tv [untitled] June 15, 2012 6:02am-6:32am EDT
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to that which i think is backed by the army and was also a prime minister in the mubarak era has been given the green light to remain in the presidential race the decision also reverts to legislative authority back to the ruling military and the military really holds executive authority in this country and to a new president is elected so you have this very worrying situation where a president will be elected in the absence of a constitution and also in the absence of a parliament so at this stage there are more questions than answers the official line from the muslim brotherhood is to respect the decision of the court we heard as much from a candidate dr mohamed morsi although he did warn that there could be more dangerous consequences and he did say in fact that if there were any kind of mishaps in the elections and he would support people going back to the streets there there have however been leading voices within the muslim brotherhood that have denounced the decision of the court and the phrase being used is that this is
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a fully fledged coup and we're hearing that kind of criticism from across the political spectrum on wednesday the justice ministry decreed that the military police and intelligence services half of whites to arrest and detain civilians and that in addition has sent out alarm bells to me it seems as if the emergency law that was only recently lifted could very well be reintroduced so you have these political developments that are causing people like mohamed el baradei who is the former head of the united nations atomic energy agency to call on the military and the court to perspire early elections that were scheduled to get under great the concern is that these elections will be overshadowed by violence the concern is also that the country will slide back into dictatorial rule and the other concern is that whichever candidate is elected as president will have powers that at this stage seemingly are unlimited. at least correspondent corroborates to agree some
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way froze he believes that with the muslim brotherhood now being deprived of its official tool of influence it could be left with no choice but to change its political strategy. the muslim brotherhood and other islamic forces. are looking into the situation from a very worrying decisions of the thinkers what's have been happening today after the solving as a parliament which is the haves overwhelming majority and side that may be moving their way forward getting in upcoming election which will be a few a few months later. and think if she comes to power this is likely actually an egyptian situation maybe it will crack down on them or seem very restrictive atmosphere experience due to mubarak regime elements or was all the regime really good being themselves in a new political party as we hear now and they will compete in the upcoming
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elections a political will to change it definitively. will decide not to waste of time or if this thing shift to prepare themselves for the parliamentary election coming out just a little later in the program a softer new one step forward no way back wiki leaks julian it sounds may find himself in sweden by the end of june after british judges refused to reopen his extradition case all that amid concerns the trials just paving his way to the u.s. we examine that one also a human rights group criticizes even policy makers for the treatment of immigrants they're calling it inhumane that as the economic crisis testing the standoff between native europeans and outsiders to the limit. despite pakistan's repeated demands for the media to end to u.s. led drug strikes in the country reports of fresh attacks continuing at least three people believed to be militants have been killed in the latest incident but with
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their identities hard to verify there are concerns that america's border roads could be causing civilian deaths in the process so-called. collateral damage he's going to come explains more. reports about you as drone strikes in pakistan come in more and more often we're getting used to hearing in the media such and such number of terrorists was killed with no way to verify really there are no names attached to those numbers usually but earlier this month american officials proudly announced that a drone strike in pakistan killed one of his top commanders almost two weeks later a video with the same men. it was posted online with titles which are generally reserved for the living leaders have not confirmed or denied this the video could have been taped before he's that's true so he might as well be dead but the confusion has once again raised the question of who's really dying in those bombings and how much do we actually know because it's all very murky what we do
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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 thing that only terrorists leave there that's not the case of course the long and investigative journalism says more than eight hundred civilians died in those bombings among them almost two hundred children what's interesting four year u.s. officials are all together tonight 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 of the aerial strike which killed two dozen pakistani soldiers last year by mistake diplomatic have a call up between the u.s. and pakistan pakistan blocked supply routes to afghanistan and they still remain closed by the way a new wave of extremism has been steered by those strikes but it's also interesting
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u.s. officials have been directly accused this bureau of investigative journalism which works to shed light on civilian deaths in those drones for. helping terrorists one might argue that this label terrorist helper is becoming an all too convenient tool for the government to brush off investigative journalists and 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 in jail reportedly 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 argument we're fighting the bad guys mean that the world should keep quiet about the execution of innocent people
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in washington i'm going to check out. after a day's a vicious combat against armed rebels syrian government forces are finally over the town of half to you and observers and 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 with almost all government buildings looted and burned the turn also appears to be deserted therefore raising suspicions that bodies have either been buried or removed for the your lives as arrived perl's also being drawn with past massacres to but there's growing doubt of the government's culpability with reports also implicating rebel forces david gibbs history professor at the university of arizona says media spin has left its mark on the story. was the general point of these types of you know conflicts of the propaganda aspect is critically important. and there is an effort of the worst. rebels in a kind of purely positive and syrian regime with
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a purely negative light and you know you know the facts on the ground are very hard . ascertain the houla massacre did for a long time for a while look like it was clearly done by the government but there was a report from the german across particularly from further argument. indicate that there is some indications it might have been some element of the rebels that might have committed at least part of the massacre of the german report with the growth of who underscores the fact that it's very difficult to get at the truth in 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 as a good versus evil conflict with all the blame on one side even if the reality is more complicated so while the media remains transfixed on stance rather than substance britain is wasting no time in calling for a tougher approach to syria their lives ambassadors the united nations world the kofi annan plan was running out of time and called for the u.n.
