tv [untitled] June 15, 2012 1:02am-1:32am EDT
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i mean those bombings and how much do we actually know because it's all very murky what we do know is that the obama administration has dramatically ramped up drone strikes in pakistan around story hundred strikes since he took office it's this area bordering afghanistan which is on the fire but judging by the intensity of the u.s. strikes there one may think that only terrorists live there that's not the case of course the long investigative journalism says more than eight hundred civilians died in those bombings among them almost two hundred children what's interesting for a year u.s. officials are all together denied civilian deaths in drone strikes but reports on the ground told the opposite and thousands of people protesting furiously in pakistan told the opposite then that was the last straw at the aerial strike which killed two dozen pakistani soldiers last year by mistake diplomatic haven't followed between the u.s. and pakistan pakistan blocked supply routes to afghanistan and they still remain closed by the way
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a new wave of extremism has been steered by those strikes but it's also interesting u.s. officials have been directly accused this bureau of investigative journalism which works to shed light on civilian deaths saying those drone strikes of helping terrorists one might argue that this label terrorist helper is becoming an all too convenient tool for the government to brush off investigative journalism then there was this yemeni journalist who reported about the drone strike in yemen in two thousand and nine twenty one woman and fourteen children died there the journalist is now we were portably at the personal request of president obama himself. there's this line of thought in washington it's all perfectly fine as long as we're fighting the bad guys the president approves the list of those bad guys by the way the kill list on secret evidence with no review but does the argue. we're fighting
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the bad guys mean the world should keep quiet about the execution of innocent people in washington i'm going to check out. well coming up just a little later in the program a surprise twist in egypt's politics the constitutional court dismisses the country's parliament even more you know little struggles the dead in the water. and we could be katrina science may find himself in sweden by the end of june of the british judges refused to reopen his extradition case of that and it concerns the trial is just paving his way to the u.s. . now after eight days of vicious combat against the rebels syrian government forces a funny open the town of half or two u.n. observers with memories of massacres still strong looking for the telltale signs of slaughter will be high on their agenda so far they found vast amounts of abandoned weapons and destruction of almost all government buildings built in burned the town
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also appears to be deserted with suspicion that bodies have been buried on moved before observers arrived aerials are already being drawn with past massacres is going down to the government's culpability reports also implicating rebel forces david gibbs a history professor at the university of arizona says western media spinners left its mark on the conflict. was a general point in these types of you know conflicts are the propaganda aspect is critically important. and there is an effort in the worst. rebels in a kind of purely positive light and syrian regime with a purely negative light. you know get the facts on the ground are very hard to ascertain who massacre did for a long time for a while look like it was clearly done by the government but there was a report in the german across particularly from further argument it's like to indicate that there are some indications that might have been some element of the rebels that might have committed at least part of the massacre or the german. what
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with the growth of underscores the fact that it's very difficult to get at the truth of these types of conflicts where you know both sides are trying to use propaganda and spin to advance their positions and so this is being presented as is typically the case in these types of conflicts the good versus evil conflict with all the blame on one side even if the reality is more complicated. with uncertainty and competing interests playing the conflict all t's crossed or program discusses just what they've got at stake in syria from coming up a little over an hour's time. if it hadn't been for the outside interference the army the opposition to prove motion of civil war by the united states britain france and their clients in the region this would not have evolved at this point it was it inevitable that there would be a sectarian conflict is joshua it seems to seems to ponder there i think the united states and britain and france are on a regime change path they recognize the vulnerabilities in different societies if
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they're if they're divided based on religion or ethno sectarian divide those divisions are then utilized in order to break i think. that now i would not think so because. the american for enter russian plans to change the regime but. people who are protesting. wealthy british style. that's not on. the. market why not come to. find out what's really happening to the global economy with mike stronger for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kaiser report on
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our. line. would be so much brighter if you remove the ballot song from feinstein question its. nice clean start on t.v. dot com. that wiki leaks founder julian assange could be sent to sweden by the end of the month where he's wanted for questioning of a sex assault allegations assault the u.k. stopped court unanimously dismissed his pay to reopen the extradition case. says the move is politically motivated and stockroom right to have a secret agreement with the u.s. he's wanted for his whistleblowing activities but strangely an affair is the court's decision brings him one step closer to being hunted over to washington u.s.
