tv [untitled] July 3, 2011 11:31am-12:01pm EDT
11:31 am
if. sin which brightened. soon from feinstein. screws down tante dot com hungry for the full story we've got it first hand the biggest issues get the human voice face to face with the news makers. wealthy british style holds. the. markets why not. find out what's really happening to the global economy in cars
11:32 am
a report on. you with all the live from moscow we'll do a quick summary now of the weekly program the e.u. approves a twelve billion euro bailout package to tackle the greek debt crisis as violent demonstrations rocked the country in protest of the high cost help faced with billions of euros worth of austerity measures demonstrators clashed with police i agree with the government's decision to approve these radical cuts. sector workers in the u.s. u.k. rather take part in a national day of strikes in an attempt to defy the government's plans to change their pensions state schools were closed to traffic disrupted during the biggest industrial action the country has seen in decades. libyans of fear for their lives as nato steps up strikes warning the bombs could fall anyplace. at any time to find
11:33 am
a colonel gadhafi meantime is threatening to retaliate against you unless the alliance has stopped its campaign. that's all it see bans activists destined for gaza from leaving greek ports vessels carrying humanitarian aid for palestinians are accused of leaving without permission campaigners on board believe the u.s. and israel. of their travel. are those were some of the top headlines from the past week of news here on r.t. in half an hour's time my colleague bill daughters here but for now since georgia's independence following the collapse of the u.s.s.r. thousands of people fled the country next we talk to politicians and artists from the country to find out what's happening today with r.t. . george or achieved independence from the u.s.s.r. . before a violent standoff with the rapidly disintegrating soviet empire. independence
11:34 am
but it resulted in much blood and destruction. a civil war broke out in georgia to susie. to this day the nation has been able to overcome its. the country's infrastructure is in ruins tens of thousands of people who fled the country in the time of the soviet union was one of the wealthiest republics today one third of the population lives below the poverty law and twenty years have passed but people here enjoy less freedom than they did during the soviet period. back in one thousand nine hundred eighty. really was just a student he joined us from destroyed government headquarters. the country was still the georgian soviet socialist republic.
11:35 am
that hunger strike which lasted eight or nine days triggered a movement of liberation i often sat on the steps with my friends. the number of protesters good day by day. then a young historian lend his support to the coolers. that independence was my watchword at that time i didn't miss a single public action all right. in april. thousands of people gathered in tbilisi for an open ended rally outside government headquarters they wanted independence for the republican georgia viet nam so for the leader of a nationalist movement with the speaker who made the most extremist remarks in an intensely dramatic speech. in the early hours of april ninth the soviet government dispatched armored vehicles and soldiers against peaceful demonstrators sixteen people died and hundreds were injured. a mathematician and would be
11:36 am
magnet of georgia was lucky enough to evade even injury. we were in too much of a hurry we were trying to study history to help move it forward what happened then had to happen but of course the thought the georgian might become independent is ninety ninety one never crossed my mind back in the late one nine hundred. sixty s. for the became the first president of a sovereign georgia in april one thousand nine hundred one after an election campaign where independence was the catchphrase. but as soon as he came to power he didn't expect that independence multo. regions in south ossetia would demand sovereignty into ethnic conflicts began georgia responded by sending troops to south assess here.
11:37 am
people are once neighbors became bitter enemies thousands of refugees fled to georgia. as far as i know years ago this building was meant to be a hospital. but there is no hospital and now. the building is used as a shelter for refugees. thousands of the georgians who have left since the early one nine hundred ninety s. still live in makeshift shelters they have lost everything homes jobs and even the hope to return to their home country georgians and abkhazians alike have gone through a lot of suffering such as the horrors of war and loss of loved ones and yet they don't blame one another for that conflict. well it is no bullet dishes have toned people apart and there was no enmity between individuals my neighbor said to me what am i supposed to do one of my sons in law is in
11:38 am
a pansy and that means my grandsons are peasants aren't they. another daughter's marriage to a georgian so her children are georgians do i need to tell my grandsons apart what am i supposed to do in this situation. bitter fighting between georgia standing army end up causing an insurgency caused thousands of lives on both sides. to more is not because young woman four of her five sons died in the war the youngest was seventeen when he volunteered to fight his grave is close to his father's. you have an opinion that i would do like to have the word war confined to the history books. i want nobody to ever arteries again i wanted to be forgotten altogether radio. tomorrow and a husband wanted the new house to have enough room for all that children and their
11:39 am
future families but now it's almost uninhabited one of the rooms houses a memorial museum to the family it features the son's medals they received and the letters they sent from the front line to more especially treasures objects made by her children i want in this is the root of a pine tree they made a heart out of it. my second son enjoyed making such things she died in a battle on the same day as my youngest son. len many georgian opposition parties and even spearhead gamsakhurdia as former associates demonstrated that discontent with the rule georgian intellectuals sent numerous letters to the president asking him to come to his senses. responded by imposing censorship. all of them with a nine hundred ninety one law even denied registration for all political parties it
11:40 am
was indorsed by people who had served terms and soviet prisons and campaigned for georgia's freedom and independence. most people did while they themselves had been opposed to the supply. train to become a mathematician in the early one nine hundred ninety s. he left university and went into business his elder brother chose the career of an actor today he is very popular in georgia i his soul's in short films have an uncanny bearing on the country's present day situation.
