tv News RT February 1, 2018 8:00am-8:30am EST
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this little bundle of joy would have no chance of surviving in the wild mother pandas can only real one cup at a time but usually give birth to. every year china puts a lot of effort into making up for this cruel mistake of nature. is just. china's pender breeding has become something of a production line. it's almost as though they've been copied three d. printed and put on show for the public. several cubs are born here each year. but all that work by dedicated scientists will be for nothing if panda love can't be encouraged in captivity it's not as though they don't practice at all but in the same lazy way they do everything else this proud to twins and has no idea that a special love potion was formulated just for the.
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pleasure. and when you don't. try to get a court to. not throw only ten. said . no servant is vastly better. if you speak french. the same. unsaid is no ward winning novelist historian and journalist whose recent novel because in. focuses on the lives of women and nazi occupied paris i reset to slater
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to speak to a number of holocaust survivors from that time and several journalist author and historian welcome to the alex semin to thank you for inviting me thanks to you to see and about the leap out is in which is a lot to ask at least five years of research and mention some of the stories and if you can give us an idea of how you came across of these wonderful women don't forget we've grown up in a time of peace and plenty we've never known fear but these women really experienced fear so i think that's one of the main things i i can't imagine that i'd ever be as courageous course we hope we would be but suppose we take a woman like us let test ila do still is still alive and living in peril still alive today who i think of often because she was only a child she and her sister madeleine were looked after by their mother because of fatherhood already being taken prisoner they were jewish family in the heart of paris and i think it needs to be said that many of these jewish families felt as if
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they were french they were proud to be jewish but they really identified as french they love france and it was the country of zoeller of rousseau so aflat who's now in her late eighty's and the wonderfully elegant palaces e.-n. told me her story how they were rounded up in july nine hundred forty two one of these big roundups that the vision government undertook for the germans called the a half of the duval deve haslam means roundup and velde eve because they were taken to a sports stadium which was highly unsuitable for a matter of hours let alone days and people were held there for five days in boiling heat and are left who told me what it was like to be there and how they were taken by train then to another camp and most people were shipped on to one of the concentration camps mostly auschwitz where they were killed. let and her sister
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and her mother by a series of really clever ruses persuaded the germans to let them come back into paris they said they'd hidden further as the germans really needed further of siberia and machines to turn furs into coats that were really important for the german army so they came back into paris and then they consciously thinking of course i can't we don't have a vine king that's what's so amazing when your life is hanging by a thread in that circumstance yes and they were persuaded by their mother to jump off a moving train to lie between the wooden sleepers and then the mother came back and collected them then they walked into paris the mother managed to hide them with people paying out of scraps of embroidery that cheated and paid for them to survive the war and then after the war when the mother discovered because what all the persians had to do they went to the hotel new tayseer where there were great lists
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put up of people who were coming back and whether they had survived or not and after a while she realized that her husband who was her childhood sweetheart obviously wasn't coming back at that point the mother commit suicide and these two children are made orphans of state and asked let today's so positive and smiling and elegant and she goes into schools and she tells these stories because she believes like me that it's really important to tell these stories of of survival to tell the stories of refugees because as you rightly say we're still suffering the world is still turned upside down with refugees being displaced and where do they go and who's looking out for them and how can we help them most no difference really found the ana and what we do continue to write and you can continue to enjoy the tremendous insight you have with the survivor. friends and members of their family this must
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have affected you personally when speaking to people and wanting an impact of yourself as a writer journalist and historian and meeting people with many great thirty's that's an interesting question how can it not and you know your constantly thinking partly of your responsibility to tell these stories accurately not to be judge mental to understand the courage of sometimes think teenagers one woman i met on the death march who had completed the death march with her mother but when she was a teenager she used to deliver pamphlets in paris and she told me how she used to walk from one mattress station to another as she thought because star power were waiting for her how on earth could i imagine that i would have found that courage sir it certainly made me feel that one has to be a bit more courageous in life but also yes there were many nights when i lay awake
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and i thought. i don't want to exploit these stories but on the other hand i think it is very important that they're told so does have it does have that effect on you all right well answered i thank you very much indeed for sharing your experiences with us thank you for talking to me. a key aspect of remembrances to celebrate the cheapened of refugees and survivors and the mind the souls of poor of this world would be if they had not been saved was news to his mother mary came to london on the very last truman's part of the conduct transport programme welcome to the excitement show during alex thank you for having me your mother to do a great deal of what she remembers of topics like to hold was what it should remember about getting on the train what was the last time she saw your granddaughter well she remember. sitting on her papa's knee and him saying to her
