tv Sophie Co RT February 23, 2018 2:30pm-3:01pm EST
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i asked my son what they did with the man who came to see them my son was stunned and said what made fright the taters i asked what else they did he rape me that was he's on so i was lost for words i called another mother she told me her kids had the same story. my son decided to tell me everything he told me i was so afraid they said they would draw me the lake would lock me up in rehab for the rest of my life. and. the. children say that one of the supervisors who brought them to this man and his
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friend just watched them being raped and all the boys saw how they gave money to the supervisors the small children didn't even know what the banknotes were so they just described them as green bits of paper. with. multiple shooters going he's. going to get a good number that we. believe in the show they're raping a child there those kids they're talking about it openly stay here until the night and listen for yourself what they are talking about at their school.
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to be. sure he was framed they're accusing him of something he didn't do the director of the orphanage who let former inmates into the school they stayed overnight there they're the ones who did all of this with the kids and now they're just protecting each other so you complained about wrongdoing at the orphanage about abuse he was so naive to do this he filed complaints about the orphanages directed to kids are taken for a walk in winter without proper clothing for the older kids a beating of younger residents that they're not giving them food sometimes. even going to tell you a far reaching investigation into the claims of abuse is under way right now child well first specialists are also carrying out assessments of all orphanages in the region now to. what's going on in south korea a real day of ups and downs for russia's a limp again at the games there was a gold silver in the figure skating a failed doping test for
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a bobsled and the men's i saw the team through to the finals let's talk about. friday has really been a day of o.a.r. headlines here it began with the team's first gold medal n.p.n. chang and that was in figure skating fifteen year old alina as the gates of got the edge over her teammate eve gave him a video in the final standings after their points from the short and free skate programs were combined the two actually tied in the free skate a rare occurrence but of a performed better in her short program on wednesday this is also as each of us a little big. as her trading partner and close friend and another moment that was really precious to watch as well was the reaction back home in russia's countryside from alina's each of us first coach her family and other young figure skaters from the same school.
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material that. i was watching skating performances out of the corner of my eye when ilene appeared on the ice rink i stopped watching i don't watch a skating life i knew recordings of performances i watched alina's performance later and then meant the end of it because i still couldn't believe it only began to sink in when i saw the results well this triumph in figure skating was followed by some very disappointing news for the team a second russian asked the tested positive for doping earlier this week it was russian curler alexander crucial need ski whose bronze medal had to be taken away after a mill donia was found in his body this time on friday the bad news were about a doping sample from a female bobsledder who wasn't on the podium and she tested positive for a different drug back to the good news it's the reason why this square was full of russian flags and people cheering o.e.r. men's ice hockey team that qualified to the gold medal game after crushing the
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czech republic three to nothing and other stories last night i hung out with kim john. and donald trump well there are look alikes actually. waiting for the two main sporting news makers at chang to arrive back in town for the final stage of the olympics. mr trump mr kim here again we hear you to go to some hospitality houses. meet some people yeah i'm going to meet some mathlete i've seen the good ones and kidnapped them back to north korea all right guys let's go. did you start getting along any better i still have a bigger bucking the need for negotiating the thing with the. yes you know i got a bigger everything and you know. i'm going to sit in the front well we're in korea
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i guess you could say that they have a kid. i call atomic missile. what are you going to get on a twitter to. put in what you want to instagram they can go. to see it. today. i think the best place that we can solve. this at the bar where we think of some of. the dumbest really cool tricks so we are just outside canada's hospitality house and the leaders say they want to try and get it.
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we would love to have you but sorry. mr. so mr trump and mr kim were told they can come inside the canada house and they're going to try somewhere else. planned to help. might go. on the gentleman. up caught up so we're inside the czech house with mr trump and mr cameron as you can see people are going wild about a. cut they're taking pictures with the south korean flag doesn't matter which right koreas to be unified on them i wrote.
