tv Trust WHO Al Jazeera May 29, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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the strength of al jazeera is that because we have a stack of nap or cable with alex last and actually shared information with the al-jazeera team in chapter. i'm how he's seen in doha the top stories on al-jazeera the un security council is warning of a humanitarian catastrophe in syria's rebel held province of idlib as government forces continue their plan bartman it's hundreds of thousands of civilians are fleeing adlib and hama province is to escape the airstrikes or to price caps or james bays reports from the united nations. yet another meeting on the 5th time it's been raised in the security council since the offensive by the syrian government and russia started yet again the division among council members means
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there was strong words but no prospect of our action and for a top humanitarian official made this appeal can to this council take any concrete action when attacks on schools and hospitals have become a war tactic that no longer sparks outrage is there nothing to be said or done when indiscriminate barrel bombs are dropped in civilian areas ambassadors from the us and europe talked of war crimes and the need for accountability attacks directed against protected medical facilities are prohibited by international law and are in defiance of many security council resolutions including 216-522-6824 extension 49. there must be accountability for the forces and leaders who planned and conducted any such strikes russia was represented at the meeting by one of its deputy foreign
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ministers he said his country's military will working with the assad government to fight what he said with terrorists. the russian aerospace forces are providing the necessary support to the syrian government forces to force the terrorists out of the regions that are used to bombard russian bases and the positions of the syrian arab or somebody new to go he's right there are groups operating in international humanitarian law is clear it says military forces must show proportionality and as well as the armed groups there off $3000000.00 civilians living in the province james pays out at the united nations. serbia has put its soldiers on high alert after call 7 police made several arrests and it served dominated northern territory officers say they were targeting organized criminal gangs at least 19 people were detained there with no party
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holding an overall majority in the european parliament's discussions have begun over who will replace. as presidents off the european commission elections so the sensorites and sense of left parties to supports the 1st trial in the us against drug makers playing for contributing to the opium crisis is underway in the state of oklahoma it's a test case to see if individual states can hold pharmaceutical companies responsible for widespread addiction the state's attorney general accuses johnson and johnson of greed which led to an oversupply of the drugs. process leaders in sudan are increasing the pressure on the military to hand over power to a civilian one administration a 2 day nationwide strike is taking place protesters hope it will force military leaders into a new round of negotiations. white house adviser jared kirshner isn't morocco
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trying to drum up support for the american plan on the future of palestine and israel is due to present the economic part of the plan that's a conference in bahrain next month the palestinians are calling for an arab boycotts of the events activists in argentina have resumed their battle to legalize abortion crowds of supporters rallied in the capital for politicians are presenting a bill to allow abortions up to the 14th week of pregnancy a similar measure was narrowly defeated in the senate last year. and scott morrison has been sworn in as a stray and prime minister this new cabinets will include a record 7 women and the 1st ever aboriginal minister. and that's your answer dates the news continues here on al-jazeera after trust w.h.o. .
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the southeast sauce truncated because i thought i knew that she was n.p.t. you. allude to always you would have liked it to be and i'm ok again it would have a face lift which will defeat we'll just we'll still be just lost a lot more to the scruples of the good obsidian operatives. below the how we are who can then to me i was 16 if it took more time under real. wimpy to remember and thirdly they gave enough to some great escape thought i'd mention it at all because i'm tied because if we want to protect americans from a bullet here at home we have to end it over there one on one sars mers universal health coverage is the single most powerful concept that public health has to offer and we will not let the people down.
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document his own thoughts on his its own courts and beyond i don't know how suits him going. to be read my duty can all men through the media see duffy's on nog on his own soon to find nazi on an internet fight one seemed told me dob i don't often baccarat the mike season and end zone and he might be done it's not tundish nation . but 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 will and good condition that is why i'm travelling to the w.h.o. headquarters in geneva the american journalist robert parsons lives here for 20 years now he's been writing about the w.h.o. . until a few years ago every monday the opening day of the world hold for something that
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was a sumptuous reception at the w.h.o. given by the director general that was the great centerpiece body bed and talk to. it was it was a very good situation for holding everybody together in an informal setting. you know more than ever it has that sort of thing has been replaced by private reception at they are organized by industry. and i'm particularly pleased to have the 2 ministers of health they have the industry spends a lot of money for them it's 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 taken the decision to formulate and implementing. the suffering of millions of human beings. will be. many many thousands of lives.
