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tv   Breaking the Set  RT  April 27, 2013 5:29am-6:00am EDT

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i mean martin welcome to breaking it so today i had the rare opportunity to share good news for once to start the show samaras. political prisoner will and his eight month hunger strike in exchange for an early release from israeli jails esol was first arrested for taking part in military activities against i.d.f. vehicles back in two thousand and two and was sent to twenty six years in prison he was then released as part of a prisoner exchange but was arrested last july and since august of two thousand and twelve salvi has been protesting his detention by refusing food and only taking water vitamins and sugars for two hundred and sixty six days for the last two months of health has been a tear your eating his heart beats slowing forcing him to put on artificial ventilation at the same time the unrest among palestinians with escalating to the point of fear of a third intifada samara was allowed to die while the great news of his early release prompted assad way to write
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a victory letter in which he states quote now i plead for a continuation of the popular movement and its escalation on all fronts in order to struggle for the political prisoners and i also call for the continuation of the political and diplomatic mobilization to internationalize the issue of the political prisoners and to turn into the international criminal court in order to indict the judges of the occupation under international law for the crimes that are being perpetrated against the palestinian people it's so great that israeli authorities understand the need to release sam aerosol we that even though he will be free soon there are thousands more palestinian men women and children being unjustly detained there still deserve our attention so let's go on with the struggle and let's break the set. a little. or should i mean like.
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if you've been watching the corporate media then you may have missed a devastating tragedy and it's the coverage of the boston bombing and syria's chemical weapons scare but this story should not be overlooked because it affects everyone in the world that wears commercial clothes on wednesday a giant garment factory in dhaka bangladesh collapsed due to a severe and massive crack in the building's infrastructure and since then three hundred people have been confirmed dead from being trapped and crushed by debris at least nine hundred more are still unaccounted for and sadly the death toll is only expected to grow not to mention the one thousand plus left injured however what's even more devastating than the single incident is that this is anything but uncommon in the southeast asian country just this past november another garment factory in bangladesh incurred a fire that killed at least one hundred twelve people and that's not all and only the last five months there have been at least thirty to forty smaller incidents of fires and workplace deaths in the country's clothing factories in fact part of this
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latest incident seven hundred apparel workers have died in preventable factory fires and building collapses since two thousand and five according to international labor rights forum. this new should be particularly disconcerting to american consumers because according to b.s.'s the bangladeshi news service the u.s. receives twenty three percent of the country's product more than other nation in the world including one of the most popular retailers in the u.s. . yet despite the slick advertising there's a dark and disturbing reality on the origin of these products the fact that these companies are not ensuring safety standards the effect of which directly results and these mass casualties. and that's why human rights groups have stepped in
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calling on apparel brands and retailers to sign on to the bangladesh fire and safety agreement which would establish a system of independent inspectors and force their proposed changes into effect but unfortunately this agreement is not gaining as much traction as it needs to be because of some companies refusal to sign on including gap inc so help me gain some insight on the latest disaster the contagion the conditions of the factories and how they could be improved i'm joined now by two research director for communications for the workers rights consortium thank you so much for coming on recently so devastating tragedy what exactly happened because i've heard reports of the workers that already pointed out there was a severe crack five stories long and they didn't want to work and also some of the other companies in the same building had already been evacuated why didn't they leave that's correct and so actually the day before the collapse took place on tuesday there were noticeable clear cracks in the building and workers pointed these out to officials and in fact other. other people in the building who worked
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at the bank that was in the building people who worked at the market in the building noticed these cracks and actually those businesses were closed the following day wednesday and police had notified the factory of these serious problems and advised them to close and yet the five garment factories that were in the facility continued operating throughout wednesday even though workers had voiced very serious concerns about their safety in the facility and i am how did the building owner respond when they did speak out because i read reports that they actually said you will be docked for a month of pay correct workers were threatened with a dock of their pay. terminations other things like that if they were refusing to work in the factory because of these concerns because ultimately managers want workers to continue working as much and as quickly as possible for fear that they might deliver an order late and somehow lose business. from brands and retailers
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sourcing from these facilities really really devastating especially since they're kind of prison of this catch twenty two where they want to lose a month of pay i mean these people are already living on a very small wages paycheck to paycheck and of course they they feel like they don't have a choice essentially this makes the factory owner criminally culpable i mean knowing that the building is on the verge of collapse and forcing the people essentially to work do you think that will see these people face prosecution that are involved in this in this factory we have seen arrests and criminal charges filed against factory owners and managers in previous fires the fire that happened back in november the smart export garment fire that happened in january where a workers were killed there have been charges filed and arrests made in those cases and i think it's quite likely that we will see something similar in this case and the infrastructure is just one aspect of these conditions what about the actual working conditions give us a sense of who is working in these factories and what conditions they work in so
