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tv   News  RT  May 7, 2018 8:00am-8:31am EDT

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all of the great just photographers of the world ellen bottom were to rather wait for the circus to pick up a camera all this and more coming up about two and going up to grow. beyond. the beyond the beyond. ministries police forces and city administrations of many countries depend on one
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corporation that does what mike was hoping one of the board doesn't own from the eyes of god i'm stunned just adama's on the guns going through the woods as the feeder did out into the sea at the last possible blood from them proprietary software you don't know the source code isn't that a such a security risk when you have a black box operating in the public eye to microsoft's dependency puts governments under cyber threat and not only that i think off message put more. nickel softness of the essence of the selling distance of the only one of them off the table into almost like a walled missile board with some of those with. the incident on this in the arsenals of the host i'm done with the old business starting there was listing all the fun is up and has cards on the fine. for all the world cup twenty eight team coverage we've. signed one of the greatest
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goalkeepers of all time but there was one more question and by the way it's going to be our coach. guys i know you are nervous he's a huge star among us and the huge amount of pressure cameron that you have to put me in eighty percent of the problem with you and you'll see all the all the great game the great game you are the rock at the back nobody gets past you we need you to get the ball going let's go. along and doesn't want to and i'm really happy to join the team for the two thousand and three in the world cup in russia meet the special one come on don't appreciate me to just say the rino p.r.t. teams latest edition to make up the bigger so i need to just look. at the plate from many clubs over the years so i know the game inside guides. the
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ball isn't only about what happens on the pitch for the final school it's about the passion from the fans it's the age of the shaper money kill the narrowness and spending shouldn't twenty million on one player. it's an experience like nothing else i want to because i want to share what i think what i know about the beautiful game but great so what chance for. a nice minute. welcome back could u.s. president donald trump launch a clinton style wag the dog war on iran because around the world governments are becoming concerned about the possibility of the white house trying to distract the u.s. public from allegations of a payoff to adult film star stormy daniels us media has been emboldened about allegations of trump's violations of campaign finance law after former mayor of new
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york city rudy giuliani appeared to contradict the president about so-called hush money media is focusing not only on the earth but the state of trump's marriage to form a fashion model malani a trump whilst few could have predicted a scandal involving the marriage of a model and the love life of an actress impinging on geopolitical catastrophe london has been hosting the work of an internationally renowned german photographer credited by the u.s. first lady as one of her photographers we caught up with evan one on worth who's iconic images of satirize down transformed the visual imagination of media from film to print at the opera gallery in one of the richest areas of the world london's mayfair her work has appeared in too many magazines to mention and she's directed beyond say rianna britney spears demi moore and kirsten dunst tell you book is called lady land i'm more interested in women because it's more fun you know it's like playing with friends and dress up barbie daughter you know you play with hand makeup and it's just more i think the work is more stronger but you know
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maybe next time it's going to be a whole made it clear mission. how did you begin your career because you were modeling of course yeah i was modeling and he gave me the camera didn't really know what to do all this my life and he gave me the camera and said there's a placid circle end of my nose in this. it's up you press a button there was my crash course for the go free and shortly after i went to kenya and i started to take. pictures in the streets and i went to villages a photo after women and the kids then and. when i came back my friends had a magazine called gin and they were like i told them the pictures and i would like oh and this is a really nice you know they were surprised because i was
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a model and people always think models are stupid so i mean even me i was surprised i didn't know i that i had talent for photography it really came to me in a way so that's how i started and then i dressed up my friends put makeup on there i put like had on that dress them up and you know my modeling friends and so we just started playing together and. then you know my modeling career came to an end really quickly because of it to the photo if i said oh i think you should put the light over here oh really. you're invoking i was. a big job before you were immortal you you joined the circus you were in a commune to get that unconventionality that you bring to these photographs you really go you know i think it's on comes together you know it's my life it's like on my experiences all over the years and you know obviously being in lots of different places when i was
