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tv   News  RT  June 8, 2019 1:00am-1:31am EDT

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the officer who. drew his or drawn. the visual wish to do away from the officer of the toys out of his crib. the obvious or did they kind of lunge for the weapon once missed and then what happened on tree swung at the officers hands didn't hit him i never saw any contact between the 2 at any kind of went back to where they were so the officers back here there try again 15 feet apart at this point and that's when the officer pulled out his gun and aimed it on tree. if the headlines are stalling any side to the wiki leaks co-founder julian assange has a life in a high security prison in london coming up for you we have exclusive images from our video you can see about. the international monetary fund says mistakes were made when it tried to improve argentina's economy admitting it failed to tackle key problems in the country goes deep into the decades of errors made by the i.m.f.
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. new york times backtracks on its reporting of the scruple poisoning case in the u.k. for money the paper failed to correct an article about the disturbing pictures showed of president trump allegedly from the save. the morning very good morning for me on kevin 0 in here with this half hour world news update for you on 1st takes a glimpse into julian assange his life behind bars video agency ruptly has exclusive video of the wiki leaks co-founder inside london's belmarsh prison the camera catches the will supply chatted with his fellow inmates in a high security prison a very severe 50 week sentence for skipping bail this indeed is the 1st so to suicide his arrest and removal from the ecuadorian embassy in london was 2 months
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ago we believe that exclusively as well americal. the wiki leaks co-founder is no waiting for an extradition hearing shows will for june the 12th he is wanted by washington on charges of soliciting and publishing classified u.s. government information. edwards dashti gives an update so on the a sound situation. as you can see journalists somewhat and nancy a to hear in this exclusive footage r.t. right place video agency has obtained that was it apparently shot by one of the inmates at the bell marsh high security. the prison here in the united kingdom where the wiki leaks founder is currently serving his 50 week sentence for skipping bell at the end of may we know that he was transferred to the prisons health well and indeed here in the united kingdom the courts did decide to postpone a hearing at the westminster magistrate's court late last month due to his ill health as he was unable to appear and not even via video link and indeed the wiki
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leaks they too believe that his condition is worsening by the day there being a higher security guards or maximum security prison it's difficult for anyone but julian spent 7 years of combined in the ecuadorian embassy before for. medical treatment without most of the article 3 limbs let's recap exactly where we are at now of course the case was reopened after that we came weeks co-founder was hauled out of london's ecuadorian embassy last month he spent up to 7 years there fearing for extradition to the united states in that time he was confined to the premises and in the last year or so his internet was qatar and his connection to the outside world was severely limited now as i say the u.k. is currently reviewing extradition requests from both the united states and sweet and meanwhile though of course in the united states they've introduced 17 indictments against juventus on late in may charging him on to the espionage act for that he faces a sentence of life imprisonment actually the sum of
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a 175 years in prison if found guilty however to his supporters including campaigners activists and indeed janice they believe that julia songe is a valiant campaigner for truth in fact they believe you should be applauded and not pass acute it for simply telling the truth well this is kusa video from shortly after the un special rapporteur on top should claim to be exposed to psychological torture during his years in the door an embassy there's no suffering its consequences he spoke to mr meltzer about the way his son has been treated to the what could a way to be the future and you can watch the interview in full or. rather world of r.t. dot com later today. what we found is that mr sand shows all the symptoms that are typical for a person that has been exposed to prolong psychological torture what we have seen now during my visit was already alarming and what we have seen since then that his
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state of health has dramatically deteriorated as predicted by a psychiatrist accompanying my visit today mr assange is no longer capable to participate in his own court hearings it is very important here that we speak about the risks that he would be exposed to in case of extradition to the us personally i'm convinced there is no chance he would get a fair trial in the united states and why do i say that while fair trial certainly generally requires a presumption of innocence now i don't have to explain to you what is the public opinion about the jewel in a stance in the us it's very difficult for him to get a unbiased impartial court hearing the fair trial also requires the gallery that he's actually being charged for something that is punishable now if you look at the 17 of the 18 charges are under the espionage act and all of them
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relates to activities that any investigative journalist would conduct would be protected under i believe it's the 1st amendment of the us constitution under the freedom of press and freedom of expression and then the 18th charge the so-called hacking charge doesn't relate to him doesn't claim that he actually hacked a computer to receive information but he obtained all of the information he published by someone who had full clearance so he as any other investigative journalists just received this information i think you could construct. a fence perhaps if all the allegations are proven in relation to you know trying attempting unset. unsuccessfully to to help someone breaking out a cold but not succeeding it's a bit like charging someone for trying to exceed the speed limit but not succeeding because the car's too weak i don't think that makes sense from
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a prosecutorial standpoint even if the radical if you could construct a certain criminal energy i don't think that makes any sense at all it certainly doesn't justify the type of suffering he has been going through and that he would likely face when when extradited to the u.s. . the international monetary fund the pacific made mistakes in argentina managing director christine lagarde claimed on wednesday that the i.m.f. underestimated argentina's complicated economic situation they are laughs an organization of 189 countries aimed at promoting international monetary cooperation and facilitating international trade but the success of the measures taken to improve the economy in many countries lately not only argentina remains questionable as our senior correspondent were ghastly of explosives. you've got to understand we're just people and people make mistakes you meet we might oversleep and be late to work likewise the i.m.f.
