tv [untitled] November 23, 2012 8:00am-8:30am EST
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leaders clash over the budget with some nations digging in their heels in order to avoid forking out more cash in their own security head upon a means. clashes erupt just protesters in egypt gather against the muslim brotherhood about president protests are gaining momentum now the opposition is claiming that he's changing a coup by granting him self so-called family hours. one palestinian was killed and several wounded by israeli gunfire at the border with gaza and the bloodiest violation yet of the fragile truce.
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world news live from our moscow headquarters five pm here in your washing r t with me lucy counts and of well into our top story now european loot union leaders are negotiating the blocks financial future in brussels today most do you members support an increase in the budget while others are calling for cuts claiming that in a time of us stared nations don't really have the time or money to spare smith has the details nobody's very optimistic at this stage that these talks will result in anything other than everyone just walking away from the table and saying we'll come back early next year and talk about it again the proposals the president. is pushing forward remain satisfactory to practically everyone it seems he presented new proposals actually late last night which involves taking some money away from akman costs and reallocating into other areas. currently offering a real terms cut in the entire budget of twenty billion euros but that's on a budget of one trillion. david cameron is calling what's the president's doing at
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the moment take correct he says that they need a real spending cuts and affordable spending cuts in the e.u. budget the same in you which of course is forcing its member countries to implement austerity and the problem here is that everybody wants something different david cameron as i say wants a real terms cut france and possibly germany as well eager to preserve their agricultural subsidies denmark wants a rebate or has threatened to veto and that's it gets one and then on the other side of the coin you've got come countries which are a net beneficiaries of the e.u. so poland greece and italy and this is leaving them very uneasy because of course they want contributions to the budget in the budget as a whole preserved and every single one of these twenty seven countries has a veto so any one of them could walk away from the table and that would mean these talks with perhaps entirely david cameron will be coming home to a country where the e.u. is becoming less and less popular in fact some surveys show overhaul of britain's
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no longer wants to be a member of the twenty seven nation bloc my colleague sarah has looked into that question and has her report exclusivity security and all the added it was once the club everyone wanted to be a part of that is the budget talks underway in brussels britain's place within the european union has never before seen so you uncertain. with support for the flagging we've come to one of the u.k.'s top members clubs to find out just how you run a successful club and more importantly how do you keep those members happy i think the key thing to be successful in a member's club is to listen. i think if you start with listening listening to your membership and what they're looking for you've got to educate them sometimes you've got to inspire them right you've got to build long term relationships based on loyalty and honesty but fundamentally you need to have
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a vision. europe's visions become blurred in recent times as reality has set in huge unemployment to sweat the e.u. the stereotype hits hard in large scale protests and now a common occurrence in britain an anti e.u. political party ukip has seen a rise in support from people who feel britain would now be better going it alone my party ukraine depends party is quite happy with friendship cooperation and try which is the way that this has been sold to the british people over the decades but it's not about that it's always been about creating a centralized political state united states of europe in a sari in reality if not in nine that's where it's gone wrong because there isn't what people want so you just want people once r.t. conducted its own mini referendum asking the british people if they were given the vote today whether they'd vote in all out i'd like britain to be part of europe
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it's good for trade it's good for business and if we're outside of it then we're going to sell it's just a lot easier when everything is in the you know passports needed ok. i don't think we should be in the e.u. because that way we'd be free to make up our own laws and follow them ourselves the process of minuses there's no absolute answer but i feel our ts results were inconclusive it seems whether you're the prime minister you're a skeptic a member of the public all just a reporter trying to judge the outcome of a possible future referendum is next to impossible right now the recent newspaper poll found more than half of those asked would vote to leave the e.u. in a referendum what's clear is that if britain is to remain a part of the e.u. things are going to have to change how do you keep everyone happy or that's the trick it's a trick and a magic that people everyone happy is treating them as individuals not true as
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numbers whether it's the sums of my. the finally agreed upon in the budget debate all the final count of the referendum should the u.k. have won when it comes to britain's future in the euro club numbers it's clear will play a very big part. of the leader of the u.k. independence party says david cameron has a tough decision to make. i don't think this summit itself or the issues that are being debated today specifically are the problem i think the real problem is that europe is now split from north to south in every way politically economically and of course culturally it always was and that's the real crisis within the european union and then there's the other dimension which of course is the british angle on it it doesn't matter what deal mr cameron comes back with today or in january or february the sixty percent of britons that now don't want to be members of this union don't believe this any price worth the isolation from the global marketplace
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is cause because we're members of the single market customs union what that means is that despite the fact that the u.k. is the world's sixth biggest trading nation we are actually pretty hip from having our own by actual trade deals with any other part of the world that has to be done on our behalf so the u.k. message is simple we love europe we want to get on with our neighbors we want to trade with them through a simple free trade agreement but then we focus british business to start concentrating on doing more deals around the rest of the world this european model this idea that europe is what matters in the rest of the world can go hang frankly is decades out of date but i'll go away coming up later in the program at the same countries catalonia region is preparing for an election since financial strain in europe is prompting calls for a break away. despite the painful divide over the next budget did manage to achieve
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a compromise on defense and security in the european parliament has passed a resolution aimed at keeping national militaries at full strength but as david campbell bannerman had voted against saying that the bill isn't really about security concerns as that and better highlight some well rather disturbing ambitions take a look. it really does trespass international responsibilities for the feds and it's talking about you looking after it so it is a. direct assault on the sovereignty is this really is about politics rather than merely this is about actually furthering the cause of the united states and europe because they want to single all be a single the friends of these three they want control of the it's part of their foreign policy and their own true involved in they want to get in for all of the high intensity conflicts and terminology and that means war in my terminology they want to be involved in rules and to commit our soldiers and.
