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tv   News  RT  March 13, 2019 3:00am-3:30am EDT

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so i'm i'm sure and i'll be speaking to the world. war i'm sure. this is the humiliating defeat for the government deceiving prime minister. three. hundred three newsgroups the same almost. a maze of tweets and brags that plan is transpiring m.p.'s will next vote on whether to leave the e.u. without a deal. and the documentary reveals that supporters of terror group islamic state have infiltrated a greek refugee camp. with an iron fist we talked to the film's producer also.
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supporters of venezuela's opposition leader clashed with police off the presidential pretend. urges them on to the streets. and follow european leaders scoff at the french president has new vision for the e.u. branding his idea of the blogs for a nice song as utopian. it's watching all international live from our moscow studio with me. into the program. u.k. prime minister to raise a deal has again been heavily defeated by parliament it was a night of high tensions in the house of commons. can you identify
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a single case say since the american war of independence in which your prime minister mori scream you're free to run the country music the same policy we have a responsibility to in the un certainty for all our constituents but all over businesses the prime minister's proposal for a motion to morrow sounded unclear tonight yeah. this is the humiliating defeat for the government this evening and this deal should not come back in any we cheat form again the u.k. has entered pretty much on charted waters with its brags that shit and today kicks off a series of parliamentary votes which should determine which way it's going to sail but it's not clear what the outcome by the end of the week will be at the moment it's anybody's guess last night parliament rejected to resign may's revised and tweaked
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a deal that deal that she had hammered out with brussels i profoundly the decision that this house has taken to it i continue to believe that by far the best outcome is the united kingdom believes the european union and orderly fashion with the deal . and that the deal we've negotiated is the best and indeed the only deal yeah the leader of the opposition labor party jeremy call been here is pretty scathing of in his criticism of the prime minister's handling of the break that process and the withdrawal deal in particular the government has been defeated again by an enormous majority and they must now accept their deal their proposal the one the prime minister's port is clearly dead and does not have the support of this house. but the prime minister's run down the clock on the caucus run run out maybe it's time instead we have a general election and the people being. government should pay now there's been
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reaction from various courses in the on the e.u. side we have done all that is possible to reach an agreement given the additional assurances provided by the e.u. in december january and yesterday it is difficult to see what more we can do regret the decision of the british ball them and despite the use of the bus to greenland i regret the outcome of tonight's brics that vote so today parliament is set to debate and then vote on the question of whether the u.k. should leave the e.u. without a deal next step is another vote and that would be on whether to extend article fifty in other words whether to delay bragg's at the moment it's penciled and as many of you will know for the twenty ninth of march so the braggs this saga is looking more out of control than ever and this week rain a strange sort of brags it purgatory where both the option of no brags it and no
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deal are both still on the table. discuss the prospects of briggs's saying the u.k. parliament finds itself in a bit of a rut. i think that we were going to have to deny breaks in any event because we've even had the miracle happened and she had one tonight we simply don't have enough time now between now and the end of the month to put in place in new statute two statutes three bits objects or that we we need now i think frankly that it would be completely crazy of the government to come back for a certain time with the same deal because it would be the identical deal because brussels. didn't blink and they're not going to blink even speed inflexible is refused to change its position that i think in some way so easy to say that the e.u. obviously want spitzer many of them back and i suppose all the way through it's a two goals the first one is if possible to dissuade britain to go back on the vote
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but secondly that if there is going to be abraxas that they don't want to censor the example of births of being easy for any other man and that something is going to have to be done in the next two days to make politicians start to really genuinely work together to get some kind of decent outcome out of this chaos. breaks that countdown tonality. terror group islamic state has it penetrated to a refugee camp in greece where it's persecuting religious minorities that's the finding of a soon to be released new documentary. it's a process that's designed for about. the hours of the people but realistically.