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attorney kevin zeese thinks the outcome of the process will be decisive for the concept of freedom of speech. i think it's a real shame all saw it as one of four is question and he's not been charged he could have done the questioning by skype there was no need to go to sweden to be questioned there been rumors that there is a c. all the awards a secret indictment already against doing the songs but there may not be we don't know the answer. this point nothing has been released about that if there is an indictment and he is actually the united states they'll be a long battle about that as well. then the charges will be very serious ones and the ones that will define press freedom and government transparency for the twenty first century are really would be a really critically important case to some of the truth. julius our just gotten out have shown that from the lowest level to the highest levels of our military and our
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state department there are crimes being committed. hillary clinton signing a memo ordering our our diplomats to spy on demands coming here and i nations which is really illegal she should be being prosecuted now during the songs and so it's a real shame that the transparency that mr assad has brought to the world is being met with the fear and repercussions that's being threatened against him because what he has done merely has been getting out the truth and the truth is what's really frightening the united states. well we've been following a sergeant's case from the start so if you're wondering how the story began head to our web site r.t. dot com and here's a taste of what else might catch your eye while you're there a super power suit is no longer the stuff of science fiction this was coming up it grabs the attention of the u.s. military. under a shower of shame a billion dollar highway fails to withstand the patter of rains it simply gets washed away.
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egypt's supreme constitutional court has thrown the country's future into disarray just ahead of the weekend's presidential runoff is dissolve the islamist dominated parliament which means months of campaigning rallying in three rounds of voting and now down the political drain with another highly contentious decision was to uphold the right of mubarak's last prime minister ahmed shafik to remain on the presidential election at that score suspicion over his possible collusion with the ruling military but accusations are growing that the army generals will use the current situation. a car a base activists and they foresee believes the muslim brotherhood can now be left with no choice but to change their political strategy. as a muslim brotherhood of islamic forces. looking into the situation
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from the very worrying the positions of the thinkers what's have been happening today after the solvency of parliament which is a halves overwhelming majority inside that may be behaving as a way for. getting the lists in and upcoming election which will be a few a few months later. and if they think is that if she comes to power this is likely actually an egyptian situation right now maybe it will crack down on them or as a phase the same very distinctive atmosphere that they experienced during mubarak regime elements of all the regime regrouping themselves and then you political party as we hear that now and they will compete in the upcoming elections a political map will change it definitively and the islamist is and will decide not to waste as of time or if there is this thing shift to prepare themselves for the
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parliamentary election. well so the kind of fear including new tremors in the euro zone britain panics euro crisis breaks down the differences with london ordering a hundred fifty billion pounds to be poured into its vulnerable banking system. plus there's no place like home that's the message russia's cardiologists want to get across that patients can further afield when facing serious heart disease. control is inhumane and has gone far beyond the books for this according to a recent report by amnesty international. explains ongoing policy failures have become a growing headache for native europeans to. it may be called the european the union but discord is right and a swing to the extreme is becoming a little more mainstream especially when it comes to discourse on immigration and
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in some cases leads to outright violence from norway. to greece. to hungary. in our streets girl is a rape of an l.s.t. and insulted by gangs of. leader of the new solidarity alternative or and they say group in belgium was convicted on charges of racism he denies being racist but says he's against immigration because belgium can no longer cope with the economic and social demands of mass immigration and that's the fault of. democracy democracy in whole in old west it's economics that's nothing to do with race and extreme right or extreme arrest or whatever the bad whether it has to do with. such is the argument that has gained traction in crisis hit europe with soaring unemployment recent elections in france and greece showed a big gains for the far right and immigrants say they've increasingly been on the
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receiving end of prejudice in many forms. the woman with the bill can go into any shop and buy anything she wants but it cannot work in this shop but what is in the report it is the discrimination and the racism in the everyday life to people are facing because they don't report because they don't trust the police so every time you get insulted on the street or issue a muslim woman that you have been stricken off you have the. report simply a two thousand and ten report by the european network against racism or discrimination found that racially discriminatory practices are widespread institutional in nature and practiced at all levels of society across europe in two thousand and eight the european commission proposed a directive that would ban discrimination on the grounds of age disability religion or belief and sexual orientation in all areas including social protection and advantages as well us access to goods and services now the current law only applies to the workplace but it's been four years and the directive is stuck largely
