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tv   News Weekly  RT  December 1, 2013 6:00am-6:30am EST

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she chooses really shouldn't why you should care about human to. dish is why you should care only on. a suit in the long down and these are the latest pictures from kiev where a person has to have retaken vicenzo be pretty uncommon so just and day after violent clashes with police over the government's decision to snub a landmark trade deal with the where bringing you live pictures from kiev right now . and a roundup of the other headlines this week tough sanctions of diplomatic action while powers agree big nuclear deal with iran is a breakthrough but differ on what made it possible meanwhile. this agreement is very much more dangerous place a real break our partners in the region schafer. the obama administration's facing
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pressure from skeptics under broad as the deal comes under fire from washington and tel aviv. we would call a halt to damaging wissmann support the seas are pushing so many people into the fold the tea corporation tax cutting of free child care and raising the minimum wage scotland outlines how life would be better outside the u.k. comparing the ground for next year's independence about. the latest news on the week's top stories and it was starts in ukraine protests as there have broken through the metal bahrain around the sitter's central square as they regroup after clashes were. police on this saturday and you're watching live
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pictures right now from the scene also she's a bond mass demonstrations with the upcoming month protesters in ukraine are demanding both the president and the government step down in response to the country's leadership rejecting a trade deal with the e.u. the country's top officials now say they're prepared to boost further efforts to integrate with the u. however they won't against a further provocation in the streets alexei here chefs he reports not on the trigger banned rest that. from smile still hold startles after kiev said last week would not be signing a free trade pact with europe e.u. officials were jumping out of their skin to persuade president going to call the church. think or. you could see repeated politicians were not too happy to hear the great in president citing economic troubles and as it became clear kiev was not going to
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sign the deal at this point with a violent dispersal of growth just in the capital that's when europe assumed a different tone where you set aside short term political calculations. and we may not give in to external pressure not the least from russia such tactics from europe which have been accusing russia of pressure in ukraine not to sign the free trade bank raised some eyebrows they should really really stop using the methods of the caldwell they're blackmailing ukraine add that to the e.u. offering no compensations to going to potential economic losses which could have been catastrophic in practical terms it would be a disaster for the ukrainian people it would mean gas prices going up the prices going up unemployment going up the industrialisation so i think really didn't have a choice the e.u. deal is a very bad one ukraine already has a staggering foreign debt of hundred thirty six billion euro and just more denies
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the factories to standards would have cost a staggering one hundred billion or more with the people in the street scared little about such implications if we deserve to be in the euro crisis the deal would have allowed us to get better education in europe during the week e of central square was the stage of the mass protest of those supporting your integration opposing president acknowledges decision not to sign the euro association deal in vilnius and even in a typically violent dispersal of their week long sit in on friday night with dozens detained and injured did not stop the protesters began to call it still insisting the deal with the e.u. will happen most likely in early twenty fifteen but after riot police come to peaceful protesters thousands are converging on the capital kiev to join the opposition's calls for unocal which to hand over the reins alexy recess deonte reporting from kiev in ukraine. annie is why the ukrainian government isn't out of its head right now thousands of protesters as well as the opposition inside the
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parliament want to move the country inside europe but the government finds the notion premature saying brussels offer does not include such pacts as membership and privileges most europeans enjoy found as a believe that law. if inside the union would be cheaper seemingly attractive the government warns this comes at the expense of destroying the country's own economy and getting little compensation for that the opposition still insists should break free of the pressure coming from moscow but close economic ties with russia including the free trade zone a shared business landscape and increased exports are pulling the states back together and while e.u. officials say moscow is playing an unfair game analysts patrick young believes brussels is just diverting attention away from its own savings. if the european union's leaders whether individually or collectively started admitting to their shortcomings there'd be no end of problems wouldn't there i mean look at the european union massive run down employment throughout the course of the entire
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union we've got things like fifty percent plus of youth unemployment in several mediterranean countries they have a euro currency project which is a fiasco built on sand by the sort of deluded technocrats who believe that they know the best thing for all people and therefore realistically the only thing the european union can try to do is keep billions storming everybody russia who cares because ultimately the european union that started and has rendered wonderful supranational trevor project is ultimately falling apart at the seams because it has become itself a crumbling soviet style empire which in many cases replicates some of the more ridiculous facets of the old soviet union.