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but. who has positively changed everything smallpox was completely eradicated which was the 1st time ever that a disease was saved each $1000000.00 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 was an english this was intentional francisco examiner anyway i was not happy with my coverage because it made them look. less than good. ever since the 1950 s. studies have shown that smoking damages the health but for decades the w.h.o. does little to oppose the tobacco industry. because.
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if i can look up that. you know that's why we're going to 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 988 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. the 1st and most important this organization has extraordinary influence on government and consumers and we must find a way to diffuse this. w.h.o.
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gets under pressure everyone is. better back a company's have operated for many years. with the deliberate group because of subverting the efforts. to control. instead. of to call. 3. dollars or so. to 3. so great that are talking to. one of these institutes is led by the american lawyer paul dietrich philip morris finances it with $240000.00 a year at the same time dietrich is
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a consultant for the w.h.o. 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 tobacco industry 6 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 2000 and sullivan's collaboration with the tobacco industry becomes public but he still continues to advise w.h.o. i mean with 2 department leaders commenting tobacco under the auspices of the w.h.o. we have a 0 tolerance approach as i said the director general says the tobacco industry is our number one and i would say and we wear that badge very proudly is franks i live in still a w joke and it absolutely and i mainly have it and we have
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a they can't because the names of all those persons are well known through the documents but now there are even countries considered to w.h.o. for example in 2002 let's say. 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 on tobacco control or infectious diseases or anywhere in the organization have to sign a declaration of interest but this means a lot of trust. they should be reviewed trust i think you should trust you trust you can't just start by already being suspicious about the people and their capacities to do things ok thank you so much. and also to most said no. they always say ok we had a problem and they were single persons who were corrupt this was this i live in the
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trees and so on. but i've always thought and i mean it wasn't really single persons and now it's over ok what you say that segments of. it when i was 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. and want to 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 2009 and one or swine flu in recent months you may be surprised to know this the odds are you didn't have a 2001 flu in fact you probably didn't have flu at all.
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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 vaccination. but only if the w.h.o. issued a pandemic level 6 alert. at the start of the 2009. and any given. reason who had fun. made yarden. subtle feat i learned in c.t.c. instill fear in. me but i can stick. it to get it that's you're not stopping to must. just kind of going to do nice to get the.
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most. swine flu makes considerable profits for the manufacturers in fact scenes in 1st quarter net profit setting at swine flu vaccine plant test for the gains francis the largest drug maker said it's not profit in the quarter rose to 1710000000 euros that's 6000000000 u.s. dollars from 1500000000 i tried 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 11 countries officially reporting 331 cases of influenza a h one n one infection with 10 deaths. where you have to 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 actually
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don't have done y. and a should not have done b. however think about the opposite what would have happened had the influenza killed 50 percent of the people. it infected and there was no vaccine. and then momentum of that outbreak then there were no no no you're not need to go to the answer given that we all know him as a poorly programmed to. make i meant. to eat them or not we are not a joke that is not meant to know conversely another year another year in low amazing. michael not a control upon them you include it on his solo in a maze there in need only putting it out on a group but who he says is the edge of a not he who cares. at the time i'm pregnant and i am airports crowds and all forms of travel public media exaggerates with words and
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images the danger resulting from swine flu. look is how a man would be in order to get so low pollute gondolas pretty girls and wonders get . their life and their lives and their lives quite dead yes he said it did i don't like guidelines and then there were below him is it could they have had to come to make level 6 also with the o in the finished no. i meant to go no the risk of dangers or l.s.a.t. the idea sent to them be a lot more to tell you that seeing clue yet as it did you deal. on that me. so this is. all. this was removed. before. people.
