tv [untitled] July 24, 2011 7:00am-7:30am EDT
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in india oh she's available in the movie joyce fever chills a movie that's a great way to go to the grand imperial through the george wesley. you can a little closer to civility to go and. read this and the colonel was searching as to retreat. top headlines of the week here on our t.v. and the man charged with the plumbing norway's capital and the shooting rampage the followed admits his guilt he says he carried out the country's first ever terrorist attack. global economic recovery is at risk
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as debt crisis talks in the us collapse within the government so after the e.u. comes up with a new lifeline to pull the euro back from the brake. pads and battle the media mogul rupert murdoch braces themselves for a legal battle in the u.s. questions are asked over the death of journalist sean hoare is credited with the reeling of. the stories that made headlines this week you're watching the weekly here on artsy welcome to it the man charged with friday's shooting spree at a norwegian at a youth camp and bombing in the capital has admitted responsibility thirty two year old anders a battering a graphic says that he carried out the twin attack which claimed over ninety lives and it's so single handedly the incident has been called the country's worst atrocities since world war two the suspect was arrested at the scene of the
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massacre on the island. he reportedly traveled there in police uniform and asked people to gather around him before gunning them down but rampage came. just hours after the oslo bombing that killed at least seven the suspect reportedly has contacts with the far right wing groups and have previously posted extreme and islam statements on his blog daniel bushell is following developments for us in oslo and will join us live later this. week. or someone who knows anders breivik a person he told us here about see that he was shocked by the news but says also there was a place where radicalism is in the air i could not imagine i even you know magic and do that again writing was right he had an ego and especially. in relation to girls for example the parents sex
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for other guys. don't. you have to be. a little bit oh but it was built on it was just you know like monday you know you know this is a. very slight i don't know what each week will be very soon but there is any possible you know nation saying god i'm a huge church then he should damn hard it is trying to get in on the other ground there is just a late. probably elation. there you got it right yes and out of your house or so. basically like just you know. which one way do you want to it and i just and doug and a research fellow with the dubai initiative says that recent years have created the perfect environment for thorodd extremism to flourish. while this transnational
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zombie terrorism has been on the radar for some time the very real threat the homegrown right wing extremists has been over loved with in most western countries we have seen two things happening at the same time we've seen this type of ratcheting up of rhetoric anti immigration rhetoric this is happening to us and also western europe and there's also been this as we can say what i call a truism so there have been individuals that have more or less become quite quite radicalized due to violence and also due to the idea that there's just been an influx of immigration then compound these factors has also been other global economic crisis so you have the euro zone crisis and you also have how the global economic crisis impacted united states so there has been a general type of environment which has encouraged individuals to take out their frustrations newly arrived immigrants so i think that this is something that is
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actually very very very very important for western policymakers to look at so i think that in the coming years we're going to see more of this right wing extremism . that norwegian attacks have sent shock waves all around the world and sparked a passionate debate over what lies behind such a person like when our website r.t. dot com have a look now we're asking you what triggered the norwegian tragedy so far the majority of you think that sheer fanaticism is to blame fewer people or forty percent say the tensions stem from multiculturalism nine percent say the reason is global terrorism which penetrates everywhere and a minority says it's down to the failure of security forces i want your take on this going to r.t. dot com and you'll say. on the way here on r.t. has a hand over nato begins withdrawing combat troops from afghanistan but are local security forces ready to fend for themselves i do stay with us for
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a special report from deep inside the war zone. if. you would r.t. now greece has seen a glimpse of hope after european leaders came up with a plan to fight its debt crisis after long negotiations in your governments agreed on a range of measures designed to help the debt stricken country to avoid a default greece will receive a new bailout now worth an estimated one hundred and nine billion euros the move will see interest rates on greek debt lowered and the period in which it must repay its loans coupled greece has been battling a crisis for the past eighteen months and has seen violent protests from a disillusioned public journalist simon young says that despite the second cash handout troubles in greece are far from over. president sarkozy has been saying in brussels you know greece is a special case it's received this special support from the europeans and other countries won't receive that but of course it's do we believe that i'm not sure
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that we do because it's inconceivable that the europeans wouldn't step in. and it's also i think inconceivable that even the resources now available to the financial stability fund are sort of nascent european monetary fund there i think they wouldn't really be sufficient in the end if it was a sort of battle between the bond markets and the italian government so those sort of without wanting to pay nightmare scenario yes i don't think we're out of the woods yet. or also rifa cross the atlantic or the u.s. president has held emergency talks with congressional leaders barack obama accused party members of risking a new global catastrophe after talks to avert a debt default collapsed congress and must approve a plan to allow more borrowing on top of its current fourteen trillion dollars level before august second if the decision is not made by then the country could