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just people but when these schools up there is tens of billions of dollars on the line it was an incredibly complicated economic situation that many actors including us underestimated a bit when we started trying to help and put together together with the argentine authorities a program to deal with the most critical sectors of the economy put yourself in the i.m.f. shoes you are the absolute last resort of any country and those a company of begging for help they're like addicts take argentina a 3rd of the population lives below the poverty line g.d.p. in freefall down 6 percent last year joblessness hopelessness in the shadow of economic chaos but there's light at the end of the tunnel the i.m.f. shining with $50000000000.00 in loans with strings attached austerity to the
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bone budget cuts tax and terrified the usual stuff that makes miserable generations. this strike aims to reject the tears highclere public service transportation and above all to confront readjustment policy of marriage on the governess and the service of the column for international monetary fine. i'm going to make it easy for my recent mockery of the next government because they still want to have a relationship with the world we're willing to fight argentina is an old hand at this making the same painful mistakes in 2001 they took an i.m.f. loan jaring an economic crisis as usual mistakes were made the i.m.f. or just people when the crisis got a teeny bit worse. q nationwide riots the government collapsing and debt being defaulted on.
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and the i.m.f. a good people they had no problem admitting that everyone else messed up even worse than they did it would have been an ugly crisis anyway but perhaps not quite as bad if the fund has supported a change in strategy earlier it isn't that mistakes are only made with tina the i.m.f. makes mistakes with everybody greece for example the economy wasn't restored jobs weren't created and the quote notable failure is the bull made made everything worse and like argentina the greeks were also choked with masochistic levels of a stereotype. in south korea i.m.f. loans and fine print conditions ended up only increasing unemployment you know that people say that you should try everything once well i.m.f.
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loans really don't belong in that category. the bolivia they did everything the i.m.f. told them to privatized water utilities added g. transport industry the need for everything to start going bankrupt and collapsing left and right and only when they chose to ignore the i.m.f. said vice the group coverage begin years of suffering for nothing now mistakes. are used to buy before but now would country with dignity oh you cannot because it had to be decided by the earth before that now we can make our own plan we had to ask the u.s. ambassador about who had to go close this but now the politics in our country is more democratic. you see there's confusion misunderstanding about the point of
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i.m.f. loans few things if any actually improve mistakes are made liberally the i.m.f. are just people i mentioned the real great thing about i.m.f. loans the amazing thing that nothing else in life can replace is the moment you pay them off internationally for a terribly and fundamentally free now that's a feeling that money can't buy. and that the world bank institutions like that make these sorts of mistakes and i put that in quotation marks fairly often. most of the time when you look more closely you will understand. the mistake really wasn't a mistake so much as it was a desire to see this situation in such a way that the i.m.f. could participate and help the government that it supports the i.m.f.
