tv [untitled] June 7, 2011 1:00am-1:30am PDT
4:00 am
the i.m.f. throws egypt a three billion dollar bailout both but its spirit of wall the line the pockets of the former president of our strategies will continue to run the country. the graduate council america's college lever spine the just want to climb to land a job leaving the rest to struggle with deep debt and desperation. plus as an international crew of three prepares to blast off in a few hours we'll meet the man behind the latest mission into orbit and.
4:01 am
what you're actually going to hear live from moscow i'm reading joshing international bankers have agreed to rescue the ailing egyptian economy for months after a blacklisting former president mubarak's regime is reeling from the revolution that toppled the leader but the military that once propped up is rule still running the country obviously are reports and fears the cash will be swallowed up by the same old players. as if the international monetary fund doesn't have enough on its plate it's agreed to loan three billion dollars to cairo and move critics say is absurd but i think this is a bribe that was trying to give to the regime lest the new one. turns against the west but climbers insisting the money will help stabilize the country's finances especially now with mubarak on and the country going through a transitional period but observers say it's the same spin with only slightly different marketing these greens are being made with traditional transitional
4:02 am
government and these transitional government's had. become a primarily out of because of the all regime that imposed primarily because i'm not regime for example samir radwan the finance minister in egypt has been negotiating this loan was a mubarak appointee obama's promise in cairo a billion dollars more in loan guarantees and on top of that another billion in debt cancellation french president nicolas sarkozy has committed the g eight to providing up to ten billion dollars in direct aid it's a commitment the west says it's making to help egypt get back on the feet the united states and the west are trying to reduce the damage caused by revolutions v our. considerable financial contributions. economy and the perfect way is through the i.m.f. which is heavily influenced by the united states for. many many years the
4:03 am
i.m.f. has been considered as an all or of american foreign policy is this. is unstable. would could be considered is a waste of money on something that is very shaky what's more it comes with particular strings attached. and that the deal could in fact spell trouble. a tree if. anybody the worst trouble. a country. because it's so pretty big. is you know. what most egyptians fear is that the money will get used up long before it reaches the pockets believing it's likely to be only a small elite as well as international banks who benefit from the loans the last
4:04 am
time the i.m.f. injected a large amount of money into egypt was twenty years ago but since then the number of rejections of living below just two dollars a day doubled in february this year the i.m.f. praised the mubarak regime as the sound fiscal management in egypt as far as libya waned it feeds the old hope for the economy remains stable but just days later mubarak was own stood and tripoli was engulfed in and he gadhafi demonstrations so it's no surprise that many see the base of the i am it rates the country the closer the country is to having a revolution highlighting just how wrong the organization can be policy r t tel aviv for more on the impact of the i.m.f. and outs and the strings they are trying to pull in countries economies have forty dot com plenty of analysis there for you finance watchers tell us how using miasma medicine war help fewer of the troubles lighting the people of egypt or tunisia the details are on our website right now. the i.m.f.
4:05 am
attention is stretched to struggling economies around the world but also to troubles at home asked to take over since former boss had to quit over sex crime claims now everyone's happy that a european will be lined up as has always been the case there are growing voices that someone from the brics countries of brazil russia india china and south africa should have a go. the u.s. has a failed economy but the eurozone has failed and the brics nations have been realizing for quite some time now they're failing anglo american british and other euro interests or at the most support on this global taper ship and that is extremely consequential implications on the entire international financial system you know then why should they be continuing to prop up the global recovery because if you go to the very bare bones of the global economy the brits are the backbone that's exactly what the i.m.f. is one big booming station but i think in the short run i think you may realize
4:06 am
that some of their success some of their economic growth does too and we study greedy hinge upon you know western western interests because as we know there are that some of the largest creditor nations in the world i think eventual it's in their best interest to completely break the chains off of this situation and perhaps start their own i.m.f. type fund which better serves their interests but i think in the short run and i think they simply can't do it things are just too fragile out there. plenty more on the way including the american students going from diploma to the dell. be that really led to great job or start a great company are seriously in the hole. qualified but with squashed hopes as america's rising unemployment rate leaves students like massive loans and nothing to pay them off with plus. work to. get in the way if you know the one you like. we tracked the file preflight preparations of free space program to
