tv [untitled] June 11, 2021 9:00am-9:31am +03
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not the mother failure to protect on jesse the, investigating the use and abuse of power across the globe on al jazeera. ah hello, i'm down jordan dough. the quick reminder, the tough stories here now just are some of the world's richest countries, are bolstering the global fight against coven 19 u. k. prime minister barak johnson says g 7 nations will donate a 1000000000 corona virus vaccines to low income countries. he spoke on the eve of a lead us some hours after us president joe biden promised $500000000.00 doses over the next year. our diplomatic editor james base has more from cornwall in the u. k . the leaders of 2 countries that often talk of this special
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relationship president joe biden, the prime minister boris johnson examined a copy of a document signed by the us and u. k. in the dark days of world war 2, the atlantic charter paved the way for the treaty that created nato. and the late charter that now governs the you and the 2 leaders believe as a parallel with present times the world needing renewed direction. after the pandemic and they offered some fresh support for countries, have been struggling to get doses of vaccine. the united states is providing these half 1000000 doses with no strings attached. let me say it again with no strings attached. our vaccine donations don't include pressure for favors or potential cassette concessions. we're doing this to save lives. great, great pleasure. present. welcome to call. despite the smiles, there was tension on one from northern ireland president biden's officials who
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expressed deep concern about the growing dispute between the e. u and the u. k. about trading arrangements put in place after breakfast. they fear it may derail the historic peace deal, signed in 1998 the good friday agreement. coby 19 has changed the world since the last g 7 meeting in barrett's in france almost 2 years ago. for this 1st in person, high level meetings, since the pandemic started the lead, as also will no longer have to deal with the trump back to the confrontational manner and unpredictability of the former president and nerve. the u. s. is close to stylize. it's hard to overstate how significant that is i've been talking about . so i a deep sigh of relief. i think for 2 reasons. one is that it's a very different american president. it is in one sense, a return to america that want to leave that thinks diplomacy matters, that invests in the overall direction. president biden's foreign policy is clear.
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it's the buying close allies and partners and then with the united position deal with problems. and those countries that don't share the u. s. is values. and that's exactly what he's doing with this trip meeting the g 7, nato, the e u, and then sitting down, face to face with the russian president vladimir putin. james bays al jazeera saint ives. the charges say the children's and the tax on minimum schools are on the rise as armed forces continue to occupy educational facilities across the country. the u . n. is calling for an end to violence against children. france has announced an end to its dairy road in operations against groups in africa, to his region. president macro says french troops will continue to be part of a broader global effort to stop the violence. the humans warm the threat and 50000 people. and if you appears to grad region, either facing or living in famine, fighting broke out in december and europe in government forces into the region to
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confront local leaders. the u. s. s. a. move sanctions on 3 former iranian officials and 2 companies previously involved in trading. petra chemicals, a us official told the reuters news agency. the move was a routine step and unrelated talks aimed at reviving the iran nuclear a claim of voter fraud and peruse. presidential election is threatening to cause weeks of political wrangling, socialist petrocca. theo hold a narrow lead of a conservative rival, keiko for g. morry, after some days poll for more he says 300000 votes were suspicious, but as offered no evidence. and brazil supreme court is allowing the copper america football tournament to go ahead despite the corona virus pandemic. the 10 nation event is you to kick off on sunday at the national stadium in brasilia. those but headlines and you continue this year now 0 opt out of the world statement. thanks so much and bye for now. i
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ah ah, this is radio caroline on 199 1st commercial radio stations. ah guys 1925. radio grove, costumes becoming very influential in the government. as a day, i realize that this is a dangerous thing to have in the hands of private companies and individuals say prohibited anyone else seeing the same radio signal. so the only people who send radio was worthy british broadcasting corporation, which effectively with an arm of the government of the day i,
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i and as it had a monopoly, there is no need to us to population what they'd like to hear. so the people running a corporation who shows in for their gravitas, several, we'll, we'll get the paper what we want, the things that they felt population wanted to have. but quick question were consulted, and we didn't accept that music was very important to us. but there wasn't music, but in the early sixty's i found a ronan realize that you can search event the regulations by just going a little bit outside of british territory and putting a radius ocean on a ship, hence ships like this. and that was the foundation radio caroline, this is radio caroline, on 199, england, 1st commercial radio stations. my name simon de. whether you for the next 2 hours
