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tv   News  RT  July 1, 2021 12:00pm-12:31pm EDT

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cause for great joint, but because it's an event that causes so many different changes. it's stressful at many levels. ah, headlining tonight more unmarked graves of indigenous children are found in canada on the grounds, before me. a catholic run school, bringing the total over a 1000. this prompted the prime minister, not as pope frances to make amends to the community. i really hope that this time it will lead towards its hope coming onto the canadian soil and apology apologizing directly. elsewhere as a highly infectious delta strain of coded plunges russia to a new wave of the panoramic. moscow makes proof vaccination q odd codes mandatory to be able to get people into restaurants and cafes. amount in the capital puts the system to the test. and by officially inside
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a code it free and i get, get rid of the mask enough secrets, microsoft, the cries of the u. s. government routing use of gag orders in low enforcement investigations involving the tech giant. it's new and it will tell you all about it . ah, hi there. good afternoon from moscow, kevin, over here at r t h q, with our latest, this are thanks for checking in. and 1st this been a gruesome discovering canada. there was mentioned there, $182.00 unmarked. indigenous graves have been found close to a former catholic school in the province of british columbia. the discoveries brought shame on the country's canada days. it is on his alex holowitz reports from canada. discovery after discovery, the latest one was on one stay $182.00 bodies found in cranbrook, british columbia. this is close to a residential school. they use basically
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a radar that looks underground. and that's where they found these people in unmarked graves. that adds to the initial finding, which happened on may 27th and can looks british columbia at another residential school of 215 people as young as 3 years old in mon, mar grace. and then of course the scotch one, which was the biggest find so far, $751.00 people. so you add all these numbers up over a 1000 people found but we have over 130 schools like this across canada. ah, you learn not trying. you just get harder and yeah, you learn to shut down every day was you were in constant fear that your hope was that it wasn't you today that was going to be the target, the victim. the program started in the late 18 hundreds and lasted all the way up
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to 1996. when the last school was close, that's 850000 native children ripped out of their families, arms and put into the schools. they were forced to go to the schools, the royal canadian mounted police were in complicit in that they were the ones that would take the children from their families to the schools that were run primarily by the catholic church at about 60 percent, but also anglican and protest and other smaller churches across the country. the levels of the abuse that we found at these schools was absolutely mind blowing. i just have to read something for you quickly. this is at 900. 07 reports for the department of indian affairs. i was called the bryce report documented 40 to 60 percent mortality rate in these schools, mostly of tuberculosis and then a 90 to 100 percent of these children. this is unbelievable suffered either from physical, emotional or sexual abuse. it was a genocide and you look at it, the whole point of the residential school was to take the indian out of the indian
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to get rid of our language, get rid of our culture. every 1st nation person is feeling the impact of the residential school. my grandmother attended my grandfather attended thankfully, my mother didn't have to attend, but she still feels the impacts on it on a daily basis. we still have rates of 80 percent abuse on these 1st nations because of this legacy left behind by these churches at the canadian government, which funded all of these programs. so canadians are demanding that the government to do something about this. we did have a back in 2015 a commission that said that this was a cultural genocide. they did very little about it. it's up to now. now people are demanding the prime minister. do something about it and the prime minister, as well as indigenous communities, are demanding an apology from the catholic church. i really hope that this time it will lead towards this hope coming onto the canadian soil, an apology,
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and apologizing directly for the responsibility that the catholic church shares in this part of our history now. and what is believed to be a reaction to what has happened in the past month or so is the churches are being burned down on native communities and close to residential schools. we've heard of 5 in british columbia to and berta at one all the way at the other side of the country. it nova scotia. ah, ah. the prime minister has said that destroying places of worship is not the way to go, obviously. but at the same time, canadians are looking at the situation in a much broader perspective. this is candidate here, there is a movement not to celebrate. hopefully candidate will do more. and that's exactly
