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tv   News  RT  September 26, 2021 10:00am-10:30am EDT

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things away dr. because the tax laws, you know, definitely do benefit the wealthier people and our society. so it makes sense for them to throw it out right off rather than give it to somebody who could use it. because then that person is not going to buy it the the week tell stories, and i see the russian city of perm morton's, the loss of 6 people killed in a university shooting. our correspondent traces the steps of the team gunman, deadly rampage. this is the exact road the perpetrator took while he was carrying out his vicious planet. also ahead from safe political dialogue within nato is nonexistent, has the us and britain struggles to come french unger over a security park with us. true and german voters are no accounting their ballots and
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a knife edge raised to the ban dish or special coverage to look back at uncle marco, 16 years up the hill. sizes up the main contenders bonding to replace. ah . with the top stories from the past 7 days and right up to the moment development and says, well, welcome to the weekly news recap, the russian city of perm isn't morning after this week's university gun massacre. 6 people were killed on monday by a student who classmates described as a silence and lonely teenager and warning you may find the following images disturbing. another 40 people were injured in the shooting. most of them students, many are still fighting for their lives. are tease coating thing. ross called has
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been retracing this steps taken by the killer. this is the exact road. the perfect trader took while he was carrying out his vicious plan. and this is, by the way, the exec street, where he fired at a passing car as he was making his way towards the campus. ah, the gunman showed up at the university faculty building. and this is where he was 1st film by terrified students. they were staring at him as he strode across the park with a hunting rifle. ammunition wrapped around his body. ah, i didn't know this, but when i was leaving university, a group of people had already gathered that turns out we had 15 minutes earlier. we could have been in that situation. it was very scary. we usually go to the building
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the next time we are in the building. out that it was this little, even today. ah, that's the building where are these horrific scenes unfolded just meters away from where we're standing now. people were jumping from a height of about 4 meters spalding heavily onto the ground. many of them have suffered serious injuries because of that hasty evacuation to my fee was among those who jumped. this is him on the video falling from the window. fortunately, he didn't suffer any injuries. unlike other students. movie gillian, we saw a guy walking across the square holding a gun aiming at our building. he fired a shot and then disappeared from our line of sight and we realized we had to do something better with us. the system has been identified as an 18 year old freshman at the university and
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a social media pose he made. shortly before he embarked on the shootings, he talked about hatred for men and in general. and that he'd been planning to commit a mass murder for several years. yeah . well, it looks like nobody's in there. this is the suspects department, that is where he lived with his mother. and they told us that after she was called in by the investigative committee, she then decided to move elsewhere away from the media. attention near the house. we met the suspect. former classmates remembered him as a silent and lonely teenager who didn't have a lot of friends. they also ran into him the morning he went to shoot people all the cable tv. he was quiet and shy, not very sociable, and he always slow when he walked in the news of the game that day, he walked differently. that day he worked with confidence quickly with broad steps . of course, the main question and everyone's mind now is how 18 year old got hold of
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a firearm. while he bought it legally, he passed the medical test. he was that advice. a high tree is who apparently hadn't found anything odd about this quite young man. there was a been footage taken in one of the guns doors on the outskirts of berg right here, where the light shooter purchased himself, ammo as he was getting ready for the mass. murder, ah ah, we were welcome at the store. you want to get your name was crystal clear about this tragedy is that it could have been much worse if it hadn't been for 2 heroic traffic police officers who just happened to be in the vicinity. when the shooting started,
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both officers rushed to the campus with one of them quickly running into the attack . open fire that officer constantine calling in return fire. wondering the suspect . and then he administered 1st 8 or the gun mans and hospital in a serious condition. although he has survived and even regain conscious, i can say that about the city though hard because pearham is still trying to come to terms with the nightmare that has just happened. then as you can see, people are still gathering at this make shift memorial to honor the memory of the deceased. the us and britain are scrambling to men the rest with the front softer side lining their ally in a security packed with us. really, a president biden has now admitted it was wrong to strike the deal behind paris is back after the french defense chief said political dialogue within nato has all but disappeared. latitude is it, as you knew,
