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tv   News  RT  November 24, 2020 4:00am-4:31am EST

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would you, would you suggest the dean mining operation in the disputed region, poor explosive devices that killed the nazeri soldier and injured a russian peacekeeper pose a threat to the local population right next to the city. that's the public full of returning refugees. people who've been scarred by the war, people still in shock and fearful for the future. the last thing they need is more explosions of the pharma giants the race to get a vaccine to market 1st. and the biggest share of profits intensify some dirty
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tricks of the world health organization on the many, many months before. there will be adequate for the whole state and looks to pack is a very lengthy and agreeing to cooperate on a transition. hey, thanks for joining us. mid day here in moscow, this is r.t. the mining operation in the disputed nagorno-karabakh region, explosive devices recently killed in azeri soldier and injured a russian peacekeeper and pose a threat to the local population. visited the site of clearance operation. the
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sheer intensity of this war, the sheer quantity of me sells ammunition bombs used, are astounding. the sad truth is that it will take years to find it, make safe. every unexploded munition footage visited by john, raining cluster bombs and cities and towns and in the garden a car buck sparked outrage, but adds, rage dissipates, and evaporates, cluster bombs, don't get buses. we're ready for anything, especially air, drop bombs and cluster munitions. rounds are dropped too. low or don't have enough rotation speed, and they wind up unexploded in people's gardens or kids playgrounds, or they could be at previous military outposts. the soldiers may have left, but the munitions remained. with russian engineers and sappers part of the
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peacekeeping. contingent have been tossed with the mining operations other than daily patrols and roads in the outposts. they also assist local sappers. there's plenty of work for both. what complicates matters even further is that we are 1000, the middle of nowhere. you can't very well blew every unexploded shell up. we have right next to the city of state by the get full of returning refugees. people who have been scarred by the war, people still in shock and fearful for the future. the last thing they need is more explosions. any minute, no munition found categorized. category 3 is the least dangerous. these shells or rockets are generally and fired and can be transported for disposal. category one of the worst booby traps cluster, bomblets, all volatile munitions that must be destroyed on the spot. in this area,
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we identified 2 r.p.g. rockets into 125 millimeter tank rounds. it's slow and dangerous work, but helping out a man's and sappers best friend. the mining dogs, some of those her name is jacqueline. she's a belgian shepherd. she took part in the future world championships and she has been through a lot of training and we've been together for 3 years. you use whatever you can. the war may be over, but every other day we hear of another incident. another casualty, a mine going off or an old grenade, exploding the peacekeepers. mission is to establish peace and bring back calm, which you can't do. if people are terrified of the very ground they walk on, or i guess the of from the garden farmer,
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john tester, seneca has revealed that the coping vaccine is working on this, on average, less effective the rival jobs at least according to preliminary data. the global race to complete final trials is intensifying and he's done. hawkins looks at how the various vaccines being developed are shaping up code 19 vaccines are racing towards the finishing line with dozens in the vellum and across the world. several front runners are now in the final stages of clinical trials. astra zeneca being the latest contender squally. we heard the cash usage, astra zeneca. that scene has been in clinical trials. the signs are this vaccine. the boy british taxpayers want to ship with a great british company, is that he can be both easy to use. haiti fantastic may be slightly optimistic while researches say the results could improve 70 percent
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average efficacy is well below that of other results. and the fall in astra zeneca share price reflects investors' disappointment in the numbers. this is a highly competitive market, and the stakes are high. every efficacy percentage point counts. so it's not surprising. there's cutthroat competition and one upmanship. pfizer and biotech were the 1st to announce a vaccine with 90 percent efficacy in early november. the russians were quick to follow reporting a slightly better result of 92 percent just a day later. but then up the ante claiming results of 95 percent difficult. and days later, pfizer decided to correct their initial results, the closer and they were actually on par with their main competitor. also at 95 percent. and remember, efficacy is just one part of the picture. any vaccine will need to be manufactured, stored and distributed in huge quantities. so again, why not point out the strengths of your products and do all you can to expose the
