tv News RT July 30, 2018 3:00am-3:31am EDT
3:00 am
good monday stories the canadian government acknowledges a postwar practice when unmarried women were forced to give up their babies here on the program we speak to one of the victims. there was no conversation with me about how i got pregnant all they cared about was the fact that i was. pregnant and that i had a baby that they can't. take. somebody who has one victory in an election overshadowed by a security crackdown claims of. terrorists in the united states presidency has created a new form of. democrats claim. the vote tallies during
3:01 am
the twenty sixteen presidential election. also ahead the u.n. resolution this removes a. treatment to be made affordable it's on the request of the u.s. is prompting concern washington might be in. ten o'clock on monday morning here in moscow this is international. putting together your top stories for this day. the canadian government has acknowledged a disturbing practice dating back to the postwar period when married women were forced to give up their babies those babies with and given to married couples in a bid to promote traditional families some women were even tricked into giving up
3:02 am
their children and we spoke to one of the victims. as soon as they found out i was pregnant they mark my records b.f.a. baby for adoption. i was a fifteen year old girl pregnant i was pregnant from a sexual assault. and. there was no conversation of all with me about how i got pregnant all they cared about was the fact that i was. pregnant and i had a baby that they could. take. help feed one together who are beautiful babies. if you will forget the child goes home get married and have other children or if not get a puppy to. that is what i was told to get up top eight. it
3:03 am
was a very abusive in there. we were isolated from our life i was isolated from my family its like community my sisters my parents. had completely left alone. with my parents were not treated instead of those where it's there for a balance of my parents to believe that they would get deported if they did it would follow that. what the government wanted at maternity homes mothers were routinely denied their right to see feed their babies there are still some mothers who do not know their delivery deployer girls being told well that's none of your business i offered to hold my daughter and i actually had to three times my. but
3:04 am
first i said it quietly and i said it a little louder and then the last time fast i had to yell and i had to yell bringing my baby now. and then the nurse stopped the doctor for permission and i was quite surprised that the nurse would have to admit me to hold my own daughter and by her of the call guardian my daughter in my arms. and then they really wanted. to walk i started to get i started to pass and then they took her away from me. i let my daughter she said she actually found me. so old she told me these. and she said. you don't know why down and
3:05 am
as soon as she said that i knew who she left the. sweet talk on the phone for about six months getting to know each other getting familiar with each other building some trust she needed to feel safe because our children were told that it was something wrong with us they were towards an alternate story that some are. drug addicts prosecuted. for. years incumbent prime minister has won a landslide victory of the country's general election you saw a challenge from twenty rival parties as well as accusations of rigging the vote.
3:06 am
to reports from the capital and on. so prime minister who. charge of combo thirty three years ago will rule the country for another five years final official results won't come out till mid august the only official number that we've received for now is the turnout eighty two percent plus it is still unclear and any of the other nine competing parties will really make it there and win at least a few parliament seats well bodhi and politics just ahead of the campaign began to turn out salutes lead toxic on sunday i was all over polling stations in the capital have a look at that the general election and it is so different from anywhere i've seen people vote this is a polling station by the way. doors
3:07 am
here open at seven in the morning and close just after lunch time at three the party that came second to last on securing almost forty five percent has vanished from the ballots with no success or quite a few things though are way too familiar. cannot stand in cambodia democracy. the prime minister's government simply wants to silence the opposition. collusion meddling cracking down on critics. that is so mainstream before changing the top level we need to prove the low one we need to change the lower level. and the us say that he's assisted me me to take the model from
3:08 am
yugoslavia. i have experts university professors in washington d.c. montreal canada hired by the americans in order to advise me on the strategy to change the leader this that was the year of come bodie as national rescue party runners up and twenty third thing talking once about us backed regime change and so on charges of treason come so it was thrown behind bars last year the government then went after the whole party for what it called conspiring with america so right now there is no such name of c.n. r.p. on that list i'm cool sam has been trying many tools to scheme and can both like n.g.o.s or foreign media so say local officials that's how they've just defied cracking down on a handful of american funded outlets and groups which include radio free asia or the national democratic institute you team up with the opposition to overthrow the
3:09 am
man in charge you leave. that's the gist but never stop those want to continue demolition to topple the government has to be a young boy and you are big boy how can you you push down a little boy and you're asking for democracy and human rights so prime minister hussein who first took power more than three decades ago after once losing in ny in combat ended up running for parliament with no mighty enemies on the ballot box battlefield the most daring political opponents of his can vote in people's party have been silenced or jailed another option is to be banned from politics like this former phnom penh city council member from the c.n.n. r.p. to make ends meet he now has to endure the south asian heat driving it took took two and at the minute i don't care about losing power i'm sorry for not being able to serve the people who elected us democracy in cambodia was dead when the