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to enforce it but only mohammed editor in chief of the syria tribune says it's not the u.n. that can enforce it but the sponsors of the syrian rebels. some sort of a little green and look will survive if political agreement is the enhanced now and then why not. opposition and its fighters have done nothing to support the enhance. the promises of countries that support them that they would pressure them to support the unfortunately that we have seen a lot of pressure from the syrian government's allies on syria and the syrian government. and the syrian government did away with the lot of the points in the plan but on the other hand. the opposition fighters were getting more vicious and receiving more weapons and fighting more viciously and this happened despite the promises needs and surround that the government supporting those
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fighters. and and land per se has a has a chance to to succeed only s. and the government supports and loose fighters and if there were friends and among . are convinced that he should be supported. with uncertainty and competing interests plaguing the conflict cross talk show discusses just what's at stake in syria the full show on air at twelve thirty g.m.t. here. if it hadn't been for the outside interference the arming of 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 as joshua it seems to. be american for enter russian plans to change the regime but.
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anyone who say that you know how can anybody say that the government of the united states actually cares about the lives of the people they killed hundreds of thousands in iraq they just bombed let me at the smithereens there intervene in syria the whole idea that they are not of states care about the lives of arabs is just nonsense or about democracy they support saudi saudi dictatorship. wiki leaks founder julian assange could be sent to sweden by the end of the month where he's wanted for questioning over sex assault allegations the u.k.'s top court unanimously dismissed his bid to reopen his extradition case but assad says the move is politically motivated and still might have a secret agreement with the united states where he's wanted for his whistleblowing activities straightly and fears the court's decision brings him one step closer now to being handed over to washington u.s. attorney kevin zeese thinks the outcome of the process will be decisive for the
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concept of freedom of speach. i think it's a real shame all assizes wanted for is questioning he's not been charged he could have done the questioning by skype there's no need to go to sweden to be questioned there's been rumors that there is a sea org or words a secret indictment already against during the songs but there may not be we don't really know the answer that at 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 levels to the highest levels of our military and our state department there are crimes being committed. hillary clinton signing a memo ordering or our diplomats to spy on demands coming here in
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a nation which is really illegal she should be being prosecuted now do you signs and so it's a real shame that the transparency that mr assize has brought to the world is being met with the fear and repercussions that's being thrown 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. but we've been following assad is case from the start so if you're wondering how this story began i had to a website also there for you to a superpower is no longer the stuff of science fiction take a look at this says this wall climbing out of to grab the attention of the u.s. military quite fancy one of those new self and shallow shame what we have a well it is a billion dollar highway and russia is far east has failed as you can see spectacularly to withstand the patter of rates got washed away more pictures online .
