tv News RT November 5, 2018 7:00pm-7:30pm EST
7:00 pm
i i. i i. i. i. i. oh. what. a regime has a choice they can either do it returned from its outlook or should actually care for the tree bark and see its academy credits. the u.s. re-impose isil sanctions against iran that would lead to this pos of the twenty fifth seemed to be a deal they took it to wrong solem can practice with washington notated frightening
7:01 pm
to penalize foreign companies doing business with the country. leave the e.u. could be relieved of a legal call teacher this whole players. time sounds the alarm over the number of saudi led coalition strikes on eight sites funded by the humanitarian group. hungry creates and not be a start using computerize lie detectors at the border it isn't the best to come immigration or their critics slam them if there's a while yet. it's just ten three am head in the russian capital we're watching international. the u.s. is promising a maximum pressure campaign against iran after imposing punitive measures that were left in twenty fifteen when the nuclear deal was reached don't trump has described
7:02 pm
the new restrictions as the strongest american sanctions ever tyrone has in ten lashed out at some merica calling the move racist. it was a regime has a choice it can either do one hundred eighty degree turn from its outlook course of action your normal country park and see its economy crumble watch out it no one else that we will probably buy post your illegal. because they are against international regulations this is part of a maximum unprecedented economic pressure campaign the united states is waging against the world's largest state sponsor of terror we have to make americans understand that they cannot talk to the great iranian nation with the language of pressure and sanctions that back in may over one hundred countries have withdrawn from iraq cancel plans to do business there we can t. negotiations to get all the nations to zero today it's not just we who are angry
7:03 pm
about america's policies european companies all too as all european governments. the sanctions will target more than seven hundred individuals as well as aircraft and ships the list also includes fifty banks and will aggressively targets ron's financial energy and shipping industries meanwhile france germany and the u.k. have issued a joint statement defying trump's threats to european companies doing business with the islamic republic they say they will work to maintain financial channels with iran moscow incest iran has been in full compliance with the treaty while china says the u.s. must respect its right to trade with iran israel though has welcomes trump's decision peace activist and author medea benjamin told us she hopes the international community will push back against washington over the sanctions the u.s. is putting such pressure on its own allies telling the europeans that they are not sovereign nations that their countries their companies are not sovereign that they
7:04 pm
must abide by what the u.s. wants to do in its unilateral withdrawal it is just quite remarkable that one country one superpower thinks that it is. able to determine the way the rest of the world trades with the run and i hope that other countries will find ways to circumvent these sanctions fact that my pump says that we're not targeting the iranian people is simply not true because the iranian people are hurting and it's from these sanctions we are receiving messages every day from people in iran who are telling us how the rise in prices since the first sanctions were implemented have made it difficult for them to feed their families how they're losing their jobs meanwhile on sunday thousands took to the streets of the iranian capital to express their anger of america's decision to reimpose sanctions.
7:05 pm
demonstrators spent american and israeli flags and chanted back to the u.s. the protests also marks the thirty ninth anniversary of the storming of the u.s. embassy in the city during the islamic revolution more of gas staff looks now at the new sanctions and the growing tensions between washington and tehran. these sanctions come into force now on the fifth of november in the us thirty nine years plus a day since the iranian revolution rees stormed the us embassy in tehran in one nine hundred seventy nine america really holds grudges the rogue regime in iran spread death destruction and chaos the iranian dictatorships long campaign remains the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism the guy even tweeted a picture of himself styled after the game of thrones t.v. show with the message that sanctions
7:06 pm
a coming player in winter is coming why he did this remains a mystery since everyone knew that they were coming he and his government all said this months ago iran spent many years under these same sanctions cut off from the world's banking system foreign trade its oil under embargo and despite that iran's oil exports never dropped below a million barrels a day roughly half of what they are now it can survive it already has survived these sanctions we are well experienced when it comes to sanctions do not doubt that under the worst circumstances greens can export as much oil as they need to. we have experienced similar restrictions in the past we've managed to get by somehow so we now have more experience than we did back then. we now have the international community on our side the u.s. sanctions are unilateral sanctions this means that the international community will
7:07 pm
not support them based on that i don't think america will be able to achieve its goal while strangling the iranians into submission seems unrealistic nevertheless you can't laugh these sanctions off officially washington wants to private the uranium regime off money. uses the spread terror without targeting ordinary people in theory humanitarian goods such as lifesaving medication are exempted from sanctions in practice everyone is so terrified of us sanctions of our big u.s. they are that banks and companies simply refuse to sell around that very medication and the u.s. doesn't seem to care it's their problem the sanctions imposed by the u.s. which they say will target our government will definitely affect people's lives putting much more pressure on us even though these sanctions haven't manifested themselves in the market yet they are already on people's minds and causing them
