tv [untitled] October 23, 2013 12:00am-12:31am EDT
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closed for business europe struggles to shut its doors to the flow of illegal migrants from the middle east and north africa with economically unstable nations like greece taking the biggest burden. and the police brutality protests us on a national day of action with activists saying cops simply have too much power. to use it. crowd more involved with the aftermath of a suicide bombing. with teenagers that killed six and left a city in shock. welcome
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much of the program on on t.v. this morning. live in moscow is now i just ate. it's really wants a shake up of europe's asylum policies because it's struggling to deal with a stampede of immigrants that things have gotten worse over the last several years as large numbers of refugees flee conflicts in the middle east and north africa some of which have been fueled by italy's more hawkish e.u. colleagues and more than a half arrived on packed migrant ferries risking their lives for asylum many literally never making it now italy and greece are among the most affected putting pressure on their already burdened economies let's have a look at the numbers for you here on t.v. because ultimately officials suggest that migrants from outside the e.u. amounts of more than twenty million in italy every twenty is a registered migrant and we shift our attention to greece the number is even higher that's more than said. percent of the population now the number of asylum
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applications in italy has increased by more than one hundred percent compared to last year and greece is only second to germany when it comes to the highest number of pending applications let's get some more on the problem here on r t with our correspondent you go to chris cuffe. they want to buy the food from and the opium to sudan then traveled to libya and finally reached sicily after what must have been the most nerve wrecking ball right off their lives these three women are hiding their faces from the cameras and now they're risking being sent back when we were at sea now the boat with refugees sank into a three hundred people died but we were lucky and in sicily we managed to void get it registered it's illegal between need to go further north there is nothing for us here under regulation all newcomers must seek asylum in the country where they are right and under italian law anyone of voting registration is sent home but nowadays more and more newcomers are ready to take their chances don't register to try to go to northern states where there are more opportunities probably when you arrive here
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they give you the very minimum there is no jobs no school and you sleep in the street for six months italy is one of the worst european states in this regard youth unemployment has exceeded forty percent while the economy is in the worst recession since the second world war international obligations and plain human principles can't allow italy to turn away refugees since for many is the only chance for survival but the situation is now which to a point when this duty has become too heavy for it to handle on its own the e.u. has pledged italy would receive an additional thirty million euro or just over forty million dollars to deal with the refugee crisis but how will this help to distribute the more evenly throughout the union and integrate them into the economy is not clear they have been so on ideas so far the cherry they may be some positive . and i see embodies a lot of. good hope but no concrete ideas and as governments and international
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organizations brainstorm the solution one thing is certain the flow of refugees is only going to continue the work is going on italy. the fight against police brutality has seen protesters come out across the u.s. . rallies against the heavy arm of the law were held in a number of cities the offseason i see a truck and i went along to one of them to find out why people are so angry in new york and dozens of other cities across the u.s. to national day of protests to stop police brutality repression and the criminalization of a generation this is a time which will enter second marks the eighteenth time these people gather around this simple message this is not a gentle to how they treat us they shoot us like animals and that's completely unwarranted is literally on warranted when something breaks through like trayvon martin. lee graham or sean bell it gets treated in the media like this is a isolated incident something that rarely happens and then more often it's
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not reported at all organizers have been documented cases of what they call the stole lives project they say just over the last two decades thousands of killings have taken place by the hand of police officers they say the majority of these cases have been under reported or brushed aside hundreds every year were killed by the police that the majority of them were unarmed and not involved in any criminal activity when they were killed and also the majority of them were young and either black or latino the mass media is a very good propaganda saw a lot of people are under the impression that people will be a stop their friends who are being gunned down somehow criminals one of the major concerns for these protesters seems to be the lack of accountability when it comes to gun violence police brutality and even killings that occur under the hands of law enforcement they see the justice system continues to neglect these cases of
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violence thus not doing anything to improve the system and bring about real change you have to go through hell and high water just to get a conviction of the officer and what he's convicted for doesn't meet the crime to he's accuse any winds up if not being found guilty eve. if he's convicted he gets out on good behavior after serving minimal time activists and families of victims called police brutality in the us a pandemic considering the united states lectures the rest of the world on human rights it's time that it follow its own example not just words but deeds. are still to come here on our washington and its most useful friend in the middle east are going through a bit of a rough patch saudi arabia is reconsidering its partnership after the u.s. failed to strike syria and promised talks with iran america's. playing all of it just saying it's all a bunch of diplomacy. no poetic justice and. human rights groups
