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tv   [untitled]    October 22, 2011 10:01pm-10:31pm EDT

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circumstances of the former leader's death have sparked international calls for an investigation with every new piece of video a constant deep shadow on the official version that he died in cos fire his body is currently being kept in a chill of room in a shopping center in misrata one of the hot spots of the revolution to oust him hundreds of levens have been queuing for photo opportunities with the united boarding the failure to carry out a bramwell within twenty four hours is a blatant contravention of islamic law now the interim government says it may be cool to conduct his extended family and he said now it has the latest from the meeting counter so the n.t.s.b. is saying that gadhafi was killed by a bullet wounds also conflicting reports as to where exactly those shots were in his stomach in the right side of his head and the left side of the head it's looking very shady and then this brutal video that went viral the mainstream media showing it more than twenty four hours constantly of gadhafi whether or not he was dead or alive very unclear at first in the first couple of shots of interferes that
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he's alive he actually goes and touch the head wipe some blood away and then there's a time and it seems that he was clearly dead in those later which is the same thing with one of his songs that was captured in syria first pictures of him standing against a wall smoking a cigarette very clearly alive then the video cards and all of a sudden he's dead so really pressure coming from around the world both from the west and other countries that we've been very critical about nato mission here in libya that something needs to be done about an investigation the u.n. is planning on launching an investigation and russia's foreign minister was very clear that russia and many of many countries and officials around the world feel like the weight of gadhafi was killed in these pictures that we saw were perhaps not the best possible way to go to go through. the footage shown on t.v. proves that he was captured alive and wounded and after that he was killed later there were reports that a convoy carrying macondo was attacked by nature planes. enough about the rebels
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captured members of that convoy has been repeated numerous times that nato planes are only have a un mandate to ensure a no fly zone over libya and the convoy wasn't posing any threat to civilians on the ground and could be a legitimate target. actions pose a number of questions as well. as speaking of that no fly zone which is of course how this mission began back in march the u.n. looking into when it will officially and pushing for that mission to end this soon as possible in the days when you know it is october thirty first but it has to be said officially nato mission is very much alive here in libya gadhafi is body is in a walk in refrigerator now in misrata and already way beyond the twenty four hour mark to have who had been buried by muslim tradition the official liberation ceremony will take place in benghazi we're hearing it will take place there that of course was the original rebel stronghold where their whole fight for freedom began it will take place there instead of the capital because the security situation here
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is still very tense just a couple of days ago there was a shootout between n.t.s.c. troops and the dow feel oil was so low mostly celebrations have been taking place obviously officials the interim officials are worried that there could be some kind of violence here in the capital very few people obviously were on the streets of my asking what's next for they'd be a they couldn't answer that question was so world analysts are certainly looking into what will happen will be chaos here one of the main fears is that libya could break out into some kind of tribal war that there's going to be this hour the world community has begun to think what will we see happen here in the upcoming months and years. to some of the international community trying to get to the bottom of his death and very well provide the answer everyone is looking for it's a little slow you know we grabbed him i hit him in the face some fighters wanted to take him away and that's when i shot up twice in the head and in the chest. so the
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syrian fighters those who didn't live there deo taking the can ally also flaunted what he calls the duckies and blood of shirts and a gold ring on which the name of cadet his second wives are poor and the date of their marriage had been engraved u.s. based and middle east expert shereen to get a say in the colonel's death will open up an era of tribal and ethnic conflict across libya. do you international community is calling for an investigation but they've been complicit in his death it casts a shadow on many things it casts a shadow on the m.t.c. to cast a shadow on the future of the country could ask how old his the tribes and the ethnicities together and what we're going to see over the next few months and years is massive trial and specifically ethnic divisions and very strong relations explain the libyans of african descent who have african features and leans of arabic over a distance as well and even during this war it started in every we've started to
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see those kinds of violent divisions between ethnicities the people of libya up are in the middle of a war right now it's a civil war or it's an international war and people are dying civilians are dying they're being imprisoned they're not getting proper medical treatment and and they're in the last people that anyone seems to care about so you know if the future is good we can't see it from here. this is on c.n.n. still ahead for you this hour double trouble places a quick quote that emerges that poisoned former k.g.b. agent alexander define cold so had ties with the country's intelligence services. antiquated on north to quit cold worldwide and british membership of the euro skeptics called for nationwide referendum on leaving the union. the occupy wall street movement grows stronger despite a series of arrests and scuffles with police which continue new york activists
