tv [untitled] July 20, 2011 4:00am-4:30am EDT
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the moviegoer the joint the hotel rooms the elevators the gateway to the grand imperial through the george west coast coromandel let her tell her. to go and. read this and the colonel was her child as a retreat. a grim days are incapable of dealing with the great ones are dead joining me from the public all too familiar with their misfortune. the georgian voices of support for three photojournalists accused of espionage growing louder as critics question the validity of the suspects and confession of a. six year old russian couples may see surrogacy as a chance at having a baby but paula just nation says the children who suffer in the end.
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costing around the world and around the clock here watching out the fine storm surrounding rupert murdoch's media empire is spreading rests outrage and resignations continue this questions are asked of the death of journalist sean more than credited with revealing the phone hacking scandal. reports his demise has reignited debate over another high profile death at the heart of a different drummer. another political scandal erupts another whistleblower doris shawn who was the first former news of the world journalists to go on the record to allege that phone hacking was endemic at the paper and that its editor andy coulson actively encouraged it always found dead in his house on monday. into a frenzy of comparisons with the case of dr david kelly. why isn't the sun horror
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story bigger reminds me of how dr david kelly was bumped off eerily similar tragedies have seen war and david kelly all this madness what then david kelly some who are that's what i'm thinking something's not right. talk to kelly was the u.n. weapons inspector who first cast doubt on the government's claim that iraq could deploy weapons of mass destruction within forty five minutes it led to scrutiny of tony blair's decision to invade iraq it was british journalist andrew gilligan who david kelly had spoken to to publicize his belief that the forty five minute claim had been exaggerated gilligan believes there are similarities between kelly and short haul being at the center of one of these storms a terrifying experience i really don't believe either david all sean hoare was murdered because. i simply don't think it would have been in anyone's interest to murder them once they got into the public spotlight any more with an iota of sense and government would have known that to kill them we just would just amplify the
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story i think it's simply i think both were under enormous pressure from their roles as whistle blows and and found it difficult to cope with that pressure short haul with evidence could have been crucial to proving that the news of the world editors supported a culture of listening to private voice mail sport stories former editor andy colson who later became a media director to the current prime minister has always denied the allegations the man was destroyed professionally by news international the journalistic world in london is a very small place and the man was distraught he was well known. drinking too much taking drugs he was depressed and. police this thing called death doesn't appear suspicious and they're looking at suicide dr kelly's death was also recorded as suicide although many including leading doctors and m.p.'s have never accepted that their suspicions of hardly be quelled by the fact that post-mortem reports and
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other evidence has been classified for seventy years so ten arrests six resignations two convictions and one death that's the toll of the phone hacking scandal so far. the key whistle scandal has raised questions but stay far only about see it's being reported as a horrible and unfortunate coincidence but it's doubtful that if it happened elsewhere. in india the british media would be so quick to accept it as a coup it's particularly gets out in the light at the death of david kelly you'll read it. well david cameron's close ties with news corp and his efforts to head off the crisis and yet take a toll on him and his government that's according to. what really gave the story legs was the fact that david cameron the then disgraced. because of the
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conservative party for the meeting was director of communications i don't think without without that kind of. legs given to the story i think it probably wouldn't have been quite so vague as it is now but the fact is there have been some errors of judgment times out there in the governing conservative party but a prime minister david cameron yes again his chief of staff has been shown to be essentially instigating a cover up by the connections because you have to sort of phone hacking and making sure that the prime minister leader of the opposition david cameron didn't know about it as being a large element of fingers in isn't just the kind of heads in the sand and that is lethal for a prime minister and he's now in a real fight he's in a real really bad situation he could well be looking at some serious consequences for himself at the very least still around him. still to come in the program of finding the man behind the drones u.k. and pakistani human rights groups want to press charges but unmanned attacks only
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killing hundreds of civilians are going after a former cia legal director reprove the strikes. and used up on ice soldiers who fought for israel in the world it's lebanon bombing so it's stuck in a country that's forgotten their existence. george's latest spy saga has taken yet another twist to be seen out says three photojournalists locked up on charges of espionage on behalf of russia have confessed guilt results is a legal issue reports there are concerns that the suspects were coerced into admitting crimes they didn't commit. and then there were none the last georgian photographer to deny allegations of spying has apparently changed his story he now admits the charges video testimony of giorgio the largest confession of spying for russia was released by prosecutors to the media what most journalists are skeptical
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about this latest development per hour percoco through all this is very strange and there is in the middle of the night and this is a case has been marcus top secret work all of these raises questions and not getting any answers and this confession is a serious face three accuser because we have clear doubts about this whole deal. you would get the hearts and mind team his innocence ever since he along with three other photojournalists was arrested at the beginning of this month old including president mikheil saakashvili his personal photographer were accused of passing on top secret information to russia's military intelligence or initially insisted they were innocent then one by one the photographers started changing their testimonies eventually three of them incriminate themselves in his dinars but up the odds they insisted he was not guilty and even went on a hunger strike to provoke this point in fact his lawyer says the photographer seems to have changed his mind over the space of just ten minutes and that's led to
