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tv   News  RT  November 24, 2020 6:00am-6:30am EST

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would you would please you look this up you know, with the developers of clinical trial data shows that it is a 95 percent effective. also becomes a mining operation in the disputed nagorno-karabakh region where explosive devices have killed and injured a russian peacekeeper under threat to the local population. we're right next to the city full of returning refugees. people who will be scarred by the war. people still in shock and fearful for the future. the last thing they need is more
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explosions, voiding taps. a war hawk for secretary of state who looks to pack his administration with figures is to relent, and agree to cooperate on the transition. hello good afternoon, just gone 2 o'clock in moscow. you with r.t. international, 95 percent effective. that is the claim being made by the developers of russian vaccine for their sputnik jab. the assessment is based on the latest clinical data which indicates that the drug's efficacy increases with time. so let's get more from our good afternoon. just tell us them. what developers have been saying then in their latest update on this drug. yes, sputnik me is currently in phase 3 of its clinical trials and it will last for at least 4 more months. but already now we receive early interim results and they are
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quite impressive. the 2nd interim analysis of clinical trial data showed a 91.4 percent efficacy for the sputnik vaccine on day $28.00 after the 1st dose. vaccine efficacy is over 95 percent. 42 days after the 1st game, only research center. the company behind the vaccine say that the results are based on the analysis of the data on 19000 volunteers who received both 1st and 2nd doses of the drug. we have to say that the us based foreign giants, pfizer in may there. that recently also announced that they are drugs, their vaccines are almost 95 percent. a fact if but the developers of sputnik the say that they are drug is unique because it uses 2 different human. and then the viral is and that's allows that guarantees
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a stronger and long term immune response compared to the vaccines when only one or the same vector is used. but in terms of, i'm pro-choice, maria, what we know so far that is there any indication how much this will cost? it seems so far that sputnik me is the cheapest about seeing on the potential market the one less than 10 percent less than $10.00. while for example, pfizer once $39.00 for their vaccine and then the $74.00 per one injection for their vaccine. and we also hear that several countries already one to buy russian sputnik, the vaccine. and we hear from the russian authorities that the sales may start already in january, but you have to understand that this prize is for international partners for
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international customers, for russia and russians backs in the will be absolutely free. there was a lot of criticism when it came to sputnik, the people claiming it cut corners, claimed that the developers haven't really published their research anywhere to be sufficiently sort of scrutinized. what's been the response from the gamma layer sensor on this or 1st of all, you have to understand that phase 3 of the clinical trial of sputnik he is currently on to go. and it is for be called into the rules of clinical trials to publish any results. it will last, as i said, for at least 4 more months, because a talk last $180.00 days and only after face threes over the military search center will publish all information. and they already said that that they're going to publish it in the international medical journal. so we're going to know everything,
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but after phase 3 is over and you have to understand that most critics and skeptics say that it was too fast for russia to develop this vaccine. but you have to understand that the machination that it uses or was developed was invented in the, 1950 s. this adenovirus that is used as a vehicle to carry the part of the gene of the corona virus. i mean, they have been using it for decades already in this is why they were so quick. they were so fast to develop these corona virus vaccine. ok, well good news anyway, so far. thanks for the option of their well, we can get some reaction from the pocket. he's a singapore monologist in mumbai and he joins us and you're very welcome. thanks for coming on. i don't know how much you heard of that interview, but what show reaction to this latest news then about the sputnik favorite thing. it is claiming something, not 95 percent efficacy. c.
