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tv   Documentary  RT  October 6, 2013 11:29am-12:01pm EDT

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daily beast going down fish is. deliberate torch is on its epic journey to such. one hundred and twenty three days. through two thousand and nine hundred two cities of russia. relate
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fourteen thousand people or sixty five thousand killing. in a record setting trip by land air sea and others face. a limp dick torch relay. m r t v dot com. you know i'm old enough to remember on reruns when gomer pyle used to cry citizen's arrest when he saw something wrong and mayberry and a new law in russia could allow our city average to do the same thing by helping to enforce laws in the country this low allow citizens to protect public order by becoming volunteer workers deputy policeman and even forming people's militias which will in theory prevent crime or at least allow the police to be informed more quickly and accurately of course the. this like any project which sounds nice on
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paper is all about the implementation so we'll see how these deputies and militias will work overall i think this won't have much of an effect on crime but it could have a huge impact on non-criminal bad public behavior you know i am not the bravest guy on the planet and it's hard to confront a group of five drunk guys who are just as big as you who are acting like idiots on the street but doing so with ten stone sober militiaman buddies could provide a much more convincing argument for the drunkard's this could be a big step forward for democracy when you actually have at least a scrap of power or control over the events in your neighborhood then you're sure feel like people actually have a lot of power and this could be good for the country but that's just my opinion.
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which if you go to the close to me will actually see the tea dance even if you know. it's not one of those pesky continue but if they. get the chance that we may not be able to get. the majority of india's population does not even have access to primary health care . many cancer patients gain access to the treatment through an ngo. the cancer patients hate association. case we seem to be supporting the city from
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the ship we keep it to one key pieces. because given. the genetic speed it just didn't have cheese the people that and provided. it would be in that range of maybe even. to this event which movie support. the efficacy of the existence is identical so i do think that. it's justified in giving that. tends. to be considered.
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that. the self sufficiency philosophy on which the indian state relied since its independence changed in one thousand nine hundred five. cool in that year the world trade organization was a stablished which determines how color should be conducted worldwide. and india became
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a member from the very beginning. if you. do not sign this agreement with your create with you. now that the world has become more like a global village late you cannot go ahead and ostracize a country and say or you do whatever you want on this one we are not created with you that country will not be able to survive on its own. as member of the w t o recognized in two thousand and five for the first time in its history peyton pharmaceutical products. based on that fact novartis demanded to be granted a payment for as it claims a renewed form of. however india's pain the office rejected his obligation. does not merit a paid and certificate in india. we don't deserve any bit.
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as big as the it is. the basic public bodies behind the bed and not to get bitten on that which is already known so good is already known. so all does all didn't. get a bit redundant. going to get a bit and so something which is already known in name to name did seem to get a bit it is lacking in novelty the. chemical which i imagine this highly was a base product but in that form it was not medicine it was just a chemical but when the waters and its researchers did their work and created to be decreased by inform it became clear break it became. a great medicine which made. initially a disease which was sure death sentence into
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a chronic illness and. then they did the drug in the unit into the lane and united states they got to children not be. it was a new compound but in india that i was not part of the system we cannot go back. and give you impact and the ninety two more. they basically said we conquered the basic so we come up with every greening application which we can put into developing countries like india and get to not be. evergreen is a pleasant term for a poor practice. it is the refreshment of a drug or in other words you present an old drug as a new one. pharmaceutical companies use it in order to falsely pull on a drugs peyton troil to use. if you ask me in one night what it means you take the same job and back and did again and again and again in different forms so the drug
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is the same but the form changes so you don't come up with a new drug you just take that and be formulated. on. jake. and make it into a shooting. and that can be a different pattern or together so you once you've done that you get a new market you get an extension of your monopoly and indeed you have not found integration because you haven't come up with something new. like a pharmaceutical zoran engineering or you know naught there might be one of the cases where this is done but that does not mean it is done all the time. it's presented it seems to be more than the norm and exception and i can certainly see in that it is deafening other kids because it's a dramatic improvement on the outcome. knowing the evergreen in practice and the
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abuse of the paging system india maintain strict safeguard measures and it's legal says. but what can be painted and what cannot. in line with the international law it was the first country to do something but others can also do. it is why those safeguard measures were at the heart of the historic legal battle between the indian state and of artists the world's largest pharmaceutical company . shall not be granted on the mirror of a.v. and. i lose the chills. because significant because india is the fourth. which has put border. in the manner in which you would prevent abuses of the patents and you seem documentary evidence that unfortunately it is from a company that's been backed by the very powerful country governments for example
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that got been commissioned that they expected coming from. clearly favor of its own from so to be that's feet rather than looking at. the pharmacy of the developing world all the other big manufacturing companies they do have the best in europe. they're trying to go ahead and negotiate on intellectual property rights as well because the voice. in india that it might be placed into big big profit margins and know. which is which has been going ahead and hindering profits of their pharmaceutical companies because when they try to word and sell their products in africa for example obviously a generic pharmaceutical will be able to give a much greater price compared to what they're offering and then we both are equally good. emirs become the cheap key competitor if india starts doing it or india because the prominent upload of these products then the rest of the world can also do it i think that's the challenge.
