tv News RT December 28, 2017 12:00am-12:31am EST
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lover and and for. in front of a camera that used between policeman is unpronounceable for a waste since he retired he campaigns openly against the racist behavior of the police the former officer has even made a very explicit count. it's. a play for many clubs over the years so i know the game and so i got. the ball isn't only about what happens on the pitch for the final school it's about the passion from the fans it's the age of the super manager killian narrowness and spending two hundred twenty million one playa. it's an experience like nothing else i want to get close i want to show what i think what i know about the beautiful game played great to what paul chimes with. and thinks it's going to.
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pay everybody i'm stephen bob taft hollywood guy suspects every proud american first of all i'm just. an r.v. . this is my buddy max famous financial guru is a little bit different. no one knows about with all the drama happening in our country and i'm shooting the road have fun every day americans. and hopefully start to bridge the gap this is the great american people.
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it's the cradle of jazz. because america is the america we have. to know all of this jazz feel. the city have climatic catastrophes of alligators on the lists of poverty and crime are used by the least swell members of my family close my birth of street racing in the heat of the night this is new orleans itself and it was the best place in the world. i'm asking police and open season stop shooting black man just like there's some
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kind of animal they were going to ask me that white now why they have they devalue the black man and the black man is well let's put it this way in driving down a street in philadelphia on a hot friday night in august i was with a partner and of course hot august night in philadelphia it's a lot of people don't have air conditioning in and they're outside so there's a lot of people outside on the steps in the street and if we're writing down my partner says well the roaches are out tonight the wet roaches cockroaches their little. bugs to crawl into floor they're always like that i can garbage and it's a very derogatory term roach the roaches are out tonight so if you view. people as a roach as an insect an undesirable very undesirable insect. you're going
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to be able to shoot them much easier than you would a person that you value hire a white person the respect of them at the time maybe was did not know how to respond to the violence against the black people he even got carried away by it yes that was. something that i became hard and somewhat so that i was not an angel. i use it all excessive force and i. slap somebody when he said something really insulting to me and then after i did that i realized wow i should that i had no right to do that that was not professional was it not i was not professional was not human about a week later. another incident occurred and i used more force than i needed. after the guy was handcuffed i grabbed the pushed him up against the
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wall and i said don't you dare say that to me again do you understand. and i realize this is a disease i'm starting to develop. what is saying really wish is not specific to philadelphia agents. in march this year the ministry of justice published in the lawman report about the ferguson police more than one hundred pages show how the police violated the rights of black residents in the city. of racism with the american police has become such a big issue that a conscious awakening in some police stations has started we are in norwalk connecticut. going back to school with in small unit growth for three days these twenty five offices we'll learn how to get rid of
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a racist pig judges says this optional training is given by two former agents their mission is a challenge to make these offices understand that they too have to judge this is what we're going to learn today is it a possibility that everyone in this room as biased as police in a biased manner and you don't even know that you've done it i can tell you the story you'll hear from me is i helped police in the biased manner i know that now didn't realize that twenty or thirty years ago this lady trainer uses her test some experience as an example in role playing in the first simulation the suspect is a white woman. officers are to be reporting party calls i reports there's a woman sitting on a bus stop across the street he's been robbed several times he thinks he may have gotten us to respond. but the two offices have to control her. blow ups or her you i'm well how are you good when suddenly. remember that we're
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going to have to come your husband your kids are just an accident over there you have to come here courtesy of her kids her kids and her husband were in your eyes all but i think written on your hat he was there like they're bleeding not to come model so i'll look into confusion the two police officers let her go without even searching had the next scenario if we were replay this right now are ok and shallow down or this time the trainer chooses a black suspect what would happen automatically bronzer to grow they're going to stop him why this is a more likely you know that he's a person that's going to have a gun and so then i like and i let him go. and talk about their perception of what they see is that so they don't then i don't let him go given that want to be we give them our selves even black officers get it the white woman had the weapon but the police arrested the unarmed black person more the lesson that the police
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whatever happens tend to see black people as criminals but it is not easy for them to admit that they have races pre-judge as. i thought they certainly didn't tell you that i do involve you know not that i haven't really thought about it you know for now so i don't know that i. was accurate. answer the question but you know maybe three days ago do you think that's after this training you are going to the same pseudo way that you all work to know that because. i want to. change the way i'm working with no part of the i will be more self will your training is designed to teach teach to teach us the rest of the police officers might be pharma to be. more fair. or impartial. jury where we already are fair and impartial of t.v. or fair or the head of this department office this training after the numerous
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cases of police violence throughout the country while this is not what this shows our community that we're doing everything we can to make sure we're policing in a fair manner is going to make large job easier we is going to trust us more and everybody wins so it's really it's a win win the only point on which this manager loses is the price sixteen thousand dollars it is one of the most expensive optional courses the only case in which it is financed by the ministry of justice is when recent blunders were committed few agencies have been trained so far but since ferguson demand is soaring i'm going to out and tell the end of the year and was trying to look into twenty fifteen this is my schedule so far. the n.y.p.d. has asked for the training it's expected in pittsburgh this year. but is this a solution. just a very visceral disservice to. the city of baltimore started training its police