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a kid and then that finished my school in the mountains and it's true i was living in a community. in a village in an old farmhouse with cats and dogs and playing music all the tie music industry to make money. because we didn't have any money at all and then i went to this circus in germany called on telly. to see it it was a very it was a lot of had a lot of noise about it because it was very romantic very beautifully way pointy and like people i could. one skinning my batman went to see it so i know i saw it i was so intrigued it was so beautiful and i went to the director and i said can i stop working in your circus and he was like oh you look like a circus guy you can start tomorrow. so that i was there for like four miles but you know it was very influential of course the whole circus life that does to carry everything because i've been in this country photographers usually came from the
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upper classes we've got a royal wedding coming up here obviously the sixty's changed all of that you. you didn't come from you put up a club german sitting on these photographs and yet of course today european society loves it so worked what about the rule of clawson for obviously kate was in there we can build a famous working class women yeah well you know i think if you have the hard life if they have a tough life it kind of makes you strong and you know a lot of athletes come from a very poor background but you know they become so powerful because they have to struggle all their lives so this is a little bit the case for me so you know even so i have like a kind of funny character but always you know i always had to because actually i wasn't often so since or in my or my life i always had to find people who were good for me and who helped me in my life so as i did with grace coddington the welsh
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genius inspired you quite a lot and she. she simply came from a different type of background she came under criticism saying she was inspired by god minister china. what inspires you to make photographs like this. while mostly the people not the. people i meet or. women and stories stories i read stories movies i love movies i love to. it's. my pictures of like movie and awesome fashion and all the fashion designers have to say it's always super interesting is the it's always beautiful to see a show all over it gives you lots of a deal and your first fashion brand was a british designer i think yes she is famous. from the archives was talking to resist her in a t. shirt against nuclear weapons yeah what was it like working for designer resort
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vesely political in the night when it was it was great i love to be these people have something to say and i got to see and outspoken and i was really super excited when she was first still at my camera since two months and she called me to do a campaign so i was very very excited and she loved the kind of documentary style and also the strong sexy woman so we you know i was like whoa whoa getting a my first campaign discuss and have that and we did lots of campaigns after and discovered lots of photographers she's very good with i mean. i mean on the bow. and like you know would you have sort of the repertoire style from journalism you board a little them in the process of making these photos to seem so alive and and now just as a photojournalist yeah because when i was a model i was was you know that always asked me to sit still and to look to the
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left and the right and i was you know that was had lots of energy and i wanted to express myself and you know do funny things for the have of not just don't move and when i started i wanted to catch their lives i wanted to catch you know emotion and live in a documentary style like in the leg. of his leg. but just like shooting and capturing these things then you know it's it's made some of my put i was playing it's like out of. but i love that energy and and that's what i always try to kept or deny tell them more or less the story you know like almost like actors but i love when they go free and just like play and you know i love and spontaneous and something happens tell me about the david bowie kate moore spic show which is creating quite a few headlines here in this country about. regardless of its playful the ideas of
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media intrusion and so it the idea was to do it like the story does kate and david and they blow up you know the movie and tell you and yeah so david was photographer and kate was the character and we did lots of pictures of the background on the backdrop and this one was actually at the end like you know i never stopped i would keep shooting shooting and you know david just put. in a playful way and that you know playing the proper axes thing and he's stopping with barbara you know that he's like the hand you know you have to handle a kind of. a hole and yeah that's how it came and i love it because he looks so protective and she looks so fragile but still kind of cute. yeah and it's you know it's such an iconic couple is that the first time you took a photo of the. yes i think it was the first time it was very funny because he had
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like we had this huge win machine and he was holding it was he caught that with machine is like oh this is my biggest fat. do you think still it's you mentioned turn your meeting it's still the directors from that period of that are inspiring you as a film director and you're right as a photographer italian miriam's whom yeah i mean also. the german movies from the twenty's and he's knowledgeable now in the movies just like to feel bad or mary mother of all those movies because that just the woman that was so beautiful and lodges and life and i always see women like this and you think censorship is go worse or better in the time of the thirty years you've been photographing i think it's get much worse. i thought you know i've fortunately you have because i think the society becomes more. brittanie and also advertise.
