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tv   [untitled]    June 21, 2011 1:01am-1:31am EDT

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both the way they are and then bursting into flames due to the fact that it landed on the highway and not on the the territory of the airport the first people who were on the scene to provide some assistance to those people trapped in the wreckage passes by now the plane itself narrowly avoided sliding into a street of houses which would have resulted in many many more casualties but terrifying scenes in terrifying tales from those who were first on the scene to try and pull people out of this wreckage. moved three people out of the rock each one was either a girl who will and i could not sell but she was larger than the man he was hard to see was dark and then there was a man he also was unhappy he was launches and me now and we carried out two more people from the wreckage in the middle of the road another man reached out his hand told me but i couldn't make it to him everything stance is exploding i could not get any closer everything was engulfed by fire story.
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peter what of the eight survivors or any of their condition. the eight people who survived this plane crash currently receiving medical treatment some of them are said to be in a very very grave condition many people suffering from from burns as you can imagine also the injuries from the impact that they have heard when that plane crash landed on the highway now the before the fleet itself the t one. one three four they they have been involved in crashes in the past the the actual plane itself was recommended in two thousand and seven by the russian transport minister that it be discontinued and replaced with a with a more modern day model but the all eyes at the moment concerning on the looking towards the the eight people that they were survived this crash they say some of those in a very serious condition they are receiving medical attention that they need and will be flown back. to moscow to receive further attention. we've received six
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patients physical trauma men women and a sixteen year old girl four of them are in critical condition we're doing what we can huge too early to make any prognosis. was the the operation to try and determine what happened to cause this fatal crash that resulted in forty four deaths start operation to determine what happened there under way also the serious state of trying to care for those people who survived what sounds like a horrific incident. ok people leave it there for now r.t. is a piece of the live from moscow and stay with r.t. to our coverage of that tragic plane crash in northwest russia throughout the day. well to libya now where another deadly nato bombing in tripoli has reportedly killed at least fifteen civilians nato insists it hit a command center that they've been official say three children among the dead he
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comes just a day after the alliance admitted to killing up to nine civilians in another air strike which it blamed on a technical failure but artie's griffin national reports now from tripoli that some images you may find disturbing. and the other day has brought more death and destruction. a large private compound west of the capital tripoli has been leveled reduced to rubble in apparent as strike. rescuers have discovered the remains of fifteen people according to libyan officials. but it was. the house destroyed belonged to gen moody one of the people closest to colonel gadhafi he was among those who took part in the military coup to bring the libyan leader to power forty years ago the general escaped injury but most of his family died in the attack. because. this man is talking about lethal are
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one of the grandchildren of the general and one of three kids killed in the incident the day of the bombing the family had gathered with friends to celebrate his fourth birthday. libyan civilians from it is where attacked in the early hours of this morning killing fifteen people including three were children are. mothers. but. the number is fifty and. nato has denied these claims just as it's never debated the death of more than eight hundred others believe in a government says were killed by their bombs the nine people killed in sunday's bombing of a residential building in tripoli remain the only civilian casualties i can buy the alliance which blamed a mistake technical failure
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a former pentagon official says the only thing clear about the nato campaign is the mountain casualty toll and damage it's inflicting on the even people they try to achieve a certain level of humanitarian effort and initially but the protracted bombing is now increasingly hitting civilian targets and it's creating a very negative reaction i think it does raise the question of what is nato's role continued role going to be there as discontented actions and crazies are their voices become more and more than. their voices of the libyan people. was and it seems that the more anger they feel about nato the more they supported. this is the seventy's that this is this is. the to.
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the. united states is that was that was that that. we will go on to deliver our message tonight to the step the bomb being there are attacking libya. is the. dying. r.t. tripoli. and it's not just foreign intervention in libya that's claiming a growing number of civilian lives as we reveal later in the program. the us people who are members alongside in the arabian peninsula then i think the real worry is that in the experience this war to the point where so many people join up with al qaeda. u.s. is under fire for the expansion of its drone attacks in pakistan and yemen we question whether the strategy is helping to fight terrorism in the region.
