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

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signed a motion of no confidence and that's the vast majority of the parliamentary labor party that is still filled with blairites that will never accept his leadership arguably you and jeremy corbyn and john mcdonnell were under siege for decades before these two are now. you know on the cusp of power why are they so silent where they feel i think that they've got their hands tied that they needed to be seen to let you process take its course and they'd hope for a positive outcome but that's not what's happened and so i think that it's not put you to the now for the labor leadership and politicians to step up to the plate and make sure that this miscarriage of justice is put right because that's what the overwhelming majority of the public are demanding every spoken to german go into an average or drama going i've got a lot my plates is about should there i'm talk you may need to people who are organizing the fight back including a national speaking tour that will begin this week people are saying to me that
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this is really the crunch point that if they can expel someone like me then no one is safe and possibly jackie walker's next ken livingstone and that doesn't speak very well for a party that is founded on the principles of fighting for social justice is supposed to be the premiere party for social justice in this country and i think that it's got a lot to demonstrate now in terms of proving that can you see any sense in the strategy of trying to keep on an even keel and allowing what some of argued is a near mccarthyism in the party just to coast slowly to power in this country in case the right wing media jump on a corbin labor party that said we welcome mark wordsworth look i'm going to be very blunt my supporters are saying that you don't win this bitter battle for the soul of the labor party to keep it socialist and to war and to racist anti black
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racism anti islamophobia by a piece meant or capitulation by god to thank you. after the break naomi campbell david bowie and kate moss just some of the subjects of one of the great just photographers in the world ellen bottom were to run away from the circus to pick up a camera all this them all coming up about two and going underground. hymens
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was as political ties back to one he counts donington disdain sex standing stock poor. use of a viral all dolled up a lot to be on the wall street on the ballpark so please don't waste your money it doesn't matter what i will start to sweat out of the i'm going to sedate old get out of the complex enough. to salute all me out for you all to close to a strike in which three years could all go out i go for opening for our golf on you so. long. haul course plus we'll turn our back to the target. ok she said you could fall in the
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routine. and you can become a scene. in time seventy. 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 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
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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 von i'm worth whose 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 this hand make up and it's just more i think the work is more stronger but you know maybe next time it's going to be a whole made an exhibition. how
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did you begin your career because you were modeling of course yeah i was modeling and he gave me the camera and didn't really know what to do. it's my life and he gave me the camera and said there's a placid circle end of my nose when the circulates up you press a button there was my crash course before they're free and shortly after i went to kenya and i started to take. pictures in the streets and i went to villages afoot to have to women and the kids then and. when i came back my friends had a magazine called 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 it was a model and people always think models are stupid so i mean even me i was surprised i didn't know that i had talent for the other three it really came to me in that way so that's how it started and then i dressed up my friends put makeup on there i put like had and they dressed up and you know my modeling friends and so we just
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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 job before you were immortal you you joined the circus you were in a commune yeah i didn't 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 a kid and then i 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
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went to this circus in germany quite frankly. to see it it was a very it was a lot of had a lot of noise about. i did because it was very romantic a very beautiful way pointy and like people like polanski and in my bad mind went to see it so and i saw it i was so intrigued it was so beautiful and i went to the director and i said can i start 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 carry everything because i've been in this country photographers usually came from the 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 work what about the rule of clawson refer to obviously kate most
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american bill a famous working class women yeah well you know i think you have the hard life they have a tough life it kind of makes you strong and you know a lot of artists come from a very poor background but you know they become so powerful because they have to struggle on their life 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 all my all 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 genius inspired you quite a lot and she. she said when he came to a different type of background she came of the criticism saying she was inspired by communist china. what inspires you to make photographs like this. mostly the people here not the. people i meet or.