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1st went off the top of the pile valley's rock and robin from somewhere in the mediterranean piece. love me. and the voice of the 4th time that i heard the station, the voice of police was in the sewage. when i was sailing with my husband, i used to, you know, at that time you had the radio, so i used to go to the channel where they used to. i used to listen to the voice of peace. and that's how i came to know that there was a radio station called the voice of peace. and it's only after i make a be, did i make that this was a gentleman? and this was a ship and i think to date, there's nobody who brought gas treadmill music. they may be, you know, i did was, it was really good music. there of the bolt broadcasting from the
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sea was a result of indeed because he couldn't get license here in israel. or maybe he didn't even try to get a license. by any case, once you broadcast on the c, you are a free bird. you can do whatever you want and then open a radio station at those times. you needed all kinds of regulations and from the sea, you don't need all those are relations and therefore he chose to do it from the sea . and he was not the 1st find out the last one, by the way, the settlers, and tried to any to imitate him and do the same years after him. then i was the people are criticized, but we are not here as israel is very people. and the good that we have come from arabs and jews at the same time. and i think we should stop this whole business. you know? i think you know, i am already and what the ship stands for. the current piece is the word
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and the voice of peace is the station 24 hours a day. the news, when when caroline started in britain, we just had the baby. see, there was no radio competition. and, and if you were a music producer, you couldn't get you new music played. and that was why ronan riley started the radio station to get the music played on the radio. i mean, random is not averse to making money running very much like making money and using other people's money. but because of his upbringing, his real motivation was to settle the score. but he was blocked in doing what he wanted to do. he has to remember that his father was an irish republican,
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and his grandfather was killed in the 1900. 16 uprising where the irish rose up against the british, occupying island. so there was a rebel street there and which is why, of course he started, caroline easter $964.00 because it was eastern $916.00. that briefly the rebels took over dublin and took over the post office and says upcoming placements. and for the british, so this was his way of saying, i mean, i'm evening the school with the british government in, in a peaceful way. ah. all his life, i think a be was obsessed with what he had done in 48 in bomb, according to what he said he had bombed. but it's been a village, is as
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a volunteer and easily new air force and the guilt feelings accompany team. for many years and where the motivation to change his way and to start a new start in his life, a new approach, he realized that he had done was wrong. and this was really this us which had fewer he's motivation to compensate to, to, to ask for forgiveness for what he had done in 48. i wish more israelis will felt the same deal feeling the um i but he's very interesting the despite the fact that he was such as anxious to begin with,
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he suddenly not suddenly probably in the process changes and becomes more and more critical. first of all, he does not believe in these really mantra. there is no one there to talk to in the world. he drives individually as to, as if i look to fly to egypt 3 times it will do just that the distance did not take him seriously. they thought he was a clown. oh i i as they sent him back immediately after he landed in my leah and twice he lendlease my lawyer. and once he came with a slight air egypt from,
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i think these really were very cross and angry with these initiative. this was part of his attempt to bring egypt and israel closer. and i think this was the 1st step in his stance formation from a very pious zionist, into someone who was no critical about the jew state, he setting hotel and watched and what to see. and listen to the radio. people, people were speaking about the conflict and about the water things about to come. and he felt that this would be a way to speak to people to warn them about the consequences of war. and he thought it possible to broadcast, not for the oil, but for me as well, but maybe from the see from a ship in to see radio station and he said, and we call it the voice of peace to speak with people and to come them he bought the ship with the donation he got from the dutch people with their generosity and
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took it to new york to transfer the ship to a radio station. it took him almost 5 years to fulfill his dream. it to transfer the small sheep into a radio station more than regular search for this period of time. and in may 1973. you came to the mediterranean sea, insulted to broadcasting with the voice of the well, there's an american saying goes, you can be city hall. and what that means is however hard, you try, your thirties will eventually when an hour attitude is, well actually they won't. and if they proceed with surviving, maybe this by them to survive because well, know, riley, i mean we will live our lives complying with rules that other people have made
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and it's automatic. mostly. now we assume the rosemary for our benefit. but then you start to think, well, maybe the rules made for the benefit of the people making the rules. now ronan has no rules. here any rules, he has his own rules. and when you come up against some pretty like that, who is determined? it's a very difficult person to stop because he doesn't operate in the conventional way that most of the rest of the population over it. yeah, i'll tell you that while i was, i was very young. i was about 7 years old when i 1st started listening to radio, caroline bits, and for a few years later, when i started working at the age of 1617 really a cower lima doing go row chose this goes around the united kingdom and the united kingdom i actually started going to those and then got to meet some of the people