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earlier this week international headlines were dominated by a historic nuclear deal with the run hammond out in geneva by six world powers to run was promised a modest relief to sanctions in return for scaling back its nuclear program but though the country's managed to set aside their differences to reach the breakthrough agreement they do still differ on what made it possible while that from playboy. it's a deal that's eluded diplomats for a decade. and as the crucial make or break iran letelier talks continued into the night details of how they were going were leading the journalists camped out in geneva so we waited and waited and waited while diplomats from six world powers and iran inched their way closer to an historic breakthrough than after sixteen hours a tweet from the e.u.'s top diplomat a deal had been done the six negotiating powers agreed to recognize iran's right to
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peaceful nuclear energy including its right to nuclear enrichment on the condition that its program is placed under strict control by the i.a.e.a. . as we received word of the agreement we got details to iran had agreed to reduce its uranium enrichment from twenty to a maximum of five percent used for u.s. centrifuges while halting construction of a new reactor near the town of iraq. throughout this long list of concessions iran's foreign minister still had a smile on his face and its hand he won for his country a partial easing of sanctions allowing tarantulas gain control of billions of dollars worth of much needed funds in foreign banks we believe that it is the sanctions that have brought us to this negotiation and ultimately today more significant negotiation to follow for
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a comprehensive agreement others have stressed that it wasn't the stress of more punitive measures but diplomacy that won the day over the night in the case of these talks the fact that that the iranians have shown time after time that there is no evidence that iran's nuclear program is anything but peaceful is something that has been ignored by the western media and western governments but this despite all that iran's resilience has forced these countries take south. enrichment and again the russians and the chinese have played a very constructive role this due to the good in the super good of the agreement is based on the concept forward by the russian president vladimir putin iran's new president hassan rouhani is also seen as having played a crucial role in making the deal possible he came to power less than three months ago pledging to improve iran's relations with the west and i don't think sanctions played as much of a role as the recognition by the united states and britain and other
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countries that we need to engage iran because iran is becoming increasingly influential it is only an interim agreement in six months time well now it sounds iran is set to return to the negotiating table but after ten years failed. to reach it scientists in the middle of the night it's a game changer polyploid a hot seat to meet. in the very first moments after the nuclear deal with iran was reached it was clear there grim and left much trained for interpretation. iranian. enrichment program will continue this first step does not say that iran has a right to enrichment and was fired to i had times correspondent path to ask about ahead believes the u.s. is time in the middle of a delicate balancing act. this being the war has started at three
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am in geneva and it's going to be going for another six months kerry had to say that so he could of peace the israel lobby the u.s. congress and the hobby petro dollar law of the us not to mention some neal cons in the west as well still very thoughtful and in iran it's different they are saying we still have our right to enrich uranium and it's correct because that deal keeping in reaching your reading of the size percent for the next six months for the moment we have a breakthrough it's going to last six months there will be all sorts of interest to try to pull bard this deal but for the moment we have diplomacy in action something that we haven't seen especially between us and iran for thirty four years and despite hands on handshakes and geneva the deal with iran left many outside the
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room unhappy in creating president obama's opposition at home and america's closest ally in the middle east then attack our reports now on the skepticism. today that diplomacy opened up a new path toward a world that is more secure and flying in the face of president obama what was cute in geneva. last night in small ways sort of agreement. it's a story in state. it's not new a safer place in an environment where israel as well as many u.s. lawmakers don't think that iran should develop nuclear technology at all the obama administration had to engage in diplomatic acrobatics to both acknowledge iran's right to peaceful nuclear energy and not acknowledge it at the same time we approach these negotiations with a basic understanding of iran like any nation should be able to access peaceful nuclear energy but because of its record of violating its obligations iran must
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accept strict limitations on its nuclear program that make it impossible to develop a nuclear weapon the scope and role of iran's enrichment as is set forth in the language within this document says that iran's peaceful nuclear program is subject to a negotiation and to mutual agreement. despite the official's attempts to appease the hawks punches are flying security cameras it looks like we've tacitly agreed that they will be enriching for commercial purposes down the road so i think you're going to see on capitol hill again a bipartisan effort to try to make sure that this is not the final agreement another senator marco rubio called the deal quote a blow to our allies in the region who are already concerned about america's commitment to their security and i think a lot of people both in the middle east and on capitol hill are very concerned that
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this interim deal becomes the new norm opponents of the deal in washington and abroad are already working not too late and survived the six month trial the obama administration is walking on egg shells before congress israel and its allies in the golf as it's trying to convey a carefully worded message which is you cannot threaten war all the time in washington i'm going to check out. i was coming up on aussie international a very unusual place to start. showing me peace for all of it to find out what it takes to graduate from europe's only university of grave digging. plan guns bones undead this trade financing all poddle the daily routine and in a couple of minutes we'll look at how the troubled countries far into yet the ousting of an on like a toughie. if
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you're thinking about an alcoholic drink associated with russia it's probably not going to be one that springs into your head but they've been making it here on the black sea coast for more than two thousand kids and there's an industry which really can compete with the best the rest of the world has to offer i've come to meet some of the people going the greats and to see if i can find out the secret to the perfect.
