Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    September 24, 2011 4:00am-4:30am EDT

4:00 am
explosive the plaza greets the palestinian bid for statehood at the u.n. but the celebrations on the west bank are marred by clashes at these really border all the boosting held stalled peace talks will resume. education stagnation shock new figures reveal one of five british youngsters leave school without basic literacy and are struggling to find jobs as a result i also. live in the us of already told him that he will eventually now deregulation whether the big time plays a role but rather than. add market meltdown it's the
4:01 am
worst trading week in europe and the u.s. since the crisis of two thousand and eight as fears of a double dip recession grow despite the efforts of the i math and world bank. this is r t coming to you live from moscow and the new era dawns in a palestinian quest for statehood after its president submitted a formal request for recognition to the united nations and impassioned speech by mahmoud abbas was greeted was rockets applause by representatives of the international community while israeli delegation chose to walk out in protest of work now i was watching it for us in new york. the palestinians have a usually submitted their application for u.n.
4:02 am
membership and statehood that application is going to be discussed by the security council on monday when the palestinian president mahmoud abbas walked into the general assembly he received a round of applause that lasted for more than a minute that's not something that's often seen lots of delegation stood up and gave him a standing ovation and they did this several times throughout his speech a speech lasted about forty minutes and he addressed the desires of the arab people their desires for independence and for democracy referring to the arab spring and he said the time has come for a palestinian spring a palestinian independence when he held up his favorite is showing a copy of the official offer kishen he had submitted to the secretary general that's when he received another sending ovation within a half hour or so after that israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu addressed the general assembly he said he was not there to get around the replies he was there to speak the truth peace of the truth is that israel does want peace but
4:03 am
israel is not going to compromise its security and he believes that no u.n. resolution can bring about a palestinian state without negotiations between the israelis and the palestinians the middle east quartet issued a statement outlining somewhat of a timetable that would bring the israelis and the palestinians back to the negotiation table and continue start up reignite some via lateral talks and this time she works as follows within one month that would like to see both parties to sit down together at the negotiation table by three months both sides need to outline their proposals regarding territory and security quartet representative tony blair said that without russia's support commitments and help in reaching a consensus this statement could not have been reached a timeline not outlined here's a little. that of but mr blair had to say you've got the international community as
4:04 am
a whole saying we understand you've lodged the application with the united nations become a negotiator and here is a specific thing we want you to do within this three month period tabled a comprehensive proposal as of borders and security the most good conference i hope will come at a certain point in this process and allow us to refute the progress within six months is very sensible i think i have a conference in moscow russia has played a constructive part in bringing all this together and this week and therefore it makes sense to hold that conference in moscow the united states has stated several times that it will use its veto power if it house to block the palestinian bid for statehood so clearly a lot of things are unfolding all at once right of retired pouring of york as mahmoud abbas presented his case to the you an enormous crowd a lot of the streets of ramallah and across the palestinian territories to listen because he's obviously reports what began as stories deliberation was soon marred by clashes. well there has been overwhelming support among palestinians for this
4:05 am
historic bid for statehood at the united nations they have been celebrations for the last few hours here in ramallah as well as in the all the major palestinian cities in hebron nablus before him to carmen what those palestinians and i've been talking to by and large say is that they feel that years and decades of struggle have finally borne fruit and this is good at the united nations is that food really for palestinians it's a done deal but certainly tensions are running high on both sides of the borders both these raids them palestinians are concerned what we saw today is just the beginning of what will come in the next days and months and what we saw was one palestinian killed in clashes between palestinians and since this there are reports of israelis who have been killed in clashes so all these kind of reports just pointing to what the israeli army was afraid would happen but if the same time palestinians say. that the israeli army has been preparing for this violence and almost in that paper ration it's as if one city and once that violence to happen
4:06 am
