tv Bares fur Rares Deutsche Welle September 21, 2020 7:00am-8:00am CEST
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this is state of the news live from berlin a large scale investigation finds banks were involved in illegal dealings hundreds of investigative journalist working to get the berfield documents leaked from u.s. financial thirty's that appear to prove big banks facilitated corruption money laundering and sanctions busting criminals. more mass protests in deliberate pro-democracy activists call another day of demonstrations the police arrest hundreds of people mainly women demanding the resignation of president alexander
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lukashenko. and within fiction rights soaring again in the u.k. the government slaps the fines on quarantine break ins imposing a sick and total lockdown. i'm anthony how'd we begin with new revelations of money laundering illegal financial flows and a banking scandal of gigantic proportions for years banks around the world appear to have helped avert and conceal funds originating from criminal activities documents lake from u.s. financial authority financing seem to show how banks help to circumvent in international sanctions including those against iran and syria danis and british banks but also don't you back implicated in the lake files. all over the world criminals are using the global financial system to launder money it's
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a dirty but lucrative business for the banks. if a bank notices a suspicious transfer it has to report it to the authorities. thousands of such reports were obtained by by speed news. and then evaluated by the i.c.i. jai. it's an international network of investigative journalists. they have discovered evidence of money laundering worth $2.00 trillion dollars. you could learn a lot by handling money from criminal sources. so that's why it's hard for banks to say no to criminal money. in germany dortch a bank has some explaining to do the country's largest bank already had to pay millions in fines in $27.00 tane after a dodgy dealings in russia. the investigation reveals that those illegal activities
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a much more extensive than previously thought russian criminals used torture banks moscow branch to loan to millions the current c.e.o. christian saving served as head of corporate order thing at the time he did not raise the alarm but subsequent external investigations deed torture bank says it is since toughened its internal controls and it denies that c.e.o. saving did anything wrong it says he was unaware of the external probe. yeah i know i know how it is she founded a unit that led these investigations as would it not being the next to have since been external investigations to this and no stage could any responsibility be traced back to the head of the business to the concerns of it and the fun for to listen to the conservatives who have no interest in the investigation also shows that u.s. president donald trump may have profited from dirty money all agog from kazakstan
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allegedly bought apartments at the trump new york property with laundered money trumps company denies knowing who these customers were but they did make money from the transactions. the investigation shows the scale of international money laundering efforts to curb it a floundering. because regulators can't get to grips with highly sophisticated criminal networks. well for more we're joined now by our washington correspondent carolyn and. carolyn of the scale of this leak is simply enormous what does it reveal exactly about the global financial system. well the leaks are explosive because they show criminals and political figures see quickly moving money through the global financial system the leaked documents involving about $2.00 trillion u.s. dollars of transactions they have revealed how some of the world's biggest banks have allowed to criminals to move this dirty money around the world the files cover
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marnia turns fears are to be tainted by well known financial institutions such as the german dacha bank or d.p. morgan and carried out for it sanctions individuals or even criminals across the world between the years 1999 and 2017 all this shows that there is apparently not enough control in terms of money laundering the leaks papers are from the us financial crime scene force and network finn's. if you could just a little more about the organization financing the organization with these leaks have originated. well fiza is a group of the united states department of treasury that collects and analyzes information about financial transactions in order to fight domestic and international money laundering and other financial crimes having said that and considering the a normal scale of this leak one can really say this this control mechanism is not
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really working the fin sent already has reacted to this and they say they are aware that various media outlets intend to publish a series of articles based on unlawful closed sensitive documents from several years ago the unauthorized disclosure of fees documents this is what they say is not legal it is a cry and this is why the finns and has already referred to this matter to the united states department of justice. you talked about the scope of the links being enormous i imagine the investigation itself was also enormous how was it carried out exactly. well the investigation was carried out by the c.i. a an international network of investigative journalists or also a colleague from d.w. has been investigating and working the network includes more than 100 partner news
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organizations from 88 countries so it was a huge investigation that took really years and the journal is analyzed more than $22000.00 pages sering all the time this is the biggest leak in terms of money laundering and this is why it also provides a unique bird's eye view of illicit money flows that are supported or why it's that support of corruption and criminality or what they do believe washington correspondent carolina jim we thank you for. moving to belive 1st where protest is not giving up despite a worsening government crackdown tens of thousands of people gathered in my just cities throughout the country on sunday police and the army have been out in force again detaining pace with and strike has calling for president lukashenko to step down after disputed elections. the streets of minsk turned into a sea of red and white flags the symbol of the position tens of thousands joined
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the march of justice in the capital and other cities it's the 6th straight sunday of protests but what looks like a high turnout was actually significantly lower than other weekends perhaps a result of call expect president alex on the go for tougher action and consist critics who want him to step down. some of them have never experienced belarus without him. well i recently stated i do my gratitude there is a streaming of democracy but i was dreaming of freedom and justice where laws are observed. we don't want our children to grow up in a prison look around that people in uniforms behind barbed wire everywhere. the government is flexing its military muscles armored vehicles are meant to intimidate protesters metro stations were closed the internet slowed down dozens
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were arrested. and police brutality is getting more and more visible like here no. i'm not resisting stop strangling me i haven't done anything shouts this protester before police arrest some in response to the latest escalation of violence and online messaging channel with more than 2000000 subscribers published a list of names birth dates and addresses of more than 1000 police officers. and let's take a look now at some of the other stories making news around the world. demonstrators have marched in several german cities calling for the evacuation of a crowded market caps in greece they want the german government to take in more than the 1500 refugees has already agreed to relocate after the fire at the morea camp on lesbos. u.c.l.