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chagnon shown if you're missing the identities mid-air pharma industry in so far and as c i know good and shia shrine are going to have a lot of us are there to let you know if you like the local to do like phone calls and also as a form of it is a law by its neighbors to the order already that's already installed just us of course would like to have a vaccine tomorrow we would have wanted to have it just city in 2009 miss kind is a member of the w.h.o. swine flu working group previously she had worked with a french pharmaceutical company trans g. 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. expand. the the the truth.
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him into. the working group on swine flu consists of 13 external consultants to report conflicts of interest ferguson declares consultancy fees from glaxo smith kline baxter and the manufacturers of the swine flu vaccines and medications not a problem for the. in 2007 albert osterhaus right on the dutch health commission due to his conflicts of interest he declares to the. but 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 his w.i. describing it as a group of independent scientists in fact it is partly financed by vaccine manufacturers. i can tell you they have no scientific meeting today organized
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that is not being spun the sponsored by industry and rightly so the industry is making the vaccine it's not the national institutes that are making the vaccines any longer industry is doing it 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 working with this you a korean scientists against influence i guess on the channels that particular organization because i saw it you declared this is a conflict of interest. and 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 so hugh you're at least you show what you do it was written there independent group of scientists yes when i looked under website as saw that it's funded by all. it's not funded by some money comes
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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 a substantial part of the funding comes from elsewhere from meetings comes from comes from european projects come from and there's a percent just coming from industry as well and that's completely transparent no it's fine to bring it up again but for me it's true. i don't get any hard figures. without any facts without transparency i can't make any progress here.
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this kind of a scam. it's keep. it. in the case of the pharmaceutical industry it's even more difficult for the w.h.o. to maintain its independence than with the tobacco industry on the one hand the dollar is dependent on the pharmaceutical industries for medication but the industry's financial interests mustn't damage the. area health one thing is clear
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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 w.h.o. in the 1990 s. all countries froze their membership contributions in the wake of the financial crisis. today u.n. organizations foundations n.g.o.s and industry contribute almost 40 percent of the w.h.o. its annual budget the 2nd largest source of finance right after the usa is the bill and melinda gates foundation. 30 years ago and starting microsoft there was we had a very ambitious vision a computer for everyone. now i join you in seeking to achieve an even more
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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. the w h o's annual budget amounts to about $2000000000.00 coca-cola spends twice that much on advertising alone and the hospitals around lake geneva spend $6000000000.00 a year. when it was founded the w.h.o. could decide how to distribute its funds itself now 70 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 the moana.
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they have a lot of delays says will tell of putting in very precise words at present w.h.o. a lot of the operational capacity of culture to deliver a full intelligence and public health risk will. be. what does the director general of the w.h.o. think about that. i want to ask her what constraints she is under. then i know i'm a little. everywhere it's a devastating impact. earthrise explore some of the efforts to recover what was lost from the syrian scientists safeguarding one of our most valuable resources these are important southpaws we have to make sure they are surviving to the refugees striving to come. exist with nature ok so what's going on there simulating what
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happens when an elephant life out to conflict on al-jazeera. examining the headlines a collapsed economy means that many people are struggling to survive setting the discussions people having to wait i don't think you can look away any longer sharing personal stories with a global audience explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform of the new views motivate and inspire. the world is watching on al-jazeera. al-jazeera while goes on a roller coaster journey in iran and discover how such an empowered refugee community itself believes and identity. i'd like to prove to the world cup. i will be able to prove myself to my towns from friends and myself. able to decide child afghan unity on
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al-jazeera. i'm hala mohit in a doha the top stories on al-jazeera the un security council is warning of a humanitarian catastrophe in syria's rebel held province all as government forces continue their bombardments hundreds of thousands of civilians are fleeing it live and how more provinces to escape the airstrikes. can't this council take any concrete action when attacks on schools and hospitals have become a war tactic that no longer sparks outrage millions of battered and beleaguered children women and men cannot wait for another geneva round to
