tv Documentary RT June 21, 2018 11:30am-12:01pm EDT
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so in the show where the military brought us to our hotel where a lot of foreigners used to stay. even here in the city that was never on any terrorist or extremist control this is the entrance to it looks like a lot of fuel a few men with guns surely all these hotels built as a fortress. and. that's never was a wrist on itself yet but a neighboring province they have brought us here to show was what they call the. center but anytime we stepped outside over a hotel we were scored by four to five vehicles loaded with five or six well armed passengers every once in a while was so roadblocks and ways to wire fences the sense here is that you are
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driving through a military camp and if peaceful life he's only possible be on the sponges. and he's going to go. as they explain to us the deregulation center is where they keep former militants well trying to reintegrate them peacefully into normal life and who are these people. that. previously yes they are being. member of the society with the three. zero zero zero zero zero zero zero. zero.
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these classrooms are used to teach civilian trades to forment terrorists things like world and i would work not too long ago all of these men were linked to groups like the taliban or al qaida extremists therefore maney years spread fear throughout the whole pakistani region. that's what made these groups famous in pakistan this is another school in the
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shower in two thousand and fourteen six terrorists stormed in and carried out a massacre killing one hundred forty nine people one hundred thirty two of them were children this was the last straw and the military operation in which your stone was launched soon afterwards the pakistani army decided not just a place to reach an affix trimmest but to completely rage against the local population suspected of having militant clinks. can you ask them to come and live with. you here is one unique xterra story this seventeen year old the youngest inmate in the center was nothing more than a kitchen helper in a house where the taliban member lived he was just thirteen at the time and escaped of his own volition with the. first edition and thought.
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it would be like he probably he's young and he was a boy you probably wouldn't able to refusing. the psychology of the people it's not a say look to. me just. because he's grown. blond thirteen and he was i don't know some. of. you know there's some impact on his mind. according to this team of local say colleges former terrorists aren't just successfully rehabilitated but fall completely in love with the place where they are held. they sure they'd no one has ever even attempted to escape. she didn't have to move. it was just on.
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the news when you more than two that be a clear. image in our supplier of those consequences. that are suggesting that it was a lot more is great for. the machine yeah for a chance to put your stomach near selection of. the closer we get to his wrist the greater the tension with feel and now we're away with bass many convoys of army trucks back with soldiers even though technically become but elements of operation cutting strike is over.
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so we're at the freshest. you can see it was a gate over there this is the entrance to do. a. dangerous mission and as we were said there's so many military personnel over here you can see they're just coming from an incoming cars with the soldiers car cars military vehicles and. yes of the right signs of normalizing here in missouri stan as you can see the motorcade of students go in back to the universe did but there is still semi she said concerned so you can see at the front of each vehicle there is a guard. but what happened during the taliban rule what was with the university when caleb speak . was the worst situation i was also
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a good neighbor you work in yes yes i was good in a good well. with the thirty four credits he did for us goodness now you are smiling yes yes well i come first ok to do to keep as a hostage or yes yes it's for how long we were fired it's a five day fire is what they get taliban amid what they. are it's a loveless would rather be i mean after he could tell you about you know how did you manage to escape. fogelman with the help of phobia i discovered. just thank very much yang gratingly thank goodness thanks very much like. he was a principal right. and so. we're now actually peter's away from have been border and my mobiles know. it's. welcome to afghanistan. the commander of two local pakistani border
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troops greets people on their way home from afghanistan. when in two thousand and fourteen the pakistani army started the operation to liberate was serious town from terrorists locals thought life would be safer across the border in afghanistan. but why he had to go with the. most. while they've been away the border that they know so well and have crossed so often in their lifetimes has changed a lot. we can even zoom into
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syria now it's like this. for example. ok now you can see in. this region. what's written you smarter that. well then. we can see it in a goat. so now you can spot even the golden moments. if you get the camera fits go to border forts built in strategic high ground along the border some of them enjoy excellent views you can even see afghan villagers on the other side of these these village isn't safe. are you sure there is no. class. so a lot of them were toward this. because no one knows for sure what's happening on the admin side of the border everyone coming from there has to. ergo
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a thorough check most of the border guards need to be certain of that fair dealing with a genial and local residents and not say it tell of a militant in disguise it's not easy to tell the difference by appearance so low. or. good but look at what we go to they go up. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the us has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime stamping each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you longs to the culture rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent just last year some with four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and bitcoin roasted for twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let
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the numbers overwhelm. the only number you need to remember is one one business shows you can afford to miss the one and only boom but. when a loved one is murdered it's natural to seek the death penalty for the murder i would prefer it be new and the death penalty just because i think that's the fair thing the right thing research shows that for every nine executions one convict is found innocent the idea that we were executing innocent people is terrifying and there's just no way that hadn't been that we weren't even many of the dems families want the death penalty to be abolished the reason we have to keep the death penalty here is because that's what murder victims' families what that's going to give them peace that's going to give them justice and we come in and say. not quite literally then. through this this isn't the way.
