tv News RT August 9, 2021 3:00pm-3:31pm EDT
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next 30 years to the victim, say they still with the consequences. today the vaccination activists, the late fee for the bbc's officers in london with a police fighting hard to stop the crowds from boasting inside the terra thing else behind bog, to here on our team international. we investigate how convicts identifying is transgender, allegedly was the system to get placed inside women's jail sales where they can go on and carry out sex. on the female, it gets in a full erection to lock them. the room 247 with a man. and there is nothing you can do about it. she may have been on her phone, lawyers to reveal that a us intelligence worker implicated in the death of british motorcyclist. how are
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you done? may have been distracted when her car plowed into him, adding that old irrelevant phone data of mysteriously disappeared. and the relentless march of wildfires of flames reeking more destruction and havoc and eastern brush on closing cities and dense smoke of correspondent is in the da's office with a fire fighting unit and brings the 1st hand account of the devastation in order to fully extinguish them. you would need to go up because they're not just burning on the surface. they're burning underground. ah, well, the news keeps on coming tonight here when artie international already a very busy monday evening here lie from moscow where it's now just off at 10 p. m . and t vaccination protesters in london have tried to storm the offices of the b,
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b. c. our police did stand in their way pushing back the crowd. the demonstrators are furious about government plans to inoculating teenagers as something it says is necessary in the face of the new contagious delta strain. shoddy, it was dusty reports from london. well, i see that same protest is all on a mission to david taking the streets of london going from one media outlet to another today job right? the b b c. television years they were met with about police officers and even offices trying to push out of the entrance style days. protest really started by pause. i hadn't got this mission in their mind at that point, but they decided at that point to take to the babysitter to try and see why the
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baby so what they're all doing is clue they've 19 gladly really opposed also what the b, b, c and all the mainstream media outlets are proposing as well. they all misrepresent many, all that well, they would say it's the mainstream media really. i played a huge role in the handling also not all of the problems with the baby, c upgraded security protocols in the wake of freedom day. many people all rushed in, but really the 5. 7 today the people at this point in time they all had to walk me out that place that really are trying to come out in full day. they all due to be totally ridiculous of why we know that the vaccination wrote out
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program is not going to go on and they were not infringement of freedom of civil liberties as well. today i thought about what the fall was to come in the future. today launches a special project. we're looking at the issue of transgender convicts abusing female prisoners a very saskia taylor has been investigating a rising number of such cases which have been doubled by women's rights activists. as a horror show. oh, me and fans over where to house sex change prisoners are particularly high in california with our being numerous complaints from inmates there being a number of recent cases that might explain that worries me
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ah ah, they're getting a full erection who locked him this room 247 with the man. and there is nothing you can do about it. the nobody cares about us. we ain't danger here. there were never love mails with full mail and that to me, sharon shall worse with us in a group shower room. yet no man can share our showers. me the proven sexual creditor hadn't committed multiple crimes against women. yet the state of washington had no problem moving him into women's facility. ah.
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we asked us prison authorities to comment on the allegations on what exactly the policies are when it comes to transgender inmates. when of course, let you know when they get back to us earlier, i had the chance to speak to penny nuns, who is the ceo and president of the concerned women for america activists group. now she's worried to some male inmates might change that gender identity, sympathy, so as to take advantage of incarcerated women. the issue before us right now is whether or not women who are incarcerated women who have no choice for being in prison and how long they're there. have no rights are being protected against biological men. we can say the biological disparities, the size, the strength of men versus women. this is changing in our country and which now men who simply identifies women. they don't have to take any surgical measures in the
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state of california and other states when someone simply identifies as a woman, that predators are willing to say anything to get access to women and to hurt them further. i recently read a statistic that said in the united states, about 84 percent of women here incarcerated. say that at some point in their life they've already been sexually assaulted. these are women who are already very troubles. there is no excuse in which a person who is the biological male or biologically female should be victimized in presence. if the prison system would take the issue of safety more seriously than that, then that concern would be met. again, there's no excuse for allowing someone to be victimized in prison. there must be common sense met and used in dealing with people who are. they're locked away, they cannot leave, and we must take measures to keep them say,
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cases of alleged abuse of women by tons to the people in jail have left some incense in light of a controversial bill passed in california at the start of the year. the law that's trans inmate's request to transfer to facilities, but align with that gender identity effectively allowing male prisoners to move to female jails. since the law is passed around $300.00 such requests have already been submitted. and as of june this year, non have been rejected by your forty's, california is the latest us state of adopted such legislation, similar and may housing policies also exist in connecticut, new york city, massachusetts, and new jersey and women's rights groups are alarmed that all the parts of the country might follow suit. the definition of transgender is dangerously inclusive and california department of corrections and rehabilitation. these are basically heterosexual men ruining this paternity for the trans community to be safe. and now