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run out of money to pay its bills and may have to take measures that would threaten the global economic recovery both democrats and republicans are divided over details of a package of spending cuts and tax rises the deal offered by the president includes cuts to medical costs and other entitlements and as investigative journalist to create a poll last says it's of the ordinary americans who will have to foot the bill for their government's actions. george bush when he was president in two thousand and one to two thousand and eight when our why it spits he had a surplus given to him an eighty six billion dollars a year by bill clinton turned it into a six hundred million dollars per year deficit adding three trillion dollars us. eric cantor voted for all those search for bush's wars in iraq or the weapons for the tax cuts now these guys don't want to pay the bill they're trying to got
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a. dad the debt the tax cuts for the rich that bush is or is somehow a compromise means that the this should in dollars will be paid for by eliminating benefits who are the working class emerging people the elderly people on social security didn't encourage it barracks veterans receiving better veterans benefits didn't increase the debt it was the result of bush's wars bush's tax cuts while spending for these programs. just running a ten minutes past the hour here in moscow you with r.t. and the weekly earlier this week rupert murdoch and his son james appeared before a u.k. parliament tree inquiry into the phone hacking scandal the media mogul denied direct responsibility stating that senior managers and those directly involved in reporting stories were to answer james murdoch has not been accused of trying to mislead british m.p.'s after saying he was unaware of the true extent of phone
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hacking by reporters prime minister david cameron it led to calls for him to answer further questions after his evidence was challenged the motives could now face a legal battle in the united states over claims the voice mails of nine eleven victims were also targeted meanwhile questions are asked over the demise of journalist sean hoare the man credited with revealing the phone hacking scandal and its r.t.c. laura reports his death is drawing striking parallels with another whistleblower. another political scandal erupts another whistleblower diaries sean hoare 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 colson actively encouraged it who was found dead in his house on monday setting the blogosphere into a frenzy of comparisons with the case of dr david kelly why isn't this one horror
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story bigger reminds me of how diplomatic kelly was dumped on dearly similar tragedies of seen war in the wood clearly this madness toward the end of it can we sean who are that's what i'm thinking something's not right dr 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 by extraordinary coincidence kelly's body was discovered exactly eight years before that of sean hordes on the eighteenth of july two thousand and three 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 iligan believes there are similarities between kelly and sean hoare being at the center of one of these storms a terrifying experience i really don't believe either david all sure was murdered because. i simply don't think it would have been in anyone's interest to murder
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them once they got into the public spotlight anyone with an iota of sense in government would have known that to kill them we're just we're just amplify the 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 was evidence could have been crucial to proving that the news of the world editors supported a culture of listening to private voice mails for stories because former editor andy colson he later became a media director. the current prime minister has always denied the allegations and was destroyed professionally by views international. in london is a very small amount was. drinking too much taking drugs he was depressed moralized police are saying hall's death doesn't appear suspicious and they're looking at suicide dr kelly's death was also recorded as suicide although
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many including leading doctors and m.p.'s have never accepted that their suspicions of hardly been quelled by the fact that more to report and other evidence has been classified for seventy years so ten arrests six resignations two convictions and one death that the toll of the phone hacking scandal so far the death of a key whistleblower in this scandal has raised questions but so far only amongst the twitter aussie it's being reported as a horrible and unfortunate coincidence but it's doubtful that if this is happening elsewhere say in india the british media would be so quick to accept it as a coincidence particularly gets out in the light of the death of david kelly. to our top story here in our weekly norway's first ever terror attack the man charged with friday's atrocities admits he carried out the bombing and the shooting
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spree single handedly let's get more now from our new bush all standing by live in . the new hello and i want you to also have bring us up to date after anders behring breivik admitted his guilt. yes as you say the suspect has admitted the crime he says it was an appalling it necessary act and he adds that it was needed to shake up norwegian society he claimed it wasn't a crime more details are emerging about the suspect that he posted a bizarre fifteen hundred page book where he says how to make a bomb and i quote once you decide to strike it's better to kill too many of them not enough or you risk reducing the desired ideological impact of the strike but also violence and the muslim views on that site now to just remind you what happened there was a car bomb here explosion here in the city center government headquarters and just a few hours later he traveled just outside to an oil and gathered in
