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tv   Documentary  RT  June 18, 2020 12:45pm-1:31pm EDT

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to change your appearance. many local people see plastic surgery as a prerequisite for a successful career. also all true is how you would spoke with a long time the well cook don't come on this put a cool school this fall on the home i will tell you on the war the bible and the punk use hold on me under what does what i mean don't watch when the you know. those of us have all. if she were to blues or one woman to woman try to do what
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you should. we will have your music you. could want all. interested in the job seekers appearance. now being asked by. you to tell me what about the food on. this is really. cool and this is something i've got to. put on have what i had last. 6 about me all. this. incredible thing on how didn't go to get there were.
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none long ago she started at the door. and. then. carefully. tab out i think was close there were all. the good out there how. if or when they go put an end to how low the hug you thought it was that they had say ok don't get out of a new concept that is why the new guy was having quite a bit of through so me i mean i think. i made the order to pin the come to me. as a whole and then tell the people when they're. talking to when you're talking about how much. you know you. would be if they.
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if you. could apply for one how about. this except it was. for you don't. you got. a little test hadn't. done that already on the eve of them and then. only bheja. 3rd. or little. came up and then they. can bury. theirs made it ok yeah yeah yeah that is in the. war. you don't have some kind of a new gun you go out on the road to fulfill windows on us when you don't know.
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the boy who died he used her pulling bushes. on the. verge of. whom much would you feel much would you. doesn't approve of them do the group who were from home. school. are cruel to you joy. too little to go to double who hold it. as a graduation present parents often give doctors plastic surgery for an extra fold in the eyelids to make their eyes take tick tick tick tick. now they are sick the runways let it out one. time. you know. it's all go. through your hierarchy and i am. as
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a rule so long that you think are tied up but i will feel a little. closer to the one god i was not on a well made harder time we were seeing the pulling up was in the whole of the. forward you know from the kids all of us tall men. with a brain so we all grew up. in the bit good looking deporting little throw us alone . all. although if i don't marry you don't having to weasel out of the house when i look at 0. 14000 what it was how cool where i was modeling all the things all. these rich was on the move on. top of the. scene you know that in them. they'd be so.
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sudden the only oh yes certainly in them now. who knows what i'm to do and when you will was home told you what if users and the movie cupid to suitable shows you prove. you are usual you could double hoods doable could overlook the time go a little will know what your load what it will all border with no good on all. but one little. you know your coupon and do do go. do double most who are both of you who will know it can get over what little. boom boom boom boom. it's on the move over the elbow room due to the bugs will be the. 40 percent of adolescents koreans who were interviewed said
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to have plastic surgery years. to learn coding. and the other that will. kill us whole thing always over a. distance a little for us to sit down to sit down with yeah. to do your quote a little bit on how. good to talk to get along as we move on and there it's the wall and global ana pilots are one of the unique long wire clues on what i was in a month ago out of the barn and they're all falling over a lot. of people will be on you fool and how do you get a clue to the know that they were in the wrong kosik who it was when they hear how little ones only a few days hello. lou in the coil of 31 is on that end on this little house on the
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i will soon be in the lawn and the cool its hands of the killing of a. whole. intern goes holding. bizarre at the white house the pope. could as all telling them vulnerable more than bother the world want to join us and we could spend hundreds and hundreds on these and then saw. the words have all we are. doing a pretty want to get in trouble find america and. the need to really play all. those who don't see good old. days when those who didn't they. hadn't given the city authorities are pulling from the pockets how to. do good would you dream will you go under as you can do with your homo slow cruel womanhood you will cruel.
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train them don't block crew suits him out hello kluwe obamaland in the world down. to bush who do all need to underage and kill you or. so who is also risen and could also win 16 in the man with me. julian how long ago coleman and tom little through this autumn will. no you. are. the cool.
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little tool. they're. all. he. says. all. and they. all only a. few
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they. all see. that. you go. you thought i would you be honest will always hanging off. work published. when it was always. going to be one done on.