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they have a big pool of potential victims. males cannot solve declaring themselves out of maleness, the yes, shouldn't fall, kelly for you here into this horror. how do you hear? california fell $13.00, to many claim that it sets a heretic precedent for the country. do you agree? i agree in the sense that the person in the law is so actually broad and generic, you're not looking for any sort of justification or behind this. you can really put other people in danger, while also insulting people who truly do struggle with it by using something that they truly do have something that they truly do identify and have identified with the young age in order to fulfill something that's going to bring harm to others, we're putting these women at risk and it's unsafe if you're responsible in california, certainly old, the women in that state better and they are failing miserably right now. do you think that there is a concern that heretic stories like the ones that are merging,
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that they can do pretty irreparable damage to an entire transgender community, doing ripley, the damage, not only to the transgender community to you, people who have have been going through their transgender, their, their changes, you're dealing generalizing them, and you're actually going to start to demonize them by using them as a crush. what do you think them is? a good commit? violence against women are not only harming the real transgender community. people are kicking, you're the, you're harming women, you're harmony, everybody else provide long time women, all this. he felt on hud. they felt forgotten about. they felt use they felt vulnerable, then they became empowered. and now suddenly it feels like a trend is going in the opposite direction. is that how it looks to you? there have been of drive to be the most possible inclusive in california, specifically. and here's where we're running into issues. we're not protecting women, we're not protecting those who were born women. and we have to understand that
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there is a distinction between those who identify as women and those who are genetically women. and that, that the harm can exist between those who are just attempting to present themselves as women, so that they can escape being housed with other men and been being a rooster in the hen house. and basically whether they want to escape other harm from other men or just come into the female prison and be a predator. we open the door to that, and that's problematic. and, and because we're so, you know, in the effort of being so inclusive, we're not realizing the harm on the back in that is being, cause this is katie, such a complicated issue. so what's the solution here? is that single sex prisons because, you know, when you read a lot, a lot of trans inmate say i don't feel safe anyway. so how do we make sure that everyone does feel safe? yes, we have male person, we have female presence. that's how it's been because you know that, that, that works better, but maybe having other facilities or individuals that i identify it's trans,
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making sure there is better security for some of these people. i don't know, maybe even looking into their medical records, not just taking somebody from california going to that basically you can get a piece of paper and check a box and then be have the bunch of women that you can victim i. that's not ok. but there are ways that you can look into somebody's medical history in psychological record, that's what it's supposed to do to verify what they think about their, their identity or their gender. that's what we need to do. i mean, what do we met with everything else? just to look into what somebody says, not just taking them at their word and make sure that there is some kind of verification for this is keeping close tabs on developments in the spare. and you can be sure that will be returning to this topic in future broadcasts. me me. so it's a new development in the case of british teenager harry dunn who was killed 2 years ago in the u. k. in a road accident involving
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a u. s. intel worker that on families, lawyers say answer coolers may have been on the phone when her car plowed into his motorcycle. adding that the relevant phone data has mysteriously disappeared. and that she's being evasive about whether or not she was actually on the phone. at the time of the crash, the, the decision to make a right turn, we are supposed to make a left turn, the roads are out the, the done finally resorted to civil action. state side is the u. s. refuses to extradite coolness. she in turn tried to have the whole case dismissed, but the judge shot that down. in july, boris johnson raised the issue in his reading with joe biden. later this month,
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harry dunn's parents will come face to face with the coolest for the 1st time in a court house in virginia. now, the u. s. government refuses to expedite the cooler, says she is under diplomatic immunity. those are refuses to reveal the true nature of her job on national security grounds. unsecured has never denied her guilt, though her lawyer claims the crash would not have been prosecuted criminally in america. i think that she is ready to do community service earlier than family spokesperson told my colleague, neil harvey, that she should face british justice. got the g 7 conference at the beginning of june. doris johnson announced that she had agreed with president biden to justice for her family had been cleared. so we are very confident that there is going to be a criminal trial here in the u. k. with mrs. secured as participating at. so that has been 2 years of fighting, but we feel that we're nearly there in terms of the criminal sense. our position
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has always been, you don't get to kill somebody or walk away with our request to mrs. or kudos on the united states. government is that she simply. ready presents herself to the united kingdom justice system and goes through the process. we've never been concerned what the outcome is because we don't have any control over that. we are simply victims of a very serious crime at this point. does it feel like this is a fight between one u. k. family and the might of the u. s. government, 100 percent. and that's really what it's a bit about from the beginning. frankly misses the coolest has been free to come back on her own and she should have done that a long time ago and diminished one of their employees killed. harry lar reaction was to not stop and think about this family and the consequences that they faced. but they thought about themselves, catastrophic miscalculation that they made was that nobody would find out about it . this is not how you behave as a, as