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the attitude of the united states. one of the submarine program is a further investigation of them servatius that we have been making for months today . political dialogue is non existent within the atlantic alliance. let's get further into the door teeth. donal quarter reports though, and the crux appearing within the western military alliance, and how the british prime minister is humbling the pressure what, what do you say? you have only a have a great evening, mutual protection, a greater common purpose. all this seems to go out the window and there's a bit of money to be made. the recent controversy surrounding the u. s. u. k, and australia is new security pack has left in new leaders scratching their heads about what even means to be in nato anymore. the reason for nato existence is transatlantic security. this is what we want to remind the united states off. therefore, our partners decided on our initiative as well as on the initiative of germany to
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revise the strategic concept of the alliance. being allies does not mean being hostage to the interests of another country. at 1st, the spat seemed confined to only a few powers. france being upset with the suspension of its submarine contract with australia, which resulted from offices, the provisioning of nuclear sub technology to the country. and the entire strategic alliance is feeling the reverb. it is such a difficult issue where we see traditional alliances in some way torn apart are certainly changed fundamentally, but the issue doesn't stop there. london doesn't even feel like they've done anything wrong. it's 3 very like mine did allies standing shoulder to shoulder creating a new partnership for the sharing of technology. it is not exclusive. i did not trying to to shoulder anybody. i did not at the stereo towards china. you states feeling like they were left, hung out to dry, the u. s. and u. k. and making decisions without consulting their friends with nato's ongoing
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friendship. crisis airing it's member states dirty laundry. many are finding it hard to see a strong united future for the west. over 7 decade long military alliance, nato was considered by franz a month ago began to go by president my whole as brain dead, a brain dead alliance, best strong words within nato. they want to revise the concept. he's teaching concepts and bring it back actually to the north atlantic. because if you follow america, nato will soon be in the pacific, cruising around china with us. this is not the way nature was conceived, and it shouldn't be there. your opinions should not be in that region of the world markets that repeatedly, that we should enlarge, our vision any desperately look to something to do. that's the reality. you know, we are in the, i mean, maintain what's in the scanner stuff is in iraq. to train the forces. that's the
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limits of the extension. this is not the north atlantic anymore. is it? london on washington of both. welcome the orchestra, but time between the 2 countries aren't exactly iron strong. joe biden has played done the chances of a post briggs a trade deal with the u. k. and that's re further over the so named special relationship as simon right. takes us through. remember the old joke. how can you tell a politician who's lying? because their lips move well, joe biden embark johnson sold that problem when they met in washington. the last event is that the western well dashed down for new york for a special meeting in washington. the kind of weird news conference where everyone, because the special relationship is still a thing, even though we all know is not really the facade of these they, they don't even really use the phrase. and in the absence of anything else, they just thought the bond over trying to keep down an abstract. is that right?
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i did. you did. i did. 1000000 miles. i'll stay the rest of that. the train went on for too many. the mission for the british prime minister was to spin the very obvious truth. the post brack that britain passed basically no chance of getting a free trade deal with us anytime. yep, biden said no. but now actually saying we're going to talk about trade in today. and we're gonna have to work at through work it through. indeed some report suggests that britain is going to try and bought in the back door of a trade off between the us, canada, mexico. anyway, every time someone brings up the idea of a free trade deal with britain, by and does that we thing way bang going about the new border. it will, however, very keen to try and show how united they are ahead of the $26.00 climate summit in law is going to come november. you made a commitment on supporting the the world to adapt it to climate change,
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doubling the american commitment that very important for our school. so like everything else is just the diplomatic show reports in january, suggested the u. s. o britain to get a grip on how it was planning conference, essentially washington telling britain to plan its own policy. so the special relationship is in this kind of place now, where every now and again, washington throws it, but in britain's way keep open ticket. so boy finally got an invite to the white house off the 2 years down close they of course they had the job, the bottom, the orchestra in the military alliance in australia. because while trade deal the hard military deal to a penny with a lot, the most telling me was this one page one, how often ending the news conference was for? it was still literally in the middle of a sentence before the boy himself fed on the plane over to the us time and sure biden of the law of fish to fry
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and see locked on raleigh's in the is trillion city of melbourne, of lead to some brittle encounters with police. one video ha, surface of a man being hurled to the ground. unrestrained. state to police say they are investigating the case. a warning, some disturbing footage had the oh, over 90 people were arrested in melbourne on saturday during a 6 day of on rest covered 900 cases. there have been on the right since july, but thousands defied a stay at home order to attend the rallies. being fueled by a mandatory cobit shot order for construction workers adding to the regions, horse locked on measures the