7:08 pm
a lot of. tracking every year or every two to three years they see new sanctions will be imposed so people have gotten used to saying that but that doesn't mean we accept them and it doesn't hurt it means we've had them so long they don't affect us anymore manson's are hard to come by because of sanctions no doubt if you are caring for a patient your life is affected by these sanctions sanctions decrease the quality of life his people cannot now obtain things they used to obtain easily the four washington sanctions hurt ordinary ukrainians the most and this is something you have to understand sanctions are not something that is cool or fun as donald trump seems to suggest in his they it is game of thrones me the kind of feeling iranians average people as well as ukrainian leaders you have regarding the u.s. is donald trump has created a lot of mistrust and anger among the ukrainians because from the iranian
7:09 pm
perspective iran has been completely obliging it's part of the deal although these sanctions have had a negative effect does that necessarily doesn't mean that iran is going to concede to the united states. iran so far remains defiant piercing on a show of force on monday conducting major address the military exercises are to continue into tuesday aircraft batteries and radars have been deployed across a number of areas in the north of the country. is the u.n. estimates that a rounds half of the yemeni population now relies on international aid and is facing famine we bring you the howling story of one of the victims of the war.
7:10 pm
why i'm a mouse mother our situation is getting worse and we're suffering from malnutrition was passed away from malnutrition after twenty days in hospital one of my neighbors call to say that one of my children was sick i dropped my daughter and one home after two days she died of malnutrition and her brother is also ill before she died and left her brother to at home and then with her to hospital but she died on the way her father went to borrow money for her burial my situation is better my hope has gone after him out on it. despite the fact that she was sick i loved her more than her brothers whatever she
7:11 pm
needed i did my best to bring that to her but i had no money to send her to. any. finally i brought her to hospital after disease had taken. out a has mother according to her mother she was about to bring her daughter back to the center for her children at home was sick she took her for treatment but she died on the way the situation is very distressing and they did not have enough funds to treat her otherwise they would have treated her somewhere else and not brought her back to the health center we have into apps each person has to manage by themselves and this is one of the tragedies of the question and one of. the tragedies caused by the war which is worse than in day by day children of food and . so far ten children suffering from severe malnutrition and garrido dozens of
7:12 pm
children are suffering from diseases and medical complications and they have no funds for treatment or someone to take them to another place of treatment. u.k. charity oxfam has expressed alarm at the coalition that airstrikes repeatedly hitting british aid projects in yemen and oxfam representative britain's approach to yemen in her hair and adding that the humanitarian crisis that continues to worsen with medical facilities and water supplies being targeted. last wednesday we had. more than twenty people killed like. we have fifteen people killed last month even our own interventions in places for example in sardar in the area called the amazon out where we provided and supported water
7:13 pm
system that has actually been bombed by a strike this is what we approach bombed out ok yes the cases that were raised by the oxfam representative have been among some of the most devastating for yemeni civilians in recent months the july strike on the water facility left as many as twenty thousand people without access to clean water then in september food supplies to parts of the country were disrupted after a key motorway was heads and in october a fruit and vegetable market in their data was. doctors without borders meanwhile has also reported that coalition that strikes have hit medical facilities in yemen it says that five centers have been targeted since twenty fifteen resulting in multiple deaths of patients and staff and in june the group's cholera
7:14 pm
treatment center or northern yemen was hit by an as strike these attacks a contributing to the catastrophic situation to civilians in the country. these claims come as to reason may's government faces mounting pressure to halt sales to riyadh's. do you have a problem with condemning murder and international violations of into international
7:15 pm
law or in conflict mistakes are made the only thing that we don't do is actually press the button to drop the bombs i'm surprised there for those who need to defend themselves the amount of raids targeting civilians has gone up north or if these are aware of this there seem to be an awful lot of and i do not agree that the united kingdom is simply to. deny its support for the party which is under threat and so engaged in support of illegitimate government i mean if we did that. peace a legitimate government is in. saudi arabia defends its actions in yemen and came to tell me targets haiti militants not civilians representative in the region however told us that the u.k. government is complicit in the suffering being collected on the people of yemen and
7:16 pm