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what canadians are demanding. at this point. this gets more reaction so this speak to her professor emeritus of history at canada is university of saskatchewan. jim miller is on the line with a fellow the gym or we can hear me. it's kevin, i'm talking to you live on the pope. i previously good the pope had previously refused to apologize, but it appears no. he may be changing his stance. willie, after this call from trudeau or not to think, i don't know he's had calls before. i think the problem is not with the politicians . it's with the bishops for the poke to come and visit the country. the bishops have to invite him. and the reason for that of course, is people visit is extremely expensive. and the bishops have to raise the money. i don't think the bishop roman catholic bishops of canada had been willing to do that . and i think that's the real obstacle to the people visit so far. we'll see if that changes in the next few months. given the red tape that you're talking about, that a lot of people will look at it as and given the horrors. so there's allegedly happened
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here in the past. the note being uncovered may be something more remotely could happen. lower is not going to happen if you get my drift, you know, an apology issued from maybe rome. well, i think the, they want to put in a lot of people are supposed to come to canada, the truth and reconciliation commission in 2015 asked that he come and apologized in canada. they know, of course the pope has gone to ireland to apologize. i know they've gone, he's known to south american countries to apologize and i think they don't understand why he's not yet agreed to come to canada to apologize. i think the reason is the bishop's so this point we have not invited to well the vatican had previously to refused to release residential school records. why they claim that there are person, personal matters, privacy matters, in canada, least are affected by legislation. of course,
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many of the files are talking about are personnel files. exactly the files you need to know. hit your hands on and read to find out if someone was indeed a perpetrator. and if that was known to church authorities, it's a very sensitive subject, but of course a lot of people are going to be watching this say, well, hang on anyway, should the fact that can be more candid here shouldn't be more forthcoming with information here about what it can't do or what it can do. i don't think it's for me to tell them what to do. i think 1st nation leaders and roman catholic leaves, there's other people that need to talk to the po, wife, the government pushing so hard now for the church to make amends. well, i do believe that to be fair to him. the prime minister believes very strongly that this would be an asset in proceeding towards reconciliation. and in addition, premise trudeau is himself a roman catholic. i think he does care a great deal about it. there is as well, of course the political calculation isn't at the moment top of mind for many,
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many canadians, and they're very upset about the revelations in cemeteries. so shaded with residential schools, really dark part of candidate history, isn't it? well, jim, we leave it there for now. jim miller, professor emeritus of history, need a versus a scotch when thank you and have a good day the rest of his i thank you. you're welcome. ok, let's focus on more to the big news. the day story covered him from here, what effect and all well, but as to where here 1st, moscow relaunching a major re vaccination campaign. today, with a highly contagious delta strain of cova dominating new infections, booster jobs were initially meant to be annually. but as it stands at the moment, given the intensity of the current pandemic doctors now saying there devising a fresh shot every 6 months. moscow's mail saying both splitting the v and it's light very suitable for that job. meantime, look at the stats. the capital is boosted job dr. coming is delta straight infections, a surging nationwide, it stands today. the country's caseload is almost doubled in recent weeks. and
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there's this figure to peking at to 700-7500 in moscow. really grim figured for the capitol at the moment. this supposed to be enabling these q jobs as opposed to enable people to be able to get into restaurants out into bars. the spike has once brought these codes forward. now let's look a bit closer about how they work away. well, this is what you need to be able to prove that mil to get one of these q codes. one of these 3 things. either you've got to be proved that you're fully vaccinated or you've got to show that you've got anti bodies to it all you've got to prove that you can show a negative p c r tested to take him within 3 days for it to this to work to be able to get in. here comes the rose, cough put his q r code to the test for us. this is my q r code. something party goers now can't live without in moscow since this has become one of the only way to get into a restaurant or bar here. so i decided to investigate how the system works and
