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tv   News  RT  April 2, 2019 7:00pm-7:30pm EDT

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u.k. prime minister says she will seek another delay to office to sit down with the leader of the opposition to break the deadlock in parliament. the badlands of spain struggles with the influx of illegal migrants a people smuggler reveals just how gangs that cashing in on the crisis. people have to get this morning. two thousand. four thousand four thousand you know for a few. hundred says it has caused an islamic state come on the posing as a refugee a man of been issued with a prepaid debit card. to help you come us. live
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from moscow what's your team's national with me. today thanks for joining us this hour. the u.k. prime minister it's a reason why has offered to sit down with the leader of the opposition jeremy cool been in a bid to break the impasse. further delay to britain's departure from the e.u. which as things stand is supposed to happen just nine days from now and london has the latest. prime minister to resume a holding martha and seven hour talks with cabinet members and coming out of it an essential the putting all the onus on the leader of the opposition corbin because she can't find the way forward her party is notoriously divided over bragg's it as it is that i have a party as well to perhaps not as extreme an extent but still both parties divided on this issue and so in order to try to find a way through she gave
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a speech to the nation and essentially offered to sit down with the leader of the opposition germany called in to try to find the path already the process that the house of commons has trying to lead has not come up with an answer. so today i am taking action to break the logjam i'm offering to sit down with the leader of the opposition and to try to agree a plan that we would both stick to to ensure that we leave the european union and that we do so with a deal now it would appear that this is an attempt a political attempt to try to put all the onus on mr corbin to say well we're headed for a no deal on april twelfth and if we don't find a way forward it will be because you didn't want to find a way forward but we've been hearing from mr corbett himself this evening and he's saying that if only to represent the views of perhaps remain those or other people who voted for the labor party at the last election he was willing to sit down with
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the prime minister we recognize that she has. that supported labor in the last election and the people who didn't support labor but nevertheless want certainty and security for their own future and that's the basis on which will meet her and we'll have those discussions but the prime minister is insisting that her withdrawal agreement that's been rejected three times already by parliament is the only deal on the table so it remains to be seen what exactly she wants to speak to mr corbett about he's whipped his m.p.'s to vote against the deal all three times he supports a customs union whereas the prime minister doesn't number of issues when it comes to briggs that they just don't see eye to eye so unless the prime minister is willing to shift in her position it remains to be seen exactly what she hopes to achieve anything from these talks well not everyone was impressed by the reason why is announcement downing street son official resident laurie the cat shared his own feline insight on twitter is just that perhaps the prominence the shifting the
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blame to labor for her own mishandling of. a political commentator klinsmann he believes the prime minister's attempts to reach a consensus has come too late. i think it seems very baffling to me that after seven hours with a couple of the best thing you can agree to a conversation with the leader of the opposition in cabinet and aren't in general have had two years to agree to some sort of move forward and if you include all of the actual voting in the in the civil rights we see from out there there is no cohesive idea of what to do moving forward so the most that we can expect in my opinion out of these talks is more delay more confusion the real thing in which we need to do is really find out what is the main. main way forward in speaking to the leader of this of the opposition at such a late stage i don't think will you know prove any any useful fruit.