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questions over the circumstances under which the photographer since to have changed his story managing editor of all in the state bird image of the crowds it believes these admissions of guilt show the case has made public a to turn of the demagoguery we live in a totalitarian state if we all power is concentrated and there comes a president saakashvili and someone goes against him and all of us will end up like this if the interior ministry has any other proof of their guilt and he wouldn't have to force these confessions anytime soon but what they were basically this is a message for all of our journalists including me and all the. members of the new. heard the message loud and clear and stage a protest outside the jail where three to talk affairs are being held and preliminary detention human rights activists meanwhile believe hardly that the system of power in the country are grounded because it's very likely that abdel odds are will be forced to ask for my removal from the case investigators want
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everyone who can enter fear out of the picture so they can lead the way they want to they want the case of the photographer stranded without any public discussion and that's possible if all the arrested plead guilty to go in well but he still seems outrageous to journalists and many ordinary people it's just the latest in a seemingly endless string of spies scandals to hit georgia even r.t. . and you can find more background on how the georgian spy scandal unfolded all websites are to dot com and make a mission find out how it ukrainian female activists showed their support for the georgian photographer it's. also online a couple of hours could simply see russia being on mass as a mascot gets its own ten page dedicated to feel like it's. a mission free accreditation three times for charges free arrangement
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free. three stooges free. download free volunteer quality videos for your media projects a free meal john darche dot com. u.k. based human rights group together with pakistani activists are seeking arrest warrant for former cia director and actually responsible for the drone strikes which killed hundreds of civilians now retired john rizzo admitted in an interview that he in approving such attacks in pakistan since two thousand and four it's not the fact the us isn't at war with a country that most of the stocks of the targets. al qaida militants but it's illegal to hold this estimated that some five hundred people said well just on the low as have already filed a complaint against raising accusing him well for conspiring to kill innocents in america until now to this to. these the u.s.
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has any home and its own interests in the region. the basic justification for this program is that it's protecting america it's necessary for u.s. national security in fact by all the figures that we've seen these drone strikes have infuriated the people of pakistan leap quadrupled the pakistani taliban in numbers and while it's attacks we've moved them east into the weeds you have the heartland to the point where they now oppose a major threat to the pakistani government believe the pakistani military so much that there is now talk of an answer he was a military coup on the front page of the new york times and most importantly applauding to the u.s. ambassador in paris that was revealed in the wiki leaks cables. we're certain the u.s. is so hated now in pakistan the government is afraid it's corporate with safe parroting its nuclear materials which are the world's fastest growing and by all experts will tell you the least secure so the result of this drone strike campaign is
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best lead receiving the danger in the united states of a conventional and or nuclear terrorist attack. if it is off to israel's retreat from lebanon thousands of soldiers are still struggling to cope with the consequences of that withdrawal they are members of the so-called a south lebanese army that's israeli forces i feel that sacrifices gone unrecognized that's one force soldier says there's little support from the country he feels. there's only one thing for was masham dreams about and that is to return home but home to southern lebanon and he's stuck here on the other side of the border in northern israel. that's my home five kilometers away eleven years ago for was was one of several thousand christian binny's to free with the israeli army as a cliff they've been on for eighteen years the israelis have been fighting the
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palestine liberation organization and his beloved on lebanese soil helped out of south lebanon army a militia of christians and jews who control the south of the country this old lebanese army didn't fight for israel as a world that is didn't fight for so. there was a meeting of interests between them and us but growing domestic pressure in israel over the high losses suffered by the army finally convinced the government to withdraw and it did so quickly. i mean epstein was a soldier at the time and says the lebanese soldiers who helped israel were left behind almost like sitting ducks. if we're soldiers knew little about us leaving they for sure knew even less there was some sort of selection the commanders were brought here but i'm sure if you were a driver not much was. apparent some seven thousand example even an army soldiers crossed it is wrong those were left behind would try it jailed and sometimes killed
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as traitors for was nash and was one of those who got half life he'd been working with israeli intelligence hoping to recruit live a nice guys i did not want to run here i wanted to die fighting with the israeli intelligence almost forced me to cog i was told you know too much but the way they treat me now is a shame they forced me to run away and now they spit on my face six months ago i'm not a lawyer found for was living in a tent on the street it was hardly surviving on the few hundred dollars a month the israeli government gave him i feel ashamed. in my country. creeping not only the case of four was not jim but it's too cold in people that remain in state in israel why the country and the state of israel are treating them like. it's a charge the government is aware of although it says it's doing its best to help him by giving cash education and in some cases although not in ours there is a home. for them already eleven years.
