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tv   [untitled]    January 12, 2011 6:00am-6:30am EST

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thank.
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you.
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in indonesia oh geez available in the ground you have a child sure it's the media who till the rich culture the time you go to turn the chill movie millennium hotel into a new you can seal a t.v. and since are told to come up so chill macaron grown to be closer to old mcconnell the initial marco resort hotel was sold at the snow to yonkers new a cold limbo could tell when results michaels beverly plaza hotel mccann riviera hotel mccullough citrus hotel mckown. crew inexperience a passenger pressure than whether i'm polish our alice did the main cool things behind the plane crash which killed polish president lech kaczynski the details of an international investigative committee presented its report on
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a full dissolve that's about. the world's most notorious detention centers on ptolemy bay is time now lying is old despise evolvement pledged to close the south of the prison still holds always she one hundred inmates in legal limbo. a modern day in a small to the euro zone then modelled like on trees great workings budget might be better spent on treating an internal plague has become true tackles belonging spread of tuberculosis. a very warm welcome to you this is all the live from moscow with me alice have bits and. reasons to crewmembers a lack of a bad weather readiness of pressure from passages to land quickly and the pilot's
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refusal to look for an alternative landing side those are listed as the main reasons behind april's deadly crash which killed polish president lech kaczynski the investigative committee has presented its final report on the accident schools and poetry will follow its calls live now it's all it seems and he said now he's following developments for us and he said now the reports been delivered have there been any surprising revelations. but one of the things that was presented which does give new details and in fact illustrations of the last thirty six minutes of that flight is a film that the international aviation committee has put together of the i.a.c. it does reveal those last for wing moments of that flight in fact we can take a listen to it.
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right. now the committee did go through several points that lead up to those last couple of seconds which you just saw let me go through them for you the first was the crew's refusal to take advice from air traffic controllers to land at a different airport we now know that they didn't even check the weather before takeoff also that the crew didn't have enough experience to land in that kind of weather the second is the poor visibility basically they couldn't see the land at all and that also was one of the factors that led to to the crash as as well. not listening like we heard in that video to the automatic system of
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the aircraft telling them to pull up let's listen to what members of the committee had to say about those factors. nurse never any are matters of series or a failure to make a timely decision to land at a reserve airport based on multiple becoming of all poor weather conditions at smolensk airport descending lower than the safety minimum height necessary to make a second landing a town or failure to react properly to match a command those are the reasons which led to the tragic crash of the aircraft into the land and the dark of those on a very large open mean you. know ultimately it has been said by the committee that so far they cannot put the blame on any one person but it is understood that there was a passenger pressure we know that the commander in chief of the air forces of poland was in the cockpit and in fact in part of that film which you can see in full on our website r t dot com you do hear the navigator in the cockpit saying quote he'll
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go crazy that is either referring to that commander in chief or perhaps to president kaczynski but pressure from passengers on board that flight is also one of the factors that the committee believes led to the tragedy. down with revelations coming out today now a niece of the draw for paul which was. hounded to find cool real concerns there why was the. well poland in fact their representative to the i.a.c. the president and the prime minister donald to also said that they found the report to be unacceptable first of all because it didn't describe all of the factors it basically said that it was pilot error so they didn't feel like it had enough detail obviously we're getting a lot more details from this final report and it's certainly going to be hopes that poland will accept it they wanted the investigating team to look at perhaps the fault of air traffic controllers we know. now know that according to aviation amman that could not be the case and that they did invite as the crew to land at another
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airport we've also been speaking to several experts who all say they believe the investigation was carried out transparently and thoroughly. my experience with the russian investigators has been very good they're very high quality organization that i believe that it was the investigation was generally curat out in accordance with the international civil aviation organization and which is the international standard for accident investigation. and we do know that polish experts were present at the main stages of this investigation the final report is still being revealed so we could hear some new findings within the hour but ultimately we do know that they are not going to play one person so far but that could change because we know that a criminal investigation is to be launched. just by juxtaposing and analyzing all available materials of the case criminal investigation authority will
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be in position to render a legal and well founded decision that will determine the causes and conditions which have led to the syria crash and to identify the guilty in the accident. now obviously this case is far from over we could hear some more details we do know that that criminal investigation is going to be launched and we do expect some kind of reaction from poland on this final report. that many. times the international investigation commission delivers the final report into the fatal acro in the polish president's plane. last april when you kind of course want to in a full on our website www dot com ok will live from the russian capital more news to come this hour including. the imported illness the blighting were.
