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tv   News  RT  March 11, 2018 6:00am-6:30am EDT

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or anything between six thousand and nine thousand and unsurprisingly most university decided to set nine thousand pounds most students we have now half a million students going through every year most of those will be paying minimum one thousand pounds. and that's stuns. over the course of fifteen years british politicians are ruling class that enjoyed free access to education inflicted a paying system on the new generation. british students along with a european fellows now have to deal with these new rulings that's the way it is. they're young they long for a solid future that thirsty for knowledge and dream of climbing the social ladder all that has a price tag and they'd better get used to it. and it i grew up in
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a working class family in the south of poland the young woman could have enrolled in a university in cracow in copenhagen or even amsterdam. it would have been free in england and it was granted a student loan to pay for her nine thousand pounds tuition fee. i knew i was going to go abroad to study and i think well for a little while i thought it was going to be scotland but then. i think i decided it was england you know like way back and it just stuck with me and i and i came here and i was it was scary it was so scary because i was away from home i was here alone i don't have anywhere to turn to and look at me now i study chinese of all the classes that i could have chosen i can't wait for you know what the future holds when i'm going to do i have so many ideas but we'll see.
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i talked to my grandfather once and we're talking about everything else and then kind of started talking about university and how much money that costs and everything and i had many thoughts about ok i'll maybe maybe i'll quit maybe i'll you know it's too much maybe it's not worth it and then i realized well how my going to pay it back but that's one of the reasons why i stayed and other reason bigger even is that i like what i do i think i'm not quite sure where that came from my need to go to university i think is because. none none of my family members went to university i think i wanted to be i wanted to be that one first person who did that and my mom my mom really wanted me to do that as well she did encourage me strongly i don't know what i would do without her if i fail i would i would feel like i
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failed her and i never want to do that ever. because. being here and doing what i do and being university is my way of paying her back problem that she's to me i think that. yeah i'm good it's my way of paying back for everything. and. will european students be forced one day to get into debt. should education become a sellable good. must didn't speak um self-made finance has to own an education. northern european countries things a bit differently. what
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politicians do such as meeting. to put themselves on the line they get accepted or rejected. so when you want to present injury. or something want to be. back at it like to be for us this is what the forecast for in the morning can people get. interested always in the waters in the house yes i am i should. say. so there's some promise that i'm valid still acting or any of us to dump on the end on the most of it on the new year to some poor and fought last underpinning made i
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think all this is the. if a man asked mr don't submit all adult instead of your feet it sounds like most of the vastness out to down to spit. or lick it on to find new found skill angles going to pull together is going to get is my boy so but all of the hammer in our studio. so dumb it all be valid mourner suited up able to scale up with a walking us muscle. at last on hamlet building but when it's got. going to from that it appears not and so most of the bit on the studio. just like denmark and finland not only offers free education to european students but also allocates a universal ground to each through dish student three hundred euros a month for six years. this way the student sees his or her time at university as an experience of freedom and learning a way to shape
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a critical mind and apprehend the world here it's important it's called the student experience. they are in love with the us the for us to them no matter internet from . their. mics on manic or. don't hold their friends photo and number her third at twelve can ask op us in from paid. tanker feet oke tank. mid and yelped i'm a forty four and i said that the lesson from to my docs is that none that. i have. been other than the one that made me have a heart that i believe that we ought to drum up at the window shop and have the do . you have to start us off good maps of the ground up on how far this because you know they are about just coming down i have to say. that if
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a child if you know man. it was something to behold i told you all the us thing. alone to those trying to solve all summonses not just. or soon to most all sales will come to market so now this i mean. some say at half the club was in a fight here no p.o.v. so. the moment you know you know fun thing with a good thing during a time and then back to empty our mothers' and me and me and decide this is the good news what's the plan since fantasy of a man the judge and the most i could give me evidence against the senate called him a spine you say on the surface the. don't get some f. don't talk about stuff different about stuff how the more the still loom the horror of a result the more hell you all hold about. if you know what he's going six months in
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a so that's where the moments come from doing the show not the. investigation from we call the toss a. special stimulus i just don't get it from us but. your picture of your teacher i played it when i meant to call start i kind of off putting on the come to. the side. for my state the fourth because i live it and it has not the most money i think of the oaks of this lot harder so think i'll see over your total how to spin it all not just when i was trying to figure it out do you congressman i said you have something to muskoka i'm still finding out is that a goddamn patsy it at the end of this week somehow i thought anything new on sunday some of the most infamous getting number six on the c.c. that's any kind to your point that three hundred to some your thank you for time means that i bought it out in the middle of the on the stand.
