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tv   Headline News  RT  October 14, 2017 4:00am-4:30am EDT

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r.t. america is. better than. c. . heard of. the world bank. headlines this morning the landmark nuclear deal with the rand is at risk of a president. getting. breaching the spirit of the agreement. this is a dangerous signal present of united states many powers not this one. else one of a more children have been reunited with their relatives campaigned to keep orphans in iraq and help believed to have been brought to the country when their parents joined islamic state argument over how they should be treated. foremost to their children are not responsible for the actions of many fathers some of these children
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. still comes to. elections this weekend in austria. there are concerns growing over the brightness of the right. barbara good morning this is art international with me. as i said eleven in the morning now this saturday and first then the historic nuclear agreement with iran is in jeopardy half to 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 u.s. and european officials 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 so now this move means the us 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 to mend the nuclear deal but if those negotiations fail trump says the deal will be terminated which risks undermining the fragile balance the nuclear deal had secured this far is why he might be considering ripping up that agreement for 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 the threat posed by iran whose geve exports are violent bloodshed and chaos all nations of current must work together to isolate. 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 here. but let's not forget money iran the evil enemy helps the so a lot more weapons than iran the compliant partner. to the united states military. community is very happy on the day you. and the cherry on top pressuring iran means pleasing a close friend israel common. to israel first from iran for decades iran has fueled the fires threatening the region and causing so much to buy alliance with so. good. i want you to know how much we appreciate. the truce in american policy on iran which you enunciated so clearly the former. supreme
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allied commander u.s. forces in europe general wesley clark reports 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 iran's taking more of the iranian is an enormous challenge and i think it's a new normal stretch to both russia and china i don't think the american people would support it and i don't think it would sixty. raney in presidents responded to trump's claims by saying it's not up to any single lead to make decisions about what is a global agreement here this is an international multilateral deal cuba has now
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ready find by the u.n. security council it is a u.n. document is it possible for a president unilaterally to certify 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 is treated the way he likes it took nine years of tough negotiations before the deal was finally reached in twenty fifteen although the standoff over iran's nuclear activities stretched out for more than a decade and they were widely regarded as one of the world's most urgent crisis at one point it was known in the u.s. that painstakingly negotiated these new terms it was the combined efforts of russia china britain france and germany to now the u.s. secretary of states tried to rally european allies over trump's decision but they've mostly reacted angrily. i believe that are eligible for it in europe maybe the region are going to be very supportive presence of united states as many posts not this one it is not a bilateral agreement it does not belong to any single country and it is not
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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 this things stand out 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 starting is
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being trying to help orphans in iraq be reunited with relatives believed to have been brought there by their parents and then went on to join islamic state many lost their immediate family then in the military operations to rid the country of of terrorists. so. one of them could i said grab dessert and these are. my skills. i think that dad put. that in good order to do it at that to work on the out of. your own list and then
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the phone last seen by us i just love this i say it's a nice true shoot i cherish it should give the right not. to see. so now the latest is five more children have returned home to russia after they were recognized by their extended family neil harvey asked a public guess what should be done to help the remaining orphan still out there.
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for some foremost these are children had they're 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 their. it's for children if we look at past experiences like the children of to use a horrible example them out so you see those children were effectively reeducated and they were reintegrated into the society boy you know showing them the benefits of society i'm showing them the wrongs of what was. carried out in their parents' names there's around about five thousand given to children in the in the caliphates when the fall those are killed the mothers then go off to the camps and they take the children with them we don't really know the numbers that are in the camps but what's happening in the 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
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a top child some of these children are being used as suicide. and if they're twelve years old does that still constitutes the child and your guest 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 ass are open borders. 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 convention on the rights of the child a child is defined as anyone under the age of eighteen years. of age
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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. a lot needs to be a no no but remember you're not going to. if you know there's no there's no question about that i mean you're making a valid bottom 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 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 that non-secular what the issue is is that. a person who is under the age of eighteen and who commits say a war crime or crime against humanity can and should be prosecuted for it down to a certain age and most domestic jurisdictions recognize that as
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a refer 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 out relatives and they take care of such young children can reduce even the radical ideas indoctrinated in inside them and rock is one way and that the vast resources of your child's psyche and now from high chance of we have been. i mean would you go along with the maybe a lot of patriots in some of these children may have seen family members killed
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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 and as i said being the greek and i've been to cal a my heart goes out to the but the 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 the psychiatry's we don't have the foster carers except 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 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
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ostracize or reject these people these are children after all would maybe follow the international standards every time i say policy in one of these discussions i'm up against a human rights industry they took 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's water hole and 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 proper therapy you know by the surrounding of you know a warm environment for a child it's incredibly important for a child to have support from. most important thing for a child and i watched with all friends of mine who worked with those children in
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the particularly the refugee youth service and in the company how incredibly important just sitting down beside each other i'm not going to talk 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 way 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 the you know the safety now to try to avoid that you know i had anything here that convinces me. continued to the present coming up. in the polls you know straight ahead of sunday's election because tomorrow it's going to go on to say.
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we are in. iraq. just about one hundred yards from here and we are experiencing full front. loaded with the impact of. the standing rock phenomenon. dropping bombs brings peace. to do so for the tell you that let me. tell you on the school and. we. will watch.