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i was ashamed to post keeping to me maybe because i come from sri lanka originally because the disease of poverty. t b is spreading through the u.k. posting the worst levels in western europe some same as did government spending could be pretty informative lives at risk also. and i see saw good happy ending the love stuff i've always found ships with three hundred people on board is being left to save the file icebreakers are wrong ways to strangle far east coast. now the twenty first century's most infamous detention centers still holding him eggs despite president obama's election promise to get it closed on time obey has become a trade mall for human rights abuses since taking its first prisoner nine years ago and as the g one after its reports cuba is far from happy and having america's
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dirty work still carried out on its soil. it's a place forever immortalized by images of torture known by its abbreviation america's notorious detention facility in guantanamo bay cuba has been the source of world condemnation abuse lack of legal recourse and indefinite detention is the norm it's also been the subject of decades of strife with cuban authorities who argue the forty five square mile military base violates cuban sovereignty and amounts to a military occupation the greenland under which u.s. has to be. more military. from earlier earliest years of the twentieth century the plot amendment was imposed following the u.s. occupation of cuba after the spanish american. or in one thousand nine hundred three it was extracted from the den tube and government under under threat under
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duress and in clear contravention of international laws like the vienna convention the us government threatened to continue its occupation of cuba unless cuban authorities agreed to lease the land for america's military base indefinitely or for as long as it paid the cubans yearly runs the rent check four thousand and eighty three dollars after the cuban revolution swept the island nation one nine hundred sixty its revolutionary leader fidel castro cashed only one check and he insists it was an accident no checks have been cashed sense and protest no such he would never be signed today knows the treaty signed today would never be internationally recognized the united states. will hunt down. and punish those responsible after nine eleven the bush administration swiftly turned its military base into a detention facility declassified documents show the u.s.
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government used cuban soil to evade national and international law to interrogate terror suspects a strategy journalist pepe escobar argues is convenience you can ship to cuba and never bring them to the u.s. mainland and they are going to live there for ever in a state of legal limbo most of the remaining one hundred seventy three prisoners at guantanamo bay have been detained there since the facility opened nine years ago awaiting trial. president obama recently signed away his right to bring detainees to u.s. soil making it unlikely that any of them will see a trial or freedom any time soon some argue the u.s. violates cuba's sovereignty for this reason because this is the only latin american country for the past over this past fifty years has said you know then you straight to the eye of the american government or as they would say the american empire
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a country cubans believe should give rights to its detainees and give back the land that's right believe there is to handcuff this r t washington d.c. . human rights activists have been holding a symbolic demonstration in front of the white house calling for guantanamo bay to close for good they wore black hoods and orange jumpsuits to represent scenes christine. they call themselves anti torture and this is now with a group called witness against torture and tell me it's yearly pilgrimage here to washington d.c. to bring attention to the fact that the detention facility at guantanamo bay going to is still open there are in fact one hundred seventy three men still detained there and they're represented by people here and jump you know they started the rally in front of the white house the home of u.s. president barack obama who started off his presidency with
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a pledge to close down the detention facility at guantanamo bay and yet two years later it is still open and nearly fifty of those one hundred seventy three men inside are considered too dangerous to release but too difficult to prosecute so what that they stay until they die. although they've come out here for the last several years there is a slight change this year to the prison uniform many here are wearing stickers with the image of private first class bradley manning he's accused of leaking those secret documents to whistleblower website wiki leaks he's being held in solitary confinement we hasn't been charged and a lot of people here say this is torture in the same way that the prisoners being held at guantanamo bay are also tortured reporting in washington christine for sound. the chief prosecutor in the guantanamo minute she commissions this president obama doll sometimes. it was this
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congress well this is. my policy for two years had been we would not use any evidence of talking about waterboarding or any of the other enhanced interrogation techniques were building the cases independent of anything the detainees while they were being tortured suddenly officials wanted to look president bush said we don't torture and he said we don't and who are you to question the president so you quickly here in washington you know congress. you know over on capitol hill i think for years and years there were cowards and let the executive branch let the bush administration have their way now when president obama comes in and says he wants to close guantanamo suddenly they get a backbone on capitol hill and want to stop him it's been a real disappointment for me with the obama administration you know he said in january of two thousand and nine within one year will close guantanamo that was two years ago so he needs some backbone as well to stand up to congress and tell them that he's the executive that is his decision and to wrap this problem up it's been
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nine years which is far too long so we're hypocrites you know to condemn others who are upholding the rule of law maybe not the way we would but we've got one hundred seventy three people that we have to an opportunity to plead their case. and. that will lead to you had online for updates and analysis on stories like this and many others of course here's a quick scan through some of the wants. you to day no holds the story of the space fifty dollars you think i got it is an earring fly upwards his comic book tells of the triumphs and tell it billions in making history. behind the scenes of the big tall azzi gets you a ringside seat at the mall state states is this the no one of the great. makes it's not to.
