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tv   News  RT  November 11, 2020 9:00am-9:31am EST

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we accept it as a fact. in today's headlines, the creators of russia's coronavirus vaccine are preparing to start mance distribution after phase 3 trials show sputnik b. is 92 percent effective. angry says it's ready to buy the drugs. you're nobody knows she can go both. are you go super rush over your novel? should you go, oh, my sushi will be the production, the at least part of the production to the hungry also this hour armenians vent their fury at their prime minister,
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accusing him of capitulating to azerbaijan by signing a peace deal. several arrests are made at a rally in the capital and just a week after the us presidential election, which could be contested in court, democrats declare, open season on anyone who's ever supported donald trump and some even demanding the destruction of their rivals. we have to collectively, it is ferndown, the republican party. we have to level this is our to international coming to you live from the russian capital where it's just turned 5 pm. welcome to the program, the developers of a russian coronavirus job. sputnik v. have said mass vaccination will start nationwide in just a few weeks time. that's after some highly promising results from face 3 trials. the publication of the interim results of the poster distribution in clinical
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trials to convincingly demonstrates vaccines efficacy gives way to mass vaccination in 19, in the coming weeks. thanks to the production scale up in new manufacturing sites will soon be available for a while to put this will break the current trend and lead to an eventual decrease in cope with 19 infection rates 1st in russia. then globally, we're joined in the studio by artist maria if an ocean now as we're just hearing there sputnik be, is going to be rolled out nationwide. very soon. what more do we know? well, yes, i think mr. greenberg makes it very clear. russia is ready for mass vaccination, new and exciting news. the drug known as sputnik b is already spreading across the country. we just heard that russia sells us to some other states as well. its production grows. just as we have to say that developers and scientists, they struggle because there are some restrictions due to coronavirus pandemic. and
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it affects the production process. but still russia plans to have 500000 days is in the bamber, and is planning to produce to start producing in 6000000 doses a month by april. that is very impressive. you would not argue, well, speaking about this vaccine, as you just said, 2 phases of its clinical trials are now behind and they were meant to prove that the drug is safe. so now we can say that sputnik really is 100 percent safe, and it is currently undergoing phase 3 of the trials. and the idea of this part is to study how effective the drug is. and now we are receiving 1st, early interim, but still very, very positive results. let's take a look. breaking the 1st interim data analysis of the sputnik vaccine against covert 19 phase 3 clinical trials and the russian federation demonstrated 9 to 2
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percent. well, we have to be honest, that they were a lot of criticism about russian vaccine with the scientific community, world scientific community divided on those criticizing russia for being too fast. data being not sufficient and those praising russia's achievement. now we hear that 3 medics in russia are region in fact sedated. they got coronavirus and the critics, they use this information to prove it and say that, see it is not a fact, but you have to understand that 1st, it takes time for the body to, to learn how to react to the virus takes time for the immune system to start producing antibodies could be that these 3 medics just didn't have enough time in their bodies, didn't have enough time to start reacting properly. and there was no time now for the vaccine to actually start working. and plus,
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actually no one can guarantee that. after being vaccinated after 2 shots, i mean, you will be 100 percent protected from being infected because it's a new virus after all, and they say no one can say, i mean how the body will behave. so what they guarantee that this vaccine will teach your body how to react in the next time when when it meets the virus, it will know what to do and you will not have severe consequences from the disease . well, of course, those would be medics who are theoretically in the thick of it. all. this is taking a huge effort to get this far. can you give us a little bit of background? yes, this vaccine was developed by a research center uses actually the american known since 1950 s. . and that's why when we hear about the criticism of the scientists say yes, we were very fast to come to this idea. but that's just because we, we knew before,
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some things that we developed like a century ago. the idea is that they use a virus and it serves as a transportation, as a vehicle to carry a genetic material from the new virus. and this genetic material is known as, as protein, it is safe. it is extracted from, from the virus, but it's not the virus itself. it's safe for the body. but still it is able to trick your body and make it believe that you were infected, while in fact you were not. and to make your immune system, we act triggering that actually this is the idea of any vaccine. you were actually among the early volunteers in phase 3 trials. i don't think a whole lot of people have a chance to speak to somebody who actually participated in that. so how was that and are you still involved? are you still being contacted? yes, i have all the time. i am one of thousands of people taking part in clinical trials
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and 3 of the clinical trials of today is a 50 day of the trial 180 days. so still in contact with doctors and scientists. this is a 2 step vaccine, so i got 2 shots already and i already have antibodies, antibodies, particulary meaning that my body reacted, meaning that the vaccine worked and my immune system responded by producing antibodies. and i'm happy about that. again, no one can say what exactly does that mean, how? i mean, where is the guarantee that it will protect me from being infected. so i still wear masks in public place to protect myself. but i feel confident that my least is now familiar with the virus. and the next time i meet it,