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the greek prime minister is facing a crucial confidence vote in parliament to determine whether he'll be able to secure another injection of cash from the e.u. and save the country from plunging into deeper crisis on monday you finance ministers for the pressure on greece they gave us two weeks to pass fresh budget cuts and tax increases missions that must be met to secure a previously agreed installment of twelve billion. dependents party wants britain out of the e.u. so the uncertainty of the next payment for greece is understandable. they've got frozen feet about but about the whole deal i mean greece is really not a very large economy and. in the present seventy billion with probably more to come in twelve months time and i mean look where's it all going to when what's basically happening is that the tax payers of northern europe particularly germany are going
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to have to pay up to stop greece should default president only or don't particularly like obsession the near fanaticism of the european elite for the political project of you know. it states of europe and a common currency has resulted in a terrible terrible human cost if there is a greek default the people who would suffer would be the holders of greek sovereign debt who are basically buying institutions and the like is sort of the people who are suffering no. principle in private that the two million private sector employees in greece were actually bearing the brunt of these draconian austerity cuts. and that anger over austerity cuts is amounting in other debt ridden states to spain we saw mass protests against the harsh measures john gaunt you referendum campaign believes it's too late to save greece spain could be next to topple if we
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just keep pumping money into greece it's only putting off the death of their economy they are already bankrupt we have to wake up and smell the coffee and say enough is enough greece is going to go ireland's going to go portugal and of course the big one everyone is worried about is the state of spine that is one of our banks like barclays have been reducing our liabilities in spain because clearly the property slump in spain is much bigger than a spanish government is telling people they say there's only been a drop of eighteen percent i do radio shows in spain people are losing seventy percent sixty percent in the fire you have their homes and their developments spain will be the next one to topple but why should the united kingdom which is already facing massive recession massive cuts in our social services massive cuts in our essential services and public services cutting down of our armed forces cutting down of our police etc etc why should we the u.k. taxpayer pay energy the german taxpayer pay for the ineptitude of the greek
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government i say we shouldn't i say let's get out of the euro and the now. financial guru max kaiser has his say about the use for natural woes and overwhelming debt dependence you can catch up with his unique analysis later in the day. a generation ago or two generations ago the word work implied accumulating savings but now the word work. accumulating debt so what they're saying is you young people out there who are entering the workforce if you work really hard you will accumulate massive. learning lessons from the japanese crisis that's the main aim of the new clear forum in vienna which began on monday in the opening session of the meeting the
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tonic agency called for a tightening up of newton security. might also stressed the need for greater transparency in the industry especially in emergency situations however the long awaited report into the disaster has been shielded from public view and malcolm grimston a london based policy advisor says the decision to keep its results behind closed doors is wrong. understandably all of us want to know as much as we can about the present situation clearly sometimes you need discussions behind closed doors to . discuss things that may not be the case but which would cause a lot of fear if if they were announced until an hour later not to be the case but for such a major and meeting of this sort i do believe that a demonstration of openness is extremely important but i think this is the wrong people are going to feel. they don't want to come out even if it's not the case i
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don't believe personally that we've seen a massive cover up of information coming from japan what we have seen though i think is a very slow response to questions and attitude which is before our true backward looking about this is what we think might have been happening two or four weeks ago instead of this is what we think. true or four weeks' time when matter is the attitude. people are going to think we're all foreigners are sitting all the information of i don't want to release. but take out some of the international headlines for you now former attorneys in presence in the al aberdeen ben ali and his wife have each been sentenced to thirty five years in prison for embezzling state funds they were tried in absentia after fleeing to saudi arabia in january following the popular uprising judge ruled that ben ali and his wife should pay fines totaling almost sixty six million dollars the deposed leader who was in power for twenty three years faces
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a second trial on possession and drug trafficking charges. in china thirty six million people have been affected by floods and landslides according to chinese media reports the death toll has now reached one hundred seventy five the flooding which began three weeks ago was triggered by torrential rains which did one of the country's most severe droughts in fifty years authorities are warning the conditions will continue that more than ten rivers in affected areas could burst their banks. the u.s. has stepped up its drone attacks in pakistan are the most recent reportedly killing at least twelve people were a growing number of civilian deaths in the strikes response public anger concerns that the action is driving up the number of extremist kreutz and now with reports that the u.s. plans to expand its drone war and territory criticism against the strategy is stronger than ever tease each account has a story. the u.s.
