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tv   Documentary  RT  December 29, 2013 6:29pm-7:01pm EST

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well let me give a sharp blow to the book but boy i wish there was a bell the test would call these stories that real close oh program us yes most of . you know that there is the problem is that the stuff he's telling us his lead in to any of it you see there. must use a cheat and there were a group of journalists who came. to let some people be in a plot against loft it could expose this he is a free man i said information with this i will print it i give you a letter but if you started it means that you will be the person that expressed to me tired of it and i need you and then i will get information but you can only give in that because you are the one of the control over their material because they are good because i can speak english when ever you want to be you can take the. police
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here and they will. keep me in business there is a really good living this is a heart. problem by that to tell you don't understand now because i know you there is a living here if you like can you just really care if he did it i did the u.s. is not going to get away with a lot and i would be upset because you know i make it. nobody's business they had to accept actually to get he was a member of the k.g.b. . and the nice things i could get them to do and about was under their eyes i would put the signature on for the key for america and my fish it's called all passion for jaws other just never i know exactly how they get their gun and my brother was persecuted in germany because he was critical of i do this but i don't give information or look for help to use as you say because he had warnings he came up with an out of the book this. ok a lot
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a lot of respect at the uk open. hi julie this is afghan journalist based in the northern afghanistan. i just met you handsome today in the morning and seven in purity myself base and that's not. i didn't know that. however when i had the initial e that having access to this information would help me an afghan journalist to disclose the face of warlords the face of those who committed crimes the face of those who committed genocide but later on when i knew that having this much else could be dangerous since afghanistan is a secure country and there is no guarantee for the life of a journalist therefore it made me a little bit impressed and it and it put me and it made me
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a little bit stressed. therefore. i don't know how to deal with this much else with a no these metal but important in order to help the journalists you know that in order to make able them to do their stories by having because all these documents are accrued by having these documents they can do their stories. one of the most important thing for a journalist is that they're facing lack of proof and information always. and by the newest alone thinking how to deal with. every day. the risk situation. can be. an example
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if you. see it every satiric. step it's going to be a papers. where you've got to. take. it at the next it's going to fix it make. anybody sedates just. get would be a very strong. pressure yeah as far as i knew the. u.s. forces are more than our. army their numbers and that's something. i can say this is another united states. in terms of having forces. you know that they have access to everything to every time ation to the afghan navy
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were. there i'm sure there are some some information. that to me and i can see is a report that what the daily u.s. wants. do they really wants to just to. just to continue this who are in you know that you have it's porous profer. i'm sure if a group of journalists came together. we would be able to handle it otherwise with only me i'm sure it's difficult for me. it's not an easy job. so.
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here's a cable about the treatment of president. bush the son of president george bush sr it's called meeting with the president. oral director including your diable the son of the forty first us president met with the president of turkmenistan. the purpose of the meeting was to explore for possible business opportunities in turkmenistan's oil sector they immediately recognized the emphasis of form over substance injured minister they were both surprised and impressed by the rapid pace of construction in the capital. the oil directors works to build a more personal relationship with the turkmen officials in the hope that it will lead to something called project. presidential meeting was featured on the front page of neutral turkmenistan newspaper in the following morning. this is the main office. building on. a lot of the
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most important newspaper in the country which is founded personally by that but. i. i i. i need to go on. but anything from it is not. really with the will we cannot. be of in case you may be a case in. you know almost no money is going. to hurt the least you. know so. yes. some people both are locking. down the young people who will be see all of the rules or should.
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follow the law you. see. the suit was. sleazy through all this those. who opposed the rule she. pulls. from here's my speech there forgive me for benefits but bush was made here. to bring us rather good luck to the beach inspiration you pull somebody pulls you up with dust and you'll be getting enjoy the question of what you would do that. doesn't see everybody who through but you're going to the ship of the air. through life. with good. starfleet who. will fill stories
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of glory over she's gone to school so who buys his troubles with the booze and he'll only once a suitable job but who doesn't look at least as negotiate that you should bring him out of the idea. of who would do you well for the blues if you will through fit to live through the illugi booth with you brother. you know who. lives here or should. go to work. or if you got fat you can still go to schools partly because of the overseas says. knows a lot of us is here and yeah if you got off easy is it ok if. a few more than us here but in your thirty's there. is
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a very near to death of public workers that they hope will see. you as you look at less as from a distance ok you thought it was for. sure screwed peachy keen. to keep the stuff we seem to see the gauge that is going to get it but also the good you would need us to get to get you so he she still does not get into hook up would be good for you that's not good i didn't do it when you guys could put it on the podium to keep us going. because it was you know this was debate that we trusted that we did digging into kind of stuff people docs would have snapped at me and must be just switching over slaves or that she was the booker who seemed good in the ship the ability be with reason you were small didn't see the full steam you. wrote you should have previously seen the sure mildred which may. seem your rights
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orchestrates you can consent to if you think you would be to. give up the idea of the. cheap cute kitten isn't right but yeah but he would. say he's going to be able models who can use a new student who was. in the movie g.c. yeah he was a runner. it's just you would you want to be i would go to. the entrance you know what do. you show us. spiritual would you believe that you should use the supplies you choose just to to look up to you could you wish you'd some good to. meet you do you. still feel that was.