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accuse the police of heavy handed tactics against people peacefully expressing their opinion confident as all that heat. well the occupy wall street protests continue to spread across the united states here in new york city and not only have occupy wall street protesters and camps themselves in zuccotti park but here in union square they are now marching against police brutality that is the new focus of the protests in the face of increasing arrests increasingly tally they say by not only the new york city police department but also police departments across the world now over the weekend approximately nineteen protesters were arrested in downtown orlando in florida one of them was an armed u.s. army soldier and a man in a wheelchair their crime not moving when the police officers told them to move even though they say they were simply trying to stand up for their first amendment freedom of speech rights to call out attention to the corruption both in wall street and in washington now one of the biggest issues of the occupy wall street
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protests today is the heavy handed police tactics by the officers one protesters are simply they say making their voices heard trying to get politicians to listen to them in a country that they say no longer represents their democratic needs or democratic interest do seem to be growing we've seen increasing numbers of protesters out in the streets from seattle to chicago to los angeles some of the people i've spoken to today in fact say they're they're starting a small scale protest in upstate new york it seems like this movement is popping up all across the country faster than authorities know how to handle it one of the interesting facts that many of the protesters here have cited both to me and other reporters working for our teeth is the fact that the united states while it only represents about five percent of the total world's population has the highest one of the highest incarceration rates across the globe in fact a quarter of all world inmates are housed in prisons here in the united states this is one of the biggest issues that are concerning protesters here many of whom like
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to point out the fact that you people on wall street have been arrested or punished for. corporate crimes while innocent civilians seem to be jailed for simply speaking simply stepping off the curb for example or marching in demonstrations that they say are constitutionally protected here in the legal system of the united states that are reporting from new york our correspondent in america calls them going on to call for demonstrations there for you and you can head to our twitter stream to get all the latest updates on that so if one of her tweets. says that police have surrounded a union square in new york and it seems now that there are more protests. israelis inspired by american accidents have spent weeks protesting and calling for social justice on the streets of tel aviv but now that the riots have ended people are left wondering when the reforms promised to them by the government were the madrigal to supporters here. anger outrage and protest on the
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streets of new york a throwback to the same scenes different streets around ten thousand kilometers away politicians in the you know. exaggerated in the same way as the. far been taking for granted the citizens occupy wall street it wasn't that long ago israelis were calling to occupy what child boulevard . joined approaches from the beginning she was inspired by what happened in cairo and caught her tain't corner car but here people are saving and we're praying every evening and people are planning on going through our as you know watch as events unfold in faraway new york she misses the six weeks she lived here and wishes she could be part of the wall street rallies by the birth however i remain with great credit goes to beijing and really holds the purchase of new york have
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strong parallels with those in israel in how they came about and why the similarity between the protesters just and. and. the way they started on facebook the way they chose a location very close to where. the center of power is where the center of greed is for in this case the wall street but many are wondering what exactly that struggle in israel achieved recommendations made by government committees still need to be implemented and that could take a long that's looks like any other street in tel aviv but it looks like the focal point of social change in the revolutionizing its role of attaining the payment made with bikers and the social demands are still waiting to be made like many american is rabies because many is watching the u.s. rallies closely and says they are an inspiration to many in israel he's proud people are taking a stand against corruption and greed the protest the struggle and the anger is in the people still and the struggle is still going to go on
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a view that more and more people around the globe seem to share policy r.t. tel aviv. and i have for you this hour the passion behind the protest. little going to come over here for the whole both parties i think we want to do body. party is new york resident hillary hoffman is the points out of water united thousands of people taking part in the occupy wall street movement. but right now finance ministers from all twenty seven european union states a meeting in brussels for more talks on the e.u. spiraling economic crisis which threatens to turn global europe remains plato a solution for greece's debt disaster and bailout with ministers saying banks should raise more than one hundred billion euros a new capital and write off some of the country's debt meanwhile british euro skeptics are pushing for the rights of a vote on a referendum for the country to name the european union they people's pledge campaign believes the to minds the u.k. sovereignty under the costs for the country are simply too high and london