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we don't have school we must do with it's very unique it's a very unique nobody the. european union member nobody of them. but still that treatment was not enough to stop two thirds of those who came to israel from immigrating elsewhere but i feel betrayed so sitting in the special intelligence forces have not given me any help since i've been here recently israeli lebanese border and that's parents used to be known as a good friend but in the last eleven years since the israelis withdrew from lebanon the situation has deteriorated and this one is close to good friends has since become close friends and through its task israel's forgotten friends seem condemned to fade if a peek at the family will more than likely never see again policy r.t.
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and is wrong even on border. well the american the space shuttle program going to officially end with the return of atlantis from its last mission on thursday there are some that say the country's dream of space exploration is now over the position rejected however by robert williams of the stink of stronger and the man behind the hubble space telescope he says the golden era of space research is in its prime when you can see the full interview with him in fifteen minutes time. we're going through difficult periods now in the past few years but when i talk about the golden age of astronomy i talk about the the space missions that we've had in the past fifteen years and the large ground based observatories and the new technological developments that have been able to us to do things like adaptive optics supercomputers that of really advance their understanding was strongly of the large number of discoveries that i would say really makes that appropriate to
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call this a golden era of astronomy. but when it comes to a starting a family determined couples in russia will stop at nothing many of the country's six million infertile couples say some of the see is their only chance of having a child but despite the practice being legal in russia end result isn't always a case of families these clothes he was a band on made him and often seen he was in his genetic parents refused even to hold him and the boy has a rare and incurable genetic disease but. they simply threw him out like an unwanted kitten and picked a healthy one. his healthy twin brother enjoys family life and has no one but hospital staff helping him to survive the boy sorry that mother also disappeared soon after the delivery little anton story is just one of the shocking examples of shortcomings in the russian family code that seeks to regulate sorry to see in the
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country for government which it is but in our modern world the ideal surrogacy is sometimes distorted a given be used to avoid the hardships of pregnancy and to preserve the beauty of a body that turned surrogacy into a business renting out a womb costs from twenty to thirty thousand dollars however often either those who are paid you know the surrogate want to admit their involvement in the process the attitude to surrogacy in russia is ambiguous so many women simply don't want anyone to know their baby is carried by another one out of committee it's easier to resort to small or not such a small lie how about one scene in public with this there really is no going back to the sides become entangled in a legal and moral not blackmail homes intended parents while sargon mothers greatest fear is not getting paid most of them see sorry can see as the only solution to their financial misery if you had no other choice i lived at my mom's
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place nine people in forty six square meter is. zinaida mother of two giving both the money would allow her to buy an apartment for her large family however way through the pregnancy the kinetics parents demanded she aborts they had shopped around and their backup was bearing twins still it's the biological father sprawled out in front of men and all chant only sounds enough when he was saying do you understand how much money neither you nor the baby. zenaida's still hoped they'd accept a baby but instead ended up with a new fleet and an addition to her family to nickle and dime these legal details are called comfort the question is whether he will ever want to know who his real parents are and why they treated him as a commodity dowry pushed to the artsy scale. well it's have a look at some other top stories around the world so we authorities have announced
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the arrest of carla projects the country's nelson remaining u.n. war crimes and it if this was sort of atrocities in jail for the murder of its prosecution for the conflict and for a show in the south in the ninety's all those the rest of the rabbit shorts would their interest in a similar crimes walking serbia's drive to overcome obstacles our way it's good to join a new. dozens of people have been tested in the front of the japanese embassy in south korea against turkey's decision to boycott. and test the disputed territory. and treat some of the. band claims as its territory the two countries having to speak. for many years from the sea to distance from the.
