tv [untitled] September 29, 2010 3:00am-3:30am EDT
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because the decree i signed states that i its president have lost trust in the school and it is a legal reason for his dismissal yes i can not work if the seychelles i can't trust that was the willing to challenge much to his job is the professional relations between the presidents in moscow had was and he was a man subordinate to the president of the not the other way round was a certain steps should have been taken to return the situation thanks a moment. before stayed in office as the mayor of moscow for eighteen years that is a tremendous amount of time that is that's why his sacking caused quite a mixed reaction from muscovites because many people supported he was called for his policies on pension years so the average level of pensions in moscow is higher than in other russian cities many people said that it was because of you do of course that most of the we see a new more and more however there are a lot of people who accuse you do was call for feeling to solve moscow's traffic
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problem of failing to protect many buildings which bore off cultural importance not only to the city of moscow but to before mation and there's also a lot of controversy going on around you of course why forgiving them but good enough to start to be russia's richest u.s. business woman and many people do say that she managed to be so consul successful because of her husband being in the air of moscow under the law the united russia party as the majority within the russian parliament now has ten days to submit that we see the candidacies to the russian president for the post of moscow's mayor then he will have to choose one of them and submit this can you see to the moscow city hall and you will still also have the right to appeal he said i think for however we haven't heard any reports of his intentions to do so it has been off
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reporting there and while muscovites are weighing out their mayor sacking former c.b.s. correspondent in moscow jonathan sanders the scribe the ousted chief as bulldozer. across eighteen years. was a combination combination of four kinds of purple he was really a renaissance prince running the city state he was in american terms a combination of mayor daley and robert moses the great city builder who ruthlessly did things he was a little dictator he was a kind of robin hood he would put his finger on the pulse or on the road there was a new landlord the people building buildings making money in moscow and force them to do other things there was a time when your. college was quite popular popular because he ripped off the rip off artists who were making money on the new book moscow and did things like build christ the savior cathedral i think his legacy will be that he's
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a bulldozer bulldozers get things done but they sometimes are rude and crude if you were to go back and look in the middle of the ninety nine days i think a lot of muscovites would say we'll take coffee with all his rough edges because he got a lot done because he did have a populist unfortunately i think many times people are influenced by their spouses . wife elin a nickel live in about two hundred hard charging in the plastics business in the construction business widely said to be in the corruption business and some of that sloshed over and a man who stayed in his job just to. yuri luzhkov will have a mixed legacy but his legacy is evident on the new face of the new moscow. now workers all over europe are set to take to the streets in a wave and test already demonstrations the protests come amid rising unemployment
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and unprecedented levels of government debt the largest march is expected in brussels near the hat quaters of the e.u. commission lower and it reports. after a summer of relative calm the european union's taking to the streets again to praise tests austerity measures and unemployment a series of marches and demonstrations the shed chilled in may just around the e.u. organized by trade unions in brussels the rally coincides with a meeting of e.u. finance ministers in dublin protesters will greet members of the irish parliament says they come back from the summer break spanish unions are going on strike and she cuts. ahead in portugal italy latvia lithuania the czech republic cyprus serbia rumania poland and prongs it's all about the government cuts which are being instigated as a result of essentially spending public funds like alter the e.u. governments have cut pay raise the retirement age and slash jobs in the public
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sector is in an effort to reduce debt restore budget just a plain these small confidence in the euro it comes in certain respects and economists say it's time for the euro to go and for countries like the pigs portugal it's really islands greece and spain who have the largest amounts of debt to drop out of the euro is dating back to managing their own finances german economists professor my daughter told me i would let the return and the pursuit to return to a return and we still would have a european union it's not like it would be the collapse of the european union quite to the contrary if we allow those countries to set their own economic policy and to be sovereign in their currencies we would do europe a service we're doing europe a disservice by having this artificial currency imposed on it it can only lead to political tensions like in greece or the greece population greek population has to
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suffer the taxpayers germany has to suffer if the only one so didn't suffer and greece with a bang speaker. so that's to me is a deal that is not quiet approachable interesting the greek unions all taking part in wednesday's demonstrations even those sales taxes being raised to twenty three percent in attempt to pay off one hundred ten billion euros from the e.u. and the i.m.f. but look will be protesting its nineteen percent unemployment rates and spain's unions will be out on the streets by saying their government's plans to save fifty billion euros over the next four years by slashing public sector jobs and pensions and despite all this new countries are still striving to join the euro zone a stone is the latest recruit it will join in january throwing its economic fortunes in with countries struggling to avoid collapse in may riots in greece resulted in the