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weaknesses of your opponents? this homegrown vaccine is, is easier to administer as well than the pfizer vaccine because it doesn't need to be stored a minus 70 hour vaccine is easier to store, easier to transport, quicker to put, to use and will have more doses, say astra zeneca. it's being touted as another nail in the coffin of coronavirus. don't forget, cost is a key factor, especially when it comes to supplying the developing world. every money factor a wants to maximize their market share and at least try to look at the coal while still making an easy payday. after all, if anything does go wrong and have nothing to worry about with indemnity agreements in place, translating pharma lingo, the announced price of fires are of 19.50 dollars and modern of 25 to 30 $7.00 per
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dose actually means they're price of $39.50 to $74.00 per person 2 doses are required per person for the pfizer splitting fee in modern vaccines. the price of sputnik v. will be much lower. some are going all out and totally undercutting the call morticians prices. it's hard to argue with the price of just a few dollars. and of course there's the marketing campaign. it's nothing personal, even if it seems that way. as long as your competitor is undermined or accused of being the one doing the undermining and launching smear attacks. perhaps the experts at the atlantic council are referring to something along these lines that moscow has been accused of cutting corners, using spice to steal western research, which he denies. russia rushed to register it as a world 1st raising eyebrows in the scientific community, letting it putin announce to the approval of the 2nd to new coronavirus fix. even
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though neither of the russian vaccines have passed to the 3rd phase of rigorous safety trials to say them is, developments is being questioned. at the end of the day, one has to be pragmatic. saving the world from a pandemic is all well and good. but business is business and everybody wants a slice of the pie. and when the pie is worth an estimated $10000000000.00 globally, why not stock the cards in your favor? we spoke to dave navarro, he's the world health organization, special envoy over 19 and with public health expert among gupta, about how they see the state of play. when it comes to the arrival of vaccines. it's going to be many, many months before there will be adequate vaccine available throughout the world for the whole world population to be immunized authorized version for use in multiple countries. that when w h o's involvement is sought, and that will take some time. you can't authorize
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a vaccine for use in multiple countries on an emergency use also arrives asian without very, very careful or parachute work. we have a lot of 7000000000 people divac. so need then rising, should not really be the critical factor. i think this is the, when our stakeholder needs to come together and really look at the possible release to finance and ensure that everybody has an access. do it not having access to will be a much more higher cost to the nations and to the public at large. the white house shake up is underway. the general services administration that oversees access to federal agencies is triggered a formal transition process to a joe biden presidency. donald trump says that is a ministration will cooperate during this period. though he still to concede the race. i want to thank emily murphy, a g.s.a. for her steadfast dedication and loyalty to our country. she's been harassed,
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threatened, and abused, and i do not want to see this happen to her or her family or employees of g.s.a. . our case strongly continues, we will keep up the good fight, and i believe we will prevail, nevertheless, in the best interests of our country. i am recommending that emily and her team do what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols and have told my team to do the same. even before the start of the official transition, joe biden was already fast that were making king cabinet picks. but by his decision to line up the oval office with war hawks is already raising questions about his foreign policy intentions. elope and picks up a story. 6 cabinet appointees have already been named. among them is anthony blanket for his secretary of state. now anthony blanket has certainly got an impressive resume. he is definitely not a washington outsider. he was obama's deputy adviser. he was national security advisor to joe biden, when he was vice president. and he was deputy secretary of state. and you can be
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expecting that he will be establishing a stark departure from the era of donald trump, whether we like it or not, the world simply doesn't organize itself. and until the trumpet, ministration of the united states have played a lead role in doing a lot of good organizing and helping to write the rules. and joe biden starts with the proposition that we need to reassert american engagement in american leadership . so where do his foreign policy instincts lie? well, based on his resume, he seems to be an advocate of military intervention. as a blanket was a supporter of the u.s. invasion of iraq in 2002. he was an advisor to joe biden at the time when joe biden was very outspoken in supporting that war and repeating the later debunked claims about weapons of mass destruction. blinken also thinks that the problem in syria or the united states has been arming terrorists and extremists in the hope of toppling the baathist government has been a lack of u.s. intervention. we failed to prevent a horrific loss of life. we failed to prevent massive displacement of people