4:07 am
learn what led them to become obsessed with getting into orbit so. for that let's take a look at some other stories from around the world and serious interior minister is promising a strong response after reports of one hundred twenty policemen were killed in a gun battle in the north of the country state t.v. reports the officers came under attack at a town near the turkish border responding to residents calls for protection from armed groups government forces are trying to quell the month long protest against president assad's rule which is left over twelve hundred people dead. u.s. secretary of state hillary clinton says yemen's government should use the absence of its president for a peaceful transition of power president saleh flew to saudi arabia for treatment after being wounded in a rocket attack on his palace u.s. officials say yes forty percent burns and is suffering with a collapsed along yemen's endured ongoing protests to try and force
4:08 am
a president to step down. loud explosions have been heard in the libyan capital as nato steps up its airstrikes uncurled cut off his military arsenal it's the latest of several rounds of intensified bombings since the alliance that spanned of its operations using attack helicopters a few days ago russian special envoys doing libya on tuesday to hold talks with opposition leaders parties there and will lead you know as always what happens and report on the situation in the capitals throughout the day. german scientists have found no traces of he called ayad an organic farm they suspect to be the source of the outbreak or they said this did not mean there suspicions were wrong german authorities and also earlier mistakenly suggested spanish cucumbers were to blame before then focusing on home grown bean sprouts but so far labs tests on samples from the organic farm are coming back negative but in temptations so far as claimed
4:09 am
twenty two lives. well in just a few minutes here in our t.v. the sarkozy storm that's testing a grandmother's law. a russian woman is dealing with her son's death by raising his children its roots are good mothers but now she must prove herself in court. would be soo much brighter than if you removed the son from violence to fresh. start on t.v. dot com. it's
4:10 am
. you're watching our team america's recovery so far on the horizon something not held by unemployment creeping back up to over nine percent in may recruitment sat its lows for eight months and that's bad news for those completing college the summer very important i reports on the graduates who forked out for their future but say he's getting a little back for their investment. america is home to the world's most expensive and prestigious universities and yet paying for them has created
4:11 am
a nation where the majority sign on to lifetime payments of loans probably of like sixty thousand dollars student. over like ninety thousand easy. yes i make you nervous yes that makes me terrified every american graduate is launching into a dwindling job market saddled with at least twenty four thousand dollars in student debt the that really led to a great job or start a great company are going to be seriously in the hole according to the economic policy institute the us economy currently has one job for every five applicants meanwhile business for bankruptcy attorney get nineteen whitman is surging half of his clients are unemployed degree holders drowning in debt anyone going to college essentially is gambling once again from an investor's point of view right now the way the dollar is the way inflation is going and the way the job market there's a college education just isn't to put a person or a not
4:12 am
a good return on your money even economics professors on the inside like richard wolfe say enslaving students to banks is a disaster for america's economic viability the future of any country in the world economy these days depends first and foremost on the quality and the quantity of. crane and new young workers and the major institutions that produce that are the colleges and universities you're pricing them out of being able to do that today a diploma no longer serves as a guaranteed passport to prosperity for americans in the meantime the number of foreigners studying at u.s. colleges and universities has reached record highs according to the latest statistics nearly seven hundred thousand international students flown in from all over the world to stay. you know america and the majority are transplanting from america's economic competitor according to the institute of international education
4:13 am
chinese students studying in the states surged thirty percent in two thousand and nine most foreign families reportedly bypassed financial aid and pay full tuition since nine hundred seventy eight the cost of u.s. colleges and universities has reportedly increased more than nine hundred percent while household income rose just one hundred fifty percent what you're seeing is american universities particularly the elite are happier to have foreigners who tend to pay their own way because they come from the very top of those societies. will forgo the americans who can afford it much in the way anyway according to the pew research center fifty seven percent of americans say college is not worth the price but with a widening workforce of untrained and educated many wonder what the u.s. economy will eventually be worth growing up porton i.r.t.