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just. like what happens elsewhere the jewish unfeeling priests hasn't deterred young english students from enrolling. in one thousand nine hundred eight just before the introduction of tuition fees there were eight hundred thousand students in english universities. there are now two point three million the cost to access knowledge hasn't deterred them so why stop there. dave vice chancellor is already making noises about the cap behavior still to live thousand pounds a year. many are saying that we need to move to an american style system where it's much much more expensive it's not a nine thousand pounds capital b. much much more but i think what we're witnessing i'm in a cross the public sector an equation on public sector within the united kingdom within the u.k. it's probably the third phase of competition and privatized market ties ation since
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since the second world war and that's what we've seen in terms of higher education it's a slow creep and when you start to introduce that you get the leadership of universities stop thinking necessarily about the education that they are providing or about the public good start importing the behaviors of what they see as a competitive environment elsewhere within the private sector. manchester so students see we've got many different universities here manchester metropolitan university university or so forth northwestern college of music manchester articulate a million so on our top one student population is about one hundred thirty thousand students which is pretty much one third of the city our campus year it is almost as big as mentions for city center. the division of communications and marketing
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communicates everything that's good about the university both internally and text and it's developing and it's also professionalizing the higher education sector is probably like behind the commercial sector for some time but it's catching up very fast our university has its very own starbucks if you're into starbucks if you're into like taking selfies with your starbucks cup and everything this is pretty much the place to go if you go to some where you're going to get a free cookies if you go to mcdonald's you're going to get a free mc flurry and so. saw the series pretty much made for students so make great use of the student fees have increased from three thousand pounds to nine thousand pounds that does mean that students want better value for money they want more than marketing through help and communicate what what the benefits of an organization are so we always have many many different people coming over we had some professors
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from many different countries we have also movie directors and everything if you want to make a good impression stuff you can get a job offers were in higher education in the u.k. traditions like historically communications and marketing have been very much support function what we're seeing now is a transformation where we're moving from a supporting role to a leadership role. and that's the feeling that as has come very very quickly over the last few years that it's not just about education anymore it's also about running a business many universities are now businesses and the vice chancellors are also chief executives and they make no they're not shy in saying this they have to make money they have to make a profit and startlingly what we found is that over
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a period of five years vice chancellors salaries had increased by on average somewhere in the region of twenty six percent whereas in the same period for your main gate lecturers those people are actually providing the service to the students so they are a drop in real terms by twelve percent on this is a clear normally and you have to ask yourself the questions why is this happening. reform this is the only system similar to all those worldwide could support paying education rely on an essential concept an economic theory born in the sixty's. and it rose to. at the end of the ninety's. the human capital. but keep it that you must take what i say faith corsi there. and i need you disposed us took the good bit also the good is also a very noisy. a.q.r. don't. you know that bt. lost all of the reform as you know what's really
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a pharmacy or even still the courses they. want this would be so they are it all off you pause. the songs. you give that is that the name they're both new and so it all clichy cimon the more they are learned remember the feel say the pharmacy also give either a pause or a larger society yeah don't have a bottle to come does it true that it. was all set up off the it what you feel most at regime like on a sauce that blue green valley or economic is very like going to meet at a sausage d.c.p. needed to jump so that your course you pause desire may lead you just we've heard it all proceed you know says it you didn't kill some other top receiver you got bigger share. in the toy meet
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the bush plan to eat. all these. influenced by the english tidal wave in two thousand and six germany also raised this tuition fees authorizing universities to charge one thousand euros per year literately finished two years all the lender of federal states slowly abandon this policy to return to an entirely free system. ga first this one only has it. it's business as for homes and buildings i'm a big dog how does midget buck does the owner visited if i had to go to when he visited. but that wouldn't just the first hoover the i'm for years before now up to him could be at odds of. so in other words order
