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tv   [untitled]    March 26, 2012 5:30am-6:00am EDT

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free. range free. free. you free. a free book you want to mediocre for your media projects a free video gone to our t.v. dot com. that the main stories we're covering for you this hour must go in washington to see eye to eye over the role of special envoy kofi annan the mission in syria as a first step towards peace his presence but heaven the bomber exchange their final one shakes. a grisly end for the martyr daffy may have been due to more than just frenzied love lost the man who engineered the regime's downfall now says someone to keep consigning to. a controversial israeli army policy has been
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criticized for calling on soldiers to avoid kidnapping costs even if it means taking their own life all that uncommon rate. and a brain drain from the baltic once a proving state a lackey is rampant unemployment scares away its young people looking for money or work abroad to try to carve out a living in their country stagnating economy. time now for our special report the arab spring the saudi taters toppled and how it changed hands we take a look at the imprint it left in the hearts and minds of wooden people. yes he was fast asleep but his face was glowing from the inside i didn't kiss him there was something strange about the situation slept until morning undisturbed and he left. and right around two o'clock on the symbols seventeen
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about us my cousin mohamed was easy target she's goods to the market place it. was friday so he had to so it's all in two days in order to get a return on some of us who. have moved to hammad worked a lot needed money to buy a car so that he could sell his goods and transport threat. three security guards of teaching away from his spot just to mark the part of the show he ferreted to their boss at the city council. but without even listening to him she turned him out of doors. the situation was unbearable for him because. he bought some gas muslim and set himself on fire in the. that's the whole story.
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for the tragedy of sport here evolution in tunisia and other countries so it was the start of the arab spring. unlike most of the population of the bustling city of color such a move but art can afford stay in bed longer. the doors of his barber shop open at ten am. but often his first customers don't drive until noon. mubarak treasures these morning hours he's no relation to the deposed president but he spends his time checking up on the latest political news. politics is far more popular than football in egypt these days. i have a kind of
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a lesson this is been the best year of my life there is freedom in a country i can say anything i like to anyone we didn't have such freedom in the past but this freedom is free for all you don't need to pay for it there hasn't been a better time for me and my job since the revolution. seventy three dead and more than a hundred. inclusion. of. that went very very wrong. on the first of february two thousand and twelve the local team in the egyptian city of port saeed posted the football club from cairo after the match most fans attacked the stand with a cargo team supporters sat through it resulted in seventy dead and more than one hundred injured. only the fans want is
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a fair investigational. justice. ah ah ah. up. two weeks after the tragedy in port saeed thousands of allah fi fans marched through the central streets of cairo. and the aim of our march is to demonstrate to the authorities that so many people are demanding an inquiry into the bloodshed but we maintain that it was a plot masterminded by security forces like in so many fans not get out of there. why were all the exits closed. off. half of the events in port saeed the national football championship was suspended
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indefinitely rallies and marches of the ways fans gather together. ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah. ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah. ah ah ah ah ah ah ah. ah ah ah ah ah. eliot was a college student until last february today he leads a youth political movement which seizes every opportunity it can to take to the streets what are you doing here these are the slogans of the revolution i'm i don't touch it. i'm off. them looking at such graffiti often leaves me speechless who are going to express how i feel with a picture or words. they're trying to tell us that we're a generation of thugs and that's an important point commend them when you see that
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this is something entirely different. to what can be how i'll be frank with this crazy she often makes me stuck in my tracks. thank you for you ness didn't feel like this nearly as often under mubarak. and that all this is simply amazing the wind. and if it's. bad. mohammed bouazizi self-immolation in chinese ears sidi bouzid took place eighteen months ago since then the economic situation in the town where the chinese ian revolution started has taken a turn for the worst. the young vendor was driven to despair by joblessness unemployment rates have gone up but local use of found a way to spend all their free toil almost every wall is covered in graffiti.