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like it was your initial reaction to actually getting the shot itself. you know, actually i got 2 shots off to each shot. there was a time when i felt miserable, so there was some side effects you know, like muscle pain, headache, fever, you know what, but i didn't, it didn't bother me at all because it didn't last for long. so it was ok just like fever, but i think more important is that this, this is the prize that i was ready to pay to have antibodies. i think it's worth it, but i mean it's my humble opinion. thank you for sharing your experience with this artist, maria, from the thank you with russia's daily corona, virus infection rate topping 20000. the capital is now rolling out new containment measures. restaurants and bars will have to close by 11 pm. middle schools and universities are switching to remote learning and seating capacity in theaters and cinemas is limited to 25 percent. meanwhile,
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hungary is among the latest european countries to impose lockdown following a dramatic surge in code cases there and will last at least 30 days, and includes a nighttime curfew. the government is now preparing to import small quantities of russia's covert vaccine. earlier my colleague spoke about those plans with the hungry and foreign minister who contract it coronavirus himself and has been in quarantine for over a week. i usually run like 15 kilometers on the day. you have to reach, you know, i am tired even not thinking about running. so when i do a little walk around here, i got exhausted. so it's, well, it's a virus which i would like to propose to everybody to avoid its bad symptoms with impacts given that this is a global problem, one would like to think that it would be tackled better by countries coming together, working together, something that always they will know better than anyone as a foreign minister, whether that's happening, having found the,
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the level of information exchange and cooperation. i think you're totally right. so any time international cooperation based on mutual respect, it is not. and i think bach received political correctness judging each other during each other should be left behind. and instead of the moment that king go out their countries on a political basis, we should think about how to cooperate. that's why i think international cooperation would be extremely important when it comes to the vaccine, for example. so sometimes i have the feeling that the short of vaccines is becoming politicized, which i think should be again, we are crossing fingers for all companies and countries which are moving forward. we developing the vaccine regardless what they are. so we are interested in india,
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american, in the european, in their russian, in the chinese, in these really vaccine development and research to be successful. because the more scenes we will have is the better be negotiating with everybody, including russia, of course. yeah. if this is correct, i have reports that i'm going to be buying some russian vaccines in december, but like you said, you were looking at all the options. is there any concern though. busy about how that will be met to response from other countries, because as we say, these things are often politicized lucca, these should be avoided. so now it's a vote. be a light for the people always anytime political aspects should be left behind. and this is the time we understand it is realistic that indeed some small scale of the be launched in order to make the national national necessary clinical trials on their suspect in hungary. and as also the 2nd part of january, it might be realistic that food by quantity from russia. but we are not going to
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negotiate and go about simply buying vaccine for russia. we are not go shooting up the production or at least the part of the production to hungary. there is a company operating here in angry which has been producing for other or viruses or diseases. of course, they seem to be able to transfer their capacity in a way that they would be able to be involved in the production cycle. the prime minister of armenia has defended his decision to sign a highly unpopular peace deal with azerbaijan. nicol passion and spoke out after street protests erupt erupted in europe and against monday's truce in the disputed . i'm going to cut about cretin. had the fighting, continued stupendous curt, much to me and ask around, would almost certainly have fallen fountains of our soldiers with then who found
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themselves surrounded. there would have been a collapse. we had to sign this agreement. hundreds of people have gathered outside parliament in europe and denouncing the pact with azerbaijan. several protesters have been detained and a policeman was reportedly beaten up, and the armenian see the peace deal brokered by russia as a defeat, a local journalist sent us this report has been another day protesting the air of on today, hard stuff, the opera house and freedom square in the city center, about 2 or 3000 people attended a protest over night by the 17, no position politicians. there were some speeches that had beginning. there were some clashes between riot police and protesters, but it police stepped aside and the protests continued critically for the offer. that was i think, some of the crowd members and supporters of some of the, i mean for me cynical posturing in among them. and they are hearing, as he said, and protesters. the message of the protests was. nicole is
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a traitor. person saying he's had decision on monday evening to sign a peace deal with russia. yes, this was actually thank you people i spoke to were grouped serious with him and want him to resign. they were too strong on who they want to replace him, and you said that they need to get rid of russian men who came to power 2 years ago, 200 years ago in the revolution. so most of the people i spoke to another supported him, but there were only 2 said they had let him down. and then moved for the purchase and moved from freedom square to the public square,