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one knee. no lawyer you go you go to. korea. when he. has thought. you could he will remember. the. civil. war single. gulp of the. gold beach was a beauty to it was the. senses of. the
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. secret and then there are. in the troubled 19 seventies a group of killers rampage 3 parts of northern ireland that was coordinated loyalists attacks particularly catholic population in belfast tens of thousands were forced to flee their homes come up with strike can put these attacks was that the r.u.c. the police actually took part in the attacks so instead of preventing it they were active participants in the burning of coal streets in belfast at the time more than
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a 100 innocent civilians were. as the review can seniors and we found out more i was surprised about the extent and its occurrence which the collusion was involved in some of those cases the killers would later be named into the now new gang i think it went to the very very top i think it has crossed the water where all the taste and you thought was going on and give the go ahead. if the epidemic continues as a disease the economies will not work we will not have trade tourism. the investments we will have continuing very deep economic crisis.
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well coming up to us from around the world in life from central london this is all to u.k. . the french president meets prime minister boris johnson as the 2 countries discuss covert 19 air bridges to avoid trouble is going into quarantine . the family of crash victim harry dunn plans to prosecute the foreign secretary for allowing his alleged killer to feed justice their spokesperson tells r.t. u.k. about the next move. their rights were were given permission to bring a case against dominic wrote that he obstructed northamptonshire police's who offered investigation to our east. health secretary blames apple for the
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failure of the u.k.'s contact tracing out as the government u. turns and goes with the tech giant's own model. and experts in the us constanta over u.k. claims that a sterling trunk can be used to treat covidien 19 we hear from one of the scientists who's approaching caution. french president emmanuel micron has met prime minister boris johnson in london to discuss the idea of any bridges between the 2 nations these would allow quarantine free travel to help revive the u.k.'s tourism industry well. the latest so recent emanuel has been to 10 downing street meeting boris johnson it's been a day hasn't absolutely the 2 leaders meeting in westminster firstly taking the opportunity to have those talks in downing street before merging to watch the red arrows fly over now this meeting was held in commemoration of the 80th
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anniversary of charles de gaulle the former french wartime leader at the liver in. a speech if you will to the french resistance fighters left. who are fighting against the nazi occupation now in the spirit of cooperation between the both sides they have been discussing in addition to issues like greggs it what to do about the call in to those that the u.k. have implemented now these cordon to move to see visitors to the united kingdom be made isolate for 2 weeks upon arrival but there's been much discussion about the establishment of averages which are essentially bilateral agreements between 2 countries whereby the citizens of those countries would not be put to or would not be forced to put through those types of self isolation methods now as a result of those talks today we've seen others such as the foreign secretary dominic robb stating that there might be legal challenges if for example the u.k.
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was to have. bridge set up with france other countries may turn around and say well what about us we also want to have access to the same type of exemptions one industry has been opposed to the implementation of quarantine rules been the travel industry they say that they will kill tourism off and another 'd issue that they've had is with regards to the european union's new app or the new a website which essentially maps out all of the countries in europe it's called reopen e.u. and it updates those who visit the site or visit the up with for example do those countries have any restrictions in place other beaches open other restaurants open and so on and so forth u.k. isn't featured not at which the travel industry says will damage the ability or the attempt to attract people to come here to visit for their holidays but the government says the u.k. is no longer part of the european union and so shouldn't be featuring on ups like.
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he said thank you very much indeed. all travel and tourism expert dr neil robinson told me that although averages are a good idea they can be difficult to implement. innocently with no loss of no love to the european union. of this mechanism which would have given information relating to where where oh social distancing measures and so on should be part of that we must remember we still do a lot of business with the european union whether we're with the european union don't pose threats while britain still have access to the website debt though so they are able to see coronavirus travel advice anyway. yeah i know that's a valid point but i do feel you know europe or sort of. no longer part of the european union they're big neighbors were in several parts of doing business with and this mechanism would have britain with facilitated communication or should the u.k.