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succeed serbia has put its soldiers on high alert after kosovo and police made several arrests in its dominated northern territory officers say they were targeting organized criminal gangs at least 19 people were detained. with no party holding an overall majority in the european parliament's discussions have begun over who will replace john quote younger as presidents of the european commission the elections all center right and center left parties lou supports the 1st trial in the us against drug makers blamed for contribution to the opioid crisis is underway in the state of oklahoma the state's attorney general accuses johnson and johnson of greed which led to an oversupply of the drugs the company denies any wrongdoing. process leaders in sudan are
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increasing the pressure on the military to hand over power to a civilian one administration a 2 day nationwide strike is taking place protesters hope it will force military leaders into a new round of negotiations. activists in argentina have resumed their battle to legalize abortion crowds of supporters rallies in the capital where politicians are presenting a bill to allow abortions up to the 14th week of pregnancy scott morrison has been sworn in as a stray and prime minister his new cabinet will include a record 7 women and the 1st ever aboriginal men to serve. now it's back to trust the rachel. june on al-jazeera people in power returns with an investigation into why india's capital delhi has some of the worst and pollution in the world 2 years
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into the blockade we look at the future of the g.c.c. crisis and its impact on life and the top join us for special coverage the big picture examines the power potential unprejudiced of ology official intelligence as it used to shape world leaders from the group of 20 nations will gather for the 14th g. 20 summit to be held for the 1st time in japan and in brand new episodes we follow people from around the globe who are risking it all just to make a living june on al-jazeera. all. and the filmmaker and i have a daughter. it is important to me that she finds the will and good condition. i can tell you they have no scientific meeting today organized that is not being spun the sponsored by industry and rightly so the industry is making the vaccines it's
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not the national issues 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. a lot of people. since i can't get to speak to market chan i meet one of her close advisors. a sink it's simply her own perception to sink that can be an external independent review. because then you have to say who is selecting this independent expert and who is controlling their independence and who is controlling the independence of those controlling the independence. of course he is right but he is wrong you know 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
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good as possible it will never ever be perfect he's quite right that he should be talking about his own i mean his 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 at the. so i know. this was very keen that any companies could have a strong mind. and
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catastrophe. in. the dangers of nuclear radiation is it for example keeping silent about a rise in cancer. it's difficult to find anybody who is allowed to talk the man. matsumoto. is also a doctor and has founded a convalescent camp for children from camp dominated area he was. was the other name of the new sample but it's met children with a. son or she not going out there so when i was about that i was helping at that. conclusion i will commit an amount of you know when you are. sure that they can meet with them and that you are much easier to scuttle with all it's not just. this kind of meat do you call the 100 there kid you were out
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can you go to. your dorm or most of the leaders joked it would all go no using the interview did it they must. as a result of experience after trying novel the w h l recommendations for iodine my revised in the year 999 under the supervision of the british scientists keefe baverstock and member of staff at the w.h.o. . 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 that we saw an astonishing number of children who had been operated for
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thyroid cancer quite young children so to see as we did on that day when i think it was 1112 maybe cases in one place at one time all having been operated was really quite extraordinary. we took it from there. russian colleagues i wish to short papers in the journal nature to draw attention to it after the papers were published w.h.o. asked me to withdraw the paper from nature. a paper published with about 5 or 6 other people all agreeing on this position. and crys lost me to redraw that they performed publication. after the being published price of. geneva yes it's written by.
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you is my career he said your career will be short and if you don't do this. did you have any contact with us w h o f that's a typical accident you know much a lot of them is does this resident of the guiding us get up and. study that the total you must. get us as far as it goes they should have it on 20 and. don't aim at the north and you go i say stay yeah it. was a successful tended to my stuff so i'm going to. so. then i thought it was all . neat. and all said so i found out i don't i mean my study is for you how. they mustn't stop. and then they
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stood up they could just as o'neill say oh that's come out of the top and they misunderstood what i had all all something you want to accomplish. i still find it beyond belief that khan was convinced that 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 200 kilometers from the nuclear power station. maybe what i'm. doing in the take i take.