11:41 am
i had no desire to get involved in the war in a cause here in such a war where brothers were killing brothers so i decided to stay away from georgia for a time there were. those who were displeased with the first president gathered to openly demand his resignation the nine hundred ninety two standoff between protesters and the regime erupt into street fighting involving all tillery and tanks. gamsakhurdia had to flee. the country. knows it was george's second president the experienced political heavyweight. perestroika soon after he took office he lifted the opposition political parties and allowed independent media. after i went into business in one thousand nine hundred ninety three i launched a project called. over ten years i turned a small studio in the provincial town of into
11:42 am
a leading national broadcaster. to t.v. channel rushed at the country's new leaders including president eduard shevardnadze and was focused on runaway corruption. corruption in the economic sphere was enormous off the shevardnadze came to power but on the other hand businessmen learned new skills in tune with modern times and a real market economy took shape true there was pervasive corruption from top to bottom but there was also freedom of speech and individual liberty the sort of quagmire that we have now didn't exist then. independent t.v. channel two became a so-called platform for the opposition and had great political weight but president shevardnadze who declared freedom of speech as a principle made no attempt to sway the channels editorial policy. to t.v.
11:43 am
channel and other georgian media pave the way for radical political transformations november two thousand and three saw a bloodless coup in georgia dubbed the rose revolution mikhail saakashvili a young and ambitious person came to power. it was a bus when i attended my resignation of my own free will to prevent bloodshed when they burst into the house of parliament i went out into the street to meet my followers. any order coming from mean is the law for the army no down the army was of defeated them only off to a bloodbath i make no distinction between the two sons all of them and georgian citizens. believe had promised to beat corruption and lead the nation to prosperity however it was the press that was the first victim of his more and order.
11:45 am
i think it will destroy order. here this street still keeps its secrets but now it's time to reveal the hidden the soviet files on. as soon as really took power he attempted to take control of the editorial policy of the country's leading independent t.v. channel. to its own skits mellish really realized that his window of opportunity was quite narrow. to short stories he's ambition to take control of the channel it
11:46 am
goes back to two thousand and four the new system of government seemed to be weak we thought we needed to build a viable state first and then take care of the rest of us because of our book as it turned out the regime's aim was to take control of the channels i think the blame for what i did because i gave away. i didn't want to rock the boat. as about the same time george's media was going out of its way to report on mikhail saakashvili as police reforms on face value the changes look quite impressive petty crime had been stamped out people now felt more secure on the streets of the terms of the. traffic patrols that stopped taking freud's. it's true. with a country straffing police are totally free from corruption. but you can get your license within a day after pain right through official channels instead of flying in somebody's spock it's. for many years nino but jenna was speaker of the country's
11:47 am
parliament and one of mikail. closest associates in two thousand and eight she resigned from the post of parliamentary speaker and founded an opposition party. what's the reason very serious problem it's corruption in the elite it has grown even launch a compared to what it was like in the last years of shevardnadze through when everybody was talking about corruption in georgia's government. there. was always an opposition moderate to saakashvili as the owner of a major medical insurance company he knows all too well the meaning of so called elite corruption saga through as soon as suck us really in his inner circle came to power they set about collecting taxes and so-called dirty money which was that they sent very many people to prison they were businessmen as well as former officials
11:48 am
among them people realize they had better pay off as much as they were expected to pay they sold the property they ceded their shares in businesses to members of saakashvili as party the prosecutor's office and the interior ministry kept a close eye on the deals this. pent up discontent fun erupted into a mass rally in november two thousand and seven according to various estimates fifty to one hundred thousand opposition supporters came to the house of parliament in tbilisi. for several days they kept around the top vigil on november seventh police barlinnie dispersed the peaceful rally hundreds of demonstrators were injured all police to gas. police beat up people lying on the ground. datums. the only remaining independent t.v. channel showed these events in tbilisi to a nationwide audience it was late shutdown while it was on the air with
11:49 am
a regular news bulletin. d.d. made the most of the amendments and said oh by closing the channel the government is violating the constitution this means that this is a dictatorship regime ots misdemeanors english coming into the studio i want to say thank you i hear shouts in the control room overture and i hope our employees won't be injured here our guests. the independent journalist of a coma he'd say became popular in georgia in the mid one nine hundred ninety s. he enjoys also king unpleasant questions no matter who is in power. is now in hiding in switzerland his latest piece of investigative journalism concerns the conflict between georgia and south the city in two thousand and eight. on this and i know of no journalist who would not have wanted to get this handle to get the facts. but all the state media summed up my work there is high treason to the
11:50 am
self-proclaimed republic of south ossetia hasn't been under georgia's direct rule since nine hundred ninety two. really repeated many times the republic had to return to georgia and he promised to settle the situation through diplomacy. to disarm we don't need a war and their pals in an ascension people don't need one either there is a force that wants the defeat of the georgian and up has in a city and people are i promise they won't let it happen. but in the early hours of just a faltering repeat of the show from georgian territory in the morning troops were sent into the republic. it was the start of the military operation described by psych us really of the introduction of constitutional order in the turret tree south of setia. if the bullets that i was woken up by
