Skip to main content

tv   Documentary  RT  September 16, 2021 11:30am-12:00pm EDT

11:30 am
another c, c on the c lowest to talk. therefore, if the question refers to diplomatic asylum, there is, of course, no general international law obligation to recognize right of diplomatic asylum. while the same can put in this plan, i'm not going to go good in the end of the very manager in which governments can only do 2 things to show the same day. there's an impromptu meeting between wiki leagues and
11:31 am
a high ranking swedish official door. talked about you, you limiting the time and attention particular cases where the person hasn't been charged. so i really, i'm really sorry. we have we have stepped into question submitted responses to have a person who is taking a crime into a tablet charges. and he's like a and a human right? yes, yes, definitely not more time than it's necessary for them to see the thing that you don't have a demonstration on that and there's no obligation on to the next . i think
11:32 am
the in those countries, pre trial detention is limited to a few hours. but the problem for lawyers is that sweden continues to insist that assange was motorist at a time rested co, not the lawyers have no doubt about it. that higher authority must confirm their arguments with the legal team's next step is to bring the case to the us working group. an arbitrary detention with something going on. always does to go to the international when local laws are insufficient or too restrictive use to determine if somebody has been improperly deprived of liberty. this group of experts listened to the arguments presented by the governments involved in sweden and the united kingdom. take part in the process of
11:33 am
issuing a decision can take several months a time that will be increasingly difficult for the london refugee in the ah, people are much west, it's way sions, and i mean, they're also people in better situations. it just means that you need to be really diligent about dealing with trying to exercise lives because it's nice to try and have lives going on at the right time of day and off. but all the time, me like people watching all the space station that you have to deal with the absence of light the lashes.
11:34 am
hughes said you're on the news. the kelly, you see yesterday i don't see the company them in the must look metrics on it is going to handle that. just in the hampton. that a sample of fun with the data center met, met coming in from the embassy. there's always an activist, vigilant in 1998, got mass chief investigating judge and madrid ordered the arrest of ex dictator pino tent, who was currently in london in
11:35 am
awe. thus, he applied the principle of international jurisdiction, the idea behind it some crime so. so serious that they have take all of humanity and can be prosecuted by any judge regardless of where they were committed. peanut jets arrest was a warning to dictators and leaders responsible for genocides, who enjoy impunity and the laws of their own country. crimes against humanity could now be prosecuted by any prosecutor or judge in the world. the 1st on how care hacker the hacker can control. hack and lay is just minus us ever putting the pack e s. s. hackers guessing is, was come years in a systemic. this was good morning sir. for my good. if they're lucky to good,
11:36 am
i went from the left left because of the middle of the unit. while waiting for the decision from the un legal team maintain their offensive in the diplomatic arena, the got to where you with that 1st, let's review what has happened. be a bomber administration supported by varying degrees via the west and allies in the last 80 years wishes and journalists under the espionage act and all previous presidencies combined. jeremy hammond sentenced to 10
11:37 am
years buried brown, us journalists recently sentenced to 60 is john kerry aucker. the only person arrested and convicted in relation to ca, torture. the only person in the united states, his role. he has now being detained for 1760 days. but he has been sentenced to 35 years. edward snowden, william benny. similarly, in relation to national security agency, orange was united states face to 50 years, been brilliant, president and $1000000.00 to find a personal friend of mine. a volunteer for wiki makes you ended up very badly being persecuted, literally to death 2 years ago, al serra harrison who assisted us with transporting it would slayton from hong kong into a place of asylum in eventually, in russia. what
11:38 am
a number of these cases have in common is not simply that the recent or that are conducted sometimes without any charge or that their abuses in the, in the formal process. it is that a technique has been developed in the west where the process was clearly the punishment. she thought she's young enough to see him. but i though, in the sense that it just full $9.87 saying when what i mean is that for, for sitting for me or, or should he don't, they will media only got worse than one of the me in the don't
11:39 am
know solution when they feel which i mean to see, so they will not just do that in just that, but i see that i know i have often said transparency for the powerful privacy for the palace, but it cares about privacy. i think there's some, there's some basic, maybe instinctual over there, privacy affairs between mothers, when you go to the toilets or whatever one privacy, that's it actually human instinct. but if we look beyond that long as a damn about privacy, what people care about is power. and the relative balance of power between small organizations, the smaller witches of family and large organizations, have it. information is power and issue. a larger organization has a lot of information about you and you don't have information on that larger organization. it has even more power or the using it otherwise would have. so
11:40 am
privacy is a way for individuals and small organizations to preserve the small amount of power that they already have. mm. mm. mm. the merger of our societies with the internet and the internet with our societies has allowed a really amazing lateral trans, severe foundation where we're able to learn from each other much more than we could . on the other hand, it is allowed state intelligence organizations and there contractors who work for them to collect more information. it is in some ways the greatest theft of wealth that has ever occurred me.