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whether it actually does it all. so let's now go to a couple of places here together. i would start off with one of the most popular place in my neighborhood, and usually have lots of customers all day long. i also brought my son along. he hasn't been vaccinated and he hasn't had cobra. so he doesn't have a q r code. so we're going to see if this is going to be a problem. there was a line outside find out what's going on. so i think i got a little bit of work in new york. what hold on the last name. there's nobody knew that well, it turned out my local fast food restaurant was serving, take away orders only knowing door dining was allowed regardless of vaccination status. when you go, when you have some input for them,
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and you said it apparently not every restaurant in moscow was able to organize q r code scanning in time. anyway, there was another place across the street. we decided to check our, our more than that for them. this time the staff did have the necessary equipment, which is just a regular smartphone by the way. but there's something weird happened. my q r code didn't work. the i had to go to a government website, download the q r code again, and it finally worked, but then something else came up. in moscow, you need to show your vaccination certificate it along with an id. i had a aspirin on me, but my wife had only a drivers license. even though having a passport is not a rule. we were denied indoors service. they only let us sit outside on
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a terrace. bottom line is that we were denied to dining at the 2nd place this morning. so i'm going to keep looking for the right spot. and finally, we managed to get through the at this turkish restaurant, everything went on without a hitch. they also let our 8 year old unvaccinated kid in as we were told young children are allowed inside if their parents have valid q r codes that fishery inside a free zone. i can get rid of the mask. yes. once you're inside your back to the free cobit era, no masks or social distance are required. as you can see, re did there to, i think that we are the only customer at the moment. i don't, there are 2 more people out there,
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but otherwise it's pretty empty for vaccinated customers, the immediate benefits are quite obvious. now there are always plenty of tables available and you can enjoy waiters this undivided attention for reference owners though things might not look as a be of the system. the fact is that the system has been introduced across moscow, so people accept it. they come prepared and even say that they have a cure code straight away. but at the same time it's summer now and they still prefer to relax on the veranda. the fact that we have some are verandas helps. of course. guests without cure codes can see there, but it's too early to talk about how many customers we've lost because of this policy. we have to wait and see what it shows up on the. so this is apparently something both citizens and restaurants will have to become used to at least wilde cove. it is still raging. and even though a couple of months ago, people were extremely skeptical about getting the job. in the past couple of weeks,
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moscow authorities received more than 80000 vaccination request a de fuel the hopes that one day moscow will eventually escape from cove its loss. custody raska r t from moscow. well, the delta strain spread over 90 countries. now the big picture in from that account for 20 percent of new cases, while in the u. k, it's almost a 100 percent. we spoke to david navarro, he's the world health organization, special envoy and cove. it about how to try and manage the risk best we can of the virus as it stands we call it be 100 percent certain that the vaccine use that we have at the moment will protect us against all possible versions of this virus. so therefore, we should be accepting the vaccines will reduce our risk of getting covered quite nicely, actually box. they're not going to guarantee. and therefore,
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what we're saying is huge vaccines as part of your control effort. but also, why not just keep going with the physical distance in the one me to row? why not keep going with ma squaring? why not keep going with really good hygiene? why not keep going with isolation when you're sick? why not keep going with protecting elderly people and those who got other diseases with vaccines because they are really good protective? if there is the perception conveyed to the population of any country, that basically we're all going to say we're going to break for a break free and we're not going to be troubled by the virus. and there's no turning back. it's a bit of a hostage to fortune just supposed, as far as takes advantage of the freedom day,
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and really spreads an awful lot and you end up with their situation of a lot of sickness and considerable debt plus distress. and if somebody is running a hotel or running an airline, no running an airport or running a festival, if day, you can have quick tests at the entrance and then quick daily checkups with tests again for participants go, it would make such a difference. so yes, i'm super keen on frequent, reliable, inexpensive tracts interest to them talks any regret and it doesn't exist next new in for you, microsoft revealing that secrecy orders have become routine and investigations by us low enforcement. the company loans saying it receives as many as 10 per day, basically that stops disclosing the search the subject of the war and shocking a war kellum opens across it. caleb, hey, revolution. revelation is called many by surprise. the question is,