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some. column just going to ask you how did you let your sister the south korean peninsula. kawan. how come you. know. she was being a bit right you know my house. she hasn't traveled all blogs by the way way she i haven't seen a i'm trying to find out what he needed to know where she is has anyone seen my sister have you seen my sister came you know john. have you seen my sister came you know john yeah but my sister came you know john she was with my parents i don't trust that guy i want to enter and i want to be introduced to it right friend of mine of. you know why write about international relations you know i can't.
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coward janis allen and you know you have a train to go far to eat making sure that there's always fun at peace when your lunch break and day. yet courtesy of a t.v. magic nice to see some smalls from some rather than expected sources to say thanks for watching much more to come here not internationally includes more serious news as we said right after this break. this manufacture consent to stick to the public well. when the ruling classes protect themselves. in the final.
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we can all middle of the room sick. little blogs telling you on the idea that dropping bombs brings police to the chicken hawks forcing you to fight the battles. for new socks for the tell you that every gossip the tabloids are shall. i tell you pull it out by. all the hawks that we along with all the walking. in other news today the french prime minister has presented a new plan to fight the spread of his let me take stream is in the country's prisons it follows weeks of protests by prison stuff after an attack by
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a radicalized inmate shiela dubin as he takes up the story. well the french prime minister i learned sixty new measures today as part of this new nationwide d. radicalization and against radicalization plan including the creation of fifteen hundred new spaces within prisons where they would be able to isolate radicalized prisoners the idea of being able to stop any contagion amongst the general prison population stop any radicalization of other prisoners now they also announced that there was going to be more training for teachers and sports coaches to sport any signs of radicalization and then how to deal with that as well as more psychological help for the children whose parents had gone to my to this islamic station have since returned to france or actually have the figures of the number of children that have returned so far over seventy but many more are expected to come
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well why has this plan been announced now you may remember that just last month there were a series of nationwide strikes and protests here in france by prison guards that happened after a number of prison guards were actually attacked by radicalized inmates at a prison in cali i went to see what happened after those attacks the justice minister has allegedly offered an increase in salary to prison guards but the people here say it's just not enough what they want is a safe working environment and it's something they want right now well the french prime minister has said this plan is not a magic formula but they cannot ignore the problems that there are with radicalization in fact this plan is now the third plan in the last four years just two years ago under the oil and administration a d. radicalise center was launched it was seen as being an ambitious project the idea of taking people who'd been marginalized and putting through the process to d.
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radicalize them unfortunately it was an abysmal failure with only nine. in residence in the time that it was opened none of them actually finished the course and in fact one of them was arrested while they were on. from that course indeed well this is not just a front problem this is a europe wide problem in germany the ministers there have been talking about the warnings of a surge in islamic radicalized prisoners and how that could affect the normal prison population in fact we also know that figures released last year show that the number of terror related investigations in germany have gone up mercifully five times the previous year and then if we look at the u.k. as well we had warnings there for the u.k. government but the idea of self-styled and me is they were described as being in prisons who were radicalizing other prisoners this is
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a problem that is sweeping europe and while many countries have tried plans to do you radicalize so far nothing has worked this new plan in fronts work well that is the billion dollar question. yet another long drawn out problem as well that doesn't seem much close to being sought is the of the gun issue in america anti gun campaigners there is stepping up their fight to have new firearms laws passed they've no published indeed a list of over two hundred fifty members of congress whom they accuse of receiving money from the national rifle association a really powerful lobby group the long running row over gun control has intensified since last week florida school massacre was seventeen died and atrocities led to a big wave of impassioned calls again of late for action to finally be taken. and this is my pretty been. legally registered a r fifteen which i purchased over thirty years ago i decided today. i'm going to make sure this weapon will never be
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able to take a life. feeling now. one way despite clearly heightened emotions across the us right now there are still many continue to staunchly defend their right to buy and carry guns well we discussed it on air we had both sides would pleas for tighter controls to protect schools are one and that was roundly rejected by gun supporters who suggested they've actually they thought the solution was no on teaches. when you think about the power of the n.r.a. you really have to think about the control of the narrative that they have in the way that politicians that are for more guns and against gun control you know pretty much repeat the same buzz buzz lines and points that the n.r.a. kind of puts out this is totally overblown to suggest that any one group has way