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as prime minister. has announced old remaining coronavirus restrictions will be lifted across much of the country with the exception of its largest city open book continue to have some measures in place for not a 16 days the city's outbreak now appears to be under control. around 3000 people gathered for an opening in mass in angola as churches there reopened for the 1st time in nearly half a year coronavirus restrictions have been relaxed about worship to still have to keep their distance while taking part in the service. one of the british government's top medical advances is warning that the u.k. is that a critical point in the coronavirus process since the start of the pandemic more than 40000 people in britain have died after testing positive for cope with 19 the highest number in europe and the u.k. health minister has now refused to rule out a 2nd total lockdown in england. as the u.k.
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enjoys the final days of summer it's not just the approaching winter that fills many with a sense of foreboding with infection rates rising a 2nd lockdown is increasingly likely we face a tipping point as a country and everyone has a role in the choice that we face either everybody follows the rules or we're going to have to take more stringent actions starting this month people who have tested positive for the corona virus will be hit with stiff fines if they break quarantine such fines are nothing new but at $10000.00 british pounds for repeat offenders the financial hit for those caught it is significant the u.k. government has not shied away from controversial decisions it has not however managed to implement an effective national testing system. in the past weeks bottlenecks have forced many people to travel hundreds of kilometers for a test. if i was there. but the best people
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to test with which to some. so far local lockdowns have been centered on the north of the country but the capital london is likely to be next it's mayor has already demanded that restaurants and pubs close by 10 pm. their annual emmy awards the television world version of the oscars were handed out on sunday in a virtual ceremony hosted by jimmy kimmel in los angeles succession took the gong for best drama series with the star jeremy strong backing best actor it was also recognized for its writing. but it was another h.b.o. show watchman who says that led to not winning in 11 categories its star jean king one for best actress in a limited series with her costar. second winning best supporting actor the show also won the award for outstanding writing of a limited series in the comedy awards shit's creek that's the one put in
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a powerhouse performance it's all the acting process and supporting actor with any dan levy also one for his writing and directing you to on the show. even though i didn't have any of the sport and cycling's most prestigious race the tour de france ended in paris on sunday and 21 year old rookie today part of the cha ok i'm the youngest to take the crown since world war 2. child's home village in slovenia people got together to celebrate the sun's victory is the 1st live indian to win the race and his compatriot which came in 2nd to lock up a very popular one to finish. the football in just a month ago ob a lot think had reached the glittering heights of the champions league semifinals on sunday it was back to the bread and butter of bundesliga business and last is the place team with heavy favorites to beat the minnows of months as they got their new campaign on the way. after just
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a few seasons leipzig are firmly among the bundesliga elite could deal yet not goes money lead them to a 1st championship their campaign got off to an ideal start against months and before spirit already put someone up from the spot when use of house and strike made it on 17 minutes. into the 2nd tower john phillips gave the visitors hope on 48 minutes to walk. but that hope was swiftly doused by amadou i doubt i made it 31 just 3 minutes later. satisfying 1st outing for leipsic but now goes mine will know that far sterner tests await his young pretenders i feel watching days of the news live from berlin up next install film hit on they definitely don't forget you can always get all the lads news and
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information around the clock on our website at any time that's the double e dot com you can also follow us on twitter and instagram as well handled they have been at me's matheny house more news coming up in 45 minutes time for now but for me and the team here and thanks for watching. most muslim women choose between their safe and self-determination. i don't want anyone to tell me. how women are striving to reform. traditional prejudices. in islam starts september 24th on t w. it's
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the president thanks began 40 days after the mexico in hamburg dropped me the for a few days of mourning it was a full hour and when they're out and you see blood on the streets and people are saying this is the peace that you promised us and you could not say don't forget it was only at the o p. wasn't there