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we do have liberties but otherwise. i see no changes. people are free to talk with the many journalists who come here. there is no pressure from the government or the police state if you look beautiful but during the revolution people were more united with that and they are not at. all he's an ease with some of the first local bloggers to post news of the young vendor setting himself all of you tube and facebook spread reports of the horrifying acts far beyond his hometown the tunisian revolution was the first arab internet could buy he's an isa maintain they have done just as much for the new free to mizzi as their fellow countrymen but was easy as a ballot before it was easy what he did in city was either december twenty ninth and most people did not know him but after that he became their hero oh not
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a they started writing about him on facebook not a lot of press not of the mainstream media covered it either a lot more national t.v. you know the radio or the press this information had to repeatedly been read all stood on the web before it was shown on al-jazeera and. the great arab information revolution initiated by young enthusiastic in tunisia is being carried on by professionals t.v. channel al-jazeera actively covered events encouraged by his quest in the military conflict in libya of the lips the overthrew the muck duffey today the information war has focused on syria. journalist refeed look he is rarely seen on the streets of damascus the man shuns public appearances wherever he goes he is followed by true bodyguards there's a reason for the caution
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a short while ago to an identified men fought on the car carrying a reporter for several months rifi kez being waged his own information rule he vessels against cooktop reports concerning events in serious trouble spots such as the now world renowned city of i i. i we can now cross to our correspondent reporting from a field hospital. we are now a medical unit located at one of the houses. there are a lot of wounded from the surrounding houses. you can see it with your illinois under. sharma's. olive jam him for having killed my younger sister. i'm flying because of him his wife must die. i'm home and gone on this video shows a field hospital of the so called free army has been organized and equipped by
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certain organizations and what i can do this footage is all orchestrated and hopefully see the face of a wounded child i think couldn't see how i need to tell you about the emotions a syrian or anyone else experiences seeing the suffering of a child on al-jazeera screams. however before the report is sent to the channel the girl's father shows up to tell her what she must say on camera notably about bashar assad. moreover somebody standing behind the camera tells the girl's father what he must say to his daughter before she repeats his words with one. that. you have it. wrong. oh yeah. let's look at how
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birth he closes his daily exposure about zero and western channels only in slits and on syrian t.v. but so far he has failed in this information. no he has been hiding with annoying children for several weeks they managed to escape from homes a city that is plunged into a massive dressed woman says she has received several death threats in the hometown the neon and can send me mad and then after we had collected thirty three thousand signatures against the revolution we started receiving threats my home was set on fire and destroyed they caused me a lot of suffering but i kept going but then i received a very open threat saying count your children before going to bed early. says the
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threats were followed by the kidnapping of her eldest son mohammed the twelve year old boy was killed by a note placed on his chest said i was murdered by pasha these are my son muhammad's clothes that's where a bullet hit here and here. and also here. here's the blood of my home i wash it in water but the blood remains that's what my hummel he was wearing no idea doesn't know how long she will have to hoyt in damascus she has to go back to. the television still churns out her frying pictures from her home town at the rate. of one. every. day on. the.
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issues that so much of the taxpayers' money to be people at various documentary film that went viral on you tube about uganda's child soldiers and warlord joseph kony has engendered very strong. and i think that. you know there. is a young chinese you know rafa ashraf is very much like the poet hero of the songs he is you are and i mean for your religious compels looks trust the media. let them
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know you. come off. as a good muslim and. a lot of muslim people bought my ticket but with a lot of people that i'm still got a bit of well good let me put this here good looking at the bottom a single drop of you don't give up it's difficult enough it was really the plot would not moment of movement to cut. the top of the group not it took them by you know the time good luck put them in service until i could but just if you got a little i'm only going to hold on to the god don't want you not muslim to stop not going to let. the t.v. of the not not be able to go up to god you want to play come up. not the. top up it's not you know not michael. duffy because you mock up the beautiful god
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you want but the locum you have business them is a tough cookie of look you know christiane a good job. was to let. me look stupid. good women. good so if you're doing this. that eunice yoon revolution has failed to achieve its goals we wanted it to be beneficial to the people we wanted jobs there were half a million people employed most of the revolution to produce freedom and dignity but now we're back to square one many people are homeless those who have a home and live in poverty as you know an. ash referee presents the new generation that emerged during the turbulent arab spring he and the young people like him see protest and defending the gains of the revolution as their main commitment.
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to his square is the focal point of the revolution in egypt even a year after the resignation of hosni mubarak it is still the center of public attention. but where for most of the stuff fell one way if. it's but. yet she catches. up with the way he did. but. many of those who were involved in the events of february two thousand and eleven have no left and a little not enough by little to. live in tents and to put up a makeshift gallows here the protesters have promised during the former president
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and muscle control with the country's current ruler. each day the never ending noise of trial here accompanies the work of such embark. the shop is situated close to the restless where. aside from other activities young revolutionary khaled is the presenter and amulets of talk show on a local channel. it just so happens the box barbershop is the closest place where it can have his head trimmed before going on you one of the revolutionary youths. one of the ones from talk years where. i like you guys you are the best generation in egypt and you know nothing was happening in egypt before i think it's a few minutes later the conversation predictably drifts to the march of the last few football club fans and the ultras came from another place they came from the streets where the palace of the nile stands tonight yes indeed i swear to god it
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was going to real heroes. that missed the paralyzing the traffic in central cairo for several hours the marches from the football club all you reach that destination just as palace ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah ah. the fans lit flares and chanted the wood justice outside the closed doors nobody emerged from the building to meet the families. that's leaving the local t.v. talk show presided over by how it focused on the football fan demonstration and what caused the musket import sayit the young revolutionary insists that when the tragedy occurred on the first of february two thousand and twelve the police did nothing to stop it the media outlets attempted to suppress the news.
