tv News RT July 12, 2021 1:00am-1:31am EDT
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who dares think me, we dare to ask me ah, ranging conflict coupled with an escalation, humanitarian crisis are tearing off down on a part of the bond continues to make a big territorial gains. and this comes to the us in packing of fog to me of country a scenario this far from new me salvation will eclipse the devastation of the cobit han mac, about according to all which claims 11 people are dying every minute from hunger and the walls will have excuse and comment true from the charity on seeing read, a new poll revealed socialism rapidly gaining traction among young brits with 70 percent wanting to live under the rules of equality. ah,
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well, in case you haven't already guessed, this is all the international and as outside the room. so welcome to our program. let's get started. fighting is intensifying in afghanistan as the taliban continues to make big territory gains, local official se, but at the weekend local security forces of repelled in assault by the taliban, and a key more than providence at the porter with 2 g cust on. now, last week, the group fighters entered afghanistan, 2nd, pick a city that can to ha, a pentacle spokes parts inside the u. s. is what she needs. developments with concern, as american troops continued rapid withdrawal from the country on president biden's orders. so the escalating situation is dragging the nation farther into a humanitarian crisis with afghanistan, calling upon european countries to hope. patients or basket migrants for the next 3
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months. thousands of afghan systems have been forced to abandon their homes. as the taliban continues their offensive. i'll village were surrounded by the telephone. there is nothing we can do. tell them captured our homes. we have been displaced. we are face and sat changes to the moment. my children live by the road . what should we do? as a mom? several years in a government should help us. our children are hungry and thirsty. our homes are under the control of the taliban and we cannot go there. i lost my cow and a calf my home and all my goods. then what i am suffering your lot. you can see will live in this tent, even though i have a home. i have been displaced. there is a war in our village and the area where i live is under the control of the taliban . and 300 families have been displaced. in the meantime and not the water nation, somalia has been experiencing similar hardships continuing to struggle with attacks
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my extremist groups. so on start today and explain explosion in somalia capital coat. it's 9 people injured, 8 others according to health officials. it was the 2nd largest explosion in the city just this month, smell the ash above extremis group has claimed responsibility. and one of the latest actions of his presidency. donald trump withdrew us troops from somalia, often in the 15 years of deployment. lots of critics to draw parallels with what's now happening and i found a st on as work, gods do reports. i've gotten a thought was the lesson a lesson on limits what can be achieved with brute force and what conk. a lesson in humility, that farmers and malicious could persevere over super bow. the united states now leaves up gather thought without seemingly having learned anything. is the u. s. sending troops back to somalia? are you putting more forces in the hell?
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how precisely is the us going to be changing its security posture on the continent? carla, i think you can understand why we wouldn't necessarily detail, but the true movements are forced presence in advance, particularly when we're talking about a counterterrorism threat up to 3 decades of unsuccessfully and painfully beating its head against the very solid somalian war. the united states is apparently considering another round last year you may remember truck pulled most jewish troops out of somalia while that potentially going back in. there's really no denying that our repositioning, fairly sudden repositioning out of somalia. earlier this year has introduce new layers of risk and complexity to our mission there. so what we're trying to do is manage that risk and complexity as we still try to help
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our african partners with their security challenges. somalia wasn't a libya or a rock, it wasn't a possible destination that the us invaded and left wreck. it was a poor country to begin with, made that much poor by far and help in the form of bombs and weapons. no somalia is much more like of janice done with insurgents, the extra bob running much of the country the the don't underestimate the they're smart that often. they're motivated. as bob, according to the b, b. c. collect almost as much in says as the government,
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even government officials pay, i shall bob to be left alone. years and years of us as strikes and grades have failed to stop them. so why not try again? the united states has been involved in somalia for decades, and it is very involved in africa for longer than that. this is a product of the poor planning in the pentagon. this is the product of the factional, little within the pentagon. it's no secret that at the highest levels of us war planning, that there are different political tendencies. there are different political factions. and so one day, one faction will have the upper hand. and the next day, another fax will have the upper hand. and you see that being played out in east africa, where we were told the states was pulling out of that part of the world. and now it
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appears there on the way back. many people claim that the u. s. last and have gone to thought, i would disagree. they went into kiera l cod and they leave with a written promise from the taliban. never to let all kinds of set up shop and have dentist on again. so they failed, but the whole nation building thing, but i'll car has gone somalia is very different in somalia, the warlords, that rule, much of the country, the actual bob, their sworn while carter us has tried everything. they've tried training. somalian still fight. i shall, bob, they've tried bombing the militants, they've paid the others to bone, the insurgents sponsored invasions by countries, that neighbor somalia, nothing's work. how many decades will the us leave it? these stop before come? what may, it just gives up? a hint and hunger pandemic could turn out to be was than anything covert felt the