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the ends in sight for the final ice bound ship that has been star call freshers of far east coast more than three hundred crew members have endured a two week ordeal but the now being a school wanted through the frozen seas vying to once break is but it's no easy task is that in the get a job or explain. all the ship rescue operation has entered its final stage while the two icebreakers us still working hard to battle this extrusion really tough weather conditions that have made this mission so challenging the admiral more carbon the cross-in eyes breakers are now in the c.e.o. beholds rescuing the larger of the two vessels that have got stuck increasing waters all russia's far east coast it's almost two weeks ago and has been really
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hard at the vessel is huge it has heavy cargo on board on the first attempts to tow it to safety were not successful the smaller one has been taken to a safe area to an area with the noise where it is no waiting to fulfill the mission the two eyes break because no need to pick up the larger one get to the smaller want to the refrigerator and finally had four open waters today the press conference rushes species agencies so that the weather could worsen throughout the day could whomp or those rescue efforts but they expect that within the next twenty four hours by the state afternoon these poor bustles could finally have for open waters where there. we are expecting the ice breakers and the supply ship to reach the refrigerator vessel within the next twenty four hours of the vessels moving continue towards the open i started we will have to be patient i believe we should consider creating a systems it would help counter such emergencies in this case we have to wait for
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several days used for the operators of the ice breakers to coordinate their actions . grew dramatically over those days before told to go cool but we know that there is no immediate danger to any of the three hundred crewmembers on board the supply she found thirty five crewmembers on board the refrigerator the smallest ship was they have enough supplies of food and drinking water on board well most go and local authorities of course are monitoring the situation with the rescue operation closely local authorities are now covering the. bills are covering the costs of the ration of this mission but once the vessels and sailors are also home and drive this will be the companies the owners of the ships which will have to pay out the calls back in december last year russia's transport taishan ministry and agency had sent along calls to all say less working in the area north to avoid just this sea
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of a whole it's going to supply in particular a very difficult place for sale is to navigate in this year extremely bad weather conditions freezing temperatures below thirty degrees celsius very strong nor the u. we have complicated matters further but despite the calls many ships and some part ships got stranded in those freezing waters one of the one troll or managed to breed out on its own without additional how and other was towed to safety by not it's great and now these two vessels have to be taken to open waters by two eyes breakers. now known as the one a pagan nine hundred century england tuberculosis is now increasingly a modern day menace for those living in the u.k. viewed as the t.v. capital of western europe the illness outbreak in britain has been connected to both poverty and immigration but as it discovered the infection is now spreading beyond those high risk groups. it's a fatal illness most common in the victorian era as
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a result of badly ventilated damp living conditions but tuberculosis is alive and kicking in twenty first century london a recent study shows tb has hit a thirty year high in the u.k. with more than nine thousand cases diagnosed annually the reasons for this increase is largely due to the number of people who are arriving in the u.k. with infection tb infection. usually would have acquired the disease because of the association of having lived in a country with a high incidence of tb. and also because of trouble to go to those countries britain has become known as the tb capital of europe pull some of felt from tb alerts which aims to draw attention to the threat of tuberculosis thinks that's a bit strong but still it is the one country in western europe where the numbers are continuing to royce can affect any body but most commonly it affects people who
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are poor much to do with perils or. close proximity of poor immune systems. it's a shocking indictment of the way poor people live in the u.k. particularly those who originally come from abroad but unlike in other countries where tb is a problem in the u.k. it's no longer limited to the poor or those with chaotic lifestyle stemming from drug or alcohol abuse or homelessness sharma pereira is a middle class journalist who's lived in the u.k. since childhood she was ill for five years we can tired with debilitating night sweats before doctors finally diagnosed tuberculosis deep in my heart i knew something was wrong i'd stopped working i'd stopped doing all the things that i normally do a movie of all of energy. but i've become this sort of role of the tired grumpy middle aged woman. sure where perera picked up the illness but say she could just