palestinians are concerned that the israeli army will now crack down heavily in terms of security in the west bank they'll make it more difficult for pallets of palestinians passing through security checkpoints and border controls and also as a form of almost punishment the israeli government will withhold the taxes that it can make some behalf of the palestinian authority one of the questions that people here are asking is what is the political implications of all of this for the palestinian president mahmoud abbas now there has been an outpouring of support for him among most palestinians he's never been this popular before but what people say is that this might be short lived because it is not a done deal in fact a done deal is that the united nations security council will not recognize the palestinian state and the questions being asked about what is the long term future of the palestinian president at the same time it is important to note that have must has not come on board with the prime minister ismail haniya saying that the
4:07 am
palestinians new do not need to big the international community for recognition and so they are very real concerns about how well the future palestinian state work when you have her must and palestinians here in the west bank so much in disagreement there is also of course the question of negotiations with palestinians now in these raids saying they're going to sit down within the next month according to what the court is asking for there are those who do believe that the palestinian president has given inch of pressure from both the united states and israel that they should have been a vote that happened and that their vote should have happened today. policy reporting there and as a philosopher palestine's bid spreads across the middle east israel's impunity from international law may be coming to a manner that's according to an advisor to the palestinian authority. it's true and i was very confortable with the thought of all over the speech of president bush what our birth israel has enjoyed a culture of impunity as a person of power but said yesterday israel has been as they have over the law and
4:08 am
that's something that not the international community should look feel very proud of we're talking about forty four resul szell's who want to solutions violated by use for all this time what is israel going to do and they've been through to through the media that they are going to take some action against the palestinians of what else can be thought they want to reoccupy areas and be in the in the west bank they have to take care of not all of the security but all sort of all our social services. to not allow pursued by what arbors to return to the occupied palestinian estate well fine let them build and let's see what's going to happen with the international community there is absolutely nothing of the israel can do because the palace and how sewage all its a strategy towards and on the violence the strategy. including for you're going to street it's like if israel stalled my up my apple is the west bank and gaza and then they told me they want to negotiate with you over this article while at the
4:09 am
same time they are eating my own uppal that's basically the message of building a financial yesterday and that's a matter of a passerby rejected by all the international community but the most important year again let's not misunderstand the concepts we don't have to show our credentials but we are good enough to be free if we have shown very good credentials but the most important is not about instance from building the most important it's about the overview right of the palestinian people to sort of their mission we've been waiting for sixty four years that we have the largest refugee group in the world we have all this military occupation more than history that's something that has a spot. so it's in the program here in our tease splashing out on dinner. hillary clinton billions because i love her but obama. year ago sure if a lot of money. party asks people on the streets of new york how much they would spend to dine out with obama. could this be the solution for exhausted air
4:10 am
travelers a russian company unveils the sleep or peaceful shelter from airport hustle and bustle. coming to later in the program before levels a literacy in developed countries something that is often taken for granted but a recent survey in the u.k. has revealed an alarming number of school leavers lack even basic skills in reading and numeracy it points to a bleak future for young people there together with the rising use unemployment rate is lower and i try to trace the roots of the problem. reading writing and arithmetic the cornerstones of a basic education but one in five young people in the u.k. leave school without them and that hasn't improved since the one nine hundred sixty s. teacher salim roger picks up the pieces schools have dropped teaching sixteen to nineteen year olds wholly unprepared for the job market is. going to individual
4:11 am
themselves again interlinked with the bringing of the family reasons or sometimes it could be a case of personally do they want to show that no i'm not smart i'm not study type of person i just can't get along with people and that is actually be a problem as well saleem teaches small classes of school leavers who realize they can't get a job with their level of writing and math these students are managing to stay the course despite a thirty percent dropout rate and a poor school record i missed out. here ten so in year eleven i didn't really get a chance to give as much and get the much show off because district like there was a lot of students. treated shakti. able to keep my english and this was just just like you know.