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involved in radio, caroline, and they knew that i could do engineering. and of course they were looking for engineers. and they were having a problem with a generator. and just asked me if i go out to the ship for a couple of weeks to have a look at it. well, that was 40 years ago. i don't still doing it already. i kind of, i know with great music from the 60s through to the 90s. oh caroline story, but it was 9 years old and i grew up with caroline and i was smitten by what i'd heard the fabulous music. the thought that these guys and they were all guys at the time that when a women involved at the time, these guys were sitting on a rusty ship and against overwhelming odds just to bring lead the lasers painted some and it did a spark. so i want to do that and that stayed through with me all the way through my teenagers for my growing years. and then i had the chance to come out. i been a fan of the station and came out and visited trips and was invited out
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the from somewhere in the mediterranean. we are the voices, be on 1540 killer her right now you can listen to the voice of the on f m stereo. that's right. 100 on your s, m die i a before that even going to speak all the time about politics. no one will listen to the voice of his . he understood that it should be a combination of music, of popular music, different style with they in english, very nice and fluent english or british b, j. most of them were british so that the public will, will enjoy listening to the room. but between the songs there will messages of jingles, like normal wall, normal blood sheets, a piece in the world,
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and the vote for faces. the station. normal wall luxury piece is the word and the voice is peace is the station. people who listened as i did for many years to the station were less exposed to the indoctrination. and that was part of the official israeli broadcasting stations. so even if you were not exposed to the rest for good messages, it will also less expose to design his narrative, so to speak. and you were thinking in a more universal way. so i think in the long run, it had a good impact on people's ability to 2 things out of the box to look to, to look at things. not only through the glasses of the van isn't jewish nestor, lady ology. the 2nd named beth was especially towards the last years of the broadcasting
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. and the ship was totally identified with ab, nothin so, so even if the message is windows coming from the ship, people, so the of the ship and his own more political activity as the same project. and i think that helped to make even a bigger influence in the direction of air and more courageous political view. these of these really policies and ideas. well, what happens in the me throughout the mediterranean, all the radio stations and the television stations are controlled by governments. but the result, the arab don't listen to the radio simply because they feel it must be propaganda. since the government controls and the same effect is on the israeli side, the difference will be with our station that will be a permanent dialogue. there are no speeches here. there's no propaganda that always
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be viewed from both sides so that people can listen to the other point of view. and by listening to the other point of view, maybe they will understand the video music. it was a bit like a secret society. you had to ask around because everybody had full names because no one wants to go to prison. i concocted a name because i didn't want to go to prison for 2 years. but you just had to meet someone who knew someone and gradually you were accepted and trusted and radio. caroline loved people who would help out everybody that came out to caroline for legal reasons, had a different name. he wasn't wise to have your own name just in case you were arrested for playing a bruce springsteen. reco rusty ship. so we all had different names and a friend of mine was mcwilliams. and before i came out to caroline he said, what are you going to call yourself? and i jokingly said, mcwilliams. and the time came in this very studio,
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when i went on air at 1 o'clock and the previous presenter had said coming up next nice mcwilliams a mic, williamson and that name was the name that i used when i 1st came out to caroline in the eighty's for years i'd be right, like and i and continuing this, rachel originally, when i went out to writing caroline in the 1970 s, i did actually change my name to stephen bishop. but when i came back on this ship, the ross revenge. and i actually came on the air, i was gonna use steven bishop, but the guy who was on before me knew me from when i worked on the irish radio in the irish republic and uncle john louis dad and introduce me as jodi louis. i felt by model stick with it now. everybody united anyway
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the oh. to the british love. a fighter. fighting with disadvantage and radio colon was such an organization. so we got so have with us man goodwill. because we were a, we were the crazy guys who had never given even when we were living and working in awful conditions and may be risking death. and in order to play the rolling stones, the rolling stones had to be very important that they will do that. i was here in 1905 when we have what we call euro sage, where the government trying to close it down. there was sales in the station called laser 558. we were together for a mile and a half apart. so 2 and a half kilometers apart. and, and the government boat that was trying to close it down more between the 2 of us.