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the men and stories stories i read. story it's a movie it's love movies i love. my pictures of like movies and fashion and all the fashion designers have to say it's always super interesting is that when you saw with beautiful to see a show all over it gives you lots of a deal and your first fashion campaign 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 vs lee 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 in store 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
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and also the strong sexy woman so you know i was like whoa whoa getting a my first campaign discussed 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 this about women and like you know would you have sort of the reporter style from journalism you bored a little them in the process of making these photos to seem so alive and and now just as photo journalist yeah because when i was a model i was was you know that always asked me to sit still and to look to the 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 the life i wanted to create. an emotion and
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live in a documentary style like in the like. three it's like the big lie but just like shooting and capturing things then you know it's a. some of my put i was being his like out of focus or moved but i love that energy and that's what i always try to kept or united them more or less the story you know like almost like actors but i love when they go free just like play and you know i love and spontaneous and something happens tell me about the david bowie kate morse picture which is created quite a few headlines here in this country about. regardless of its playful the ideas of media intrusion and so it the idea was to do it like the story of his kid and david and they blew up you know the movie and julie and yeah so david was photographer and kate was the villain character and we did lots of pictures of the
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background on the backdrop and this one was actually at the end it's like you know i never stopped i was keep shooting shooting and you know david just put. in a playful way and it's you know playing the proper axes thing and or he's stopping with bob or you know that he's like the hand you know he has to handle a kind of. 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 isn't the first time you took a photo of the. yes i think it was the first time and it was very funny because he had like we had this huge 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 that have that are
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inspiring you as a film director and you're right there's a photographer italian miriam's whom yeah i mean also the. the german. from the twenty's and he's knowledgeable now in the movies just like to feel lower and. mary mother of all those movies because that just the woman never so beautiful and larger than 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. yeah i fortunately yeah because i think the society becomes more pretty tiny and also at advertising. become much more straight about what they wanted i wanted you know you don't you don't mix of clothes between. design. and you cannot use cigarettes anymore you cannot do this you cannot do that i mean like magazines and stuff so yeah there's much
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more restraints now we're 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 i've worked for so many years for a great magazine but often it you're disappointed when it comes out because that imprinted favorite picture that's why i do books because most of my favorite pictures don't get printed because a little too provocative or that out of a little move. like just doesn't have the right outfit so. in the magazine i would have would have total control and the books of course are very expensive for you is that way exhibitions 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
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connect with people. one thing about photography that's changed in the past thirty years is the fact that everyone is because. i'm a photographer because they have mobile phones what do you think of a 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. so you know and like. everybody. can but you know there's 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 abseil haven't even thought and it's you can do it in the city of mobile phone i mean i don't want to do it i think after. the little book would let me know what it's doing you have so much fun myself i made you know it is so much you can do or doing a little photographers at a business that. no because it's all about the it's not about the you know it's i
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mean it's about what you see and how you see things and that's an important element of what thank you thank you for the show will be back on wednesday to ask for a home office minister norman baker reserved only because i'm going to draw as a man about how much of the news secretary really knew about the women dress scandal and children to human touch with us by the social media still with. the new global economic war is unfolding in the realm of education the right to education is being supplanted by the right to access to education low it's high education is becoming just another product that can be bought and sold to understand just about education anymore it's also about running a business where you could also through a lot could this also kind of finally couldn't you. want is the place of students
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in this business model before college i was born now and i'm extremely more higher education the new global economic war. putting lives by two things by his emotion and he is. in the long term he places a very long need he says so to speak a. long distance runner in politics and that's the way they underestimate. about your sudden passing i've only just learnt you worry yourself in taking your last term. care act we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry he cried so i write these last words and hopes to put to rest. things that i never got off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned on each.
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but then my feeling started change you talked about more like it was a kid still some are fond of you those that didn't like to question our arc and they promised to never like it said one does not need a funeral the same as one enters the mind gets consumed with this. speech as there are no other takers. saying that mainstream media has met its maker. i know. what it will. leave.
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sooner than i expected donald trump's promising he'll now announce his decision on the iran nuclear deal tomorrow days earlier than was planned it comes right as foreign secretary is in washington attempting to save the agreement. but even putin's been officially sworn in as the president of russia and is wasted no time in making king cabinet decisions for who's. also to come. forward but. it is only one ties something to kill hundreds of interpreters who worked with the british army and. ganna stand face deportation from the u.k. even though they were promised asylum by london.