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a nation state. when you kill somebody abroad, you face the consequences of your actions, and you do the right thing. you know, this issue is never going to go away until the united states government realizes. ready that there is a broken hearted arrest family here who need help and needs support. we've reached out and all the rest to them numerous times continually get slapped in the face for doing. ready so they've lost their son and they want accountability and they want justice both in the criminal sense in the civil sense. a regional emergency has just now being declared in far east in russia as wildfires continue to rage creeping ever closer to populated areas more than one and a half 1000000 hectares have been consumed by the flames. over the past 3 months, the fires left nearby cities blanketed in choking smoke of correspondent dmitri pal reports now from the frontline, where some 3000 people are battling nature's fury. just arrived at the camp site
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where we're supposed to be saying what apparently we might actually have to evacuate right now because the fire is already near the camp. the firefighters are trying to balance right now, but as you can see behind it spreading really fast, like that tree just caught on fire and like less than a minute, the fire spreading really quickly. there's wind and still really dry. there's still been no rain and the region for a while for over a month. the listing is really nice people here now the fires cover a very large area. it's hard to keep the track. it's almost impossible. i don't
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know how we can manage that for water with a hand pump. but this, despite being very primitive, is one of the most effective things they have. right now we're going through a fire that we are still battling. it's taking a while. it's been away. present hours since we got here. we're still battling the fire me so basically we go round around around the fire. so we see some flame hit them, so ahead and with some water. but some of these are actually routes on fire and water to fully extinguish them. you would need to go up because they're not burning on the surface. they're burning under ground.
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me just finish battling one fire and then literally like 2 minutes later there was another one just 20 meters to the left. and there's just not enough people right now in this camp to be dealing with all this effectively. thankfully this is a bottom fire. so they call it as basically when the ground is burning, as opposed to a top fire, where the top of the trees is burning, which is the most dangerous thing there is. because if we pick that up, it's pretty much unsolvable difficulties. these guys are having is basically, there is not enough people and the equipment they have, or, i mean there's not that many ways to fight fire. basically with the use of the backpacks with 20 leaders in it. and they use that texting and a pump attach that backpack, and they use it to spray water on the fire. the other one is these shuttle where they, they got a trench so that the ground fire will sub basically they get rid of all them on the
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grass, the branches, the leaves, everything that could be set on fire instantly. that's pretty much how these people have been battling all these fires for the past 4 months. the u. k. defense secretary has slammed the us taliban agreement on the withdrawal of american forces, branding it as rotten the deal was struck last year and ames to keep the likes of al qaeda out of the country. but it seems it does not have unanimous nato support. the deal was a rotten deal. it is flawed. it saddens me that's the deal picked apart lots of what had been achieved. and if the dentist on over 20 years will probably be back in 10 or 20 years. as nato forces started to pull out, the taliban immediately exploited the opportunity rapidly capturing huge areas of
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the gun countryside. you can see right here on the map. that's all about now. controls most of the country, the latest flare up and fighting happening in the north. after rapid advances in rural areas, it is now targeting the big cities over the course of a 20 years. the war and i've gotten on has left 47000 civilians dead while almost 3000 soldiers from america and the u. k. alone lost their lives of taxpayers in america, the wars cost and estimated trillion dollars plus. whereas with the u. k, the figure is around 40000000000 pounds or less learn more about this. now i'm joined by my lender, mr. a. professor of international political science at lancaster university, a very well welcome to you. so thanks for joining us here on our tv. you share the u. k. defense secretary is pessimism. let me you think nato countries will have to return to. i've got nathan again at some point in the future to deal with terrorism . when you speak, there was this american bombing going on against taller one,
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who's your dog and posters underground as cute around $500.00 on troops. so don't know as to how this is going to unfold in the weeks, months and years to come from reckoning close enough to members that perhaps until loud was pretty much your not your strengths. didn't think through as to what is going to happen in the event of the school out. lot of them, i'm sorry, don't you think it's pretty tough to say the pull out has been premature. i mean, they've been there roughly 2 decades. well, i mean, if you compare it with some other post wash societies such as crossover, how long the navy, blue sunday of the union has been present. and also it's almost a 25 years to 30 years. so why companies speak something along those lines? i'm given the fact that some of broad threat antea was spend there and not much bonding had gone into the pool loud. in fact,
