Skip to main content

tv   Headline News  RT  July 14, 2014 9:00am-9:30am EDT

9:00 am
unfortunately doesn't give a. mission to teach creation why it should care about. this is why you should care only. army and self defense activism battle first. pour on the shell shock civilians. in gaza scenes of destruction and terrified palestinians bombing but israel's prime minister with public backing only to step up the offense. and britain beware your internet surfing and chatting about who is stored for up to a year is government to rush through a resurrected snooping chart. five
9:01 am
pm in moscow good to have you with us on our he international our top story ukraine's army and anti-government forces locked in fierce battles to control the city of lugansk in the east the main fighting taking place near the city's airport this video showing kiev activists apparently shelling government troops earlier both sides currently claim control over the strategic area. a massive military convoy also reportedly approaching the lugansk region up to eighty tanks there an anti government forces can be seen maneuvering their own hardware to respond president poroshenko ordered a change of tactics in what he calls anti terror operations across the east this week here borders and protect civilians. trapped in the middle of the middle of it all are more than a million civilians shelling air raids and fighting laying waste to cities villages and towns in the u.s. worry if an ocean reports from logan's where she spent
9:02 am
a day with an ambulance crew. they actually don't need to turn on the siren ambulances are almost the only cars on the empty rows of lugansk and recent days have left a message and see workers easier than ever before. cameras are now going to send our. private house up for the residential areas. eat fish yeah. through a narrow street we enter with looks like a densely populated area locals say at least six shells landed here just minutes ago that if you look at the capital of the well in the back of the movie going to doesn't let you walk on this time it seems no one was killed after that but everyone has to work on their part of said goodbye it was a quark put a different look at what else are the good clothes do you look who do you just go
9:03 am
oh what just when you look towards the bugs and with the school you call you look at the logo of those who do the people who we do the work to do you need you really the only true religion is the removal of the three who consider themselves area of new people coming north. cravats house is still a. little weaker a local told us they still could be unexploded mines here smokeless the new guinea is not so that you'll see. just the arsenal blue note book i was also one of them but much of the bomb didn't call for more than what we thought was aiming up ardelia spoken with those women able to show the police and their children will look up what was in many of them would people be doing. this i see them as you must also see the multitude of warehouses is still burning no one knows whether anybody steere inside we find out that one man was taken. and buy another
9:04 am
ambulance and you'll look after the telecom and he's the one who needs it i decided to leave that to the state i gave it to the. public. at an advanced regional hospital we find the man has suffered multiple burns and miss our wounds but doctors say he will leave. the ambulance received another call this time no siree the doctor states because they could be targeted we're on our way to the area of fighting it took us less than seven minutes to arrive at the scene but it was still too late this young fighter died seconds after doctors arrived we rushed to the next address another shell another destroyed home we hear that there woman was killed here but before we learn any further details
9:05 am
the air raid siren makes us run to a nearby basement. most of them have been abandoned for years but recently people have reopened them and this is where we hear what happened position where we are right now a little a little on the whole caught on the scene and while the conflict continues to rage scenes like these are becoming an every day reality. nation otieno our team in eastern ukraine maria posting updates on the situation or dansk on her twitter feed follow her she chronicles life under shelling and seen. on sunday a russian man was killed by a shell fired from ukrainian territory that landed in a small border village in russia killing the father of four he reportedly bled to death in front of his family while two other women were seriously wounded his visibly distraught daughter described what she saw.