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they be introducing bridges that we've discussed i mean we have the highest on number in europe that way. yeah i think it's a great idea i don't applaud you know i'm not providing this cop observation but. not necessarily easy to introduce we don't have a blueprint never before have they been considered or implemented on of equal importance they need to be reciprocal you know you need to have 2. countries in place that are familiar with woman whose ability to be more interesting to see long . is doable and you know i question it all government policy as being about avoiding that 2nd peak of the virus i mean that could be even worse for the travel industry could it absolutely be speaking to colleagues in sacks or in the you know the say there is that there could be a 2nd spike so it's important that we're cautiously maintain you know good hygiene and that we don't open you know the pandora's box of tourism to say.
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the u.k. government has here turned on its contacts pricing out in favor of the model made by tech firms google and apple they already know that pose meant to be the cornerstone of the government's test and try system to help find contacts of those with the virus was making it so safe coronavirus press conference the health secretary blamed the u.s. tech giant but insisted the government had always been prepared to go with the alternative we found that are out works well on android devices but apple software prevents i phones being used effectively for contact tracing unless you're using apple's own technology. after we started our work on our app google and apple then started working on their own product and as soon as they did this we began working on both so as it stands our out went work because apple won't change their system but it can measure distance and their app can't measure distance well enough to
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a standard that we are satisfied with throughout this for me what matters is what works because what works will save lives and i will work with any one public or private sector here or overseas to gain and any inch of ground against this disease so we've agreed to join forces with google and apple to bring the best bits of both systems together. for the u. turn follows months of development by the health secretary's innovation arm and was trialed on the isle of wight of the south coast of england last month it was announced on wednesday that the national rollout of that app would have been delayed until the winter. while apps use blue so signals on smart phones which register if someone comes into contact with a user who has covert 19 it then alerts the person him the infected carrier has come into contact with the critics say the way the government's original plan on data storage or a centralized system made it open to abuse the new system stores the data on
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individual phones which some say makes it more secure or right and privacy expert ray walsh welcomed the change in strategy. there's already been quite a lot of development. towards these kinds of ups you know other countries such as germany 40 got up like this and then it is that today out of 500 we could be yours you went on the record and said that he'd be willing to help the n.h.s. to get this up and running without cost of that spread as it is really no reason why it can't go ahead and it's a real shame that the government to sort of. been wasting so much time before making this decision because we could have had this up a lot sooner and get much he helped prevent the spread of convict 1000 before and also one of the concerns was that not enough people would download the app i mean do you think this was a greater engagement absolutely astrally am i using a simulation using a machine running out or is it in the us review and it's actually proof that these kind of apps can really help to stop the spread of cribbage 19 and summation prove that it's only going to actually have to be the threat if people were to choose to
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download the app and if they are concerned about their privacy they may decide not only which is when i'm making the are the essential lies the make in the that they that remain local i think people's brains is going to be really good as that too was open the people to want to donate to want to have be an interest but spread the disease and also right once it is operational i mean how useful will this technology be. yeah i mean any contact tracing out that can be used that is essential as a nice safe it can always be prepared best if there's another outbreak if there's a 2nd wave or if there's a future pandemic so it's good to actually use technology that is safe and that doesn't hurt people at risk. northern ireland plans to abandon the u.k. government's to meet a social distancing rule for schools from august the 1st minister of northern ireland has said they will reduce the rule to one me so when schools reopened to
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encourage people to return but this change will put pressure on westminster to ditch the 2 meet a distance as well ministers have already called upon the u.k. government to make the changes to help boost the country's economy. the family of harry dunn is set to prosecute the foreign secretary for allegedly obstructing a police investigation into their son's death the family lost a court action against the foreign office which would have forced them to disclose more documents relating to their handling of the case but the judges found that there was already enough in the public domain to back their case it concerns us citizen and secure last who allegedly hit and killed 19 year old motorcyclist harry done in the english county of northamptonshire last august she was believed to be driving on the wrong side of the road near to the air force base where her husband worked so cool last of pledge to america claiming diplomatic immunity and was subsequently charged by u.k. police for causing death by dangerous driving dominic robb denied knowing and