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me the the reviews back and you got hope and i said to
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the very person all the while the trillion prime minister in says people need to get jobs if they want restrictions to end. we've been very successful saving lives, but we've also got to give people their lives back. and i think that's what a strategy and wanted to get your feel facts and i did. and we can ensure that a strike can go forward and not be held back. a lot of pushback against that earlier in the week. victoria state law enforcement called for the earth space over melbourne to be restricted only to police helicopters,
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news. let's challenge the plan with a court, then ruling choppers could fly, but only with police approval. australian for as little as getting rosner gave us his view on the my suspicion is i did that because they thought that there was so many angry and frustrated people in melbourne that it people saw, had been the protest were, but actually come and joining. and we can't be under any illusions as to what's happening here. for the 1st time in australia, the victorian police has since effectively since the broadcast media. once you have the police censoring the free press, you are entering a very, very dangerous territory. we are using can to terrorism police officers on australian citizens on protest. we shouldn't have a situation where police protest prints free protest this baldly with rubber bullets. would you guess police climates, because on the crown of ours rules, you can't gather publicly for any reason, including protesting. i actually think there's an element of politicization that's
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occurred upstream police brutality. we're saying it is an attempt to crush people who crushed a thing to, to baldly tight down. people who disagree with these in sign at a p. freedom locked and was a passenger train of the real in the us state of montana killing at least 3 people on injuring dozens more. the truck train was heading from seattle to chicago on saturday afternoon, carrying a 141 passengers in 16 crew members. 7 of the 10 cars derailed along a straight section of track the cause. busy of the disaster is so far on clear and the investigation is ongoing. go ahead in the program solid sir now being cast in germany's election. so the nation prefers for life after america will be exploring her 16 year legacy and special coverage out for the shortest the break. the
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hello, this is driven by dream shaped by those with the in me dares think we dare to ask me. ah, yes, no, they didn't take into account one thing for their own capabilities. i didn't want to face the truth if you will. view lots. and the truth is that the u. s. is no longer capable of playing the role of global hagaman. i mean the role which had had
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assigned to itself and took a weapon glove. by the way, you do more with the hello again. voting is now well under way in germany in what shipping up to be a knife edge contest. now there's one big question on voters minds this sunday who's going to replace anglo merkel after 16 years after him. the ah. yeah. and like previous german federal elections, voters are essentially going to the polls had no clear idea as to who may emerge
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just chancellor. the outgoing liter uncommercial has endorsed her own parties, candidates arm and lush. it, although posters have name, social democratic leader left shore says favorite shows to a strong challenge from the parties seen as a coalition power broker, the greens, one of the issues looming over the election is of course, the pandemic on saturdays rallies in berlin against vaccines. and relentless restrictions, with the latest reminder of how divided people are over how it cobit should be dealt with marco's constantly taking a tough line and curves lockdown, sparking frequent unrest over the past. you're a well charged at merkel of time in power us how to ties this lows and plenty of challenges from immigration to cobit and to being spied on by her friends in washington or europe correspond. and peter oliver has more in that aspect. after almost 16 years in charge, the time has come for angle merkel to step down as german chancellor. drawing the curtain on a political korea of over 3 decades. coming to office in 2005. she's the 3rd
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longest serving german chancellor of old time, only her mentor helmet. cole held the position longer in postwar, germany, anglo myrtle have achieved something that most politicians haven't. at the time of leaving office. she has remained popular with a large chunk of the voters. no small achievement. when you look at the challenges she's had to face me, germany weathered the financial storm that began with the collapse of layman brothers back in 2008 better than most countries. a 480000000000, euro bailout for the banks and managing to keep on employment figures from spiking to high, sor, i'm the local, reelected in 2009. then came the collapse of grief and the fear that could never pay any of it to lawful that pushed the single current, the close to the brink and
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a tidal wave of criticism crushing down on merkel and her government's view. 2013. so whistleblower. edward snowden reveal that the united states had kept detailed tubs on senior german officials, including chancellor merkel, her phone being tapped by washington. protests on the streets of germany were followed up with more diplomatic comment from the chancellor. have always made it clear to the u. s. president, buying amongst friends is not acceptable to me. one of the biggest moments of angle americans tenure came in 2015 with the refugee crisis. her statement via shuffle. so we can do it. she did a policy which saw hundreds of thousands of refuge. she is fleeing the conflict and syria coming here to germany. something which saw anglo merkel revealed by some reviled by others. each daughter guns, i simply say that germany,