4:12 am
kind of messed up the girls both want jobs in retail they're in the right place and they're not alone in their lack of literacy newman's one of the most deprived areas in the u.k. where more than two thirds of children live in low income families it's also now home to the elim pick stadio earns the recently opened westfield stratford city which is europe's largest shopping center westfield wanted to hire five thousand local people almost half of them from the ranks of the long term unemployed candidates managers say were enthusiastic but it was soon disk. it's that more than three hundred of them couldn't read all right enough to fill out a basic form westfield is giving remedial classes to its new recruits in the hopes their enthusiasm will carry them through but it comrade survey shows companies all over the city feel the education system right up to university is letting them down
4:13 am
to fifty eight percent of london business leaders for all too often graduates in london lack basic literacy and numeracy skills this is we're talking about people who spend three or four years in higher education so that so that means that it's really fairly damning indictment of the education system at large and it leaves one wondering water water all those ugandans universe to work meanwhile the number of unemployed eighteen to twenty four year old keeps on rising the latest figures show nearly eight hundred thousand and now out of work but if businesses can't count on them to be able to add up and read instructions there are likely to want to risk hiring them lower ebit r.t. london i'll get more on this on any of the other stories we're covering and always log on to our web site r t v dot com here's a quick look at what's available if we can out. more respect less indifference the paper say there is a bid to improve communities in russia's northern cal has become
4:14 am
a superhero in st petersburg also online. i see myself as well and proust. thank you thank you but artie's interview with britney spears as a pop prince's gear is up for sale in moscow. markets goals in europe and the us have seen their worst week since the part of financial. crisis of two thousand and eight hiding fears of a double dip recession and massive losses came to supply reassuring words from the world bank the international monetary fund the hands of the lending institutions gathered for their annual meeting in washington to discuss ways to deal with the european debt crisis and a slowdown of global economic growth but there is no good way out of the crisis
4:15 am
along as a canonic policies worldwide are dominated by greedy bankers that's according to paul craig roberts a columnist and former undersecretary of the treasury bond reagan. who trouble. makers and united states and europe are in the hands of the blankets and so the bankers who don't want to lose in one euro or a one day. are using the policy of europe and united states to bail themselves out and they're being bailed out regardless of the cause to the general public and the various countries or the cost to the national economies of the countries to mention a basic problem so as long as policymakers that focus. really on the banks. the rest of the economy will suffer and continue to worsen it's not up to the i.m.f. or whether greece defaults and we have to be very careful that the i.m.f.
4:16 am
doesn't become the governor of these countries and the best solution for greece would be to the thought because if they default it means their loans have to be restructured to what they can pay and the banks then have to write down the losses and if the losses endangered by then the european central bank i could turn its attention to what it takes to save the banks but as long as the european central bank and the g twenty and the i.m.f. and the federal reserve and states are focused on saving the banks at all cost you know sensible outcome is possible. but later peter look down his gas take an in-depth look at the role of russia and other emerging economies in the current volatile global situation and watch on the money and fifteen minutes time but here is a quick preview. our other countries emerging markets going to be looking at this volatility because in some ways some ways there are some real cherry picks out there i mean
4:17 am
like quality i'm thinking of these kind of things and if you've got the cash you're going to give emerging markets like russia second third look no better the moment at the moment that's being driven as far as i can see both pure you know the first . in europe and major european banks going through the wall people are doing with their wisdom and they flow to the things that they think the safest stupors in the state's gold but the irony of this is that the emerging markets have sold off heavily if you look at the fundamentals they're in a lot more sort of position really this is a crisis of the west's not a global crisis. as financial stocks in the u.s. are made shaky it emerges that a fund raising dinner for barack obama costing mouthwatering thirty five thousand dollars per head or harvest ask spiegel on the streets of new york how much they'd
4:18 am
spend to dine out with the u.s. president. president obama held a dinner that individuals could attend for just over thirty five thousand dollars how much money would you spend to have dinner with a world leader this week let's talk about that how much would you spend your oh why i'm a how to the job he's doing. i think twenty dollars twenty back by ten bucks. hillary clinton or billions because i love her but obama now obama a year ago i paid a lot of money now actually if you put five thousand dollars on taking that money. because thousand. because that's what i could afford is there anyone you would spend more to have dinner with. maybe michelle cheney i would love to spend
4:19 am
money to talk to me actually get the truth of what happened for those a years but again you won't get any truth about it i want some kind of important. oh really just something for mankind and you know i think thousands do that i don't think either of the two must think it would of. course and what would it be thirty five thousand dollars. spent for a campaign funds for. ok here and yeah. definitely how much would you spend so have dinner with the pope and spend thirty five posing for the. people to try to you think that would guarantee you a seat have been well yeah yeah i think he's got a good cold with it politics and government has reached such levels of the us and it's partly due to all of the money that's involved with it that no i don't think i would spend money on that i don't think that's i'd rather somebody spent thirty
4:20 am
