Skip to main content

tv   Witness Balomania  Al Jazeera  December 14, 2024 4:00am-5:00am AST

4:00 am
the higher your monetary, i'm really foundation the on the how much improvement do i have? these are the top stories on algebra. multiple explosions have been heard in the syrian capital, damascus, believe to be, is really or strikes the city of us, the way the and the country southwest has also been target. the latest strikes come as hundreds of thousands of jubilant syrians have poured onto the streets and several cities after the 1st friday prayers. and since the fall of bush auto search government, those celebrations in damascus, have continued into the night. how many of all has been speaking to people who are still out on the street parking the fall of the region of thousands of people still here? who may as well they don't seem to be willing to be. they don't seem to be willing
4:01 am
to finish these separation by word just a few minutes ago as 5 minutes. you have more of those by words. people shots in their families too, with most of these who started stays in this country on top with me. a beautiful family here obviously high. you told me very nice things about their pollution about feeling side not to be honest before 2011 or something. and aspects of those 2011. it's something different. totally different. i had a visa like and develop i live in the us, but i could, i couldn't believe because i felt i have my duty here to say this was all i just would say, but i feel that we have a future that we have to do to improve it also at work to fight for something
4:02 am
different. there's been a series of regional diplomatic meetings on the political transition in syria after the ousting of us that us secretary of state. and to me, blinking has made a surprise visit to iraq. the rocks prime minister and how much she adds to danny says about that expects tangible actions from syria's new liter to ensure stability in the meeting, blinking stress, the importance of helping syria rebuild and fight any resurgence of ice. so no one knows the importance is that more than a wreck because of the presence of the ongoing presence of isis dash in syria. and we are determined to make sure that, gosh, cannot, we emerge the united states, rac, gets together, had tremendous success in taking away churchwell caliphate dash it created years ago. and now having put that back in his box,
4:03 am
we can let it out. we were determined to make sure that that doesn't happen earlier blinking was in turkey holding talks with turkish foreign minister. huck on a few done. they also spoke about the importance of countering any resurgence of iso in syria throughout the syria and civil war. the us and turkey have backed rival opposition groups very focused on there's been multiple is really attacks across northern gaza is really strikes, had several ambulances and come out of had one hospital in beta here. but you and says 90 percent of its 8 missions destined for the siege north been denied by israel since october. russia, as long as the large scale aerial attack on energy infrastructure across to ukraine, ukraine's president says it was the largest attack yet on the energy grid. moscow says it was in retaliation for ukraine's use of us supplied long range missiles. french president, emmanuel, my crohn, has appointed
4:04 am
a centrist ally as prime minister as he tries to in a months long political crisis. francois bay rou, seen here on the right, replaces michelle barney, who was out so just over a week ago by parliament and a no confidence vote. he's the 4th person to hold the post this year. in georgia, the ruling party is due to a point a far right loyalist as president. it will be the 1st time in the country's history, the m p's rather than the public, will be choosing the president. the move has angered protesters to accuse the governing georgia dream party of rigging elections in october. there been nighttime protests for weeks. of the headlines up next is a very british way of torture. thanks for watching. the
4:05 am
dre the sticks. when i was growing up in the 1950s in kenya, i just had this sort of slightly too blue effect. but, you know, basically the prince did things the right way. the result, the sort of pretty simple is written countries on the mountain at the great, you know, i presume that we purchased, we were the good guys and we were trying to make the bed. but then later i discovered that when we came to our end struggle here, that wasn't,
4:06 am
that wasn't quite true. mamma uprising isn't um, freedom movement that takes place in kenya in the 1950s. it is one of the most violent struggles in the british empire. but the cry was loud, and for the low miles the full audi mom, i'll get the, the new we do both sides can be violent atrocities. but it's the colonial side that is often been ignored by historians and british might say they don't do touch, but we demo on some of the for the 1st time, the lease, if you documents it, has given us a very much fuller account as to what is being done and why? and how is the partition attractive trust and now because of the new documentation
4:07 am
historians in griffin finding, they're investigating how the british is trusts for institutionalized. and they would know from the top in london, all the way down into ken is really clips the scripts as to who is on the when the british decided to leave kenya. in 63, they took with them more than 1500 government files full mopped top secret. over the next 4050 years, these documents were squared away. and i facilitate soon as counsellor talk link to t c h q, which is used by my 5 and i 6,
4:08 am
hidden in plain sight. when you tried to request these documents, you were told that they didn't take the they are in the seventy's and eighty's. now, but they troubles thousands of miles from their homes in rural. can you seeking justice? they say is more than half a century over to you. i was involved in the legal change in 2011, 2012 as an expert witness. and the request by the court and amount our case through some sort of disclosure to light. however, the british government deliberately settled the case was difficult in order to avoid a full hearing with the details of what it happened would be with us. they knew it, they want to donate to denied for only