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and couple of times they came, came close to us to try and be menacing and threatening. but that it, it didn't upset the till. and in fact, what, at the time, it was like we were on every news channel throughout the world. and certainly all the european news outlets recovering the story that the government trying to close down every newspaper in europe. so it was like us spending 20000000 pounds of advertising revenue, so it actually backfired on the government because suddenly we were getting letters from people saying we thought you were going with the years ago. we didn't even realize you're still there. so reacted in our favor on $55.00, a killer radio cabinet. this is mutiny. it was the hotel christian maybe the early years of caroline were not very professional. they actually didn't
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matter because no one had heard that sort of radio before. so even if they were very good, the population absolutely loved it. and in a few months after caroline started to grow, cost had a big audience over baby c networks combined. and course that is here to the government as well. somehow we have to stop me. and that's what set off the battle between the government saying we will close you down radio, carline saying you will know they would try and come close to us in a rubber boat to try and measure how much water fuel that we had on board. and on it on a ship, you got them. so line. so you can normally tell by that plan. so line how's the ship is lying, has how much fuel the waters on board? so we always to do was pump sea water into empty tanks and disposed around the ships every day. we sat differently in the water and in the end i gave up. it was a cat mouse game, but we used to have a lot of fun with them when they came close to his inner rob about a couple of times with measuring equipment to measure all signals. and again,
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i was just trying to be menacing. so on the ship there also event. we have a very, very powerful fire hydrant so we can spray water, but fi that. so we did was when they came close because we want them what we're going to do that, you know, 70 spray them with the water. they soon disappeared and they never try that again. it was, it was basically a junior minister in the british government trying to make a name for himself and it had back 5 in some respects, lays that they got off the eval. caroline remained on the air and they just got off in the end and let us continue. and here we are. i mean, this is a test transmission of the voice of peace radio station, the voice of peace broadcast from the merger vessel piece lying in the eastern mediterranean. the voice of bass was a be not done and they've been out there was the voice of peace. i mean, there was a lot of music and he saw that through the music,
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he can get also to the house of the people. but by the end of the day, it was, he's monologues, he's interviews, he interviewed people, he did his monologues about peace, and his spirit was on the whole both. i remember one interview that he did together with me, i think it was reasonable shots. i think it was a big shot when the policy is 1st mentioned the jericho, 1st a, the before or slow. and this was really a sensation because they never talked about the jericho 1st. and he was very proud about it later on, gave some momentum. but above all, it was he tried to reach young people and he saw that he can reach young people through the music. and this will hear that i don't think anything is going to happen. and yet why the politicians are going to keep talking about the problem in
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the united nations and the big powers and the rising and all over the world. i think every day we are having more and more people dying on the borders and there be more bomb throwing adobe continuous retaliation. actually, what is happening is the part additions will live to talk about these boys. and the ordinary man is going to keep the in the us gun capital calling me, i've been fine. i really maternity me killing pregnant women need wives and baby one or when he struggled to afghanistan or even newborns are targets on al jazeera, the demand for low price clothing is celebrating at high speed. that's absolutely great by 2030, the industry will expand by an additional 60 percent. i'll just take a detailed look at the disposal of what our calculating,
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exposing the hidden human and environmental costs way with the company give free, wants to know why they said, boss fashion, all knowledge of revealing eco friendly solutions to come back. threats to our planet on al jazeera, on the health of humanity, is it the stake. a global pandemic requires a global response. w h o is the guardian of global health. delivering life saving tools, supplies, and training to help the world's most vulnerable people, uniting across borders to speed up the development of tests, treatments, and vaccine keeping you up to date with what's happening on the ground in the ward and in the lab. now more than ever, the world needs w h. making
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a healthy a world for you. everyone. ah, hello, i'm down, jordan doe. how are the top stories here on al jazeera, the british prime minister barak johnson, says g 7 nations are set to pledge a 1000000000 corona, virus vaccines, the low income countries. he was speaking on the eve of the lead of summit and ours after us president joe biden, from his 500000000 doses by the middle of next year. $200000000.00 of these doses will be delivered. this year 2021 and 300000000 more. we delivered in the 1st half of 2022.
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