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yes that was. that there was that. there's these are performing the national. to stand. there. was the was neat that. was modeled there was this children's home like many other facilities that we saw in which he was done functions under the direct supervision of the pakistani army it's clear that you've been brought here this is a model children's home perhaps even one of the best in the country but the main in the unique thing about this place is entirely different. were you
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parents. still would you want to. follow them idle could you. do you have any brothers or sisters feel like brad that you. two sisters. let's put your mother's name. was all of the rain why didn't i just didn't use your mother's general good luck but. each bit we have we have ten rules for the children each week along with six children a mother meet also sleeps so that they are comfortable to my. mother you when you're there do is i'm going to meet you so that children of mine are the only people who. know me you. know what's your name so i was i'm going to do you have your own children oh yes he said well i didn't know where we are and but have
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you ever you personally as a mother have you ever imagine yourself being a position of do women who give their kids. or pitches like this isn't just how do you feel as a shot of just about one of them. when there's a thorough if you do get to be that people get easy from that beat out of me out of it will have been did which i missed the very last question and i can feel your stress that when my kids do they say here. so you know so far this was. your. so so far this was the hardest part because i'm. we get used when we see our french we're
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keeping the mind probably these this is the key it's just all of their parents but it's not the same for that particular orphan just because of the poorest because of the poverty of this area some mothers who for preferred to give some of their. children to today kind of are pinched. they say they can visit them for example. once a month. but still these kids have these kids have a mother it's customary for a woman who loses her husband to marry his brother when that happens her children are often seen as a burden they are extremists to feed these boys have similar stories they all lost their fathers and when their mothers found a new family they were simply backed off to an orphanage.
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eighth. inch yes this is because i want to keep this to make them understand how to source seed and how it grows up. form. where you are you want to become do you. have any given that. you're good you want to do with this year and. this is a replica terraced house where we were shown how just like the army does now the militants also cared about education for kids but in a very different way you said this is if you die room this is the room where the terrorists were training the suicide bombers let's get inside. so everything is decorated as it is already at. i have and this is like what you go in to see when
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you commit suicide bomb. interesting think people to be sure is a beautiful ladies here but you can mention that these pictures of a lady with uncovered face actually and. all other stuff like these decorations fake flower worse you know in a terrorist nest everything like they were trying to put into the mind of the young person you go in kill infidels go and commit suicide bomb and then that will be they have been were you will find yourself after death. woman and man across the border separately. it looks like it looks like you might be able to see some latest it's a very rare a cadence of area of the season for us because you know we when there is
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a party to do this is there. still we see i would be. a nice to meet you sir. when was the last time she had a conversation with a man out of the family. is still ok so i'm against it is not. going to do. after that question the converse ation turned off work it was good to know the soldiers had our backs in other circumstances an interview like this could have meant serious trouble. women it was a risk down were disempowered even before the spread of radical islam and their status as an improved much after the taliban were defeated but the man we spoke to on this border all hope that after returning home everything. will be different
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better than before. my speech sounds so unusual to them but. trying to hear it as this. as they can. gets from families that have passed the checks and left the camp can now would be reopened schools some of them have been built right inside military garrisons there are also dormitories for students who have to come from more remote villages. we arrive at one such dormitory late at night. it's mostly teenagers who leave here two to each room with a metal door that's bolted from the outside. occasionally there are blackouts just one of the representation so for.