9:06 am
he. used to do you. used to. spit at kiev insists it's not to blame but rather self defense fighters who fired the show there have been reports that russia might answer with targeted strikes if the shelling continues but the kremlin how to dismiss those as untrue dot com for the full details. no respite for the people of gaza in israel's now week long anti terror operation thousands of fled with the number of palestinians reaching killed at reaching one hundred seventy two most of them civilian the u.n. says thirty two of them are children and cause situation in the region devastating and predictable fear is in gaza for r.t. talking with some of the victims' relatives on the night after more than one hundred rockets were fired from gaza israel targeted a home belonging to the albats family the target was time. to direct
9:07 am
a general of gaza's police force who himself survived and remains in critical condition he was lucky to be among the forty two wounded and not the eighteen killed at gaza's main hospital was seventy year old name one of the surviving injured. dad. who was said. russia lost three of her children in the targeting and. when i know this is. what. most of. the strikes took place at eleven pm mohammed lives just over the road from the batch family. saying evening prayers at the mosque while they were crying they realized that the area was becoming more dangerous and left to continue their present home when they got home the bombing
9:08 am
started and israel has used a policy of issuing warnings in some cases before making its targeting warnings either via s.m.s. fire calls in some cases leaflets but often roof knocking that is issuing warning drone strikes on the roof of the building before targeting it however in this case there was no warning of any kind and residents are adamant that israel must have known that over fifty people were in this area when it struck the way that was perpetrated it's a variation of basic principles of international law it's official is very clear on this there should be principles to be preserved professional a-t. discrimination and humanity and nothing of these prisoners have been respected by the israeli army i asked a government spokesperson whether the targeting was justified given that israel's at war with hamas and is known to target the police everybody knows that the police
9:09 am
is a seven work and it's helping the people service for the people he wasn't actually since this conflict began last the health ministry counts eleven such incidents when family homes have been targeted with inhabitants and signed. israel's november two thousand and twelve operation did not see an israeli ground invasion it ended after eight days with a ceasefire but it did not fully eradicate the masses rocket capability now israel's pm says it is a must for israel to stop all rocket fire from gaza and that they don't know how long the campaign will continue given the daily loss felt by palestinian civilians here people fear how this conflict will evolve howry fear. we spoke with an expert from the islamic university of gaza who believes that the civilian fatalities could have been avoided had israel wanted. the images that we
9:10 am
see on t.v. screens are prove that basically it is when it is targeting palestinian civilians and i cannot really understand how israel can justify that if the israelis wanted to hurt him in a thousand of those who are responsible for the launching of rockets against israel the thousand villages they are able to basically do without without their injuring palestinian civilians these cries must be investigated by the international community because they are not that israel is violating international humanitarian law. israel says nearly a thousand rockets have been fired at them by hamas since the offensive began a week ago this video showing palestinian rockets being fired at the city of tel aviv israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu says he is ready to use all means necessary to stop the militant attacks that hundred stepping up proper preparations for a possible ground invasion as well policy or find out what people in tel aviv think the effects. most israeli supported the military's airstrikes of
9:11 am
a gaza seeing it as a legitimate response to defend the country's borders but at the same time people here are afraid i'm dome anti missile defense system into around ninety percent of rockets it's that ten percent that remains that has seen some never misses who could accept to receive myside just like this without doing the thing it's not possible i think very sad really very sad that i think that the israelis don't need this kind of life and really cared about their with being. i just i don't know how to feel about israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has so he scored political points with this military offensive even the opposition inside his unity government supports the military strikes although they are calling for a diplomatic solution there is of course a very cool voice inside israeli society who now wants to see all gazans killed they will be the ones at the forefront. of calling for
9:12 am
a ground offensive i hope so that now they're going to do define and define instead about entering those three i being that they should do something really radical because they deemed that in the they giving them like too much time like they have the whole time to send more. but most israelis make the distinction between hamas that rules and the ordinary civilians who live there. i think there also needs to be an opening or some kind of hope for the palestinian residents when all of this is over because if at the end we're back to square one it means we didn't do much at all meanwhile israel's aerial strikes continue and people here live in fear of the next rocket fire police say on t.v. tel aviv israel's offensive has caused public anger around the world with nash rallies held in the u.k. australia and france protests were peaceful for the most part though appropriateness for the demonstration in paris turned violent crowds attacked two
9:13 am
synagogues trapping about one hundred people in the side for a time as the conflict in flames between israel and palestine keep on top of r.t. dot com for the developments and remembered a fellow followed reporter already fear on twitter. stay with us as we had to brazil world cup fever is stepping aside for big business between brics countries. history is never really dead as long as it's with us the start of the first world war one hundred years ago is a case in point in numerous ways the beginning and conclusion of that conflict shapes our world today. choose your language. of choice we can with no intervention they still some of us. choose to use the concerns to. choose the opinions that degrade to.
9:14 am
choose the stories that in time good night choose be access to often. with the economic downturn the final. day belonged to the new york sang night and the rest because i think the case you'll be every week long. interview.