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it wasn't just a group of thugs attacking be seen killing others that's not the point and the point is that they punished fans what they had done for the sake of the revolution the thought this means that the wealth or at least blame what the military council the interior ministry and all the government structures. is i believe all of them have a hand in those events i think that the media has achieved. to come out with a clear position instead of distorting the truth as. people in revolutionary egypt have changed their attitude towards the revolutions principle mouthpiece the qatar based al-jazeera news channels i publish i will never it's true that during those eighteen days al-jazeera and other channels did a good deal to the public about the goings on it was quite unlike what the gyptian television was trying to demonstrate but after that channel began was in line with the requirements of the government send or it's up to. three journalists from al
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jazeera is lebanese bureaus that in the spring of two thousand and twelve they were leaving the channel because of disagreements with its editorial policy the main complaint concerned its coverage of syria june as say the channel's top executives post pictures of the gunman opposing the government troops from t.v. screens. the problem is today we have independent media there is no independent media the media in general was i don't think so. for example like you know promoting pollutions in. egypt. i don't think for example the revelation of so directly in two thousand and eleven the news channels one of its most experienced correspondents son ben just does interviewees include his sheik. and feed castro for
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a long time he was in charge of the channels the rain you know your. he held a similar post to the office in lebanon in the spring of two thousand and eleven as i left the child after a row saying he was not going to cooperate with a news outlet which sacrificed objectivity for politically sponsored programming out of you know how with him and i realize that i could not work and resign i suddenly understood that i was afraid. those revolutions such thoughts appeared when the revolution in libya broke out of course i think that money market duffy was a disk but in the ought to have stepped down what my fears grew on something that on face value looked like the beginning of a new arab reality with its revolution and change something very different underneath than any a few years at least at least. that it was a shock. that the law yet look. at
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it at cairo has followed a new routine for a year and as a rule less processions take place in the daytime just off to lunch the sales is of demonstrations include people from all walks of life you discipline workers angry at low salaries football fans and religious radicals of every description often demonstrations hold rallies near the public show run by mubarak he shivers each time his name is chosen by the crowd. that. was. the baba gives us his weight pledge allegiance to revolutionary ideals but in the evening he prefers to bring down the shutters over his shop window just in case.
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then i know what i should be yes i did say this the revolution has been a success i mean ask you a question if you remember students going off university campuses such things only happened in the one nine hundred seventy s. and yesterday they held a rally in front of the defense ministry is that true yes it is what does it mean it means that we have freedom isn't that so they used to be locked inside their university staying under control and supervision if they did anything wrong the next day to. got arrested which was a case so it's freedom what else. i am. saying. as the day draws to a close in cairo
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a young activist called mool is just getting going first he attends a congress of the liberal policy that by his father an eminent politician and after that he meets fellow rights campaigners there is a vast social gap between normal and his peers keeping vigil in tile his square new lives in a large flat in the most fashionable neighborhoods of the egyptian capital he often travels to foreign countries and speaks excellent english. and a fishing boat but what's more. he has radical views on the future of the revolution many years some people the you what is happening on the streets now is you know the after party for of a while quite a bit without however i totally disagree i don't even think the party began the party said has not become fine maybe there was a house warming at the beginning but we are still waiting for the actual revolution
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to have. sometimes time nor his friends perform with the youth leisure center on the banks of the molten town tile card the young revolutionaries play on the usual instruments strictly speaking they are instruments of tuning both they make music from the trash picked up from the street the progressive musicians call the group the zabbaleen which is local slang for garbage collectors. this is where the actuals up alina found. one hundred thousand people in this district on the outskirts of cairo. their lives depend on garbage design gather it from all of the cargo and bring it back to their neighborhood these people to have opposed the view of the revolution.
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get their main concern isn't that some tyrant is being toppled or because freedom has arrived rather since they could business has been booming for the. orderly we did a good deal of collecting join the revolution everybody was running apart like a match for enjoying themselves in cafes oh that produced a lot of garbage. it is for that reason that the inhabitants of the trash neighborhood in great food in the arab spring they don't want it to dry out and to come a scorched summer that is so typical of the middle east public unrest means garbage and garbage is their life.
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