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tv   Headline News  RT  October 14, 2017 3:00am-3:30am EDT

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the media. is meant to run this country business because. it's not business as usual it's business like it's never been time for. headline this weekend the landmark nuclear deal with iran is at risk of unraveling president leaders by getting tough on iran claiming it's breaching the spirit of the agreement. this is a dangerous signal president of the united states many palos not this one coming up two more children have been reunited with their relatives in an r.t. ongoing campaign to help orphans in iraq they believe should be brought to the country when their parents joined islamic state but now there's an argument too over how they should be exactly treated. for some foremost these are children are not responsible for the actions of many fathers some of these children are
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being used. and if their twelve years old still calls to. the gratian party get strength from austria concerns are raised over the rise of the right in europe is a big election there this weekend. saturday morning here in moscow good morning from me i'm kevin zero in here without t h q i'm starting with the historic nuclear agreement with iran is in jeopardy this weekend after president trump announced that he won't certify to rand's compliance with the deal his decision comes despite the global nuclear watchdog as well as the u.s. and european officials though saying that iran is keeping its side of the bargain. we will not continue down a path whose predictable conclusion is more violence more terror and the very real
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threat of iran's nuclear breakout importantly iran is not living up to the spirit of the deal the movement now means that u.s. congress has sixty days to decide whether or not to reimpose sanctions against iran as well as to come up with new legislation to try and amend the nuclear deal but if those negotiations fail trump says the deal will be terminated which risks undermining the fragile balance the nuclear deal is secured is why it might be considering ripping up that agreement. four reasons why trump needs to pick a fight with iran. after all his policy flip flops he needs to stand firm on something iran will do just to save face threat posed by iran whose chief exports are violence bloodshed and chaos all nations of country must work together to isolate the. washington's also getting worried by iran's
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growing influence in the region iran has been allowed to run wild throughout the middle east for the last eight years. but let's not forget money iran the evil enemy helps to sell a lot more weapons than iran the compline talk. to the united states in our military. communities very happy want to thank you. and the cherry on top pressuring iran means pleasing it close friend israel. will add israel face from iran for decades iran has feel the fires threatening the region and causing so much you buy a lance with rigs so. funny. i want you to know how much we appreciate. the change in american
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policy on iran which you enunciated so clearly the former. supreme allied commander of u.s. forces in europe general wesley clark said that the course of a couple of visits to the to the pentagon he was informed by people in the war room that they had been ordered to. draw a line and to overthrow seven middle eastern countries within the next five years one of those was ever a man is taking more of the air raid in. there's an enormous challenge and i think it's a new norm as to both russia and china i don't think the american people would support it and i don't think it would sixty. four for the iranian president he's responded to train as clumps claims by saying that it's not up to any single leader to make a decision about what in effect here is
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a global agreement this is an international multilateral deal that has been ready to fight by the u.n. security council it is a u.n. document is it possible for a president to unilaterally decide to fight this important international deal apparently he's not in the know it is not a document between iran and the u.s. so he can't treat it out the way he likes it if it took nine years of tough negotiations before that deal was finally reached back in twenty fifteen although the standoff over iran's nuclear activities stretched way by more than a decade and was widely regarded as one of the world's most urgent crisis for a long time it was not only the u.s. that painstakingly the negotiated the terms either it was the combined efforts of russia china britain france and germany to the u.s. secretary of state tried to rally european allies over tribes decision but they've mostly reacted angrily. i pull each bird that are eligible for it in europe or the
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region are going to be very supportive present of united states us many posts not this one it is not a bilateral agreement it does not belong to any single country and it is not up to any single country to terminate it we cannot afford as international community as europe for sure to dismantle and nuclear agreement that is working and delivering especially now this is a difficult and in our view dangerous signal the agreement with iran has shown for the first time that it's possible to prevent war through negotiations the destruction of this agreement would mean that others around the world would no longer rely on such treaties it's therefore a danger that goes far beyond iran we in europe germany france the u.k. and the e.u. we stand by this agreement with iran we want to preserve the agreement i think it will will further estrange our relations with our european allies it will draw them closer together and i think actually closer to the russians and the chinese as
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things stand now the iranians have the support of the russians the chinese and all of our european allies it's washington that is isolated. from on the saudis being trying to help orphans in iraq be reunited with relatives believed to be brought there by their parents and then join islamic state many lost their immediate family in the military operations to rid the country of terrorists. or. one of them could i third grade desert and these three.
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good order to do.