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around ten thousand. visions of the camps were pretty bad the rest of the shortest show the soto's of videos of riots happening all the time especially when the three of us being delivered it obviously you know that means you did nothing you could get it back it was rather no you're going to. come up hard for i said i get it yeah they are here that they can break their can kill they can steal my dogs everyone. has a model coming does she want to be on the on out of the market the only one that no one move that i love you when you're in jail is it did you come on mom it's all done you look at that level of like a lot to look at on. top of that many times to put
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a camera are classed to protect ourselves to go what is. the film will be released in may we spoke to his producer about how they ended up telling this story. you know the main reason we chose more is because there were reports of really quite disastrous things happening there but we never ever expected to find out what we really found out this place was was completely sort of uncontrollable there were there were tense scattered up all through the mountain sides there was no security there there was almost no control whatsoever and one of the residents actually told us they were terrified of being attacked one man told us on camera that the reason he fled the middle east was to escape from radical islam when they arrived in europe within days they were experiencing the same thing which was which was really really shocking is because an overwhelming feeling of hopelessness when you're there you know as
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a filmmaker. director george and laura and i have spent so much time in different different environments different conditions but this was definitely one of the most difficult and also scary this is you know interpol only recently published published a report saying that there is now a new way of terror threat coming to europe from returning to hardy's the residents told us that the reason isis is operating on the town now because they've been defeated in their own countries in the east and other coming here and it all fits into the narrative of interpol and to a to everybody else so it's. it's quite depressing overall but it was worth it to bring this truth neither the police know the government responded to requests or the documentary makers and the situation in the camp and we've sent our own requests to the police as well. now french president emmanuel micron's ambitious call for an overhaul of the european union which he made last week has been pulled to pieces by fellow european leaders among the
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critics of the austrian chancellor as well as the chief of one of germany's ruling coalition parties who's also being widely touted as merkel successor ati's peta all of it looks at what exactly the leaders took exception to in microns plan. if french president to manual mccrone was hoping this fellow e.u. leaders would support his new vision for the future of europe his european renascence as he called it well he may be a little disappointed austrian chancellor said busty and could says the latest to criticize micron's plan saying it's utopian comes with too many rules i believe that many of the suggestions are utopian we plead for europe with as few rules as possible so what is my crime put forward that could doesn't like well he's proposed creating a whole load of new e.u. agencies including one that would police campaign financing in elections in member states he also wants to see more and more centralized powers for
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a shingle and border force and has even a plan there for an e.u. minimum wage mark or once a an agency for democracy that's ridiculous i mean we have democracy you should reform the e.u. but he doesn't really want to reform the year because it's an intra governmental e.q. built on french design i mean france basically has a vested plymouths there and the e.u. is missing true parliament and the view is missing. french nuclear power on the french seat in the in the security council so for the to reform we have to talk about everything it's not just the austrian chancellor that is unhappy about this though here in germany the woman widely tipped to take over from angela merkel is chancellor also isn't very king european centralism european status in the community rising debt the european eyes ation of social systems and the minimum wage would be the wrong approach c.d.u.
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leader and a good outcome callum did agree with president macro when it came to security but on not a lot else and members of a christian democratic union party are also critical of the plan i'm quite amazed that on a good compact car involved a new city. skeptical because normally german leaders always follow the french leaders of germany thought that would be part of the german reason of state but apparently it's not anymore than you can see in this the turmoil and the the change in europe the pressure by the people and democratic change has probably brought the party leader to present position ourselves slightly more skeptical of new french plans and france is failing and this e.u. in some ways is feeling the timing of the release of crohn's plan hasn't helped the french president either it's come out just before european parliamentary elections in which it's expected euro skeptic parties will make pretty decent gains and while he hasn't got the support of key allies within the european union the dream of
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a new european renee sonce may well remain just a dream peter all of our. protests erupted overnight in the venezuelan capital caracas where supporters of the country's opposition leader clashed with police. thank you thank you. the arrest are said after people gathered in a western district of the city as we can see here they were throwing stones at the police. out of the streets by the philosophical president while. they did was going out if i know it sounds harsh in a venezuela that is bleeding today that is suffering to say that we are doing well i know that sounds tough but it is so obvious that we aren't saying it because of the country situation because we know the situation in the country is critical we know it is critical when have condemned it and we have a proposal to improve it when we say that it is because we are united when we start
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trouble when we make those decisions. as well as president nicolas maduro says the country is car with electrical power have all been restored nationwide outages he alleges u.s. hackers were behind the blackout and has appealed for help defend against a future interference. bid if you can't get full she would have to i want you to know that i have appointed a presidential special investigations commission to look into the cyber attack and i've asked for the participation of international specialists i will ask for the support of the united nations and in addition i would also ask for the already active support of russia china iran and cuba countries with a lot of experience defending against cyberattacks we really have the support of these countries. as well designed. so that. those is acted to be led.