4:09 am
a very small section of the documents weren't actually used. and it's only not several years old. i'm not time to look at these documents conclusively that we can really begin to tell you what those documents with the, the inactive, if you to return. there was a colony of, of, of the british and i've been calling this since 1920 officially sort of overseen by the colonial office. and that you can so that he, all it is the british came here to take stuff, not to help us out. we have an old white settlers with
4:10 am
100, some even thousands of acres of land living be lavish, fitness, take life at the cost of the people who work for them. the british got a little bit greedy and we wanted more land. the one the one was that i'm at the flooded. yep. mondo and get it that way. i've got yeah. yeah. the, the, if you did not call a set to the one you have comments at the crime and the love to be put in prison for that reason. and that's why i said no,
4:11 am
this is not set to continue to join those people who are fighting for the nation of our country for to come not do peace. if for the you cannot, she said, oh, well, the capital of your gm's and african as well as the streets instead of the dreaded mama. what it is that man doesn't have x, whose bloody deeds have caused a dog shadow across the face. so keen on the mamma uprising was a present uprising. they was tending up against the british demanding return of the
4:12 am
land and actually did money for independence and was something like $25005.00 times. they were mostly individuals who would be in some way, disinherited will have the land dispossess. they will have notes if you will, of african society the navigate and targeting a small number of white settling families got really most some cases of children being killed in the beds we men being raped and being reminded of the in the whole of the pilots. only 32 white civilians were
4:13 am
killed. thousands of black canyons were killed by the male model among several, many really are post st. don't blankets of violence. they think the finances are necessary. so that doesn't mean that those africans like colonialism and the british called the loyalist. and that makes it seem that they would prove british. but that's fall from the truth. to deal with the british gods loyal lives they brave to them to cut out their show off beat to the freedom, find the so the mile. now
4:14 am
maybe this, estimating these colonial collaborate, just shapes and had been the trustees settle committed by the mile mile against fellows civilians. while the minutes law as well. and they belong at the right the face to a short time modeling mall passed on. what do you best bet? so, because the thought this was the british realize that the only way they can stop is the only way they can preserve that route in county is by declaring this formal state of emergency. in october 1952. the result that they simply by executive order going to put people in detention counts in these counts. there's
4:15 am
a mix of actual now my fight is with innocent people that they were discussing. i'd like to say it as a conflict between goods and he felt, but what recent revelations have shown us together with the work that historians have done. how much of the british counter insurgency? essex was equally brutal, the queen violence, and that they then try to highlight evidence of what happened after our troops. every province is visited in an effort to stamp out the moment us restore peace to trouble obtain your company. the propaganda was a very important tool within the mama struggle. and so the ones that we see be used to describe them o our terrorist savage, maniac. the d
4:16 am
assuming ice ation as the enemy reached the point that excessive violence becomes tolerated. you're seeing, members of regiments made up of can you central is taking some of the justice executing presents that with bounties. first, individual british soldiers the how many of mammo guerrillas, they could tell he early excessive behaviors by centers, but gradually gives way to a more sinister and online set of stories about wholesale torture going on in the context of what are known as who god posts and those efforts and noiseless stuff and lead by your p
4:17 am
offices of the prime minister, the keys which the church and churchill takes quite a lively interest in what's going on and can peace very much concerned about what's happening and he wants to tell you don't the kind of we understand is waiting on the open outside and then a few minutes time he'll be taking off for kenya. it's not so very long. is it? since you came back from the lid? no, i came back on the 1st of may. the youngest died, it was a bill that so he's coming from very humble origins compared to most of the colonial officials. viewed as someone who has a strong sense of what is proper,
4:18 am
what is just give you minutes to finish, getting back with how do you feel about going kenya? well, i feel i'm ready. when young is appointed, i think he's running off to mission. he thinks you'll manage this is an interesting challenge. he's looking forward to it. within 2 weeks of indian ruby, he'll change his mind. the young starts to investigate crimes carried on body all sources as does his assistant who is head of the ceiling in kenya. duncan, look 1st, he goes off to individual cases that have been reported. i knocks on doors tops and between them, young and macpherson starts on kind of the instances of major human rights
4:19 am
abuses of the home. well, he knew the bad, they could only be done a 2 year mo, mo, get go. we says the patio most of the i took my kids, go to the affordable and i did this youngest. got the, you know, you know, why did i call you the money they needed doing? and i got it all for you. um were you little did you do is download it. you go? no, not the. what do you mind me to knock on the home? can you know what was on my not yet?
