tv [untitled] December 18, 2012 4:00am-4:30am EST
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we've gone. harbored. stepping out of the ground down to bahrain suppresses anti regime projects using tear gas and stun grenades to despise rallies and ignores calls to improve its record on human rights. gave the green lights to plans to build fifteen hundred new settler homes and palestinian east jerusalem but its claims the move will lead to further his radio isolation. and the wave of mass shootings that have swabs the us senate connecticut massacre of twenty children brings the gun control debate back to the forefront of american politics.
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international news and comment live from moscow this is all she was me you know shapovalov thanks for joining us bahrain has again moved to crush dissent. ressa twenty five protectors at monday's anti regime rally in and around the capital of tear gas and rubber bullets on the crowd and detained a well known campaigner from the bahrain center for human rights the street marsh's were calling for more freedoms from their sunni rulers and the release of all political prisoners including a leading rights advocate and i believe our job his sentence was reduced last week at court but an appeal for his release was rejected around asia people have been killed by security forces in nearly two years of continual quote reform demonstrations bahrain is under pressure from rights groups for not following up with violence to modernize its case state institutions political scientists call
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and cover ourselves the main reason and gulf monarchy is still in power is due to vital backing from abroad. trying to. position. the international community that they have left the protests but at the same time they are. behaving just as they are generally three quarters of the population or oppose them and the relation is no longer. relations want to leave. the country they want to. try a thirty year. why has. the united states when the by relations of human rights was so gross i just mean and generally quiet. and of course you and everyone else no matter the reason enough of the bully based in bahrain on the bahrain the us uses that as
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a pivot point tried to intervene in control. is. a joke in the modern world. israel says it will go ahead with plans to build fifteen hundred new settler homes and jerusalem the part of the city that's considered palestinian land the project was given an immediate into media to say green line by israeli officials on monday this comes less than a month after the u.n. granted palestine nonmember observer status palestinians want east jerusalem to be the capital of a future palestinian state and down promising to raise the issue at a security council meeting also and historian gerald horne signs that with palestinians a recent upgrade israel is playing a risky game this really is making a very dangerous wager that its chief ally and washington can protect it from the
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reach of international law but i think that's a misjudgment on israel's part the enhanced status of the public schooling authority raises the possibility that he is really bitter ship can be dragged before the international criminal court and he for various transgressions not only that but the neighborhood of israel is changing with the rise of the south of the rise of the islamicist so i think israel is playing a very dangerous game in the short term and in the long term the problem is that mr netanyahu does not want a settlement of this question he feels that his regime can continue in a grab a palestinian land and settling palestinian land with jewish settlers and for night into the future however it's well known that israel's main protector in washington is declining in international significance because really authorities would be wise
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to change their ill advised policy before it's too late. phil is increasingly isolated at the u.n. of its expansion policy the arab spring means it's increasingly isolated in its own neighborhood as well the turmoil has seen and become the target of more attacks militant rocket. well across the border with syria want to slay records there's a storm brewing in the middle east and it's leaving a chill in the hearts of most israelis say what you might about the arab spring it poses an obvious problem for television zaman and so we've seen just a few weeks ago. plenty of missiles falling on israel form a radical. regime and we see. already the beginning of may be attrition war in the golan heights we see plenty of the angels in the mediterranean sea israel's backyard has become
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a lot more dangerous in the last two years weapons from libya are leaking across borders and landing in the hands of unknown militant groups the trouble ahead is symbolized by the muslim brotherhood sweep to power in egypt from this rally in june an ominous promise by the movement to make sure i'm not the capital of the middle. brief for weapons money and supplies from egypt into the gaza strip we will see egyptian volunteers going into the gaza strip to fight that's the minimum moving up from there the possibility of egypt israel war is by no means impossible but it was democracy that brought the muslim brotherhood to power and i deal both israel and the west came to espouse but both are now waking up to the reality that things might in fact have been better under the previous dictatorships at least for them we had a difficult situation but at least we had the contact you know with the leadership
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secondly president mubarak was committed to the peace process the situation today is that we are confronting a new president who belongs to a certain institution a certain movement which do not believe in the right of israel for existence. israeli leaders know all too well that whatever friendships however useful they have with arab leaders it doesn't alter the basic freight posed by an arab awakening that in most countries is empowering militant islamic groups we will expect that these governments when when they will will but pressure not only on the friends of we feel also this. the new changes in the board democracies that is emerging in the world will have a tremendous challenges and. in order to maintain. law and order to establish