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so five more children for to home to brush it off to be recognized by their extended family and you have the us to probably guess what should be done to help the remaining officers. first and foremost these are children not responsible for the actions of their many fathers or their mothers and they should be treated as individuals in their own right to have protections on of the convention of the rights for children if we look at pos experiences like the children of to use a horrible example the nazis those children were effectively reeducated and they were reinterpreted into the society by you know showing them the benefits of society i'm showing them the wrongs of what was. carried out in their parents' names those around about five thousand given to children in the in the caliphates when the fault is a kilo the mothers then go off to the camps and they take the showdown with them we don't really know the numbers that are in the camp. but what's happening in the
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camps is that the the children and the parents are actually the mothers are being rejected by other people in the camps you have to think about what constitutes the age of a top child some of these children are being used as suicide. and if they're twelve years old does that still constitute the child's and your guess was quite right about what happened to the nazis but the nazis were completely obliterated they ended after the second world war we have got fifty thousand. and other areas that have come through the borders asked. in with the so-called refugees and economic migrants what are we going to do about them because they're not going anywhere so i actually have to take issue with what with with what janice just said there is a very strong consensus in the international law. according to the united nations
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convention on the rights of the child a child is defined as anyone under the age of eighteen years. of age and that means the definition is very very clear i know what your definition is but the reality of laws in individual company countries doesn't actually reflect what the international lorries and i think international law and needs to paper know but remember modeling to is. concerned. no there's no there's no question about that i mean you're you're you're making a valid model in their eyes you're mixing up two issues with respect because on the one hand the definition of child is very clear the age of criminal responsibility which jennifer is raising just now is an important issue and but that doesn't mean that if you commit a crime you're no longer a child i mean the non sequitur what the issue is is that. a person who is under the age of eighteen and who commits to. a war crime or a crime against humanity can and should be prosecuted for it down to
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a certain age and most domestic the jurisdiction is recognized it. referred to there and i mentioned earlier the convention of the rights of the child. most states apart from america have signed up to it including iraq. those rights apply to the children just as much there as they do in ireland or the u.k. and to treat children differently just because there may be different cultural norms would be horrendous state of affairs i want to hear from the russian children's rights commissioner she was saying that it's still possible to fight the radical ideas that may have been instilled into children by the jihadist let's just hear what was said. but it was arrested got the right influence good intentions and outlook of relatives and they take care of such young children can reduce or even count so all the radical ideas indoctrinated in winds of them in iraq is one name that the vast resources of your child's psyche and now from high chance of we have
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been in. so i mean would you go along with the maybe a lot of hatred in some of these children may have seen family members killed they may have been told to hate the west or hate certain religions or mentalities do you think they can still be saved. i'm a mother of two children and as i said being the greek and i've been to a among those outs of the but very very careful how we rehabilitate the child that is in our country is that we've still got seventy thousand children. we don't have the facilities we don't have to. have the foster care a success and that is that there is a real risk that children who have been heavily indoctrinated and have become newer to to violence and maybe have perpetrated some atrocities themselves have to be monitored and rehabilitated very carefully and it's not an
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easy task so i respect what very much what what she's raised there as a point and that points not so much to say well we just have to marginalize or ostracize or reject these people these are children after all would maybe follow the international standards every time i state policy in one of these discussions i'm up against a human rights industry they say look in the human rights industry. they don't want to talk about surveyed it's why should we not be having these children on survey that they talk about best practices and your guest quotes many countries around the world where there is well told in situations but they just talking why don't you actually explain to the people watching what you think your best practice is all what results you've had what you were to actually do because we're not hearing not from the industry well the challenges can be addressed by my proper therapy you know but in the surrounding of you know a warm environment for a child it's incredibly important for
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a child to have support the most important thing for a child and i watched with all friends of mine who worked with those children in the particularly the refugee youth service and in the comp and how incredibly important it was sitting down beside the toilet i'm not in the trial to. really you know allowing them to open up and deal with the issues that they've seen and you know support for children is the only way forward or the wise what's the alternative that we put a tiger on their ankle that we criminalize these children that is not going to change anything it's going to make them more simple it will make them turn towards what will feed their anger which is violence ok let's go to. try to avoid that you know identifying here that convinces me. well the conversation went on coming up here in the break. in the polls and had a big election sunday we'll tell you all about it.
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put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected. so what you want to be president. to going to be this is what before. people. interested. in north dakota we are in this standing rock reservation just about a hundred yards from here and we are experiencing full front. loaded the impact of. the standing rock phenomena.