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officers against racial prejudice last year despite that a young afro-american died in april this year players or demonstrations for the protection of black people in the riots that shake the city images that suddenly reminds america for its past. a task that continues to haunt the country. in the southeast of the united states three hours from atlanta america has a meeting with its own history on this former land of slavery blacks did not have the same rights as whites. fifty years ago the police were beating up blacks here. fifty years ago young african-americans would not have had the right to walk on this bridge. the march that changed the destiny of the black community is come in
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memory to today the fight for black freedom to fight against racism to the right to vote like white people that. the last thought but i thought last fall. on sunday march seventh one thousand nine hundred sixty five on a bridge in selma six hundred african americans demonstrated peacefully to demand their right to vote. the state governor ordered the police to charge the activists . over fifty people were taken to hospital. the event became a symbol. here fifty years later the president and protesters are waiting for is black history acknowledgement has witnessed. in his speech barack obama makes an analogy between the come immigration and the recent events in the country. he admits that there is still a lot to be done. of course the more common mistake is to suggest that
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ferguson is a isolated incident. that racism is better. than the work that drew men and women to selma is now complete. we don't need the ferguson reports and no that's not true . why does need to open our minds and our ears and our hearts to know that this nation's racial history is still care system long shadow upon us. on the bridge in selma many share the same feeling many still have the impression of living in a racist country. black people are popular anywhere in america not in france on any ice this is a little different because we were former slaves so that mentality is still there even though we're not currently slaves we can still be viewed as slaves sometimes. and this white has a slogan black people i count three he's the last words of every gonna strangled by the n.y.p.d. . my god. why did you well this shot today because we can't breathe either way
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because for black. berry gone his mother was also they. have. to get up here to be a business and are right. this is a commemoration not a celebration and now we have to go forward with this we shouldn't stop until everybody gets justice you know justice in this city justice in every city you know because what happened on this bridge is similar to what happened to my son you know they had no because for our wives and. and we didn't get justice yet but we're still pushing on we want to show on just like we're pushing on here that we don't wish to hurt. erica and
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his mother will continue to fight in order to sentence the policeman who killed her son it will not be easy to hand and for all those in selma today walking on this bridge is a way to continue the fight for justice and equality the fight that is and. the necessary. the long litany of blunders and police abuse proves it the united states has still very far from having solved the issue with racism.
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how does it feel to be a sheriff the greatest job in the world it's as close to being a king as any job there is what business model helps to run a prison now we just do it oh my guess is no b.t.o. visitation i don't know what comes anymore we don't have to serve them anymore it's cost effective that's what they want to do that as long as they don't give a damn if you do the chores and that they're actually paying us to put it back into the louisiana incarceration rate is twice as high as the us sandbridge what she could is behind such success. in two thousand and sixteen the panama papers show the world with a tax haven the secrets to trillion united states dollars passed through most. in the amount of time that we've been in the panama papers exposure that's what it shows a lot of money it really is. journalism it's
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a fact of journalism looking at things that people want to keep secret and asking why would they want to keep these things secret. millions of mossad fonseca documents were examined. the all the people which basically have tried to get an advantage out of this thought it was just paper. and probably other politician which was tough at that other politician the media would point to find their targets such as the kings of morocco in saudi arabia the president of argentina several prime ministers. and russian president vladimir putin of course. oh my god i've had so i have sued so many newspapers for defamation some things don't just happen by chance it was very striking there were no more. american symbol is special a lot of people from the brics countries specially brazil russia and china
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this special project reveals what was missed in the media coverage. of the panama chronicles. it's the cradle of jazz. this is america is the america we have. to close this jazz feeling. a city of climatic contest a fish of alligators on the loose of poverty and crime of the years by the least swell members of my family close my first love street racing in the heat of the night this is new orleans self-command the best place in the world.
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thought. i am. not. i am. an explosion rocks a supermarket in the russian city of st petersburg injuring ten people investigators say the blast killed by an improvised bomb packed with ball bearings . german authorities identify a large network of women threatening islamic states idea of the warning that the wives of killed eisel with officials warning that the wives of killed eisel
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fighters are now more effective at spreading the group's message of hate. and thousands of documents relating to controversial episodes in british history have gone missing with the national archives claiming that civil servants simply misplaced them. international live from moscow studio with me in a day or two to welcome to the program an improvised bomb has exploded in a supermarket in the russian city of st petersburg these are images from inside the store where the device went off injuring ten people counterterrorist investigators are handling the case but it's so far unclear whether the incident is terror related the bomb was placed inside a locker near the entrance of the supermarket later in the program we'll get more on the situation live from our correspondent who is in st petersburg right now.