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more sway or the ability to like truly put lives in danger the enter a certainly is is a powerful special interest group but there's probably you know a dozen twenty thirty i don't know it's hard to say who is more powerful think it's false it's the majority of american people supports what the n.r.a. puts out there many studies have actually shown that many people on the ground actually don't exactly support the same line by line arguments at the n.r.a. you put out there after the florida shooting president trump said he believes teachers should be armed which is a controversial stance in of itself well let's take a listen to his exact words school concealed carry where a teacher would have a concealed gun on them they go for special training that is the only step that could reasonably protect every kid in america today you can ban all the guns you
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want today you can ban every sale every manufacturer you're not going to stop a single shooting killer every killer is going to find a gun there are over two hundred thirty million guns and almost one per person in this country if we're talking about specifically education and schools we really have to think reflect and think what does education really mean to us and if we want to militarize these areas if we want to introduce weapons and encourage teachers to carry weapons i think that that's absurd. and the story goes on bus the round up so far this off comes good old the latest twenty four seven folks are watching from the. news of the war from gaza to the lest. we dismantle the settlements what we got good neighbors we got to tell them is a she said launching
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a look at store religious symbol i will keep it simple and dug tunnels so instead of having a good neighbors we have a mustang which is a pill state. that . the girls i want to do it in just show me face do we really be very clear let's go away go to. management. and they are they they when they up and they have.
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i have the honor to interview alister croaky is a former diplomat and founder and director of conflicts form and we discussed the middle east and west are welcome to moscow and thank you for talking with the with r t. let's start out with syria and the conflict has been going on almost seven years now. part of that conflict has come to an end with the almost complete defeat of isis and its affiliate. in that country primarily proxies now this calm thirty is changing how is it different this conflict about as opposed to the formal one you know it really is quite tragic because syria was slowly coming to a conclusion and coming to an end and a political end with a political solution that was going to very likely emerge from these other
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processes going on and now suddenly we have new wars and we have a new episode you use all the plural wars wars explain we've got three at least wars. the internal war is only going the war against the jihad is is winding down syria has had a big success which i always thought was going to be much more difficult but in practice it's almost finished so we should be moving directly towards a political situation instead of which we have first of all america deciding to have a permanent base in northeast of syria on thirty percent of syria why are they want that it's nothing to do with putting pressure on us to get a better constitutional agreement or whatever the something quite different about that it's a very aggressive position using the kurds as it even though the kurds are not a majority in this part of syria at all they're actually no more than thirty
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percent in that poll maybe a majority enough. five percent of the country yeah yeah or thirty thirty or forty maybe but a lot of the country. and really what this is about is first of all simply didn't i president putin a political solution to syria in advance was like the so you. mentions here this is spite is there when it is the politics of diplomacy or a military doctrine of spite you could call it that or you'd say it's the policy of the lowest common denominator which is to stop. all putin having a political victory from syria of being if you like winning or maybe it's just a policy not knowing what else to do you know it's been a very clear and. deliberate policy by centcom who act as viceroy in this area the colonel in charge of it axes viceroy in
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this area it's a very deliberate policy to deny the territory and they say this is clear to try and build it up economically and it's not a short term thing to do with a star no because if you look at the defense estimates for twenty nineteen not this year but the following year you'll find five hundred fifty million mark for the kurdish forces that the americans are you said morris three distinct ok one more there the second war of course is turkey has come into a frame and says it's going to go all the way across the border than the border of turkey right up to the iranian border past the north and the euphrates to there and to clear out all of what they call the kurdish terrorists there along that border but in the middle of this there's an american roadblock called man be sitting
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straight in the middle of the road that the turks are going to go take and. the americans say we're not budging and the turks say they only will not go in and the techs say we're going anyway in our life the two most important nato allies in the entire life exactly and the rhetoric in turkey is is is really heating up very strong very nationalist. very anti american very strongly. everyone and not only did they say they're going to go and we don't care but there's also conflict with the syrian government forces now the turks have put their positions in and it led almost to block the syrian army from completing their operation here part of it is illegal in the sense that it's part of the deescalation zone but this is also politics geopolitics of of turkey trying to to block it and now we have
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an agreement it seems it's a formal agreement between the kurds and the syrian government that syria will come in and take over the a free in area and they and the turks are saying no we're going to proceed jeffrey so there is a real risk now that not only that can be if you like a war in the north east either with the syrian forces or between with syrian forces or russian forces in the north east but a conflict between the turks and the americans and a conflict or both between the turks and the syrian armed forces and then. we have israel which has been bombing regularly syria during this period and as you know very well last saturday there was the incident where we were that close to a war very very close to the war with the shooting down of an f.