we believe that you can go no legal party to this conflict and they actually go to war and bomb the conference back in may of this way here when you're actually operational on the border areas of saudi arabia it's the same war and i do think that the advice they gave us seems to show that any changes happened every few days we're hearing it will do the horrific it's out west it is a kill whether it's the school was falling or the other reason was falling recently and the main water pumping station to go to city was bombed which left eighty thousand people without water so that part is continuing and the absolute you could governments in people into that parties every few days we've got snacks and if we can get a secret government looking to excuse the saudis i mean the policy in its role we call it which is government providing more excuses is also giving than got here is that right. we never really. we need them to stop the weapons now so there's
7:17 pm
no and i mustn't we can we will cease fire first for a cease fire is even a security council nothing less than that will actually do to save the people. britain's foreign secretary jeremy hunt has just said that for the first time there peers to be a window for a peace deal in the country meanwhile donald trump has commented on the u.s. supply bomb that killed forty children on a yemeni school bus in august he said that u.s. arms and not to blame their brother saudi misuse of them. it wasn't operated by us people there's a big difference we don't do that people are the best operators in the world that was basically people who didn't know how to use the weapon which is horrible i think the problem is by in time he said ok we are going to do you vies a lot of policies in yemen but what does he mean by that is he going to stop arming so they've been sending i'm going it can prevent myside warplanes so this is
7:18 pm
the big question now if we are talking about peace i believe this is just up lloyd because now the tramp is busy with his sanctions against iran so maybe he would like to quote to him that war in yemen grew older to put incident three on here are i don't believe this is actually will take an action so all we need is on the bottom and continual from air sea from the ground the targeting yemenis markets a school zone hospitals so it seems he is trying time and he's trying to say because of the international criticism he's trying to say i'm going to revise my policy is i don't believe him i told he is interested more in arm deals he said i have a one hundred and ten billion dollar. deal to saudi arabia where they are going ahead with it despite the brutal murder of john i was shocked to see the saudi
7:19 pm
7:20 pm
is neo mercantilist. all countries competing with all countries no more globalization no more central bank domination no more national monetary fund world bank united nations colluding in back rooms and down to continue to rob the global . welcome back to. the un has expressed concern for the well being of thousands of migrants currently travelling through central america and says it's providing humanitarian assistance to eva one thousand five hundred people the largest caravan which is heading for the u.s. border is expected to arrive in two weeks time it includes more than two thousand
7:21 pm
children and knox basic supplies we can show you the latest pictures of the convoy . the first members of the five thousand strong group began arriving on in mexico city on monday however and said since he awaits the migrants as us president omar trump confirmed this around fifteen thousand soldiers have been deployed to the southern border of putting up a barbed wire fence. it was said to around seven thousand troops would be tossed withholding the migrants back operation faithful picture it has set to focus on texas arizona california they show has become a key talking points ahead of tuesday's midterm elections jack has more on the migrants quest for a better life the imminent arrival of several thousand migrants at the u.s. border has gotten both the media politicians talking and spinning away carob it was care about the carob and invasion dangers to the country those telling. that the
7:22 pm
biggest threat to america is some impoverished refugees democrats want to charlie open the borders they have the caravan. the caravan is mostly made up of people from three central american countries wonderous guatemala and el salvador also known as the northern triangle and it's fair to say that region is not in the best of shape what a mall and neighboring el salvador and honduras are three of the most violent countries in the world or capital of the world there is nearly one homicide every thirteen hours a woman is murdered in this country and while both the left and the right in america are using the caravan as a rallying point the history which led to the situation seems all but ignored the central american problem we do directly affect the security and the will being on their own. to date could recognize the caribbean and central america is vital to our interest shouldn't we president ronald reagan famously took
7:23 pm
a no holds barred approach to central america under reagan's administration the u.s. aided the staging of a coup and guatemala and spent years propping up those who carried it out despite legitimate accusations of human rights abuses much the same can be said for el salvador where billions of u.s. dollars was poured into a government that was slaughtering its citizens meanwhile as the u.s. work to overthrow a government in a neighboring country was flooded with u.s. soldiers aid in arms and joint bases greatly strengthening the militarization of hunger and society the one nine hundred eighty s. where the u.s. set up this walk of you know so water on the wall used the u.s. so ordered brutal dictatorships that surprised us mostly because. of the country it really has destroyed the ability of people to make. cross for since the one nine hundred eighty central american migration has skyrocketed and surprisingly.