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navy people into these kind of conflicts and that is not acceptable. we can get all the latest details on the crucial negotiations in brussels on our web site that's r t dot com also don't forget to check out our twitter feed r.t. underscore com. well clashes in egypt in different parts of egypt have erupted as thousands of protesters have taken to the streets reacting to calls from the country's opposition leaders for nationwide demonstrations the outrage is driven by a new decree granting president mohamed morsi a wider range of powers his decisions can no longer be repealed by any authority including the judiciary the move was slammed as a coup against legitimacy of the opposition claiming that the president has appointed himself but actually the egypt's new pharaoh now morsi took power in june this year following the nation's first presidential election after the ousting of former leader hosni mubarak earlier we spoke to shame a hell of a human rights activist and she says the people are confused as members of the
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former regime are now part of the opposition. there are lots of questions in many you know decisions that come randomly that nobody understands. we are pretty confused over why would she make such decisions at the movements and why not earlier why not anytime soon the news. right now in the video position cam does not only include resolutions or people who supports the pollution it also includes figures also the mubarak regime that only you inflicted against at the beginning so many many people even within the illusion camp have concerns about someone like him in the city for example or all of these works figures joining the the opposition people live in the streets have different reactions some of them support to a morsi is doing others do not supported a lot of people are confused and i could i could say this is the majority of people in the egyptian property right now moving on from the middle east to the far east
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or north korea is reportedly getting ready to test another one of its missiles tensions are building on the korean peninsula but a self holding military drill so are the shelling of its territory by planning and two years ago. plus a court in bahrain has a jail jail terms to medics who treated pro-forma protesters this is a country it's slanted by human rights organizations for the long running brutal crackdown on dissent. on tuesday starts at five am even earlier in the winter tending to his flock of story hundred sheep in the mountains and pains of. thirty five years old it wasn't the life he dreamt of having studied accounting but he dition on familiar duty dictated that he would take on the care of these animals off to his father. he's just made camp at their winter farm stage setting up his ute the traditional to the
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union round tent made of diskin. back amongst his family and his job is a lonely one and tough going out in all weathers braving streams of plus to minus forty degrees celsius it's just that i'm with them there are certain difficulties there's not enough time for everything i'm almost alone my sister works with my mother my mother is seventy five she's very old and i miss mountains when i'm in town and i spend a lot of time here. so most of us are simply carrying out the work that his father did and his father before him nothing has changed over many many centuries and that's half the problem it's hard work and many people don't want to come into the industry now and it's really fit there could die out altogether. it's difficult to manage everything alone i used to have people who helped me but they were no good they didn't take care of the sheep with all their heart they hurt the cattle. with more people leaving than coming to the countryside the region's
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government is having to act making the life of the herd in more attractive than promising largest producer and lie still in organizing cooperatives for the sale of day put out to ensure the herd it gets a high at fair price i sympathize with those youngsters leaving for an easier more profitable life day in their publics capital. but he no longer wishes to join them he enjoys his pastoral way of life and looking for a helper who shares his enthusiasm with more time on his hands he says matter of fact he can start to look for a new wife. welcome back you're watching our team one palestinians been killed and several wounded by israeli gunfire in the gaza medics say that civilians came under attack for
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trespassing on the border area with israel tel aviv though claims that forces have fired warning shots the bloodshed comes just two days after a crucial cease fire ended with armed and the pardon me armed conflict with gaza militants now all activists harry fear who is in gaza says the terms of the truce remain unclear. under the ceasefire most gazans see that the no go military buffer zone which israel had put imposed on palestinian terror john the palestinian side of the border had been erased and that the farmers in the area whose land had been taken away they would not be able to farm that so this morning groups of palestinians went to what they thought was now again that palestinian territory one palestinian has been killed in that incident we're now getting reports that there are protests following in the area in the cease fire as a particular line referring to this that over these coming hours and days that will be more detail different to this notion of the lifting of this siege blockade on