4:20 am
not yet. yeah. that image for the case is that mcpherson young, investigate or involve your opinion officers either directly carrying out the alleged act or subsequently helping to cover up and concealed them by acts of deliberate deception. these cases are presented to the ministry of legal affairs contained in the attorney general, but they then go into a preliminary investigation. so as out was the hands of young macpherson, that's when suddenly they disappear solely. there's not enough evidence. suddenly, investigations don't proceed. young begins to understand this resistance is going on at the highest possible level. how was this happening?
4:21 am
the of the british government recognizes that canyons was subject to torture and other forms of ill treatment of the hands of the colonial administration. the case was one out of court in 2013 was really something of a period victory. having decided to make the quote, settlement to william hague then for the secretary made a statement before parliament. and which she essentially apologized to the can do. people like all such statements, the apology was quite diplomatic, and hate chose his words with great care. we continue to deny liability on behalf of the governments and produce tax pay us today for the actions of the colonial administration in respect of the claims. he made it very clear that the claim for
4:22 am
this did not lie with the british government. money lane was a colonial to kenya. so he made a distinction between the 2, between london and i really think but we know no government to say london. i've had no hand in what had happened. it was during the spring economic was the truth. and some of the same distorting the history the lease of new documents and the hassle of disclosure, has given us a very much fuller account of what looked 1st and was trying to do, and how he was being obstructed. for the 1st time, we began to get a really clear picture of how the executive in narrow be deliberately suppressed evidence. the key in this process was something toughness, complaints. it was sent out towards the end and 1953 by the clothing these patients
4:23 am
in there will be to handle complaints. we can't government officials, cases of alleged souls rapes murders, particularly in the new rounds home guard posts. but in fact, i would describe the governor's complaints committee, it was a kind of kind of rework crimes tribunal. it was 3 or 4 officials to basically decide which cases were worth investigating. and which worked. when you look at this 5, you find that there are individual meetings, and in those minutes, the dismissing cases outside, no case decision not to prosecute something along those lines. what they doing is talking to a local district commission is local district officers who are the allies of the people that have committed these crimes and looking investigations by following the advice of the people that are committing the crime just and your covering up the crime. it's asking them to mark their own homework the governor's ca,
4:24 am
thanks for me to, you've dealt with more than a few $150.00 cases of those that are investigated at less than 10 percent of a come to court. so the end of the day, i think you comes the inclusion that the governors complaints committee successfully suppressed nearly $300.00 cases. if not to what's particularly shocking about the complex committees that then meets the direct evidence. the cases were being suppressed were being sent to the way up the chain to the governor, to the colonial secretary in the front of the secretary. and exploit is fully informed of for the 1st time we can show that from the documents, we know we're passing across his desk and the colonial secretary reports to cabinet . so we have to assume the cabinet must know something they talk no, nothing the,
4:25 am
the colonial shifter tree to you was that it plays into, to, well for how my just is government. so i don't know how you step by british government from getting a new government the why one i'm the same. therefore, denying that the british government is not the responsible issue. it focus but that's not how long this would see that. if you force is, if your troops accused of human rights abuses, that is in a sense, something that is going to be recognized by your enemies. it's going to get in the way of ultimate victory. i'm up matters as to when the war against mama doesn't see okay, news as people who are right, that is of to be protected as people who was dignity needs to be
4:26 am
a fun. the youngest, frustrated that so many cases he's on, covered all the major abuses of human rights have not been prosecute some young feelings as a complete smack in the face against me. and he said, which is resignation the say on goes back to you. k way with the colonial secretary, the craft are much more torn down pressings. the process of the sorts of things that he had done covered under the complicity of the colonial regime. the in the atrocities are being committed the. ready
