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tv   [untitled]    June 8, 2021 11:30pm-12:01am +03

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those connections, ah, oh, be the hero world, right? ah washer. in the news non tater, and under the top stories on our era record, not it has been described as one of history's most depraved and barbarous figures. as a court confirmed his role in genocide and war crimes, the former bosnian general was appealing against his conviction. a bit, the leading judge said, was dismissed in its entirety. the butcher of bosnia, he was found guilty of 2017 of orchestrating atrocities during the war. in the early nineties, in particular, found him responsible for the massacre in the town was trevor nita,
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by more than 8000 muslin men and boys were murdered. for we mixed feelings here in the hague, i have to say. not only was the appeal by the defense, lawyers of not each rejected, but also by the prosecution. so relatives of victims who are gathering here at the us court say that there's a very much disappointment, that's not only the channels tight. and so, but a lisa has been recognized, but the genocide and other parts of both have been rejected hasn't been called agenda side. and they say that's not fair. they have been lots of people who died during that part of the war as well, which was before the 1995 s a. but anytime massacre, more than 800 people have been arrested worldwide after a sting, left them using phones that law enforcement could monitor. the operation lead file straight in and u. s. agencies, targeted, organized crime groups and drugs,
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gangs. millions of dollars in cash and 30 tons of drugs were seized in rage covering asia, europe and the middle east. us officials had paid a convicted drug trafficker for access to a customized and supposedly secure messaging app, letting them gather evidence. us vice president comalla harris says her country's ties with mexico are entering a new era after meeting the mexican president under manuel federal door. the other one, the leaders agreed to try to lower the spike and migration to the u. s. from central america, by attacking poverty. the number of families and on the company line is from central america. as accelerated since president joe biden took office, mexico is detained at least $91000.00 people traveling north since the start of the year. is up stories do stay with us out of the world continues. next, i'll be back out of that with the news to join me then if you can. thanks for watching. oh
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i i the double faulted and again the will, the fight between israel and the countries and during the wall a be to keep the sheep, to the 4th of near the 4th of a 4th aid and broadcast that the message is for police. so people who stop the woman in think with the bullying and speak with our deal, but he said it was like, it was realistic because he e could see the massage in the plains and the, the plane are being heated and falling to the sea and everything was killing the other, but they didn't touch him. they didn't touch the votes for face after the war.
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return to broadcast again. have you got permission from you guys for the canal? not yet, but i never ask for permission. i wouldn't let you go through last time. why would they change their minds now? i think the better climate right now, and i think what we're doing right now is really the then it's of people, the people effort. it's a gesture of goodwill, with flowers that they along we remember young or at the day of a lot of violence. maybe we can help change up the my presenting law and control of this is been a minion piece, banner minion, piece, echo alpha, charley to remain in the job in immediately leaving now. thank you very much. good
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morning. ah, caroline could have got involved with politics in 1970 the station did, but only for a short while, but most of the time it was here just to play music. the chances are, had the station really got political, had overstepped the mark. then as had happened in 1970, it would have been jammed by, by government, probably any government. and they, you know, if you are an embarrassment to the government, they do the utmost to close down. caroline knew how far to go, but didn't overstep that mark. and until the eighty's, when the dutch invaded the ship,
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they were reasonably safe. we kept ourselves to ourselves and just played the music . and that was the intention. clive gregson american cars very much like well 30 minutes away from age and we have colleen, glen stone. thank you. late summer, 989. the ship came out from england and spoke to this ship and said, we want you to shut down and switch off, go away. and if you don't, and something else is going to happen, which is far more severe than our am nice request. and of course, the law of the sea is you can't board a ship in international waters unless you are invited to do so. so our thought was, well, then what they have in mind. they went bullet ship because international law says you can't do that. the next day, a very much larger ship horizon tied up alongside and it came from holland. and on