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internally in syria, and of course, externally is refugees. and it's something that i will take with me for the rest of my days. lincolns love for war has expressed itself in some rather odd ways. for example, back in 2011, he called out joe biden, his boss at the time for not being enthusiastic enough about nato, his intervention in libya. we'll take a look at the north african country almost a decade later and see how well that intervention turned out. now blinken also repeats the allegation that russia was paying bounties to afghan terrorists if they killed u.s. soldiers. when president trump stands with vladimir putin on the world stage and takes his word about rush's attacks in our elections over that's for intelligence agencies that exacerbates the problem when we have a president who is told that russia may be putting bounties on the heads of our troops in afghanistan and does nothing, in fact worse than nothing by his own knowledge meant speaking to president putin
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at least 6 times off. he got that report and not raising it. not confirming him and even inviting president putin to washington and russia back into the g. 7. we have a real fundamental problem. sure, that's pretty bad except that it probably didn't happen. u.s. intelligence has admitted on multiple occasions that it has absolutely no concrete evidence to back up these claims, but it sure made a good talking point for the joe biden presidential campaign, and it was a way to keep the russia gate hysterics a lot. so who cares if it's not true? so while trump is still contesting the election results, biden is getting prepared to get to work in the oval office and based on his secretary of state pick, it looks like peace will definitely not be a priority. we've seen somebody who is doubled down, defended and read, defended a position that has no defense. he has continued to argue for the type of hope for a policy that has been shown to be false, images that should be ineffective. it's an entirely unscientific approach to try
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something, see it not work, and then declare success. and we're going to see more and more money through good money thrown after bad as this involvement continues. i don't think anything there is particularly surprising. i mean, we see a continuation of the previous of the obama administration and the clinton administration. i don't see anything there that unusual. i see basically business as usual military overreach, rather than cutting military spending. we're not going to see the shutting down foreign military bases and bring the troops home. we're not going to see a deal escalation of the conflicts in iran, and sorry, in iraq and afghanistan and syria. we're going to see just an escalation to continue asian, a base of the military industrial complex running the u.s. government place in central paris. take us to break up a large probe migrant protest in the french capital, but your route to the after temporary camp was cleared by authorities i
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i i, i, i, i, i, i think the appeal is film and there, but this camp was set up by various organizations in response to the evacuation of the migrant camp site danny. last tuesday, the goal of the organizers of the tent camp of the past in the republic is to make their voices heard to draw the attention of the authorities to the plight of migrants. let me remind you again that last tuesday the camp in centennial was evacuated. it was home to 1500 migrants. 800 of them are still that the rest are trying to find a way out of the situation. and of course, some refuge in paris and various pro migrant organizations are trying to help them
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. the government has not yet proposed any solution, which is why the prime migrant eutopia organization launched this protest. florida's holocaust museum hosts an exhibition dedicated to george floyd's problem thing i can get from some members of the jewish community that story unfold after this break.
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so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy confrontation, let it be an arms race is on the spear in dramatic development. only. i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical. time to sit down and talk. welcome back. the holocaust museum in florida has sparked outrage with a new exhibition in honor of someone who had nothing to do with that particular chapter of history. alongside exhibits of nazi war crimes. the memorial center
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presented images and quotes captured in the aftermath of george floyd's death. the killing of the black man in minneapolis back in may expose months of protests against police racism and brutality. in the u.s. and beyond, the museum said the fluid exhibition is supposed to counter any identity based hate . the members of the jewish community found it hugely disrespectful. once someone faces an act of anti semitism, racism, or any form of identity based hate, whether to result in death or not, there is an uprising of many emotions were felt. it was important to bring the human experience of the aftermath to our museum. we strongly question placing the george floyd exhibit in the holocaust museum, one wouldn't expect to see holocaust exhibit at the museum about the african-american experience. it is deeply offensive to appropriate our persecution to score cheap political points masquerading as intersectionality holocaust. the story from 0 of the new exhibition reflects
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a dangerous trend of equating other events to the atrocities of the holocaust. the death of george floyd compared to the how of course. i mean, that's absurd, totally absurd and totally inappropriate today. especially in the western world. the major problem that we face one of the major problems is of course, how, of course, distortion. how, of course, distortion is not to deny that the tragedy of the scope of the holocaust took place . but to change the narrative of the holocaust in many cases to hide. 9 the involvement of people other than the german and austrian, nazis, and this attempt to universalize the holocaust is a very dangerous phenomenon as well. and this is a classic example. not every tragedy is the how honest that every tragedy in the holocaust or should the holocaust be compared to 2. far less the tragedies. so