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a police uniform he took her children around him he had a gun and because of the close here the children were expecting that there were lots of policemen with guns around at the time so they weren't surprised by that and then he began to shoot sheltering all kill everyone everyone must die now we have new pictures of a swimmer's people swimming pool survival. for their lives hiding in the rocks of a ten year old boy being rescued today's a day of mourning there's a memorial service being held just a few hundred meters from here in oslo and the court hearing is on monday all right daniel you are in oslo right now how the people feeling that sense and shocking. yes tensions are high people are still trying to figure out how something like this could have happened the police say there's still maybe more casualties up to ninety seven recorded and there is criticism that it's an hour to an hour and
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a half after receiving information of the attack on the island that it's over an hour to get to the scene and to stop the massacre there's also been criticism they were looking for muslims initially they were saying it was a muslim attack the police say that it was difficult to get to the island they had to find transport their stories are emerging of immense heroism over ordinary people who rescued fellow victims who went back into the danger area here in the city center but also there is growing criticism here in oslo of government integration policies which seems to have backfired more now in this report. brave christine who was. called explosion in the days and surrounded by a group of close she stayed in the laws to help the wounded who wait this just standing thing and then suddenly it just feels like it's not like i can like a fish just waiting for your body to go like last bits and their eyes have been you
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know that's smashed glass all over them the skin and everything this short patched up victims giving its whole drinks as a nation which has never suffered at the hands of terrorists before he says norwegians just didn't know how to react. all orms from from course on the buildings. people holding a steaming rolling on this man's wife suffered severe short when their windows were blown last but she says they're lucky to be alone he's the many young victims of the second attack i think it will be sure to shoot the most. die she says. and so. mr cupples to the two atrocities produced many acts of heroism but there's little settles on the world's worst mass shooting explosive is also closing anger the attacks were allowed to
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happen in the first place and good little. dozens of hate messages from suspect anders behring breivik you haven't really been prepared for right being extremism previous expressed fury at the government's open door policy on immigration blogs and twitter feeds and despite the shootings may reflect a growing national position to flee immigration policies the political establishment the more they are relative of the people but they've been areas where there are simply no immigrants there's a poor people ignore the being pushed out of places they used to live live in on the soles of their drop stock are in jeopardy muslims claim this disappointment that the killer turned out to be wants they want this guy to be a muslim although most of you know. it's for them it's just a little bit strange because he's no egypt so they talk too much about this down and about us. it is not like new religions are said to be fed up with the ground of
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what's been dubbed radical liberalism it's the country's multicultural policies to turn the government against his own. way. far right. and wider. to admit and there's a respectful attitude towards that kind of. and in mainstream media but the reality is that fifty percent often are against multiculturalism as people here try to pick up the pieces and bring meaning to this twitter already thing it will sell relations between communities some expect the crackdown by police on the e.u. growing far right movements while the spirit is slowly fueled resentment against europe's muslims victims are beginning to piece spoke together the shuttered lawyers but expose warned this might not be the last such attack as the perceived
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failure of a multicultural society grows. see also look. now i just turning twenty minutes past the hour on this sunday here in moscow and coming up for you here on r.t. . for rent for how the prices of sorry good motherhood has been turned into a commercial business by some here in russia. divers have recovered more bodies on a pleasure cruise or that sank two weeks ago in russia's republic of qatar stan that's bringing the death toll now to one hundred and one team the country's worst river disaster in years happened on the volga when a boat with over two hundred on board just minutes emergency crews are now preparing to seal that bulgaria after it was towed to a shallow waters the task now is to pump water from the sunken hole to make the red white and after lift the ship can be examined to determine what caused the wreckage of the boat owner is under investigation and two people have already been charged with violating the safety regulations. well we follow the recovery operation of the
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ship online as well i think at our web site you can get the latest updates and videos and blog entries of course all the wrong people go online for all the details of the tragic event from the moment the cruiser went down to the latest salvage operation. also iran's media is denying reports that a man shot dead in tehran was one of the country's nuclear scientists and asserts that he was a student who just happened to share the same name unknown physicist. and on this date sixty years ago just over sixty years ago now u.s. reveals the u.s.s.r. that had a weapon of devastating power and the atomic bomb would later become a catalyst for the cold. three terrorists have been killed by security forces in a russia's republic of dagestan officials say the suspects are believed to be responsible for carrying out several deadly terror attacks the band was located in