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this is the. national welcome bog the tension between edinburgh and london rose a no show this week as this country's government issued a blueprint for independence ahead of next september's referendum we would also call a halt to damaging wissmann support of pushing soo many people into poverty and the six hundred seventy page document outlines plans to cut corporation tonks expand free childcare and raise the minimum wage london strongly opposes the idea of separation crunching with edinburgh issues ranging from current sea oil reserves
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and e.u. membership tests. should scotland be an independent country it's a six word question that requires a simple yes or no but breaking a three hundred year old unit could hardly be simple in the scots are not taking it lightly as it stands only about thirty percent of scots say they will vote for independence a figure those of the yes camp hope to increase by presenting that much anticipated white paper which a scottish national party says has the answers to all the questions about it dependents the prime minister david cameron and goes the ball into the no cab and says that in the car this is laden with risks and problems with warnings on just about everything scotland wants to keep the sterling pounded a currency union with the u.k. an idea dismissed by westminster taxes and debt the no suggests deeper and higher taxes e.u. membership london says scotland could forget about it the trident nuclear program david cameron claims getting rid of it is a bad idea in case of
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a north korean nuclear attack and there might even be roaming charges of mobile phones if the split happens at the list goes on it's dubbed project fear by the yes camp and they accuse the government of scare mongering scots into voting no and they'd says the white paper will prove. that independence would bring about a jobs and the thriving economy serves that resonate with voters cameron argued that an independent scotland will have to negotiate in the future for the things that house right now a law that is signaling that it won't be making it easy for the crux of the matter goes back to economics a recent poll found out that if independents made the five hundred pounds richer more than hot spots were growth. reporting from london i'm tess or cilia. more than forty people were killed in libya and stay in a blast in military a gun you have been trying to steal ammunition but all of them died in the explosion of militias often a tug on the bases in the country and government troops fighting with armed gangs
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is a part of everyday life there freelance journalist reports now from tripoli. this is really a lot there are no fourteen people were killed and more than fifty wounded in a recent clash between islamic militant group and start at sharia and the military says a report by the interior ministry tripoli is witnessing security problems to over forty people were killed and more than two hundred injured at a rally last week in tripoli as protesters clashed with the militias a to control of a number of government buildings the gunmen gave into the demands of the libyan authorities and left tripoli but refused to lay down arms reportedly natives of the city of misrata they were among the first to seek to remove the gaddafi regime in general the security situation in libya remains unstable really be as deputy intelligence chief more stuff on north recently kidnapped outside tripoli's international airport. believe bin army has been struggling to control armed groups that took
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part in the overthrow of the country's former leader colonel gadhafi and according to some reports there's up to seventeen hundred of them all with different goals and libya is also facing an uncontrolled flow of arms estimates say there are around four hundred weapons depos with only twenty of them belonging to the government so about three thousand missiles that could bring down civilian airliners have gone missing that were two affairs expert on the as a care way so as the situations not being held by the whole of weapons coming into the country from outside the government is totally incapable of reading in these militias they're not going to do so and then of course we still have the ongoing role of the united states and these other western states who are continually going to fear in their internal affairs of libya and this of course could cause even more cost the nation and the country because many of these militia groups even though they were against
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gadhafi they still do not support the u.s. or nato interfering in the intro affairs of libya at this stage. our website for you wells on fire the russian city of all is going to siberia has witnessed an unusual sight an empty blazing bonser rolling down the road had a line from all footage and all the details there. and also there you'll find a story of how british officials systematically destroyed secret files that included information on the abuse and torture of locals in former colony. so think a fully functioning gun is something you simply can't make at home while it seems it's all about to change as three d. printing makes enormous strides in a fortnight visited a company that specializes in creating three d. guns but some experts say it won't be long before you can do it yourself.