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i. know fargas claims to understand poor people's inability to access drugs and for that reason it gives glivec for free to fifteen thousand patients and meet with the help of a program that a supervised by the max foundation. has been approved. and then physicians. to
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give them money and foundation and. mr vince devised a doctor i'm self was diagnosed in two thousand and four with clinic my load leukemia. his doctor was read sturtevant of artist program and referred him to the max foundation. drug. is an expensive drug and. even for me it would have been very difficult to be able to afford this drug and to be able to use it without extreme discomfort to my finances and to my living so i would not have honestly been able to afford the drug if it was not for this wonderful foundation and people the drug is given to the patients life for as long as the physician says they need it the drug is given it's
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a big boon the pharma company has this kind of project. x. is a drug like this this drug is a drug. fifteen thousand patients take glivec three hundred thousand take them out. doctor but the health care system cannot rely on novartis is project. the head. of this group certain hospitals. and so there it is need to go from that point of view. to the efforts which the will to shoot the social responsibility to know that if the poor and to make use of the. subcommittee to cease because of the ability to and. that drug.
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please. play. safe if you need to review these economic ups and downs in the final months day belong to the old sang night and the rest of the life it's a neat take it will be it briefly come out they played a. key. player. played.
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played. oh i. for several years mr i have been receiving hiv medicine from the doctors without borders clinic in mumbai. they were too expensive for private patients i didn't have an income and couldn't work so it was impossible for me to pay the medical bills. left everything in the hands of god
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i will live out the time that i am given i cannot take the medicine the drug on the market was too expensive. i thought of where to get the money. or if i should take the drug today leave it i will take it tomorrow. is something i always thought about the money. when i started taking the medicines here my health improved i gained weight and i eat drink maddi and don't even think about the fact that i'm ill now i feel very good now i feel that i will live. eighty percent of the drugs used by doctors without borders in their missions to offer life to patients worldwide are
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generic drugs from india. that is why the organization is one of the swiss companies most ardent opponents in this legal battle. it's not that you have drugs from m.s.f. to an extra model or the next week or next month but in. be able to treat cancer be able to treat hepatitis b. be able to treat drug resistant tuberculosis drug resistant. and. genetics will not be able to expand and treat the same manner that we have done for example in sub-saharan africa. in america. saying that we should stop. i mean. isn't it. if you do not. return. again money in there for investment for future research.