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a ceremony ira fun in a row being held clean wasn't going to be. 1 . 1 in march 94 we headed back to the negotiating table since the wave of suicide bombings is really close to border to 2 and a half 1000000 palestinians poverty was rising throughout the occupied territories and living conditions declining our people were losing faith in the peace process but i knew we must not give up. because it was a good student of syria. he's also thinking about the 6 are going to go in the future of sleep fast for the common it's arrangements or whatever but yeah it's going to sort of i don't know going now the trick of negotiating with the palestinians is not to address the main aspects of the prominent to enjoy. if we try to deal with the prominent arrangements but now the whole thing will fall upon
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your going to have to clean up the system started to set off without me despite the blood and the violence the process had a force of its own and i'm a 94 when we set out to sign the gaza jericho agreement granting the palestinian self rule in gaza city a song that uses. told the stage was finally set ajor president mubarak provided a suitably dramatic setting to the ceremony in cairo. the morning of the signing of the gaza jericho agreement faisal and i were being interviewed in jerusalem while watching on my broadcast of the ceremony. on my way to the interview i was held up by israeli soldiers at the checkpoints someone said to me this is your idea of peace tell the old man not to sign tell him to come wait at the checkpoint and sign it here along with the rest of us. i stared at the screen
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and wondered is this a celebration of the birth of the peace process or its burial. both sides appear to have sorted out differences over the gaza strip and jericho but within minutes it was clear that the deal like the stage positions was not going to plan a just finding the jericho sell for a living. i was sitting there and i see a 5 signing book signing good book humans signing a document be all the documents and then the guy that the system brought the maps look the bam. didn't sign close the them went back to spare them copying was walking through the saying. why walk up the stair. and i stand next to a beam and as he begins to sign i open it and then i whisper
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in his ear without show trying not to show any excitement op because everything was recalled. and filmed and i told him are off the notes signed. so he says so what does it mean. i responded it means that the snow agreement. israel's prime minister. examined the documents. foreign minister shimon peres and also refused to sign. for a while it seemed as if the entire ceremony was about to collapse. because we had not been a part of that channel we didn't fully appreciate what the gaps were between the 2 sides israel saw this as a devolution of power as
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a power seems prove themselves how soon saw this says we have to show this is a new day and as a new day we have to have all the trappings of state even if we don't have a formal yet so immediately they want to you know they didn't want controls over across the ones they wanted they wanted immediately to say you know the israelis are out of our lives. without in 2005 of the number of a bush nations is says that. he says no no no. i was. with barak they want to be serious. so i would go to them and says no they would quit and to stop it. mubarak said publicly was on the stage and. the son of a bitch. after a brief interval the p.l.o. leader was assured that the size of the jericho region was still under negotiation
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he signed the document and a few comments. finally with the briefest of handshakes and deal was done at the very last minute. on july 1st 1904 yasser arafat returned to his home and reclaimed his position as the palestinian leader. it was an ambivalent return he came back and had to govern palestine which was divided and driven apart. or perhaps israel brought him back in order to control him. what was the price we had to pay for his return home was this $1.00 of also most minefields or was it the 1st step toward peace and the liberation of palestine.
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as we made our way to promise time my heart pounded and i was choked with the emotion of the moment. i wept tears i had never went before kissing and hugging all my relatives and friends. the last time i met my father in jordan i hinted that i might be coming home so he cried and raised his hands swearing he would prepare a feast on my return. with my sadness was that my father had passed away just 4 months earlier after waiting for my return for so many years. so when i called yuri i said i'm finally back in march childhood home he greeted me with the arab order of
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welcome and told me he was really pleased to hear my voice we have become neighbors and i asked. one week after i returned to abu d.s. we met once again in taba this time in order to negotiate the 2nd stage of the all slow process israel's withdrawal from the west bank. by spread out the map we had kept secret until then. the oslo accord stated israel will withdraw from most of the west bank within a year and the palestinians were expecting to receive control over the land immediately. but israel demanded a gradual withdrawal and offered the palestinians full control of only 2 percent of the land. the remaining 98 percent would be controlled by the israeli army.