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sixteen not only an f. sixteen but the most sophisticated it's been reported that president putin and prime minister netanyahu had a conversation and it was quite heated we don't know what the contents of that were but i tend to agree with you that it was very close to the line right there the escalation was necessary but it's also showing force ok i mean it's also debated to what degree syria took the initiative to defend itself over and over the years of one hundred incursions from israel over its sovereign territory and that plane went down so it is upping the stakes here i think it's quite clear that this was a strategic decision probably not only by syria but perhaps by syria and its allies to make a new redline of israel kept if you like not only disrupting
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but disrupting any political process in syria by these methods to i don't think they were doing that much damage to syria and from what i understand but it was but it was an effort to show israeli force to show that they had the ability to overfly now what is critical in this and what is very obvious is that the air defense of syria is totally unified in integrated with the russian system it carries a russian flag on it it's not just the syrian flag so clearly when they were flying firing what they described as a bouquet of twenty seven surface to air missiles at the israeli aircraft coming in . you know the russians who are all about it i'm not saying there was permission or they nodded but they didn't they didn't take action against a lot of the players that you talked about they're not the bluffing type i mean
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particularly the turks everyone is put invested in enormous amount he keeps there's not a lot of wiggle room for him here ok assad you know his great swaths of his country are still under foreign occupation here the united states is there almost no one of all the parties we mentioned wants the united states right there and then we have two other countries we haven't heard very much about that but aren't any red you know i think this is i mean i think precisely this was a move mr putin's talk with the israeli prime minister to say listen you know ok you may have your interests in your security we hear that but you don't mess up syria but our security interests that's russian security interests ok not just assad we want a stable syria and we want a stable lebanon and you can't just send in planes every week to bomb the country
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and disrupt the political process in this way it's unacceptable and i think this was a message that was delivered both physically and by telephone. to the prime minister but it's a very strategically a huge message because israel depends entirely on air superiority overwhelming oh no totally no i mean the army they made a decision after the two thousand and six war that they couldn't put boots on the ground in lebanon let alone in syria for more than six days i mean they would not be possible to do this so superiority is crucial do they have it. now i don't know do they have it in lebanon maybe not but it's been tested for a year and it's been tested and now israel has a huge decision do you actually accept that and digest it.
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affectively say we are deterred we are not able to use our military force against the arab way labeled us which only militants shift in if you will in its entire military posture in the region cultural shift they culturally have been a used and. assimilated to the idea that they have complete domination of all of their arab neighbors guys and that they have the military right to use it and suddenly they're being told well you know maybe the problem with the you know coming in and of course i mean you know putin's given his warning so the israelis also have to think i don't know what missile was he was. i doubt it was an s two hundred but it could have been but what also is there are s four hundred who are very potent russian surface.
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