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board with dutch police and coast guards. and in holland, the dutch police and coast close, they were guns, and there are a lot of them. so they climbed on board and nobody's going to confront a uniform man with a gun. and so they took ship over. now my contention is i had no right to do so because they had no warranty. because you are only a policeman in the country where that power is awarded to the 2nd you are in a foreign country or no country, you know the policeman anymore. but you are a man with a gun. and they wrecked and stripped every part of the ship during the course of the day. and took all of our equipment away and left the ship behind. but the crew were invited to give up and go ashore and they said, no, we won't, we'll stay. and we start all over again. what happened? and this is the most wonderful moment for me really to come back out on the caroline ship into the studio, play wonderful. all vital. again. this is what radio was all about. it was
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a great adventure. yes, i was aware that i was breaking the law, but i don't make a habit of breaking the law. and if the worst thing i ever doing, my life is sit on a rusty ship and play a beatles record. i haven't got much of a problem with that. my conscience is clear. i wasn't that kate, on rough weather, out at sea. we did have some really, really, really rough weather. but equally we had black. com days. beautiful, sunny days. so people trying to go on cruises, we want to ship like music sitting in the sun. when the sun shone, it was lovely with friends, all doing the same thing. they all want you to be part of radio, caroline. unless weiss, if you work for radio station, why not work for one with the most famous name in the world, we will use to discuss the music that we played. so the great thing with everybody who was on the ship was if you can imagine a radio station on land, you know, somebody comes through the door through the program,
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go home. now the person comes through the door to the problem that i'm here. we doing what we're doing and record library. we used to sit around and talk about music. you know, what god is into music when new records used to come out to the ship, we used to get a lot of new records every week being sent to us, even though the record companies weren't supposed to. but id because they knew where the listeners we actually listen to what the listeners want as well. that's what that was. the beauty and the success of caroline. it was the listeners controlled us. we controls the listeners, that beauty of the station ah a be paid the hell of a price being jade and i visited him in jail. not for the radio station, but for his so called illegal meetings with p. o lee this. soon after it became. thanks god legitimated to meet below people. but
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in this stage it was still is not ready as after the brainwash against the piano is what it was not ready to to for such a step. he understood very early on. the piece with egypt was not in english. the main issue was peace with other things. and a, although the voice of pieces no change because of that visit his own personal activity became more focused on the settlements and he'll get by the tories. the meeting with a pillow. so i think that it was this credit that he was a moment of achievement for him. you know that he contributed directly to this piece, but he understood many other is really not. and then let, this was not the whole picture that was still
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a lot of work to be the well, it's your thing with caroline when everything's going well. something real bad happens. and when everything seems so terrible that there is no means this means a possibility of rescuing it in something good happens. but the worst time was in, in round 990. when we absolutely ran out of money, we couldn't grow across the signal. the ship was in the middle of the ocean. the living conditions were appalling. nobody should have been expected to live like that. but people didn't live like that because it meant some power to radio, caroline, so continued, and then the ship we ship wrapped in a part of the coast, where if you get ship repair, you just die. and it is part of the coast were 250 ships have been shipwrecked and
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no one is survived and those ship it survived. and when i had this is in the process of happening. me having put people on the ship, encourage them to be there. i thought, well, this is good. i'm probably going to be responsible for the death of 6 people with all the repercussions it will follow up to that. but astonishingly, in, thanks to the british. therefore, there were no death, and only 6 crew rescued without injury. then it seemed absolutely certain the ship with just the last gray cart but st. but it was the only ship of $250.00, which was rescued and brought in shore. and at that point we had a ship, but nothing else. so a choice was okay, you know, we've given a best shot. this will go and get on with our lives or, you know, i think we start over again and we did
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the news with my 9 year old in music station. it's not exactly 9 o'clock the u. l. o v. a watch time boulevard caroline. ah, it was a david and goliath. you know, you have big brother. the government trying to stop is all the time. and to be fair, they could have stopped us. but we had a lot of friends within the government law, friends within the police who just turned a blind eye. cuz i've been here since i've been working on shore. and i worked for legal radio. when i 1st came ashore, i remember talking to a policeman and he said, we have bad things to do the chase thing, jay's up and down the river. we got criminals to catch you. will you not as soon as playing music and most of the police and most of the government listen to anyway?