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wild as the warning from our fun. it says, 11 people are dying of starvation globally every minute. while 155000000 people are apparently facing crisis levels of food insecurity, the charge has also published a series of harrowing foss hand accounts for women struggling to feed the children . i come secure a good quality 14 for my children. therefore, i feel guilty and i feel that no matter how much i'm trying, i still need to do more. i had to look for solutions. i can go hungry, but the boy cannot. i even dared. i dared allure to go back for food because i couldn't into your hunger. it hurts me. i'm out of ideas on what to do with children. i'm not eating properly. and i sometimes feel like i'm not raising them boil enough. most of the time, we have little to nothing treat. i struggle to get my children to sleep at night. they ask for food and i tried to distract them, telling them stories until they're asleep. then i look at them and pray for a better life until i get stolen by sleep. you know, when you think it's like this,
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it's always short. and i think we have to understand what i'm actually means to people on the ground. i mean, it's extraordinarily serious with knowing that hunger figures were increasing. we predicted last year, the tension going to get was a few. how about it's gotten, i think, yes, this is genuinely shocking. but it, it is happening across the globe called africa where the moment we've seen hunger, i significantly in brazil, india, many of the developing countries. and i think we also need to look at the kind of safety net that, that some of the rich countries have with the poor countries. 3rd off the world's population have no access to social security, know, safety. or when they see a shock like this, there's just no way to recover from well found lifted climate change conflict on the economic impact of the current of ours pandemic has the driving forces behind this crisis with the lock downs and the closure borders and businesses only making matters was for those right out of disadvantage, but the head told for humanitarian policy at all from matthew trust,
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the guy told us there are other factors, a play to the number of 1000000000 as increasing. and we have a situation now where you have 1000000000 as a big thing to be the 1st to go to space where you have a 1000000 still going hungry. and that's because of systemic inequality. i think also comes back to that scene inequality. we have to make sure that people are able to get vaccine. it's not just going to rich countries because we have to also restart the economies and put a country for me. there are 3 key things we have 3 media firstly on these files. and the 2nd is we have to stop worrying policies from blocking the monetary and we cannot have a situation where parties are using hunger as a weapon of war. and finally, of course, funding funding is crucial to get people to help they need. so i'd say those would be my key 3 things to be done and then looking for long term have to build a more equal society and looks like socialism is winning the hearts of young britons. a new poll shows always 70 percent quiz say they would prefer to live under a socialist government. well,
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they blamed capitalism for housing. problems on climate change. they will solve the report believes that provides an interesting glimpse into the potential future. it is a preview of what would be the mainstream opinion in britain to morrow. these results show that millennial socialism is not just social media hype. this is a long term shifting attitudes, which is not going to go away on its own supporters of the markets economy needs accept that challenge and rise to it rather than dismiss it or pretend it's not happening. not long ago. millennials with the i don't know, generation apathetic and totally uninterested. but in recent years the u. k. has seen movements like black, like climate change and violence against women. not only supported by young people, but let by them to another cause is getting traction among the young 70 percent of them. in fact, it's socialism. the term used to be a sla, but now it's a badge of honor. people. one more fantasy more quickly and want to live in a community got treated properly. i think it become more and more parents. we don't
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going to fastest, and we live in a system that really benefit very small amount of people and treats others. and you are more on to treat people know quickly i badly. this is why people all gravitating more towards ideas that are going to be preparing the problems that we are getting more and more in the work, pushes them it's becoming more and more mainstream. when jeremy kobus launched his bid for the labor lead, only a fringe few dead to use the label. but now it's capitalism. the signal is a political death sentence, at least for the younger generation who predominantly associate the term with everything that's wrong and on. fenn society, when we think about what that means to most people, it means focusing on creating well creating capital, focusing on spending, focusing on creating more more,
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more money. and i think that is the completely wrong way to think about to come to people, you know, be seen in grantsville, the impact of, you know, not thinking about people not thinking about safety, you know, not putting people before profit. and if the con, demik has shown us anything, the divide between rich and pull is only guessing west pushing hundreds, if not millions onto the front line, while the wealthiest wallets bursting at the seams from what few young people have always had it bad. but it's going to survive, know that it's actually bringing people together. pot, if they're divide and rule strategy that's being used by governments and by capitalism is backfiring in a way because it's, it's assuming that the morale, it isn't there in the use when it is. and we're engaging in these conversations that were meant to divide us that were meant to pay us against each other. and what
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we're actually finding is that, you know, we have our humanity in common. and, you know, if you've got any aspect of humanity, what can you do but reject capitalism. today, young people are typically seen as intensely politicized with many embracing radical left wing. i did, and pursuing the utopia of equality for all. and while scoffers may say how she'll grow out of it, in fact it's a case of she'll grow into it. as polling suggests socialist ideas are just as popular among people in the forty's as those in the late teens. so socialism looks like it isn't going away anytime soon with research suggesting today's hype is actually a fresh frame into the future, but it's socialism is so popular. how come the conservatives have been in power for the last decade? perhaps because they've never been tried and tested here in the u. k. with the younger generation, increasingly taking messages to their own hand change could be on its way.