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one has to understand that the studies that are done usually done with the widest protein d.n.a. as well as the end your body. every said you also have seen studies which i've done the new saloon immunity. most of the time this a little immunity is not a study. what i mean to see is this shows that bleach, that degree of the sions is going to be awful, which is going to be limited to react to the less well as far as why it is for doing d.n.a. studies done. 'd they usually stimulate and then your body reaction. my question is that, for example, if you conceal or you have seen is 99 percent sold, so is the efficacy of your true actions,
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etc. so there's no harm in doing these accidents. these they're saying that it is the. busy efficient in 95 percent of the population, but not a jump in that and you know, can i just jump in, are you surprised that it's only 95 percent? if the majority of vaccines that are at that to treat other aliases are up there at 99 percent, should it be high? would you expect it to be high? i would expect a body $195.00 is not bad. what's wrong with $95.00? the flu, vaccines usually were 50 percent but they give the africa's he movie to. 'd 60 percent 70 percent said is you're saving that part of the population and, active-x. things that we've seen so far that have been put out that is that one in particular, but you would have a preference for on the basis of price and the ability to distribute it then the
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price will always be affected. but my question is that if 95 percent of the population in the big, these vaccines are each one of them going, going to go back to london and it being that we were not needed to lead among us. has that, is that going to be the situation again? i understand that there are together. do you want to be going on the ventilator but are you going to come back to the normal lifestyle that you all. 'd mn beans were having in 2000 a day. why wouldn't they? i mean, are just a xing diff. we would get a vaccine. that means that, you know, we, we wouldn't be carries, we wouldn't pos on the illness to other paper we could get back to normal. seems to be the political message to a room, but that does no good being addressed. i don't think it has been and does, but anybody because you are giving a vaccine the population at large is so clever. not that people are not sure that
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they should take this, let's you know, not with this, if i'm not sure what it might be, that there are countless what it is. and as far as i'm concerned, any vaccine that comes into play initially is most welcome by congress, a decision. absolutely, but just finally on that, just very briefly, we don't know the long term impacts. do we have any vaccine because we haven't had time to assess it? exactly, exactly. so my take on this is let do that says that you won't do the sions, and let's see. and in the meanwhile, i think again, improvise on the vaccines too. but that does not mean that we should not starve and initiate the process of that since. ok, look, dr. park, i'm going to have to leave it there. really nice to see this afternoon naps, dr. judy parker, singapore monologist speaking us,
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speaking to us there from mumbai, thank you. recent conflicts still pose a threat to the local population and recently killed in this area. as well as injure, a russian servicemen artie's murdered, can stand, visited the site of one clearance operation. the 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 never gotten a car. buck sparked outrage, but adds, rage dissipates, and evaporates. cluster bombs, don't work with us. so we are ready for anything,
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especially air drop bombs and cluster munitions of 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 peacekeeper contingent have been tossed with the mining operations other than daily patrols and roads in iraq 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're 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,
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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, 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 them, her name is jacqueline. she's a belgian shepherd. she took part in the fee for world championship in 2018. 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,
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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 to our white house shakeup is under way the general services administration, which oversees access to federal agencies has triggered the formal transition process to the joe biden presidency. don't trump says he did ministration well cooperate during this period, although he still to concede the race, i want to thank emily murphy, a g.s.a. for her steadfast education and loyalty to our country. she's been harassed, 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
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what needs to be done with regard to initial protocols and have told my team to do the same well even before the start of the official transition, biden was already fast at work making cabinet picks and his decision to fill his administration with war, hawks is already creating concerns about his foreign policy intentions. with more, his color more pay. 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 adviser to joe biden, when he was vice president. and he was deputy secretary of state. and you can be 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
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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 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. lincoln's love for war has expressed itself in some rather odd ways. for example, back in 2011, he called out joe biden,
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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 lot of peace in all 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, at least 6 times off 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
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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 has 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 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
