tv News RT January 2, 2019 2:00am-2:30am EST
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welcome to the program. and a story of incredible survival a baby boy has been pulled out alive after more than thirty hours in the freezing cold under the rubble of a collapsed. the building was devastated by a suspected gas explosion in the early hours of monday morning here's a look at how the rescue operation unfold.
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use the spotlight and there's a little but one of the rescuers heard a child crying we stopped all the machinery to listen in we were saying to keep quiet and the baby was reacting and kept silent so we started asking where are you then there was a noise we started working that there was a risk of further collapse we were afraid as the child was crying for help. a ten month old boy is said to be in a very serious condition and has been center of moscow hospital for further treatment the baby's family was among the first to be saved after the tragedy he could have done has been. spending more than thirty hours under the rubble in his
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crib when it's minus twenty celsius outside really the rescuers are telling us that it is just because the baby was wrapped in very warm blankets this is essentially what saved defined as life so the moment vanya as parents learn that their youngest son is alive they rushed to this hospital and we talked to them their favorite new film it's a play. in the region discussion. on iraq is on the. climate is the first and last i'm. sure for listeners in the last year. but perhaps the most incredible thing about this whole rescue this is that it was called the making of dad's hands because he was at work when the disaster when the tragedy unraveled he came back to where he used to live and he really wanted to show because he had an idea as to where the baby my degree and he wanted to show
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rescue sport but because of the whole place was cordoned off and because of very grave risk of the demolition of the building he wasn't allowed to vote for a very long time eventually he told me he had to sneak into to tell the world rescues that that approximate area where his son could be the most horrible i could have shown him immediately where my son probably was but we weren't allowed at the site but today i managed to get there and show the rescuers the place i got acquainted with one rescuer who later calls me to say that they'd found my son. and this is one of the stories that struck this industrial city in russia as you were dressed still dozens of people no one's heard from since the tragedy we get down of course in the city of new divorce all to see. just to remind you of this tragedy struck amid new year's celebrations over
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a thousand people were evacuated from their homes following the collapse of that building fourteen people are now known to have died but it's fear that more are still trapped under the rubble investigators meantime have found no traces of any explosives and when we get the updates here at r.t. you will get them here. speech to rally support for. the next few weeks these will have an important decision to make if parliament backs the deal. i think we come together in two thousand and ninety i know we can make a success of what lies ahead and build a country that truly works for. the british prime minister. and uphill battle to get the european. divorce deal with little success it's. not short on drama.
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it's hard to believe but at the start of the still relatively rosy phase one of. the forty billion. to live in the un seemingly out was fairly. surely if his two reason man had been it started playing. this musical chair. unveiled. his deal. we have come to an agreement to. which absolutely. people. have country residence the pm total the minister says that if they don't like it they were free to resign and get taxis. down the driveway the foreign secretary boris johnson breaks it secretary david davis stayed loyal to the prime minister until the time that is and resigned within forty eight hours it is.
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too late to say. jonas and waited to tell the pm heat quit until just before she had to try to sell the time to check his plan to parliament mr speaker i want to pay tribute to my friends i remember. the brag cabinet exit didn't stop there. find a better reason may have finally. were also on you commemorate the event he says were forced to come to sunday for. a trip. to the.