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last year spain witnessed the record number of migrant arrivals by sea with many of them helped across by people smugglers human trafficking from morocco spoke to method of journalist lauren southern he describes how the lucrative trade works. how do people get this thing. people have to get to spin the morning how to spend two thousand you know. four thousand for four thousand you know or put on for a few how much money can you make per boat. from the door to space where you know. you can have two thousand two thousand five hundred four thousand. the totality fifty plus one. fifty four so i'm. fifty seven everybody by two thousand five hundred people two thousand five. hundred bought into. the phone well you know we spoke with lawrence up now the moroccan man we assume at the
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moment is someone that would have connections within the moroccan government or be able to ensure that the coast guard would leave because we were told multiple times by people on the ground that there is a cut that people on the coast moroccan coast guard received to stop patrolling certain areas so about boats can leave from spain so this is a quite. intelligent business this isn't just a few people fleeing their country desperately getting on dinghies trying to get to spain this is a very structured business and at times he's saying it's around five hundred to a thousand people imagine how much money you're making it's one hundred thirty thousand euros per boat i mean you could ten boats in a day you're making one point three million dollars why is no one talking about this massive criminal syndicate it's crazy to me to to think that anyone has been portraying this as well certainly on the moroccan or turkish side of libyan side as
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a humanitarian aid crisis this is almost entirely a business and anyone you speak to on the ground migrant trafficker or otherwise will tell you this is. business they are not looking to help people they don't care if you're persecuted they don't care about your race religion your gender in fact women are turned away often in some of these camps. spain is one of the main gateways to europe from africa since the start of this year more than five thousand migrants have arrived in spain by sea in twenty eight sixty five thousand made the crossing over in southern again believes the authorities don't know how to deal with the crisis. there's not much the authorities can do i don't doubt that some want to do something about this however most of these migrants and this causes chaos for both the spanish and for the migrants themselves on the advice of traffickers are told to throw their passports into the sea or destroy them before
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entering spain and we actually saw it with our own eyes passports that had been ripped up on the ground in these camps in morocco in the reason they do this is so that once they set foot in spain they have no way of being deported but what this also achieves is that there is no way of processing these migrants they can't be imagine how long it takes to process a person that has offered all of their history their passport their work their banking records it still takes five six seven years to get citizen citizenship in a country a person rocking up with not even a passport how are they supposed to get processed how are they supposed to get a job or become a citizen or even be seen as a refugee so the police can't deal with this influx of people because they can't even identify who they are and the migrants cannot become a part of the european system because on the advice of these traffickers they threw out their passports assuming they would be entering
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a europe that is far more they imagine is far more wealthy and far more like paradise than it actually is the reality is these people end up on the streets in france they end up on the streets in italy in spain unable to get a job unable to join the actual society because they can't be processed as citizens so the police can do what they want but there's not much they can achieve when these people cannot be identified. and governments claiming a suspected your hardest thing to do as a refugee and was even given a prepaid debit card by the e.u. auntie's peter all of a has more details. imagine a suspected islamic terrorist receiving aid money meant for refugees not just any terrorist a senior eisel commander and not just any money a new tax payer money and it gets worse reports say that he received monthly payments of five hundred euros on his debit card that's well over today's gross
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minimum wage in hungary these prepaid cards are issued to a joint project between the united nations and the european union that's supposed to be a strict screening process in place to make sure that only those eligible have access to the funds but this wouldn't be the first time that a suspected terrorist hiding among refugees that inadvertently been given taxpayer money. the european commission insists that the prepaid debit cards are not just handed out to anyone that they know exactly who these cards are being distributed to and
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check up on this status on a monthly basis so hungry is wondering why did brussels not know that they were funding a suspected terrorist this not only creates another poll it also raises serious security concerns the citizens of europe have a right to know the problem of how to provide much needed funding and aid to refugees in europe isn't an easy one to solve but it's cases like these that fuel the popularity of anti immigration parties across the continent and with a new parliamentary elections coming up next month question is will the establishment. dealt another blow because laps of the territory that so-called isis was holding it will generate more people trying to get in through and that's why a very carefully orchestrated and internationally coordinated this is where international cooperation is key i think the threat for a period of time will grow because foreign fighters will start to come back but i
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think what we're seeing know with. so-called isis and with al qaeda is we're seeing a time of transition they will transition into something different this is a very very dangerous and very difficult period we need to monitor the transition very closely to be able to identify and track normally how to sort of coming through and to run intelligence operations or trying to identify those unknown terrorists that are potentially coming into europe and elsewhere in the world. the u.s. supreme court turned down an appeal from a death row inmates who asked for a painless execution a judge explain the ruling citing the constitution. the eighth amendment does not guarantee a prisoner a painless death something that of course isn't guaranteed to many people including most victims of capital crimes another prisoner russell buckley who is a convicted murderer who was sentenced to death back in one thousand nine hundred seventy is lawyers say he has
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a rare condition that would cause tumors in his throat to burst after being given the lethal injection they say the process would result in an extremely painful death in violation of his constitutional rights are asked to be executed with gas but the request was turned down by officials lethal injection is the most common form of capital punishment in the united states it's done in three separate stages first a sedative is injected paralytic drug is administered that can cause suffocation a third injection then stops the heart however there is no guarantee of a quick death in some cases the process can last several hours according to officials that is that nearly seven percent of lethal injections are botched and cause unnecessary suffering.