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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 as our in iraq in afghanistan and syria. we're going to see just an escalation in a continuous, in a base where the military industrial complex running the us government my place in central paris have used take ass to break up a large problem. my current protest in the french capital which erupted after a temporary camp was clade by authorities. i think i was i think the
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appeal is film in 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 there. the rest are trying to find a way out of this situation. and of course, some are refugee in paris, various pro migrant organizations are trying to help them. the government has not yet proposed any solution, which is why the prime migrant eutopia organization launched this protest. still ahead for the south, florida's holocaust museum hosts an exhibition dedicated to george floyd prompting anger from some members of the jewish community. we'll have that story in full just
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after the brought my so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy. let it be an arms race, spearing dramatic. only move will be ready to sit down and talk. well, remember the old peak oil or gold? we're running out of oil running out of that, of course is true, but in the case of big oil, because it is absolutely because the demand is approaching. we are getting increasingly impossible for the average mom and pop to acquire coin because all the
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$900.00 points per day that are generated through mining will be sucked by the market. again our holocaust museum in florida with a new exhibition on a somebody who had nothing to do with that chapter of history alongside exhibits of nazi war crimes. the memorial center presented images and quotes captured in the aftermath of george floyd's death. the killing of the black man in minneapolis back in may, did spark months of protests against police racism and brutality. in the u.s. and beyond. the museum said the florida exhibition is supposed to counter any
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identity based, but members of the jewish community found it hugely disrespectful. when someone faces an act of anti semitism, racism, or any form of identity based hate, whether to result in death or not. and there is an uprising of many emotions. we 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 a museum about the african-american experience. it is deeply offensive to appropriate or persecution to score cheap political points masquerading as intersectionality. or course a story any from those who are off this 5th new exhibition reflects a dangerous trend of equating other events to the atrocities of the holocaust. the death of george floyd compared to the holocaust. i mean that's absurd, totally absurd and totally inappropriate today. especially in the western world.
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the major problem that we face one of the major problems is of course, 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 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 holocaust that every tragedy nor can the holocaust or should the holocaust be compared to 2. far less the tragedies. so here too, you see this is a battle over the accuracy of the narrative. and the perception of how the turkish president says he, his country sees itself as part of europe, comes ahead of an east summit next month. and amid tensions with one bloc member in
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particular, as more it may have been a live branch. 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 is saying what paris really wants is to see actions for 2 or 3 days. we have heard soothing statements from president. this is not enough. we need action simmering. tensions between france and turkey are in danger of boiling over into uncooled and to question my mental health. well, marc cohn suggested turkey was stirring up resentment against france in the media. i mean, it's not the 1st time that the 2 countries have ratcheted up. the temperature turkey has been recognized as a candidate for full e.u.
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membership since 9095, 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 back then france's president might call on didn't mince his words. he said it was time to end the poker. see, pretending that there was any prospect of advancement in membership talks. but as 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 a nato allies. more recently there have been new to speech including over turkey, drilling in the eastern mediterranean in search of natural gas. the waters are
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claimed by 2 members of the new greece and cyprus, that in turn will the you in a quarrel with this warning shot from the top diplomat. it is important that turkey understands that its behavior is white. any, it's separation from the e.u. . then there has been the fallout over the controversial mohammed cartoons for his what happened in france. the lawlessness towards muslims has become almost commonplace in many western states which always praising musos when it comes to the matter of democracy. hostility towards islam and muslims has become a state backed policy in some european countries, and one which is possibly backed by the some incidents by francis had to state. all of this seems to be hardening the e.u. against turkey with france leading the charge. france is united and europe is
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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 cautious germany has warned turkey that it needs to think carefully about its next move. all of this could come to a head as leaders meet next month with a real possibility of 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 mean? ski auti, paris. and that brings up with all the news for this hour, back again in about 30 minutes. elwood forward to talking to you all. that technology should work for people. a
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greetings and sally, you take more than 11000000 infected and close. 225-0000 are dead from the covert. 19 pandemic, here in the united states of america. globally, the number sit at a roughly 55000000 cases and over 1300000 souls lost as we enter into the final month of 2021 of the most brutally tragic bizarre and pivotal years. so far here in the early 21st century. but thankfully, it appears that help may finally finally be on the way as not one, but 2, too big pharma conglomerates have recently. and now.

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