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if you hear yes i know you're in england so she knew those words in english then she said that you remember going to the station and she was really excited to go and see a train in the station and she was with her from vienna this is from vienna she was holding her mother and father's hand and her and she was there as well and she was skipping towards the train loads of people at station then she turned around and her mother had gone her father had gone and she was holding hands with her auntie and she was looking around for mom or pop or a bearing in mind she was this high and then the next thing she knew she was pushed on the train and turned around and her auntie was gone and then she started to get frightened and started to cry and she couldn't see over the window so you know the train was here and my mother couldn't see out of the window so she just started to cry to them to understand what happened wired up and i think probably years later but she was picked up at heritage and then she went to a family in london and she was not a jew from no i mean
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a lot of the jewish families wouldn't take the children and i mean that's quite common language and i don't know if it was fear about you know what would happen to them but they a lot of them went to gentile families and so my mother didn't even know she was jewish until she was eleven anyway determined to reclaim jewish heritage well she didn't really know anything about it until she left she was which was brought up into this family and she was a companion for their daughter and my mom came with some beautiful boots as a child and beautiful clothes from vienna and all of these clothes were given to this other child and so she lay there in this little bed and she stood say that used to lie on the end of her bed oh my god this is going to make me cry so she used to lie on the end of her bed. it's come you think. the impact of these of us who succeeds don't new generations show up because it makes you so you know aware of your mortality for a start. how how brave my grandparents were this tiny little girl had no one so
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when i was born she was so she looked after me she loved me so much but she had she really didn't know how to be a mom herself so when eleven years old she went to the beacon in tunbridge wells which is where all the children went and i think that would probably be just after the war had finished or but when the war was finishing she was sent to the beginning and then she met all the other children who'd been on the can to transport children that came over and they are they were all together in this place in tunbridge wells and that's when my mum started to realise who she was and that and that was the story yes and then then she got the telegram because then they were all given telegrams about saying what had happened to their parents and she said all the other kids are getting telegrams sister alive brother alive mary grabbing her parents' exam and i said that was it so she just thought well and the . news was broken just in the form of in the form of a telegram parent's exterminated that was the end so your mom after thinking she
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was alone in the world all of a sudden a brother pops up to tell you how she felt when she was introduced to a course with well uncle joseph found her and the reason that he found her was that her father was in ash and he found his father in auschwitz and he said to his father said to his son you have a sister in england and you have to go and find her so joseph escapes from auschwitz which is very rare not many people did and he came to find his sister in england and he found her remember and i met uncle joseph and the first thing my mother showed me was the number on his arm for most of you and the he also was able to give you more information about the family yes saying that you know his father was a comedian that he was a big star in the initiatives are so well to be a she became a teacher. and then she had to put twenty was she married she married my dad my dad was a very big star then and she married him she had about a jewish dance and he. found because he always wanted to adopt one of the children
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from the kid's transport so when he found her he brought it home to his house and sunderland and said look i found my refugee said he he got it from the very beginning if you like so he kidnapped her and took him to some land which. really wasn't. but she did very well and then he became ill and because he was very very successful he took the plate in three times in three months and his career was just taking off. to have a fantastic time away are the better and there are just too strong yeah there i had a brain tumor and then my mom had to learn how to survive without him and of course a friend of hers to just open a nightclub in newcastle and he asked her if he could ring up somebody to to book him and my mum then became an agent do you think knowing the background of your family if. you more determined go or world you know emotional robots too but i still think your values are very different when you know what you've come from because you are you know the child of a refugee. so therefore things that are transients don't mean that much i mean you
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know my mother always used to say remember the thing about fame as well because my father was very famous and she's to say to me and you can forget about fame darling because you can't take it to bed with you and it doesn't love you at night it doesn't pay the bills so it's made us all very very levelheaded when we see the stories of other refugee families. and the success they've achieved in a range of human and do you have a feeling of solidarity as of yes justification yes i do with i feel that with any people that have had family in the kinda transport of people that have lost people in the holocaust i feel she actually connected to them because i think that the thing is now everything's become very diluted we are in a very sort of cosmopolitan society so there's mixes of everything but i feel what we went through i still feel it's still feel it's part of me it's never left me i don't know if my children feel the same but it's definitely part of me what message you think. it is which except refugee terms of the potential