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and there you don't know by that kind of man could we scare the mom. gave them on even that i but i mean. and if we have yet to see it come up with another mistake if i had there was needed to be one of these to sort either their children we know you've got a young man if my to see my team either movement there. to meet their high it was my mark when i got up and i not been wrong so no they were right there. and that's when it is going on all so i'm going to have them all so they move which isn't good for the. weather so you know whether it's going to do still a dual boot to you know letters in a studio cooks but who is right in plain thinking about this now and also you can see it so i just got out of the planes again so it would be an awful scene but what was really cool to do that without makeup i couldn't even think i'm was you know.
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what do you think today about i had an intake asked a nuclear accident well again it's more or less what was said in the video. people are not taking all it on as if it were the job of these authorities have thought so that. they have distributed are you going tablets prepositional them but have not yet ask anyone to take them taking i don't like tablets in the absence of. radiation is actually for you know you need to match i don't i'm taking iodine to the exposure and i stand by that from today's point of view was the exposure given at that time in most affected areas are not you know again that's almost 5 years ago and i can't remember the process from day to day and certainly we would have adopted through 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 was in the 1st 6 hours after
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a nuclear accident. that's in the air and it's also clear that it was not given in full. it's all its effects 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 12 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 a 100 fingertips i'm not going to speculate. but in general is it possible. to criticize nations. i'm i'm not going to say anything more about this what should i say anything or no this was a general question not in relation to. well let's move on to another topic ok is it
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getting much difficult for you now that w h o has travis. who says w in terms of most trust that you. the new york academy of science book this one. comes up with an estimate of 985000 deaths but that is world wide between 986 and 2004. and of course that makes a dramatic contrast with what the establishment says which is still around 50 deaths and possibly $4000.00 cancers as a as a final total. we have been in front of the world health organization headquarters in geneva for 7 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.
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as a health effects through committee so minister that role model is as much as an inch of the newsgroup that you used to but your admission yes immediate right. position our school students. really are very much here. in this case. the school doesn't. get prayer the right here. for. the rest of. us. and the. church to. rescue people so that there will be eventually destroy anybody just would have to be of tremendous gusty. since jan oh well we know that there are other diseases one of the diseases unfortunately. it's caused
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us killer disease infertility diseases other than cancer there's a book maybe you heard about it the academy of science which was reputed by the new yorker cademy 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 2011 or 12 they were puting it at the board and let me give you this this is from the journal of radiology monitoring where you ok the york academy of sciences which talks about all the flaws of that ok ok so i should also if you something in her book review by independent to me. yeah yeah. ok read this and then we meet again.
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hello this is me and frank what does it mean exactly and that the new york academy of science repudiate the channel. the editor tells me that the academy never repudiated the book he permits me to record the phone call and later he withdraws his permission isn't the able to speak freely either. perhaps the publisher of the chernobyl book can help me. orning good morning the original contact person at the new york cademy of sciences you know agreed to publish the book and then there was a big draw to the new yorker cadmium a 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. is the influence of the nuclear industry. the international atomic energy
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agency i a e a wants to promote to safe and peaceful use of atomic energy. an important and viable option for many countries in. the w.h.o. is concerned with health these are different priorities but the 2 organisations are working closely together. for example together with other un organisations they are compiling a report on the health consequences of her novel. a. critical view. and they. tended not to invite critics for their
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2 reports one of. the thing was that the word be whole series of informative is going on between w. h. o. and i i quite senior levels very senior levels. and they would. predetermined what the line they would take. that's why they had a w.h.o. stroke. meeting in riyadh 2005 but afterwards with of the far to put the line across this is a this is what we're going to do the trouble was that many many people came. near out works at the. 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 1st meet. is like
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a lot of them said i'm saying that they're just being. this is because they love one of their own. and then. 1000000 this is there but this is because they are looking at a broader patch of population 1000000000 that's you think you can hide 1000000 but seriously yes but do you seriously trade course you have more the only difference to how can you seriously believe that accident caused 50 deaths. but it's still under. 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 30 and 60000 altogether
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worldwide future death because the plume from chernobyl went right round the world . not hemisphere and whiles the concentrations were low far far away it doesn't matter because the many many millions of people there are 600000000 people and europe alone. and they were all affected even if it's all kinds of it is at sea on the faint that's you'll see even 5 caning if you hadn't mentioned that it often in regular in the soviet union.