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the gaza strip but i think people here in gaza according to mind reading a very very skeptical about that actually being realized to one hundred percent extent that the blockade would totally be lifted and there have been two milestone easing of the blockade since it was first imposed but they have been tiny in relative to i don't think people are expecting this ceasefire to manifest in a proper proper and real lifting of the blockade of the gaza strip we've had so many injured over a thousand we've had over one hundred sixty palestinians killed and remember that more is still being killed because they're dying all of the injuries that they. inflicted on them during the seven day war so the body count is still rising and the ministry of health here in gaza and the world health organization still have not given us the latest figures of how many palestinians were killed and so the scars are very much on the ground there on the mind and there on the bodies of some palestinians. here and spokesman chris gunness has been working to bring much
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needed humanitarian relief to the palestinians he says the ongoing israeli blockade it has a form of collective punishment that must be abolished take a look even before the current upsurge in financing there is a crisis in almost every aspect of life of. walls crisis over which patients are in the process of building one hundred new schools because there is a cute parenting in school so there is a crisis of public health because for example ninety percent to be in guards that is untrue to call nearly instantly to the school sewage but flowing into the sea here because the sewage system is not functional it's north of the list goes on there's a crisis as i see it nearly every aspect of the economically it seems are not good but we have to see what is going to happen as far as the regime is concerned we've
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always called for the blockade to be lifted you said that it's a collective punishment of one point six one it will certainly be people it has to end and we have to see what's in this arrangement has been decided in relation to the blockade we hope it's good news for the people of gaza the israeli bombing of gaza killed more than one hundred sixty people around half of them civilians including women and children however tel aviv maintains that it caused minimal collateral damage take a look. at the most possible not to hurt the civilians what we did is we pinpointed our operation just to the terrorist leaders and to their army and ammunition but i do agree that there are a once in a while there were civilian cattle casualties and we feel very badly about it but as you know this is not an easy operation no military operation is led by any international standard the collateral damage here is pretty minimal amounts of civilian. i it's hard to see it this way it sounds very bad but it could have been
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much much worse if we weren't so surgical and if our pilots were not given instructions to be very very precise. specially at the military terrorist leaders. but don't forget to head over to r.t. dot com or we have the full timeline of the violence between the mosque as well as extensive analysis of the conflict. north korea could be preparing for a long range ballistic missile test and that at least as according to japan's asahi newspaper which was citing a u.s. intelligence report american satellite images appear to show missile related material being moved to a factory part of it from a factory to a launch pad in the country's northwest region the move is seen to be a response to south korean military drills which marked two years since the north launched shells into the south sara torrie killing four people now last month sells military was given a boost by
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a deal with washington which extended its ballistic missile range peace campaigner ryan dawson says pyongyang remains as isolated as. north korea is not going to listen to the un nor do they care what the un has the say i mean north korea is suffering from pretty severe sanctions they need food aid they just recently opened up more tourism to china at least some form of revenue so they have no incentive to listen to any such demands from the un because the un and national pressure are already doing everything they can to squash and squelch north korea's economy as it is for south korea has a lot more room to maneuver they're not so internationally isolated as north korea but they're choosing to continue this tension with the north which has been going on since the korean war with the united states and there is nothing good to come of it i don't see why they're making these decisions to continually bear. a group of
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twenty three doctors have been sentenced to three months in jail. for treating protesters and also for taking part in mass rallies now all of this pardon me follows a report by amnesty international which had condemned the gulf kingdom for quote sliding into a downward spiral of oppression now the medics were among the nearly one hundred arrested last year during an uprising against the monarchy the court has ruled that they could pay fines to help their prison time suspended activists in bahrain have been clashing with the sunni led government forces for nearly two years now to eighty people have been killed and thousands put behind bars during the protests which are called forms and equal rights opportunities now one of the doctors told r.t. that what she had to explain to our tea party what she had to go through after her tragic arrest. i was involved in treating the injured patients to us there's testers are not that doesn't really matter. as a punishment for not obeying the authorities to abandon these patients all the
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doctors who were involved in cheating the contest thursday they were arrested my sense of their sin and i was at a state of gifted from my house at three am in the morning and i was badly mistreated i was told carrie later on asked and being jailed for almost two months i wish to disputed try to intimate it to the court and i was sentenced for fifteen years and prison meant we appealed the verdict and we were released tonight on bail well definitely they will not bring charges for you for treating the protesters they will come with any charges they fabricate any crimes but the main issue here is to punish those who stood in the face of the gene and disobeyed orders unfortunately as long as these dictatorship regimes are backed up by international forces and power and they're protecting them and their allies with the united states and britain who don't see any chance for us and this is