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become much more straight about what they want they don't want you know you don't you don't mix a close between. design. and you cannot use cigarettes anymore you cannot do this you cannot do that i mean like in magazines and stuff so yeah there's much more in strains now obviously not condoning the use of cigarettes as a when you like the world premier. how important is control of the final image because sometimes you work for magazines for great magazines them of for so many years for great magazine but also that you're disappointed when it comes out because that didn't predict your favorite picture that's why do books because most of my favorite pictures don't get printed cause a little too provocative or they're out of little move. like she doesn't have the right outfit so. in the magazine i would have been have total control
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and the books of course are very expensive for you is that way exhibitions are important for your work so that more people can see them yeah yeah no that was great you know you just touch a total different range of people who come to the exhibition the great way to to to connect with people and there goes one thing about photography has changed in the past thirty years is the fact that everyone has become a photographer because they have mobile phones what do you think of that development they can do their own reporter yeah it's crazy and they do i mean sometimes a girl i take pictures and the girl is like picking. you know i like. everybody . can but you know still a difference i think when it's i hate to say it but it's amazing i mean all the things you can do all the different apps you haven't even thought you can do for. i
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don't want to do it right i think after because that way i was sounding a little bit fluid when this may not be what it's doing and so much fun myself on it you know it is so much you can do you think it'll photographers out of business . not because it's all about the it's not about the you know it's i mean it's about what you see and how you see things and that's an important element of what you thank you for the show will be back on wednesday to ask for a home office minister norman baker is because i'm going to draw as a man about how much of the new secretary really knew about the with the until then keep in touch with us by social media still with.
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the new global economic war is unfolding in the realm of education the right to education has been supplanted by the right to access education low high education is becoming just another product that can be bought and sold so there's not just about education anymore it's also about running a business and what you know most of. the fellow economy. want is the place of students in this business model before college i was born now and i'm extremely more higher education the new global economic war. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy going from cation let it be an arms race off and spearing dramatic development is only really going to exist i don't see how that strategy will be so . very. time to sit down and talk.
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to local blogs selling you on the idea that dropping bombs brings police to the chicken hawks forcing you to fight the battles they don't believe the new socks products tell you that will be gossip and tabloids but also the most important news today. about how you think you are not cool enough and such to buy their product. all the hawks that we along with our audience will watch. for a world cup twenty eight team coverage we've signed one of the greatest goalkeepers of all time but there was one more question and by the way he's going to be our coach. guys i know you are nervous he's a huge star and the huge amount of pressure you have to the center of the beach.
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and you agree. you are the rock at the back nobody gets past you we need you to get down there we go. alone. and i'm really happy to join for the two thousand and three and world cup in russia meet the special one. needs to just read the review the aussie team's latest edition make up as we go. you. yeah. i'd.
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like you. this i was told headlines on r.t. international britain's foreign minister heads to washington in a bid to save the iranian nuclear deal. on the agreement. it. is only one time to kill hundreds of interpreters who worked with the british army in afghanistan face deportation from the u.k. even though they were. promised asylum by london speaks to one of those affected. me putin is being sworn in as the russian president on monday after winning the election and in the run up to the inauguration a sneak peek inside the lavish grand kremlin palace but the ceremony will be taking
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. every hour this is international law from moscow and a very warm welcome here. the british foreign secretary is making a last minute efforts to persuade donald trump to stick to the iranian nuclear deal . and is currently on a two day visit to washington where he will meet with senior administration officials. jacqueline and takes a closer look at europe's efforts to change his mind. terms apparent intention of dropping the iran nuclear deal later this week has sent the international community into overdrive there are now two competing influence campaigns playing out keep it and kill it seemingly testing out the theory third time's a charm the british foreign secretary boris johnson is in washington and
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a last ditch effort to save the pack from trump's wrath that's after the leaders of france and germany had no luck whatsoever isn't that we believe it's better to have this agreement even if it's not perfect and you have no agreement. the iran deal is not sufficient to see that iran's ambitions are curbed and contained it is most important to recognize that iran through its ballistic missile program is trying to exert geo political influence in syria and lebanon. the solid robust verifiable agreement that guarantees that iran is not a nuclear weapons to denounce it without proposing anything else would be a serious mistake not respecting it would be irresponsible. but we should acknowledge that the current agreement doesn't allow us to address all of the issues among the things not covered by the iran nuclear deal is iran's
