tv News RT August 8, 2021 6:00am-6:31am EDT
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vegas is a money machine, is a huge cash register that is ran by people who don't care about people's lives being lost. the use in the shape of the week. it's lee temporarily exam citizens of neighboring summary has been given russia sputnik vaccine from meeting colbert passports. the shot is still not recognized. 5, if you decide, proving its effectiveness in the small european nation on numerous independent study r t spoke exclusively to the country health minister. we have some data from god that guarantee deposit. i'll be at the cmc. we are closer to a 100 percent talk cclc. see, massive accusations home burned to the ground apocalyptic thing. devastating
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wildfires raged throughout the world from turkey and greece to russia and a jailed hucker who exposed abusive conditions of the prison he's being held in is denied telephone access to his lawyers. his wife runs the move in act of retaliation, 0 present lawyer telling them that she can only like to speak to them if they have upcoming court deadline, where she's not applying that requirement to any of the other news . hello, and welcome to the weekly or review of the big events of the past 7 days. i'm, you know, neil italy has temporarily exempted residents of some marino from needing
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cobit passports to travel there. that tiny country sits entirely within it, leaves borders and has almost completely immunized its adult population using rushes button and the vaccine, which isn't on the use approval list. brussels recently agreed to accept coven, i not q lation certificate issued by son marino and vatican city. but only with the jobs, it's given the green light to the pastors alive, free movement between those 2 non a new states on the block. however, with the sputnik vaccine, still not given approval, it left most summer and eases stuck at home. we spoke exclusively to the nation's health minister. our green pass, recognize this from you, but only for the people the summary know about naked by pfizer. so the people and it is 94 percent of our population that's will be seen as the problem to move into italy in the service or italy
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bar or restaurant or c m. ok and the order close space, close space. so we are now working with the italian government to, to find a solution to this problem. the yourself. sputnik v in the sun, re know her show, and it has an efficacy rate of more than 91 percent, 2 percent of those inoculated. so for the adverse side effects with less than half of that figure occurring in people over the age of 60, the health minister did that all those jump widths button that can sun reno have developed antibodies against cooper. we did some strategies about the ccsp of the sporting boxing. we have some day, some data guarantee. i'll be at the cmc,
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we are closer to a 100 percent off a few c o c. and so all our people develop the anti bodies and which is splitting be much a nation after one week from the start of the 2nd. those is what maybe we start to do to, to free our ospital and our accounts and, and now we have people in, in, in the roof because someone called me from turkey to the united states and russia to italy. devastating while fires are ranging throughout the world increase this week, 2 people were killed in fires surging across the european country i
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friday the nation said it was struggling to contain more than $150.00 while. the prime minister was not a heath way had turned grief to ponder cake described her as the worst in decades, mustn't blazes or causing help. again, turkey to at least 8 people up and kills. and around $10000.00. in fact, you, in the mid extreme while fires burning along the coast like popular tourist destinations, right. in that line of action boardroom, mom or if they've been hit one local, describe the scene there is reading ashes and unsolved. a heavy rains did bring at least some relief to the country living away from the region. surreal scenes in the u. s. state of california. this week, one time in plumas county, really looks like a hollywood movie about the end of the world. aided by tinder, dr. vegetate unfun by strong winds, the dixie fire as its been named tor, through greenville the remains of homes and abundant cars,
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totally burnt out. are common sight buildings dating from the gold rush era were destroyed along with a school gas station, church hotel museum. and russia has also been hard hit by must have wildfires in its side barrier region. there were mass like your wishes of villages with firefighters trying to puzzling furnace while in the russian republic of your crew tia fires blanketed large areas in thick smoke. a computer engineer is currently serving a prison sentence in the u. k. us for hacking a hospital. martin gods felt he did the to draw attention to a come to be baffled between the facility and the parents of a child being kept there without their consent. mr. gulf felt recently turned to us after he was denied telephone access to his lawyers.