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if you refuse economic up downs in the find out all day long to do your shanghai and the rest because like doing the case you will be if we can all. be a burglar and social science center just published a study suggesting that two thirds of muslims in western europe hold their religious roles of all the laws of the countries that believe that if you read the
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bible if you get if you go into christianity you find the sentence that you should obey god more than caesar. means religious will more important and higher more convincing those of the students of the very same thing that is now referred to the muslims. why is the price of gold so high. demand global demand do you think oldest money. know the value of the only place we have to live of the water that we need to survive it's not compared to i mean gold we're not going to eat gold we're not going to bait with gold. we're not going to drink up what clearly what amal is and
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is in a desperate economic situation absolutely right what we're running to do is say they're for any kind of economic development from the outside is going to be a benefit their only purpose is to extract as much money as possible to feed into the global financial system. with part of the geo political economic system that's extremely or split to do. first of all is a question whether mining should even be carried out altogether can it be done in a way which doesn't destroy people's lives resources environment and so on will you know those are pretty serious questions mining is not a what a moment problem it's happening in asia in africa and south america in central america in mexico and it's even happening in canada and the united states.
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the us i think these nice places to go on the right these people even me shouldn't think tristen for us i'm not trees this is the right place to propose that they call it here at john going that route just these particular people we're working with who the fuck all that here why why why do they do anything. why would they work with these chemicals why would they not work with these mold many of them for money yes and this needs to be said they do this for the money yeah but the i am why everybody has one thing well known what a liar it's why did you know that this year i am having said that i was joking. and the man you are dodging no not even with your silly ending this movie's judge and that it's a fact i'm just saying any should be we need to be concerned that we're not going around places saying we're better than you are because i've had this situation and
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i fucked off in years to there this is what i'd like to see this approach to the one where if you seem out of seeing that you you go to two people you mean open their doors you start out with them there's only room we can extend then when they have or this is a strong reaction you're like strong reaction when they said they went because the cables because they didn't only going to the first place it was no no you're watching all these who are you have you have quiet then you get a slightly different opinion then you don't get that you only get the response they want to get as opposed to show in the audience what they will say about these things do you not think that it is an interesting question to see if media around the world will do this and he will and he went on stealing of thing well that is an interesting question if it's an interesting question no two they are too scared to publish the way to go his argument in the morning with the rest of knowing or even if they see it there are many other great tears that missoni what walk walk or to
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what criteria are used to of an. interest newsworthiness know now that you can write a script every news organization that has a website has a website developer who can discuss. like that and they get free hits in google is very very it is very very profitable to publish cables because you don't have to write cable it's free stories. the point as far as i see it is that. there are boundaries to free speech in the same way as there are boundaries to our thoughts into our language and their . music between news to speak it is basically what we are dealing with and these boundaries that look differently in different countries but they are always exist in one way or another that's color your sense of or conformism or
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self-censorship or whatever it may be and we have a very unique opportunity to actually just show we're these boundaries are was necessarily mean that these boundary is better than that boundary they're really showing where i would have to look back down to that area but the thing is that people usually are annoyed with people or if you're unaware of where the boundaries are the easiest way of getting a hold of them is by asking about it and it was a well i cannot write about the king or kind of write about sex or whatever they are most often they like when i tell you that there are only about most of you know we say well we have no boundaries whatsoever yes and this is what you will get when you interview any journalist in the united kingdom or in brazil or in sweden or it ever again so what we have here is the tools in actually catching these boundaries if you push any eigenstates and they will have monies entering into yet what i and what i write all of them including what i lied. existing home.
