tv Going Underground RT March 26, 2018 6:30am-7:00am EDT
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we are very conscious in britain of the importance of tackling the humanitarian crisis and yemen and we do want to ensure that the actions taken by others particularly those who are our partners make that situation even worse well we spoke to a journalist on the ground in yemen hussein because he about some of the alleged saudi actions that the british government to factor supports that double strike that they you know as used to use this tactic and they say i got that guy the on of the world and afghanistan thought of going to canada but they you. know the let's call it that is using this against civilians dog it against the home they target civilians then they thought it is cooler than they thought you don't know that if you have a home has been destroyed by as that i the fittest people are going to go that their neighbors don't know this and they do that and i think this is the kind of that i think that the u.k. is given to this i'll get a coalition is using this technique but there are reasons according to britain's former ambassador william patey that we support saudi arabia i mean britain has
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extensive interests and so you really have. military tree economic security interests so you are often accused of having a system that has bred extremism but equally they're in the forefront of the battle against people like al qaida and. they keep us safe and according to tory m.p. a member of the committee for arms export control the saudi government isn't even all that repressive anymore. do you not think saudi arabia is a repressive regime it has been i think it's changing because they are now allowing women to drive they are changing the role of women in society they wanting women to get elected into parliament it is moving forward to a democratic society but another member of the british committee labor m.p. lloyd russell moyle has a very different view the argument is not that the sound is a bombing women in saudi arabia the argument is they're bombing the heck out of people in yemen you know kind so what they're doing for people in saudi is neither
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here nor there when we're talking about the arms now actually the fact that they're allowing women after many many years of not to drive in saudi arabia is hardly the gold standard of we've been a quality in feminism as the saudi arabian government the bomb civilians at times using illegal cluster bombs sold to them by the u.k. government to resume still insist that britain has one of the most rigorous arms export controls in the world we spoke to the author of shadow world. arms exports in the united kingdom is not amongst the most rigorous in the world and we've seen that over years and years and years it's my view that simply by exporting to a country like saudi arabia who's the human rights abuses at home has been documented over decades and decades his involvement in conflicts in the middle east both historically and currently is almost the stuff of legend it's so pronounced and so important in that region that by exporting to the country the united kingdom
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government is violating its own laws let alone the international arms trade treaty of which it was a claimed proud signatory let alone the e use common position on arms exports let alone the rules of war and a whole lot of international humanitarian law but while going underground has been covering the ever worsening crisis in yemen as hundreds of cases of cholera turn from thousands to now a million here is journalist and filmmaker john pilger to explain relative media silence to the parent u.k. government ignorance over yemen. the middle east itself is is seen by us us when i mean in the west in terms of its usefulness syria israel elsewhere saudi arabia and this and the yemen as expendable it's either one of the other useful or expendable and that appears to dominate. the news coverage
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perception or the perception we're allowed of this part of the world joining me now from jordan is the regional director of unicef middle east and north africa get companies to tell us what british made bombs have done in the poorest country in the middle east thanks so much for joining us is the third anniversary of the saudi backed bombing with with british arms how is the world's worst humanitarian crisis well i'm just coming out of yemen after another visit another visit making it crystal clear that children are suffering are suffering dramatically of the impact of three years of war britain is of course a donor but to resume says the saudi investigations of discovered no war crimes as such what has been the effect of bombs dropping on villages in yemen well the impact upon children east's and then we have seen last year
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long over eleven hundred children being killed. or very seriously injured to day at close to two million children in yemen are not able to go to school we have seen last year an unprecedented outbreak of what the. color out we have seen an outbreak of. in yemen. over four hundred thousand children are suffering from the life threatening. severe acute malnutrition as a result of war and it's not one or another part of the it is everybody who has been fighting in their yemen and that has to be held accountable for that the
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suffering of children. suffering of children in a war that is not of children's making let's be very clear that a war that has become a war on children it's difficult to imagine those numbers obviously is as a human being but while britain continues to sell arms to saudi arabia the u.s. senate just voted to continue the war bernie sanders the senator said america the usa should stop funding it the senate majority leader mitch mcconnell said u.s. intelligence will result in fewer casualties presumably child casualties as well hopeful that u.s. intelligence is going to bring fewer casualties to the bombing campaign well only if i may talk from a children's perspective if i may talk on behalf of every single mother and father who have seen their children killed and severely injured i have on the one message it's not about fewer children to be killed and that should be no single boy