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socialism built on fairness and equality. and i don't see that once socialism takes takes hold, that there's any kind of expos in anything that because it's, it's a very transparent system and it's, he's going to rebel against it if we're all going. and if you believe what they say, you might just be a social skill. so i just actually the u. k. the, as i was saying in the news, dozens of people were arrested on police officers entered as riots broke out in london before and after the final of the euro football championship, crowds of hot broken fans poured onto the streets to repeat england and the march, the huge crowds off fueling fairs of a new wave of covert in the u. k. as that spots and officials are the public to remember, the health crisis is still present. how also thousands took to the streets of cuba
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to protest economic crisis amid what is being described as the biggest antique government demonstration. in saucy years, the country's president had blamed the rest of us saying it provoked protests by tightening the embargo and called on supporters to go out and defend the country. for its part, the us said it is supporting freedom of expression. cuba, unquote, strongly condemned. any violence or targeting of full protest us the over in europe, frances main intelligence agency is giving a rap pink behind its cottons. it's launched a web site to attract new talent to the secret service. turns out more than half of frances people don't mind to know poking around as all t as she wanted t boned ski reports. it's made out to be one of the coolest job in the
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world. working for the secret service is not only drink come, shaken, not stirred. because the coolest gadget on of course, you always get the bad guy that a newer certainty work for the french with 52 percent thing that they want to be a fine margin would be kind of want to be a spy, to have a big car, a beautiful wife, money, a lot of money. but i'd love to because it would be fun. you don't have a monday advice on investigations. and sometimes it's very sensational to discover the hidden truth. and i would love it if you want to. i always have the best tables in restaurants, the best cars, the most beautiful women, and totally spectacular. and they know it all because they are the people who know everything in a big through make the pros, fact, black cloak and dagger the french secret services. and the g. s. i a giving us me
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a mortal, a peek into its work. launched the 1st website, which snippets about top secret missions pending on terrorism. i saw you were a tax on foreign agents and no, they're not talking about me. just hold up for a 2nd. nobody didn't put it in the buddy. young. oh, good. look at that. are you, where was i? me? oh, oh. even as sage advice, those buzzing agents, a professional manipulator, a spy will 1st show sympathy an interest in the private life and activities of the person they are targeting. they are an enlightened strategist who will do
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everything in their power to trump, their target in an insidious spiral from which that person will not be able to extricate themselves without outside help. the i see you all, but coming by is tantalizing. but what model would the french take on until they want to be aging? that's $100.00. 17 double 070. the james bond, but the seriousness of the cases, the call the money jim james bond. because his taxi do butter 2 of them because i do, i bought it always says 117 and james bond. but i'm in fun. so i'm a little bit more for i want to say, oh it says 1170 and says, because he's french for sure. we can move james bond because he is always the best . james james bond because he's charismatic,
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but don't get too excited. walla pero says the entry into the pe you the french secret service may now be more transparent. if you do show enough promise to be recruited. more than likely the only high life you're going to be leading is watching sports movies from your desk. she only see empowered to find me. it's a land of sun see on sanctions. nevertheless, crimea on the black sea is increasingly proving a tool for foreign business people. the reasons being under western economic restrictions since the 2014 referendum on rejoining russia, which wasn't recognized internationally. however, the areas rich and local approaches are still proving a tool on t as thomas suspend has been finding out what it's like for foreigners to live in to business in crimea. and while she does that, i'll see you again at the top. ah,
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d, i'm in an insulin in yours isn't between east and west, and north and south well connotations. i argue who it actually belongs to. good people. there are living bad daily lives, with more than 2000000 resigning crimea now, including many foreign furnace and countries around the world, including germany, stores. ah, today the peninsula is not only a favorite tourist, as it is also an inviting place for entrepreneurs and large and small russian and foreign. and those returning to the land relatives once viewed home team like for example, willy martin, descendant of the men and immigrants of the 18th century,
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in 1918 rich presents were exiled from here. 87 years later, grandson went back to work and all gross is in the door. my great grandfather was born here in a neighboring village. my grandfather was born here in this village. just imagine 100 years ago, people from france and germany work here as governesses, when boys governesses and shooting for children when they think and yes, that's why my great grandfather and grandfather could speak 5 languages fluently, studying in this village didn't door. if i think him, no, this is dennis lands, the stillness, the largest is grand, 5205 hector's is known as the ride. for now he has pride in it. $500.00 goes for that and he psalms for milk. and his next step would be making this is we have hard cheese and here a soft cheeses. pushing the crammed with various crimean seasonings.