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deaths of three people and while everyone will be hoping nothing like that happens again it's clear the political arm rest in europe is far from over. and that is war and our responded in london you're watching r t coming up later in the program the panels on destroys the war about war is that a former army officer in afghanistan find out more. and in india thousands of farmers are educating against government plans to build a new road of their own land find out why. in meantime kyrgyzstan is gearing up for a general election in the hope of restoring order fall with months of ethnic violence and political uncertainty in the central asian republics the interim leader of a took the reins following april's bloody street riots which kiev she saw remain in office until the end of next year a poll on the tenth will see some two dozen parties battling it out for one hundred
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twenty seats in parliament but one party and its leader has a chance at winning to raise as artie's everything goes through now reports. as the clock ticks to. wards the kurdistan elections the country holds its breath will the polls bring stability or plunge the country into another round of violence and chaos meet felix cool of the country's former prime minister who could be next to lead the country following the controversial rains of us got a cause and could not get back ie of course his one of the few figures who have not been tarnished in the last fifteen twenty years so he has a pretty hard moral stand. with population and he has a good chance of all we need in the next parliamentary elections who have has a different times been the national security general the regional governor and mayor of the capital bishkek but what he's most renowned and praised for in his home country is an ability to handle crisis situations. in two
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thousand and five there were scarce total mass marauders in the capital police and national security had all running away at that point that's when cool of his friends revolutionaries asked him to take matters into his own hands and in three days he restored order. but also has a reputation for being difficult. he was a close ally of both presidents at the beginning of their terms and soon fell out of favor with both of them finding himself in opposition and twice in prison. they can never be two or three powerful figures at the top of the curious politics pool of has always been a very powerful person and the key of and the kind of have both felt that he could be the person to sweep them from their post and take power into his hands some predict school of the party are numberless which translates as dignity is in a strong position yet cool it will have to run against a multitude of other parties all of whom also fancy their chances of challenging
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him the problem is that it's very difficult to create a democratic country in central asia kyrgyzstan is the most democratic country in central asia unfortunately this is a very immature democracy and sometimes it leads to or some very bad results right now what kyrgyzstan needs is not a democracy of european type i don't think it's possible in kyrgyzstan what it needs is stability and suspicion of violence whoever wins the election this is a crucial decision for kurdistan a country that's been to the brink it in a go go r.t. . ten militants have been killed in two separate counter terror operations in russia's southern republican doug stone security forces say there were no casualties among the police in the volatile north caucasus region has seen several militant attacks in the past few months last week a suicide bomber blew himself up killing four policemen and wounding more than forty civilians who had attempted to produce or you would probably capital much.
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the pentagon as ordered the destruction of almost ten thousand copies of memoirs by a former intelligence officer involved in the afghanistan campaign the defense department called the book a threat to america's national security a revised edition has since been published earlier the author anthony shafir told r.t. the first version of the memoirs was banned when information backing up his claims emerged. we actually worked with the army the organization i do belong to as a reservist to work to vet the book reading going through it being very careful to not reveal anything in a way of secrets which would be detrimental effect our troops our operations or the our allies within the region that process took about eight months to books been in work for two years and that process was collaborative things were taken out they were completely taken our me ask i did and that process in january of this year at
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that point through my lawyer mark zaid the manuscript was passed to the publisher and the funny thing is that all through this entire time between january and today there was total public awareness of the book late in the summer when the book was ready to be released you know three guys in black suits and sunglasses shows up at the publisher and basically says hey we've got really we get a lot of problems in this book and if you publish it the world's going to fall the whole issue became what do you didn't did and did not like in the book and obviously we've worked on that issue for the past month it resulted in the book you see today two major events happened which changed the atmosphere regarding my burst it was like it's means something but no one can really make out what it really means it was all this stuff just kind of thrown out there and second thing that happens from a crystal spiral i was in favor of president obama retaining him for any number of reasons those two events changed the very fabric of we are going to go on and their
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concerns all of a sudden there's a lot of information a back up what i'm saying they can't just say i'm a disgruntled employee you don't nothing to see here all the sudden you've got people saying hey you made me take a look at this and the book actually predates the information is already out there . thousands of farmers in india are opposing government plans to build a new highway on their land with two thirds of country spot in the pan and on their great cultural land acquisition is a sensitive and explosive issue as our teams current saying reports. indian farmers took to the capital recently in protest against a government takeover of their land to build a new two billion dollar highway this followed the deaths of three farmers who were killed after police opened fire on protesters in the state of top of this. will not give learned for development to turn in price at any price at any price we are ready to die and will not allow anyone to step in our learned. these protests have