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and no single girl or killed that britain is proud of its intelligence services and if britain is providing intelligence for the bombs that are being dropped on yemen surely surely that's a reason for hope for unicef to day because of the war because of decades of in the development and every single ten minutes a child is dying from a preventable disease for the simple fact that we are not able any longer to vaccinate children timely children suffering from a lack of access to drinking what the resulting in severe acute diary of the war simply needs to stop and all parties need to take their responsibility or for that or any country that has any authority over the fighting parties britain is earning
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billions of dollars billions of pounds. by selling the weapons in the war planes you're asking for one hundred million dollars more i think that brings you up to something like a third of a billion that you want what has unicef going to spend that money well we gonna spend that money wisely we gonna spend that money to guarantee that every single boy and girl in yemen can lead a healthy life that it has access to those health services that every mother and father are one step children to access to guarantee that every boy and girl can go to school and benefit from the world of the education that's what unicef going to invest its money into and probably an investment by any count that is the best investment to make in yemen now president barack obama supported the blockade of yemen sports are things better under the trumpet ministration in terms of the ports
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he obviously has signed a new weapons deal of course with saudi arabia though we call upon everybody to keep sea and airports open at any moment. for him any darian as well ask for commercial supplies commercial supplies for example food needs to come in yemen it is highly dependent on the import of the food yemen is highly dependent on import of fuel fuel that this ferry much needed to do we quit but the health centers for example to pump water out of the out of yemeni soil for commercial and humanitarian reasons or for the sake of children ports need to be your button just finally in syria the trumpet ministration along with the russians with the syrian government of course was supporting defacto early why p.g. and northern syria in africa figures of hundreds of thousands now be. affected by
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the british backed turkish war plane attacks on a friend what is the situation as far as unicef says of the wealth from children spritz active again syria is another war on children syria is another situation where fighting parties and all countries with influence over them have at no moment over the last seven years been respecting that sacred principle of protection of children at any given moment of time thousands of children have been killed also in syria. millions of children are being displaced or living as refugees so we hope that the political leadership both amongst the fighting parties and those who have authority over these fighting bar peace that do that political leadership will take their decisions bearing in mind their own
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children and that they decide to end the suffering that they want they do not want their own children or their grandchildren to suffer your governor thank you. thank you so much after the break the end of britain's dreaming as we investigate why forty thousand union members of even italy and britain if you give us the system and off the u.k. government threats to shut down this t.v. station we speak to one of the first pirate radio. scope who sailed for free speech to break the british censorship blockade. going underground. with the appointing of john bolton is the new national security adviser should we
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expect more stupid wars of choice since he wants success but everything associated with bolton's name is a failure the war party is again in charge. about your sudden passing i've only just learnt you worry yourself in taking your last bang turn. your at we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry. so i write these last words in hopes to put to rest these things that i never got off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned on each parent. but then my feeling started to change you talked about more like it was again still some more fun to view those that didn't like to question our arc and i secretly promised to never be like it's one does not leave a funeral in the same as one enters the mind gets consumed with this one to see you
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speak to you now is there we know what they're takers. claimed that mainstream media has not its maker. welcome back today the british parliament his work and pensions questions but will anyone raise the largest ever strike called in british irish occasion even oxford the cambridge message a disproportionate about of britain's establishment guns from looks set to be shut out ahead of a second wave of strike action involving tens of thousands of union members across sixty four higher education institutions i'm joined now by professor julian celebrates from london's courtauld institute judith thanks for coming back on just before we go to the strike cambridge analytical has been in the news associated with universities that are because the name cambridge is not just facebook users that are affected by surveillance in a rather crude way the government basically asks us to assess ourselves and of
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research not teaching. academics to sit in panels for instance to judge the research. well no it hasn't actually in fact what this does is to violate a fundamental principle that academics. freedom which is to say that academics should have the freedom to critically inquire wherever they want and say whatever they want and that is protected and the jobs would not be under threat for instance if they were to say something inconvenient. but what the government surveillance of research does through the so-called research excellence framework excellence being an entirely vacuous concept. is to judge one's research writings output. by a panel of peers and you don't know who these people are going to be and you don't know exactly what criteria are going to use to judge you by and what it's meant is that much academic work has become being pitched towards the center of a particular field has become very worthy but boring as