4:27 am
ready the new documents on national disclosure is transformative, and it gave us really fresh insights on what actually happened in kenya. so the resignation letter is extraordinarily powerful and that young makes no bones at home about his concerns about the lack of the regional and interference by the executive. and i really, the the reason he gives her resigning is that he's been entirely obstructed by the colonial government in attempting to reform. the way justice is done in kenya. he is furious. he's understood that he has been deliberately. i knew that the
4:28 am
one of the key unintended consequences of young's occupation is the 18 power. those who wish to take us a line against mamma. torches would not become run by the state and institutions and that controlled and measured way. this would be fall, fall was gonna call the 1st 5 because is the world's leading coproducer, but it's weak infrastructure and makes traveling a challenge we follow to drive as soon as he grapples with the past, the, his many, bob and the one of the few women to try to remote villages, risk in it all. i because on out is there
4:29 am
the latest news as it breaks the last test? what was the please of power of president bush chart? a said his role is now over with detailed coverage. i don't know how much time do you say $5.00 to $1.00 to process the women say it's about for disability, progressive disabled, and the beach from around the world. bruce, the valley avenue is filled with tens of thousands of processes in the 7th consecutive night of pros, as in the georgia in capital. the story of the section last and is right is fine, but for writing on the div cover, in serious knowing that discovery would make sense and out you 0 well tells the gripping story most that's by coming operated on the cover in syria, in the 1960 no dish is correct, that ended in public execution. eli cohen, most of the agents on out is there the,
4:30 am
the, and the how much the german to how these are the top stories on the algae 0, multiple explosions have been heard in the syrian capital, damascus. believe to be is really air strikes. the city of us the way the in the country southwest has also been targeting. the latest strikes come as hundreds of thousands of jubilant syrians have poured onto the streets and several cities after the 1st friday prayers since the fall of the shot search government. how many of all has been speaking to people who are still out on the streets, marking the fall of the regime? thousands of people here who may as well they don't seem to be willing to lead. they don't seem to be willing to finish these separation by word just
4:31 am
a few minutes ago as 5 minutes to one of those 5 words shots and their families to with most of these have started phase in this country on top with me, a beautiful family here but obviously high, you told me very nice things about their pollution about feeling side not to be honest before 2011 or something. and aspects of those developers live in it's something different. totally different. i had a visa like develop, i live in to us, but i could, i couldn't believe because i filled my, i have my do to you to say this was all i just would say, but i feel that we have a future that we have to do to improve it, also at work to fight for something different. and there's been multiple is really
4:32 am
a tax across northern gauze that is really strikes hit several ambulances that come out at one hospital in bed. last year. the u. n. says 90 percent of his aid missions destined for the siege north have been denied by israel since october french president, the manual of my crime has appointed a centrist ally as prime minister as he tries to end a month's long political crisis. francois by rou, seeing here on the right, replaces michelle barney without suggest over a week ago by parliament in a no confidence vote. he's the 4th person to hold the post this year. all right, those are the headlines. the news continues here and houses here after a very british way of torture. thanks for watching these off choose solutions that gives us know for future that we have to find creative solutions. not just turn our backs on the don't think that has a number. think about it as a person yourself and that person shoes. so as you can see for this
4:33 am
is my us, my life. earliest in my life, those stages we want we want to operate because the women in my country, then that's when they come out to us. we are not denies all of who we are human beings and deserves to be treated equally. we are okay and therefore the steps are officers whatever has been done before can be done as long as a human being is doing it. you just have to keep pushing because no one else can see. the vision is keywords, you the fear of the fanatical depths dealing with society, grips kenya,