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ah, mr. golf felt wife claims communication with his lawyer was cut off shortly after he wrote an article published, and archie's website in the piece, he describes cases of mistreatment at the prison. he's being held in the authorities to say, his lack of colds were done to changes in their cobit staffing policies. but the activists wife isn't satisfied with not explanation. they read all his mail. so they had a heads up on what was coming. they shouldn't as legal privilege mail, but i guess i guess they were aware he has multiple attorneys who are trying to get in touch with him for meetings about strategic matters. he answered an appeal and other ledges and other stuff in court and they just can't reach him. they're telling him that they catherine fairville,
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his the bureaus prison lawyer is telling them that she can only let him speak to them if they have upcoming court deadlines. where she's not applying that requirement to any of the other inmates. well, we contacted officials and leading rights organizations for their taken mr. gods feld's case. the european court of human rights and human rights watch to list. they cannot comment on the issue. we can take a look back indeed, how the entire situation actually unfolded up to this point. i please let me know right now i need to be home. my family. ah, she has been totally medically abuse
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and on barnett bryan, or it's a journalist and activist himself who was imprisoned in connection with a data league. marty himself, over throughout the entire was imprisonment, has been retaliated against 4 other particles written or lawsuits. he has filed against a system against individual wardens and so forth, having done for years and feds myself, the prison, the us for my activism and having written, calling from prison. i've been in prison where there wasn't a lot. i've been in prisons where, you know, i was, i was pulled off the phone. what was doing interview media interview and been put in the shoe for doing that interview and then release after investigation. you know, 2 weeks later i was re arrested because these orders in 2017, for getting interviewed advice after i got out of prison. no one has been involved in activism. should be tried in the us, north gosh, where there. and it just did the record of the us saw it on this is just
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a mentally vile. the harm should be proportionate to the sentence, not that potential harm. and increasingly what we see, certainly in the us justice system is this kind of trend of symbolic convictions. and symbolic sentences, whereby the politicization of the justice system and the what used to be due process is become increasingly politicized. and i think we can see that in so many different cases, especially with the area of cyber crime or hacking, it seems that and i think maybe this just really speaks to the ability of hackers or hacked of ists to threaten the power structure which has become increasingly dependent on digital networks, we only have to look really at the julian assigned case as, as the sort of top level sort of case in this area. he is absolutely and political
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prisoner, and it's not so much about what he did. it's about what he represents and the ability of an organization to get around the powers of the state. me the join me every thursday on the alex salmon show and i'll be speaking to guess in the world, the politics sport, business. i'm show business. i'll see you then me the i mentioned that i saw that you know more than a month up in the last arctic. and when i got back,
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i had just totally refrained how great we now have it in modern life. so before i go up there, it's like i use hot running water everyday. i never thought about upgrade that has dr. car, but they never saw great that was don't have to go out and walk 5 miles down hill there was stream and bring it back up to get my water right. but after alaska like i had to do all those things. and so when i get back into my water, my modern world and i turn on the faucet and hot running water comes out and hits my hand was like, oh my god, this is unbelievable. this is the most amazing thing that i've ever had happen to me. my life, ah ah, hello again on thursday. these really are for stroke growing targets in southern lebanon, in response to what they call terrorist attacks from the neighboring territory.