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by what we call the soul you know it seems combat to rethink the whole strategy about what to do. is our. government open. yes national security adviser john bolton says the u.s. military will take responsibility for protecting the people it comes off to several days and has been told to stay home because of the blackouts in washington at a different approach when a power outage struck closer to home that will close to explain. u.s. senator marco rubio has been openly expressing his extreme concern over the situation in venezuela and when the blackout took place he just could not ignore it the nationwide power failure in venezuela go in known as twenty fifth hours comes in devastating long term economic damage in the blink of an eye the counter is
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entire and the many improved auction capacity was destroyed by damage caused by the blackout but he was soon reminded about another much longer blackout one a bit closer to home puerto rico's eleven month long crisis became the longest blackout in u.s. history and the second longest worldwide at the time unlike in venezuela it was caused by a hurricane named maria and back then rubio went to puerto rico and had this to say i shouldn't say surprised but so i'm encouraged to see so many of my colleagues in the republican conference express a real desire to be helpful both for the short term for the long term unfortunately nice words weren't enough to bring the lights back on months after the hurricane devastated the caribbean island an explosion took the grid down yet again now of course nobody blamed it on a plan by washington to sabotage puerto rico's electricity but when the same thing happened in venezuela guess who was to blame but was sure to juice and starvation are the result of the majeure regimes incompetence i do respond this is bring
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nothing but darkness. and when the u.s. government was called out for its poor handling of the puerto rican relief efforts well come on that was different it was a deepening humanitarian crisis where the feds were the good guys early response to puerto rico hurricane wasn't good but not because federal government didn't care the u.s. government does seem to care a lot about venezuela check out those u.s. aid trucks as for washington's aid packages for puerto rico and i. a couple months ago donald trump tweeted he wants to end the little aid that is left for puerto rico it seems that crises abroad are much easier to solve than those at home either that or maybe despite all the appeal to emotions for some politicians it's just not really about solving the crisis in the first place we discuss the issue with gregory we'll put co-founder of the final analysis dot com
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he thinks american sanctions all the stabilizing fanous while the sanctions are having a serious impact on them as well as the economy and life i think the very fact that for example sixteen members of the u.s. congress have complained to the trumpet administration sent a letter to the trumpet ministration about the sanctions saying that they should be stopped because they're costly irreparable damage to the economy and to the people of venezuela and that's of course very possible because then as we were depends on almost everything on it for imports and it's become extremely difficult to import anything there specially if it's coming from the united states and it needs replacement parts for its electrical equipment it needs for the backup generators and backup power plants and special fuel that comes from the united states so if if it hadn't been for the sanctions the power outage would almost definitely have not last as long or not been a serious but because they have the sanctions it ended up being much worse. i was
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the blowout faces jail in australia after lifting the lid on all misconduct that story and more after this break. the bottom of. the book. what politicians do. to put themselves on the line. to get accepted or rejected.
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so when you want to be president i'm sure. some want to. get you the right to be close it's like the fourth tree in the morning can't be good. interested falls in the waters of our. first sip. welcome back to the program in australia a former defense lawyer is facing jail after he blew the whistle on alleged war crimes by his country's special forces in afghanistan the documents leaked to the media by david mcbride with the basis of a t.v. documentary series called the afghan files among the incidents reported is the
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killing of a civilian man and his son while they slept during a raid in twenty thirteen it's alleged that australia but avoided prosecution in another case an afghan detainees was shot dead while he was alone with an australian soldier david mcbride insists that before leaking the information to the media he had tried to draw officials attention to it but to know a failed. i think it was swept under the carpet i visually saw the police they didn't do anything about it finally i saw the press and it was published only. david mcbride who's been living in spain for the past few years was arrested at sydney airport last september when he came to visit his daughter last week he appeared in court and was charged with leaking classified information bribe didn't enter a plea to any of the five charges he's facing speaking after the hearing he said he wasn't afraid of prison. going to jail if i was afraid of going to
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be i would have been a soldier r.t. has asked the australian defense force for comment on david macwrite allegations and agent and whistleblower colin roundy who told us that even in times of war soldiers should uphold the rule of law. we've been at war since nine eleven for eighteen plus years i think when times of war the leaders lose sight of the law the rule of law is a victim there's an interesting thing because david mcbride you know when he was a soldier he swore an oath to to follow his duty as a soldier and of course he's fighting for the rule of law is the same thing in the united states when when you know chelsea manning and other soldiers and even people like myself former formerly f.b.i. in the intelligence we swore an oath to the constitution to sustain the