4:34 am
price for the human brain. and the momma uprising isn't fee to movement that takes place in kenya in the 1950s. it is one of the most violent struggles in the british empire. the but the cry was loud and frequent. loma the full audi. mama i gave to the new to both sides can be violent atrocities. but it's the colonial side that is often been ignored by historians and british might say they don't do a search. but we demo on the for the 1st time, the lease of new documents. it has given us a very much slower account as to what is being done and why. and how is the partition attractive trust. and now because of the new documentation historians in
4:35 am
griffin, and in case they're investigating how the british is trusts for institutionalized. and they would know from the top in london all the way down into the 1956, only 1000 remaining did. large leaders were captured and temporary peace was restored to the african jung. the, the problem that is faced by the colonial government is they have essentially mean by this point, puts tens of thousands of cutting down to detention come that are managed to hold
4:36 am
people who are suspected of being at the moment and who have failed to renounce that oh, don't my legions to the momma, the by 1955, that's over 80000 people that have been detained in this whole set of accounts across the threats of kenya. but the colonial government doesn't want to let them go simply because they have to. they want to rehabilitate them. they want to stop them. be now my supporters. mr. breckenridge. what they will see is the main name of your rehabilitation work. and their name is to try and bring these all the natural people back to normal life to kevin. now i'm out of this just and bring them back to normal distance, civilized people again. but in the detention camps. the launch party of irreconcilable memo support is one not going to confess.
4:37 am
they imprisoned man, flush 7 that you must take. god knows that 2 cannot set in a chat and that in this, out of the question bits of died the, these camps are costing a huge amount of money which is coming directly from the british state. and so there's increasing pressure from london, but you need to somehow do this more quickly, get men to confess, much more quickly than they have to be. and what's the fastest way to make people confess? the
4:38 am
easy ideas and she becomes name is the dilution technique. that was designed to separate how and cool mamma to small groups, subject them to a massive degree of torture and compels them individually to concise and then use those you confessed to bring read those who are resisting. or both africans and europeans involved in this to do it on the board of what kind of deals that we're doing that. ok, the of the ways you in one? well, the way to go as a to that's all you have to go with a, the media and die, or do you do away google about our app where you are now on the need body for the get the can give me the
4:39 am
legal on that kind of that kind of appointment, and that the, they put in pieces, so broken box. and they could use that to shave you, i. and then when they finish, you have all these cards the, they would get to get ahold of the dispute, the fuse to one face. they would be fucked because the not your monte gauge already. if you on the bottom i who would i got to be ready? yes, you are not going to remarket the little boys you might do about it and you give him a little more. she only went for not to one of the 3 guys that is central to the nation
4:40 am
technique and its execution on the ground is tyrants cover. hub is a comp administrator. so don't have administrator that is responsible for one of the largest crumbs in west ice home tenants come um he was very top office that bundling the do i own good morning or all run at it? i'm. i'm to my, the it that i knew i love on gateway a family now, but what i've, i don't need it out. i'm not going to not be lilian window. then ended up later on level level of funding plug. i will run them when you come when they got ahead and gave several tv interviews, he was always keen to be the spokes person for what happened with my my in kenya.
4:41 am
manipulation falls, in no way. printers, it falls, manipulative policy takes on discharges, is off, it takes a bit of doing, kind of right. so that, that is done. and then uh, if somebody holes, then it has to be maybe 10 minutes of enforcement. and what does that require? what i've just described, what does it mean? enforcement? the enforcement then handles. so that's a man who was standing up. it's done. the decisions on monday so far has been shaved. that he was charged as i pulled off with these potential charges. and so when they, when they ever knocked unconscious? no, never the . do you feel any sense of guilt about those doubled up?