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it's the worst escalation between the 2 countries in the past decade and they have the shelling came on a grim anniversary for lebanon. it's exactly a year since the devastating explosion in bay route, which claimed the lives of more than $200.00 people. thousands gathered in the capital to mark the tragic event, holding up pictures of the dead and demanding justice. police fire tear gas up demonstrators during a heated exchange. then i sign a government building or angry over the government's failure to specify what triggered the blind who was responsible for it. it was one of the largest non nuclear explosions in history warning you may find the following footage, disturbing the cash human rights group on the international condemn lebanese officials for quote, shamelessly, obstructing an investigation into the black,
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one of lebanon's. all this hospital was devastated by the explosion while nurse died while a baby was born during the very minute of a bus one year old and the child is reported to be doing well. we spoke to a nurse working on the maternity ward. i'm not tragic day. she told us panic wasn't an option. there were simply too much to do. i was studying my mother in my day and i do remember my cleaning alone feeling very bad that i did not know if i was okay to be the be great kid and didn't have an idea what had what has happened. so i, when i try to move my hands and i was able to cite actually i supposed to be, you want to be where, where are they? if they are okay. i happened to baby the company in the go they doing very well
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that way. and i went to the parents every day and we pick through it and they send me everything they do, how they play, how they feed the training. so they doing very well. rebuilding efforts have a long way to go in the port city. they come to the country faces huge challenges from a plummeting currency to power outages, as well as medicine and fuel shortages because of that, most of the reconstruction work has been funded privately are carried on by non governmental organizations. the owner of one historic property left, guarded by the blast, told us he's been let on by all sides in the city. and my house is a heritage building, but we didn't get any help from unesco or anyone else. the only people who've been helping a one kind strange that god sent to us and recently won n g o no one else. the government didn't help her to have given us nothing but faith promises them. i've witness many was i was born in 1944,
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but i've never seen the situation so bad. everyone keeps saying we've never seen such a crime and so much damage. if there was a war, it would've been easier. at least we could have had the option to escape at times of war, we were always notified to leave our homes. but this time we were left to die. the un special wrapper tor and tortures said there are grounds for an official intervention against police in berlin. it follows numerous accusations of brutality against those recently protesting the tightening of cobra restrictions. disturbing footage has emerged from last sundays demonstration. the will after these images of an officer throwing an elderly woman to the ground went viral. berlin police confirmed an investigation into suspected bodily harm had been opened. but the head of the german police union told his criticism,
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pressure exerted only officers might be considered one of this month. i am sure that my colleagues acted in accordance with the law. in addition, more than 60 police officers were injured. they clearly did not stumble but suffered during the protests, which by the way, were far from peaceful because they violated public order. since they were banned, the police are the center of criticism and such deployments. that's something we're used to society is becoming ever more polarized politics that cultivate anything but peaceful conversation have come tribute to that. and the police on right between irreconcilable fronts that a no longer ready to engage in dialogue and all that doesn't make up police work any easier. i don't have any other opinions about this colleague say they have been under pressure and these events a lot of colleagues have been injured and that doesn't make the situation easier. we'd like to see politics being used to calm people down on all sides. around 5000 people took part in protests in berlin last weekend with more than 600
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arrested officers use buttons on pepper spray against demonstrators. a german lawyer we talk to believe the use of force was grossly disproportionate. that's the daughter we've seen in this video is quite shocking, at least to me, that if you assess it from a legal perspective, you'd ask yourself if there was a threat. but from what it looked, it's just an elderly lady trying to pass by the policeman. i don't think it was an extremely tense situation which justify the police of the throwing the lady to the ground like that. if you look at the standard legal definition of a threat, it just didn't look like one of the policemen wasn't being attacked. and there was no gross disturbance of the peace and public security that lady just wanted to pass by from a legal perspective of the conduct, quote, disproportionate freedom of assembly. the constitutional rights can be restricted. for instance, in a pan they make like the one we're seeing there may be restrictions, but they shouldn't be a difference where the people have notified of their rally beforehand or not. they
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should be able to gather spontaneously, to those that pietro and on owned in the open. it citizens shouldn't be in fear of being subjected to this kind of treatment. when going to protest. meanwhile, in a huge show of people power in nearby france, a quarter of a 1000000 protestors took to the streets of the capital and started to vent their anger at plans for monetary colbert. how passes it is the 4th weekend in a row. such demonstrations have been held. numerous trade unions including medical groupings, were among them. they've been rallying their members against the controversial passports during the week. people in paris made their feelings. here, after the country's constitutional council rules, the governments moves legal. we've been gauging the mood in the city. right? mostly that's like there's, there's room today. we're not talking about deprivation of social right. when about an attempt on human rights, we're forced to vaccinate. this is real to tell terry news. there's