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should we be surprised? oh dear, we've lost the most so much for that revelation. we'll try and get back to me and get the answer whether it be surprised not the minute to hopefully before this program ends. now next, which we talk about cuisine. hello there. okay. well, when it there, when it comes to cuisine, each nation and culture both their own. but now academics have singled out the french for indulging in food to the supposedly racist left, a bad taste in the messages, expect to go. mays on chess shall do ben ski explain. i forget what she sold. she said the perfect ingredients for a french pe connect. but be careful travelling down on these as i could see labels as a racist, condoning white privilege. french food ways are shaped by white, middle, and upper norms. why christian norms are considered a default? much like whiteness itself is often construed as
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a neutral non racial identity. i mean home and about why the seminar presenting to region and go all one. you thought that france was a country with a diverse range of food given it's soils is cheeses. it's meats of all kinds. it's called flowers from brittany, and it's melanie from terrace gone. well no, your kitchen is to blame. and tonight's, you have to bend in the, in your kitchen, rip off your apron and beat yourself with a whip. i love france is the country that welcomes me as a young refugee 40 years ago. i love it. cassim is heath or its literature. and i'm sorry to read, see and hear such nonsense. it's hard to imagine how foods like the court or even the forget could be consumed as races. but then what do i know? why racist? what is the link between? i do not see the link between races,
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amanda and the food. we need to say that it is not racist in france, drug costs since just as they're accustomed to marg rep. in all countries, they're different and it's normal. it's french culture. i don't understand where the problem if you're on this food is eaten by black people. white people with chinese indians. italians is the same for everyone. isn't this logic? i could call you a races because your shirt is blue and i have blue eyes. it's looking for a problem that doesn't exist. meanwhile, feels university which hell the seminar has also criticism for allowing it to pay to play. the racialist of sport invent would whiteness french cuisine is said to be races and contribute to white supremacy. but what is stopping us from cutting all subsidies to this researchers to ensure that our traditions are expected. i'm sorry to hear that this school i graduated from, which was once open and excellent. now teaches nativist racialist and totally
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delusional theories. university has self proven coaching home and it's not the 1st time that discussions around the food course traverse the last year in theory, minutes, the need to get on those who has been shocked to walk into a supermarket and see. and i live foods for one community, in my opinion, that's how community start to form. it simply calling on ceos to understand that they can contribute to public peace and the fight against prism. not just in front of that, the issue is giving people plenty to come from appropriation of food even threaten only for paul. i need to be raised quite including whether eating for food could do should be on the cultural appropriation list, whether any of us can find
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a fellow being branded racist. but simply guessing how big sure chinese indian was from my point of view it's, it's very sad because, well, what is the best thing about cultural appropriation anyway? it means that you have like the sense of another cultured i think we can eat or whatever you want. it's our choice. if we like foreign food, no one can stop us from eating it. it's just all come from the most of the time when we go to a chinese or japanese restaurant, way even served by people from those countries. it's normal, especially in the multicultural society. we must be open to all types of cultures. i think that if it is done with respect, there should be no problem. probably put some money to lecture me to the stronger but to caleb moping money. that story. we couldn't go to just now microsoft revealing that to secrecy or does it become routine investigations by us lo enforcement. caleb opens across a caleb hope ticket in this time. yeah,
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i was saying that if you had it and it's a surprise and they should we be surprised to hear this. sure. well tom birch, who is the head of customer's security and trust, the vice president for that at microsoft has been testifying about the u. s. department of justice and their policy of accessing the data of journalists, politicians, and ordinary citizens. now, according to bert, microsoft receives roughly 25023500 such secrecy orders every year. that amounts to roughly $7.00 to $10.00 requests from the department of justice every day. take a listen. most shocking is just how routine secrecy orders have become when law enforcement targets and americans e mail text messages or other sensitive data stored in the cloud.
