tv Documentary RT February 22, 2020 12:30am-1:01am EST
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why i wanted to be more like all. the one the boss. when they wanted access to commence they were then that is a spurious and simple. knowledge they can't even do no great this little note with respect. in the moment they collided with him they took the information he had but then immediately let's say the next day you had a hit piece in the new york times from bill keller he was at that time described him as a bank lazy. he came immediately something about his character up. there i think that is a betrayal it's a betrayal of principle. what do you think of the allegations that julian have sanji is
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a direct quote from the new york times is that he's a narcissist with an outsized view of his own of origins and that he has no interest in monday matters like personal hygiene. really. i can't think of another journalist or publisher who has won a major international journalist wards. and for whom media organizations have complained about whether his socks were dirty. or had been washed here i mean really. i wonder whether any single human being has been subjected to the level of snow. in the palms and walls at school.
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into india live in a british court released a social built on condition that he didn't leave the country. he was also required to remain at the country house owned by a close friend the british journalist phone smith. well i'm now sitting in a chair. and ingham home is a sort of house that is the products of wealth that my family has generated for hundreds of years my family moved here and 75. fortunate. to have that responsibility as it often. is and investing at the journalists and that's why our journalists. kindly offered these may be a secure place to be the place from what are the publications will be made.
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piecemeal say captain. phillips i just want to convey this it's always a bit safer to be much much safer i was here and though i knew i was you know but as far as the few we can ground these cases is about as good as. we can expect a sickly to turn this into office for quite a lot so you would have come in here and you'd have found people who working on computers bits of paper printouts everywhere running around with these little disks and things like this so that involved having julian it had involved having. the people that work for him and involved having everybody who wanted to interview him but this was the main office this was where he had course this. is the place where. a lot of work later down the road also came to happen but i would say that the big fear. the big publication. fram.
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cable gate they were conducted. wireless jordan was in house arrest and having them all. because it was so secret you'd be heroines you see people working on computers and you know i wouldn't like office because it was you know you you know you'd be looked at and they had one don't you think oh gosh what a silly question washed off will bury them tell me if they want to tell me. i sold them release the afghan war loans i sold them working on the diplomatic. and i saw them working on some stuff that came off the woods when they were here it's interesting. very hard to stop organizations like we. and the whitney's isn't going to be the end of it even if we disappear which is no sign that it will. become a sort of guerrilla organization for freedom of speech. on the 1st the judy it was in the next year on embassy. the morning off that
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he went to that and the sikhs i read in the news and realized that i just lost my bail money. that is the school and. selflessness gravity was making me more sad listening seeing the rain and it was. a very sad. but this is a good during the embassy when curiosus on to leave maybe 7 gets the embassies only the one of the 2 flats in the 1st floor. so what you're looking at them balcony all of them must be houses which in fact was . julien's through. 5 minutes.
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out. today a solar stay found with few mates he's refusing to leave the ecuadorian embassy in london is expected to make his 1st public comment the softening. we knew each other before he came to me and i say. basically the possibility of tech team arrives from that friendship. can lead. me to. say that this is in 30. percent sophie
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during the embassy itself a small piece of flight. 300. 81st when they were. sort. of the room. building is surrounded by high buildings which is just not allowed. to come into them but julian compared ceased stay at the embassy. to be leaving space because he was subject to only a few feet. and he never saw sunlight and he didn't have dental and medical care there were huge challenges. first years. he
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was constantly under surveillance there open civilians and when you were in the embassy you could constantly hear the people outside with the speaking on walkie talkie nearly no corner in the embassy where you were not watched in this or in the buildings we also hard to bring video camera. pointing at them. all the time. was the most sort of a place in the war for many years. to newness and continued to run we can experience a state of the ecuadorian embassy well within its walls many new publications and revelations came to light the highest profile exposing is probably a period in 2016 the year in which a new president was to be elected in the us. and
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know my the same situation. to be. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy on sunday shouldn't let it be an arms race in this on off and spearing dramatic development only personally i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time to sit down and talk. i want to do one. on the.
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believe. came from the fact that he put in the main. one of the d.n.c. leaks basically. e-mails from democrats. the democrats are. trying. to present. that was something that i think the american public is really important about wiki leaks is that the russian government has engaged in espionage against america and then they have that information. wiki leaks.
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of those cables was pretty nasty i think if they did there was even this outrage and these hate make him stop making stuff make a songe stop kick him out of the embassy silence him guy keep. when the years went by his situation became more difficult and difficult the pressure become bigger and bigger and then the government changed in ecuador i think the situation became pretty crazy. there was an election in ecuador. marriner lenin became president. he was a great supporter of america still the. government
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decided to shift. going on foreign policy. decided to have to defer relationship economics states to you know was an obstacle for dot for months he started. collecting could release actually go to sites not just the records local as he could see of this. prebuttal state refugee but a political belief it was healed but it must be your psyche. but it's a kind of let me see if to see this up this will be able to persuade us no it is not for them or a no government was determined that they had to get rid of him and turned his life into hell 1. 100. going away loiters the searching businesses. installing cameras in every room just private meetings had to be.