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crowds welcoming the prime minister in london on the hated deal the compromise she signed up. for deal was bound for spectacular failure after shoring the country on terror ministers she wouldn't come so. the reason may yank the parliamentary vote at the eleventh hour i've listened very carefully to what has been said in this chamber and i we will dance to defend the church. with bragg's it hanging by a thread engraved politicians into reason maser blatty tried to push her off a political ploy by triggering a no confidence vote because of who is where you are drifting procedure of the broader somebody who is in office this is working through the procedure of overkill for the body does go through school luckily for the prime minister the plot against her wasn't big enough to bring her down she was old so you start treating the
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little girls that are using them she thought they were belly and crush down with her party's confidence in her hands back to reason made jetted back to brussels with the aim of negotiating a slightly better deal one that parliament might improve. with mission impossible and the british media knew it word on the brussels street and told the front pages that show told him to have been calling to meet him a little because she moved enough. for the situation to my true excuse to me. that this thing didn't help may's pretty good deal brussels said you need concession today you know stands for a disagreement in turns to proceed to is it certification it's not open for you to resign may's deal is yet to be approved or rejected by an angry and divided
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parliament while the end of the ride the brags that deadline of march twenty ninth is fast approaching and if we're sticking to the analogy then drag this is a lie that's perilously close to breaking down but to those in need of comic relief that will always be terry's amaze down to say. well new here revelers in the british capital also sold their twenty eight hundred farewell to somewhat political during his traditional fireworks display the london eye appeared to be lit up in the colors of the new frog and someone not amused by that.
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i would have been proud to be a union job with such. a wooden coming together as a country to liberate the one thousand nine hundred they had a message. to polish first. back you do not speak for all the people were capital city. to be. proud that my taxes i being spanked. it's very low to lift what is it from to national public events it's a betrayal of democracy and it's what we have come to expect from a very poor mayor of london. and of the one million citizens who have made our city your home your londoners you make a huge contribution you're welcome i'm proud in twenty nineteen with
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a message of support to you. two women have made history in india after entering one of the country's holiest hindu temples barred to women for centuries it follows months of tensions against of course decision to overturn the religious meanwhile tens of thousands of women have taken part in a human chain in the south of india in support of gender equality the so-called women's wall stretched for over six hundred. here's a look at what the controversy is all about. as long as the temple is here we have to follow this tradition.
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rejected. so when you want to be president bush or more somehow want to be preached . to the right to be closer as like the fog lifts the tree of the morning can't be good. in pursuit of all those in the waters in the gulf. seem wrong when all the old just don't all. get to say proud just day. long and engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground.
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thanks for joining us here on r.t. today the u.k.'s mirror newspaper reports that a british export officials met with the saudi government just days after the killing of jamal khashoggi according to a freedom of information request by the newspaper there were at least two meetings between the u.k.'s delegation and riyadh last october the british government said at the time it condemned the killing of the journalist in the strongest possible terms. we thought full and considerate in our response i have also been clear if the appalling stories we are reading turn out to be true they are fundamentally incompatible with our values and we will act accordingly we asked at the british department for international trade to comment on the matter in the meantime some experts we spoke to say the u.k.
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isn't likely to give up its military trade with the saudis anytime soon. it doesn't really surprise me at all that the trade delegation was sent there because with bricks it coming in and everything else that is happening in the u.k. i don't think they're going to give up the money because. he was actually brutally murdered by saudi arabia this is the highest level of hypocrisy that is we can play i don't think the british government will stop selling saudi arabia to anybody else for that matter i think they will keep doing that. because the money is just way too good but this is a clear violation of the united kingdom's. sale and a violation of the european international law which is actually making a mockery of the clean rigorously control arms export now something will happen about yemen because these are going to be peace in yemen or an initiative will be
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put in place so that the murder can we brushed under the carpet meanwhile saudi arabia is bombing campaign in yemen against who with the opposition fighters deemed terrorist by riyadh has been ongoing now for more than three years yet what the united nations calls the world's worst manmade humanitarian disaster apparently gone as far less attention than the murder of one journalist what explains. the killing of jamal has shot jeep sparked a media firestorm televised crusade by journalists pundits columnists week after month journalists democracy. the disappearance of washington post contributor if you want into a building a never came out of the building the murder happened because shogi had died media here is building any us response not just a list of all the show and murder but the saudi the saudi it was almost overnight
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the saudi government was made up. outcast directly accused of killing of a cruelly one man the saudi government denies it's complicit saying it was done by elements suddenly suddenly everyone remembers the war in yemen congress are beginning to catch on to the nature of this regime likely they are not telling us the truth about what happened to jamal to show why would we believe them to the bay are intentionally hitting civilians inside you know this really needs to alter our relationship we need to bring an end to the conflict in yemen make no mistake what's happening in yemen is. one of the worst humanitarian crises currently happening in the world.