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secure last had left despite a text message from a senior diplomat showing his officials told the us that she could in fact leave the country well that says a done family says they are angry and brittany disappointed with boris johnson after his 1st letter to them came 10 months after their son's death they claim they received a cut and paste response from the prime minister claiming it's simply more of the same from the government but johnson and the foreign office maintain that they are working to facilitate her return both the foreign secretary and the prime minister have been clear with the u.s. that the refusal to extradite answer coolest amounts to a denial of justice and that she should return to the u.k. . the foreign secretary remains ready to meet terri's family and to support them to get the justice they deserve well the bombs found his spokesman ratzinger told me that what the ruling means for the future of the case there was no loss or victory in court today what the court decided in terms of further disclosure was that it
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already had enough to make the determination as to whether or not. and so cruel this diplomatic immunity so the parents wanted more documents around that issue the court decided it up and those of us who sat in on the hearing could clearly see which way the court was going to go we are very confident that the court will ultimately make the determination to secure this diplomatic immunity the other very important development that came out of the hearing today was that the parents were given permission to bring a case against dominic rob that he struck to northamptonshire police is lawful investigation to it soon ari's death so it's you know the parents certainly feel that there are giant step closer to getting the justice that they deserve. coming up after the break. experts in america for cold water on claims that
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a common steroids trial get into the biggest breakthrough yet in i think 19 treatment i'll be talking to one of the scientists researching court. and venezuelan rights campaigners over the bank of england to return gold stored in its vaults to help the country back to the coronavirus we have from the secretary of the venezuelan saudi darity campaign.
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so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy foundation let it be an arms race in. spearing dramatic development only mostly i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time to sit down and talk. if the
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epidemic continues as a disease the economies will not work we will not have trade tourism. we will have continue with a very deep economic crisis. welcome back medical experts in the u.s. have cost out on the findings by scientists at oxford university who claim the common steroid drug decks that medicine can be used to treat covert 19 a study claims the drug reduced death rates among coronavirus patients on ventilators by up to a 3rd u.k. prime minister boris johnson held it as the biggest breakthrough yet oxygen averse to have said they'll soon publish their findings in full but as in america are cautious about celebrating the study's results before all the data is released
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recently a french study into the effectiveness of the drug hydroxy chloroquine against coping 19 was withdrawn from a top medical journal over similar data concerns. this comes amid research which rates the u.k. as the 2nd worst in a table of how the world's richest nations have handled the coronavirus spain and italy received the same ranking but research has pointed out that those countries were the 1st in europe to be hit by the pandemic while experts at the economist intelligence unit claimed the u.k. had adequate time to respond but failed to sufficiently coordinated the us received a good rating despite having the world's highest coronavirus death toll so far while some countries received a very good racing in relation to 90 response these include new zealand germany norway and denmark over all the countries that managed the pandemic the better all reacted early in swiftly as new zealand did for instance not all of them introduced stringent lock downs but all implemented aggressive testing and tracing programs
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which were among the most crucial factors to contain the pandemic and insufficiently fast and coordinated response an initial lack of testing capacity and a decision to suspend track and trace in early march explain why the u.k. became an outlier. well for more on the decks the methane issue i'm now joined by a u.s. based particle expert who's adopting a cautious approach that's professor thomas j. again with us and again thank you for joining us i mean you think the full data of the study should be released before we jump to conclusions so therefore was the u.k. government right to make such a bold statement you know i'm very cautious about i don't think it was the right thing to do i don't think they should have announced this i think they should have waited till this was peer reviewed published in her journal and then we can make the announcement we've been burnt so many times by this in this crisis where things have been retracted where the data was clear where the messaging was wrong so why not do this the right way why not have it peer reviewed published and then released