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condemned the fifteen year sentence for a writer who criticized the regime there. it's good to have you with us on our to today a roadside service has been held in volgograd in memory of the six victims of a suicide bombing on monday more than forty others were wounded doctors are still fighting now to save the lives of the critically hurt. piece together exactly what happened on that day from the unassuming start to that of the horrifying. october twenty first started just like any other monday here and people places to go and things to get heavily using bus stations just like this. but for several people needing bus number twenty nine they could never have foreseen how quickly their lives would change when they took that ride. the route ran without incident from morning till afternoon it's
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a one person got on board thirty year old why you don't see all of that is when things took a tragic turn and it starts to the very end of all it was on her way home from classes at the university laughing and talking with the other students crucially it was in the middle of the bus which say trade life it was a real truth when the boss who did everything around me when flying and from that moment i don't remember anything on the recall being thrown onto her window then suddenly finding myself on the street and in a panic i realised something had happened to my hands i was covered in blood it was right here at about two pm local time that a blast ripped through bus twenty nine filled with about forty people first responders thought it was perhaps a malfunction of the bus fuel systems but aside from the shop they fell they asked themselves if this was a gas explosion was the fire. in that boat was the same rock was there in the credit of it in the blast was touching their faces and heads asking what happened
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what happened there was a lot of blood on them and a lot of flesh everywhere i was very afraid i let out of my car and i saw the head lying there i mean my friend took a young boy and his father to the hospital the remnant of an explosive device told the shrapnel t.n.t. and a grenade the accident site became a crime scene while a jihadist from the republic of dagestan became the central focus of the investigation and then the story took another twist the attack wasn't meant for volgograd at all as the all of a had apparently taken a detour. she had purchased a ticket to moscow and boarded an intercity boss the pass through volgograd when the bus was almost at the city limits i see all of our gado and went back to downtown belgrade right now investigators are trying to find out whether this move had been planned in advance or are altered the plan along the way looking for
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a place packed with as many people as possible also under suspicion are three men believed to have helped in the plot to attack the russian capital two from dagestan wanted for twin terror attacks there in two thousand and twelve were said to be waiting for her in moscow on his way there was a see all of us husband dmitri of an ethnic russian convert to islam missing since two thousand and twelve some reports suggest the couple had an argument shortly before the attack which may have caused a last minute change in her deadly plans authorities will be keen to find her husband in the hope he may have the answers lindsey france r.t. in volgograd now it is well known that terrorists plot their attacks hidden away in small clusters called cells but terrorism nowadays could be changing the criminals openly gaging in society and using social media to raise their money this report to wattis paul scott. we don't even know what happened please help us. well this is
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the russian t.v. program called wait for me it's june two thousand and thirteen and a distraught mother is making an appeal for information for the return of her missing son who's been missing for around a year now it's the type of appeal that's been at hundreds of times before over the years and at first glance nothing appears to be out of the ordinary and likewise this appeal in a russian social networking site doesn't appear to be out of the ordinary it's an appeal for funds so that a friend can receive medical treatment for an incurable disease while the friends turn out to be naïve. the suicide bomber who carried out monday's volgograd bus bombing the son turned out to be dimitri sokoloff an explosives expert wanted by the authorities and living on the run having converted to islam a married couple headed to dagestan after meeting at a moscow university. believe that at the very same time these appeals were being made public plans for monday's volgograd bus bombing were being hatched and those
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who donated rubles to help a sick woman or phoned in information to help a distressed mother later discovered that those capable of carrying out such atrocities don't always shun mainstream society and in some cases play an active part in it so. hard on the web site right now we are witness accounts for more as well on the alleged perpetrators if you like and also see the suicide bombers bus ticket which she apparently planned to use to get to moscow. or is still to come on the program here on our revelations of the sheer scale of n.s.a. spying in france it's got the country's politicians in a state of shock. if you're going to follow the same direction confrontation might be political. and that's another report exposes the alleged u.s. surveillance of a u.s. . swarm of spy ware inside the diplomatic computers.
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and the. people giving young women in the u.k. take to specialized online dating sites in the hope that older men will hand over the keys to the high life still ahead for you. in the meantime here in america and his best friend in the gulf may be in for a rather difficult breakup saudi arabia's ruling family members are upset with the latest twists and turns of u.s. foreign policy the worst case scenario for washington could be a disruption to oil supply our white house officials insist it's no big deal. explains they've been wrong before. saudi arabia hates the fact that he was didn't bomb syria saudi arabia did everything possible to make it happen and he didn't saudi arabia hates iran and any mentioning of a possible nuclear deal between the us and iran and washington and tehran are far
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from any deal really but even the talk irritates saudi arabia so saudi arabia decided to go public with all that imitation the saudi prince bandar bin sultan said there will be quote a major shift away from the u.s. and that it will affect arms purchases and oil sales and most recently citing a protest against the us saudi arabia refused at the u.n. security council so couldn't ally be turning into a foe i spoke with professor. the u.s. has invested a lot in the relationship with saudi arabia and now saudi arabia is right near the u.s. i mean talking to suppliers and all we hear is this alliance going well. by supporting saudi arabia saudi arabia and many of the gulf countries are probably the most undemocratic the most corrupt and they are really a liability and they have contributed to the sense of alienation between the.