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again it's exactly seventy minutes past ten moscow time so his right wing is once again in contention for a place in government had to sunday's vote polls suggest a strong showing for the entity gratian freedom party but the country's foreign minister and leader of the centrist people's party sebastian cuts is widely expected to win the race that's the stops look at the moment now if he becomes austria's next chancellor he says he wants to end the power sharing with the social democrats that could be key here instead. seeking coalition with any other party including maybe the right wing with which he does share a strong hand him a great platform the latest results are only of course adding to the concern of a general rise in populism in the heart of europe if you just check out what's
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happened earlier on this year in france of course a lot of eyes on the big presidential vote earlier this year the staunch immigration hardliner a national real apparent was a leading contender in this year's presidential election then there was that lady last month germany saw a right wing party enter parliament for the first time in nearly sixty years the f.t. and now austria might be about to follow suit. there is a history of frustration with the established political parties during the global recession
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and twenty nine europe in austria were hit hard and top of this with this stream of migrants in twenty fifteen all that enormously increased popular discontent. well following the events this weekend in austria our correspondent paula slayers. there's a lot of intrigue over whether or not the right wing freedom party will do as well as its sisters elsewhere in europe in france and in germany form of fringe parties making it big on the political scene the us skeptic anti immigrant freedom party is seriously complicates things for the leading center right people's party v p o v p started to harsh in its agenda to attract voters i'm here to pro freedom party rally the last one before sunday's parliamentary election in which the party is expected to come second many here accuse one of its main rivals of stealing some of its proposals and if nobody is coming into the country without registration without a passport no one should be allowed to enter austria i list we will do everything
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possible to stop illegal immigration i am asking that social benefits for non austrians be significantly reduced i just will do everything we can to end the abuse of our social welfare system by immigrant the people's party has always been the pro european party quite conservative and now they're copied to mention those program after freedom party they're now not trying to be like the blue party they're trying to be against foreign. multicultural things that's copy paste party because of freedom party was successful and so far it's working well for the people's party with its new young leader sebastian kurtz at the helm presenting himself as a bold reformist and not shying away from bowing the policies of the controversial freedom party it's slated to win sunday's parliamentary election some expose suggests kurtz might even approach the freedom party to form
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a coalition government not least of all because of its fallout with its previous partner the social democrats i don't think that a big correlation the collision between conservatives and social democrats will come again because no. one wants i think there will be a change people want change people won't change the european political landscape is shifting with parties that were on the fringes wielding ever more influence policy r t v and. students have clashed with police outside the greek education ministry in athens. i i. think. i. should. think.
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they were protesting against a new law covering secondary education they believe they'll be budget cuts and a limit on free books in greek universities earlier there was also a city in protest at the university and as along a key. deadly wildfires are continuing to ravage the u.s. state of california thus far at least thirty five people are known to have died many more are missing though got this body cam video showing ferocity of that fire demonstrates just what the emergency services have to contend to try to deal with all this around them california's forestry and fire protection department says it's the worst outbreak in the state's history more than five thousand seven hundred buildings have been destroyed nearly ninety thousand hectares of land of being scorched. on a happier note one of the world's largest events for young people is about to get underway here in russia it's called the world festival of youth and students it's a cultural event that's expected to attract twenty thousand visitors it along with
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the parade here in moscow big ones but the main events take place in the black sea resort of sochi. i will bring you more of the big pride in the russian capital and what about.
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keeping you posted to rest of the week long event. for an icy. the next life. with me thirty minutes tell. me more.
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oh. good move for you. apply for many flips over the years so i know that. the ball isn't only. what happens on the pitch put a funnel school it's about the passion from the fans it's the age of the super money killian erroneous and spending student twenty million. books it's an experience like nothing else on earth because i want to share what i think of what i know about the beautiful guy great so well.
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and thinks. we all willingly accepted the risk of being shot wounded taken prisoner but noone signed up to be friggin poisoned by our own people that was nuclear biological and chemical products the said do not truck tires all types of styrofoam polystyrene batteries trucks there was a complete denial i think at all levels of government that there was any connection between berm pits and what these brave soldiers were suffering from to compensate every soldier marine airman and sailor that was on the ground that are complaining about illnesses from their exposure from the berm pits would really literally send a be a pro and they don't want to pay it so the waiting decades a lot of those soldiers will die in time and they won't have to pay
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a. call for help and get the middle finger the movies to model is. delayed and i hope you don't. do colonies still exist. ricos treated as one. hundred point zero three cool. and i knew a lot of seats and they could be seen on the island is controlled by the us government and some puerto ricans crave independence gentle it was the only kind of you know me both. either way. still many do wish to join the u.s. hundreds more leave every day. on time along. with the country at
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a crossroads anger on the island is on the rise. the francis is the boss broadcasting around the world from washington d.c. tonight president donald trump the long awaited policy remarks on the iran nuclear deal some people shaking their head and others quite dissatisfied also depends kobe still is in big trouble with its customers it's set to pay out big time after the
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company lied about the quality of its product and will talk movies and money in light of the recent revelations about hollywood sexual harassment will there be financial impact on the film industry which injects billions of dollars into our economy will open the box office books take a closer look than by start right now. it's going bananas big going to hit a high of five thousand eight hundred fifty six dollars and ten cents on friday it's meteoric rise from around one thousand dollars to this in ten and a half months setting analysts and investors back on their heels now initial coin offerings were sternly turned away by.

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