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it could be that the media the bulk of it now realizes how awful things are in yemen or could be the day using it for different ends president from taking a stunningly dismissive tone about any possible saudi leadership role why he's going so far in this way to cover for the country. specifically the ruler that carried out this killing of the president trump it doesn't seem to matter whether the facts support what the saudis say the thing is of course yemen has been a growing graveyard for over three years three long bloodstained years and the pundits the politicians by and large have ignored that case in point according to a media watchdog america's m.s.n. b c news channel did one single segment on the war and given in the course of
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a year by comparison this n.b.c. aired four hundred fifty five segments a stormy daniels for an actress who claims to slept with donald trump before he became president hundred fifty. one pm but now things have changed the charges changed everything saudi arabia's former supporters are jumping ship i changed my mind because i'm pissed at the way that ministrations handled the saudi arabia and is just not acceptable interesting isn't it how the death of one man sparked immediate global outrage and indignation the deaths of thousands and thousands in yemen saudi arabia's hand through only murmured concern. is going to be with us today here for the program want to see international over the next few days we are looking back at some of the stories are brought you and twenty eighteen more to come in just
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a myth. one of this year's highlights of course out of the world cup here in russia team was in the thick of it reporting from boulder host cities are sharing the brilliant atmosphere with the tens of thousands of fans that came from all over the world. should have been taken over by friendly belgium egypt should the city with the next ten days so please. tell people to be sixty six seven.
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does. yes france are going to win rosie little bit closer to the river boat going up right here. should all feel up to get up. and pass the program for this hour on r.t. international that we're back at the top of the hour with more hope you can join us . when lawmakers manufacture consent instant of public wealth. when the ruling classes protect themselves. with the famous merry go round lifts only the one percent told.
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to ignore middle of the room signals. to leave the room i mean real news is really. their bread for a single purpose. they have a superman. they start training very young. eight months of intensive school. they're rats. and they save lives. when else so small seemed wrong why don't we all just don't all. in the world get to shape out just the come out of coal and in detroit because of the trail.
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when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. it's hard to imagine decades after the war. was still active. in the nineteen seventies crittle had as the chair of its board a man convicted of mass murder and slavery. a german company developed so the demise of a drug that was promoted as completely safe even during pregnancy. it turned out to have terrible side effects what has happened to my baby is anything. you know she said is just. minutes of it a mind victims i have to this day received no compensation then never apologized for the suffering that not only want the money i want the revenge.
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countries gone into a nihilistic fever. and get out the traveling across america to find what makes america the showed the genius of the south american hero this is a point about which element is done so we always are on the margins something this . morning. we're starting last with is moving ahead of east into the swamp we're going into the belly of the beast i think i want to leave now doesn't get any more ground on them it may be completely different but minister.
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since the presidential election of twenty sixteen we've seen the rise of what the mainstream media terms fake news as though news had previously been honest and accurate until online platforms boys told media outlets that circulated stories that were less than accurate. intentionally misleading but the british documentarian adam curtis had first seen not predicted the rise of fake news sixteen. normalisation to describe the landscape where people look to validate their personal realities in a hall of mirrors of online. political voices that reinforce their previously held beliefs it is perhaps best exemplified in social media dictatorship by a search engine optimization the content to a personal life. but in a world where citizens have been replaced by consume. content information to
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justify old patterns are left to wonder is our reality like the internet a construct of our own. good looks like the real thing the trickiest one. as the box it. seems. like you. would think we. would free to. air. this here. there's a phrase that's been part of our culture for a few hundred years really it was the beginning of the enlightenment so-called but they cart saying i think therefore i am and i tend to i.
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