3:10 am
government got rid of the opposition party which represents almost half of the country i said it's time for a prime minister to step down. for peace and development country needs to keep going without any violence or war so we need to concede it would have been ukraine in the middle east in afghanistan where wars started by the us still not over. under the c.b.p. government has shown steady year on year economic growth however it is still among the three poorest countries in the region with a depleted and impoverished country so i believe the trend go reporting from composer on a day to. anxiety over a possible global conflict a feeling of helplessness spending more time on social media all of these could well be the symptoms of a brand new psychological illness therapists in america say they are seeing increasing numbers of patients with what they call donald trump anxiety disorder
3:11 am
apparently it affects both those who support the president and his detractors and the president's haters for example tend to wirehead that the world will end while his supporters feel isolated from society and even from their family with therapists now saying policies make their patients feel on edge u.s. democrats also appear to be suffering recent polls show they are still addicted to the idea that russia rigged the vote tally in the election the got trump into office something is up and explains is denied by the majority of the u.s. government agencies. the ideas that are commonly labeled as conspiracy theories at this point are most commonly associated with right wingers and top supporters in the public mind however it seems that liberals also have their share of tinfoil hat thinking polls show that fifty five percent of democrats believe that russia actually did tamper with the voting results only thirteen percent of republicans
3:12 am
buy into this idea which is pretty universally rejected even by the staunchest russia bashers that i know of no evidence that through cyber intrusions boats were altered or suppressed they did not change any votel ways or anything of that sort so if russia did indeed carry out election fraud on behalf of donald trump why would james clapper and john brennan and the intelligence community say that they didn't do that are fifty five percent of democrats actually convinced that the cia is covering up for russia that's quite a conspiracy theory we decided to ask new yorkers about it do you think that russia changed the voting results in the last election no no not at all ok and fifty five percent of democrats apparently believe that why media that's why. propaganda fake news trump says it best they're delusional misinformed or they have their own
3:13 am
agenda beyond that something else do you think that russia changed the voting results in the last election s. can you tell us now well i'm sure through technology they were able to somehow finagle possibly i think so i've heard that a lawyer so. yeah maybe but i don't know that they found. one story that he keep bringing up and attack president trump and i think they're going to try to milk as much as they can. i personally don't see any evidence of fresh millionaire elections i lived through pretty. media. in the united states if people don't know the truth about what's really happening is not the enemy that they make it out to be some people think that the moon landing was fake nine eleven was an inside job and it seems that the majority of rank and file democrats believe that somehow rush voting machines and change votes
3:14 am
3:15 am
to make sure this doesn't happen again the president now has security out there those guys will be there to say yes. moscow does one year since the death of a. contributor who was killed by islamic state shelling in syria he was twenty five years old in his own. special award for the best reporting from war zones the first prizes will be awarded later today right here in moscow. has made a documentary about syria is a brief preview. but
3:16 am
you know i know where his body is buried deep in my heart i'm still hoping he's alive on that day he called me and asked me to pray for him i asked him to be careful and not risk his life being a hero i didn't want to lose him i was so afraid to lose him. but he loved life the morning of the day he died i was worried my mind started to come up with the scariest of images i was afraid he'd be captured by i so i had a very bad feeling.
3:17 am
we were near the front line the syrian army was battling i still i worked was over and we were about to pack or equipment khaled stood near it i put the helmets on him i just wanted to take a photo as a memory of my work with the film crew in the explosion came. along i realized something had happened i didn't know what exactly out of habit i started to film everything after i began filming i saw a lot on the camera. i tried to room them. i couldn't move my legs i couldn't see anything my eyes were covered in blood mixed with doest a call for khaled but nobody also. checked
3:18 am
his facebook page and saw his old photo and the text below said john was khalid al had died a hero i started to cry my husband fell on the floor i just ran out of our house and screamed. i don't want to go on that mission but how do you get here i had a rule she was bright and very determined she was a good journalist you could see that by his reports he did a lot not only for john ways but by his model and as well he helped people soldiers she would bring them food and prompt mind. action all my friends know that i want to do something good for people family did a lot for me and now i'm trying to do everything for my loved ones that's my main goal.