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a result it's an immense engine of conformity with a nice religious peer review absolutely yes it's completely politicized. it's there to divide and rule universities so the outcomes of these research assessment exercises. depends on. the funding that research funding that goes to different colleges and apartments can be massively affected by your performance in these things so there's a lot of pressure on academics to first produce enough work to be assessed and then to produce work which they think will play well to these panels. elf why are you going to be able to strike ok well there has been a huge attack on our pensions the pensions used to be defined benefits which means that you put a certain amount of money in and you know what you're getting when you retire it's now moved to a different system whereby everybody's pension pot perform this differently and
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depends on the form of stocks and shares so no one can plan no one will know exactly what they will retire on but the figures have been done by the union show that our pensions will move from being more this but liveable to in many cases being. especially for younger people you could work your whole life within academia and come out and still be struggling to make ends meet when you retire there are problems with getting work or good work or because this is after all to have austerity or. lots of people be saying you know there are hundreds of thousands starving there's going to reload food bags where should they care about university lecturers and professors well this is a deliberate attempt to break the union it was imposed by the employers u.k. without negotiation ok we have only been forced into negotiations because of the strike action we taken so far because it's been as you say remarkably. widely supported across the universities by not only by staff and also by students
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are often so it was imposed without negotiation so we had no choice basically but to strike and i think the thing is that there are many other places teachers. teachers and school teachers in the post ninety two universities are on different schemes at the moment which are better than ours if they can do this to us it will happen to the people too and more widely you know industries generally will be looking at this very carefully how the boss is treating you. i mean this board of governors vice chancellors i think lord brough does read all this show for were boss of b.p. yes a former boss of the b.p. but a lot more pertinently an architect of the student fees regime so rather extraordinary person to have on a university board i think many of the students who of course suffer immense stress and difficulty because of the very high piece that they pay and the facing debt slavery for decades after finishing that agrees not happy with this figurehead of our institution do we dispute your union isn't it because you've got foreign
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students who are presumably complaining that their professors lecturers aren't turning up for the pictures and you have people who are in this market should an ethic of feeling that they're going to be in debt for degrees which weren't even taught. yes we've had a surprising amount of support from our students i have to say and it's been very very heartening we did a march down to parliament which took place in a blizzard there were many students on that march is really remarkable you can see some of the photographs of those people around you we have been doing our best so far to minimize the impact on the students while shutting down the university and part of this has been to do with doing teach outs a lot of less casual or more casual more meaningful teaching perhaps i mean you teach in which isn't geared absolutely towards courses but has been discussing deeper issues about about politics about art history in my place but also about the university ought to look like if we escape from those legal although there are
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elements to it and we have a wonderful open air lecture on the last given by t.j. clark coach of the other week and a lot of people talk about zero i was going to say i understand that higher education is becoming part time when so many ways like when the other or a public service is as much of a teaching is becoming more and more casual lives that people can't know you know how much work they're going to get and when and they're juggling many jobs and then the sense we're facing both by through management surveillance and this downward pressure on wages and downward pressure on the costs of education very similar pressures to those faced by doctors and nurses or or the police or teachers in schools it's all the same kind of marketization of something which should not be marketed ised it's an artificial system and you can see in this that near liberalism as a whole this system which has been put into place since the one nine hundred eighty s. is a kind of cancer of the state from the inside until it can no longer properly perform its functions reza julian stella brus thank you well from the new liberal
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marketisation of education to fighting against the law of entertainment joining me now from l.a. in california is one of the original deejays from reputedly the first ever pirate radio station in the. radio caroline emperor roscoe is currently launching his new radio show on united deejays and you know with us him being portrayed by the late philip seymour hoffman in the boat that rocked ever rosco before we even get to how you broke censorship laws here in britain and got britain done saying what what started your entertainment career. i got started in the military actually i was as you saw the morning the movie good morning vietnam i was good morning vietnam but in the navy. but of course i'm coming that was my first my first date for both of paul mccartney pull the gun he says the beatle of they they had a big helping hand from radio caroline how did you end up on this ship. i was
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a destruct in france at the time. doing bold emotionally gupta on europe number one and i was also a leader do seen the x. it came from england on tour and i was on stage with sam the sham and the pharoahs when there are a manager came up and he said you know you read a good you should be on radio caroline what's radio caroline. he said well this is a pirate ship that just started in england and i'm good friends with ronan o'reilly so i said well you know here's a tape let's see what happens and two weeks later i had a phone call from rodin who said get your so here i need you in you is a pirate radio station what you frightened of going on to some ship that you knew was illegally broadcasting to britain i saw this finished for years and maybe in the south china sea i was going to be too worried about a little boat in the channel. i probably handled seasickness better than most