4:42 am
did you, did anyone ever die on the ration? no. no. one of 20000. well she doesn't seem like she's talking about human beings. just brings home to you just how to how we will see. i'll be our stuff reading as a caustic financial on your to run the animal my, my the vanity you, what do you by the move and i know when i'm going to able with the with or like i will, a with you out, you can go back to god, at the time you did that interview screen you line. he knows exactly what he did. he knows exactly how we did it. up until
4:43 am
now the story is, but he said she said in relation to gods, but now with the hands love dispos here. what that enables us to do is show to grab a hand was guilty of exactly the things the keys tonight. the document did always speak that reveals the worst of trustees the what. how many camps on the governance control refer to the case of samuel dc. some you do choose to classic example of an african violets. the creation of the restraint, often supervised by europeans instructed in torture. due to eventually is accused of monitoring one of the detainees who is undergoing the time we should take me to prisoners, given a shout on told to take his own grave, used and taken from the page very, very badly. some of the 2 continues to kick him and then after forcing the
4:44 am
detainees to carry buckets that is filled with maybe 50 pounds of toil around this type. the detainee collapses in dice. so this is the case with which someone get to is tried for mano, striking things that we've revealed from house of disclosure was key to the gap on was quite close friends as well as being colleagues. and jeff and actually right several family link fee letters about the key suitcase. he says, my own experience and then why i comes does not seem to defy why d? at any time, i could have been in exactly the same danger persecution as he has been. gather hon is directly identifying himself with, with a mind committing such terrific acts of torture. deacon seats that he and his
4:45 am
colleagues are doing exactly the same thing every day, to savage, to speak brusquely to now what is not is not an admission of guilt. the show, the new evidence in the hands of the files unquestionably provides evidence that go ahead and admit that he was actively involved in the torturing of christmas. we could have confronted gap, i had with this evidence, but in 2001 we did. i think that the most shocking element of the story is the under the legal arrangements that are made during the emergency. the kind of violence of governance committing is, is justified. it's tolerated, it's legally the, the,
4:46 am
the british government, new con, it's leaking down to shop. i'm so there is an attempt to come up with a way to make this legal. the side of the canyon tiny general creates this distinction between what he calls compelling force, which is legal. in his view on punitive force, which is a compelling force is very loosely defined. and this is a carte blanche for the comp office says to do anything provided that it's a means to the end of getting a confession. this kind of falls distinctions that i use to sanitize. what especially is i talk to the governor since this legal decision to the secretary of state, back in london, who although he's wary of it, does approve this use of force and that becomes illegal authorization to the car
4:47 am
lucian method across the grounds. the, the definition of compelling forced effectively means that there is systematic torture of reign of terror in these camps. and the result of the issues that by the middle of 9058, the remaining detention camps are not to be can you get riots? you get hunger strikes and watch those and kind of you don't yet realize is that explosion is going to affect more than can you is going to affect britton's entire reputation as an imperial power. the. busy busy busy
4:48 am
new a new york on, you know, when i bought a new pretty equitably mock . welcome. can we go to my community by 1958 if time change between waters and the remaining detainees are acute. the lack of cooperation from the niece has reached the one camp where the situation escalates the most. is that how the it is the apotheosis, the culmination of the violence that have been incurring in the accounts before that hole in early march. $195952.00 each for one compound and 80 of them. they were forced to
4:49 am
work, fight, be beaten, until they pick up tools. and the results are catastrophic. carrier needing mo, reopen 40 doors, need new glass or the on my head is that, you know, mike, you have way to ship with the when they've done their tools refused to work up to 2 of the waters because right shields and passions charge of the prisoners and beat them heavily to prisoners pick up whatever they can find to run, to defend themselves with boldest stones and get this battle continues for the next 5 hours. by the end of this 11 main, a date 72 others hospitalized
4:50 am
the 55. it will make week by day one, idea might equal me. normally i am more available. florida mazda, mazda of elk, with data. when i do my deal, mccue level medial my, the key will my to kind of muggy the cool, all the my 5, i need to work with mac equity to eat lunch, about why to compliment your things well, know what to do or don't make you already have what can we do? i get to meet, get area to meet up with call because the news got with the dmv, the,
4:51 am