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is looking to expand its war on terror but its methods are under fire. in pakistan cia drone strikes aim at terrorists but end up killing mostly civilians public outrage is growing hatred and anger foster more terror if you push them against the wall then if this militancy and don't use them is going to increase this is not dissolution because if you're attacking them by drones and they're not part of the war there are good ones on the other side who which might be they're going to join in pakistan in the one year the u.s. strikes killed seven hundred civilians but net it only five actual militant leaders many pakistanis are furious at their government for helping the americans kill their own people they accuse their leaders of doing that in exchange for billions of dollars from washington americans on the other hand are not too happy with what they get in return for their billions how on do we support governments allied to us
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when we say enough is enough most governments lie to each other that's the way business gets done and meet all the cheerleading about bin laden's killing the u.s. has stepped up drone strikes in pakistan. and pakistan in a number of civilian casualties that result because of the drone strikes. straightness like the taliban and al qaeda and other groups in pakistan to recruit new numbers and they're doing that. face washington now sees yemen as the most dangerous al qaida outpost and he's planning to step up drone attacks on the country as stablish ing abasing the persian gulf specifically for that purpose especially now when bin nonce replacement iman also laurie is thought to be building up as already significant presence in yemen. the u.s. had been cooperated with yemeni counterterrorism forces in targeting al qaida but they've since left the field preoccupied. it is that with the nationwide turmoil
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against the sollie regime that means the americans are likely to have a freer hand going it alone with the cia to take a central role because the agency is not subject to the accountability the us military is legally under expect more bombs to fall on yemen when the us starts to hit people who are numbers of all quiet in the arabian peninsula then i think the real worry is that it expands this war to the point where so many people join up with al qaeda there's fury in yemen over the killing of scores of civilians by the drone strikes in want to tack there the american military presumably ming at an al qaeda training camp ended up killing dozens of women and children in another strike a year ago a drone mistakenly killed a deputy governor in yemen his family and eight with the expansion of the drone war it seems to go on thinking only in the south of the fighting on might have had only say some of the main theories and this is the all the base mark not having taken
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down the fourth symphony and that their mommy and the lack of accountability when it comes to feel that. that had more carried on the website it may have what that mary-kate body and body hair at the same time i am going to check out with forty. more. to have a child diagnosed with a rare and disabling diseases every parent's worst nightmare knowing that treatment exists should be a welcome relief the hopes are dashed by extortionate costs and lack of state support somebody can reports on a price really can be put on a child's life. the first match followed in february this year fourteen according to his birth certificate he looked have that his hearing was rapidly declining his vision almost gone he responded only to this silver strokes of his mother who gave up everything to care for him. i'm happy just to wake up and see him breathing
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sometimes he smiles and it's the greatest thing for me. he wasn't always this way but they just five he knew the point his mother is reading to him now by heart it was active in affectionate he liked cats and talked about being a driver then step by step his house began to deteriorate his mother rushed from one doctor to another until last year he was finally diagnosed with hunter syndrome a genetic condition that means his body conned gets rid of toxins it's extremely rare and extremely expensive to treat. without treatment doctors say he may soon die if we get the drug his body will be slowly clean stuff to talk sense she may be able to walk again and play and enjoy life like other kids say annual cost for voloder was almost eight hundred thousand dollars beyond comprehension for you lana
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whose husband left the family with the first signs of the disease she'd be titian to all sorts of organizations and was about to see the local authorities when in april they finally agreed to provide the money for the drug back then this piece of paper seemed to follow this license to life. when i got this letter i was so hopeful it meant that my child would live. there waited weeks then months in early june voted health took a turn for the worst and he died never having seen the promised drug. most people agree that losing a child is the worst thing that can happen to a parent but it's not the worst thing for her is to leave the rest of her life knowing that her child could have been saved that the treatment was there and these exorbitant money was found. wrecked tape or administrative procedures whatever you call it. was never given
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a chance local authorities say there was absolutely no way to speed things up their own region where you live and leave is an impoverished mostly agricultural province in central russia but what his treatment would have accounted for about a quarter of all how subsidies of course are the treatment of this boy in monetary terms is equivalent to almost cancer surgeries in our region and we're talking about thousands of people yet we still made a decision to allocate this money but before this we need to conduct some budget restructuring and to hold attended by it now these procedures are almost complete and we expect the drug to be here by the end of june well it's already too late to help followed the allocated money may save another little boy just period kilometers to the south at least seventy year old peter who was also diagnosed with contra syndrome yet he still has a few years before the damage becomes a wrapper both his parents believe to save their son this state has to step in.