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this was the 1st time in 10 years when i saw him when he i could really see the toll it took on him. it will stay like i was shocked. cut back to 2011 with. his youthful lawyer very. sweet. to see. after a 3 month torture certainties are. certain. not to where you. know you are. doing. this to face. was very very.
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the united states immediately filed an extradition request with the u.k. but it could not be considered until julian a son should still be in the months in prison for breaching the terms of his home detention and 2012. just keeping to the we don't remember seeing the wiki leaks founder was sent to belmarsh prison just outside london. prison or. high security maximum security prison it's where your murderers and terrorists. berthold. belmarsh prison is said to be a worse place even than what. he is. to. nod. the right fraternizing with all the person knows.
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he told me that when he sees people go past his sell he wishes he wished he could 3. i saw those leaked media also where he appears to have a lot lost a lot of weight. when i saw that i really started crying because when you know someone very well and see him in this position. i'm not allowed to hand him anything the only way of communicating with the outside world just him to receive their heads. we were not sure if he wanted to communicate with journalists but here's a letter we have just received from belmarsh prison and it's from jill and
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a songe as it says here on the back of. that letter reveals despair and frustration as the trial draws closer the wiki leaks founder says he has no internet or telephone nexus which seriously hinders his ability to prepare his own defense and what he has nothing much to do except walk thousands of laps per day around the cell. it's very distressing to. see someone you have worked with and who is an old friend. in such peril. and. to. think that they may not come out and it is very upsetting. the charges that the u.s. government have raised against union to extradite him have shifted.
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they called him a hacker and said that he had assisted manning in securing the information that manning wanted. bradley manning was a handyman who was in the armed forces and clearly was shocked by what was going on around him and. bradley manning now chelsea manning. was the original whistleblower who gave wiki leaks them most important information we ask on war logs in the film from a helicopter or he says a journalist been in. the diplomatic papers all came from bradley manning. the way the u.s. ministry of justice sees it julian a stanch didn't just receive information from an informant which would not constitute a crime journalist do have the right to acquire information from sources even if it
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is classified the american government claims that assad conspired with private manning who helped him access classified information intending to harm the united states. the u.s. hopes to prove that just sound is a spy not a journalist. to look at the charges they are absolutely applicable. to potentially other journalism or media publications. during a sound being a publisher is put in prison for being a publisher for no other reason than being a publisher. they have no voice. there are no rules to the game. even green turn a list in the united states should feel aku to a scene in running down the spine. at the charges that have been leveled against
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this publisher. because they could be next. dear julian. you are one of the most bravest person i know and this sentence that you'll get repeated often courage is contagious it was really true. that's the reason for great movements of draws you'll have so i would think of people. support and understand that there is. a wider issue at stake he's done alone he is not alone. there are a large number of people. value the contribution as main party and public interest. i remembered you today i went into another's famous
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when you were relatively free and i remember that you were just you know carrying his legal back back. and having him very humble i. would look forward to a day well he's free and not being honest or. not being chased around the world by the americans. i hope that we can get you out of there. if you will be sitting next to us somewhere nice something water by deceit these would be like just just a bad memory. our early hours. of a lot of thank you for. in
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the troubled 19 seventies a group of killers rampage through parts of northern ireland that was coordinated loyalists attacks particularly catholic population of tens of thousands were forced to flee their homes and what was striking to put these attacks was that the are you see the police actually took part in the attacks so instead of preventing it they were active participants in the burning of full streets in belfast at that take more than a 100 innocent civilians with that as the review can seniors and we found out more i was surprised about the extent and its occurrence which the collusion was
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involved in some of those cases that killers would lead to be named. i think it went to the very very top i think if the phones for all the water where all the taste you know on and give the go ahead. nuclear become a battleground in the u.s. in vermont people are demanding the shut down of a local plant. is right now my focus because it's a very dangerous. power plant the owner is attempting to run the reactor beyond its operational limits this case just sort of puts a magnifying glass on where's the power in this country where is it going is it moving more towards corporate interests or is it more in the idea of a traditional participatory democracy as are our lie with the people this case
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demonstrates that struggle in the very real ways that our struggle on r.t. . same. wrong. i mean you get to shape out just to come out to it and it. equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. i can't show you my face but i'm going to teach you must story in 1993 this man was sentenced to death. they could charge kenny with capital murder even though he didn't have the gun didn't pull the trigger didn't intend to kill anybody imagine living in your bathroom for that week with the sound of
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all. i can link up my. us media claims russia is backing both the republicans and the democrats in the 2020 presidential election as anonymous sources kick off another alleged russian meddling campaign stateside. accused of fueling hatred politicians in germany blame the lies of the old. senator for germany party the wake of wednesday's bracy motivated terror attack in an alley . on the new york times rolls the afghan president over an article by a taliban leader our team looks at the ethics of giving everybody a free speech. why is it that they are so willing to publish their lead.
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