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arafat stared at the map silently and then announced that it was an unbearable humiliation these are prison camps he yelled you want to destroy me with those words arafat left the room. what you were suggesting deviates from the signed agreement i shouted you keep 98 percent of the land we won't accept that you can enforce this approach on our a fact and push him into a corner. but remember this a one sided agreement will not last. last it up without saying another word and summoned his driver. we exchanged a polite and cold handshake and we each went our separate ways.
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as hours went by we waited nervously in the hotel's lobby some israeli reporters informed us that arafat had issued a statement about the talks collapsing. we were all on edge but refused to cave in . a sound that goes from the now is the time to decide do they want agreement or not 2 main issues are on the table hebron and withdrawal maps are out of so i believe we'll know in hours or in the days but where the end of the negotiation is almost at the stage of the final decision. later that evening arafat's personal assistant came rushing towards me arafat asked that you come to our room immediately she said he's collapsed. i went to our laws room and found him lying in bed pale as a ghost trembling nodding in and out of consciousness.
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hold on my friend i whispered i need you to stay with me. the doctors found a collapse to be a result of extreme fatigue caused by the many hours of negotiations but i knew the truth. the map i presented to him had broken his heart. there was something very personal in east making it was a political. festival it wasn't a political ambition it was a very human race. there's a symbolic. picture where people live when the israeli attacks in the streets and put on their branches. that's that the story of your lives and your horrors the irony of that killed your kids from oppressed you people who went out and gave them
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i'm a woman i want day i'm driving to my office and the guards tell me a bus was blown up as we drove there and the whole square was awash with blood. and the bodies were still lying there body parts people wailing and weeping. i wish i would fail. as i must thousands of people were there and when i walked in they saw him murder and see what you've done to us try to see what you've done to us much as it's a man. i had the meeting with you here and ron. we all felt that time was running out and
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that we had to act fast. we agreed on deliberations that would lead to a permanent agreement utilizing the same framework we use and ask low. quick discreet talks and no empty slogans. mahmoud abbas and i deliberated over the draft for almost 2 years. behind the scenes without the racket of the taba hotel we touched on the most sensitive points of the process. the for the very 1st time at least theoretically we have a document in our hands with a comprehensive solution the withdrawal to the 67 borders the establishment of a palestinian state of course keeping the settlement blocks intact and making jerusalem the capital of both nations my plan was to set up a meeting with rabin. i told him that i would like to meet with him about the permanent solution and he said it's not possible. so i told him let's do it when i
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returned from the united states on saturday nov 11th. no one could have guessed under what circumstances that meeting would take place. on september 5th we reassembled in taba i must admit that after our last encounter i wasn't looking forward to another round of this endless boxing match. it was the nastiest meeting i've ever been in my life we just wanted to be anywhere but in that room as i was leaving the room i turned around and the israeli and palestinian delegations are talking to each other and having a cup of coffee i think it underscores the point that. part of what happens to negotiations is the humanisation of the other side you no longer see just the
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quote unquote enemy but you see a person and you learn about that person's family and their ups and downs their happy moments and you get a sense of how committed they are to peace and you never able to translate that to the public. that evening we improvised a friday prayer service we lit candles and much to the astonishment of the palestinians singer recited the kiddush prayer. we opened with everybody love saturday night in 3 languages. afterwards abu alaa and myself joked around by imitating the peres and arafat conversations meanwhile we taught the ass for how to sing my you disha mama. it was nice to get around again. later that night i received a call from jerusalem a bus had exploded in the center of the capital. i.
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told the government stop the peace talks. we sat and watched the news silently no one said a word no one doubted that our palestinian friends opposed to terror and that it was directed towards them as well. 2 days later called me up from his room and asked me to watch the arab evening news with him. we watched images of a 7 year old boy's funeral a boy who had been killed that day by the israeli army. abu alaa was right when he said that neither side has dominion over suffering. that night abu alaa and i reached the final draft of the osce low b. agreement. is going to let them of the also be accords was signed by early
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severe on the israeli side and as well enough for the palestinians according to the treaty the israeli army will withdraw from 6 main cities in the west bank besides jericho and elections for the palestinian council will take place and much else. this is a yawn this is a day of achievement the visits are grubby and all this morning he achieved the signing of the oslo be accorded the government debated for 5 hours you know what the minister has described as an historic meeting about in a storage. i know showed you today with the help of the israeli army we rule over more than 2000000 palestinians. and control their daily lives through the civil administration all shallow this is no peaceful solution or we can go on fighting. we can continue killing and being killed off the government for labor not so bad we can also try to bring
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a halt to this endless cycle of bloodshed we can't give peace a chance call your shallow. i don't think al sees have gathered to protest the ratification of the oslo b. agreement and what the nationalist camp calls the forsaking of security and the abandonment of the whole life that is surely that i asked face huge crowd is there anyone amongst you the police yes i don't find. them over you say no but there is someone who doesn't care about your pain enough to put that through mr rabin i don't believe. i i i i i i.