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no single family can deal with this disease on its own the cost of the drug is simply unreal the local authorities often refused to cover the costs of this one think the state has to house. out of about two hundred fifty children of a hunter's syndrome in russia less than half are receiving medical treatment it's a postcode lottery available in reach or areas like mosco and almost unimaginable in poorer towns and that despite the fact that when it comes to this citizenship they're all supposed to be playing on this same. kind of work or artsy region. but in a few moments they just a business news with dmitri status. and
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warm welcome to business outside the russians eighteen year long saga to join the world trade organization is coming to an end and it's hoped i was standing issues including agriculture motor industry regulations will be resolved by the end of july if talks pass off smoove leave the largest economy outside the international trade club will join the organization by the end of the year a u.s. official believes russia's membership will bring your butts in seats to the country and the global economy. in fact russia's accession to the w t o would actually bring new opportunities for u.s. exporters and u.s. workers russia is the world's tenth largest economy but only our thirty seventh largest export market. it's expanding middle class will likely soon make russia the largest retail market in europe russian accession to the w t a will provide
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america's farmers and ranchers with improved access to russia's one hundred forty million consumers a russia that is more integrated into the global economy which supports and it hears to its rules will strengthen the international economy the russian economy and the american economy the move and will finalize the decision on acquiring patrolling stake in austria volks bank international in around to two weeks' time the seven hundred million euro deal will help russia's biggest land that's an established itself on the european markets but i see you have a graph outlines the company sentiment towards international expansion. innocent to suit we're interested in emerging markets for example in europe we're interested in turkey in poland and we will look at assets in these countries according to our preliminary plan by twenty fourteen we should gain five percent a net profit on the international markets however i don't think we'll be able to cope with that because we changed our priorities to date we aim for
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a better competitive level it'll country most likely we will be able to increase our expansion strategy after twenty fourteen to twenty fifteen but today our domestic market is our main priority. staying was burbank russia's largest lender was included in the list of the world's twentieth strongest banks ranked by bloomberg markets magazine is the only russian bank ever to appear in the racing world most of the places are comply by lenders from canada and singapore a list of all its banks with assets worth more than one hundred billion dollars the small share of bad credit and highwood deficiency counted as the difference between incomes and losses. secular the markets now oil prices are up with light sweet gaining almost a dollar actually sixty five cents there brant making it back to close the territory up eleven percent worries over greece's debt problems and the cloud of prospects for global growth are still weighing heavily on the markets and the world
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lost six percent last week a situation in your phrase concerns about energy demands and this is a correction. in stock markets across asia stocks of pushing up higher than a percent saying up one point three percent also in retail stocks are among the top gainers toyota is up zero percent and honda is rising almost one car maker reported this set to go on a hiring spree to increase production. trading will begin and one hour's time very sentiment dominated the markets on monday as you can see there the r.t.s. lost a one percent my six one point two. so we will be back with more nextel headlines and i starting.
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on. the news today violence is once again flared up the film these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada ashu for trying to corporations are on the day.
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welcome back time now for a look at the main stories we're covering this hour herron out. forty four people are killed as a passenger plane crash lands in northwest russia eight survivors are hospitalized in critical condition bad weather and airport systems failure among the first theories for the cause of the tragedy. claims of more civilian victims in libya after a fresh nato bombing but at least fifteen reportedly dead including children from the strike west of tripoli it comes just a day off the alliance admitted to killing civilians while blaming a weapons malfunction. on the prime minister of greece is facing a crucial confidence in his recently government the outcome could determine whether
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he will be able to push through an austerity package to secure another much needed injection of cash from you. but next we look into the issues surrounding russia nato distrust program.
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hello again in the world complete spotlight the incidents on our t.v. i'm al green all of them today my guest on the program is told mom. french president nicolas sarkozy looked very content at the g eight summit and russia announced it is ready to buy two helicopters carriers from from the longing to separated but contradictory deals backed by president need for the admitted in the bargain will cost russia more than a billion euro but it is likely to improve moscow's relations with paris and probably with gross. would be the first step in rejecting that we may need this trust between russia and myself so monogram are proud of their russia and i asked senate of the french institute of international relations is here to answer the question. to fred.

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