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the use of force from the immigration control is inhumane and has gone far beyond the blocks borders according to a recent report by amnesty international and as artie's tests or a similar explains next going policy failures have become a growing headache for native europeans too. it may be called the european hue. but dispirit is right to swing to the extreme is becoming a little more mainstream especially when it comes to discourse on immigration and in some cases leads to outright violence from norway. to greece. to hungary you know just in our street is a rate doesn't l.s.d. and insults that by gangs of in all this eighty years need a leader of the new solidarity alternative or and they say group was convicted on
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charges of racism he denies being racist it says he's against immigration because belgium can no longer cope with the economic and social demands of mass immigration that's the fault of the liberal democracy democracy in whole in old west it's economics that's nothing to do with race is more extreme right or extreme arrest or whatever the bad weather it has to do with it. such is the argument that has gained traction and 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 receiving end of prejudice in many forms. in all of europe a woman with a veil can go into any shop and buy anything she wants but it build women cannot work in this shop but what is in the report it is the discrimination and racism in the everyday life the people are facing because first they don't trip or because they don't trust the police so every time you get into that on the street or if you
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understand women that you has got it sticking out of your head. whatever you don't 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 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. it was a policy. to the migrants i never knew that if there is
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a policy it's not the full of too far as i know it's of those who make the policy over the europe's economic troubles which are preoccupying leaders show no sign of ending soon but the race and immigration issues they've left unsolved could prove just as big a political time bomb tests are cilia r.t. brussels as extremism and intolerance flourish across the. coming from the economy too terrified of what's happening in the euro zone britons and some one hundred billion pounds will be pumped into the banks as matters in mainland europe and especially spain get worse as for the eurozone author and commentator professor philip bagus says we're seeing the beginning of a chain reaction. well now it looks like that spain really needs their own bailout one of the says happened probably italy will need one and then we have suppression
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of greece if greece actually exits the year all this. legal and ministering to the president so markets investors within the markets could leave and. present precedents for countries like finland and germany to say well we may actually if you don't get your hours this in morals that are so then they would have them are credible threat. to push other countries to do the necessary stuff so it's very open how this all will end but i fear that in in the end these. two political pressure and start running the printing press. they say don't know what goes around comes around all of your of desperately seeks its financial stimulus it may feel another blow this time coming from iran other countries oil ministers war that the e.u. is looming oil sanctions will be a tough burden for the blocks economy that's ahead of major international talks over iran's nuclear issues which according to the country's top diplomats are
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entirely peaceful. firstly we are strongly against weapons of mass destruction today the republic of iran has the capacities to cooperate in disarmament and you can you nonproliferation that these capacities should be used by the international community secondly that we expect that the rounds right nuclear technologies including uranium enrichment as we recognize that this is something that is clearly defined by the nuclear nonproliferation treaty and i think that addressing these two issues will help to advance negotiation is. the full interview coming your way a bit later this hour the world. news in brief elsewhere around the world argentina's presidents appeared at the u.n. to economize a committee arguing the falkland islands should not be under british rule it coincided with the thirtieth anniversary of the war with britain over the territory
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which claimed more than nine hundred lives decades all the ownership disputes not died and islanders will hold a referendum next year to decide their future argentina claims the british illegally occupied the falklands which he calls the melvina says almost two hundred years ago according to experts the disputes fueled by the lucrative all reserves found off the coast of. bolivia natives are continuing their forty six day march towards the country's capital of powers in protest at new plans to build a highway through an amazon nature reserve they say the project would destroy their homeland with the country's president over morales promising a public vote on the matter now they're hoping to walk more than five hundred kilometers off for a similar march last year led to the original plans for the road being scrapped. japanese police say they've arrested the final fugitive suspected of involvement in a gas attack on tokyo subway seventeen years ago which killed thirteen people and injured thousands an employee in a city cafe recognised and called the police the man belong to
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a cult group which possessed an arsenal of chemical and biological weapons nearly two hundred of its members have been convicted of dozens of crime since then another fugitive from the cold indeed was arrested just two weeks ago. trust is easy to lose and harder to work that's what russia's cardiologists experienced first hand with their patients looking abroad instead when it came to treatment for serious heart disease but that may all soon change as arteries are an igloo founder . 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 is many is just saying thousand russians are here just to go abroad to get treatment because they say health care at home leaves much to be desired for the country's leading cardiologists it's a great concern but only this that we have thousands of cases which can be very successfully treated here at home i say with all responsibilities ninety percent of