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conference by the group demands for a nationwide referendum with the issue to be discussed in westminster on monday spokesperson for the people's pleasure economist and ruth police says e.u. officials and leaders have neglected the opinions of the people in making their decisions throughout the history of the union. the truth is that we joined the e.u. all the e.c. is it was way back in one nine hundred seventy three when it was a very different animal and since then have been all these treaties as with the single european act the maastricht treaty the amsterdam treaty nice treaty in the lisbon treaty and they've gone it's gone from being basically a trading area with aspirations to something very close to a political union when we do surveys as to whether people actual people there you know that was behind me and in front of me or in the hall today whether they want a referendum on e.u. membership they say yes and i'm afraid to say there's a lot of the politicians here who also move us about actually letting the people have their say i mean the the truth is that i think creasing lee and western
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democracies including the old european democracies people will want to say i'm good on the politicians say mother but he's very interesting that even when they're all referenda in the e.u. there was one constitution for in france and there's one in the constitution in ireland and one in the netherlands and they voted no we don't want this but what happened the politicians bottom line regardless so as far as i'm concerned you know it's the people who should be allowed to have the say and we must get these messages across so the politicians this time they listen to the people as an inquest into the death of former russian agent alexander granted by the u.k. his way to admit he was working for british intelligence the long stretch an investigation was launched five years ago one that died of radiation poisoning in london. reports now and recent discoveries could post some uncomfortable questions for british and. according to britain this is
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a man on the run and very lugovoy hasn't left russia since two thousand and six because of an international arrest warrant he's accused of murdering alexander litvinenko in london almost five years ago both former k.g.b. agents but lugovoy says he's got nothing to hide. from you know nobody really expected me at the pre inquest hearing even though british officials claim i'm hiding from justice my lawyers annoy found out about it by sheer chance had we not found out about it i think the british press would have accused us once again of hiding from justice but this girl won't look at boys lawyers last week echoed calls from a live in yonkers widow for a full inquest which is now finally being ordered but that's prompted yet another twist in a case already steeped in intrigue in order. my lawyers and i put ourselves food as an interested party so live in yonkers we don't often was forced to admit her husband was a paid agent of m i five and m i six o'clock that he worked for britain's
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intelligence and not just as a consultant she had no other choice she realized you might get involved in the inquest this will be reviewed anyway because i know a few facts that will force a british court to ask m i five and m i six a few questions. until now marina litvinenko has always denied any such link she says he was out of loyalty to her husband she refused to speak to us they said mission leaves m i five facing awkward questions in an inquest they were the only party trying to limit and they did take it for granted that they can just brush embarrassment can't help it and as i said if it had been consulting for them or working with them and he died in highly. the tourist circumstances on their patch then you have of course they would be questioned about not offering protection to people and also not offering protection to the london public you know . as the trail of polonium two ten left across the city living in kid died
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a slow and painful death caused by the lethal radioactive substance polonium two ten the unsolved case has been the thorn in the side of british russian relations with moscow refusing to extradite abundance chief suspect but some claim britain's pursuit has blurred the line between fact and fiction there's a whole host of unofficial allegations. how we go from my death which i were horrible to an accusation that mr lugovoy was responsible is ludicrous i mean it's all looks very fishy joy an unbiased observer but the diet that we are being fed in britain through the media. short circuits a lot of that this is where it all began the millennium hotel in central london and it's what happened in here remains the biggest question mark living yankee met lugovoy for breakfast here the day he fell ill and that's when he's alleged to have
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been poisoned forensics to find the contaminated teapot but a link from that diluted boy is still unproven it's hoped the coroner's inquest will determine once and for all what exactly went on behind these walls something c.c.-t.v. missed the police say they have new evidence but won't disclose it until they conclude their own investigation as for lugovoy he says he'll answer any questions they've got not in person of course but via video link i've been it r t london. russia has several u.s. officials from visiting the country in an escalating raw over the death of a lawyer sergei magnitsky in a moscow prison almost two years ago this comes in response to a similar blacklist of russians are banned by washington from entering the u.s. but miska died after a good read remand facing tax evasion charges his colleagues claimed he was held up ahead alleged a huge fraud against a number of russian office officials to prison dr. face charges in moscow of negligence over his death but the u.s.