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a change in the policy of the citizens of these countries. the last day of campaigning is underway in spain's catalonia region that's ahead of sunday's election as one of the hardest fought in decades the governing governing party seeks a mandate to hold a referendum on independence this is months after one and a half million people took to the streets of barcelona in support of a breakaway farmer has more details for us catalonia is one of spain's wealthiest regions and it will choose a new government on sunday however the elections could also trigger a constitutional crisis in spain and that is because the cattle and president after mass has promised to hold a referendum on independence if he is reelected and that will put all the heads with the spanish prime minister. who says it would be against spain's constitution and also against the national interest during this time of economic hardship what kind of loans have long harbored feelings of separatism historically they do have their own culture and their own language but they say it is this economic crisis
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which is which has acted as a catalyst for this latest drive for independence the region as a whole pays more in taxes to the spanish government than it gets back that really rankles the residents here with unemployment rate today around twenty five percent there are all those who are against separatism some people do say that the region's economy could suffer if it is forced to draw from the spanish market and potentially the european union market however straw polls do suggest a majority of people are in favor and that the mass won't be reelected on sunday and therefore give the spanish prime minister a headache he would rather not have. some other world news for you in brief this hour a suicide bomb attack has left at least two dead and more than sixty wounded in eastern afghanistan the blast happened just forty meters away from the joint coordination office for international and afghan security forces the taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack saying that it was in retaliation for the recent execution of four militants and this is the second such attack this week with kabul
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trying to beef up security in the city ahead of a holy day. activists are claiming syrian troops have shelled the suburbs of damascus in an attempt to advance on rebel held areas defense of syrian state t.v. journalist was killed by armed gangs in the capital violence in damascus rages on and made a visit by iran's parliament speaker who is in the country for talks with president bashar al assad tehran is considered to be syria's strongest ally in the region. after the break we got our meet the factors a special report don't go away. more
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news today. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. operations to rule the day. it won't do the trick to look at the world pass you by as the best and brightest tech minds gather in moscow some came to work while others came to play and get up close and personal with devices that recreate masterpieces and scan russian treasures for insight and from space to keep us safe from oil spills and forest fires to unleash your inner gadget geek is the majors to search for the next big thing in the computer world and russia's own giant numerous goodies clipping to take the fight straight to their competitors nonchalantly here on r.g.p. we've got the future of coverage. culture is that so much different and there's
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a huge movement to share the power on the mark with actual ceasefire over gaza after eight days of destruction and then what did israel actually achieve what about the palestinians. war lords war criminals we have a lot of illegal groups the causes of. all our views in the right enough to my mind it was like many at that marriage wasn't forced marriage it's just maddy when i was fourteen yes you can liberate their women and you certainly can't do it through the barrel of a gun only effective social changes can be the afghans themselves ask again men and women we believe i'm going to stun him not to across parts. of the patient it's
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it's not bigger than texas it is texas. downtown dallas what the locals call the heart from. this is strange twisted beauty it's more than just a complex multi-layered interconnected freeways it's a monument to america's energy. dependence i should. end up with. a high five groups and rolls out over some of the richest shale fields in the mines. that make the united by moving into the suburbs around here might well be a drilling. i know people who tried everything they possibly could and they still have drilling
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right next to their houses and they're very unhappy if. you don't have to travel fucked to witness a collusion between community and comus family and industry we all take risks every day driving to work you know but there's risk set you have to take and recess you don't have to take and to me it just doesn't make sense to put a heavy industrial process right next to somebody. this is self like a prosperous community on the outskirts of dallas. a few years ago forbes magazine named this the most affluent neighborhood in the united states. a place where usually money talks. but right now the talks all about the riches of the bonnet shale field underneath suburbs like south like. unto dr gold.
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