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now apparently the trump era justice department was accessing the phone records of journalists as they investigated links from the administration and where they were coming from. this was all an effort to find out who could have been leaking classified information to the press. now, it's certainly worrying because this essentially means that journalists cannot, cannot essentially promise the confidentiality of their sources. now, microsoft and apple were cooperating with the u. s. department of justice in these efforts. we now have microsoft stepping up and calling for reform and an end to the overuse of these gag orders. they want to essentially stop these orders that prevent companies from informing users that their information has been requested and not telling users that their information has been handed over to government officials. this is more of what tom, bert said. if law enforcement wanted to secretly search your physical office,
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they had to meet a heightened standards required to get a so called speak and peek warrant. however, today, if law enforcement wants to secretly search your virtual office in the cloud, they just serve a boilerplate warrant and secrecy order on your cloud provider that prevents notice to you. and so the reforms that were called for by microsoft include limiting gag orders to 90 days, not having them be carried out for a long amount of time. furthermore, the company has called for secrecy orders to be the rare exception and not the rule when the department of justice handles these things. so information is being revealed about the trumpet administration and how it went about gathering the data of the politicians, journalists, and ordinary citizens. at this point, folks are wondering how this will change with a new administration in the white house and a new person leading the u. s department of justice in new york city kelly open.
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thank you for the update. and i was starting the states from next door is we're going to focus on miami and the latest rescue work at the sight of the collapse residential building such a mess. there isn't, it has been halted and made fears about the stability of part of the complex still standing is according to local media. they said they could hear. it may be moving 18 bodies, including 2 children have been recovered from the revel so far, nearly 150, still missing rescue if it threatened to refer the hamper 2 by a tropical storm approaching from the atlantic, that's a war if a restless buildings as a stable cause and before this, a fire that broke, the rebel also slowed the initial response. now, more recently in the engine is now i was saying they raised the alarm 3 years ago of a major structural damage that apartment block, recommending expensive and massive repairs to be carried out. to john hardy's got the latest to day, there been a number of red flags and
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a number of warning signs. and what we're hearing is certainly, you know, the url is structural deficiency struggling structural degradation, including some of the supporting columns in the foundation of the building. the champlain towers and south building behind me that were basically cracking that were essentially disintegrating that were corroding because of the salt air. and just over time, this building was built in 1981. and since then, specifically, as noted by the structural engineers report in 2018, there are a number of concerning problems. the question is, why weren't they taken care of? there was a 40 a re certification process that was underway. there was roof repair work that was underway and the price tag for all of these things was in excess of $1550000000.00 . so you know, a big question, mark fair as this investigation continues. it's really in its infancy, the beginning stages, along with the ongoing investigation and what causes collapse. of course, as you can imagine, investigator structural engineers inspectors are pouring over all the other
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buildings in this area, including the other champlain towers, champlain towers, east, and champlain towers north. now, earlier we did go over in that area, please see have a, a lot of the area court enough, but i spoke with several residents, including one resident who wanted to talk off camera. he's a resident champlain towers, east. it was built in 1994 and he said at least quite close to a dozen engineers and inspectors have been there throughout the last week. he said they've been given a big, quote unquote thumbs up, that he see no reason to leave. others have voluntarily let they're staying with family friends or been put up by various charitable organization. so, you know, these buildings are being looked at very closely. obviously the rules, the regulations and certainly the pass inspections of this building are all coming into play at this point. just to give you an idea, i'm not sure if we can see this, but maybe andres can push. and so what you're seeing is the front portion of the champlain towers of south parts, the parts that didn't collapse on the other side for the cranes or that's where
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a pancake to 12 stories. but to show you how quickly people were rescued, literally, author balconies. some of those balcony doors remain open. that's been the case now over the past week. and when the storms come through, it's been the case just about every day. and you can see the blinds basically blowing in the way. and so certainly the search effort does continue. the governor said, no one is going to be left behind, but obviously as a decimal increases. it is certainly a grim reminder of the catastrophe that occurred here. now, a week ago, again, it is a grim seen, isn't it? well, that's what we're talking about so far this thursday. thank you for company, kevin. one of the team signing off. i can tell you in the very capable hands of you to no nail in the coming i was your anchor for the evening here on or t international. ah
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imagine picking up a future textbook on the early years of the 21st century. what other chapters called gun violence school shootings, homelessness. first, it was my job, then it was my family. didn't was my savings. i have nothing. i have nothing and it's not like i don't try. i look for resources, i look for jobs. i look for everything i can to make this pass and i end up doing is testing the road to the american dream aid with dead refugees. at this very idealized image of the older america, native americans look past the death that happened every single day. this is a modern history of the usa, my america phone r t i .

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