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martin has everything made from goat's milk, cottage cheese. miss sour cream butter. yes, this is just us talking about identity did. who are you now? who do you feel more like? russian german crime in european isn't said, you know, most likely, i'm a russian men a nice when i'm in russia. they tell me mom. ok, your european, when i come to germany, they tell me that i'm a catholic, russian. i do not know who else is. oh, but i don't feel like one when they tell me that i'm a med and i i say yes, it is true. but here in crimea, is there a certain crimean identity? because yes, i can't imagine living anywhere else on us. i want to live in crimea. i like everything here. the mountain steps to see everything here is exactly what i need. the
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news interest. christy for country the southern coast, high above this vineyard, i met the wind make a thomas dove from a vine, has to luxury holiday complex called maria. oh, been made of any orders and i came here for the 1st time pretty much by chance. i saw all of this and understood the potential of crimea as to the climate in the soils. i thought fantastic wines could be produced here. and i was quite surprised when i found the wine menu in local restaurants. it's not good. i tried to explore melissa, i couldn't find any drinkable wines, and it was just something couple years. a poor video seemed of your prediction. how many years or decades will it take until crime in wine reaches international standards? basically there are already wines to the highest level. it will definitely take
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a few more. yes. before everyone gets to know this my own car. as for the new project, starting now, such as ours, will probably take about 10 years for someone to decide to come here. let's say from hamburg me to find some space from wine to ice cream, from a mega project to a family company that with a 10 year the italian rebecca to leslie has been running his gelata italiana ice cream shop from within the interest hotel in the elsa ah, how did you end up the crimea foresee and that was many years ago. i was on vacation here back in 2007. i liked it very much because everything was so similar to literally the climate. the weather was good and it was in september, but meanwhile, were better owns not only an ice cream campaign, but also the donor maria cafe in sebastopol. simple and comforting italian food at
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reasonable prices is nice, is it's difficult to work here. so it's nice and simple, but basically there are no big problems the time and taxes here are low. so you can definitely do business here. go into kilowatt. now we have driven a kilometer from sebastopol on a narrow road, a mountainous landscape. it could be italy that could be olive trees. cypress is just like in greece. we are in the crimea mountains and we are on our way to a vineyard, which was recommended to us. and the owner is have a he is one of the founders at the new wine making business in crimea. first, let's take a look at the surrounding area at a height of 400 meters above sea level vineyard drive in the sub tropical climate. they didn't receive too much sunlight. that's why vintage crimea, wines such as sandra and income and come out suite use of
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how many bathrooms are produced? yes, $60000.00 a year. 50000 young internet. according to global standards. that's not bad at all in russia. this is considered to be a very small company, but in europe it is normal. oh the the me, what was the starting point for your enterprise? i've asked us, i like the idea of a small european family business because when there's a territories that belongs to one family own, you work by yourself. you have blisters on your hands and you don't depend on anything and only the weather and your own workers. boyd to lock the house in mid noir. today the crimean peninsula offers new potential new opportunities, a new future, a future that invites not only tours, but also entrepreneurs or tourists who suddenly understand that an entrepreneurial
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future away from here, an industry with its own nation for everyone, leaves and on the floor here, front of the hype ins, as in case often all towards an ad in the an insulin are closed and that's how the german foreign ministry warns about the travel band here in time. you flew off and the reason for roco just in front of me, of course as an international airport, which due to sanctions, clinton to national, at the moment. but it provides everything needed for local travel. me. and i say good bye to you and look forward to my next trip crimea. yours and thomas. ah ah, me me.
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so if someone wants to authorize a broad text in europe, let's say a plan protection product disbursed. and the, because this person or this company, the applicant, has to provide data that allows us, as the risk assessors to judge whether these products is safe or not. and this information comes from the applicant and the studies that are commissioned by the applicant to allow us to assess the safety are paid by the applicant, obviously. so it's the intellectual property of the applicant. and we can publish parts of the studies in the current legal framework, but we also have to respect the business confidentiality claims of the africans. so there's a balance to be found between transparency as much as possible, but also to protect the investment of companies into their product innovation.
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that is, that companies have to submit studies to your commission. they do the study themselves . they have to submit it to the european commission and to accept. so the europe food safety authority and they have a panel of experts that looks at the studies and then they say ok, safe or not. so what we have found is that within these expert panels, you have a lot of people with dice with the food industry. so that means a conflict of interest me in. so home system, the communication agencies and the regulatory agencies have the same scientists and they.
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