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i don't know if it was humane or not that song. could do it you could either teach and that was clearly not going as planned. so at that point a decision was made to insert one central line into the growing area which is what they did. i can understand. not even mining to read about these things francis plan then you have to be in the resume or watson this was my kid thinks you should just see it was by far believe the term i used with a colleague last night by far just the most why did i get sick.
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jerry givens former chief state prison executioner and now an advocate for the a but abolition of the death penalty believes the supreme court's made the wrong decision. so that supreme court don't have to carry out the executions the people that have to carry out their executions is the one that something the pain that can be a moment to suffer for a moment for short period of time until the chemicals kick in the electricity kick in a whatever what have you but the people that have to live with this and the rest of them live with this pain and saddened them. it's the people that carry these things out and we don't consider that and i don't know why they don't consider that dealing with. inexperienced people to corrode a professional task when i know you're dealing with medications in syringes things of that nature you tell them what medical personnel trained personnel experienced personnel but they can't be involved in stuff like this because it's against their
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code of ethics. so you can't have that person so you've got inexperienced people doing. these things that will cause them to make mistakes and you came blame them for that british arms sales to saudi arabia are again under the spotlight we'll have more on that story and others still to come off the break. breaks and. i've been saying the numbers mean something they've never us is over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime tamping each day. eighty five percent of
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global wealth he longs to be old rich with six percent world market rose thirty percent some with four hundred five hundred three first second per second and we rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let the numbers over. the only number you need to remember one one business show you know for the mid one and only boom but. welcome back to the program british foreign secretary jeremy hunt is under fire off
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to reaching a deal with germany over the export of weapons components the saudi arabia but unlike london has sales to riyadh but a loophole was found to sell parts ultimately destined by it to the kingdom through the u.k. and one of the reasons that sales to saudi arabia are controversial is this involvement in neighboring german. the leader of the rebels says the u.k. foreign secretary cannot be both the peace broker and the salesman. if it wasn't
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for the joint british us saudi in us naval forces the existing famine and the tragic humanitarian situation wouldn't reach such critical levels the saudi led coalition backed by britain commits war crimes and does not abide by has britain claims the most stringent guidelines for the export of weapons in the world and reports adding context to a tragic reality the u.k.'s man on sunday has reveals that at least five british special force commandos were wounded in gun battles as part of the secrets military campaign in north in yemen believed to be part of the special boat services said that they are now back in britain recovering to spark the controversy you case forces the relentlessly fighting alongside child soldiers here in the u.k. the news triggered protests and condemnation from an m.p. with the war in the complicity of the british government of the war in yemen british soldiers were fighting alongside indentured schild soldiers who are forced
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to fight in the yemen this is a war crime this is a crime almost against humanity and britain has been complicit in it and we must say no more inside westminster the shadow foreign secretary is questioning the scope of britain's involvement if that is in any way true because if it is then it will confirm the off forces are not just a party to this conflict but witnesses to war crimes when pressed on the issue mark fields from the u.k. foreign office said he would seek to get to the bottom of the allegations but khan's comment on the presence of u.k. soldiers on the ground as for the ministry of defense they apparently don't comment on the special forces but with a little sign of an answer to the conflicts we asked people here in london what they think about the crisis in yemen i'm very surprised that the troops are getting involved and didn't know that hypocritical of them to be saying. you know that
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there are kind of. trying to evade the many conflict or fueling the many conflicts you know that it should be have anybody personally no i don't think they should be doing that it should be dealt with you know internally but i also understand yemen is you know phenomenally complicated situation some people we asked were unsure about the you case except mission in yemen but then on the air you want to ask the secretary of state for defense what recent assessment he's made of the effectiveness of operations involving british forces in the yemen in the last six months. with civilians bearing the brunt of the crisis and millions on the brink of famine doubts is again being cast on the u.k.'s role and whether it is party to the conflicts commission sethi london. writer and commentator abdel bari atwan says the british public should be shocked. this is the first evidence that the.