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oh you know you. can come with me because just think over. what you'll see years for pretty. suspicious. that the guardian you got a paper that's been around nearly two hundred years. has completely sold the traditions of its international trade it's at the forefront of digital innovation with doing something that is almost unique in times and no one else that looks. very much struck. to establish that you are talking to me for a film which is documented. we're going to do there's the story don't you know
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how we roll out. there so this is not just me with will this is essentially your you don't agee you're right. yeah so here are some big surprise because we're going to. react to. the substantial. u.s. cables that why did you go for example it was fixed at. the u.s. government will sit there nations this week carol and the mafia lucky guy you are. the one to watch. it exceeded the more balls so why did you go with what i say many of the top developments upsidedown you can speak more tonight i guess and you know i don't
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guess. that. the the monocles i have seen the mound of being used extensively by people from. the former soviet rule. to protect her attention. to the slightest trace all of this. and so. see some of these people on board rich caps and millions on on five occasions now also when it's on their little table which sit in on. the telly and if you. are ready. for the record me. souls' you. see i was correct. to say this is
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a case of. now attention and you will regret it in. a great britain you know what is the loophole and curtains of the company can suit . to you and we will see what company. you did with that test. in the two thousand case that. doesn't prove it was not something that. could happen here we go to the easy easy and. did ten cost trying to do. that so that yes the norberg in this company. we're a part. of the area they're extremely interested in. an hour ago
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here. on the creation of every state. i have to. but it was some of them would be god you. got. to. be. all. over the age mocking them and it will become. one thing remained which was the name rough. it was the stop it. or. go forth and so i flipped all of this which made this rough. life. was the subject of a. pro memory. we had kind of group at the beginning of the series where we said we try to fix it. what we were trying to claim. while we.
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consult. your memory that they're all good is an. option for you so. among them an equal consideration. so. if your point is the couldn't. be more explicit in explaining. why we do things and. some nature you can't forgive. were you first of all i. got. you to believe it was not enough. we heard so it was decided that. the new york times would approach going across the room go separately we had. two sets of communication with the american one is not
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the embassy in london a little. to see if you will we will do the very much because we need or is. a channel through to you. and the second channel was a little set up but the state called all the agencies. run rate aim was to just go. into a new. good afternoon you probably have seen either in person or on the t.v. screens the. state party thing that we just finished i won't repeat everything i said at the start they are but two of the. most significant response to what has happened is. exactly what secretary clinton is doing in
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a stall or kazakhstan as we speak you know she is there working constructively on cooperation and security in a very important part of the world clearly the release of the authorized release of these documents you know. represents risk to the united states and to others with whom we collaborate. on this this is why we condemn what wiki leaks has done basically from kazakstan. through right in through here. to three most ministers we did your grocery in between i realize i'm going to be you as much as i really are there and i got up. there we. pulled the kind of or. from two different countries where the police material has been have been published but they're only looking from the
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outside without actually having any particular knowledge about it you get the impression that all these various. private u.s. institutions. have acted. from being pressured in one way or another by the u.s. government in order to block or flows of money in order that's not true that that is you know in the lizards we have is that is that is absolutely not true. in my time in government. at no time did government tell any private company what to do. i mean there's been rumors there's been suggestions of that and to be honest there's been no. evidence by those who question this you know it's with companies protect their own reputation it's not for the government to tell a company what it should or shouldn't do. they've taken actions because. they they
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see it as as in their interest to do this or that really how would you look at the affair the same thing were to happen to for example the new york times of the year of times who are all of a sudden they're. stopped from getting funds and they're without their offices closed i could hear it because hating a hypothetical that i can't follow your brain from harvard to go where they are in the exact same position as for example reagan in europe time decides to publish everything that they get no i mean no but that there is a very sharp distinction here. i mean. you have two actors who are in the business of communicating with a broader public. one after made clear the new york times and other publications we are going to report on what we have we want to do it responsibly and we want to do it in a way that. is is it respectful. of
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the danger that this might cause to specific individuals and the new york times voluntarily withheld certain documents and certain names because they recognized as we did that the publication of these documents of publication these names would put real life human beings at risk. live play live.
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live live. live . the year that was two thousand and thirteen and what has made a memorable in this edition of. despair .
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is now thought a terror attack in the russian city of volgograd could have been carried out by a man fifteen were killed by a suicide bomber targeting the city's main railway station. and this week's top news in turkey riot police crackdown on protesters demanding the government step down after high ranking corruption scandal. that shaped the world in two thousand and thirteen a we review the revelations by former n.s.a. contractor edward snowden which exposed america's mass surveillance. we also talk to wiki leaks founder julian assange. and his new media stan road movie where he.

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