five thousand dollars on education or some direct way of actually helping people instead of just getting in good with a lobbyist no matter how much money you'd spend to have dinner with a world leader let's just hope that at the end of it they'd pick up the check. russian politics is coming to live half of december's parliamentary elections the rolling out of russia party had by prime minister what he reported as holding its annual congress in moscow with around ten thousand participants are usually so now he joins us live on their knees of this as the file they have a conference so naturally there's a sense of expectation there so what's likely to be the main talking point i think it's fair to say that there is a big spaces which they are tremendous not just in russia but of course the whole world is watching to see whether or not this will be the place where we find out who my hood for president is in which way to come out with that of course the main
4:21 am
focus of this united russia venture in brussels the only gardy is to go get on the floor of the eventually elections which will take place in december and what their life form is going to be very something good seen a million russians sent in the polls and will be hearing about those proposals and what their main focus is going to be as they run for seats in the month we're going to hear the president it's made of of course but it also prime minister vladimir putin was the head of the idea of russia and he's going to talk about what the main goals what the main forms would be a lot of experts still divided on whether or not today will be the table here who will run for president some people think that it's too early the focus should in fact be on those arguments reelections of the forces on the minds of everyone in this room some ten thousand people who are participating in this conventional thinking whether or not today will be the day. and he said thank you very much indeed for the subway down of course we'll be crossing back to you for more as the day unfolds thank you very much for now though nice analogy there. now let's take
4:22 am
a look at other stories from around the world india and sri lanka have finished near a biggest join a way exercises in the indian ocean vessel the first multi-role frigate with stealth features. billeted india drew most attention during the event of a new verse which started on monday also involved in it helicopters and other aircraft and today was worked closely in two thousand and eight when sri lanka defeated the separatist tunnel tigers. but as well on president zuma travis has returned from cuba after completing the final round of chemotherapy there he said it was successful as tests at shell no signs of any you recurrence and he was ready to stand in next year's presidential election travis underwent surgery on the island in june to remove a cancer tumor and have five subsequent rounds of. thousands of students have clashed with police in the chilean capital santiago demanding
4:23 am
education reforms security forces used water cannon after a group of students piled chairs and benches as barricades the protests came after government again stations where the students broke down terms for asians in the country have been running for months. now if you are on the lead a quick nap and new russian designed by just have a solution it's called the sleep box many hotels to help exhausted adventures catch for the wings. tested out. what can be cuter than a sleeping baby a baby she's been home for it and airports and release the asians are not the best place for it. now two young russian architect have decided to change that with a sleek books sound proof and air conditions it's a mobile hotel room for a quick rest and the demand for them is already evening over the requests for me from all over the world in the future and to europe to.
4:24 am
the nearest culture were still in the e.u. spain similar concept capsule hotels were invented in japan some thirty years ago but never became popular elsewhere and this neatly designed confort will cost you about gender wise but our well deserved rest until business experts say see boxes could be goldmine. for transit passengers or foreign students even it's a great idea taking into consideration always unpredictable transport collapses it cetera they a much higher standard capsule hotels and the only one in the world so for is already drawing attention all those traveling through moscow all the longest flights i've ever been on lasted for twenty three hours with two stops i don't think there's a need to explain how desperate i was for a power nap just couple moments to add something for the rest my eyes right now i'm going to check out what it can be like to sleep in one of these just acknowledge.
4:25 am
well you're up to date and more member there as i said our dot com i'll bring you the headlines here shortly.
4:26 am
this was a city. of about one hundred ninety thousand people and we had eighty thousand people working for general motors. depended on general motors. general motors is if it's not relation to you it might be your neighbor or somebody you knew. family run business myself i'm third generation my father was working
4:27 am
there and you have a lot of two three and four generation families are there first let's understand that. this is a whole new doesn't know what. it is gone. into work. i think for a long time this notion in america that bigger was better was simply an undisputed fact in the twenty first century smarter it's going to get better general motors simply became too large for their own good and so many brands that they couldn't even keep up with they just basically became a dinosaur. on
4:28 am
the money with the business of rushing this. very first verses of the bible is that all human beings are created the set of it all came in god's image and it doesn't say just jews or god just. sixty to seventy percent of what i did as a combat soldier in the occupied territories was to do with the turds doing what we call making our presence so you go out should some bozo they hear a knock on some doors run to the other corner and it is not a house religion and nationalism not as judaism have been a part of the problem they've been part of what leads to. bloodshed a few one. thousand four hundred people in
4:29 am
a month and you want to expect that this will have no effect and kind of feel you have to be either extremely naive or extremely stupid oh good enough is it here and still religious jew calling another jew and not not the way they really let him out . in the far away land. where human life is ruled by nature. the distant past of planet earth is scarcely deserved by the poor. things are minimal and lie hidden in the deep permafrost. and for those who deal with them prehistoric times are still not filtered. down to the official tea hopefully cation kewl i phone all i pod touch from the shops to. geology is life on the gut.

28 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on