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we were not using cancer mortality figures but rather incidence is because as you know most of the cancers can now be treated in therefore that will not work valid the associated i don't know whether you have not is 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 as from my you you are not on the best of the science which is the case i don't think they were there to represent any interest i mean it was criticize that there was no color just on our radio biologist also no scientist who published critical articles on has effect of nuclear energy but when you need to do this equate poor it is not a question of printing an activist a from the left with an activist a from the right when it's a question of science what's happening is that there are groups outside that they want to use those stevens to say you see nuclear energy is is bad is dangerous
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why with want to stop the use of the nuclear energy which is a different cause doing and saying it could also be the other way around that nuclear 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 recognized that there is a need for a. 35 institution that would sense i mean with weight. and powerful institution it would be the best for all of us and i will fight for that. for the rest of my life. convenes public health officer and i think my record credits that we need to fight and not afraid.
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a scientist in the united states this past spring maybe observation that this generation of children. is the 1st generation in modern history. it is 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. right it's over to you folks who would like to start the round of questions. is it on. yeah ok 1000000 frank open media it's
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a question to dr chan we have just learned that area if you. are and climate change global health challenges but i am asking myself how can we meet. if it's constantly losing power in pardon no 9 nations may want to week. one could even compared to the titanic i would say so isn't it your response have been a dr chan to step down before the end of your 2nd term an audit to signal to the well that your organization your ship is sinking. you as an excellent question if i tell you that big toe as an organization only 30 percent of my budget is predictable funds other 70 percent i have to take a head and go around the world to beg for money. and when they give us the money
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hello there we've had some more severe weather over parts of the u.s. and we take a look at the satellite picture we can see this area of cloud here that stretching its way towards the east and it's across this where we've had most of us who are natives in the last 24 hours will say there's likely to be some more severe weather too as we head through the next couple of days again stretching along this line here towards the south there's also the risk of seeing some thunderstorms here as well that could give us some very large hail and maybe some tornadoes as well and this dangling leg is still with us as we head through the day on thursday to the southeast it's pretty hot atlanta right up at 33 degrees further west it's court force in l.a. with a maximum of 24 a bit further towards the south and there's plenty of showers here they're pretty active at the moment through many parts of cuba jamaica and into his band yet we're also seeing a little area of low pressure that's just off the coast of costa rica this is going to stick around over the next few days so there is going to be a lot of heavy rain across this whole region and there is likely to be more in the
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way of flooding and potentially some landslides to be further towards the south and we've also got some wet weather ahead mostly over parts of paraguayan into parts of brazil this system is still with us just sinking south with as we had 3 the day there's also more rain making its way towards chile what day for santiago. in 2012 al-jazeera traveled to iraq people here are definitely scared to speak on camera they're saying that if they talk to us they think they'll be arrested down the line to take the pulse of a country ravaged under us occupation some of these graves are completely destroyed it's one of the most holy and sacred sites in all of iraq turned into a battleground between the mighty army the americans we want returns to iraq after the americans on al-jazeera.
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al-jazeera. this is al-jazeera. hello i'm hella mohit scene and this is the news our live from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes qantas council take any concrete action. syrian forces pound rebel held edler province killing civilians and forcing the un to suspend some aid operations. serbia puts its forces on alert after kosovo police raids several looked.
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