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this deal that to the by not just on hodge with the dollar. one wasn't particularly when called down the steps. what i would say on the moment, do you think, do you think that taliban could become the middle east? knew i sole or ice suits in terms of territorial conquest that i had to get to the wall. and in the way you see them sort of taking over, but it's after us up to down city, up to city. and on the latest had gone, we had for provincial capital, which had fallen through the forces. so be just a matter of time before the call except perhaps couple and some nearby 80 is the fall of the gum drug sees are pretty much imminent. so to go back to your question about whether the neighbor crucial going to back in 1020 years time is difficult to say the moment. but the science of that it is definitely going to attract a lot of non stop doctors would find some kind of come readily in the on of,
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on wanted to ask you because you know the taliban is, it's not just a militant group. it's also a political entity. in fact, the taliban delegation was recently welcomed in china. you think with all the natural wealth and resources of i've gotten it on the taliban in talks with other governments try to gain credibility as a political entity and end to the world stage is more of a player then what happened is that a lot just a lot of goodwill that they had or they did offer community with a military have been chosen that is going one of the mom and so whoever is going to have to deal with them is going to be considered part i as well. we have sin indicate pockets on angina, extending their support dawson and otherwise. so they might be able to help taliban floored in the longer on that whether they're going to accept about the communities on the question altogether. yes. don't forget that 20 years back when all of them
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was in power and i've gone to some little countries that so they are parked on united auto trips and 41 was. so that is exactly what is going to happen in the for several tricia even does transform themselves pause. they kind of credible political power, given their track record. in the last couple of weeks, i don't international community going to accept and lead to med bowers, that just something that's need to be walked out at least to discuss a melinda, mr. a. professor of international political studies at lancaster university. joining us here live one on the international. we appreciate it. thank you for your time. thank you. la catholic priest has been murdered in western france the killers reportedly a migrant who's under judicial supervision on suspicion of setting fire to non cathedral a year ago. a paula clear fathers report from france. the 16 year old catholic
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creek was murdered in waste and france in the region of the body of the man has found we understand that he was killed in his room. now, according to the interior minister, the suspect can solve handed himself over almost immediately off to the murder. he confessed to the murder, and he is waiting and to provision for having been involved in a fire that got a large part of the cathedral in man. last year, we understand that the suspect is a 40 year old one, the asylum pico, who has been living in france or waiting for several years. he was known to his victim. he was being welcomed into the catholic community and was serving as a volunteer at the church. now, according to the senator who represents this region, he named the victim as olivia man and had this to say deeply shocked by
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the terrible murder of the priest had taken his murderer into his care. the 1st petition marine has said that this is unprecedented with really quick to seize upon the incident and admits how remarkable it was that somebody who was involved in the fire at the cathedral was in fact not expelled from the country. taken listened in france, you can therefore be legal said on fire. the cathedral of nand never be expelled and go further by murdering a priest. what is happening in our country is of unprecedented gravity. it is the complete failure of the state and observed gentlemen on the country consider minister. we needed me to marine the pen accusing her of not knowing the facts and saying that she was so quick to point fingers when she should be showing compassion to the catholic community. what a shame rather than expressing her compassion to catholics. madame le pen is entering into debate without knowing the facts. this foreign could not be deported
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despite his deputation order, and he was still under judicial watch. at this stage, the motive is unclear, but it certainly highlights the whole issue of immigration, which is a hot potato in france, and will remain one in mixtures presidential election when, when the pin will be one of the candidates facing off the common president, emanuel mac cron well, the staying in france for the meantime as anti corona virus measures again being tightened with a set of new rules coming into force. this monday citizens will now have to provide a covert health pass to access boss restaurants or travel long distance. the infectious delta varying has increased daily case load, allegedly, to over 20000 at the pass plans have been while seeing weeks of nationwide fury the the
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the, the me, the so called a health pass is already required for cinemas and museums. but now that will include cafes, whether indoors or outdoors. also, hotels will not be asking to see one as well. and one will also be needed for domestic flights, long distance bus journeys on in a city trains. as we understand, both of our metro and suburban trains remain pass free. even hospitals, for example, of falling under these new rules with exceptions, only being made for a and e. now to get a pass which comes in q r code form, you need to have been injected or passed a coping test in the last 72 hours. those with a certificate saying they recently recovered from the virus also qualify. despite
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protests, the french mainstream media says most locals, most french actually support this new system. but we got very mixed reaction on the streets of paris. tommy, it's norman. i put my car, the material. this is clearly blackmail. it's even putting certain jobs on the line as well. thank you. if you're not inoculated, it's all awful. no, this is not a sign of dictatorship for real dictatorship. go and look at north korea or in china. i think this is all nonsense. forcing us to do this, but they're smart enough to make us do it in the right way. i think last in relation till this are only considering themselves, but not that people, that's not freedom. if people don't want to do this for now, this should be allowed to not have, i think having the health passed in place as good as it gives you reassurance when you go somewhere. very heated discussion about right now on line r t dot com at least 3 months if you're in protest all across from your news
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