4:14 am
new york. and worrying parallels being drawn between president obama's politics towards iran and those of george bush's moves in iraq award winning writer seymour hersh has been following developments four years later he tells r t why it can only leads to a dead end. if the fear is based on the notion that you know that some are iran has a bomb or is going to get a bomb soon that's ridiculous because every bit of evidence they have from their own intelligence community. the people who talk with bieber go but no there's no weapons there and we've known that for years we've been looking for years there for years if we support the station's program that's designed to stop the punishment is . aimed at stopping the iranians from doing something you know we know they're not doing to me and so miracle the analogy between what they're doing with obama's doing with iran it's very close to work bush and cheney the vice president did to iraq there is they want to punish they want to make
4:15 am
a case against iraq for politics. and so we made a case about nuclear weapons. the pale losing a child is something no parent wants to bear and now a russian woman is keeping her a late son's legacy alive by using his frozen sperm and surrogate mothers but she's battling the courts and society's attitudes to be recognized as the guardian of her for baby grandchildren are she's excited boyko explains. it was only after fifty seven that lamar understood the true meaning of having her hands full an accomplished scientist a wife of three decades and also a devoted mother now of these roles kept her as busy as she is now her tragedy she became a grandmother only after she'd lost everything else you know the death of my son created a hole in my life that will never close but the birth of my grandchildren certainly
4:16 am
provide some solace as god's gift to me the march son died of cancer three years ago the grief for his first chemotherapy session doctors conserve his sperm the help of surrogate mothers keysets of twins were brought into the world. the market has been full after her scientific career was put on hold yet lamar's says they're all trifles compared to bereavement brought about by her son's death. it's love which is fed by a grief but it's love nonetheless three years ago i couldn't imagine myself even smiling let alone laughing or singing songs of the little ones pulled me out of this abyss of despair but her large family support lamarr says she has no financial or parental concerns about raising her grandchildren her main problem now is the reluctance of the russian state to recognize her as the marder of these children
4:17 am
and her deceased son as their father. erm i has taken the issue to court with a ruling expected and once they hear laura believes the law is in their side. of according to russian law there are no limits on who can become a parent through the use of surrogate mother who of course cases like this one are still very unusual in russia that's why some are distraction offices or court officials may be confused and refuse to register children but the law is definitely in our a favor them are is the third woman in russia who use the sperm of her deceased son to continue the family's lineage yet whether it is due to her age or the sheer number of children involved her story a good many russians questioning the affix of these kind of parenting or that you will all these exercises in biomechanics ultimately lead to this very ambiguous situation we can really tell the difference between a son and
4:18 am
a grandson there are so many orphans in russia so she wanted to be a mother she could have easily realized her maternal instincts i think ultimately it's a very selfish drive to pass your genes no matter what. the camara couldn't care less about societal attitudes too much suffering for the loss of here along with some persuaded her that there is no such thing as too many grandchildren russian law has no age cap people are willing to adopt children the only cavite is that a potential parent could be at least sixteen years older than the child in law muskies these days difference is almost sixty years but he doesn't see it easily in a country where most people become parents before they turn thirty they're raising even two kids has often been more than a handful it's not a boycott artsy moscow. just a few hours three men will be propelled into orbit from the remote baikonur cosmodrome in kazakhstan a russian and american and
4:19 am
a japanese astronaut have now completed their intense training lindsey france has been finding out what drives them to the final frontier. it's go time for the crew of expedition twenty eight to the international space station in the final days and hours leading to blastoff it's all come down to one thing for the team quarantine a whole mark of any space program. welcome to the good of the. cause for new. questions we're going to work it out with a chance to. really look once again. that's right. shooting pool. working out. and playing with their custom made space suits in a fight to retain muscle mass for the six months in zero gravity physical exercise
4:20 am
occupies a surprising amount of time and it's difficult such. a doctor want to defy new advances in medicine using outer space vall called wanted to follow in his father. alexander's footsteps as a cosmonaut but it was a secret well sr only found out by flipping through application files and if you were i saw a personal file with the name sergei volkov on it but it didn't even dawn on me into north would be cover page and saw his picture that's why i feel completely shocked and dumbfounded i genuinely never expected this to happen i feel very proud but it gave way to worry because i know the space travel is very dangerous i knew i would worry whenever he's on a space trip. for mike fossum as an american boy growing up in texas watching the moon landing paved his way to the stars and i remember you know watching that and just my mind just exploding it was something months later through the schools we had a program where you could buy very simple little paperback books and i got
4:21 am