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maybe even john when the president of the united states is majesty king hussein of the hashemite kingdom of jordan is excellent seem obama who's mubarak president of the arab republic of egypt it is actually unseat saddam the prime minister of israel chairman arafat. please take a good look. the saw you did you see was it possible. goes on a gerbil just to ease sugar. into our great being a soldier inserted in your way to do. to make peace moment most of. these where the years of hope when the peace camps
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felt that they were somehow. vindicated. bringing to their people the fruits. and open the same hotel a spontaneous get together of the oslo veterans among them the original negotiators and. it was 100 you know it's a one day off you know the one. that i'm just yes i am optimistic yes i believe that. the process to get out of it will continue despite of all the difficulties we face but subsequently. we have both we have a good political push this process for. all and i concur with up well what i said that we have no choice and there is some good common language around this table if you can. see also you know the days highlight is the friendly perception
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of us where personal guards are let down and on the podium gives her phone number to me says out of. this chemistry among the women in the she and addresses out of foster the 1st time in a personal tell me. what the situation spoke. and are sorry. species. i. are still in the believe chair but know. that you are close to be sure each i was. with. if. i was not one post i was valid and looks into it so i could be his eyes
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and replies a lot of. oh out of causing. i was 3 was i later yet sacra been at the shimon peres the yossi beilin game and to their friends i say to you throughout. the hour. we will rally our forces and we will succeed obviously was we will put an end to those threats but we will succeed was because there's no nation is much stronger than its government because i think it was you was true.
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rabin and arafat felt isolated and the hostile environment was the peace camp wasn't going out into the streets to protest was instead they chose to avoid confrontation was the peace opponents hamas on the palestinian side and the greater israel camp on our side was now on to public opinion was the face off wasn't between israel and the palestinians but between those who supported peace and those who objected to it. mr udell of why do you like to make the settlers angry as. much what are they accusing me of not of cut off forsaking the settlers lives why most people said that the settlements bole stop our security where is the security look beautiful. a problem today just providing security for the settlers let me. see the settlers as pioneers should absolutely not do you see them and.
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i see them as people who are implementing their political philosophy they believe in the greater israel what is dying isn't it these days. some hill near ramallah bringing 700000 immigrants to israel and absolving building a society and economy of. the tiny settlements surrounded by hundreds of thousands of palestinian. in early october john freedman a friend of peres convinced him to arrange a rally in support of the peace process. peres urged robin to accept the initiative but rabin wondered would be people even leave their homes in those days rabin was more pessimistic than ever.
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if too much is heard in the middle east from the few extremists tonight the supporters of peace and a huge rally in tel aviv this is the young israel tired of obvious service tired of chasing palestinian stone throwing children through refugee camps all sides are mobilizing but this is now becoming one of the most contentious moments in israeli history for the past 5 perhaps no surprise is fighting and there is a popular i'm about to piece. it was the happiest day of his life. i've known him for 15 years i do never seen him so happy. he has many downs. he didn't know if people would show up or call how they behave. and to his pleasant surprise the crowd was enormous and the enthusiasm was incredible. and young men and women jumped into the pool in their
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clothes and praised him and peace and me to a little so. i'm sure i'm from out i've known him for 15 years and i never saw him seeing that was the 1st time i ever saw him and seeing. i was i what we both sang and neither of us so great seeing as the hard go afterwards he hugged me like he never hugged me before. i never saw him so happy as he was that night.
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allow me to say. i'm also. i do. i want to thank every one of you. for coming here to stand up against violence piece. thank. god so when the rally was over i started walking down the stairs all right my car was parked in front of his car and next to his cost shoot his driver i asked him. he said there he is he was maybe 10 or 12 meters away from me the most i got in the cockpit driver started it and just as we closed the door we heard 3 gunshots strong .