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what would you normally do what. i would you if he said oh yeah you have a phone no i don't have you you're not allowed to have no oh really. most of these . when was the last time you went. on the internet. no i'm not used to it never no never you know you don't we do want to know how does it work yes. i mean. for example if you would get an access to the internet which you are one who just their. invasion is. so tight that.
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some of them even after passing all the border checks the people who are returning to resume can go home straight away first they are brought here. it looks now we're moving forward to this is a temporary camp. through these. fences to give. these. refugees will have a short stop to get refreshment straight it's. then move on to their houses. the resettlement camp was built and discarded by the military. they maintain that no one is still to hear against their will. the barbed wire and our men and compass fatigues are only there to protect the inmates themselves.
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did you have any a any occasion so someone from the outside world would trying to our you know into if you know you're out of work primarily because we have of the future to secure. for that but we're pretty good friends of security for their debate more liberty i've ever dared to come and make anything wrong and defend. this camp has one important purpose above all others it plays the role of a giant filtration system that everyone wanting to return to his wrist must go through an old man came out to us from one of the towns after seen several soldiers he mediately reached for his id there's no militant connections detected this is the first time that you have such a identification card in your life. you know that none of. their students who are accustomed to ancient tribal ways i.d.'s are a new concept. many
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still see themselves the sport of try not to spend he said as citizens and many see their own army as outsiders. partly. by means of. the things you guys are pretty good at the bar needs to get. sick as you grow going to see his national. and there was when the question of. when the taliban were. here was a wrist on was the life for you personally was good or bad no the taliban. did no one of the taliban did it because by going to shy keeping these poor the i don't want to know you. but i thought i'd go. but i'm not worthy of
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a need taliban fighters in his village ever. rule. if there were no clashes and no tell it stand why you have to leave your house. you know when i could only. get excited because i just. do you know who was shelling novelty of positive either that was the age of miracles that. i think. that i go i'm not sure that. we were already heading for the cricket ground were and match was well underway when we were given the chance to talk to another local woman. has faced down spent five people looking at. how many kids she has. a school cricket. said i what it was that i could eat at the. track record that.
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i wanted you know they could he could make sure that it was what it was that you did i what do you guys are going to definitely. not be lord of the world. the cricket match is the last part of a film. it also marked the end of our visit prepared by the military who never did get to see how people leave the camp and go back to their homes it's clear though that they will still have to adjust to a new life in their native. and for the time being and even the traditional push to dance can start until a man income a flush stands in the middle of the circle. in
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the heart of the swiss alps this is a place probably more secretive than the pentagon more mysterious than the cia and better guarded than for knox swiss customs. is controlled by them and they impose the opening times so if. it is from his office the procedures in place of the strictest in all europe must to pieces by artists like pecans oh and modigliani i can't boards and sold inside this warehouse that's where the report comes in it covers up deals which are naturally discreet commercially discreet felt but also discreet because they concern fraud from some of those
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paintings a link to dark secrets nobody knows how many of these secrets a kept inside the geneva freeport system you'll never obtain an inventory of all the works in the freeport who knows how many there are three hundred three thousand three hundred thousand is it a matter of confidentiality only is it the world's black box of the art business. stock market manipulation by insiders and abetted by regulators like the f.c.c. all the f.c.c. is doing here is see why they could look up on urban dictionary what that means all they're trying to do is cover their tracks so that when the lawsuits happen they can say oh we were aware of it we warned against it we're on top of it but they are aiding and abetting the regulators or capture the regulators or venal the regulators get payoffs. to. zero says harlan kentucky.
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we move them places you go to street fanny's remove. a co money since it was almost no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the coal mines of said that's that it was a laugh to see these people a survivor was disappearing before their eyes. i remember thinking when i was younger that if anything ever happened to the coal mines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in the million years i would see that and it's happening it's happened. with the three hundred world russia managers architects visionary stuff the margins to international congress on the development of medicine this july seventeenth
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twenty second so write to your part business program interactive exhibition urban festival details on possible forum dot com. this is all taking all special coverage of the biggest football event all the year the fifo world cup france is currently one up against peru off of the first off with killian about becoming france's youngest ever goalscorer how to world cup. first. from all over the world. the unofficial.
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