material we have featured before the juice has a series of calls on this government this one looks at the collaboration of four governments in the case australia ecuador the us and the u.k. it was created and written by giordano nonny the language is as they say colorful we did a lot of bleeping but you'll figure it out we'll see you next time you're at the listening post hello i am from the british government with a fabulous announcement no i'm sorry we still haven't sorted out this show but we have finally managed to wanted criminals know the other one the wiki leaks founder julian assange on because america's. on from the ecuadorian government
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and i'm here to go through that our new president america to set up. a lever made up of fog of youth mr salinger and we feel compelled to state in the strongest possible terms that where america is we're grateful to all out for handing over david letterman i mean julian a fan who is wanted on charges of making us look like a war criminal which of course we are we have indicted the cues for the crime of helping you source to anonymously act the documents in the public interest otherwise known as good journalism we ask all of you to cooperate with us and dangerous preceded by focusing on how the use the bit of an. attempt to destroy your press freedom american empire.
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the right to adequate housing is adequate who decides what is as housing is not just about four walls and a roof it's about living in a place where you have peace security and most importantly dignity un special rapporteur. talks to al-jazeera. it's a door to climb to one of the holiest sites in bhutan tiger's mess ball astri seems to defy gravity every few cities is expected to complete the pilgrimage to ensure peace and happiness what it became a democracy in two thousand and eight be time put happiness at the center of all political policy inspiring the un to pass
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a resolution urging other nations to follow betimes example but how do you measure it ready brittany's happiness is what we ensure it's if it is quantifiable but by simply turning its pursuit into policy time has done what no other country has. refugees heading for a better life in australia to settle and send to remote islands indefinite detention in holistic conditions get a conscience in order to understand how to do this to smuggled out for each eyewitness accounts the main thing in doing for pain for asking not thomas hamill's to kill themselves witness chasing asylum. on al-jazeera. examining the headlines a collapsed economy believes that many people are struggling to survive setting the discussions people have looked away i. i think you can look that way any longer
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sharing personal stories with a global audience explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform the media's motivate and inspire. the world is watching on al-jazeera. hello i'm barbara starr in london these are the top stories on al-jazeera clashes in libya have intensified close to the capital tripoli as forces loyal to the warlord highly for have to are continue their campaign to take control of the city after us forces are battling the un recognized libyan government south of tripoli in the town of cassadaga sheer the world health organization says that at least two
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hundred twenty people have now been killed since after us forces launched their offensive more than two weeks ago the spike in violence follows the white house's revelation that president spoke the have to on the phone earlier this week while a spokesman for have to use forces known as the libyan national army says that they are increasing the pressure on the un backed government that. our air force is providing fire support ground operations the enemy is trying to flank of forces from the back but they have failed in the face of the strength of our thought is and the experience of. you just become a war of attrition so this just controlled by the oil and i. head has the latest now from the libyan capital. fierce fighting happened today according as the spokesman of have those forces described. have those forces lost the ground today as the government forces proceeded and took control of the strategic locations
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including the vinous cities of the disused international airport on the southern part of the capital meanwhile civil military units on the government of national called the you and the recognized government have joined each other forming a kind of defense could have gone as military commanders describe it they have managed to push have to his forces back beyond civil war locations in the southern outskirts of tripoli and also now they say that military commanders with the government say that they are now besieging military units loyal to the world have to have been here that area that's near the tripoli this used international airport meanwhile the spokesman of have to as was said that his forces received the air strikes from the government of national called all planes today near the city over the yan around eighty kilometers to the south from tripoli in the city of fallujah and there is a central command of running the battles in the southern outskirts of tripoli and
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also government of national called warplanes targeted. around one hundred sixty kilometers to the southwest from the capital tripoli that is there has the runways from which have to warplanes have been taken off from their targeting to target locations of the government forces on the southern outskirts of the libyan capital tripoli. egyptians are voting in a three day referendum on constitutional amendments that could allow up to five to stay in power until twenty thirty if approved the cc's current term would be extended by two years and he could stand for another six year mandate after that the changes would also allow him to appoint top judges and give the powerful military even more control. for civilians and three soldiers have been killed in an attack on the communications ministry in the afghan capital kabul
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a suicide bomber targeted the building before gunman opened fire on it and try to get inside it took the security forces several hours to bring the situation under control the taliban which has been holding talks with the u.s. has denied responsibility for the attack police in northern ireland have arrested two teenagers in connection with the killing of a young investigative journalist and they're warning of what they call a new breed of terrorists threatening the area politicians have called for calm after thursday's shooting added to concerns about the stability of the region's twenty one year old peace deal police in paris have detained more than one hundred twenty people after another saturday of yellow vests protests the arrests the fall of violence between police and them straighter as many of whom were angry at the huge donations pledged to repair the not for dame cathedral it's the twenty third weekend in a row that the protests have taken place with these other top stories al-jazeera
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world that welcome to italy is next of i. place . the blame.
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somewhat a little bit. on this not talk of missions out of this and that almost lost almost. bowman's it's been over by the us and i and there was. such a rush at us especially. and i'm not a muslim but no one in seven out of the bubble sort of. sham i don't know how to look on my own i'm a guy like commando the most played. get going on so was was an almost a minute i'm can show off for you with that element. of the not so fun. bottle for him as with the. plane. leaking down for
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a. little if anybody. leaks i don't. know me. yet. got. engineers you know how. that turns out. that any of it. good i'm not. gonna go
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do you want. me. to know. my. daughter. or your. mom you're going to.
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show us the warm up for the day i thought the sundays off. have been safe how am. i going to. go into work to your room with you more of the walsh. moral. is that i was a lawyer. don't. give the but then the market and you to
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the political left to that emptiness i do feel comfy in the fullness because the new feet get the ticket to the what we should be in the machine a good movie looked at them in the mood to. get. bin laden in the name and then a as i've seen him is ahead with that in my could be. you know we. must have made a game made them famous where in the meal. tickets you know a lot of them i could maybe give me give me a game of who actually there's enough incentive and why you. don't finish because it will fit and. confidence because it was good. but how about on my connection with. it's going to be. a
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little don't get it but it could go from then. you know do you know. from my. sure mom annoying. playing. such. a place. to. sleep knowing that there's a man much but i don't like a dog in the that i'm allowed to. work it out then oh i don't mean that. in ten
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minutes but at that then the vatican but. not. then i don't buy the. modern of a lot the. message that bag is about a mile clean and as emblematic of solomon in the midst of them enough on those in the medical. call open in this in those lay out i don't mind that it's wonderful and sin that a lot of the soul i had done one knew i had to but know that that i would give it. no longer has the. legal. duty. to.

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