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concern on the floor much of the old shit yet makiko my face we're now seeing an edited footage from the peace rally this is what we know so far in the face 3 shots were fired prime minister rabin the jewish and other planes to a shop. we still don't know the condition of the prime minister moments of false emotion inshallah. i went to the hospital. layer a big. in the family and close friends were there to go and the hospital director took me aside and said it's a bad situation almost hopeless. a few minutes later he came to tell me it was over she was last.
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you know his people were fighting each other didn't go on as each other they kill each other and sort of was in the play. but then later i saw robin's meeting with our president meeting after meeting after meeting after meeting i was there every single meeting and i saw how the relationships develop. after their one and rabin was assassinated out of 5 told me is as an aid to the peace process and i disagreed with. them on that i was not about her and the vidual and it's about institutions it's about. having replacements and so on and me the bribe is for the has happened to me very sensitive about this process.
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there is was. was not himself was not himself. he was very said deeply said. he was already the prime minister and day on saturday i came to his home with all the maps and all the material. and i said to him. this is the women that have it with one. i think that we can go for it you have the exact border you have the solution for jerusalem everything is and. i think that now is the time i mean everybody is so confused including also but still there is the support for for peace even more than before as a result of that as a nation and let's use it. for his memory and finish the job. and
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listen to me very carefully for 2 hours and then he said not now not mom i don't think that people are ready to leave the jordan valley which was part of the map so that israel should withdraw for the dawn of. and. i think today to bring it to the people with his emotional little neuroses but this is the opportunity i was not strong enough to tell him it is your biggest mistake reconsidering i did not come again to him with this and. maybe it is in me maybe it is part of my weakness
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maybe it was just a mistake i don't know but if you ask me where there are rape i don't regret it i had i had apparently to fight for. him for the permanent agreement. on may 5th 1906 i found myself back in the familiar surroundings of the hilton taba . i wondered about the 3 years that had passed since i 1st met abu allah and all slow since then our lives had become a combination of promise and anguish. the process was started and withstood tremendous trials. since the 1st day and asked lo and up until this current exchange in may 961001 100 days of peace talks had passed when we said our
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farewells that day i never imagined that it would be my last and final meeting with abu allah in my official role as head of the israeli negotiating team 'd. if i had known it was all going to end maybe i would have come up with something more intelligent to say to him but all i said to our boy allow was 'd see you soon my friend. nearly 80 percent of israel's or 1000000 voters dreams of polling stations everyone seemed to understand why piss on election was important. in suburban tel aviv voters chose peres the peace process that he would one be in a bloody army or in a bloody war in the west bank city of hebron jewish settlers voted for netanyahu they just want to be give our land for the obvious so of course we are voting for me i mean if i go tonight those who support the steps israel has taken toward peace
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mark playing into the whole that they may be the ultimate winner. and have told the shah and shots from the opposition it's official up a turnabout in the 1906 elections the next prime minister is binyamin netanyahu he received 50.4 percent of the dots on that call while shimon peres received only $49.00 and a half percent but it's. it's
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like someone building a bridge and building and building and building something that could have really changed. the middle east and to put shouldn't the make these comes one c. $100.00 the it's and it was a waste. i felt so. when it all collapsed because i hailed it already and i felt we can do it we can do it and then. it it went wrong and i know it's not in my life by probably not in my kids' lifetime maybe the grandchildren. should. shoot.
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us. us. getting to their comrades. saving supporters. friends. the state of israel is embarking on a new path to understand i was. well when you get done you. get a belated. let. the man. well and the whole room. get a belated blueness. well it didn't hurt the little thing. but not in the order in the
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enough. just to believe there's a chance for peace between us and i'm going to stand among the girls and i'm both on the can. mold for us. donald are there is an ongoing war. about to conquer the world people think in war there are no big storms only big games. no wars open. unless it's moving airplanes focus.
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back in the not nothing. well i guess sometimes i am but most end up in with the me but i don't think deep into the german culture of. new jersey we're taking this drama day on the east coast to fold out who they know i'm right so join me to meet the gentleman to tell. the power of influencers and what they mean for democracy. welcome to our minds session global. influencers have an enormous reach. now recently voicing their opinions about political issues there's a new dynamic is emerging. what does this mean for democracy. joining our discussion starts 1230 eastern.
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this is e w news live from berlin a massive investigation finds banks around the world were involved in the illegal dealings to the tune of 2 trillion dollars you could learn a lot by handling money from criminal sources because that's why it's hot for banks to say no to criminal money. charlus have banded together to reveal documents.
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