7:24 pm
and with that comes deportations remember how much trump loves to talk about the infamous m s thirteen criminal gang vile criminal cartel and as thirteen the savages of m.s. thirty m. s. thirteen these are animals and mr dean lives by the motto kill rape and control well it turns out they were actually made in america refugees from all solved or found of the group in l.a. in the eighty's and a program was set up to kick the members out and send them back home and there were corruption and instability was a bound the gang flourished and terrorize the local population the irony is while coffins flaming you know drug traders are being exported to the us and back to the next order to central america some drug cartels that actually began in los angeles . or and have room to do that again because of the instability the us was greatly responsible with there now the u.s.
7:25 pm
has a long history of interfering in foreign country's affairs and in this instance it seems the consequences are finally coming home the us has been involved in a very. very disastrous way the violence that the us set in motion. has never stopped it's just taking a different form it's really the victim of these dirty us blaming the victims for their own life but the u.s. has a huge role in that and has a lot of blame that it has to really own up to. the atlantico hungry. puppet destinations for migrants will start testing computerized slides attack to send them what is this month the artificial intelligence driven machine so funded by the and it's hoped will help boost european border controls one of the receptionists behind the technology explains how it wakes. this border series of
7:26 pm
questions typical to what you would see when you cross borders in europe by real border guards. so we're not looking at things like smiling all frowning looking at very small movements such as an eye moving left all right. let's take a closer look at how this away travelers will be quizzed by a virtual border guard of the same ethnicity and gender speaking that language special software will scan his or her face the micro expressions and people deemed to be lying by the system will be subjected to fit the checks such as think printing and travel is still considered suspicious or beaver feds to human border guards now during an initial tests volunteers were asked to intentionally lie or tell the truth the machine had a seventy six percent success rate they develop is think they can improve that they also want that the increased threat of illegal immigration makes the system necessary but to make the claims that the project border security something it's
7:27 pm
all a bit. some people might have a light bar is to discriminate against asian people all black people all white people would have a yard system in principle should be able to. come to decision that for a year over by this doesn't mean of course that they are systems apologists for we've seen many examples where they are systems kind of their own biases but at least they can be free of overt bias if they're refugee from sue real from yemen or for money or the part of the world was suffering persecution then they should be treated with humanity are these sort of you know artificial intelligence based systems into choose to catch people out i don't think is appropriate i would argue is a breach of their human rights the our border patrol system doesn't just to look out for deception people when they're coming through the border it's a will to process the. the commission has been logged in advance for people who
7:28 pm
want to the gym at the cross the border to help speed up the paperwork at the border and it's also able to help look for humans in cargo is a always or instead of white. cards so the benefits of this isn't let's have the trial let's make the trial of a. to all people of all ethnicities all backgrounds all nationalities and let's see if it works properly and if it works properly then that's fine when you know you can introduce it but you know if you still got the same error rate of twenty four percent that means twenty four percent of cases the computer is making a mistake i don't think that's not i think when you look at refugees that's not good enough more global news at the top of the hour. the united states under many present us as
7:29 pm
a long war going to have of break in its treaty and other promise which now the united states says it's going to leave a treaty a guarantee. i've been saying for a number of means from a matter of us of a one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crimes happen each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you want to be ultra rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred three first check it first shot and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building a two point one billion dollar a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need to remember is one one just to show you can't afford to miss the one and only
7:30 pm
boombox. ministry is police forces and city administrations of many countries depend on one corporation and another by mike was hoping the board doesn't run from them on the eyes of god i'm stumped on this adama's on the guns going through. woods as if he did it on into the sea it's just a small bribe 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 dependency puts governments under a cyber threat and not only that. moral. softness in the sense of selling this is also a good one woke. up in the warden's problems with. them.
30 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=82304114)