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stalled government efforts to acquire farm land for industrial in india which means developers have been forced to put their roads refineries and power plants on hold the major talent is the land acquisition if the land acquisition is i mean the projects will not even pick up with the order given and in hand and that is what government is trying to do in case there is a you know projects an orchid they offered big and the land available to you to elaborate only twenty thirty percent then they believe that in the bill is going to happen the land is an emotive issue in a country where two thirds of the population is still dependent on agriculture fifty five year old age we're saying doesn't want to sell out but nor some offers will be hard to turn down he got a gallop but if my land goes i will lose my livelihood what will i do so i say if you are going to take my farm give me a fair price for my land as well as
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a job. some analysts believe that acquiring prime agricultural land for non agricultural purposes could spur a food crisis in the country and it was that. there will be no food to eat they aren't giving us good conversation and they're still taking our land without a land what we eat either the government listens to or demanded in a month or we will take action. the farmers do have a point after all the government uses a colonial role to pay tiny amounts of compensation to farmers to buy their land for development projects the government plans to up big the small by the end of the year to get indian market prices for farmers but until it does vital infrastructure projects remain in limbo something is just total just economy can ill afford got and seeing our new delhi. and check out our website for more stories and we're online for you twenty four hours a day here's a taste of what you'll find right now at r t dot com. socialism by any other name
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find out why americans are scared of the term while at the same time supporting many of its ideas. and the governor of a russian southern region is planning to put a divine guarantee of bottled mineral water more ahead to r.t. dot com. in the u.s. protesters have picketed outside f.b.i. offices outraged at the security services raiding of peace activist homes agents claim they were searching for evidence of supporting terrorism and connections to radical groups abroad campaigners insist the raids in chicago in minnesota were intended to intimidate those speaking out against america's ongoing wars. well these raids are consciously attempting to have a chilling effect on opposition to us wars and to the entire movement and they are a threat to the whole movement what they have to gain is they're faced with an
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unwinnable wars they're faced with an economy in crisis and the very people who make those links and who say we need jobs and health care and good education for our children or not and less wars represent a threat to them what's been so important it's not is as soon as they were happening residents surrounded these homes people with cameras immediately linked a notice to the whole country on you tube so right away there was a response and people understanding that these were not terrorists these are activists who played a role in the demands for jobs and against home foreclosures along with talking always about the war there's a history in the u.s. of these efforts to intimidate political movements again and again today when you look at the sheer number of muslims who have been arrested detained also their
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homes broken into their files e-mail cell phones and all of that complicated now to some other stories from around the world in a landslide in southern mexico various homes and left more than a dozen people missing blocked roads are making it difficult for rescue teams to search for survivors earlier officials said hundreds have been killed after heavy rains caused landslides if tropical storms which battered mexico's eastern and southern regions last month. elsinore career to hold military talks for the first time in nearly two years and thursday comes after kim jani appointed his youngest son to two main party posts a step was made hours before convention of the workers' party the move is seen as a part of a plan to extend the kim dynasty in the reclusive communist state into a third generation. thirty three miners trapped on the ground in chile for about two months could be out earlier than previously thought rescue workers say they can
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get the job done by the middle of the tobruk but they also warned that unforeseen problems would slow their work however the country's government still insists it could take until early november to get them out. time now for business have a prius here and russia's national eric carrier air flawed plans to quadruple its passenger flow and revenue it is right now to tell us how well the company wants to concentrate primarily on domestic flights by starting a low cost subsidiary and reducing international flights more of that in the program but first to other stories businessmen investing in russia's timber industry will get support from the government said prime minister benjamin push and he was at a timber plants and russia's call me republic where he pledged to ask bankers for smaller credit rates for long term investors put a note of that new investments have started flooding into the sector. twelve major projects have been realized with capital spending totaling more than
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one billion dollars this year we plan to complete nine more projects in various russian regions with another billion dollars of investment that's not bad for a start and this industry is becoming increasingly attractive for the business thus the task of the government is to give access to forests to all interested investors . and russian president to a very has been playing host to chinese counterpart hu jintao in the russian pavilion at the world expo and shall high the state visit has been dominated by business and trade at the expo the russian delegation took the opportunity to promote the country's high tech would then shoals make poor parts. showing off what modern russia can do the latest and safest in nuclear technologies a three dimensional display of the two thousand and fourteen winter olympics in sochi and dmitri medvedev pet project innovation center in skolkovo which is open