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u.s. president barack obama has welcomed a bipartisan summit proposing. countries that. aims to sit every. two weeks left to avoid default well makers from both parties are also discussing the raising borrowing limit there is a lot of. other questions tackled in crosstalk next hour in the program as a previously. if you asked the question very specifically q would you like to see taxes rise on people with six figure incomes or would you rather see medicare and social security cut there's no question that people would like to see rising taxes on the upper brackets but this is not what the true believers in the tea party want they want a very dramatically smaller government they've had it out for the new deal the great society for generations really if we can go back to early fifty's to
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the new deal rhetoric. somehow are really dominating the discourse partly because the president is not not a tough bargain i think partly because he would like to see some of these cuts himself. in. such a crowd that his business needs. hello and welcome to business here and i see now we start with russia which has removed the capital gains tax for foreigners trading on the country stock exchanges the move is meant to track further investment and the further promote not sco as an international financial center and i said in this young at renaissance capital says
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investors will welcome the change but people who are in north. russian domestic stalks know three zero or four good your stocks right so if they don't want to or you know talks to be didn't want to sleep sort of for structures or international investors more and your arsenal will be excused from taxes in the previous set up so in currency ensure is the petroleum the mystic stops locally the same provision as international or you go through some sort of a this creates for them which will come from the most three of them so it was a corporate mr ritter. and stock markets are letting out a little sigh of relief at least for the moment they're welcome president obama's news of progress only racing america's debt ceiling but there is still concern a new round of quantitative easing or more simply money printing could be on the
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cards john breaux jack from and the interest group believes the net effect of a cash stimulus is questionable. essentially q.e. two or three is nothing more than printing up money out of thin air one of the things that people don't realize is that the six to seven hundred billion dollars that was printed up in q e two all went overseas if you look at where a majority of that money went over six hundred billion went to the european banks basically to support their balance sheets in the wake of what's going on here none of that money was really used to stimulate the economy now having said that the aftereffects of printing up more money are evidence i think what we have to do is look back in history there are a few times where we could look back at when the government decides to inflate over growth what are the ancillary implications and one of them of course is the fact that you see both commodity prices and prices incidentally go up simultaneously. let's take a look at the markets now crude is on the rise light sweet is seventy six cents
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there and runs and sounding seventy three cents the price increase comes after a strong u.s. housing data and that cuts and on anger out avoiding technical default. then european stock markets are higher this hour with financials driving gains he often i rally on wall street and earnings from apple are a boost in confidence and investor confidence there and we see that the footsie is sixty point sixty seven percent up and going fifty three for the dax now in russian markets are now open and they're on a positive note the artsy asses off point eighty three percent and my sex is up point seven seems one percent. and most of the blue chips are on the rise on the my sex and gas problem is that in point ninety five percent gross telecom is posting strong gains on speculation it could be completely sold to private investors this
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forty two thousand americans die each year from car accidents will be a thousand. seven hundred thousand people. and thirty two thousand will kill themselves cancer in all its forms kills five hundred sixty thousand of us here heart disease is even more devastating it kills over eight hundred seventy thousand americans every year. welcome to the fuck outta me it's a big splash in the world of hi-tech business which earns advanced science into i ching products they don't understand coke you trophies is got the fall of russian invaders to keep your bidders abroad and their feet break through back sunlight on sunday consequently update here on. we got the future covered.
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the books measure the disciplinary punishment. education. words could the penitentiary system transform a criminal into a law abiding citizen the. prison life behind bars one archie. download the official c.f.a. cation phone the i pod touch from the i choose ops to. lunch all teachers life on the go. video on demand copies mindful of costs and r.s.s. feeds now in the palm of your. question. call wealthy british.
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market finance scandals find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike's concert for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into cars a report on our cheap. fix. the first few. if. i'm. hungry for the full story we've got it for us has the biggest issues get a human voice face to face with the news makers. in india she's available in the movie goer.
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