3:19 am
this is out international thanks for sharing your time with us so far on the program plenty more stories still to come on this monday to see you in just about. there is the most noble political deciders to have more green energy but if implemented in the wrong commercial way. it will over the next few years save was enough of the time to move three full five years you will have such a mountain all subsidized projects cetera that all unlikely to be able to stand on their own two feet. one else truths seemed wrong. but all roads just don't hold. me close
3:20 am
yet to stamp out disdain comes to connecticut and engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. i. thank for joining us here on r.t. tuberculosis the world's deadliest infection may become more expensive to treat that's after the u.s. requested a paragraph be removed from a un resolution draft the initial resolution dating from july the tenth which was obtained by r.t. from our source involved in negotiations on the matter content
3:21 am
a paragraph calling for affordability and the removal of various barriers for the production of tuberculosis treatment drugs and on the request of washington the paragraph was removed the final document dated july twentieth does not include leonardo poem bow from doctors without borders explains why this paragraph was so crucial for combating the disease. and she is to be able to. take measures to. engineer generic manufacturing their words competition. for drugs when medicines are unavoidable for a country or when there are new generic versions available it's a part of the. international intellectual norms in every country around the root as you read that countries have the rates to the use of these folks who believe this.
3:22 am
is an infection that kills three people every minute it mostly affects the lungs but can also attack the nervous system in the past twenty five years the world health organization twice declared tuberculosis a global health emergency and it's not a cheap disease to cure the treatment of his latest former senior south africa costs around fifteen thousand u.s. dollars per patient. now the pharmaceutical industry invests heavily in lobbying in washington drugmakers spent over one hundred seventy one million dollars there in two thousand and seventeen and we spoke to i used to real also from doctors without borders she thinks that the u.s. was lucky to amend the un declaration on tuberculosis this is not a new element i mean those of us who have been advocating for affordable access to medicines globally for the past twenty years know that a number of countries are very very strong pressure of their pharmaceutical
3:23 am
industry who are constantly asking for much more police stronger monopolies longer monopolies because of course that it's much more profitable for themselves and we know that the united states is very strongly influenced by the pharmaceutical lobby and it's therefore that they are bullying other countries to accept. the deletion of tips like civility. in other news here on our two teenaged activist who for some is a symbol of palestinian resistance has been released after eight months in the israeli prison but what he was going to. do today was behave tell me left prison with her mother who was also jailed or both met by supporters at a military checkpoint in the west bank. but none that i hope to see campaigns this
3:24 am
were established for me continue in carry on for the other prisoners because there are more prisoners and i stand with them in these campaigns in support of their families. i became an icon for the resistance and a symbol for resistance by young people who refused the procedures and existence of the occupation and challenge this occupation with their bare hands to the class to hold little free in the circumstances surely dean forced her to become a symbol for a difficult life and israel's actions in the village day and night helped her face her voice and reach out to the world the seventeen year old was arrested in december along with several of her politicians she had been filmed slapping and kicking israeli soldiers off to her cousin who was shot at close range during protests a video of the incident went viral. so there. was. never. a time this is going to come right out of.
3:25 am
god i mean he was convicted of aggravated assault and of obstructing israeli soldiers case number of protests in palestine as well as. israel's practice of detaining children has been criticized by various rights groups. israeli politicians claim to me means eight months in prison. is relaxed to mercifully with these types of terrorists israel should treat. the soldiers so we can't have a situation where there is no terror and lack of to tears leads to the reality we see now we must change that. to me does however have a long history of resistance even violent resistance and she's reportedly been an activist since she was twelve years old or one expression of support has been a giant mural of the girl which appeared on the israeli west bank barrier well it didn't go down too well with also the israeli authorities.
3:26 am
3:27 am
3:28 am
they put themselves on the line. to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. i wanted. to try to be close to see what the local experience more people. interested ols in the waters of our. city. this is kentucky. a co money since it was almost no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the.
3:29 am
people the survivors of 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 a million years i would see that and it's how it's happened. hello and welcome to cross talk where all things are considered i'm peter lavelle trumps imitation to putin to visit the white house is postponed putin turns around inviting trump to moscow. a grand plan regarding russia or is he merely keeping
3:30 am
a campaign promise this and much much more on this edition of crossfire. cross talking trump's agenda i'm joined by my guest here in moscow erich krauss he's an independent political risk analysis we also have the bobbit she's a political analyst with sputnik international and in london across the charles. bridge is a security analyst and a former u.k. army and counterterrorism intelligence officer all right gentlemen crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want and i always appreciate charles let me go to you first in london here we had after the afterglow of helsinki trump appeared to have want to have another bite at the apple and then he changed his mind we can talk about why that happened and then potent turns around and invites trump to moscow the same kind of perilous jeopardy or is there
27 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on