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bangladesh is now the second largest export of the u.s. and it is a garment industry made up of about five million mostly young female garment workers in their late teens or early twenty's who are struggling to survive on a minimum wage of thirty seven dollars a month which is an extremely low wage even by bangladesh living standards and they are subject to incredibly long hours eleven twelve hours a day six days a week. there are very serious fire safety violations going on other health concerns in the factory verbal abuse physical abuse is quite common as well. really really want i mean it's almost a quite a bit of slave labor when you're looking at you know no benefits i mean really just harsh working conditions long hours very little pay pennies on the dollar. in the u.s. united states are proven to have the least amount of worker deaths the safest environment
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for workers. is there any sort of movement going on that ocean to unionize and organize within these factories there is there certainly are efforts and i'm glad you pointed that out because in this country many people may be familiar with the triangle shirtwaist factory fire that happened more than one hundred years ago in this country and that really galvanized a movement among female garment workers in this country to improve conditions and lead to the formation of a number of labor unions towards that end and workers in bangladesh have tried similar strategies but in bangladesh there is an extreme level of oppression that exists towards workers who attempt to exercise these rights about a year ago. the labor union organizer by the name of islam was found tortured and murdered in an apparent retaliation for his efforts to support workers' rights to speak out and that's the kind of attitude that that these individuals are treated with in that country so obviously it's still in a culture of fear and a kind of a chilling effect to not want to do that all of this aside i've actually shockingly
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read that safety standards are getting progressively better i mean is this due in part to the organizing that is happening on a grassroots level i think i think to some extent that is true although what we've seen over the past several months is a number of these deadly fires and other building disasters that have led to more than seven hundred deaths just in the past six months alone and so although we've heard a number of statements from u.s. and european brands and retailers about the progress that they're making that has not come to pass and so what laws exist right now to prevent these things that are they not being enforced or there's simply not enough laws they're in place bangladesh actually has an excellent labor code they have an excellent national building code that is based on u.s. building regulations the difficulty and the problem is that those things are not enforced and brands and retailers sourcing from this factory from the other facilities that have burned have their own monitoring programs in place and those programs have proven to be in credit. ineffective at preventing and protecting
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workers from these types of tragedies and let's talk about the other parties responsible here which of course are companies corporations and u.s. clothing companies we know that twenty two percent of bangladeshi goods are exported to this country what companies are the biggest players in the bangladeshi sweatshop scene right now so the largest companies sourcing from bangladesh is the european retailer h. and wal-mart is the largest u.s. buyer from the country there's a number of other big buyers gap is a large player there as well as a number of european retailers as well and then of course in the wake of the last two disasters as you said you know people are saying we're working on safety standards wal-mart and gap are both pledging money gap is even saying that they're planning to pledge twenty million dollars yet they're not signing on to this agreement which would actually ensure that the safety senator carried out efficiently and you and your organization has said that this is not good enough the twenty million dollars so what needs to be done how can we get these companies to sign on i mean it sounds like a no brainer so over the past few weeks wal-mart has announced about one point five
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million dollars or so towards a training initiatives for factories in bangladesh and it's important to understand that you cannot train workers to walk through fire what really needs to happen is the brands and retailers need to undertake a program throughout the five thousand garment factories in the country and make fundamental structural renovations and repairs to prevent these types of fires and collapses from happening and that's what did lehman but lead to it require ins and retailers to make a legally binding enforceable commitments to improve structurally fifty in the building a source from allow access for worker representatives to the facilities and independent fire safety inspections which are largely. not happening in the industry right now and we were sympathetic to the corporations and even the corporations themselves who have this bottom line saying you know it's really costly to do this it might be a huge profit margin how much of a profit. we looking at let's say with
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a calvin klein t. shirt for forty dollars being sold here in the u.s. so an estimate that we have put together is that over the period of five years it would cost about three billion u.s. dollars to renovate all of the factories in bangladesh for fire and building safety and i know that sounds like a large number but it breaks down to less than ten cents per hour which is an extremely small price to pay to save the lives of of what is likely to be hundreds of more deaths over the coming years and they're making thousands of percent profit on each piece of government we have about a minute left but sweatshops seem to have emerged in china and now they're all going to bangladesh i mean it seems like a vicious cycle where companies are going to continue to chase whatever is the cheapest labor and exploited for the countries that are willing to take the most health and safety risks how can we stop this vicious cycle no that's absolutely true bangladesh is the lowest wage country in the world and orders continue to flow into the country unabated and so what needs to happen is that we need to reverse
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the downward price pressure and the race to the bottom that is being driven by companies like gap and wal-mart n.h. and m. and require them to take meaningful steps to improve and building safe in their supplier factories in bangladesh thank you so much for coming on breaking down this extremely important story theresa haas communications director of worker rights consortium initiated. what you see you can head to our you tube channel at youtube dot com slash breaking the sent be sure to subscribe so you do not miss a single episode we also have all our interview segments tabbed out if you want to catch those separately and encourage or want to check out our interview yesterday about islamophobia perpetuated by the corporate media and also check up every everything we've done separately under tab the section on the top of the page from big brother watch to weapons of mass distraction check out all that and more youtube dot com slash break in the set and i know that to break from my preaching but stay tuned to hear from our favorite comedian activist leave camp.