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a suburban house and surrounded by troops and militants refused to surrender and opened fire forcing officers to gun down three of the suspects one member of the group a woman was taken alive after searching the house police found a cache of weapons and a pair of suicide bomb vests russia's caucasus region has seen a spike in terrorist activity in recent months. as we do in the weekly here on our t.v. will pause for what i want to check out some other top stories from around the world today nato has carried out at least seventy new airstrikes on the libyan capital hitting colonel gadhafi as a residential compound on friday a large crowd rallied in the capital in a show of support for the colonel where exact whereabouts of still unknown libya's ongoing revolution started in february with the nato led coalition that launching airstrikes in march germany announced on sunday the decision to loan one hundred and forty four million dollars to the libyan rebels. a car bomb has killed eight
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soldiers in yemen's a coastal city of aden the blast took place near the entrance of an army camp as a convoy of vehicles packed with troops was about to leave the compound they were supposed to take part in fighting against al qaeda linked militants in a nearby province the attack follows another car blast that took place a few days ago which killed one person. two high speed trains of crash into each other in eastern china killing at least thirty two people and leaving more than one hundred injured reports say one of the bullet train stopped after it was struck by lightning before then being hit by another train from behind two train coaches fell off a bridge as a result of the crash the rescue operation continues at the site officials say each carriage could carry up to one hundred people. a joint raid by nato and afghan forces has left sixteen militants that in the south of the country russian company response to renew a ton of activity as a foreign a combat troops begin to withdraw from afghanistan. military commander in the
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country general john allen warns of quote talk times ahead of the but. president's brother who run the south of the country was recently gunned down by an insurgent one of her because i was told visors was also being assassinated activist brian becker thinks the u.s. led coalition is losing its grip on afghanistan. they can't win by staying in fact their presence is becoming the main catalyst for the armed insurgency not only the taliban but maybe one hundred forty armed groups and they can't leave either because if they leave there will be a perception that the us and nato were defeated by an armed insurgency but this dilemma must be solved someway so ultimately the united states cannot prevail the assassination of cars eyes brother and his inner circle shows that the edifice of the karzai regime necessary at least to get afghan face to the nato occupation that
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itself is now crumbling and these armed attacks these assassination attempts are designed to create panic and i think in all likelihood they are creating panic within the very heart the foundation of the karzai government the u.s. is losing grown steadily its spending one hundred twenty billion dollars a year that's an increasing amount from the treasury that's already drained based on huge budget deficits here the number of casualties on the afghan and american side is is increasing not decreasing and yet they're no closer to victory in fact they're losing control of the country and the government that they sponsor is is in fact in danger of crumbling i would say the u.s. hasn't gained anything i think the u.s. is losing ground it's part of what david petraeus and the obama administration say this is a bad situation possibly a catastrophe for the united states. you with r.t. life in the heart of moscow an hour when it comes to starting a family some couples will embrace every possible method to achieve their dream while illegal in many countries commercial surrogacy is an option in russia can
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carry a heavy financial and emotional price but is a diary a push over the reports on how poor legislation fails to protect those involved in the process i should warn you you may find some of the following images distressing beast was a band all made him and often seen he was ill his genetic parents refused even to hold him and the boy has a rare and incurable genetic disease but they don't provide they simply threw him out like an unwanted kitten and picked a healthy one. while his healthy twin brother enjoys family life and has no one but hospital staff helping him to survive the boy's surrogate mother also disappeared soon after the delivery little anton story is just one of those shocking examples of shortcomings in the russian family code that seeks to regulate sorry to see in the country for a group of activists in our modern world the idea of surrogacy is sometimes distorted if you didn't use to avoid the hardships of pregnancy and to preserve the
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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 pay in or the sarah good want to admit their involvement in the process we had to do 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 many it's easier to resort custom all over not the just moral why. 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 surrogate mothers greatest fear is not getting paid most of them see surrogacy as the only solution to their financial misery if you had no other choice lived at my mom's place nine people in forty six square metres zenaida mother of two hope giving birth or money would allow her buy an apartment for her large family however hard way through the
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pregnancy the genetic parents demanded she a board they had shopped around and their backup was bearing twins. the biological father sprawled out in front of men and on the chair and almost knocked when he was saying don't you understand we need neither you nor the baby. you know even still hoped they'd accept the baby but instead and it up with no feet and an addition to her family. and these legal details are cold comfort the question is whether he will ever want to know who his real parents all and why they treated him as a commodity terry pushed kovach artsy nasca. and i'll be back with a recovery stories in just a few minutes saying you're sick. of
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this nature and discover its buzy. communicate with the wild and let them. test yourself and become free to. see what nature can give you on on to. the wealthy british soil the sun. spot on the front of. the. market financed scandal find out what's really happening to the global economy for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines to name two crimes a report on our.
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