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world so for saudi arabia specially mr bundy to take this position is a little bit astonishing. but i think i don't think that there will be a total disconnect but if there would be one it would be in the best interest of the us on the whole. the u.s. would not be associated with a country that is the generator of terrorism it will not be associated with a leader like bundy who is playing a major role in the bloody war going on in syria and supporting terrorists the u.s. now downplays this shift with saudi arabia possibly thinking that the saudis are not going to go too far but the u.s. has underestimated dynamic before with saddam hussein he was an ally of one point with a majority in afghanistan and other folks so in this case it all depends on how four
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saudi arabia is actually willing to go with this number in virginia i'm going to strike them all right in moscow i'm rory sushi and in qatar simple of rhymes can land you in jail a court has upheld a fifteen year sentence for a poet found guilty of insulting the ruler and inciting people to oust the government and the decision for the activist who was sympathetic to the arab spring has been condemned by rights organizations and they. are from human rights watch he says the case clearly has a political slant. what we've seen of the poms that were on board it onto the internet doesn't seem to be a saying that he's guilty of of these faces and of course you know these offenses are a country it's international standards of freedom of expression and we saw it it does seem to be a case that has a political slant to it unless you were i could see out of it the mountain in which he was treated pretrial he in addition to that he wasn't present for many of the
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original trial stations and five he wasn't even present for the fatal court of appeal decision which was a yesterday morning when i was you know a lot of pressure on both three and marching a lot of pressure on me make a lot of grammar and count i was doesn't have the same levels of domestic dissenters they do it's the same story the issue where they are getting pressures migrant workers' rights no point but generally speaking i think the international community can be a bit silent where the goals can sound and obviously. to some extent enables them to do as you see it to get away with some serious human rights violations. so a very special souvenir from iran to russia right there a copy of a cia spy drone tehran says it shot down two years ago if not more that story right now what are to be told to call including how the machine indeed was captured reverse engineered and be coded why is there at all to dot com also check this one out as well the rain from all bit european science satellite is expected to fall
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back to earth off to two and a half years of working over time it will split into more than fifty pieces but where they'll end up it's anybody's guess. maybe you. should open the car. to. everyone in my life that i care about their gold mine and then. i came to skin well. i was a national champion in track and field and also i was able to go in qualify for the olympic games. you know nine hundred eighty eight i started to experiment with that the drugs i had lost all the financial means that i. was really on the street.
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black market was. here the great. trick here. i went term i saved money to hire a hitman to shoot me dead from the next building or through the open window. i searched through the internet typing things like i'm looking for you i'm waiting for you before i wrote i'm waiting for you know i'm looking for you i didn't care at all what this man would be like deprived disabled ill i'll catch up with you know you want the battery is run out. i love everything about him i have grown to love every here everyone interesting. him actually be healthy years and other guys drink beer in a bench i've always promised that if she ever realizes it's too much for her and
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she decides to leave me i will accept her decision without criticism because that search. flight from moscow this is our teeth thanks for joining us today in its latest official statement on the n.s.a. spying in france the u.s. has. labelled allegations that it logged millions of phone calls a lie now this hasn't stopped the newspaper le monde publishing another report just about how america got the diplomatic upper hand by bugging computers at the u.n. and more than half a billion dollars was reportedly used to keep the so-called genie spying program running it allegedly sold millions of machines fire walls and routers infected in
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almost every corner of the world dominique de villepin who served as the country's prime minister is as well as the interior and foreign minister says the u.s. crossed the line with the sheer scale of its activities. we knew that. some practices were existed but the search and overall system this came as a surprise for everybody in fact what we are seeing today is the incredible privileges of the us administration over the control of the world system we knew that the us were controlling the financial system through the banking dominance of some big banks through the dollar currency reserve currency but controlling internet controlling the formation you know well this is a privilege in monopoly if we are going to follow the same direction then confrontation might be in the book or we also spoke to a civil rights activist norman solomon he thinks the u.s.