9:15 am
i know c.n.n. the m s m b c news have taken some slightly but the fact is i admire their commitment to cover all sides of the story just in case one of them happens to be accurate oh. that was funny but it's closer to the truth than the might think. it's because one whole attention and the mainstream media works side by side the joke is actually on we're going to be coming back. at our teen years we have
9:16 am
a different approach to the ok because the news of the world just is not this funny i'm not laughing dammit i'm not. ok. i'm ok. you guys talk to the jokes well handled it makes sense to me but i've got to. thanks for staying with us seventeen minutes past the hour if you're watching us from britain you better watch what you post online it's all about to go into the intelligence archives down to a new emergency law being pushed by the government to allow security agencies to store user data for up to a year ali boyko has the details. the u.k. prime minister says britain meads these emergency laws that force telecommunications companies to hold wreck or words of customers data because back in april the european court of justice scrapped an existing law that already forced
9:17 am
companies to do just that on the grounds that it infringed human rights so the british government wants to rush through its own law david cameron says that telecoms firms are just weeks away from deleting customer information ministers say that would have serious consequences for police and counter terror operations sometimes in the dangerous world in which we live we need our security services to listen to someone to read the e-mails to identify and disrupt a terrorist plot as prime minister i knew of examples we're doing this to stop a terrorist attack according to the mobile phone providers will have to store data on who contacted who under way for twelve months so that means your message is websites you visited and even the places you've been so you with their recorded on geo location apps like facebook well all be retained and anyone who's followed to
9:18 am
the snowden revelations even briefly will know that we already have huge parts of massive violence here in the united kingdom and we have a program called mastering the internet and sake but in fact this is not protected us people have still become radical right to cologne just. these palaces disproportional its tongue all of sit turns all of us from citizens into suspects the law is being rushed through parliament and could be in force before the week is out but perhaps one small consolation for its opponents the regulations will automatically expire in twenty sixteen which means politicians will have to re-examine the measures all over again in two years' time. london and as a whistleblower edward snowden seriously doubts the need for such an emergency law in an exclusive interview to be published in britain's guardian newspaper snowden
9:19 am
says he's worried about a lack of public debate on an issue that will touch every citizen editor of politics dot co dot u.k. believes leaders want to speed up the approval of the law to evade parliament. you do of course want to be protected from terrorists and extremists at the same time you also need some protection from your own state from your own government and or third tarion governments which exist of course across the west as they do across asia and many other regions will tend to go to the absolute limits of that powers in tracking their citizens and but what we've really seen from the last few years is that what i've been or you put down to monitor the amount that you are surveyed by your own government they will go up to the absolute nimitz of what that nora downs so yes we need protection absolutely from terrorists and some aspects of this legislation would provide that but we also deserve some protection from our own governments and from their insatiable desire to snoop on our own private activities this suggestion that they have some enormous image and see that they're about to get cut off from all of this information that peta followers and terrorists will run free doesn't really stand up to scrutiny the understanding among and among
9:20 am
a lot of campaigns is actually this is being forced through very quickly virus secret deal done behind closed doors between the three party leaders in order to just get it down get it on the statute book with a minimum of scrutiny and with a minimum of parliamentary debate. meanwhile britain's intelligence services found itself in the dock accused of illegal snooping activities the full story on a website where you can also learn about tougher rules for the u.k. cops. officers being encouraged to snitch on each other if they break their new code to read about the do's and don'ts on line. and sun block or hail blocks or freaky blast of wintry weather leaving siberian sun but the sun may there is at a loss to check out the great video and more at our team dot com. right the sea. search string. and i would think that you're.
9:21 am
on a recorder's. instrument. in the the in. one team's win is another team's heartbreak and for argentinian fans left despondent by the world cup defeat final that could mean trashing buenos aires here's how the argentine capital look after the final whistle smash windows wrecked cars dozens of people injured in mass arrests riot police deployed water cannons and tear gas to disperse crowds of angry and upset fans. germans getting fired up too but in a different way as you might expect here they are in berlin after what's been a miserable rising week oh football for them culminating in their team coming the
9:22 am
world champions after their win over argentina. the world cup may have come to an end in brazil but the country has another major international event up next the brics summit gathering the leaders of the top six developing nations russia one of them and looking to bolster economic ties with a bloc brazil in particular paul scott has the details. brazilian russian cooperation is expected to be strength in joining president putin's latin america tour but why is brazil such an important strategic ally for russia well brazil is latin america's largest economy it's twice the size of second placed mexico trade between the two countries last year reached five and a half billion u.s. dollars and they are hoping that that figure is soon doubled brazil on to russia also have similar stances on n.s.a. surveillance following edward snowden's revelations brazilian president dilma rousseff has proposed setting up a brazilian internet which will protect latin american countries from u.s.