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constitution which is the rule of law and yet in times of war it seems we revert back to this notion that there are kingdoms and no matter even if they commit murder and crimes agree just crimes war crimes that everyone has to stay quiet. palestinian protesters have clashed with israeli police nascent jerusalem outside the isle acts on mosque a sort of the police closed whole entrances to the muslim holy site over security concerns. oh right. right right. because you came off the palestinian protesters reportedly threw molotov cocktails at the police station on temple mount dozens of israeli soldiers then stormed the al aksa compound at least ten palestinians were injured with five more arrested the holy site has seen a series of tense standoff silent arrests since an area called the ok to say was
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reopened to what's been worshippers in recent weeks that had been closed by israel in two thousand and three. tensions flared outside jerusalem as well an israeli politician and powerless to do annoying. clashed in a vicious exchange ad on b.b.c. news diana buttu a former spokesperson for the palestine liberation organization poised to support for the boycott divestment sanctions campaign against israel prompting israel's education minister of taliban it to respond with this. the palestinians have spent the past seven years victimized will themselves they fall in love with the what did you bring to the world beyond suicide terrorist what's your invention. but it suggested that israel had brought a lot to the world however pointing out that all those inventions had come on palestinian soil we discussed this with martin sherman
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a member of palestine that's a revolutionary council. it's a double standard which is applied only to israel no other country would. be subjected to such of such a policy so what i'm saying is that the media's is basically semitic initiative. is a form of nonviolent resistance it's a statement against the only lasting. occupying power in the world today they are not the jewish people they do not represent the jewish people the government is not elected by the jewish people they are elected by the people of the state of israel so you know this is there anybody who says this is. so now you take an advantage like here you are used to your settlers so used to taking advantage of people's last minute trying to talk to my right to talk well i'm not going to let you have that the city of israel has proven day after day that it's
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committing human rights violations and crimes against palestinian people it is an occupying power this occupation start to end and we have recognized the state of israel the said israel has not recognize the state of palestine two decades. why do . decades you were not defined as a seven or eight years or got killed thousands of palestinians you have this displaced internally and found a stimulus living is the answer exactly one year i was given by right when i land some of the people that you have stolen but that the other and chosen people to vote on to make about one thousand year also that you want to live today that's a good that's very that's very unlikely because when you say seventy one years when you say seventy one years that means you deny the existence of israel so you cannot just simply put the heritage and they achieve myths of people who have been here for thousands of years and tie it to what you concerned or the concerns as his problem the israeli people i mean it's all nothing to do why isn't honest for you
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to this all unfolds you have to deal with others and listen because if you don't eat you if you read the founding documents i give you one reason the founding documents of both fatah and hamas they deny the jews any self-determination both of them the law you have recognized as he said of his own when he has an awful lot of you listening to the past and when you talk about dehumanizing people there is new government is the jews to be. if not the palestinians you will come from berlin just background trying to make four thousand year old text become alive today which is just what we can do is your idea what to do with what's that got to do with anything the news i'll be back around thirty minutes time but stay tuned now for much of the hoax. after the previous stage of my career was over everyone wondered what i was going
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to do next the ball different clubs on one hand it is logical to say the home field where everything is familiar on the other i wanted a new challenge and a fresh perspective i'm used to surprising people and i saw why not if you think. i'm going to talk about football not for you or else you think i was going to do it . by the way ways of the flying here. is this is a stick for the water bottle phone in the stomach of the fish the brand is spawns of the coca-cola company which sells millions of bottles of soda every day the idea was that let's tell consumers there are the bad ones there the litter bugs are throwing us away industry should be blamed for all this waste the company has long promised to reuse the plastic. stickle capsules excuse.
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in maine that seems cool sets for something their classes. online your best bet is the end of a footy team but for now the mountains of least only grow higher. when else chose seemed wrong. but all wrong just don't call. me old yet to shape out these days to come as a kid and in games from an equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart when you choose to look for common ground.
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greetings and salutations we all love us some good scientific breakthroughs hawk watchers i mean where would we be without the history changing discoveries of copernicus as revelations around the sun tesla's alternating current pastores bacteria einstein's relativity russell of franklin's double helix.

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