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which was the scene of monday nights or choosing mornings. but in protests when the building behind me a government building was broken into and they say, protesters say here about half an hour, but there is a heavy police presence right place behind me and just backing away now that they were between projects in the building 3 or 4 lines of the bright lights. and it was a pretty good chance of that. he tried to continue, but it was fairly calm. monday's truce followed almost 2 months of deadly fighting, claiming hundreds of lives here in moscow, which is home to a large armenian population. people have been gathering outside the country's embassy to pay their respects and there's no use there when you have to be dishing up shit. so you stuck a pretty good option. you had neither gas that i'm not for today. no, it's not going to doing it. then you got demoted bit by bit and you start because
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she's emotional but many people go through you believe so when you choose to think you must be you know, start of bunch of ministers shows you doing the police with the local point out that they were losing it, and your brother, i mean, you would split the people in my computer was you showing up with almost all the, despite all that, a pleasure. not appear at all the story. meanwhile, and azerbaijan, people have taken to the streets to celebrate the agreement. armenians see the truce as a defeat. many as areas regarded as a victory for
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under the new car treaty, azerbaijan will hold on to its military gains, plus armenia is a blind to handover 3 districts by the end of the month. it's also been agreed that russian peacekeepers will patrol the line of contact between opposing forces and roads linking the region to armenia. history professor peter cruz, nick believes that if not for the deal, armenia would have lost a lot more. it's still a very tense situation. everybody is hoping that this ceasefire will hold and that russian peacekeeping troops will be able to do so they've brokered 3, previous cease fires, none of which helped part of what the situation was that once the azeris took shushi, then they had a possible way to attack the capital in nagorno-karabakh,
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and that would have been a much more devastating defeat for the armenians and what they came up with here. so it's not a setback to the armenians, but it's not nearly as devastating as a total defeat would have been still had as liberal celebrate joe biden's election victory. many are out for revenge against trump supporters. a story and more after this break is you'll be a reflection of reality in a world transformed what will make you feel safe, isolation or community. are you going the right way or are you being
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that direct? what is true? what is faith? in the world corrupted, you need to descend to join us in the death or remake of the shallowness media claim, joe biden, to be president elect someone group. that's not how it works. fine or go to always make that determination and we aren't there. you lose the election free and fair, and what is the possibility from the country? explain the election was still welcome back in the us. the knives are out for donald trump. supporters,
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media personalities have called them for them to be named shamed and sacked by some even calling for the destruction of the republican party. if our past to lose, but that ocean enablers have to lose. they have to, we have to collectively, in essence, burn down the republican party. we have to level them because if there are survivors, if there are people who weathered this storm, they will do it again. threats like these aren't only being heard from rank and file liberals. some of the loudest voices are saying, if you don't care what the liberal program, good luck finding a job. a truly sympathize with those dealing with losing is not easy, but it is certain point. one has to think not only about what's best for the nation peaceful transfer of power, but how any future employers might see your character defined during adversity. caitlin collins just reported white house staff are starting to look for jobs. employers considering them should know there are consequences for hiring anyone who helps trump attack american values. find out how at the trump accountability
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project, the trump accountability project mentioned there was just recently found it likely with the goal of naming and shaming those who work for trump's administration, so they can't find any more work. congresswoman alexandria causing a cortez also raised a lot of eyebrows with a tweet singing a similar to is anyone archiving these trump sycophants for when they try to downplay or deny their complicity in the future? i foresee decent probability of many deleted tweets writings, photos in the future. and who could forget the mainstream media trying to sabotage trump at every step of his presidency is one thing. but now many want to prosecute him. it's all very different to the message of solidarity and bringing the country together that we heard and biden's victory speech to make progress. we have to stop treating our opponents as enemies. there will be no blue states and red states when we were just the united states of america. maybe
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a supporters got the wrong idea because repressing red votes out of existence won't necessarily make them blue. all that it's really, terry, enraged has been coming from the left, submit or else get fired, get banned, shut up. it's ridiculous and yes kind of scary because they're turning violent. are you saying people should lose jobs or not get future jobs based on their political beliefs? that's right. of the 3rd reich. nice career you have there be a shame if something you know happened to it and not a tool unhinged person. trump supporters. the conservatives have been cancelled in bandon blacklisted the famed and smeared relate leslie for the last 4 years, especially by mainstream media. by far left agitators, people losing their jobs for simply supporting the president people having their homes, dogs, people being attacked from supporters are, i've been through all of this. they've survived the last 4 years. they're actually
