tv News RT March 1, 2018 7:00am-7:31am EST
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rypien union the implications of briggs very profound for both nations i think you know let's have a look at the other two interviews just not just from them and see what they have to have a little bit dawdled. with them in this threesome me or david davis even though you know on either side of the complacent because it's been upgraded of composite of peace and i we tried hard in the bracks at the base to get the irish message over. i went to some of the universities and textures blood and accordance with the dead then to soak went over to some debate both the reality is that none of them kerttu hoots about northern ireland it was no longer an issue it wasn't one of the. top three stories as it was for for generations in the news. thirty years of troubles twenty years of peace but of course but that process which some people
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believe is a fundamental danger to the peace process how do you evaluate the braggs this and the good friday agreement are mutually incompatible you can also have brags that you cannot have a forcing of the north of ireland i was of the european union on the one hand and still claim to honor in words and spares and last are the good friday agreement i think the tories have played a very dangerous game no way can our and our show darren and our will our lands be the collateral damage in the midst of all of the ass. but first here betty i have the myth that he was to show who negotiated the good friday agreement if uses words beautifully but some of his stuff was very very pointed you can understand bertie ahearn frustration with the way things have developed in terms of the good friday agreement when you've got british ministers or former secretaries of state for
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northern are now recklessly saying frankly the good friday agreement as served its time they certainly weren't saying that when they were in office you can understand why bertie ahearn is virtually uttering disbelief at the way events of turned bertie ahearn was the man who flew up from dublin to belfast on the morning of his mother's own funeral to try and clinch that agreement he put years of effort without any electoral reward in the south people weren't voting in the twenty six counties of violence on the basis of what was happening in the north bertie ahearn wasn't doing it for you know vainglorious reasons he wasn't even doing it for domestic political reasons he put a lot of effort into the peace process for the good of ireland as a whole and the middle of mcdonald very much the merging woman of irish politics if she is going to be a force to be reckoned with merriment on was the obvious successes you carry on and she's very very smart intellectually she's very very well at human politically she will leitch in fane i'm sure to greater success you've got
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a lot where she come from first of all in one thousand nine hundred seven the year prior to the good friday agreement she only had a single member of the oil aaron you know twenty years on the vote there already up to twenty three t.d.'s on the mary lou i would expect she would fain to continue to grow very rapidly and i think the big attraction in terms of marilu to ordinary voters is she's not really associated with the northern irish conflict in the way that gerry adams was so she's far less politically toxic and she can in many ways continue to modernize invade and lead it further and further away from those ira roots this week we've seen a significant shift in the labor party british wing on the question of the euro. being customs union that may offer an op if it's supported by a majority of m.p.'s as it might be a solution to a physical border between the north of ireland and of the public but many of the interviewees were suggesting this is more than a physical border the storm is the birth of
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a psychological border they're concerned about more than just the existence of customs porson yeah i mean nationalists across the on the violence will just about accept a border as a political fact in the short to medium term but they want a united ireland more broadly but they're certainly not going to accept it as a fence nor reinvigorated one. of the troubles now whether you have an electronic fence or whether you have a physical fence the fact is you know it's something that nationalists don't want the only way you can get around that is to have a customs union embracing the u.k. and ireland and if there's not a bespoke u.k. island deal then frankly the u.k. has to stay within the customs union as the labor party is now proposing there are no alternatives professor john tongue thank you so much just one final thing looks circular liverpool swisscom producing qualities but for being a guest in the show in total to the they'll examine quick whisky scotch in the
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quick a couple came this past phoned your many friends in liverpool fantastic thank you very much thank you so much for the interview thank you. throughout all three of our programs in ireland these major figures of zero when the dangers that bret's that poses to the peace process they see the dismantling of barriers in ireland is not just physical but psychological and breck's that threatens up process interestingly the rather more concerned about the potential impact on the island of ireland itself than for example the threat to trade and commerce between britain and ireland. and westminster the tonic plates are also shifting the opposition labor party switch to support a european customs union this week is not just a tactical shift to place the government in a tight parliamentary corner but a strategic move past the justified on the basis of only such an initiative can honor the pledge to fictionalise border between the north and south for violent it seems that now for the first time in westminster politics what churchill termed the
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dreary steeples of a man and tyrone could be crucial in determining the political balance of london. so from all of us to alex simon show a goodbye and chima next week for our special program marking international women's day. feeling the tale of a genuinely have a bottle of saudi shine a six oir here and. an
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estimated eighty percent under-age refugees are now living in greece. you know still more to go. to your home in new york for getting. many sell their bodies just to make ends meet. you know in the second i get you know all the sins in there that. says a lot of things it. also has turned to dealing drugs to make a living. and loved loved loved the little. game and then you. apply for many flips 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