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the announcement on the effect of this well it's just too many too many times we've seen this go wrong when we had dexamethasone could have adverse side effects as well i mean is it an irresponsible then to call it a big breakthrough before we fully understand the drugs effects. if the numbers there they're telling are accurate and they're hopefully they measured side effects then this would be a reasonable breakthrough but again why announce this when you have been published in a peer reviewed journal where we can look at the who is included in the trial who wasn't included in the trial how many people did have side effects how many people didn't have side effects we need to know the details and we need to have a peer reviewed so again the breakthrough we don't know yet what we're also as he related to there some code related scientific reports have been published without those proper views such as hydroxy chloroquine i mean should the government then step in to help control these publications. we definitely need to look at our peer review process it's something that our journals have been struggling with during
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this crisis when normally these things take a year before we go through operative you look at the data analyze those things now we're asking these scientific terms to do this within weeks and there's so much pressure on them how the government shores up that process gives it some objective support is a good question but when they are on the other side if the data best his findings are true this is big news isn't it oh i think this is very exciting again i hope these are true i want this to be true the numbers are very impressive you're looking at a 15 percent absolute reduction in mortality unvented patients or 5 percent reduction in patients on oxygen if these numbers hold out to be true i mean these are exciting we've been discussing dexamethasone and steroids in these patients for years so this is not a surprise that it would work it would certainly be welcome and in terms of going forward do you think there should be more focus on drugs that treat 19 rather than
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on chasing a vaccine that could be years away well i mean we have to do both we definitely need to do both i don't think this is an either or situation these are drugs that can help suppress our immune system we have 2 types of drugs those that the virus and those that suppress the immune reaction and then we have our vaccines many did all 3 of these we don't have the ability to sit back and say let's focus on one versus the other it was that time is of the essence and professor thomas j. mcginn thank you very much indeed thank you for having me. we want to campaign great claims he police forces are more likely to find people from black and ethnic minority backgrounds during the coronavirus lockdown research indicates that 17 police forces in england and wales were more likely to issue a penalty notice to people from ethnic minorities than to those who were white were cumbrous police force was almost 7 times more likely to find black asian and minority ethnic people while the west midlands police was 1.6 times more likely to find minorities while the chief constable of the west midlands said that
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interaction based on the 4 e's which are engaging explaining encouraging and enforcement may be less successful if trust is already low of the cumbrian residents issued penalty notices 5 for of a b.a. m.-e. by groaned in relation to those who reside outside of cumbria 22 people of a b.a. any background were issued a fixed penalty notice overall just over 8 percent of fixed penalty notice is issued or to individuals of a b.a. i mean background i can't rule out is a service we do have biases and discrimination our interactions based on the 4 may be less successful if trust is already low with certain communities where the vice president of the national black police association and george told me that police forces need to build trust and confidence among certain communities and i think they're just fartman but they've been also commas no surprise black asian minority
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ethnic communities are disproportionately dealt with or are slim probably in a number of areas or around. a dance in custody they're twice as likely to die immediately your interactions worse place their own stop and searches well they're more likely to be stopped and searched if you're black and particular parts of the a change across their many of the wheels so for me it's disheartening but not so great and unfortunately this is something that changed easily. i think it's like anything and what the 1st thing we have to do is accept that there's a problem there what we often do in policing is defend our position i think we have to listen to their communities look at the dollar overweight and discover way these communities are getting and i would agree around the fact that the trust and confidence in some communities are less likely to gain compliance so what we need to do is really build and build the trust and confidence in those particular communities for the longer term benefits. that