a book on the first moon landing and i remember sitting in my bed reading this book at night just just dreaming about it i was twelve years old at the time when i put out a pen and i wrote inside the cover of this book you know you know i've witnessed all of the things that took place in here and someday i too will reach to the stars at the time he never expected it would be ross cosmos the russian space agency would be helping to take him there with the nasa about to wind up in space shuttle program cosmos may offer the only way to space now for astronauts but parts or us it also offers one of the most expensive for daybreak patients many of them have ever taken it costs thousands of dollars to view a launch in kazakstan but dozens have shown up to do it alexander preview an issue and left russia for new jersey seventeen years ago wasn't going to miss out look it's almost like oh it's a thought it was just like old because there's
4:22 am
a lot of people in the city where there's a lot of love so it's not a cool experience back in quarantine the crew don't get to see their rocket yet they're separated from loved ones by glass waiting just hours for the adventure to finally be again lindsey france r t back in our cosmodrome cassocks down. well kareen is here with the latest business news stay with us. oh welcome to business here and i would say thanks for joining me taking steps to sell its fifty percent stake in russian venture take a b.p. to state run ross nipped the move could help the british all may just save its landmark corp deal with russia's largest oil producer yuki recently failed to buy out its russian partners we have blocked the deal with rosneft now b.p.'s partners have objected to the sale saying it will lose control of the company analysts say the deal could help you improve its shows but it may also be
4:23 am
a blow to the companies oil but. it's not a policy making in the new russia is very similar to what it was in the old soviet union a study by a research group at the institute for economic policy says in both cases only state expenses are balanced revenues but hours from business news europe magazine explains it just up the powers than it are for from the beginning you need the states to do a big push where you spend heavily on infrastructure problems turning you put some money in the system and then once you get this sort of green shoots of rice then the state needs to step back and business and that's not state spending that's about tax credits and maybe some bureaucracy. rushes about station or worse transition with the state spending it needs to nurture a business that is not very good at it if he still thinks in terms of the. woods but nobody. said it will lead to any more information or imports are going to be
4:24 am
really just cause or economic problems. russia has often been criticized for its red tape overburdening foreign business daniel thornley global business consulting believes it's not for many other parts of the world. i think political risk in russia is globally and regionally very manageable on a very acceptable levels if you look at it coolly and calculated and that's why many western companies want to take pepsi co they're not putting you know short term capital in the country they've been bought for several billions there's a long term investment in this country and they've obviously done some very serious discussions in the global headquarters of pepsi co about russian political risks and so forth and i share the moderate thoughtful optimism about them oh it broadly you can say that it's not a lot of stability and predictability in this market now whether that's entirely
4:25 am
good or knowledge is another issue but it's certainly very important factors for investors there are a lot of things wrong with the country again relative compared with other parts of the world it's not about either. the markets oil prices slightly lower ahead of opec meeting told him exporters are expected to increase production quotas also worries over the u.s. recovery on the sport expectations of warnings or not or any action by sweet is trading at around ninety eight dollars a barrel brant is around one hundred fourteen dollars a barrel this summer. european stocks are higher in early trading the footsies trading point two percent are black and the dax is over half a percent higher h m v up six percent in london after the struggling company said it has secured new financing agreements from its banks here in moscow markets are high enough than in trading the odds here says that point really point eight percent of them isaacs is up over half percent let's look at some individual
4:26 am
channels on them isaacs this hour most of the blue chips are high and also have some longer talk gainers with shares up more than two percent after gaz is adding more than one percent of reports it's long saying thing you are nineteen nautical bucking the trend is there a bank which shares down point two percent. now was the stock markets are hitting a quiet period and heads like a fundamental drivers under curfew of coat renascence capital still believes there are some stocks on offer. i would it was infrastructure i would still make use we should. be cheap fundamentally flawed from the mental attractiveness is not the key point that should be the price of soul for a studio they are but i mean are. we it's. cheap valuations we have this to make of so they could but at the. quake and tsunami force the number of constants to restate their nuclear plans the most far reaching is germany saying it
4:27 am
will do its own again or g. by the end of two thousand and twenty two john rich of the well says the evidence goes against the general decision in one nine hundred sixty there were three billion people in the world today there are nearly seven billion and we're moving rapidly toward nine billion by the middle of this century as we make that continued growth in population world economies like those of japan and india are catching up and we're going to see me seeing a tripling in world energy consumption over the next forty or fifty years at the very time when our climate scientists are telling us that we must curtail carbon emissions by eighty percent triple energy consumption reduce carbon by eighty percent how do you do that there is only one major expandable clean energy technology now available to countries and that's a nuclear power and this is precisely the reasoning that it has is maintaining that commitment to nuclear power and all nations that are engaged in responsible
4:28 am
4:29 am
point i'm bringing more to. this time the party goes to the region where half of the area is occupied by a nature preserve. where the young generation transition their ancestors camps and where the mysterious city of the deadlocks well come come republic of north or south young russia close up car cheap.
31 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on