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the strong country, we have already managed so many things. we can do it on these. and whenever there is something sending, you know, way, if you need to cross that bridge, which is need to work and see if these are going to invite the indoor. so we have not migrant glows in such forms before. and what we are seeing right now has no relevance to the present rule. this is merkle. repeat constantly, we will cope with it, but she is not offered a structured solution yet. on to the chancellor medical actions in regard to refugees change the makeup of the german parliament is opposition to her policies on asylum allowed. b m. t migrant. alternative for germany party to win seats in the bottom, the stag, becoming the largest opposition party to her government, making things difficult to her when addressing the chamber. i me that being no easy run to the finish line for angle american,
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the government's policies on the coven pandemic set off a small but vocal opposition. that at one point threatened to storm the bottom to stuck. the me me, me, me, the retreat from afghanistan provided the chancellor with more problems in her final weeks with accusations of rifts within her cabinets over how best to evacuate people from cobble and then issues over who had been able to get on german planes. because that's the, it will continue the evacuation operation for as long as possible in order to help
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afghans who work with us or security. freedom for the rule of law and development to leave the country. we currently have a very pragmatic procedure. we only carry out the security check upon entry to the country. we have now identified 4 cases of people who had already been deported. border now in germany with, as she prepared to vacate the chancellor's office just behind me. alarm bells ringing loudly an angle of miracles, christiy, and democratic union party as they slump to record lows in the poles. the chancellor's final address to the bone, the stag, which became a attempt to promote the d. you candidate arm and lush, it as her successor ended in a barrage of hackles. god isn't, it's not just about foreign policy and nato in europe. and my, what if i have been with this gym and buddha says for with he is,
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here is the heart of the democracy. and this is exactly what will be discussed me. despite the obvious challenges, the merkel years will go down as a time of relative stability for most germans. her policies have made it easier for families to balance. children with korea's employment figures have remained steady while the economy is enviable in the you. internationally, germany has taken a far more prominent role under miracles leadership than it is had in modern times . one of the big concerns right now though, is that with no clear successor to angle america in terms of policy or certainly international clout, what will become of those years of stability that we've seen to her reign feature all of her r, t, berlin, unjust in terms of how things work. as regards the vote, germans don't directly choose a chancellor. they elect members of the industry like who will later pick
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a chancellor to lead. what in practice as old as a coalition government? each voter receives to ballad papers. the 1st is for candidates in the electoral district, there are $299.00 such constituencies across the country. the 2nd ballot is for a political party. there are 47 of them fine for 6, but only parties with more than 5 percent of the vote nationwide can enter parliament will none of the german parties are expected to secure a clear lead. so there's likely to be plenty of post election wrangling on forming a governing coalition. german law professor elmore d mueller shared his take with us on the possible line up. the only thing we certainly noticed that when part is, is just a big in the future government because they needed to coalition attributed a coalition may be together the democratic national social democrats of the greens unnecessary entity. so the question is can
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the majority to gather the into the most likely then he needs the liberal party to form a majority called coalition. the other option is from my point of view. ready a bit less preferably that it would be a social, democratic, quoted, and green coalition to cut a long story short my view as it did most likely be a coalition bit of christian democrats, unless it will be the chancellor. next johnson, the greens definitely. and of course, will be so voting as well on the way in one of the most keenly contested german elections in decades. we will bring you all the latest on the pallet right here on our team, on our website r t dot com, all right. good day check in with us when you come the
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ah, i look forward to talking to you all. that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, accept where's the short or conflict? with the 1st law show your identification. we should be very careful about artificial intelligence. the point obviously is to great truck, rather than fear i would take on various jobs, artificial intelligence, we have so many demons, the robot must protect its own existence with
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join me every 1st day on the alex simon show. and i'll be speaking to guess in the world, the politics sport, business. i'm show business. i'll see you then in the me the me i turn the welcome to all the parts in the english language. it's hard to find a more ontology.

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