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activity in the region. this by going in with iron resolve both across and merkel and it up looking like they were just trying to pander to the u.s. leader and although boris is set to meet with trump's vice president and his hawkish new national security adviser those two will likely try to browbeat johnson into accepting this is a bad job and doomed deal i don't see that there's any prospect of a real fix to this deal i think the deal is inherently flawed i think it's a strategic the buckle for the united states the iran nuclear deal is a disaster in the united states of america will no longer certify this field can see. the only hope france germany and the. ok seemed to have is to push for a compromise with trump simply tweaking the existing agreement but perhaps we're not seeing the whole picture here maybe the problem for america actually goes deeper than this one pact we got a president is a president who doesn't listen to. the people who are naysayers and
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a president that is as true to regime change as we are. meanwhile pushing the white house to abandon the agreement is the israeli prime minister whose country is in the signatory netanyahu just last week gave a pretty dramatic power point presentation on iran's secret nuclear program which turned out to be both not secret and non-existent still b.b. is flying to moscow in the coming days to try and get his message across to president putin the kremlin has been clear on its stance however we are going to support the deal concluded with the previous u.s. administration so with both sides battling it out everything for now is still up in the air this deal took years of exhaustive negotiations to reach and surely none of that included worrying about what the next guy in the white house thought but if one naysayer is all it takes to bring them down maybe it sends the message that all landmark international agreements should be structured to only last for one presidential cycle it shows that the united states foreign policy is not based on
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responsibility but it's based on force the u.n. has no place other world powers are not even enough room to play a major actors in the us foreign policy and this shows major failure for diplomacy in resolving global issues like nuclear problem that's the main message of the kind of policy that has been adopted by donald trump. hundreds of interpreters who worked with the british army and afghanistan facing the threat of deportation from the u.k. that's despite a promise from britain that they would be allowed to stay we spoke to one of those affected and he says the only thing that awaits him back in afghanistan is death. if they deport me back there is only one tries for me to be killed he doesn't know when but the u.k. home office has informed abdul bari that he's going to be deported to kabul within
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the next three months abdul says he can't go back to afghanistan because he worked as a frontline interpreter for british forces from two thousand and eight to two thousand and ten my life was in danger my family and i have something to be threatening me but he told me that you know that he joined the infidels. you can talk about there was only one chance for me and i must leave the country cost the second time to the mean time to post for pay me so if they did catch me if i had they were definitely just the kind of register friends secretary gavin williamson has made headlines in recent days by telling the home office that afghan interpreters should be allowed to stay in the u.k. but that reassurance only refers to around four hundred form a interpreters who had been given five year you tavi says they expire soon and all the authorities have done in reality is say that they'll waive the costly renewal
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fees so those celebrator you headlines don't apply to the six hundred or so former afghan interpreter is still in kabul who have had their asylum claims rejected nor do they applied to the handful of complicated cases relating to former interpreters who were forced to flee and entered the u.k. illegally like abbeville all of us are delighted that those who've had better all the criteria and their families are here and will stay here and that nobody paid any money there are still people who are being looked at and we need to be careful that we don't let it fall through the debts we have a debt of honor to these people and what we mustn't do is leave someone who actually worked for us looked after us. soldiers helped us we mustn't leave someone like that in a position where they and their families will be at risk and we've got to be very clear make sure we don't do that abdul says he didn't have time to apply for
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a visa through the official interpreter scheme while he was still in kabul that required months of waiting and his life was increasingly at risk now abdul's lawyer is appealing the home office's moves to deport him many interpreters got these first directly from afghanistan through the ministry defense is. very strict criteria that required you to be. working in helmand province and to be made redundant on or after the nineteenth of december twenty twelve a lot of people i missed the. word working in two thousand and twelve because they were threatened and targeted by the taliban had to quit their jobs and flee it's not really fair to make this journey to the you care to escape these threats to be told actually go home they're saying it's it's there for him to read we have evidence from former employees not just from the british army but they also he was working with in the in kabul what he really cared to the originator of. but
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evidence suggests he was threatened in kabul. and if he goes back to the same will happen again he will be targeted when it comes to its own citizens the u.k. government clearly warns against travel to almost all of afghanistan even districts in the heavily guarded capital kabul it adds that terrorists are very likely to carry out attacks and methods are evolving and increasing in sophistication but that's apparently safe enough for abdul barry to return as far as the u.k. government is concerned i don't think a couple has so you cos i think i'm always the most dangerous place in the world at the moment because every day bomb is exploding people are dying and i don't know. the home office is saying the couple is saying i first met abbeville a couple of months ago since then his already fragile mental state has worsened the surviving thirty five. and time accommodations i'm are allowed to.
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so it can do nothing but talk so i have a very bad depression so i bring to the g.p. many times and some medicine from them. doesn't work. and i'm still struggling i ask him about what he wants to do if and after all this he wants to work he'd read economics at university and kaberle he wouldn't mind resurrecting his professional boxing career either but his talk is tentative working and living here sounds like a dream one that any day now could come crashing down with the arrival of a final deportation letter. in just a few hours of lie to me putin will be sworn in as russian president of course he won the election back in march and.

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