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when i've been seeing more bold to get outspoken to stand up, to not be afraid of these tactics anymore. but democrats, i believe a lot of people do that. we have a plan for a permanent democrat majority in this country. so republicans could never get elected in federal elections in this country and, and they can, you know, sort of march in there, there of one party socialist to tell terry and utopia they had of the european commission has said she's looking forward to working with the incoming biden and ministration and the u.s. at the spite, the warm words, the e.u. is going ahead with $4000000000.00 of import tariffs on american goods. i believe that divisions can always be breached once can be healed, but some shifts in priorities and perceptions. run much deeper than one political, a one administration,
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and they will not disappear because of one election. we cannot bring in our to charlotte, devinsky and paris charlotte, could you talk us through the e.u. stance on biden, and the ongoing transatlantic disputes? yes. well, ocilla von delaine has essentially been outlining what she sees as the e.u.'s priorities its interests, to keep this transatlantic relationship between the e.u. and the us strong and make it stronger. but if you listen to her speech, it really does seem that just before joe biden comes into office, she is looking to take the bull by the horns and it doesn't take too much to, to read what she says as being a list of demands. she talks about the digital economy making that fairer. she talks about tax. in general, she talks about strengthening organizations such as the un, the world health organization, and the world trade organization. all things that biden will now have to look at
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when he becomes the next u.s. president. now this is all in the context of the fact that the e.u. earlier this week decided to slap $4000000000.00 worth of retaliatory taxes on the u.s. products coming into the e.u. . now this is in relation to a long running dispute that's been going on in regards to subsidies given to airbus and boeing and trump himself. during his term, as president has been furious about these subsidies to help companies such as airbus and as such, taxed a whole host of european products, mainly foods and wines being huge, burdens to e.u. produces and exporters to try and get their products into the u.s. . now it had been thought that the e.u. was going to hold back on the retaliatory taxes wait for that election to play out . and then it was a biden ministrations sort of reopen negotiations or a softly, softly approach. but essentially, it hasn't done that just in
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a few hours after biden was announced to be the next president, it essentially stuck up 2 fingers to him and said, here are the taxes on the u.s. goods. meaning, it's essentially a challenge to him when he comes into office, a headache that he now has to deal with without their being this renegotiation. and even the u.s. exporters are sounding the alarm. additional tariffs will be a major blow to the u.s. spirits industry, especially kraft to distillers who are struggling to regain their footing, following the closings of distillery tasting rooms, restaurants and bars due to cope with 19. well, it's not gone down massively well in europe, either the federation of wine exporters describe these retaliate. taxes has been dangerous and in comprehensible and said that that raised the risk for them to the situation is now extremely worrying. it is more than ever necessary to get out of
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this interminable conflict, because that is the only way to end these taxes. and there is a dispute is a european level as well. germany is being more conciliatory towards the us. france seems to be taking a harder line all while bundling is trying to patrol the e.u. is having sort of a joined up thinking a stance on this part by attacking 1st. there is this question as to where the country's new are really formed in one line behind that, or whether this could backfire, not necessarily in the long term, but in the short term to our to charlotte devinsky. thank you for bringing us that report. that's our global news update for this hour. but don't forget you can always how to our website are to dot com for the details on all those stories. and more
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the world is driven by shaped by one person with those great dares thinks we dare to ask the or tactics that can be used to get innocent people to confess, to crimes they didn't commit. i don't even think people in the us really get that the police are allowed to lie to you. the person who falsely confessed actually came to believe the lie that they were told about their own behavior. once a false confession is taken, the case is closed and nobody really can tell the difference between a good confession and one that is
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a during the vietnam war, u.s. forces were in laos. it was a secret war. and for years, the american people did not know how much in the case of country per capita, human history, millions of unexploded bombs still in danger. lives in this small agricultural country, jordyn wieber. even today, kids in laos full victims of bombs dropped decades ago. it is the us making amends for the tragedy in laos, won't help to the people need in that little land of mines.
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i'm action or times are we going underground is the man so-called, mainstream media goal us president elect joe biden. marks veterans day on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. while the likely pick for pentagon, michele flournoy stresses the need for the usa to become a force to be reckoned with. coming up on the show, there will be a smooth transition to a 2nd trumpet ministration. right. took us $37.00 plus days, you know, watching back in 2000 conducted a successful transition then did the corporate funded networks call it too early? as u.s. attorney general bill barr authorizes federal prosecutors to investigate allegations of voting irregularities in last week's presidential election. we speak to barry richard, the more who helped win george bush's legal fight against al gore in 2000. and there's coronavirus lockdowns in the robot revolution force us to ask questions about the very ways we live in.

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