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troops on the ground fighting alongside the saudi forces and the saudi backed militia and this lobby or i believe it is it is a disaster has to be on it for the british people to pay for this war from their own pockets actually from their own taxes and finance a law which is you know well a war crime is committed in yemen and to know that there are special forces dissipating with the saudi who have been good sort of who are actually the. bombing hospitals schools i believe this war actually wouldn't be ended either by peace or by war because there's a whole made that. the british government should actually uses knowledge to put pressure on saudi arabia in order to stop this war because the saudis tend to want to play is. that they sent also personnel they
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composed a coalition and those are the five this was hoping to win it and few weeks time by protests that i've been on for now for years if this is the fifth year. then it's we the u.k. starting myla said his report has prompted a u.n. investigation we asked for the united nations to comment on this. and to vaccine activists in the u.s. have playing there being prosecuted persecuted like ginger in the holocaust where the star of david to make that point that's often vaccinated children were banned from entering certain public places. how are we going to know if you know how we're going to arrest you. if you won't do it. we did the last time so for you. jews in york right now there never thought this moment will come i am still. with you. memorial museum in poland has condemned the
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use of the star of david which was used to label jews during the holocaust instrumental lazing the feet of jews who are persecuted by hateful anti-semitic ideology in argue against vaccination that saves human lives is a symptom of intellectual and moral degeneration according to the u.s. government agency dealing with diseases twenty eighty in the country suffered seventeen outbreaks of measles the cases were reported mainly among vaccinated people in the orthodox jewish community the number of cases this year was almost four hundred and is expected to rise alleviated after richie jewish community adviser says the way the star of david was used by the anti vaccine activists has cheapened its meaning. util star for the jewish people is about remembrance for us you know it's too much people because of what they all we paid the jewish people paid a terrible price because of the so you know style drew another jew you don't you
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have no right to use these symbols because you make them becoming part of political i would say game you make them becoming cheap we cannot forget when children women and people were worrying what happened to them what happened to them to have this if people are doing so even jews doing it to me stake for me it's a terrible abuse and i think it's it's that's would be punished by a lot there's the headlines for the south thanks for staying soon that also means a national park in thirty minutes with the latest global news updates. join me every first week on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see you then.
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there was a crack she used to do crack when i was a little kid my dad he was like a bust at the you know i got like what i needed when i was a baby but i had a bad child. there's always playing single mothers and african-american community service and saying very. i think that's more of a teenager's having kids and you can expect a fourteen or fifteen year old first daughter now old enough for him maybe or far there any child. we actually lost our place in october my car end up breaking down and i was unable to get to work on time so they let me go in with my paycheck that i bring home i have barely enough to pay my
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car insurance. the gas in my car at. the bridge for a single purpose. of a supermoon. to start training very young. eight months of intensive school. wraps. and very safe lives. when i almost chose seemed wrong when old rules just don't hold. any old belief yet to shape out this day come to council. and it gains from an equals
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betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. up. young elephants have come to. rest basically brutal pledging incidents because sadly the baby elephants often do see their mother as need be killed by the also be caught up unfortunate. i do believe and laugh and smile and i see it in the salons they home facial expression changes and. they need to be.
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and this is boom bust broadcasting around the world and covering the world of business and finance and the impact on us all been one fill in the children of washington glad you're with us so coming up a swine flu outbreak has devastated china's market but what does that mean for the markets more importantly what does it mean for you fred thompson the author of bet the farm and part of war with the above the trading day join us to break down what this all means report plus we made through what the outbreak means for support stocks across the globe and then we break down some other big news in the tech and health sector with danielle shay she's the director operators over at simpler trading and once again facebook is under fire this time on the other side of the globe as a social media giant role in the indian election is now coming under scrutiny conservative t.v. and radio commentator steve molesworth and archie producer of bridgeboro dive into
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the details and tell us what this means for the world's largest democracy all that straight ahead but first let's do some headlines. let's start here a demeanor now look for a fracturing world market in twenty one thousand so the world trade organization significantly downgrades their regular forecast on growth in global trade the latest trade in statistics out look at lowers their expectations for global trade growth this year predicting two point six percent growth for twenty nine team that's down.

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