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red's shooting range in austin texas is normally packed with gun enthusiasm. today the difference is that these men are firing rounds with a do it yourself firearm the world's first three d. printed metal gun we wanted to showcase the abilities of what direct metal can do eric much later is a project coordinator at solid concepts of company specializing in three d. printing game prints or in the arts he was granted an exclusive tour of their austin facility which boasts ten three d. industrial printers and a glimpse of our technological future these are all the three d. printed parts that went into making this car after getting a federal firearms license the company used a process called direct metal laser centering to produce this browning nine hundred eleven pistol with three d. printed metal gone has fired over one thousand rounds in the meantime solid concepts has manufactured its second nineteen eleven firearm solid concepts insists
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the stainless steel firearm they've introduced to the world can't be replicated by hobbyists these machines start at six hundred thousand and go up to a million dollars they need to be in industrial environments they require more electricity than is available in residential areas and it will be years before metal printers become available on the consumer market not exactly the world's first mini metal maker has already been created and with laser centering patterns set to expire in february it's predicted that metal desktop printers will hit the consumer market before you know it as the world has learned the convenience of technology has a downside we all loved the internet cell phones e-mail and social media before finding out that our beloved data is being monitored and stored by the n.s.a. . the astonishing capabilities of three d. metal printers is no law. a secret. so when they become
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a part of our household tap along side the microwave and flat screen t.v. . what people choose to physically create in the privacy of their home. will be beyond the control of the u.s. government arena point r.t. texas. and you can go to our website for expert analysis on how three d. guns could inspire a new gun control debate in america. whether that recession heads digging round for jobs is a tough task but there's one school in europe that's offering is a future in a business that's unlikely to ever die out on a one to the continent's only a kind to me for him to take. a small town college a class like any other except for the coffin in the middle of the room that is the students i'm learning how to be undertake is i want to work where i help people
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through what is a very difficult time when my grandmother died she funeral directors didn't do a great job and i saw the distress that caused my family this isn't a job it's a calling. the college in northern bavaria is the only one of its kind in europe each year they take about five hundred students on a three year course rain or shine they are drilled for every eventuality needs to form but. the bodies down all the guests have left but the police call and say this lady may have been poisoned and must be exude how do we get her out of there any ideas yeah. a lot of the courses spent on the job at local funeral parlors despite the onus being on professionalism it doesn't leave the participants immune to the realities. it's tough sometimes you know if there's a kid lying there or someone my age and it hits you how fragile life can be the
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students don't just spend their time digging graves they also receive extensive studies in a not to me as well as lessons in how to deal with the deceased using some rather realistic props also the correct way to measure on build a coffin including those designed to fit the regulations for international travel. and perhaps most importantly a lot of work is done to make sure the students can be sensitive to the needs of a grieving family if a meeting or to be hero we aim to make sure that. they have the skills to work anywhere or even set up their own enterprise when they leave our gates their professional funeral directors which will be welcome news to any of their future customers because you only get one chance to get it right these are all over germany. and now back to our top story this weekend hundreds of protest
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as have retaken the central square in the ukrainian capital as they regroup after clashing with police on saturday and you're watching live pictures right now from the scene police have fled central kiev for now as demonstrators broke through barriers actually it's a place in ukrainian and european flying on a large christmas tree big constructed in the middle of the independence square the opposition is calling for a revolution saying it's taken the campus so authorities are banned mass demonstrations and care for the upcoming month protest as untrain are demanding the president and the government step down in response to the country's leadership snubbing a trade deal with the e.u. and we're bringing you live pictures from kiev right now and we'll be keeping you posted on this story as well. and coming up next our reporter on the secrets of making a good russian why. i
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hate to be a downer but i really think the olympics of last of me. and the past when there was the cold war it was like a battle between two ideologies taking place in the abstract and the nine hundred thirty six olympics nazi pseudo science their self proclaimed superiority was put on trial for the whole world to see and spent the olympics having the majority of the countries on earth participating they're now horribly horribly bland one could argue that they have become a great way for countries to show off their ex used to build up some infrastructure by i think this is a big misconception let's look back to the two thousand lympics and beijing yet china has really developed in the last twenty years but the deal it picks really teach us anything about this country with
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a radically different political system or anything about their ancient culture or the way they think of the way they live no nothing at all all we saw were some flags and some pandas that rather unique stadium which was mostly the work of a swiss company yeah i hate to say i think the olympic flame is kind of burnt out over the years although i have to admit that saying the torch in the space was kind of neat i think that when and if the world ever becomes an ideological battle ground again then the olympics will become worth watching but for now it's just generic sports from generic countries a generic stadiums but that's just my opinion. but i see coast as one of russia's top tourist.

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