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have been standing next to the wrong person on london's public transport network i was ashamed because tb to me maybe because i come from sri lanka originally was a disease of poverty and it's. not deliberate but a lack of cleanliness a lack of hygiene in. to me. it was consumption it was what me. was it was what it was to do with sort of darkness it was d.h. lawrence it was not comfortable me in my nice little move west london home pereira now has to take antibiotics for six months and will then be well statistically she's much more likely to take the whole course of treatment than someone poverty stricken or addicted to drugs or alcohol not finishing treatment leads to drug resistant tuberculosis already on the rise in the u.k.
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in the late one nine hundred eighty s. the us had a similar cases of tuberculosis the way they solved that problem was by pumping vast sums of money into it ironically the u.k. is one of the world's largest foreign aid with huge investments in fighting tb abroad but in austerity hit britain it's unclear whether the money will be available to stop the spread of the disease. and. some of the world news headlines this hour now and a suicide of the last. couple. has left eight dead and twenty nine of those injured. riding a motorbike self up alongside a past the explosion happened close to the parliament building and offices run by foreign companies. hate is marking the one year anniversary. the massive earthquake that devastated the country over two hundred miles and people
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lost their lives and over a million all still hope this country's president led to. find a mass grave on the island former u.s. president bill clinton attended the commemorations and took a tour of the reconstruction effort part of which he's overseeing. many believe that international and death have done little to improve conditions in quake hit and about an hour's time cross talk gas discuss who's to blame for the situation one year on here's a taste of what's ahead. just like all of the others that are that are employees of usa idea or international republican institute these are folks haitians that are used to be the face of imperialism in haiti and mr lucas was was part of that back in two thousand and four i want to focus here on what. are you carry.
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he needs someone to reach him a room i was an ideological problem because he is a problem not ideological going to swab is a failure you should tell now you should know the actual world where you have your you need is now that. you need to tell them. you need to know to speed also to show you and you need a little stealing business to look at all the resources of the economy. right here . crosstalk but up next a little bit he does business with the area. very well welcome to the business news disputes between russia and belarus have read the head again with russian oil producers hold to deliver its wild pricing to go change
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drug companies want to raise the price of oil off to minsk said it would be hiking transit tariffs for oil delivers to europe are just not going to whoever has the details must go and have failed to reach a new oil price agreement and that resulted in a halt in russian oil sales tool balor reduce oil companies are demanding to increase the oil price for ballerinas by forty five dollars per ton that comes to men's announced a twelve percent tariff rise on a russian oil transits to euro now russia exports about twenty million tons of crude to balad rose annually but minsk refined than we exports most of it to europe at much higher prize that resulted in russia contributing full duties on its goals for the roof last year and they believe that the only issue that would turn to you if you feed them telling the russian oil to you a bit ago shh-h.
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and between the with russia and the dollar rules are now underway and the russian companies are saying that so far they have enough oil in their refineries it to last. this month. deposit interest rates continue to decline and russia s people at to their bank savings the interest rate among the country's top ten lenders is now eight point one to five percent on average bank deposits grew to more than two hundred ninety billion dollars last year russia's ten largest lenders hold seventy two percent of all deposits. and a quick look at the markets now european stocks edged higher on wednesday ahead of the crucial action for four to go shares and airbus parent company a.d.'s are among the strong its performance before most rising three point seven percent off the airbus announced an order from one hundred eighty new jets from india and bush to carry indeed h.s.b.c. continues its winning streak taken from tuesday as i'll wait for.

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