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to high tech companies all over the world including china but the head of russian nanotechnologies says there's a lot to be learned from china in terms of its technological development get their powered watches china cars are very successful program of bringing back chinese scientists are most broad everywhere in shanghai i met scientists who are just coming back from harvard and mit stanford these are people who came back to their own country to develop science and production is that the way the project is organized is very professional regrettably we can't do it the same way comes a moment but if the. trade between china and russia is heavily weighted towards energy the world's most populous and fastest growing country is hungry for power and russia has played golf but it's not an oil and gas charge these companies are investing in manufacturing in russia such as under sky corp joining with ross nano to build a fourth billion dollar pontoon novus appears to produce batteries for electric
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cars and buses russian tycoon addicted ex old who's heading the sculptor project has high hopes for further partnerships however he knows that russians tend to overrate their country's scientific reputation. thank you no one knows much about us we are so proud of russia's vast scientific potential and think it plays a major role in the global scientific and innovation community which sadly this is not the case china is the world's largest market shanghai's technology park is one of the world's largest of its kind people who know almost nothing about us. but admitted that no deals regarding innovative industries were soaring during his visit shanghai. olds would be. billions of dollars worth of agreements in just a few. businesses. and now let's take a look at the equity markets asian stocks ohio and speculation the federal reserve
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will introduce more stimulus measures to support the u.s. economy japan's nikkei up point six percent this hour helped by the yen slight retreat against the dollar in hong kong the hang seng is also gaining one point three percent here in russia the r.t.s. on the mars extended the morning session in the black the rise comes amid high u.s. and asian markets and oil prices all the blue chips are gaining nearly half a percent full force its. russian oil major lukoil intends to buy back the rest of its shares held by conoco phillips the company recently bought almost five percent of its talk from the american firm it now says it will buy the remaining six percent separately local says it intends to challenge and official decision to prevent it from bidding for the trips fields which are among the largest yet to be distributed in russia. washes national air carrier air flight plans to quadripolar its passenger flow and revenues in fifteen
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years air flow will concentrate primarily on domestic flights by developing current segments and starting a low cost subsidiary it will also reduce fifteen percent of its international flights these goals have been set out in the company's development strategy analysts find it very similar to what germany's has done. and german engineering and out of products from siemens plans to invest five hundred forty million dollars and its projects in russia over the next two or three years the company is to build a number of plans plans to produce electronics equipment and also wants to construct a wind farm in the country's far east siemens will build all the generating equipment from start to finish and a joint venture with hydro and state corp russian technology. that's all from me in the business to here for now thanks watch.
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line genes are being england and france tried to reason with hitler's germany demands a dozen land and gets its way they all felt betrayed in a safety net for themselves nineteen thirty nine the whole of europe is and gulf war efforts to establish a system of collective security in one nine hundred thirty eight failed and it's still on the agenda. the lessons to be learned from the munich agreement on our t.v. culture is that so much of a mugging me is really a hypocrite a lot of the play area of brooklyn next to kim isolated and impoverished north korea is badly in need of change how will this happen and who will.
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say things to this is not a prohibition but a warning of. a force it let me show you first step is what you should it's a pretty tree they have no idea about the hardships to face it. they wanted to says it all of them to listen. for in the army the life of the usaf is the most precious thing in the world. is of self-sacrifice and the heroism of those who understand it fully but you have to live a. real life stories from world war. one nine
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hundred forty five don't auntie dot com. back to watching r.t. coming to live from moscow these are the top stories moscow's former mayor is reportedly planning to stay in politics after being sacked by the russian president on wednesday morning euro was coffer arrived at the mayor's office to pack up. thousands prepare to take to the streets throughout europe say no to a stare and measures the largest march is expected in brussels near the head waters of the e.u. commission. and kyrgyzstan is gearing up for a parliamentary poll after months of violence and political turmoil in the central asian republics country's former prime minister and his party are said to be in with a good chance of winning the rates. that was came john taylor effectively naming
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his son as his hair here will veil and he's crossed all guess the bait whether the country is turning into a kind of presidential marquee. june thirtieth being lynam from tried to reason with hitler's germany demands or doesn't land and gets its way the old stuff they have created a safety net for themselves. thirty nine the whole of europe isn't going to war efforts to establish a system of collective security nine hundred thirty eight failed and it's still on the agenda. the lessons to be learned from the munich agreement. and. if you want to.
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