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to human doors led by to him to be on fire fighter in him come. in style but as many action scene come. on. skips as i'm normally coniston when he visited and get. this in shift its business model to tighten daughter leading to bit skips is because in that benzine. xen they just wouldn't be on z. but listen and. we visit if it's a must but the university of manchester does into us a pushing this it's your aunt to florida to the arctic when for cedar fair become. decent in the states you and placed. despite some resistance the english model is spreading throughout europe. it applies theories elaborated by large international
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instances mostly by the world bank and the o.e.c.d. . from now on the knowledge market is the new doctrine universities are expected to become a strategic force in wealth production. they must become like companies and industries they must promote applied research they must favor in playability they must produce a qualified workforce consistent with companies designers. models does this took to it a bit of affinity swoosh nearly as yet if you're going to fix that also if you think that it a hobby and see if you can be moved. guardian technician that i can to sion. traineeships into neiman ward the human voice defensive for the waterloo comment to be daft isn't a name it's not my computer to be had and what does it cover just after to give it the a current in under who should in email it's pretty easy of does he know i was bitten that's the one to me i'm involved in or does not in a guy this is all in internet isn't shafton is he to employ ability id for absolute
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feel good from or end up using dolphin does the division of the qualitative good to get out into the internet i don't have. this british model i'm blue ahmed accommodation more the first did when he visited forty others number was always been known to institute through one this is their first was in. these i want to is there isn't lee by months on finished first read the first blunder of the theme for george one for. the. church secret indeed carefully priests accused of sexually abusing children can get away with it quite literally i like to call this the geographic solution. what the bishop needs to do then he finds out that the priest is is
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a perpetrator is simply moves him to a different spot where the previous standards not the highest ranks of the catholic church help conceal the accused priests from the police and justice system to that end that's known as the end then. and.
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used to. have been found in the. way he had dined with his daughter before the. nearby. finally managed to deliver aid to syria. with civilians being prevented from fleeing the area. using both. official one hundred. being hosted by the country.
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the week's top stories in the main headlines of today welcome to the weekly. traces of the nerve agent used to poison a former russian spy and his daughter have reportedly been found in a restaurant in the british city of salzburg the pair had had a meal there two hours before being found unconscious on a park bench the pizzeria is now one of five sites cordoned off by police as part of their ongoing investigation. the story. a week ago two people were found collapsed on an unremarkable bench near a quiet shopping center in salisbury the area was sealed off and a major incident was declared at the hospital where the pair were being treated for exposure to an unknown substance but no one really took much notice of the man and the woman until about twenty four hours later when breaking news reports began to flood the airways that the sixty six year old man was in fact service cripple
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a former russian spy. group el stilted in the soviet forces he quickly moved to russia's foreign military intelligence agency the g o u on a mission to the mediterranean region in ninety five he was recruited by calling him till antonio elder is that he don't go a british intelligence. rooming have luminol. exposed at least three hundred russian spies to the u.k. he handed over the g. or use entire phone directory doing in this did mobile damage to most. five years on colonel scrupled retired from the jail you on health grounds but continued moving crucial information to britain's m i six they could meet him with and build him a time share holiday home in spain sell close to the double agent was convicted in twenty six of treason getting at the teen years since it's in the top security
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russian jail but just four years later he was freed in a high profile spy swap between moscow and washington scruple moved to the sylvan british town of celebrity where his recruits a publisher miller allegedly lives the explorer then enjoyed a fairly low profile till now the first speculations appear with immediate parallels drawn to another former russian agent poisoned in london twelve years ago with a public inquiry later lying the blame squarely at the kremlin feet was history repeating itself and it didn't stop there every wild theory was given its day in the. son was it north korea was it russia's revenge for treason after all these years was putin being framed is it linked to the trump russia collusion investigation we need to make sure that we respond not to rumor but all the evidence that they collect this investigation is that the stages and and the speculations and helpful at this time if we are to be rigorous in this investigation we must avoid speculation people not