11:51 am
a lot of noise everything was rolling and shaking women outside was screaming and crying it was as if all of us had landed in hell after a volcanic eruption and everybody stayed awake throughout the night the noise never died down not even for a second. color man. lives in an old house on the outskirts of the village of galle cooler fifteen kilometers from the border with south of setia he is not interested in politics and doesn't know the first thing about international relations but alters from around the world flocked to his home to display their works one of the projects was called liquid it was to have been implemented jointly with russian artists in late september two thousand and eight. the georgian word for this
11:52 am
place is near it is in places like this that georgians traditionally make wine artists of different nationalities are going to contribute to georgian traditions they will get in there to press grapes with their feet just as it was done in the old days a year later we will get a jointly made product a wine brand called liquid aunt. in the spring of two thousand and eight karen man began building a pavilion for the exhibition he was still constructing it in august when another war broke out between south to set here in georgia. i went on building the pavilion during the war fighting was going on right behind the mountain fifteen kilometers from here i saw the flashes and heard the bombings i also saw helicopters up in the air.
11:53 am
hostilities came to an end nine days later when russia sent troops into south of setia to separate the warring parties georgia subsequently broke off diplomatic relations with russia. when invest ten kemah he was working on a film about the georgian city and conflict he made arrangements for an interview with european human rights campaigners to be held in geneva shortly before he was due to go the journalist received a tip off that he had better stay in switzerland. all sorts of problems cropped up after my return from senegal because i won't talk about them because my words may get in the way of the investigation. i can only tell you that i received open threats and heard something so humiliating that i contradicted. no comma he'd say lives in a swiss hostel for political refugees friends keep him abreast of events by.
11:54 am
i hear you going to switzerland. that's right in october by that time you must complete all formalities concerning immigration chances are i myself will return home by then that there is a regime change. did you say regime change yes why not that's a possibility. we hope so. vegetating and so is us who body have been friends ever since they went to school together when parliament appointed to the post of he gave his friend a job in his office when his first term of office came to an end the noid him a second term now the journalist is in hiding in a foreign country the ex is unemployed. if i praise the authorities i would have been elected second term they would even have changed the law to let me for ten terms. in the last presidential election. was officially the
11:55 am
runner up his party's headquarters supplied the zero s c e commission with evidence documenting scores a regularities some of them made public in the commission's conclusions but the final report ultimately described the election as valid. is a famous georgian musician in protest against the regime he decided to barricade himself in a television studio made up to look like a prison cell for several months he stayed in the room with four t.v. cameras tracking his every move. today georgia means prison all of georgia is a prison but the georgian people made
11:56 am
a mistake by electing what i call an illegitimate person. politician sportsman and artists all visited his cell to support the musician. heads the leading opposition party he visited his brother three times during his self-imposed imprisonment. how are you so so what are you i get loads of letters to pass as a full of them already the guy's a nuts they made the same town to me. prison show began as eleven pm and last until morning the following day the whole country would discuss what had been said during the night after two months of self confinement you only get took time out for a public appearance at the b.b.c. stadium levy a cage in the midst of a show was a strikingly symbolic act the people who had filled the stadium and adjacent roads
11:57 am
turned. a show into what amounted to a protest rally. and they pull month two thousand and nine leaders of all opposition parties as their followers to take to the streets in tbilisi. just felt get out second street get out saakashvili guess now gets out you know it all position has never said a president we call him a de facto rather than a president. today the former participants in the rallies for georgia's independence. into a party. that are aim is to create a party that is without parallel and georgian history it should be a party based on genuine national values shared by most people in our country. the leader of the new party is live. a former magnets in the wine industry he has the
11:58 am
support of. really the architect of the country's leading television company and george's last ambassador to russia the party's third leader is a historian who has won the nation's affection as an honest man. georges rulers in recent years have been so different the one. would be hard put to say which of them is fully to blame for the present day situation there are no independent courts of law democratic institutions are not allowed to develop and the country's people are intimidated in the autumn of two thousand and eight a group of friends met in old warehouses turned into studios in moscow they were artists who are keen to participate in an international project that was to take place in the home of. the will this is a remarkably exquisite european style project but i think we need to make slight changes to emphasize a note of sorrow in it merry making is out of place after what happened you don't
11:59 am
do that at a funeral the funeral still goes on. the russian artists didn't visit their georgian friends in either two thousand and eight or later they have decided against going to georgia for the time be for they do politics they believe that in their beautiful country of long traditions funerals will give way to weddings and the street protests else did by projects concerts and theatre festivals.
41 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on