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getting to you watching r.t. international. donald trump's decision on the iran nuclear deal is set to be announced earlier than expected the u.s. president has tweeted that he will reveal all two pm tomorrow washington time now this sudden declaration comes on the same day the british foreign secretary has been in the u.s. capitol trying to persuade the president's team to stick with the deal or as johnson did get a chance to speak to the president himself so he decided the next best thing would be to deliver it stalls fire television johnson gave an interview to fox and friends that's been branded by the media as being dumb trumps favorite show the president has been right to call attention to it but you could do that without just
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throwing the baby out with the bath water without scrapping the whole thing because if you do that you have to answer the question what next. correspondent in washington who can join me so some twists and turns now to take us through what boris johnson has been doing over in the states. well the possibility of trump pulling out of the iran deal has sent the entire international community into a frenzy but the foreign secretaries first stop in d.c. was fox and friends why well johnson wasn't able to speak to the president so he decided to deliver his message via trump's favorite t.v. show fox and friends but boris johnson has already met with secretary pompei and he even tweeted quote honor to be the first foreign minister to visit secretary pompei in washington now johnson is also set to meet with other top officials during his visit but he's not the first european official that's tried to warn the u.s. against leaving the deal the german and french foreign ministers have stated that
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there's no justifiable reason to pull out of the deal and before that president mccrone and chancellor merkel even visited washington d.c. to discuss the matter but they were unable to convince trump otherwise. we believe it's better to have this agreement even if it's not perfect and have no agreement. iran deal is not sufficient to see that iran's ambitions are curbed and contained it is most important to recognize is that iran through its ballistic missile program is trying to exert geo political influence in syria and lebanon. the solid bust verifiable agreed guarantees that iran will not nuclear weapons to denounce it without proposing anything else would be a serious mistake not respected it would be irresponsible. and we should acknowledge that the current agreement doesn't address the root of
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the issue among the things not covered by the iran nuclear deal is iran's activity in the region. so samir it seems like in terms of scrapping the iran deal don't trouble to getting a lot of support from key european leaders what about the support. while the u.s. is divided along partisan lines and it's mostly democrats who want to uphold what's widely regarded as obama's only foreign policy achievement according to many pundits on t.v. here but believe it or not the republican chair of the house armed services committee advised against leaving the deal check out what he had to say. i'm not necessarily opposed to sticking with this deal forever but you need to have a clearer idea of about next steps if we are going to pull out. so it looks like there's both a domestic and international effort to convince trump against killing the deal but
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the deadlines coming up in a few days however trump will be and now seeing his decision at two pm from the white house tomorrow so we'll just have to wait and see what happens yeah the deadline been brought forward by donald trump of course in his own style vajra tweet many thanks mary kom there in washington well foreign policy specialist at the university of tehran for desired he told us what steps would run could take if from tomorrow announces to scrap the nuclear deal. he's receiving some encouragement from people like bibi netanyahu. there's a segment of the very lobby in the united states that's also encouraging him and what some of the people around him like. and john bolton are saying is that they're basically telling him you get out of the agreement and you put more pressure on iran and they want to have regime change they want to change the government of iran. and the end result is going to be. you don't
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get out of the need for the regular met if u.s. does iran may actually get out of the nonproliferation treaty if trump continues with these type of policies. but they were putin has been officially sworn in as russian president two months almost after he won the election. it's been six years since the last ceremony and it kind of showed as well in the number of small phones in the audience who were attempting to capture the event as
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it is done a report from the kremlin on what else was different this time. lattimer putin who is known to be sometimes fashionably sometimes not so fashionably late well this time he was right on time with work like a swiss clock i should say and really this ceremony had a very fresh spirit compared to the previous ones for instance the city center of moscow was not blocked off for traffic but instead lattimer putin got a call in his office and then we saw him walk all the way to the east and to this palace now he also rode for briefly with his motorcade and for the first time apparently he preferred to his usual mercedes benz limousine a new one russian made cortege which literally translates as a motorcade it is a new vehicle designed specifically for the russian president it is in its main feature is how well protected it is it is rumored that it can basically withstand
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being hit by mortar rounds so this is what we know so apparently it was probably the first time that he actually rode that vehicle now he got in here he walked through these magnificent kremlin walls kremlin palace walls said an oath and then he delivered a speech and basically the first thing that we gathered from that speech is that he does not expect this presidency to be easy and we have to keep up with global changes to create an agenda of groundbreaking development so that no obstacle is a circumstance which prevents us from determining our future by ourselves we go through realizing our most ambitious plan with your dreams so. well also vladimir putin made a very big emphasis on you know his on the responsibility he says he's feeling in front of all the people of russia he's focused much of the internal the
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domestic policies of russia on the domestic affairs in his speech rather than on the foreign policy. for instance he tried his speech to try to be very unifying you cried you made of visual a very vivid effort of trying to unite the nation in these in these times now. we need breakthroughs in all spheres of life i strongly believe that only a free modern society that is ready for change and innovation rejects injustice extreme conservatism and excess bureaucracy only such a society can achieve this kind of progress i believe that the main basis for the development of our country is the unity of the free responsible civil society and the democratic government alone after delivering that speech vladimir putin was pretty much on his way and the russian government has already disbanded itself it has already we signed which is a normal of course procedure in this situation so the next thing the next big
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sensations that we could expect is from vladimir putin's new appointments as to who's girl going to be the prime minister of cause this is the main intrigue as to the key positions the key ministerial positions also many of them remain remain uncertain so this is definitely something to look forward to after the ceremony the president immediately got to work and signed a decree that outlined the plan for the country's next six years under his administration he also announced incumbent prime minister and former president dmitry medvedev as his pick for the leading position in the new government. in. putin's long cycle russia's prime minister since twenty. arguably the most tech savvy of this russia. he's also a big rocky.

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