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for good which often comes out of it yes i mean i think people should look after refugees i really do i understand that you know that there is a possibility that that there's a huge influx of people but i think when there's a war and we can help people why wouldn't you listen to your life story your mom story particularly when your family is living testament firstly to what actually happened to people to their families that's really important the story is told yes absolutely i mean you know we hear what happened to our family you know there are people today that said that a local color course didn't exist well it did otherwise there are millions of people that have been wiped out we don't know where they are something definitely happened and we have to acknowledge that and we have to acknowledge it enormously and our children it's a very important part of history. and those of us of survived yes families of us of you who have survived through your mother yes i'm
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a huge contribution to their adopted country oh yes well i mean my mother just loved that she was proud to be british she was so proud to be british and i think we've helped so many people in this country and we should carry on doing that it's really important. thank you so much thank you. it is no over seventy years since the full horror of the extermination camps was revealed and that's the voices of the last first hand testimony the survivors are still in the priority must be to preserve the next generation of the opportunity to remember the reality of the holocaust. the model day is part of that process the monuments and centers labs and small national and community land but none of these will really matter unless the educational program is a fact of and presenting an experience which is a step into the life experience of every school child then and only then can we be
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assured that the horror of the previous generation will not be visited on those who fall. back on the matter of. this little bundle of joy would have no chance of surviving in the wild mother pandas can only real one come at a time but usually give birth to. every year china puts a lot of effort into making up for this cruel mistake of nature. is just. china's panda breeding has become something of a production line. it's almost as though they've been copied three d.
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printed and put on show for the public. good several cubs are born here each year. but only left work by dedicated scientists will be for nothing if pandemic of can't be encouraged in captivity it's not as though they don't practice at all but in the same lazy way they do everything else in this proud mommy gave birth to twins and has no idea that a special love potion was formulated just for the. across europe municipalities are taking their water supply back from private companies who have it to meet people this is the simple song alone even some company gets from elsewhere though they invited private companies to take over the utilities any part of. a lag so mr got to go home to pick him up because. i've been this is.
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just because i'm out. for you to lift bill brought up locals are ready to stand up for the basic human right of access to water it's about water but it's also over much more than war it's about the hurt and the redistribution of all of. us their debt downwards we want to. run. close to the best out of the children. the concepts of paying to perform i had to actually prepare myself to die. he did what to say when i asked him. as most are. you to slow in home or stop trying to her.
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libyan man's fight for justice against nato could go to europe's top human rights court as he claims he lines killed his family during a raid in twenty eleven. now we explain why our house and other houses were show all the military targets i don't understand why nato targeted our house. from extortion to drug deals one of the biggest u.s. police corruption scandals reveals an abuse of power within an elite task force in the secure baltimore. and tech giant facebook relating to cryptocurrency products as part of the policy against so-called deceptive marketing .
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it's eleven o'clock am in moscow and you're watching r t international live from our studio here with me in india today welcome to the program the libyan man who lost his whole family during a nato bombardment in the country is planning to take his fight for justice to the european court for human rights the international alliance reportedly dropped two bombs on his house during a campaign back in twenty eleven. now we demand that need to explain why our house and other houses were showing all the military targets i don't understand why nato targeted our house sadly my dear wife died as well as my cousins my innocent children our neighbors our friends were there with those it was a monstrous crime and nato has the latest equipment and technology which allows them to accurately determine the targets of the nato aircraft struck specifically
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at night when people were in their homes they intentionally hit civilian targets hospitals schools gas stations they destroyed all the infrastructure they were killing civilians and destroying civilian infrastructure apparently knowing there were no weapons there. you can see here on the map where the shelling took place by nato forces as kelli described thirteen people were killed in the attack including three children he admits his house may have been targeted because his father was a general who served under libya's former leader moammar gadhafi but cali says it was just a family home with no weapons or threat the lawsuit was filed almost seven years ago but he's faced an uphill struggle since to actually get his case into court nato argues that it had no evidence suggesting civilians were in the house at the time of the bombing however cali's says his lawyers have now found a way to overcome the alliance's immunity in such incidents and he hopes his case will set a precedent for those who also lost their families. we gathered our families
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in different parts of libya we found a man whose wife daughter and son as well as his mother died during the shelling there were other families in other cities a lot of families we compiled a report from all identified victims after having documented in photograph the material was so that this case would become a historical precedent. where the rates in the u.s. city of baltimore skyrocketed in twenty seventeen with fifty six killings per one hundred thousand people a new record for the city that already has a reputation for being dangerous and crime rate. few cities in body america never been to a more depressing leaving the city of baltimore baltimore struggles with a record high murder rate. murder.