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a button. the coven health has divided the french people into 2 categories, vaccinated and unvaccinated. for me, it's the beginning of the soft dictatorship. it is the dictatorship that the pass introduces. what are some of the details about what the particular gentleman might be? speaking about france? next week we'll see people having to show over passports to restaurants, cafes, even hospitals, while health workers face mandatory vaccination by next month, the series of angry rallies over the pressure to vaccinate on the pandemic. restrictions to saw things like this in late july. the
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money because even before the man does, your vaccination was introduced. there had been more than 10000 lay offs in french hospitals. but can the local health care system afford to lose all the employees? many people now say that they want to leave their work and not only in hospitals. if you have a closer look at what's happening now, you'll see that some specialist refused to comply with the vaccination order and say, whatever of my job, i choose to work as an independent specialist. so stop working on, you know, there are small, they're fast, they're eco friendly, but increasingly they're proving something of a menace on the streets. you may very well have seen them the use of electric scooters. it's rising rapidly, but so are the number of accidents involving them. we took a test drive through 2 very busy cities. fast convenient and environmentally friendly. east butte is massively growing in popularity here in the u. k. over the
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last few years, the relatively cheap to run and use electricity. so that perfectly invoke with the current focus on renewable energy. although russia is a relatively lead boomer in the market of shareable electric scooter, this service has spread rapidly across the country where the number of users doubling. since the beginning of the pandemic, as more people are being encouraged to use and the virtual means was transferred. it's also become an all time favorite among all kinds of delivery companies. yet not everyone is so keen on them, the british government, his band excuses from public roads saying that can only be used on private land. it is not currently possible to get appropriate insurance for privately owned e scooters, meaning it is illegal to use them on the road or in public spaces. despite protective measures, up 220-0000 accidents involving excuses a protected to occur by the end of this year. there are also concerns around the
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impact that you're having on vulnerable people in society. especially the visually impaired leaving me to wonder exactly. well understand the question of that, you know, people that have actually had to go to school because it's so far drive them or so . but the thing that really dangerous it depends on the news it clued up. nothing there cause trouble fall to false and there's no oversight. there's no guidance for these people. they just buy them and, and they're just allowed to get onto the road in the footway without any guidance as a number of people whizzing around moscow, parks and pavements growth. so does the number of accidents involving e scooters can people have died within the past 2 years? many believe that the reason is that ease scooters operate in a legal gray area. and it's true. according to the current legislation, a person on an e scooter is a pedestrian, but in reality, this is a person on
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a fast moving object. the city council has so far responded by introducing the so called flow zones. limiting the speed for rented electric scooter is to 15 kilometers per hour down from 30 to 40 kilometers per hour. but clearly that's not enough. yeah, i think these are fun. yeah, but moscow is not well suited to them. there are few places that can write safely. there are fish and cycling and pretty narrow sidewalk. if the people who don't have driving life and don't lie with traffic calls, which can result in accident, local infrastructure is not thought through the school. there are no specials, but there are lots of inconsistent is okay to write on the side, or should you cycling should be regulated legislative level. many belief it's the task of police to regulate and control how people use a scooters. but in fact, it's more complicated and all sides should be involved, the rental companies,
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the transferred authorities and the users themselves. and while it can take months to work out a proper legislative base for the service, the scooters will continue to zoom along the streets of our big cities. well, at least until winter for sure. well that's a recap of the we can use for no neil, it will be here with all of your updates in around 30 hope you'll join him, then this is our international stay with us now for more great programs getting going in moment the who's the the know what would you
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give them and i knew him by the in the can can while we're on by now i know i should know mama to new york on mon tesla fields on labels like football on them and i have an initiation national flirtation of know how the community i bit off more than 100 people. and i mean, i mean, i saw it and they went out and my my name is
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the the, the, the the me, the me ah, hello, welcome, joyce depart from the early days of culture. humans have known too much of anything is good for nothing. every major religion was glad to me and all sorts of excesses which poisoned the soul and enfeebled the body. pushing before our ancestors scarcity used to take care of that. but what are we supposed to do in this era of
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ever increasing abundance? well, to discuss that i am now joined by michael easter, a. visiting lecturing journalism at the university for me by the las vegas and author all of the conference crisis. michael, it's great to talk to you. congratulations on the grade book. hey, thanks so much for having me on. i'm excited to chat. now let's start with it's a subtitle which tells people to quote, embrace discomfort to reclaim your wild, happy and how fate self. why does it need to be reclaim? well, i think you hit it in the beginning and the intro there. it's that we evolved in these environments of scarcity. and so we developed these drives to always do that, which was most comfortable. for example, we avoid movement. we are wired to be lazy when we have access to food, we have incentives to over eat it on and on and on. we avoid risk. but in our past environments they are actually kind of danger.
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