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tv   [untitled]    June 14, 2021 4:00am-4:31am +03

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because of the rising temperatures and the lack of rainfall, most of the trees planted are either dying or already dead. and while polluting countries have recently pledged billions of dollars more in funds for this project, people here say they're throwing money into the desert. they say they don't need more trees, but more access to water. ah, and there are money side in your stories on al jazeera. right wing, nuts less. natalie bennett has been sworn in as israel's new leader. after parliament approved a new co dish and government by a narrow margin, it ends benjamin netanyahu, the 12 year grip on power. but it leads to coalition of a policies with vos audiological differences, but is promising to bring unity to a divided nation. and the few come, surely we are at the start of new days, hardships,
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not an exaggerated wording. escape much of the hardships of establishing the unity government is behind us. and now the people of israel, everyone is putting their eyes on us and the burden of proof is on us. we will work together in partnership with responsibility in order to man the resting the nation with immediately bring back the country one normal functioning, one after a long period of paralysis and quarrels. benjamin netanyahu staying on an opposition and as threatened to topple the new government. well listen, members of the connected, we've gone from being a marginal state to a rising power in the global arena. this is our way mine and my friends from the national block, my friends of the real rights. and if it is destined for us to be in the opposition, we will do it with our back straight. and so we toppled the dangers government and returned to lead the country in our way. let me hurry forth. as has been following developments from west to recent, they have done what is usually done at this stage,
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which is to convene themselves in the israeli parliament in the can i sit in a separate hole to the the main chamber. and so you saw the pictures of natalie bennet heading that round table with la pete alongside him. and very much wanting to present themselves as they've tried since really the formation of this coalition to do so as a sort of a pragmatic get on with the job kind of government. that is the message that they're trying to. so to be really people, they are aware of the fact that they are ideologically, hugely divergent, not to say contradictory. and they're all sorts of questions about their ability to stay together in the face of what will be exceptionally strong attacks coming from the yahoo. and his eyes on the right as there were even in advance of the vote. well palestinian leaders, they, israel's new government will do little to end occupation and violence. natalie bennett support annexing much of the west bank opposed to the creation of
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a palestinian state. in the news, the g 7 summit from the united kingdom has ended with a commitment to increase action on climate change. we're new to promise to provide $100000000000.00 a year to developing nations to cut emissions. leading environmental groups say the plan likes detail and mission. the couple america football competition is kicked off in brazil. the whole countries facing a backlash by agreeing to hold the tournament during the pandemic. the original host opted to counsel the event columbia as the latest team to report cove. it infections amongst the staff just hours before its match against ecuador, monica yanna. kiev has more from re edition year the brazilian team and its head coach had asked of the football authorities, the people that are organizing this tournament not to hold the tournament. and brazil. brazil is about to have to reach another grim milestone of half
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a 1000000 dead by coven 19. there's a parliamentary inquiry going on right now investigating the government's handling of the pandemic. and they simply had asked for, for this tournament, not to be here. they said it wasn't for political reasons. it was also technical reasons. they say everything was organized at the last minute police in nicaragua have arrested for more opponents of president. daniel ortega mac critics, a calling on a sold so on democracy. it doesn't have been detained, including 4 hoping to run against ortega, end of embassy election activists from ethiopia, northern te gray region, a warning of an eminent government offensive the global society of t. grey scholars and professionals as written an open letter to g 7 leaders, voicing that concern as he had lost sneeze continuously out there. well, ah,
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[000:00:00;00] ah, [000:00:00;00] the
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good news . ah ah, this is radio caroline on 199, and best commercial radio station. i got 925 radio gro costumes becoming very influential in the government. as a day, i realized that this is a dangerous thing to has in the hands of private companies and individuals prohibited anyone else seeing the same radio signal. so the only people who send radius or who is worthy british broadcasting corporation,
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which effectively with an arm of the government of the day 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 their gravity several will, will get the paper what we want, the things that they felt the population wanted to have. a quick question were consulted and we didn't accept that music was very important to us. but there wasn't music ref, but in the early sixties i found a ronan realized that you can search event the regulations by just going a little bit outside of british territory and putting a radio station on a ship, hence ships like this. and that was the foundation radio caroline,
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this is radio caroline, on 199, england, 1st commercial radio stations. my name simon de, whether you for the next 2 hours, 1st one off the top of the pile valleys, rock and robin. from somewhere in the mediterranean peace love me, and the voice of your voice died that i heard the station, the voice of police was in the suicide. when i was feeling with my husband. i used to, you know, at that time you had the radio, so i used to go to the general where they use, i still 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 can make that this was a gentleman and this was a ship and i think to date,
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there's nobody who broadcast music. they may be you know, i did was it was really good music. the idea of bolt broadcasting from the sea was a result of a need 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, to any, to imitate him and do the same yourself to him. then i was the people who criticized, but we are not here as israeli people and the goods that we have come from arabs and jews at the same time. and i think we should stop this whole business. you know?