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international at the very heart of moscow. so basically case you haven't noticed the media entirely focus on one thing for the last week's boston but interestingly enough just before that they were incessantly hyping up the fear of an impending nuclear attack north korea or this. being a mobile missile launcher that has been moved within north korea by train the launcher has the ability to strike japan as well as u.s. bases in okinawa and guam adding to the fears today the young leader of the said the moment of explosion is coming the moment of explosion is coming so what happen
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interesting how the media jumps from one salacious threat to the other that they just forget about this imminent danger facing this nation oh my next guest is here to get his two cents on that and a whole lot more right now i'm joined by lee kant comedian activist and creator of the moment of clarity web series what is going on lee i have a how you know i'm doing great so we the media say north korea is the biggest threat facing this country two weeks ago what the hell happened. i think they just they just need somewhere to point the frantic america they just want to keep you scared because it's good ratings rates every whether it's real or not it's everything you put on there i'd be afraid be afraid all right crappy afraid and then every commercial break do you have anxiety. yeah exactly because it shows that there is really no threat in this country after all and of course the threat of domestic terrorism take its place really quickly what i found most interesting is how some lawmakers tried to link it to immigration one of the areas where representative louie gohmert said who said radical muslims are posing as suspects
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to cross the border and terrorize the u.s. so we should we be worried about ok dressing up as muslims next of kins oh my god we should this is the al qaeda is finally figured out if they just wear a sombrero and eat it taco that's all it takes to get through i mean is this really the respect he has for our f.b.i. that all you have to do to. commit an attack on the u.s. is where lucia lieber a t. shirt you know before that before they came out with this hispanic threat all the f.b.i. was looking for was t. shirts that said bin laden is my homeboy. really calls into question how these people or even elected i mean how is it that louie gohmert an elected representative spewing such nonsense as al qaeda dressing up in sombreros crossing the border to infiltrate and attack this country i mean it's the point of just such absurd and of course let's not gather new story that they can headlines the opening of the bush presidential library centrally a giant museum glorifying his presidency i mean is it just me or does this
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historical revisionism terrify you to. i mean i think that everybody in america pretty much appreciates the irony of the least illiterate president we've ever had opening a library it's like the mel gibson center of you know racial sensitivity but apparently the library has like it has a decision theatre where you go in and you try and see if you can make the decisions bush made and i was just trying to picture what that looks like you know like hurricane katrina hits people or drowning in new orleans do you fly overhead in your helicopter and then put a horse trainer in charge of fema is that how you deal with it because it is the decider because that is that the situation room and someone else told me it was hilarious like what is that full of pop up books and it is it just is just one book that my pet goat upside down in the this is what astounded of course hearing all
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the speeches and you know bush did get a little got a little emotional after giving this speech a little wink a little tear i mean i think those tears of joy are that he thinks he has friends again. you know no one spoken to him and many years so i think that's pretty exciting for him and of course the media the media didn't really cover the protesters that were outside my friend and filmmaker dennis traynor got arrested dressed as dick cheney outside the library so i think it was just exciting to see dick cheney get arrested. when we think dick cheney got to. did his dinner june dressed as dick cheney got. to say dick cheney was noticeably absent did you finally get a citizen's arrest made on him like i have been hoping this whole time and as you know each living president was there and then you think about you know what they've been doing since they've been leaving office jimmy carter is in haiti working with his hands building houses for the poor bill clinton with his foundation and in
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a recent interview but actually revealed what he's been up to let's take a look at. two or three hours a day i'm shooting here analyzing that you have and trying to figure out if i can the next. to you what are you serious yeah little permanent revolution maybe a touch of. white and on the other side. maybe a little. dark and i can reflect the light properly. i'm sorry. this is a star yet to respond and who says he lacks cultural or cultural awareness or intellectual curiosity i mean i also i want to get to his painting by speaking about something else he said which he said that dick cheney and he don't speak anymore and i was thinking like that makes a lot of sense because if you think about it when they when a puppet tear has a television show or a play or something and the play ends the puppets here doesn't keep speaking to the