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is really a kind of international economic appendage of the u.s. and its allies that control the i.m.f. and i believe the the u.s. . was behind a lot of this. changing of the guard here with the right wing and ministrations in argentina and brazil ecuador and places like that so it's part of the u.s. policy policy overseen the consequences of that prudence also part of the u.s. dollar policy interest rate policy and now the global economy and therefore us in a trade promises. the new york times before so apologize for misreporting on the script for poisoning in the u.k. back in march last year it wrote that the cia director gina hospital showed the president from images of dead ducks and children allegedly from the scene of the attack and the british authorities quickly confirm the photos were not related to
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the incident the new york times took 2 months to issue a correction kalib open as more of a story. you're remember when the new york times dropped a bombshell about how gina haskell the cia director had convinced donald trump to send russian diplomats packing in response to the script all poisoning by showing him photographs of dead ducks and sick children except those reports turned out to be fake news the author has apologized i regret the error and over my apology i strive to get information right the 1st time that is was subscribers pay for but when i give something bone fix it so this is how they fixed it an earlier version of this article in correctly described the photos the jena house bill showed to president trump during a discussion about responding to the nerve agent attack in britain on a former russian intelligence officer miss haskell displayed pictures illustrating the consequences of nerve agent attacks not images specific to the chemical attack
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in britain let's break this down a little bit more so gina haskell the cia director shows donald trump images of the impact of nerve agents here is what the original article said ms haskell showed pictures of the british government had supplied her of young children hospitalized after being sickened by the nova choked nerve agent that poisoned the script poles she then showed a photograph of ducks that british officials said were inadvertently killed by the sloppy work of the russian operatives so donald trump sees these images of sick kids and dead ducks and he is furious with russia now back then that made sense after all u.k. media was reporting that 3 children had gone to the hospital after receiving bread from the scree palls and feeding it to ducks however this story fell apart the next day the children were fine they were not affected in any way and furthermore no ducks were harmed either there were no other casualties other than those previously
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stated no wildlife were impacted by the incident and no children were exposed to or became ill as a result of the incident so. exactly to the cia director showed it trump she showed donald trump images of horror that had nothing to do with the incident at hand but here's another question why did it take so long to correct this correction was delayed because of the time needed for research the correction wasn't published for 2 entire months afterwards the initial article cited people briefed on the conversation whereas the new correction cited a person familiar with the intelligence time well spent kaleb up and artsy new york will further to this the russian embassy in washington responded to the new york times correction made criticize the length of time it took for the mistake to be addressed and called for the end to this information while the normal relations between russia and the us to be restored. this is out since national good morning coming up china gets perhaps we ought to commit the on going trade war with the us
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with solmes against the west and we'll go viral on social media has some of the break. before in the eighty's with the rise of japan and the us had a response rejiggered the global currency markets that the plaza accord.
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the same people that gave us the plan for tension team after the crash of $1000.00 . so china doesn't seem to be wanting to play that game so they're going to have to come up with some other strategy and at the moment appear on the rise. again 82 the morning moscow time next as u.s. trade sanctions begin to bite in china patrick i think songs have become increasingly popular in karaoke bars across the country the man who penned the hit song trade war says there's more of this kind of music to come to. was. her.
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teacher of the us proposed a lot of outrageously tough requirements in the trade secrets who can teach there were one us as a cultural worker from the basic by groaned i need to be heard so hard someone to make a song basing my lyrics and i hate to lose my own money. god he found in one hand time doing research in local culture and trying to promote it with the other hand keep working on creating my patriotic poem snowball song st paul's it's a funny as you say. was
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. well if child is kicking back of the sanctions and not just with karaoke american chicken and polka off the menu then response to the current us trade instructions but there's a solution on the leading russian producer told r.t. they are going to try to fill the gap in the market. beginning of this year we'll start a supply of chicken meat and more those 30 producers and russia will prove to play chicken to china. to get up a great potential to supply as much as maybe 200000 pounds to the chinese market
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for the cool and over half a $1000000000.00 but at the moment the chinese the largest consumer of meat. in the world to cull some most of 50 percent as little and russia fortunately today doesn't have access russia or producers don't have access to any market where very much call for that in the near term will get access and will be able to provide high quality for foreigners to the chinese market. will choose a new president tomorrow it's the 1st time the central asian country will choose a new leader since the breakup of the soviet union and as he goes down off explains next there's a lot at stake for the strategically important country and its neighbors. it hasn't happened since the fall of the soviet union it's a phrase you don't hear very often these days but it's mega relevant here in cannes extern and in its capital no soul done because the country prepares to enter
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a new chapter. russia will be passing a careful are you over this one. has been on a quest of uniting the post soviet bloc economically as it stands is an integral part of this strategy especially in new zealand leaders eurasian economic union forward there was a personal friendship there too between vladimir putin and the former kazakstan leader not assault on those that are biased at the same time he has always maintained a policy independent from more school and never recognized south a set up and there was silence on crimea so look still looms and plenty to gain because a capital has also played host to 11 rounds of the syria peace talks spearheaded by more schools which have been key to establishing dialogue between the assad government and the opposition so a lot rests on kazakhstan when it comes to international diplomacy too.