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a real democracy the need need some time but television fears that in the time it takes for that democracy to really take root and for the arab public perhaps one day to accept a jewish state relations with its arab neighbors will get far worse before they get better the challenge now for israeli leadership is twofold to avoid inflaming arab public opinion while protecting israel and also to counter the growing to space many israelis feel of a growing isolation in an increasingly volatile neighborhood policy r.t. tell of of. moving on now thousands have demonstrated in madrid against austerity policies with much of the county government based on a broken promise to raise pensions in line with inflation pensioners and elderly made up a large section of the crowd in the irani organized by spanish labor unions the protests comes a day after medical workers marched through the capital and raised by the government's plan to privatize health care space current does stands at least eight
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hundred billion euros however madrid going out of its power in the trade saying a sovereign bailout economist again is a very fine case as the mistakes made by the country's government could ultimately cost a part of its territory. this is a government like the one you like the one i love which is with all its eggs. germany. was one of the great. risk of losing an election. change the course of the spanish government on a very much a very or all of. the possibility of losing the lawyer. for so long you start thinking about. how far you run. just ahead for you this hour does serving time mean you'll repeat the crime later
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on this hour we'll focus on the failings in british jails examining why so many people are thrown back in prison almost as soon as they've been let out. well. it's technology innovations all the latest developments around russia we've got the future covered. news a secret laboratory to mccurdy was able to build a most sophisticated robot which fortunately. dorna found anything tim's mission to teach music creation why it should care about humans and. this is why you should care only on the. wealthy british.
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thank you. thank you thank. you thank you very much i. am. getting the sez she welcome back. it's a long running debate with a tragic new contacts to as the relatives of the twenty six victims of the sandy hook elementary school shooting mourn the loss the argument over gun control laws in the u.s. is back in the spotlight. you know went to newtown connecticut to find out what people that think. to describe what's going on on the ground i think if we take all
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the sad words in the dictionary and combine them together there really is no way to describe no words to find to describe the heartbreak really the grief the sadness the tears. we saw on the ground this town is really at the you to me of grief during this holiday season in this country more or less half of the population supports gun control and of the country is split and half believes that it's a civil right and it's a right that americans are entitled to so whether or not any legislation good strong legislation can be passed to prevent these kinds of things is a question we're going to have to wait and see exactly what kind of steps lawmakers take and what the u.s. president takes but certainly i'm sure people are going to be demanding this kind of something to happen so that these situations are so they don't happen in the future over and over and over again parents holding their kids a little tighter and a little longer these days oh gosh i'm so glad that i have so many opportunities to
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. i love you i'm so glad you're mine i'm so glad you're in our family i'm so glad. you're here i'm still so glad that i'm having breakfast with you this morning candles flowers toys and grief filled newtown i keep hearing on the news over and over about the parents. were able to get their kids and had to be told. their kids were called home. and i can't imagine. if i was in their shoes as a parent that my daughter wouldn't pick up nobody twenty first graders none of them older than seven were killed in a mass shooting at school twenty year old adam lanza lived with his mother nancy in a well off residential neighborhood on friday morning he shot and killed her with her own gun got into a car drove about ten minutes to sandy hook elementary quoting two witnesses he
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didn't say a word during the rampage eight year old zachary was saved by his teacher and my youngest son since and he had school and. he was in a classroom right near where the shooting took place and he was with a reading teacher just him in the reading teacher and she closed the door and took them into the bathroom they sat in the bathroom floor until police came and said prayers and just stayed very quiet until the police came six school employees were also killed in the shooting including the favorite one of them devon in that step to them which i would like him for. the six and nine year olds held a garage sale with their family after surviving the shooting with proceeds going to their school they did tell them to close their eyes my my daughter. course you never listens so she she didn't and she's pretty she's been talking about that a lot she said she said mommy i can't get that body out of my head i keep seeing
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people's emotions are stretched to the limit make an end here like make it worth something. because you can't you could create change change that heartbroken locals are now demanding. strict severe gun control but really a look in the second amendment to bear arms but. then when it was written three hundred years ago two hundred fifty years ago the forefathers never thought it had come to this while politicians don't have the power to bring back the twenty little children who used to play on these streets they do have the power to decide what happens next in a country where two hundred seventy million firearms almost one per person are in private possession. newtown connecticut. and the website an enormous hole kaino russia and russia which has become a magnet for schools of thrill seeking tourists is not as appealing fathers who
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fear it's an omen heralding the apocalypse. don't run cyber security experts are sounding the alarm as it's revealed to the nation's computers are in jeopardy for a brand new data hungry buyer is all these stories online at all. is being reporters that bold garia has invited the u.s. to send troops to its territory one vulgar and daily newspaper says washington has already pumped around sixty million dollars into rebuilding a training range in the country's east the government in sofia says this will help boost regional security under sr with the training of its soldiers antiwar activist brian backer says the u.s. is seeking to expand its influence in eastern europe. we've seen that there is a strong motive force to maintain the cold war even without the soviet union to incorporate the countries of eastern and central europe the former warsaw pact