11:41 am
most of the transfer information is coming from the bottom of these powerful intelligence organizations. and organizations like google, facebook, where helix does it the other way. we take information from a very powerful reservations, the most powerful ations, and we put it in the public record where everyone can use this unusual who's we're giving people a choice. if you have information about how the world is working around you, then you have a choice that what you support, but you don't support but you do with your life with the
11:42 am
the pacific leg around the world expedition 5000 miles round the clock and the dead calm miss vanish as every country close by like the crew, gavin's food and water, and food to check those for shelter. blue on the little thing is got everybody locked down or no more? no food and no water. but really, i'm not sure. somebody either stuck
11:43 am
a fish in the cove if you're living like the semen of home, but in the 21st century, ah ah, the ah ah wiki leeks is back in the news after he published wednesday, part of the secret tax of
11:44 am
a massive new trade pack called the trans pacific partnership or g p. p. nowadays, to wiki leaks, we haven't even better idea of just how dangerous the t p. p really is lovely. the gpc would sacrifice national sovereignty, public health and the internet. freedom to school. a huge struggle with governments. corporations who want to keep information secret and others who the democratic rights shouldn't be pushed forward and people have a right to know what to do in the lawyers have found out that google's in response to warren from the u. s. department of justice has turned over everything from wiki leaks, journalist accounts, every email, contact matter data. for me, my account that i had was actually a past the one that i had from a long time ago. and this regards to how the us government is
11:45 am
treating what they were actually doing with bright going off that private email account in the home position would get them something to you to attack the organization and. and so, and she's very to concern all of you can give the warrant for google confirms to the lawyers that the case the united states is secretly building against wiki leaks is not just paranoia. it has a case number. one of the charges is s p m dash you have an international espionage case that has sucked in dozens of
11:46 am
people to its grand jury process. that has pulled in 3 was from google and others. thousands of pages is information that has gone explicitly off the journals. that is what it called the whole of governance investigation. what other states call hollow government investigation, which is the largest investigation ever into a publisher, which is an extra territorial maneuver by the united states to engulf foreign publishes in claims of espionage and its immediate case? surely this is the sexiest media case ever. but nonetheless, there's something that's even sexier than an international espionage case. and that is a sex case. and in sweden, there suddenly movement in this case although the appeals court declined to crush the arrest, boring for his sons. it also criticized the prosecution's passivity and demanded
11:47 am
that marianna knew move forward with the investigation. she may now change her mind about traveling to london to question a thumbs. the days elevated in a few other thing if your mental shows you like to monitor. but when it's done, you should, she will not get it. like when we're senators are pretty well enough because if she did, i say yes, yes. if you don't want to be on the form here, but i mean it just comes into the sort of while with city one. okay. and
11:48 am
what do you watch? we have breaking news warning. they are now offering to travel to london to question trillion of dodge for the band to come to them. they'll come to fidget, come under 5 years of limitation. so it is possible to interrogate the funds in london and sweden is in a hurry. they do so my lawyer said, i don't want to trumpet that victory because any correlation, even a victorious correlation with a sex case. his name, the prosecutor, marianna, knew arranges a meeting with the sons for the questioning. but that is not enough. ecuador, in sweden, after sign a judicial corporation agreement for the agreement between echoed or in sweden is
11:49 am
not ready in time. and the questioning is cancelled. ah, you were going to attempt an interview, which was just 3 days after you sent the request. when you have agreement with that go for this. so i just want to understand how you can justify the claim that you want treating him like anybody else will be found behind in the afternoon. you can actually put a time to day if the 2nd fiasco government court yet see it or not to just let us know about somebody which i assume that is approved on it to the school board and mentor for where you had an on that. so you are, you have a sandwich, friends, house, before i bought to steven, the steward sickening gets through or the flu shot your back. and i was out last summer to be in the potter on julia and i saw on july the house. none. i mean,
11:50 am
you'll make statements off to you violates his rights by his name coming out. i mean, i'm sorry for some reason where everybody, you know, the 3 left, the allegations expire, they will never be clarified me. now, what has happened? they are talking about swedish because we're talking about the swedish case and no one's now talking about the case. there was there in the beginning that it's still ongoing, which is as far as i'm concerned, which is the great danger to me and to the organizations a whole, which is this massive espionage investigation. mm. let's be serious. we are in a conflict situation with the largest, most powerful employer. that's what it is that has every system
11:51 am