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and was there doubts there's opportunity and that's the way nato and the u.s. will likely be viewing kazakstan right now there have been moves to integrate the country into closer realms of corporation despite the nation being a non member of the military alliance russia has never shied away from letting nato know with feelings about expansion encroaching on its borders and kazakstan could yet be the camel with a few too many bales of straw the e.u. has interests here too currently kazakstan as largest trade partner but a change in power could see a change in direction east to another pretty big neighbor. i'm talking about china of course and beijing could be in for a treat here because extern has been pushing to increase its weight in asia seeking an alliance with china the race itself has a clear favorite. he is
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a flowing chinese speaker so it is likely that kazakstan will move to tighten its corporation with beijing but until monday it's all just speculation and when these 1st results 1st decisive results come in it really will be a 1st since u.s.s.r. amigas done of reporting from mosul town and kazakhstan r.t. . yeah it's all part of all that as well that we will cover for you spend a day i'm sure that sit for a while seems national from now into moscow i'm kevin owen for the rest of this sunday morning thanks ever so much for watching and a great week. so you say that breeze is the end of the series if we could just let josie marino walk
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away so we decided to treat up stuff goes to a very special farewell party and by guys. we walk along an interesting path as a team but this time to go back to the punchline and thanks for putting on some sort of body. with. the only thing that i didn't enjoy was my then singing fun in moscow my dancing. on ice. well thankfully we nailed it literally there we go. join me every
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thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics or business i'm show business i'll see you then. agree has long positioned itself as a sovereign player within the e.u. it can stand up to brussels then put its. and when it comes to its own national interests but when it comes to dealing with the trumpet ministration is the old and government just as ready to put hungary 1st. if. you know to the 2017 the german newspaper developed published an article claiming that the european union that last 30000000000 euros as a result of its very anti russian sanctions.
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particularly affected eastern europe many polish farmers went broke and even committed suicide. sometimes i can't account for as i was of on the get on one of the top level what on the political and on the. rooms are like. on these if the young can behave that often at 5 in the halls i'm going gifts to the dolls and on to other kind of unknown home doesn't in let's say in the in the point is if in a fun song a smith. on the dance with all the faults and that's wasn't.
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i determine that you're the one who did it. so i'm going to move into the interrogation. i'll leave the role electra's that there for several minutes because i want you to get anxious. to think about the error of your way. and then i walked back and when i walked back in i'm going to have a big fix file with me. all kind of a person it may have seen just like our surveillance video of it might all be blank
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. but it's to show you that i have a strong investigation and i have all this evidence. so the 1st thing i tell you is . our investigation has proven that you are the one who committed this crime there is no doubt about it whatsoever we have the evidence that you did it there is nothing that you can say that will convince me otherwise all i want to know is why . could you confess to a crime that you did not commit. and interrogation technique used by the majority of police officers in the united states is causing controversy across the country. created in the sixty's by the private company john reed this method has gone on to influence most of the interrogation techniques taught in american police academies it involves 9 different stages leading from confrontation to spoken confession to a final written confession this technique has allegedly compelled thousands of
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innocent people to confess to crimes that they did not commit interrogation should be conducted in a non supportive environment and want to get the person on to our territory away from his or her own surroundings interrogation room should be quiet private free of any outside distractions or noises. so please. remember what. i don't know they tell these interrogators that you can tell whether someone is guilty by looking at them and listening to what they say that confirms their belief that the suspect is guilty and it is a recipe for disaster when our family realized what had happened in that interrogation room it was like oh my god oh my we begin to move closer shortening the distance between the suspect and ourselves moving into their personal space.

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