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i think that's what kept it going. the fact that we shouldn't have been there, but we were doing no harm. you know, anybody who worked on the station, if we were doing any harm, we went agenda. that was it that we were entered, we were there to entertain and not not to do any harm. and we brought about a change in radio and british radio. and again, that was, you know, that was what we, what we were there for to change british radio. we've done it. but we're still here . you know, we've got a license now and that's why we're sitting in, you know, if you like a river, not in international waters anymore, but still doing it on the ship to say thank you because there's so many lists. caroline is not caroline unless it comes from a ship. so for 2 weeks, for a weekend, every month we do everything from the off the original radio caroline ship sank. me, amigo, i got a call to say will you come at work for the voice of pace and i feel, yeah, cool. and then i'll initially, when i was going to go out there for 3 months,
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but enjoyed it so much that, you know, i stayed to 9 months and we used to broadcast them from the town of 8th. but we were broadcast of the whole of the middle east. so again, we kept everything very short, very sharp, because a lot of people can understand english, could they? you know, so, and that was why we kept the billings ratio shop there that played pop music. because at the time i was there 980 at the time, i don't think there was many stations playing music. and that was what we used to do with the baby said doesn't float. so that's the 1st difference. but you still work with people who were committed to bringing good radio, but it's a different sort of radio to the caroline radio here on the ship. you. it's part of your life. you live on the ship, you eat on the ship, you sleep on the ship. you are part of the ship's crew. whereas with the b b say, you wake up at home, you get a new car, you drive to work, you do the program. you go home again and once you've got friends there and the
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guys, they are very friendly and a nice guys to, to work with that as, as around the world, any radio station. but you don't sleep with them. you don't eat with them. you don't talk with them other than with your program because it's then time to go home again. and that's the difference with caroline. you. you live sleep 8 radio on the me amigo, which was the one of the original radio. caroline ships, the one that's in 1980. that was probably the most challenging because literally every day it was so all with the ship we used to spring leaks. you know, so technically the boat was thinking. so every day we like where there's water coming in, pump it out, but it just became like one of those daily occurrence. so you just got used to it. but there was one particular night where at the time you think to yourself, yeah, it's windy, it's rough. we're in a situation here where, you know, like we were walking around in the record library on the b, m eco, which was downstairs. and the water level was coming out. so about here on the legs
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. so, you know, it was like, do we call a life boat? don't we call a life that we go? now let's, if we get the pump started, we got the pump started. pump the ship out very cold, but then she started to ride again and didn't take. we still take a water, but we are pumping water faster than we were taking it. and we used to fill holes in the bottom of the ship with a piece of wood, not going through the hole that made it bigger. stop the water then concrete around . but that was all why patching up the boat. and i suppose the next day that was myself, geico, pretty chicago, was our chief engineer. and another guy we sat at the mess room table. and we actually said that was probably the closest we've ever come to losing our lives. but at the time, you didn't realize it, you know, because there's so much going around and you had, you don't have time to think about it. but even thinking back to, to it now you think that was probably the closest law for me to come to lose your life the
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i just love it. the chances are you heard that for the very 1st telling on this radio station many years ago, smith group because we're not here on cower life. you know, when you turn on the radio on and suddenly a radio last out there speak or do you think while i haven't heard this for ages and ages and ages, this is that moment. but the whole latitude is changed over the years. following on from what radio caroline started, it has taken an awful long time. i mean, here we are now with a license for the government license, but why couldn't they have given that to caroline 50 years ago? a just seems that they were worried about something that really they shouldn't have been worried about. and perhaps that's the way with governments around the world they, they worry that they haven't got control. and the government didn't have control of caroline. but i had nothing to fear because we, we really wanted to play music that we weren't spies, we weren't cherish, we weren't bad guys. we just wanted to stay on
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a ship and play music and some politicians. some politicians still even today find the hard to understand. that's the other thing. it didn't matter how bad the weather got. you never fell on safe on the ship, even on the me and me go. you never fell on safe on the ship you shortly. so it's because we call it the lady and you say the lady's looking after she's looking after is and again, something we often talk about is in the history of caroline, which was 964 to 2019. nobody's been, you know, seriously her or even worse killed yet. we've had a few injuries, but that's it. you know. and when you consider what we went through to keep a radio station on the air is remarkable. very good morning to morning madam special. good morning. sunshine, a perfect, so for the tuesday morning, the 10th of june, like the legal piece is the lead. and the voice is peace. is the station 24 hours
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a day. it was quite ready because the whole project of a be was finally was it was a very said and very said ending personally, his live and in a very, very said way lonely for gotten in a wheelchair is didn't appreciate his men as he deserve. and also the sheep go into financial travers. nobody was there to help him. there was all slow and everyone saw that there will be peace without a be not that which was obviously not true. and in a certain stage he gave up and made the sheep sink. there were very few listener, then it was all dying. and it's a very, very sad story. i mean, it's a, it's a good story is a good opening and many good years. but the end, both of the both and of