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people. yes baltimore there is a robust active crime strategy. it all comes as baltimore has been wronged by the ongoing trials in one of america's biggest police corruption scandals the gun trace tossed for also an elite group of plainclothes officers was supposed to be reducing violence and crime however it now seems they've actually been adding to it six out of eight members of
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the group of pleaded guilty of charges of organized crime including extortion and drug dealing. has been covering the story. the baltimore police department is now involved in one of the biggest scandals in u.s. law enforcement history for months now the court system has been trying to investigate corruption within the city's police force eight officers are on trial over drug trafficking racketeering robbery and planting fake evidence like drugs and. we would create false reports to cover up the robberies we were involved in. it was like aware if life were got away with a lot of things if proven guilty the officers of may face twenty to one hundred years in prison and six of them have already pleaded guilty and are now acting as witnesses in hopes of softening the moving verdict and their lawyers claim the officer spilled guilt over what they've done mr jenkins is extremely remorseful he's been remorseful for a long time even before these charges were brought and he's relieved that today
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finally he was publicly able to accept responsibility for their clients sorry for what they did for sure. he sure seems regretful of what what happened i really don't have any comment meanwhile officers cases continue to be dismissed with hundreds under review and most of them involve incidents of officer switching off their body cameras to plant drugs or guns and then reenact seizing the evidence they had already planted we talked to christopher irvin who founded a group that helps former convicts back into society he's concerned about innocent people being set up by the authorities with fake evidence. going to jail for things that they didn't do so you know when you look at the news and you see that these police are corrupt these are the same guys that we lock up people work you know certainly jail reports putting guns on drugs is so sad when you look at the police to be semi that you trust in your city so my that you can call but you can't even
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call him because you don't know of the comfort you call. a case maybe it's so sad because the commissioner in baltimore do or not the you know at night is so scary is to be outside because you don't know if you will be robbed you know you look for the police to do to protect you and they're not alone in. the beginning and the men and election campaign in the japanese city of narco has again highlighted the issue of american military presence in the country japan central government and authorities and. u.s. troops are currently stationed have been in battle over the possible relocation of the base to the northern city of narco a recent poll which shows sixty three percent of voters oppose the relocation while only twenty percent support the move the incumbent mayor of the city says a vote for him would be a vote for defending japan's autonomy. showing that each of these elections are extremely important as they will have a great impact on the future of not go in okinawa our country's current
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administration is attacking us with attempts to sway the power of these elections are meant to define japanese democracy and our tanami we're asking people from all over the country for their understanding okinawa is in a difficult situation right now but if many people support us we will continue what we're doing in one thousand nine hundred six a review by japan and the us to sign of the american base should be relocated to the remote area of head nako the decision was made in order to reduce the military impact on the populated communities of southern okinawa but there has since been numerous crimes committed concerning the u.s. military presence that.
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activists in okinawa believe the japanese government has been turning a blind eye to the tense situation playing out in their region. and. misstating i mean it is a really strong body already so using that it could have nation of the day but another candidate is bucked up book by japanese into the government so he agree this. is location over there and the new meeting face. most people who are against the new media the basic core section is government job . government hungry ignoring voice against democracy and
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against division if the. accept a base they can get the money many citizens who know the troops the facts are really own it japan's government sent who sent. ministers money and all the mccall. the fake news of but we really let loose we will win. now people in afghanistan have been giving their accounts of the latest u.s. military operations in the country it comes as a new report says there's been a record number of air strikes since twenty twelve in afghanistan. islamic street militants green here the government then dropped off a leaflet to warn nash so we fled arledge then the americans were barred and destroyed the.
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