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is now refusing to grant bases to several russians it says are connected to the case last year says the american as it has blacklisted this saturday are suspected of crimes against russian citizens in the u.s. think creating kidnapping and torture russia has also wanted to make stand in that state which has not been publicly released unless washington drops its actions. president barack obama announced the end of military deployment in iraq ordering all troops to leave by the end of the year about thirty nine thousand american troops will leave the country after more than eight years an era that has cost us taxpayers over eight hundred billion dollars almost four thousand five hundred u.s. soldiers have died during their service in the iraq war was a slogan and iraq an american political activist or a juror are things to go after the trial is a step forward for bad countries but it doesn't mean america's influence in the region will end this is very important milestone i think iraq is in general have been waiting for this is the last eight years we want to hear this military
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occupation is over it's all over although it is a major step in but i better unfortunately it does not necessarily mean the end of the u.s. involvement and intervention in iraq because the u.s. is planning to keep sixteen thousand person under the state department all for all the iraqi political leaders of not against keeping some you a stream of. three in the new iraqi army on using newly purchased u.s. weapons but they are against granting munity because there have been a long list of crimes that were committed killing iraqi civilians with no accountability the u.s. intervention and occupation of iraq has been a disaster it is not because. there's nothing to look back at because the disaster that should not have happened it's a disaster for this this is. and the us has been
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a part of iraq's problem in the last decade or two decades since the intervention started i'm very happy that the us is ending its intervention because i think this will help iraqis move forward and put the country in the right truck. some national headlines for you this hour in northern kosovo day two peacekeepers try to remove barricades by ethnic serbs that have been stalled by hundreds of people called suppose subset in front of sixteen world blocks to prevent foreign troops pushing through the barricades western peacekeepers and local said been leaders afterwards failed to achieve a breakthrough during the talks next on saturday in the region were billed by local service back in july when the ethnic albanian government attempted to take control of the disputed crossing area. the turkish military has reported at least forty nine deaths among kurdish rebels after and ground offensives in the southeast of the country operations against the separatists were launched on wednesday and
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reportedly involved ten thousand troops they began as a response to the death of twenty four soldiers killed by fighters old days kurdistan workers party o p k k k s conflict with the kurdish rebels has claimed thousands of lives since they started their fight for tony in nineteen eighty-four . to vote for a new government on sunday in the country's first democratic elections in more than forty years following january's revolution over ten thousand candidates and eighty parties are running islamists and secular opponents will compete for two hundred seventeen seats in a parliament which was drawn to a new constitution and form an interim government the poll comes ten months after former president. ben ali was ousted in the post popular uprising of the arab spring revolt. which claimed over three hundred and fifty lives in recent months and displaced more than one hundred thousand people are now approaching the type competent bank called the nine million residents of the city
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hall been warned to take protective measures such as moving belongings to higher levels under monitors offenders have been opened canals have begun to fill in some of the city's outskirts already closing damage to homes this year's floods which began. in july are the worst in almost seventeen. saudi arabian t.v. has reported the death of the kingdom's heir to the throne prince sultan bin abdul aziz also mood he was eighty five and had been diagnosed with colon cancer in two thousand and four. when surgery new york two years ago and has been parading abroad since but it's not been released where he died the data brings into focus the health of saudi arabia's aging of all elite especially king abdullah is now eighty seven. a support for the occupy wall street movement is growing across the world to include even iran and north korea many are wondering what exactly has united so many people in protest there were half its own president reporter in new york went