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countries into an american sphere of influence through the medium of nato and so i think what the what the troop deployment that we creation of more bases there already for. the corp of this as part of the nato strategy is one threat to russia a threat to the national sovereignty of the people of boggy area because they have foreign military bases and it incorporates buggery makes it more secure as part of an american political and economic as well as military formation egypt's public prosecutor has resigned less than a month after being appointed by president morsi the opposition is celebrating the move as a victory for the independence of the judiciary most of the country's judges are critical of morse's recent policies many refused to see the referendum in egypt's new draft constitution which forced the government to split it into two stages this weekend's first round ended in favor of the president of arkansas comment according to an unofficial counting data the vote is however strongly contested by the
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opposition which has vowed to take protesters to the streets full nationwide aspirations later today. there are reports coming out of syria are ongoing scan which is between pro and anti government groups at a refugee camp for palestinians in the south of damascus it follows claims that free syrian army rebels that's had seized who could full control of the compound attitudes toward the syrian government are split inside the camp where fighting has raged on for several days most of the refugees had to be moved to lebanon because of the escalating violence. the reputation of britain's prison system is taking a tumble with reports showing trails have become a revolving door for we have fenders the government has promised to turn the trend around by improving its systems on work and training in areas of confinement but as our taste our first reports now it seems there's a far more being said and. person looks up more people than anywhere else in
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europe where we get a glimpse of what life on the inside is really like and i would describe it as a sea of boredom. peppered with small of extreme violence and disruption stretched to breaking point you case prison systems are once again in the spotlight following a series of critical reports by the country's prisons inspectorate this government promised the rehabilitation revolution the trouble is the revolution seems to be taking its time to get. i don't see any rehabilitation revolution in the us government passed hundreds of new laws which were sweeping people back into the prison system and this government is going down the same line you know the working people up that's the it's getting people out of the difficulty getting them out so that they they don't come back but despite all the rhetoric say far the
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government's promise is improved regimes all work in training in prisons have failed to materialize well as a bit of a cliche but prisons of education colleges of course you can go to prison or did you know not only have to hope one of my part become a vast amounts of knowledge that's what prisoners do. and it's not only mixing with other criminals that's a problem it's becoming a secret that the u.k.'s prisons are all washed with drugs. i would estimate probably when. it's a troubling accusation given that today the inmate population stands at more than eighty thousand people right now in a person's relief from prison they've given forty six pounds but very little of the support released back into the same communities have all the same problems as
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before so it should be no surprise that also often it's not long before those people and up back inside the figures show is rising the past years in the number who leave prison to go on to commit further crimes forty seven point five percent of the reconvicted within one year of being released prisoners prisons it seems have become a revolving door every offenders and with all the government cuts it's hard to see just how the situation's going to improve it's obviously it's much more challenging if what you're doing the population is increasing resources are reducing and you're asking prisons to do those taping to stay out of prison within number of published books he's focusing on his writing career giving talks to schools orning children the realities of a life behind bars but with tens of thousands of people released from prison every
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. please. please. please. i live. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so for langley you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else and you hear or see some other part of it and realized everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm tom hartman welcome to the big picture. courageous and creative. elegance and full and those public speaking.
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hello again. today my guest on the program is. the first humanity develops and the more wealth it generates ironically the brakes problem. great masses of people migrate from rural areas to big cities from the third world to the west longed for a better life but only a few of them eventually make it their real result of mass migration as poverty. is becoming a problem in major cities around the world is it possible to solve the problem to discuss it would stop here. and the founder of. international which helped. for the. release says when a person is in trouble everyone is involved founder of doctors without borders he
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spent many years treating and deprived people around the globe. international charity fund social it helps homeless people to get back to a dignified life. release as those who hit rock bottom steal can find their way back he believes all humans are a family where everyone should care about others. thank you very much for being with us today well first of all the moscow affiliate. is being functional in this country for quite a while now and here in moscow do you have any facts and positive results of your work in russia. yes our biggest achievement is that after a few years. have picked up.
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