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a be both very tragic, very said and shouldn't be like this. it should have been different. they would know to appreciate the heroes of peace and not only heroes of war, then able to be more remembered. and these bo, to may be broadcast until today. we're going to also have done a for too many times work on the ship of the vote, while a lot of the go to prison lost a lot of money. i lost all the funds i have i think ship ship has done the job registration. the whole purpose was to bring the
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2 parties of different off of each other and all this other talking that the government that was i think that by and large it is a lovely fairy tale. was there unhappy ending at a b was a dreamer. he was not taking seriously enough as he deserved people liked his parties. people liked his life, he was a bohemian, also we men foods parties. he owned the restaurant. i mean, he was really a, a social project. but we need to get it go to politics and he was even elected for the apartment he was running for the farm. and but it didn't take him seriously enough. and i wish that is there with taking him more serious than he take by the end of the day. it is one of those color,
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4 aspects of the conflict. but unfortunately, it's not the story of success because we know how the both ended. we know how a be and then most of them for working today. and whenever i think about a b and i think about him quite often, i must say. whenever i think about him, i feel deep sadness for the sake that not only he deserved more success between the re lease and the palestinians obviously deserved more people like a be who really could have changed the picture. but never did a b as many, many friends and find it. he was quite a lonely person. he had those and you will be parties in the hilton every year to commemorate his flight to egypt any. had the dennis at home almost every friday or
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every 2nd friday, which i attended and all the who's who came or so there. but as i said, find it. he was lonely. ok, let's put this is a song we cannot possibly and without the song i don't i hear it. ok, we oh, this is a song i think we should all thing. so let's see if we have the broadcast of the voice of peace. after more than 21 years. thank you all for all your support. all the thank you and show every oh t ah a to be we
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are i and most people will never know what's beyond these. the deafening silence of 100000. how it feels to touch danger every day. most people will never know what it's like to work with. every breath is precious. with fear it's not an option. but when most people
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use hello polar air has really settled in across australia. we're dealing with very blustery conditions as well. so adelaide saw wind gusts, 95 kilometers per hour when i show you where all the rain is on wednesday, toward the south east of victoria, south west of new south wales. so some heavy rain could see to 300 millimeters of rain here in the days to come. snow levels are dropping to about 900 meters. so it's not just snow for the australian elves. and you know, we could even see some hail mixed in here. but very cool air, thanks to that polar influence toward new zealand, high pressure in charge. so the translation is a lot of sun. wellington, we've got you in for 16 degrees and that's a few above average asia pacific. we're seen our plum rains are going to start to migrate further to the north. so i'll show you a thursday and one sec, but 1st heavy rain for beijing on wednesday in a batch of what weather? just west of wu han. now here's thursday. see that organisation over the east china
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see just a firehose of rain that we're dealing with for the korean peninsula, and that will eventually make its way into the southern sections of japan. later in the week, southwest monsoon brings us heavy rain along the western gadson. our mon soon reins really dropping a lot of rain as we hit toward me and mar, we have to watch for the very real risk of flooding. the news reporters retreat in a brutal civil war. if a comment hadn't been that, the israeli invasion would not have been so well resorted. the commodore had become a journalist center. you could be in a safe enclave and then you went out into civil war. i started off leaving this other grand street. the commodore hotel, the next room i was in, was underground in a tiny prison. so as a hostage, a route to commodore war hotels on al jazeera, something was going to change,
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has anything really changed? this is systemic violent that needs to be addressed at its core. no way against coded variance. know what to say until we are all looking at the world as it is right now, not the world. we like it to be. the devil is always going to be in the house, the bottom line when i was just there on june on, i just either who will take half honeys plate will bring you the latest from ron's presidential election. on june 18th, the bottom line returns to discuss current developments in us politics and how they affect the world member state to gather in the u. k. on june 11th for talks on key issues at the g 7 summit, a new series portal brings us award winning digital content to our tv audience. and the sentencing of derek children will be handed down on june 25th join us for loans coverage. as the historic us court case reaches a conclusion. june on our jersey,
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at the state of oman, city of the most of the region, gulf and big eastern end of the era peninsula. if you look at the raven peninsula as a whole, the essentially to the ancient countries to the east to west. it's sometimes known as the switzerland of the gulf because of the important regional role plays in the gulf co operation council. the gtc platform on long history is not well known outside the gulf region before oil was discovered in 1962 fishing and prototyping words, main sources of income. in this film, we go back over the last 500 years of all 90 history of tribe boris. rebellion and colonization, and explore how and why man still plays an important regional role today.
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unprompted and uninterrupted discussions from our london broadcast center on our 0. ah . this is al jazeera ah, hello, lauren taylor. this is down there and use. i live from london coming up for my boss, news commander rudco, manage loses his appeal against his genocide conviction. and life sentence was an 800 arrested worldwide in a global thing where crime gangs were sold encrypted phones. the police could monitor.

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