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because some member states are blocking it arguing that implementation would be too costly this activists say is one of the many failures of policy makers and while immigrants are blamed by politicians on the right for failure to integrate others say it's the authorities which have not done enough of. it was afraid. i never knew that if there is a policy it's not the full. of those who make the policy europe's economic troubles which are preoccupying leaders show no sign of ending soon but the race and immigration issues they left unsolved could prove just as big a political time bomb tests are cilia r.t. brussels. this extremism and intolerance flourish across the you are even further headaches coming from the economy terrified of what's happening in the euro zone
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that britain has announced some one hundred fifty billion dollars we pumped into its banks this matters in mainland europe and especially space get worse for you as a author and commentator professor says it's the beginning of a chain reaction. well now it looks like that spain with needs bail out and once this has happened probably italy will need then we have to question greece if greece actually exits the euro this. legal and minister to president so markets investors within that could leave and most of the press and presidents for countries like finland and germany to say well we may actually if you don't get your house in all of that or so then they would have a more credible threat. to push other countries to do the necessary. so it's a very open how this all really but i fear that in in the end these. two
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political pressure and start running the printing press. what goes around comes around as europe it desperately seeks a financial stimulus it may feel another blow this time coming from iran a country is oil minister has warned that the oil sanctions will be tough a burden for the blocks economy as a head of a major international talks over iran's nuclear activities which according to the country's top diplomats are simply peaceful. we are strongly against weapons of mass destruction to do these republic of iran. to cooperate in disarmament in nuclear nonproliferation to these good passive suzi should be used by the international community secondly means that we expect that the wrongs right nuclear technologies including you rhenium in richmond as we recognize are going to be subject to that this is something that is clearly defined by the nuclear nonproliferation treaty and i think that addressing these two issues will help to
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advance negotiations. while that full interview is coming your way after a while though seven thirty g.m.t. . now a look at some other stories making headlines around the world this hour tens of thousands have been displaced and twenty nine people killed after clashes between williams and buddhists in northern india or than two thousand homes have been burnt with many people being housed in temporary camps neighboring bangladesh is guarding its border to stop more refugees fleeing their violence was sparked off a murder of a buddhist woman that almost a dozen muslims being beaten to death. were bolivian natives are continuing their forty six day march towards their prayers in protest at new plans to build a highway through an i was a nature reserve they say the project would destroy their homeland the country's president ever morale is promising
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a public vote on the matter and to walk over five hundred kilometers after a similar march last year in regional. for the record being scrapped. emergency workers in the u.s. state of colorado are battling to fight a wildfire covering more than fifty thousand acres at least one person has been killed and hundreds forced to leave their homes of the buildings were destroyed the blaze was started by lightning almost a week ago the latest in a string of large fires to hit the state this year. now trust is easy to lose and harder to then that's what russia's cardiologists experience first hand their patients looking over the border when it came to treatment for serious heart disease but this may soon change as art is ridiculous could escape it. home is where the heart is but for many russians their country is not where the chance to get their medical care especially those with heart problems as many as this thing thousand russians in here just to go abroad to get treatment because they say
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health care at home leaves much to be desired for the country's leading cardiologists it's a great concern. is that we have thousands of cases which can be very successfully treated here at home i say with all responsibility ninety percent of all treatments done abroad can be done here. but many remain unconvinced even though centers like most goes back will of institute have perfected some of the most complicated procedures which can give the old or young taker and new life dr busier she believes the country's recent past is partly to blame that's of course the after the break up of the u.s.s.r. the state had to be created in you and in the process the situation with medicine was led to go to the point where people have unfortunately lost the trust in russian health care to me it's not so for two time hard bypass survivor italian meal knife the former diplomat underwent extensive treatment both abroad and at the
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buckley of center most of. our health care is far stronger and kinder than western especially now when many medical centers have the technology we're used to seeing in the west but most importantly our doctors have so. that along with well trained hands is something which allows russian doctors to save lives daily with operations on heard of just a few years ago such as replacing a human heart valve with one from a calf the worst although i'm holding a famous professes of an ear to involved in the cardiac cycle for cuff we purchase hearts from meat packers bring them here isolate the necessary tissues give them the necessary treatment the treatment methods are protected by a. and then we see from this tissue the confusing repletion damaged human. thousands of such procedures have already been performed at the center on patients as young as just a few weeks old to those whose lives are in full bloom like twenty four year old