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puppets in the green room like it's all over that's you put the puppet down you move so what is the puppet do he goes to paint he goes to paint his feet in the bath and him self look in somber in the shower is this a sign that bush is using painting as a therapy to reflect on all those were crimes he committed yeah that's why it's all about trying to wash off the blood of innocent people i wonder if he is painting by numbers i mean it's just amazing i can't wait to see his next series of shower paintings and you know the latest news that i wanted to bring out as this infamous have first break up of course that a hole that's in santa cruz just sprain everyone sitting down in a chain he's got off scot free don't you anything wrong but you don't really make an kelly on fox says that all these kids are just getting worked up for nothing let's hear what she had to say about it. which will pepper spray that just burn drives right right i mean it's like a derivative of actual pepper it's a food product right. i want to i want to see her sprayed with pepper spray during
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one of her broadcasts and see how well that goes right it's just it's just a condiment this is a crime and just i mean just eat it just sprayed all of your food every day making kelly a complete idiot thank you so much leak can always a pleasure to have you on they are making me laugh on this friday comedian activist creator of the moment of clarity web series thanks for having. her. so we've been hearing a lot of news about syria lately talk of syrian president bashar al assad using chemical weapons which is drawing an airy parallel to the war drums leading up to the iraq war no doubt this is a disastrous situation where eighty thousand people of needlessly died in just the last two years and the tragedies occurring there certainly deserve the world's attention. however when the corporate media focuses so narrowly on one subject
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usually signifies that there's a larger agenda play and that singular focus distracts us from so many other events unfolding in the world that are crying for our attention take for instance behind or government officials recently blocked a un torture investigator from visiting the country in the wake of a spike in anti-government protests it's the second time a visit has been cancelled by government forces who have been brutally crushing dissent across the nation since the protests broke out in early two thousand and eleven human rights groups have cited kidnappings murders and thousands of arrests at the hands of the regime the violence on the streets is all accompanied by several reports of torture being used against political prisoners however the corporate media has been mostly silent for that matter so is the u.s. government who relies on the trains a willingness to host the u.s. navy's fifth fleet which serves to place strategic u.s. military pressure against countries like iran u.s.
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support of the brutal regime is the root of american double standards when it comes to addressing human rights abuses and another tragically overlooked story that continues to unfold is the persecution of rohingya muslims in burma since the second massacre took place last october the world has continued to ignore what more and more officials are referring to as a genocidal ethnic cleansing conservative estimates suggest that over one hundred twenty thousand people remain homeless after buddhist. miss caused mass arson violence and a string of massacres that resulted in at least two hundred rohingya muslims needlessly slaughtered unfortunately a media blackout in the country is helping the world to ignore the plight of people who've been acquired by the un is the most persecuted minority group in the world. independent journalist assad begg i recently interviewed from the ground in rangoon i'm sorry in rangoon burma recently wrote about the woman who are being taken
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hostage by the burmese government and there's growing evidence suggesting that the military is keeping these women as sex slaves it's important that more visibility is given to this crisis before countless other innocent people die. and finally i want to talk about guantanamo bay prison currently ninety three of the prisoners were just more than half of the inmates at the prison camp have now joined the hunger strike is reaching the end of its third month the source of the frustration among detainees is the realization that congress and the obama administration have fully turned their backs on the idea that get motion be closed the detainees at the camp path of whom have been declared innocent and cleared for release are losing hope that they will ever be set free and they're literally killing themselves right now as a plea for help. to add insult to injury us corporate media has also conveniently
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taken the same position as obama choosing to look forward not backward on the crimes of the bush administration despite a sworn declaration obtained by truthout just recently from colonel warren's wilkerson wilkerson said that bush cheney and rumsfeld all knew that the vast majority of prisoners at gitmo when in fact innocent they were freed of the political repercussions of their bad judgment still the corporate news remains silent on the fact that more prisoners have died to get now and actually been convicted said in a truly trouble. precedent for human rights standards of the u.s. but these are all example of stories that you won't hear on the mainstream easy to get sucked in the media black hole so take these stories and share them and help me shine a light on this world that's. clear
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. after going down of the song and good morning we will remember that we will leave. that. limitation free could you take three days for charges free to make amends three. three stooges free.
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download free blog plug in video for your media project free media r t v dot com. lou. played. live. play. live. live live live
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. anything. to teach. syria denies claims or to use chemical weapons as the u.s. and its allies drum up a case for intervention. and
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heads to the polls are. tiny they. during the financial meltdown and refuse to rescue the banks. are russian officials blacklisted by the u.s. . prison so the allegations against them are groundless and politically motivated.

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