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to the center of the action tossed people would want them. a month into the occupy wall street movement is there a unified method this week let's talk about that there isn't a centralized message a lot of people say that's the problem and i think that's actually a strength that we currently have. as a movement where we're just over a month old. october seventeenth was or one month anniversary and and i think it's it's early to to be issuing any statements or anything along those lines any any sort of movement major movement or revolution or anything like that throughout history has issued a statement within the first month it feels a little absurd to me to expect there to be one core message when this is a movement that's wanting to be inclusive that wants everyone to have a voice and everyone has their own life they have their own struggles is it i mean
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today's world is the sound bite no one has attention at a.t.t. world and they need a soundbite are there often that the current dominant paradigm and where looking to give examples of what alternative paradigms could exist i tried to come every day for a couple of bottles so a lot of people are saying that the message isn't unified and that's an issue that the movement is having its problem communicating but i don't see it as an issue. because you feel like it's a unified i think it is ultimately this is a big battle of ideas there's fifteen different worldviews per square foot and. people are talking and people are listening it's like the best university in the world but there's no unified message a lot of people don't seem to really understand why they're here they can articulate it so you know if this sort of makes them think about why they're here well there in the alternative do you think that that's a problem with the movement is that there isn't
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a unified message not necessarily i think there's a profiling theme to it everybody's distant. franchise with something you're saying education and health care some guy over there just said shipping jobs out of the country through our stuff we part of it i mean there's not one thing like i said it's not just one thing and there's a bunch of different reasons out that i'm part of that too i mean i definitely agree with that the fact that they're shipping jobs of the country we don't need any more so how would you sum it up in one clears that tends what the message is here. little going to comic reform the whole of both parties i think we want to party so it seems like everyone here feels like there is a unified message and that is there isn't a unified message which they feel like is the very strike of the movements. and who are on the protests that are shaking out the u.s. go on to our web site on to the home and find out about the former u.s. marine who stood up to that information to the counter and spokesperson for the
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occupy wall street movement that i don't know it's more. legendary norm to russian soyuz rocket sets from my french space base in the tropics carrying being used by satellite navigation system aiming to become a rival to america's trivia. coming up next the kaiser report with mark for stacy but before that i'll update you on the headlines if you mom.
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a very warm welcome to you this is your news today protesters on the wall street center they have. leads in canceling your chance to choose is it to get the break that the status of the human experiment is expanding or will. we put your programs in this rap music or would it snows good movies lately trying to make sense of global economy and its arcane things as financial templates the research grambling to maintain our confidence in markets and. wants to be easing trade imbalances recession look even the nations close to collapsing a subprime loan foreclosed homes people. to fail so we play banks again feel it
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will make things as us crash and seven and smash the ceiling team feels it's like putting it in the closet enough in streaks the i.m.f. impulse punched me i'm just programs increase the total economy. the for. us. you know without see it will triple the headlines it. had for the dawn of a new era but the market circumstances of penalty duck is a brutal cost of bloodstain shot out over generations he checked the interim
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government claims he died in a shootout but in the media shows an n t c a rebel fighter by his day he executed the former aide to. the movement in the us will support across the world as many york city's new arrests described peaceful demonstrations as protests in the big apple become more and more organized the police presence is also increasing. finance chiefs enemies yet again brussels for that latest round of crisis talks with euro skeptics in the u.k. push for a nationwide referendum for britain to quit the union they claim e.q. membership undermines british sovereignty and cost the country and cost the country to much. that we do know former russian agent alexander litvinenko died from poisoning in london five years ago has admitted in an interview to a british newspaper that he'd worked for british intelligence a coroner in london has agreed to hold an inquest into.

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