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i think, you know, i am already and what the ship stands for. the current piece is the word and the voice of peace is the station. 24 hours a day. the news, when the 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 room is not averse to making money. running very much like making money and using other people's money. but because of his upbringing,
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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, and his grandfather was killed in the 1900. 16 uprising where the irish rose up against the british, occupying the island. so there was a rebel street there and which is why, of course he started, caroline and 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
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a be was obsessed with what he had done in 48 in bomb, according to what he said he had bombed, but it's still villages as a volunteer and easily new air force and the guilt feelings. the company 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 with the felt the same deal feeling the
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i but it's very interesting that despite the fact that he was such as anxious to begin with, 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 a pilot to fly to egypt. 3 times it will be 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,
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and twice he landed in my lawyer. and once he came with a slight air egypt from. i think these railways were very cross and angry with these initiatives. this was part of his attempt to bring egypt, and these were closer. and i think this was the 1st step in history formation from a very pious zionist, into someone who was low, critical about the jew state. he settings 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 still possible to broadcast, not for the 30 or even, but from israel, but maybe from the sea, from a ship in to see radio station. and he said,
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and we call it the voice of peace to speak with people and to come them both to ship with the donation he got from the dutch people for with their generosity and took it to new york to transfer the ship to radio station. it took him almost 5 years to fulfill his dream it when fran filled 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 and started to broadcasting the voice of me where there is an american saying which goes, you call the 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,
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maybe this by then to survive because, well, know, riley, i mean we will live our lives. complying with rules and other people made 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 had no rules. are there any rules he has his own rules and when you come i've got some pretty like that who is determined. it's a very difficult person to stop because he doesn't operate in a conventional way that most of the rest of the population over it. yeah i was to tell you that while 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, for the carolina doing go row,
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chose this goes around the united kingdom of united kingdom. i actually started going to those and then got to meet some of the people involved in radio, caroline and i 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 would 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 ninety's. 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 laser, sprinkle some and it did a spark. so i want to do that and that stayed through with me all the way through
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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 on business trips and was invited out the from somewhere in the mediterranean. we are the voices be on $1540.00. and right now you can listen to the voice of the on f m stereo. that's right. 100 on your fm die a before that even going to speak all the about politics. no one will listen to the voice of the sea and the story that it should be a combination of music, of popular music, different style with a in english, very nice and fluent english, british b, j. most of them were british. so that the public will,
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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, 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 this 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
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nestor, lady ology. the 2nd named beth was especially towards the last years of the broadcasting . and the ship was totally identified with ab, nothin so, so even if the message is when those coming from the ship, people, so the project 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 are these really policies and ideas. well, what happens in the drought, 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,
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the difference will be with our station that will be a permanent dialogue. there are no speeches here. there's no propaganda that always 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 excepted 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,
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what are you going to call yourself? and i jokingly said, mcwilliams. and the time came in this very studio, when i went on air at 1 o'clock and the previous presenter had said coming up next, nice mcwilliams. i'm mc 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? i 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
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the irish republic and uncle johnny louis stand and introduce me as jodie lewis. i felt my motto, stick with it. now. everybody knows anyway, the oh, to the british love, a fighter. fighting with disadvantage and radio colon was such an organization. so we got, we still have the vast mass 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
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a half kilometers apart. and, and the government boat that was trying to close it down more between the 2 of us. 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're going to see a years ago. we didn't even realize you're still there. so reacted in our favor on $55.00, a killer. this is catherine. this is mutiny. it was the
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hotel christian maybe the early years of caroline were not very professional. they actually didn't 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 sets off the battle between the government saying we will close you down radio, carline saying, you 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 only tell why that plan. so line how the ship is lying has how much fuel the waters on board? so we all ways to do was pump, say water into empty tanks and dispersed around the ships every day. we sat differently in the water near me and i gave up. it was a cat and mouse game, but we just have
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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 they were just trying to be menacing. so on this ship, the ross revenge. we have a very, very powerful fire hydrant. so we can spray water, but fi that so we did was when they came close cuz we weren't what we were going to do. they took $970.00 spray them with the water. they soon disappeared and they never tried that guy. it was, it was basically a junior minister in the british government trying to make a name for himself and it happened back 5 in some respects later they got off, the carolina remained on the air and they just gave off in the end. let's continue . and here we are, the, this is a pass 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 space was
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a be not done and they've been out. that was the voice of peace. i mean there was a lot of music and he saw that through the music, 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 boat. 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 police, there's 1st mention that 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. again, some were mental, but above all it was he tried to reach young people and he saw that he can reach
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young people through the music. and this will hear that. i don't think anything is gonna happen. and yet why the politicians are going to keep talking about the problem, the united nations and the big powers and the rise and all over the world. i think every day we are having more and more people dying on the borders and there will be more bomb throwing and they'll be continuous retaliation. actually what is happening, it's the politicians will live to talk about these boys. and the ordinary man is going to keep the on june 18th iran withhold the presidential election will take her sound on his place, put a conservative candidate to succeed, the moderate, the death, and what impact on national and global politics. join us
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a way to result analysis of the iran addiction on algebra with bank energy and say to every part of our universe or small to continue the change all around the shape by technology and human ingenuity. we can make it work for you and your business. something was going to change as anything really changed. this is systemic violin that needs to be addressed at its core. we are in a race against the barrier and know what to say. we are all say we're 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 details. the bottom line, when i was just there on the demand for low price, it accelerated at high speed. that's absolutely great by 2030,
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the industry will expand by an additional 60 percent. i'll just take a detailed look at disposal fashion. we handle our admitted update at closing the hidden human and environmental costs way with the company. give free what that is. you never know what he said, boss. fashions on all j o l l money fight and he told stories on al jazeera right. when nash less, natalie bennett has been sworn in as israel's new leader, after parliament approved a new coalition government by a narrow margin in benjamin netanyahu 12 year grip on power. but it lead to coalition of 8 parties with vast audiological differences,

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