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from the fans it's the age of the super manager kill the loneliness and spend the two to twenty million or one player. book it's an experience like. nothing else not to because i want to share what i think of what i know about the beautiful guy great so well all chance with. the thinks he's going to. in some american cities the police have built themselves cling to refutation of people who walk on the streets of the united states who are at risk from the very people who are supposed to protect that poor people are no more afraid of the police than of us in the us. you can see something happening in this is like i don't want to call the cops let that happen rather than call the cops in and those young black men lose their lives chasing the with their
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fingers on the trigger you never know better safe than sorry i don't know that someone else is going to pull a gun so. unfortunately around and around here we end up going our guns are told from such precautions to bill clinton. a russia sponsored ceasefire in a damascus suburb failed for a second day after terrorists shelled an evacuation of route preventing hundreds of civilians from leaving the war torn area. facebook admits it still found no sign that of russia interfered in the u.k. vote despite a renewed effort to dig up proof. and berlin is our split over
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a local initiative to introduce sex education in kindergartens with brochures featuring transgender identity and same sex marriage issues. thursday march the first here in moscow are you watching r.t. international and a very warm welcome to you. a third russia sponsored humanitarian pause in syria's eastern ghouta is under way now during the previous two a safety corridor organized by russia came under heavy shelling from terrorists preventing civilians from leaving the district according to the russian run a reconciliation center trapped residents are now asking for human rights groups to get involved the failed truce efforts were certainly provoked a heated debate at a un security council meeting. the fighting
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has not stopped the opposition groups operating in eastern good to have made clear their commitment to the cease fire on the very first day the militants use the declared pools to stop an onslaught on the second day the same move to shelling has continued including of the humanitarian corridor that's a single person has left the danger zone. there were reports that the assad regime once again used chlorine. gas as a weapon i'm tired of asking this but do you understand how pointless it would be for damascus to use chemical weapons both from a military and political standpoint whereas for the militants it would make perfect sense i think you understand this perfectly well but you persistently look for a pretext for an armed intervention. russia does not get unilaterally rewrite the terms of the resolution if russia is able to deliver a five pools let it deliver
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a twenty four hour one so you wouldn't need your new book that was due in our western partners are portraying the situation as if the resolution applies only to damascus and to russia as if it all depends almost exclusively on the will of our country may i ask you what you have done to implement the resolution if any of you lifted a finger you use your influence on those who you consider the moderate opposition have you persuaded them to lay down their weapons and release hostages there are been a large number of efforts to protect civilians in the area russia carries out a five hour humanitarian positive daily basis in the hopes of protecting civilians and allowing them to get out through the humanitarian corridor furthermore the un security council has passed a resolution calling for a thirty day cease fire now a letter was sent to the un security council by some of the opposition and rebel groups saying that they would honor this u.n. resolution however at this point always three hundred civilians have been prevented from leaving due to the attacks they've experienced as they try to escape now the
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russian representative pointed out that these kind of humanitarian concerns and outrage were not being raised while the liberation of iraq was taking place you will be because the americans. so where were you when the u.s. coalition were leaving records where was your outcry it's been months since the terrorists were forced out of the city and it's still unfit for life. there was quite clearly a gap in the international media. in the way the different situations have been portrayed when the syrian city of raka and the iraqi city of mosul were being liberated by the u.s. led coalition and a lot of bombing was taking place that we heard u.s. leaders say making statements to the effect that civilian casualties are just a fact of life civilian casualties are a fact of life so it was quite a heated exchange at the united nations but all parties agree that the lives of civilians in eastern duty is key at however there is quite
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a disagreement about who's responsible for the circumstances in the situation in the country well the neighboring iraq people are dealing with life after liberation from terrorists iraqi refugees in the countries anbar province say they feel safer in camps than in the homes they're being told in some cases forced to return to and that's according to a joint report by three humanitarian organizations the report says eighty four percent of refugees feel much safer in their camps only one percent sure they still have a house to return to or half of those questioned know their homes have been destroyed testimonies in the report appear to reflect those figures. we didn't make it to this place without seeing death with their own eyes a thousand times. i can't return to ramadi my house was damaged by isis i'm worried about the camp
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management telling us to leave and return home i had remiss that i might close the count there's nothing official most of my friends have returned to ramadi but i can't go i can't afford to repair my house. that. we are stuck in here like sheep the last month anality crew was filming in the iraqi city of mosul which was liberated from i still over a year ago as these pig. is here show the still little sign of the city returning to normal and while people are being told to return locals who are actually in most soul say the author he's themselves are afraid to do so. how many bodies have you removed since you started working in this area approximately five hundred ok then you move yes in houses and on.
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