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all treatment is done in a broader 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 let's address the after the break up of the use of the state had to be created in you and in the process the situation with medicine was let go to the point where people have unfortunately lost the trust and russian health care system it's not so for two time hard bypass survivor italian meal knife the former diplomat underwent extensive treatment both abroad and at the buckley center motion that zuma our health care is far stronger and kinder than westerns especially now when many medical centers have the technology or used to seeing in the west i suggest most importantly our doctors
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have sold most of them to this or 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. and holding a frame with two thesis of an ear to evolve from 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 can fully replace the damaged human. thousands of such procedures have already been deformed at the center on patients as young as just a few weeks old to those whose lives are in full bloom a twenty four year old not earlier who suffered from inherited terry heart condition. the feeling right now is that i understand and feel like a completely healthy person. a priceless feeling of inner health achieved without
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hitting outside russia's borders in moscow. r.t. twenty six minutes past two moscow time creators a reality business center character is expected to be a hugely volatile week next week on the markets after sunday's election in greece results are saying that the bank of england's already taken action to try and deal with any problems from such a date that why they're sort of leading the pack at the moment that will be pumping more than one hundred billion pounds that's over one point five billion dollars into the economy and that is as you say in case of the worst case scenario next week the volatility that is expected also u.s. stock futures are pointing to the upside and that's because investors there are anticipating the federal reserve will follow suit and also pump cash into the system the european markets are gaining in there to support a shed of the stimulus from the major central banks across the globe and that's despite moody's downgrading eleven year opinion banks they also said that they would cut again if they were to ditch the year as you can see six tenth's of
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percent out for the first say a nearly a percent for the dax if we look at the roster back as we see how most is responding to the fact that the oil prices id getting the low stimulus here from the russian central bank they decided to keep the interest rate unchanged because of inflation rate arrests as you can see that one point two percent of the r.t.s. in the my six six heads of upset let's see the major blue chips here we've got gas from still managing a healthy hour just a tenth of a cent as well there. percent up in positive territory aluko benefiting probably or prices seven tenths of a percent on the asian markets as well they didn't get stimulus either though the bank of japan disappointed somewhat we've also current citizens have a look at those as well they see how the group was getting out i believe it's a change of fortunes as well of the ruble just now we've got it gaining against the u.s. dollar figure i ask you you're a doll up is indeed dropping as a slightly one twenty six zero eight just that the asian markets i did mention the
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bank of japan as well they are not going to be enforcing any stimulus and in asia investors were pretty disappointed by that the maytag was up for most of the session but by the end just managed to one basis point in positive territory as the hindsight five or two percent up on the oil as well talk about china is increasing increasing their crude imports just up to levels not seen since the olympics in beijing four years ago and that's because of those prices remaining live as you can say they're getting this hour haven't been back in fifteen minutes ok thanks for that and i'll exact twenty twelve after being crushed by world champion straight in the sport more of a spectacular performance by for iraq coming up later this hour. the
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this is our team these are our top stories the twists and turns of egypt's politics become ever more winding after the constitutional court dismisses the country's parliament the move likely to bring protesters throwing back on the streets. here in observers into the syrian town of half which has been shattered by a week of bloody fighting with initial reports suggesting rebels scorched the area before abandoning it. and the world's top whistleblower joining the sun could be extradited to sweden by the end of the month after the u.k. stopped court rejects his bid to reopen the case amid fears still comes just a stopover on route to the u.s. . at a crucial international talks about iran's nuclear program here in moscow r.t. caught up with the country's top nuclear negotiator that's next.
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another round of talks on the iranian nuclear issue is about to begin in moscow is it likely to produce any tangible results while to discuss that we are now joined by iran's chief nuclear negotiator say jelly thank you very much for your time sir we have seen so many rounds that produce so little results and the expectations at this moment are pretty low what do you think should be done in order for the new round of talks to be a success or. in the name of the most gracious the most merciful we have always said that you now our actions we are guided by clear logic we do welcome dialogue we have always been open to corporation and talks with different countries on a wide range of issues including corporation nuclear energy but there needs to be a certain strategy if we stick to the same strategy do the same approach then the prospects for the top.
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