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here too, you see this is a battle over the active see the narrative and the perception of the matter. it looks, president says that his country sees itself as being part of europe, comes ahead of an e.u. summit next month and of intentions with one bloc member in particular. so that deep explains, it may have been an all live, but the turkish president's overtures to the e.u. and by extension to france over the last few days have met with little enthusiasm, the french foreign minister saying what paris really wants is to see action. for 2 or 3 days, we have heard soothing statements from prism. this is not enough. we need action simmering. tensions between france and turkey are in danger of boiling over into uncooled into question mark calls mental health. while not cool suggested tikki was stirring up resentment against france in the media. and it's not the 1st time that
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the 2 come trees have ratcheted up. the temperature turkey has been recognized as a candidate for full e.u. membership since 995, but a quarter of a century later, the talks have stalled. concerns were raised following the 2016 coup in turkey and the crackdown that followed with human rights issues among the chief sticking points. but then france's president might call on didn't mince his words. he said it was time to end a poker see or pretending that there was any prospect of advancement in membership talks that ice far as the relationship with the european union is concerned. it is clear that recent developments in choices do not allow any progression of the process and which we are engaged. since then, relations have deteriorated, france and turkey have been at loggerheads over syria, libya, and as
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a nato allies. more recently, there have been new just speeches including over turkey, drilling in the eastern, mediterranean, in search of natural gas. the world as are claimed by 2 members of the new greece and cyprus, that in turn will be in a quarrel with this warning shot from the top diplomat. it is important that turkey understands that its behavior is why did it separation? then there has been the fallout over the controversial mohammed cartoons, but also the one on the door. that is what happened in from listeners towards muslims has become almost commonplace in many states praising sounds. when it comes to the matter of democracy towards islam and muslims has become
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a state backed policy in some european countries. and one which is possibly backed by the some incidents by fear. st. all of this seems to be hardening the against turkey with france leading the charge. france is united, and europe is united and the next european council. europe will have to take decisions that will allow it to strengthen the power balance with turkey to better defend its interests and european values. even though cautious germany has warned turkey that it needs to fink craftily a buy out its next move. all of this could come to a head as easy does meet next month when the real possibility open sanctions against being given the green light, a move that could truly signal the end of the road for turkey, joining the bloc. so what do you can ski altie, paris? appreciate you coming here and i wanted to national, you're buying up to date. i will return with more not top stories in just over 30
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minutes. chose seemed wrong. but old rules just don't hold the old beliefs
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yet to shape out just because the educated and indeed trained equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart, just to look for common ground. she'll welcome you. normal god holds a memory a little, you know, well, you know, but notice when you're watching cruiser up on the board with a boy in the bushnell, in unison, you leap to the need for times to lead
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you to surround us. you know so much that one in some of these which you'll see in the local, which is based on your own work or one with you. it means lucas, a chance to start a new digital shift. i would have lucas, i want you to do it. is your media a reflection of reality? in a world transformed what will make you feel safe? isolation, full community?
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are you going the right way or are you being led? so direct. what is truly wants is faith in the world corrupted. you need to descend to join us in the depths. aura, maybe in the shallowness maybe your brood will be
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back by blue. oh well, what i would want to do we all are going to live. you're going to be eligible for, i don't know woman if you know all domain niigata looks fine, but when i go we are forgot. i have my doubts on the fact we are told i got my own. but if they're going with them over the guy with a top layer was in a what
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they believe i like that to have been, well, let's look at a political level that really well and, you know, look for how much i'm at ground 0 were a little back to where i would be allowed to go and also vote on a bill and go to the i will eventually talk with you when they go my do i come over and i knew i got a 1000000. i've been in a building up a window about one in a little can i go.

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