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why again austria is right wing is once again in contention for a placing government ahead this sunday's big vote their polls suggest a strong showing for the anti immigration freedom party but the country's foreign minister and the leader of the centrist people's party sebastian kurtz though is widely expected to win the race if he becomes austria's next chancellor he says he wants to end power sharing with the social democrats so the stats look at the moment this could be crucial of who he teams up with next and serve up seeking a coalition with any other party including including maybe the right wing with which he shares a strong anti immigration platform the latest results in austria only adding to the concern over the rise of populism in the heart of europe let's check out what's happened so far this year in france of course all eyes are on the big presidential
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vote there the staunch immigration hardliner nationalist marine le pen was a contender in this year's big presidential election there then there's the f.d.a. getting in just last month in germany so a right wing party entered parliament for the first time in nearly sixty years and now it just may be austria might be about to follow suit. that gets on the board at the. urging of the cricket club to help the ball it's really up. there the goal. is to ship all the rights. to a break there is a history of frustration with the established political parties during the global recession and twenty nine europe in austria were hit hard until of this war this
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stream of migrants in twenty fifteen all that enormously increased popular discontent. following this vote coming up on the events in austria now over the next twenty four hours pulis lias. 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 a fringe parties making it big on the political scene the us skeptic anti immigrant freedom party seriously complicates things for the leading center right people's party the v.p. ovi peace 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 look if nobody is coming into the country without registration without
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a passport no one should be allowed to enter austria. we will do everything possible to stop illegal immigration so i am asking that social benefits for non austrians be significantly reduced. everything we can to end the use of our social welfare system by immigrants the people's body has always been the bro europe the. probably quite conservative and now they're copied to the nation those program after freedom party they're now now trying to be like the blue party they're trying to be against foreign and multicultural things that's copy paste partly because of freedom but it was successful and so far it's working well for the people's party with its new young leaders sebastian kurtz at the helm presenting himself as a bold reformist and not shying away from bowing the policies of the controversial freedom party its stated to win sunday's parliamentary election some expose suggests curt's might even approach the freedom party to form
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a coalition government not least of all because of its fall out 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 will vote change the european political landscape is shifting with parties that were on the fringes wielding even more influence policy r.t. . elsewhere in the world students have clashed with police outside the greek education ministry in athens and i think. i. was i. should thank you thank you thank you god that's so bit of trouble there now they're
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protesting against a new law covering secondary education they believe there will be budget cuts and the limits on free books and great universities earlier there was also a sit in protest of university and for so long. said the wildfires are contin. to ravage the u.s. state of california at least thirty five people now are known to have died many more are missing though to check out this for a body cam video we've got you showing the ferocity of the fire what these guys trying to attack that have to deal with demonstrates just what the emergency services have to contend with there with all this going on around the california's forestry and fire protection department says it's the worst break in the state's history more than five thousand seven hundred buildings have been destroyed nearly ninety thousand hectares of land of been scorched. one more cheery note this weekend 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
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cultural event that's expected to a truck twenty thousand visitors is set to launch with a parade big one in moscow within the next hour the main events there will take place in the black sea resort of sochi.
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if you check out the parade we'll be covering it here in the russian capital it's in about three i was talking five i'm told so let's. keep you posted on the rest of the week long event in sochi to. be saturday's going good see again in thirty maybe. on. sundays in the morning. on the world. oh. oh good move for you.
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please. liz liz liz . about your sudden passing i've only just learnt you worry yourself and taken your last strong term caught up to you as we all knew it would i
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tell you i'm sorry i could so i write these last words in hopes to put to rest these things that i never got off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned on each. but then my feelings started to change you talked about war like it was again still some marshawn to feel those that didn't like to question our arc and i secretly promised to never again like it said one does not leave a funeral the same as one enters the mind it's consumed with death and this one. i speak to now because there are no other takers. that mainstream media has met its maker. the lead.
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they were going underground is today the leader of western europe's largest socialist posse surely cool with their olds of a. nation's of modern consumer lore in the u.k. at the co-operative party conference in london coming up in the show venezuela's foreign minister tells us about this week's talks with the resumes government and attempts by washington and its corporate media to destroy the nation with the
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greatest reserves of oil in the world and the queen of country music dolly parton in the studio in nashville talks to us about her new album i believe in you could help millions of british children learn to read after the closure of hundreds of my breweries amidst the western economic crisis plus hours after her government met with venezuelan officials the leader of the opposition asked me what money john was on and what we all know will punish me in his shadow chancellor on this planet venezuela tourism a trice of the u.k. labor party with the country deemed once by u.s. president jimmy carter to have the best electoral system in the world at this week's prime minister's questions golden some more coming up a days going underground but first five years ago today nicolas maduro was named vice president of venezuela by one of the most electorally successful politicians in the world who go chavez but during the would succeed chavez as president of the nation with the world's largest known oil reserves elected in
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a landslide in twenty thirteen but could threats from nato nations change all that regional elections in venezuela tomorrow the u.s. response to stay improvements in everything from literacy to health since the dark days of us back to take this has been clear under obama and trump many options for me and by the way i'm not going to rule out a military option and here in britain venezuela is used by trades amaze ministers to attack the supporter of progressive movements around the world jeremy corbyn he says he still had mas bolivarian revolution recession as i say he's caracas. well joining me now is boris johnson's venezuelan counterpart or head. thanks so much for coming to our media hub more on media and how it manipulates opinion in a second why you in london we have to say the truth.

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