the reaction empowerment is really explosive. on that really flips the scripts as to who is on saving lives. do you know, and who really bad is the weight of the brutal torture and abuse the arrow to much smell and it's time and it's not as a result of this huge problem entry pressure on the government. they have an inquiry into what has happened. we establish in narrative around solar quite simply, is that this was an aberration. this was an individual operation that went completely wrong. but then you evidence does allow us to see very clearly that the british government was very, very well aware, present danger of dance in detention camps, redemption technical reviews. but respondents are simply to say,
4:52 am
you find your oldest the whole of masika on the attended publicity of it covers the abuses of what happening under the whole pipeline system. under the littlest out of been watching the idea of the british having any legitimacy in holding on to the, on the surface is still prosperous and peaceful. but there's no doubt in anybody's mind the independence must come in the question that remains. the result is when, when would you like to see kenya independent? well, i don't to any immediate median. the british government just said, let's get out of here as quick as possible. 7 total. it was what? 59. and by 63, we're already independent. the to meet
4:53 am
the special issues which savage, the establishment narratives always been to the end of empires, consent to process it is london sort of electing its children grow up and leave the house back to that scenario of the british long and on britain deciding that to now, on on nice is not if you was foster by circumstances, the reality is this is something that the british has been dragged, kicking and screaming at least over 15 years into accepting. and it's that violence, it's that rupture, it's that contested. the nature of it that is completely alive, is do up on the fluid,
4:54 am
i don't or a to do you. what else would have been a reaction either or not? also taken and to defend shops, the lead to hear that can new to loop you would eat them but still waiting you day towards the the or the the mama version. so i think we're all of them unlocked. now that coverage actually coming out and stating to the world what's happened to
4:55 am
them who didn't know what we know today. and so for me, their responsibility is to bring a sense of humanity to people who never had to stay in the humanity being taken away from them. of the, in terms of our imperial pash, there is a strong carson with pinion size. these things off, too long ago. i'm not sleeping, dogs should be left to lie. for some, there is this concern that person's moral source each day would be weak. if britain starts to print and i'll pull, acknowledge its own historical find by talking about the atrocities that were committed in your name and the boss doesn't your model or sorry, fucked. his time the fly,
4:56 am
him know, trashing reputation. post. i'm actually very patriotic, but i'm very offended by the fact that people represent my country. might think it's ok to talk to. so we need to be able to sort these things out, not to just put it under the carpet, but to come out and confronted learn from history. and so probably with one or the young people to learn about quarter 3 or 4 or 5 that speaks in other parts of the world. so us not actually and that has to be more defense for still i'm
4:57 am
the, the color we have signed. so some useful weather pushing it to california over the next couple of days. very right, weather coming through,
4:58 am
even some snow. so that will help with the well fine as it presents. we have got the co red top to place it out of kind of the just pushing down across the plains, high pressure. here's a normally bloss here that normally bloss, running into something, some warmer rad, down towards the deep south. and whether to flash, we're going to say some of the lobby storms for a time. so that'd be guy minus 7. and when he peg looking, get to a $23.00 though a full boost and i'm not heat. going to win out as we go through the next couple of days minus 3. and when we pick up as we go through sunday, cut it off is going to on monday, but the hate still very much in place across that is the side of the us. then we have to bait that we guy with those shots shala's bus, a very heavy rain fund, re down pulls, coming for could cool some localized flooding. but you also west, that's where we sit. we need the wet weather and in the, the winfrey weather. so useful weather in terms of ice qualifies as we go through fast i smoke coming through here,
4:59 am
rolling across the rockies tended to play to little. still a few showers, save it towards the snow for new england. the pod huge, i mean to be could be interim head for 4 years, which is pretty much it. and that tool times no, i didn't say that that will be for 40 years facing realities. what does donald trump's re election? mean? pretty tough. it is most important that we focus on how to work with president trump thought provoking on stuff. and your wife is dealing with the climate crisis is a crisis of crisis good times. but it's, there's not just one prices up via the store on talk to how does era the challenges, era within the
5:00 am
explosions in damascus and other areas of syria is really air strikes on the same day theory and celebrate the fall of the shot of less than the bottom, how much i'm doing this is just to rely from to how also coming up all lies on the new administration in damascus. the us secretary of state is in the middle east to talk regional politics with serious neighbors. the.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on