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a foreign secretary has come under fire for comments on the black lives matter action of taking the knee as a form of protest doesn't it rob said the jester represented a form of submission that he reserved for the queen and proposing to his wife i've got so in this taken the i don't know maybe it's going through the history that seems to be taken from the golden throats feels to me like a symbol of subjugation subordination rather one of liberation emancipation where rob has since clarified his comments tweeting that he respected the decision by those in the black lives matter movement to choose to take the knee the action came to prominence in 2016 when american football player culling company knelt during the us national anthem in protest against police brutality it has since become a symbol of solidarity against racial injustice. they waddle thought is an oxford oriel college have voted to remove
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a statue of british imperial assess all roads from its grounds it marks the culmination of a 4 year campaign by students to have the monument removed to citing road support for apartheid style measures in southern africa. well oriel college said an independent review into rhodes legacy will follow which will also make recommendations on improving access from other minority students the group behind the campaign say protests against roads will continue until the statue has been removed the decision comes amid a wider push to review the legacy of prominent britons who profited from darker aspects of colonialism such as the slave trade. well this comes as at least 2 companies issue apologies over there links records from university college london show that benjamin green one of the founders of the green king pub chain held over $230.00 slaves in the caribbean when slavery was abolished in 833 he was paid compensation worth half a 1000000 pounds in today's money while simon fraser one of the founding members of
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the insurers lloyd's of london was paid 400000 pounds for a plantation in dominica both firms have since apologized and have promised payments that will benefit britain's with minority ethnic backgrounds it is inexcusable without one of our founders property from slavery and argued against abolition in the 1800s we don't have all the answers so that is why we have taken time to listen and learn from all the voices including our team members and charity partners as we strengthen our diversity and inclusion work there are some aspects of our history that we are not proud of in particular we are sorry for her role played by the lloyd's market in the 18th and 19th century slave trade this was an appalling and shameful period of english history as well as our own and we condemn the indefensible wrongdoing that occurred during this period.
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campaigners are calling on the bank of england to return venezuelan gold stored in its faults last month venezuela filed a lawsuit against the bank of england in a bid to force the bank to release gold worth about a $1000000000.00 the venezuelan government wants to spend the money on medicine and food to tackle the coronavirus crisis in the country and it claims the money would be transferred directly to the united nations development program to administrate the poaches of medical equipment and still make sure it will be spent on health care however the british government does not recognize nicolas maduro as the country's legitimate leader and the bank of england refused to comment on the claim well the secretary of the venezuela solidarity campaign dr francisco domingo has questioned the motivations of the u.k. government in holding on to the gold. in the context of the need for the construction of in all the new sort of secret to be used. by the u.k. government though i have to be discovered by investigative journalism what can we
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draw from that as a conclusion given the intention that the united kingdom has gotten these remember there are several persons of god you know 'd resources that were taken from the reserves or were they even from iraq after the regime change the successor regime change in those countries the union flew the construction of war when you. actually gained some of it abates the regime change that he stood by the united states after which obviously you know the united kingdom to be intense all of these are in the are on your bill isn't going to work for. you that's often r.t.u. k.-n. and our colleagues in washington will take over at the top of the hour but from all of us here at westminster the bike.
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for her. we go to work so you straight home.
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i know to no crow. no shots no. action felt. no forests. quench your thirst for action. some control from middle class to homeless overnight muslim are very hardworking people who want to get ahead that have either have some some health issues or have some of it out of strict about luck a full time job won't always pay for a place to live and missing just a month's rent can get you a victim to gunpoint if anything bad happens to any thing that just throws your budget off slightly. you better catch up real quick or you're going to have a judgment of possession against you and get addicted by anyone that's homeless is
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history like garbage people look at you like a monster or someone bad or you chose to be there most of the time it's not the case see how it is to be poll in the world's richest country. greetings and salyut ation is all right as we now enter the halfway point of june which in turn is the halfway point of 2021 thing we have discovered is that here in the united states of america despite the many times our government and corporate culture has attempted to suppress.

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