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to speculate such warnings did nothing to quell the fires however as police reveal that screwball and his daughter were deliberately targeted with a nerve agent news reports charge for theorizing that the attack came from the very top in moscow bad things have been known to happen to russians who crossed vladimir putin the fact that a nerve agent was use strengthens the likelihood that this was a state sponsor of some sort and russia is the chief suspect of course that doesn't look like an act of provocation by putin here has been making increasingly bold and brazen in the west the british foreign secretary boris johnson join the chorus as well yes to more sanctions on russia and no to the upcoming football world cup that is if the kremlin is indeed involved you must be very confident that we say because it is too early to prejudge the investigation but if the suspicions on both sides of the house prove to be well founded then it may very well be mr speaker that we are forced to look again at our regime our sanctions regime and other measures that
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we seek to put in place russia hit back at johnson's comments calling them wild and aimed at damaging relations between the two countries and while the investigation continues and concrete details are few and far between the public court looks to have already solved the crime and i talk of this nature that any time especially this time on the part of the russian government would constitute a monumental act of political self harm resulting in severe and significant reputational damage across the world obviously the shadows of the resonance in so. really people's minds are going to be from the alexander litvinenko case because that dominated the british had lines for so long and it seems at least superficially that there are parallels here let's face it in intelligence terms he was a busted flush he had been caught in russia he'd been convicted to being sent to prison he'd been pardoned and allowed to go free so you know the russian authorities will
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have picked him clean of any intelligence he had which would be useful to them and to since he got to the u.k. m i six would have done the same thing so you know in terms of his old intelligence role it's really nothing more to add to it so in terms of what he might be involved in now i think that's where the most patients going to be found and that's what the intelligence agencies and the police are going to be investigating intensively at the moment. after a week due to heavy fighting you were in and red cross and trucks finally enter the perceived syrian enclave of eastern ghouta of damascus district held by militants and home to nearly four hundred thousand people the convoy had been allowed into the area or monday but was forced to leave before finishing be unloading. at one point three hundred families and gathered to cross into damascus via an evacuation route set up by russia but it was shelled by the militants in
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a bid to prevent them from leaving the area as the syrian army tries to retake the region militants are doing all they can to defend their last bastion syria's capital. you have all sorts of needs inside the will today the priority remains medical help that we need to. reach with people inside the whole time and food aid as well. very bloody two months here the beginning of this year it is really hell for the children.
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in this in this situation they have no we have to go. my colleague spoke to a syrian a mother superior working at a refugee camp organized for those fleeing eastern ghouta that is. in the rebel side. to keep the civilian under their custody and may be to use them as a human shield go in go from a lot of out from a lot to the camp is very dangerous. people are shelled and they are sniped and we have witnessed this our team or was there in
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contact with families inside wanting to go out i'm imagining that those trapped within the city. are completely helpless and we can't imagine the kind of living conditions as well because of lack of supplies those people they want to leave because they are living in extreme conditions. i have one my for many. a request from people inside. to be helped to go out safely because inside it's also very difficult for them person messages on your phone can you describe the kind of things that they're saying i am getting private messages and you know the woman i would never save their woman you can you expand on that why why are they going to have sexual violence every time we have a head to deal with and you acquitted people we have found like twenty
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five percent of the women and the little little girls they have. they have been assault it is very said reality. tell us who the perpetrators are of sexual violence the people in control the men that are in control and they can oblige. this week also saw claims of a fresh chemical attack on ghouta allegedly carried out by the syrian government something damascus strongly denies middle east analysts told us syria the militants have a track record of using chemical weapons to deliberately derail peace initiatives. we noticed kind of pattern whenever there's a there's a council meeting human rights council meeting or security council meeting prior to this we see this kind of attacks.

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