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and. you know i was not the least bit worried i know i was a bit of a rebel myself you know so we you have are on the ship when when the british authorities were trying to board it and shut it down to radio caroline when i was on the ship the only one supporting where the girls on sailboats would come sailing out to bring us cookies you may not have known rode in a rally his grandfather who is who i think gates wrote a poem about boys rode in like i know he's ill and got the loud at the moment what was his role in the station. running was the boss you know a perfectly charming man he you know he had lou joie de vivre like he had a cause. he was doing the right thing and he was being successful at it me love the notoriety so it all you know it was all a great you know great ball of good time and outside of reno running into
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a few money problems at one point when he had to sell i think thirty percent of the station to fill solomons. he ran the show the way he wanted it because it was a real rebel radio stations to put it into context at that time the statement they b.b.c. had playlists dictated to them by record companies and some would say that's still the case today actually going three in riyadh was radio luxembourg primarily you know like the decker show would be all decorated courts but luxembourg was only at night you couldn't hear it very well radio b.b.c. it was like program and they basically did an hour pop music. every day and that was all you got if you were you full force and ironically it was the labor government tony benn who gave his last interview to this show actually tried to shut you down but the conservatives in gilmore actually supported new freedom of speech they did they did and we supported them and i think probably because of
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radio caroline support which is why the conservatives won back that. that's quite something you you think at that time though you said there was this one hour report music basically statement say by they did b.b.c. was playing basically white middle class music. oh margaret i know they were playing big band music and middle of the road you sick and unfortunately a lot of it was recorded live not even the all riginal stuff so basically you know it was an enigma in a puzzle of its own making where is we came along and gave the people the real thing in twenty four hours a day of it though it's television networks of course they get bad and get attacked what do you think of that. obviously i'm i'm against it i'm i'm all for free speech and the only reason you're in that i would think that you were being targeted at the moment as you have the name russia in your title but it's
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a tit for tat i don't think it's. what you were doing. problem you know broadcast wise i think it's simply you're caught in the crosshairs for the moment and with a bit of luck you'll skate you know what do we do the name change actually go on t.v. but it didn't seem to help. no home office knows the truth and how dangerous it is a is it nowadays for governments to interfere with broadcast networks what happens when they try and interfere as you know the algorithms are very wide in widespread because it is set such a general question when you. well go back to when the girl in wall fell. you said you felt the momentum you saw it all happening and it happened and. now it's a different situation with the networks because it's
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a question of the people behind the network and the people that how many people if they shut you down are going to take to the streets that's the question you have to ask yourself so. if you were the b.b.c. and they shut you down i think there'd be a big big uproar because you're a guerilla kind of guerilla underground station i think you'll be ok at least i would hope so especially when they see how you handle me they will realise that you are there for the good of mankind not trying to overtake us and overcome everybody. thank you and that's it for the show but we'll be back on wednesday to speak to fully u.s. ambassador to iraq and deputy director of the white house's toss a force on terrorism at the package delivered to the prices you will feel when say fifteen years of the day twenty five year old schoolgirl matthew hall was killed in iraq by us a ten time cluster extra bucks for jet corinna with described the u.s.
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killing as criminal. what politicians do. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. some want to be reduced. to going to prison as a white woman for three of the more beautiful. i'm interested in the war. i played for many clubs over the years so i know the game inside guys. football isn't only about what happens on the pitch pull the final school it's about the passion from the fans it's the age of the superman each kill the narrowness and spending
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two hundred twenty million on one player. well it's an experience like nothing else on to because i want to share what i think what i know about the beautiful game played great so one more chimes for. and thinks this minute. how does it feel to be a share of the greatest job in the world it's as close to being a king as any job there is a good business model helps to run a prison now we just do it oh my guess is nobody you know visitation i don't know one comes anymore we don't have to serve them anymore it's cost effective that's what they want to do that knowing they don't give a damn if you do the chores or not they're actually paying us to put it back into. the louisiana incarceration rate is twice as high as the us sam bridge what she could is behind such success. fundamentally the united states and
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russia are have been for decades to scorpions in a bottle each capable of destroying the other but only at the price of being destroyed itself. putin said well these weapons will overcome u.s. missile defenses u.s. missile defenses were totally ineffective against russian forces already so they'll be more effective against russian forces. would. rather have them. on.
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a massive fire rips through a shopping center in the russian city of camera sixty four people are so far confirmed dead including many children. can you just first of that would you not spot that. one you couldn't quite see for yourself chilling messages the despair pair on social media from children who were trapped in a deadly blaze. but you could if you merely snipped it is simply a good move. on to feel good movie rooms to students. and. this is easy really good.
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