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man tyler who suffered from inherited terry heart condition it's just the feeling right now is that i understand and feel like a completely healthy person. a priceless feeling of your health achieved without hitting outside russia's borders in moscow. r.t. . but it's time to join a k t on the business for us and more downgrades in europe we understand that's right we had spain cyprus and now it's the netherlands turns to really feel the wrath of from the agency moody's the credit rating agency has slashed five of their banks including around bank now they're saying it's because of the continuation of the recession and also falling house prices to blame now they did assign a stable for all of these find out she was in the future except for i n g with which is that she put on negative outlook so let's see how the markets are reacting
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to this and if we can see the make a if she just wants to drop into negative territory and that's because edge of power right now the bank of japan has announced not adjusting that interest rate they didn't allow seventy first stimulus ahead of the great election and that's what investors were hoping for so bit of optimism has been loves that the world's biggest mobile phone may kill that relies on europe and nineteen percent of that is dropping over three percent still as it is gaining around nine percent in hong kong heading for its first advance in three days lots of news stories coming out about that company this week it's a clothing company and they've had their c.e.o. and their chairman resigned this way but as you can see behind me is in the green zone a one point. to op if we have a look at the u.s. markets we'll see how they closed up yesterday now hopes will now remain with the federal was boosting some stimulus there are reports that they're going to do so we
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also have the reports yesterday claims unexpectedly rose although the cost of living she fell by the most in three years so as you can see there was optimism that dow jones one point two percent and the nasdaq. imposed interrogate the euro if we look at the exchange rates i believe is still trading relatively flat off to the news that we're going to be seeing some intervention the dollar to roll it out for the ruble less than an hour's time to start moving and shaking again here in moscow a little south of us on the year i as far as of us markets are concerned also. now russia's essential bank is expected to refrain from raising boring costs today that would be for six months to avoid inflation accelerating now russia is actually the only brit country not enforcing the stimulus to the money we've got brazil india and china old doing so in order to boost growth as you can see it was
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a red day for the russian markets yesterday look at the oil prices that it was the organization of petroleum exporting countries that met yesterday to talk about how much production they're going to be making in the second half of the year they left the ceiling on that. that was disappointment for russia. bit of light relief for everybody else filling up as you can see right now the oil prices are gaming but the prices do remain low in nearly all right so next on how the ivory figures for the russian markets ok many thanks. in just a couple of minutes here to our to return to look for the sars headlines stay with us.
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if you're followed up on my death snow one of the. names are sort of a throwback and a kid part of our long. and it goes back to a time when people would bite out of their forces in the wild west and take up peace future dates and putting them into the sheriff for prosecution there's no law that the company may well feel guilty. when they go out there discount weapons. and have to hope that nothing bad can. get loans. or chasing killers and you gotta keep that in mind how does it to me
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a dollar bill for his arrest. without superheroes we can be killed too you know they shoot me in the head i'm going to die. and. once you cut and run you'll never go back to hunt anything else. the. comfort is the least you have. money is the last you need if you travel this way. language is common. you see. the. emotions are intense. and experience priceless.
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here we don't see the headlines now here in observers into the syrian town of haifa which has been shattered by a week of bloody fighting but initial reports suggesting rebels scorched the area before abandoning it. twists and turns of egypt's politics become ever more winding up the constitutional court dismisses the country's parliament want to die in the barracks ex prime minister to run for president. and the world's top whistleblower during a song could be extradited to sweden by the end of this month a new case top court rejects his bid to reopen the case amid fears a stone claim is just a stopover on the route to the u.s. . those are the headlines for it back with more news in about half an hour's time now there a special report. but but by the wrist all times of the weapon
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ok he would be on the stomach and then i got the weapon ok that's one now that was left handed i had to be prepared for either hand if it was his right hand if its right hand same thing ok if it's his right hand ok i push i grab. this is a very special school in sacramento. it takes just a few hours to train people into bounty hunters. what i'm wearing right now is exactly where i work in the streets if you instructor is a native american. is the area of expertise is bounty hunting people are going to be taking. this weekend. on sunday to get the. close race.
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