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in other news now the german security service has identified a female terror network spreading islamist ideology online maria reports that's not for the first on what we see women actively involved in promoting jihadist fuz we have been hearing reports about isis female recruiters since of police twenty fourteen those are a wives of. killed islamic state fighters who decided after the death of their husbands to somehow continue that fight but now germany says that the number is on a constant dramatic rise the women an ideology promotes the men have the women could not work much but it's a form of expanding the scene in this most recent case germany identified what they called the islamist terrorist women's network consisting of a least forty what they call sisters who follow an ultra conservative branch of
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islam known as selah fees and spread extremist views via internet particularly targeting so-called nonbelievers the german authorities stress that it would be wrong to equal salafism to terrorists but at the same time they add that it could be potential breeding ground for terrorists all over europe including here in germany especially following last year's berlin terror attack christmas has said had become the time for extra concerns and worries over security because christians and their faith and their holidays and everything that is connected to it include in christmas markets that the now operating and will be open for the next week at least all of the europe have repeatedly been targeted by islam ist so it has been bet for quite some time but now fears are increasing with the number of those who share salafist views here in germany rose to an all time high according to the
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country's intelligence agency germany sees it as a direct result of dramatic losses in the middle east and as a consequence and rise in a number of returning to europe including women and now they say that with the defeat of so-called islamic state in syria and iraq europe security could be as fragile as never before. after the fall of this state in syria and iraq more tales of horror are emerging of life under the terrorists rule kurdish minority families in iraq and as you z.d. suffered capture death all in slavery and our senior correspondent laura garza here has been speaking with some of the families who managed to survive the ordeal we'll show you the full interviews on thursday. we were captured we spent two months in iraq then we were taken to syria they made
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me a slave were put to work and held where the troops were were given a one hour day to rest and then to run away the court me and looks me in the toilet for three days without food or water or try to escape again and again but each time i was caught beaten and severely tortured the shot my friends were back then for mercy on our knees they were hit by mr eric and i was kind cursed by has to hers i can talk all on. your monologue i was pregnant but i was sore terrified that i lost my child my husband and family were captured i was left alone with my mother so i took poison i decided it was better to die when they caught me i thought that since my family my husband and my house were gone it would be better to die. in twenty fourteen up to ten thousand years either these were killed or kidnapped by iceland a matter of days of those
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a third were executed however the truth scale of the tragedy may never be fully though the testimonies that have emerged suggest many have been tortured to beheaded or even burned alive in many cases entire families were captured together women and girls were often sold as sex slaves while young boys were forced to become i saw fighters someone not even old enough to school when they were forced to serve the terrorists. my daughter was five years old when she was captured four years have passed since then so she is nine we endured a lot of suffering my brother escaped and i stayed at his place then he died instant jar i was desperate after his death and i went to stay with my other brother he is poor and has young children all girls. thousands of documents relating to controversial episodes in british history appear to be missing the national archives claim they were misplaced or removed by civil
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servants the revelation has sparked an outcry the british people deserve to know what the government has done in their name and their laws will only fuel accusations of a cover up as a story and it's impossible to believe this loss the declassified files themselves show governments view the public largely as a threat the threat of democracy is deeply embedded if it happened in russia for example would be up in arms about corrupt governments but hey this is the british way to avoid scrutiny of its past misdeeds. which pages of history have been lost. well the national archive is a very important resource especially for people like historians and journalists because it keeps documents relating to the country's history and the idea is a perfectly transparent system whereby once government documents are decursive fide anyone over the age of sixteen can go to the national archives and access these files but not all of them because it appears that some of them have gone missing
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some of the files relating to thought a moment in british history among the files missing are papers relating to the folk lin's war there are documents missing relating to the northern ireland troubles as well and perhaps most controversially the files relating to the famous. letter from way back in nineteen twenty four that was a huge political scandal at the time because m i six almost certainly forged a letter that was then leaked to the press that well it was just discredited the labor government at the time and ultimately resulted in its downfall now the files missing are all listed as misplaced while on loan to government departments so there is this situation now where a number of different government departments are under pressure to explain why they
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have taken these bits of paper but they have failed to return them now we've asked the home office for a comment on that is an obvious letter we still haven't got a response we have however heard from the foreign office now the foreign office had misplaced a file relating to the markov case that was way back in one thousand nine hundred seventy eight it was the shooting of a dissident both gary and journalist on waterloo bridge which isn't too far from where i'm sitting now this is what the foreign office. to say about those documents take a listen seventeen of nineteen documents have been recovered and we are sending them back to the national archives when still searching for the documents that have not yet been accounted for so an explanation there and clearly efforts being made to shall we say correct what has happened because the public care has a right to access these files access these chapters of british history rather than
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finding that they have been misplaced and according to some misplaced a little too conveniently we contacted the national archives and they told us that when loaned files go missing they request that action be taken international affairs commentator jonathan steele says that the huge loss of sensitive documents rate is many questions which is an absolute scandal because as you pointed out most of them refer to incidents in the past where britain was in a very bad position because there was a question of torture in northern ireland there was no obvious letter really interesting there were limits to time when we're talking about fake news we used the term for with elections all kinds of allegations being made we haven't got the evidence that was once a variable has now gone missing persons being asked to do do do do do you keep documents did you make copies did you make duplications were.
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