in such a situation. it's remarkable to survive though. hey, how are you all about? going to see you again. we know that there's been a grand jury against against wikileaks. in essence, now, the attempts to prosecute wikileaks have lasted over 5 years. the procedure in the united states is that before someone can be prosecuted for a serious crime, the constitution, the constitution requires an indictment by a grand jury. welcome to the federal grand jury service. you are here today because you've been asked to take part in our democratic process by serving as a member of a federal grand jury. it's a job of great importance, grounded in the constitution that guarantees our freedoms. the drafters of the
11:52 am
constitution knew that deciding whether or not to accuse someone of a crime is an enormous power. so they created the grand jury. but the problem is that the grand jury, it happens in secret. the grand jury can compel testimony. they can issue search warrants, they can use the patriot act to conduct surveillance. so when the prosecutors prosecute, they decide, i mean, they look at the map and they decide where to bring the case. so they decided to bring allegiance agencies. so guess why? so the they pick, they pick the jurors. well, ok, you were here and say, your wife is gonna say everyone's connected. exactly. thank you. i hope all of you will enjoy your grand jury experience. we do know that the prosecution of wiki leaks and includes espionage computer fraud,
11:53 am
conspiracy and theft of u. s. government property. but now i'm running a former military intelligence analyst. my name was accused of leaking to wiki leaks, thousands of confidential documents about the was in iraq and afghanistan. her punishment was harsher than the one imposed on the service men accused of committing war crimes or torture in the same conflict. during 3 years of prosecution and trial manning was the victim of humiliation and humane treatment and torture. phone, just defend fears, he may suffer the same fate if he's indicted, an expedited to the united states. i guess telephone english could shuttle out into it and sure enough, gentle casino lewis in a moment o p. c. last port. okay. and then no. okay, no, i saw
11:54 am
a quote to run your gussy thing. go and you seem to see on the part of this poise unless you say that he's been denied medical attention. sanchez, been suffering from severe upper body pain and limited movement of his shoulders. and the doctor has recently been in the embassies to try to diagnose it. but the doctor's completed that for full diagnosis on needs and m r i and this is not possible with you and the embassies to me, to go to the hospital in the southern or look at in the i'm i guess it is even done for tomorrow in the secret field, a matter of you know, in october 2015, a quote, request safe passage to take a psalms to a hospital. the you, katie, nice. the petition is fun. just health problems are not only physical in december
11:55 am
2015. a medical report evaluated the impact that indefinite confinement could have on his mental health. the report owns that his health will deteriorate if he remains in his current situation. it concludes such stressful circumstances with no end in sight can lead 2014 and destructive consequences. with the potential to become life threatening him the medicaid system for him and his the mr. momento, park, and also listed on the field. but he actually something happens he has to exceed the place because it's his life is place. i mean, he's, if i'm in that situation, i don't know what, you know if there's something we can, we do not understand that there is no proceeding in the u. k for such an emergency
11:56 am
unless they handle this and that is their new local case and better than others. ignore them ascending calmness. nope. or them or gun. don't even know if you're not meant this, you know, i say most another local ment literally. you know, see i got not a moment, then we'll get it. if you can, why do not premier i will go ahead equal a given they got the run was run the she misses something from them. they've got the right this with what and they got the order they got the us with. yeah. ordering that there was going to go his and they got the right for the i'm for the most you can much. what if i working group i'll commit to that. it just remind or i'll tell you or you got guess it, mr. moody ended up. so i give me the guy the
11:57 am
the in the 19 twenties and since he is several 100 african americans move to the soviet union, and many of their descendants still live in russia. no, no rush, but i still have yet to be truthful. nice things was that richard lum duck back home, black american suffered from racism and a complete lack of prospects. not but the real be losing sure. one by elsa store room provide you with the full ranger. so they decided to leave everything behind and start a new life in a country about which they knew almost nothing at all. some of the african
11:58 am
americans who went to the union in the 930 found great success monet blown to me. and now almost a 100 years later, history is repeating itself. my great grandfather, george time, went to russia. party the worst time to go anywhere. why not mean what is come here? ah, ah, working machine. she popped in, she said, well, i'm getting ready to go. shopping for christmas and we, we said there was a good device to another, shooting another safe part of american life. shattered by violence. the gunman was armed with an a r 15, semi automatic rifle. when the issue comes home,
11:59 am
it's time to act. when we're filing on this issue, the other side wins by default, lady that lived over there. i was walking one of the dogs. she said, why do you wear again? were you scared? that's such a good offer that i think people need to take responsibility in their own hands and be prepared if those kind of weapons were less available. we wouldn't have a lot of shootings and we certainly wouldn't have the number that i me the news the news. good evening,
12:00 pm
i'm welcome to our coverage of the 2020 more russian state, duma reelections. we have chosen one of the best feeds in moscow. and the most appropriate one politically, is it overlooks the feminine base of operations that is from here, that we will be counting down to 3 days of voting, which will be getting underway now in under 24 hours.

19 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on