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is trying to undo the damage to its image but is not even thinking about changing its policies president obama is extremely adept at dancing through this kind of a firestorm and saying that he's willing to disclose and willing to be more forthcoming and he's willing to re-evaluate frankly he said that earlier this year when there was a big speech he gave in washington about the use of drones and yet we saw almost no change in actual policy once it could be measured so i think one way to put that in context is that after secretary of state kerry arrived in paris in the last day he told a news conference that he would not discuss intelligence matters so there's a lot of fog coming from the white house and the state department not a lot of substance by let's get to the os he was up there now some other headlines for you and brief the greek parliament has passed a law banning government funding to parties whose members are involved in criminal
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activity and this means that the golden dawn parties funding will be frozen leaders were charged in connection with the killing of an anti fascist musician. caused violent protests across the country and the party denies being a neo nazi movement despite its swastika like symbol also. in london's chinatown have stopped work making a racket as they marched through the streets in protest of police raids against illegal immigrants and they waved banners with slogans labeling the searches and racist and poorly targeted border control officials of raided more than a dozen businesses in the area in recent months. and bank of america says the us government has failed to produce any evidence to back up its lawsuit for mortgage fraud and the four week trial coming to an end the bank could be forced to pay a six billion dollars fine if found guilty by the jury the institution is accused
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of misleading lenders during the housing boom that led to the two thousand and eight mortgage crisis though some economists say the government is just searching for scapegoats. the banks that were responsible for the government actually looting the banks right now i mean how they have been overstated for probably a half a century is the root directory result of washington policy this is every u.s. . greatest thing ever the banking industry was sort of riding the wave they were looking for. and they found a. big surprise government backed. world. between israeli soldiers and locals now reported in the west bank city of ramallah it's off the troops killed a palestinian thought to be a member of a radical jihadist movement the man was shot dead while hiding in a cave from i.d.f.
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forces who say he played a key role in a televised bus bombing last november. so they are young attractive and have a whole pile of debts to pay off so some female university students in the u.k. are turning to pay for dating websites it's where men can lavish cash in expensive gifts on the girl of their choice but as artie's sarah further reports this modern approach to money making can have or rather unwanted consequences young pretty student seeks wealthy older man welcome to the world of sugar daddy dating where anything you want question. can apparently be yours at the click of a button websites like seeking arrangement link up young sugar babies like nineteen year old sarah with sugar daddies men who are willing to cough up some serious cash
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. and. be in reality there probably are. seven in the seeking arrangement launched recently in the u.k. students and to take taken to the concerts but that's not surprising given the rising cost of tuition fees for the controversial dating websites released the twenty british universities that have the highest number of students signing up see one of the top the list according to seeking arrangement survey eighty percent of relationships through the website some form of physical intimacy the remaining twenty percent claim to be platonic i spoke to the site's founder brandon wade about the criticism that this is another form of prostitution it's like the power of it's like
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a mother you think this is what i mean it's how you use the system and how you use the mind well it's a tool to find a better defined or it can be exploited by using the side to really explode people or as you say to do the illegal things the websites say they operate a robust system to weed out the gating and illegal activity and they kick off roughly one hundred members every day for violating the rules and if you're wondering by now what the payoff is my mom is hard and i was a prosecutor i said all this like she heard that she actually start. you. have to get. served. london or so we're coming to you live from moscow i'm real research stepping aside becomes i'll be modern she takes on the mainstream media in breaking the certain just a moment. series
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last chance is a day for the geneva conference or be arranged for the assad regime. from an empty chair syria's rebel oppositions on the ground are hopelessly divided the syrian political opposition in exile is divorced from the brutality on the battlefield so what can geneva two point zero four do achieve. we'll go to the. show thirty four countries spend over fifteen billion euros on faulty head says to each one hundred fifty million degrees with uncle mike to sell from st petersburg to france we travel in search of the song. we've got the future covered. choose your language. the holy week of you know if. someone. chooses to use the consensus you can.
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choose the opinions that you. choose the stories could impact the life choose the access to. the the. what's going on guys i'm having martin and this is breaking the set of guys it's almost all the way in so i decided to open the show with a good old fashioned story this one's about a senate bill called the cyber intelligence sharing and protection act or since. it is bill essentially makes tech companies illegally immune from sharing private user data with the u.s. government and the house passed this and it's a wet dream of the bill earlier this summer and the senate was all ready to give it could go ahead but then edward van helsing snowden started his closing one
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surveillance program at the other and celebs to spot once and for all that gas was at its back. and who's leading the charge to pass in the senate none other than senator dianne frankenstein. the knowledge of the help of n.s.a. director keith alexander who specially requested that the zombie bill be resurrected and as much as i wish that this was an urban legend to keep the snowden's the world up at night this is all the bills alive and well so it's up to us to bury it once and for all back in the ground where it belongs. it was a. very hard to take. your. life that had sex with her right there really. are.
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