9:23 am
snooping well from hanoi president putin flies to force a laser in the north of the country for the brics summits of the bric summit of the five nations that's brazil russia india china and south africa during that summit a nother round of talks is expected on the possibility of a brics development bank worth one hundred billion u.s. dollars which is going to be seen as an alternative to the international monetary fund so it's clear that is plenty to discuss for the brazilian and russian leaders stock market analyst david kuo thinks the formation of a new bank between developing countries is likely to help expand the block as a whole don't lead when you have a look at the i.m.f. and even the world bank i mean the two organizations tend to be controlled by the leaders in the west and many of the developing country particularly british countries i've seen it before to be let down to believe they need to be able to have a bank of the river and say how can we have
9:24 am
a bank that will look after the needs of our people having walked during this very elite club of colonies is that they're even born. in kenya colombia i mean these were actually sort of made very interesting additions to to the to the brits . car bomb explosions in mainly shiite neighborhoods in baghdad have killed at least seven people leading our world update today deadliest attacks striking the so-called green zone where many government offices and foreign embassies are located it's the largest attack on the capital in recent weeks as iraq plunges deeper into chaos followed by the deadly islamist uprising that. an unprecedented operation underway to refloat the coast to couldn't cordie a cruise liner which sank after the off the italian island of giglio in two thousand and twelve killing thirty two people it's an environmentally risky process greenpeace warning that the whole could break apart allowing decaying elements of the vessel to leak into the sea the ship's captain is on trial for manslaughter and
9:25 am
for abandoning ship charges he denies. north korea has fired about one hundred shells into the waters near the maritime border with the south after conducting rocket tests sunday south korean media saying shells are presumably from multiple rocket launch systems a u.s. aircraft carrier recently entered the waters near the korean peninsula for joint naval drills with the south and japan which has angered north korea. rocket attacks in egypt's sinai peninsula have killed a soldier and seven civilians the first missile landing near a supermarket two others striking a security compound more than twenty people injured rebel groups operating in sinai have targeted egypt's security forces the overthrow of mohamed morsi last year. coming your way next on r t international stay with us.
9:26 am
if there's anything we're afraid of in the modern western world isn't al qaeda or aids or something like that it's words just words especially on the internet morning radio shock jock in the cumia from the opie and anthony show has been fired for a massive twitter rant that he made against a woman who believe that the radio host was taking mocking photographs of her and got aggressive with them who may claim to just be taking pictures of time square now normally what you do outside of work shouldn't matter but with public personalities i can see how people want them to have good behavior all the time but the problem is that guys like him are put on the airwaves to have bad behavior what does the sirius x.m. company expect from people they put on air to be wild and raunchy this is typical corporate boardroom mentality well we want morning gigi's to be really crazy and shocking but not too crazy and shocking hey i don't have a horse in this race i actually think the opie and anthony show is pretty dismal but when i see someone getting fired for wacky shock jock stuff that is in
9:27 am
a way kind of part of his job well it just seems very hypocritical to me but that's just my opinion. told you my language as well but i will only react to situations i have read the reports but. it was a no i will leave that to the state department to comment on your latter point i'm . sick yes a car is on the docket. no. thank you no more weasel words. when you fade a direct question be prepared for a chase when you know you should be ready for a. pretty tough speech a little different to my. do we speak your language or not advance. news programs and documentaries and spanish what
9:28 am
matters to you breaking news a little tuna to angle the stories. you hear. the choice i'll teach spanish to find out more visit. all tito it's comb. there's a media lead us so we leave that maybe. by the sea potions to cure the play your party there's a. question is that no one is asking with the guests that you deserve answers from it's all on politicking only on our t.v. .
9:29 am
hello and welcome to cross talk where all things are considered on peter lavelle history is never really dead as long as it's with us the start of the first world war one hundred years ago is a case in point and numerous ways the beginning and conclusion of that conflict shapes our world today. to cross-talk the legacies of world war one i'm joined by my guest george seven uli in new york he is a fellow of the global policy institute of london metropolitan university and author of the new book bombs for peace nato is humanitarian war on yugoslavia in washington we have ivan eland he is a senior fellow and director of the independent institute and in new haven we cross to pierre perceval he is an associate professor at the university of warwick and president of the international society for first world war studies all right gentlemen crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want i very much encourage it i mean a lot if i go to you first recently wrote an article.

31 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on