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because it deemed to twenty percent and off the top of the foreign companies. it is not being given the. trust that husky generated by the company so i think. because to moral and. from left to copy from anybody. they didn't. want this to argue that. the patent system is giving such frivolous we wouldn't have you know there's a problem with innovation despite the patent system for example very few new
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antibiotics and why do we need. to be needed for. infection so you need new antibiotics. why would you invest in a new compound when you put back to the same point again and again and keep extending your profit. challenges that research costs huge amount to be to get a new chemical entity costs two to three billion dollars and the reason is issued degree will feel in the process of. their normal wall until the prom night is a government scrambling to do research on nor do you have any other organization coming to do research on abuses which will move profit and loss because if you do
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not allow people to have their returns they'll just disappear because the show will run over and that's a logical i'm telling the logic it's not about profits at all let me put this question back to them. after the beating thing has come up right need drugs have come up in the market i put this question back to them if you look into the data you'll find that most of the drugs which have been researched. have come into the market in nearly once most of them there were more number which came before the phaeton concept came in for example even if you were closest to the seymour draft which i think it was early in one thousand eight hundred a wonder what it was that the seem that is preventing you know why not is that if it isn't for drug benefit they don't see profit so it. this is a simple reason not only looking for profits and that is looking at point as i
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think it's clear. there is a disease that affects the most that most will parts of the walls or the most or. the less pretty when it's part of a society. then the picks but this one for profit is very good either because the patients can look to for themselves the treatment or because their state their government they are also poor but the couple to four i don't agree i don't recreate that at all in fact we have to talk of the value of the medicine not the price of the medicine because water the value all seeing the smile on a mother's tears when the child disappeared from a life threatening disease waters a value that you put on improving life expectancy from forty years to eighty years what are the economic value if that person had been at your place and you had been in the place and that person will have been selling their drugs at such a high place that you were not able to afford it. and would have would you have
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liked it. and how do you received. for. more. as. this particular piece. our. principal multinationals should. really be. enriching the experience of the city. to be.
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today the supreme court is to issue its verdict and put an end to the sensational court battle of novartis india that has lasted for seven years. the court's verdict will be the one to determine whether millions of patients worldwide will continue to have access to affordable drugs. and everyone is holding their breath. we're getting breaking news and this is dissipating and we will be getting news from the supreme court that the apex court has in fact dismissed no vortices appeal this is what would. be. taking the first trade ordered against indian companies for manufacturing also
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that the company. has the way for indian companies to continue copying the medicine and campaigners say it means poor people will still be able to get access to cheap generic forms of lifesaving treatment. according to the court's dismisses decision no payton rights are given to the. original pharmaceutical formulation of an older drug. the decision is to set a legal precedent for other similar cases for other pharmaceutical industries taining similar pain rights. but the great interest at stake do not leave much hope that something similar will not be attempted again in the
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future. for now this important battle has finally been won. even before. even after the. move. and more greedy that is what i think this is something that you could to change i mean because once it comes to the general people of the poor people i think that that aspect has to go i cannot accept that people can die if there is treatment awaits save their lives that there is no law system or the can explain or justify its interesting. science which cannot help society had no meaning. so what of the science be to it has to well to me to translate to the society is to be for the benefit of society this earth has enough to go ahead and feed all the living
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beings. it has enough. but it is not enough to sustain one person's greed. ok thanks.
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ok. there's a nine story building i noticed that standing on a true for some men in civilian clothes holding a sniper rifle. to say something that
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offends so they can only do they don't use blank or wooden shells but the building was but a room of how much time it took to restore it. reloaded for yeltsin in the referendum to deputies of the supreme soviet didn't appeal to us out all we have to support yeltsin otherwise it would have been civil war. more news today violence is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. china operations are all today. people look at the videos we get from syria these days you know people chpa topping
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off eating these intestines this is why i have a far warns them something that you play beyond that hollywood movie lies the united states of america to stop supporting people who have ideologies and crush humanity in the name of religion in the name of interest in the name of any political ends. think. they were going to do that you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy albus. role. in fact the single biggest threat facing our nation today is the corporate takeover of our government and across several we've been hijacked why
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a handful of transnational corporations will profit by destroying what our founding fathers once told us i'm job market and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem or trying to fix rational debate and a real discussion of critical issues facing and to find a job ready to join the movement then welcome to the big picture. welcome to russia that you pick a plane makes it to moscow the first torchbearers that now taking the torch on a marathon four miles a relay through russia until it launches sochi twenty four percent.

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