tv News RT November 12, 2021 5:00am-5:31am EST
5:00 am
in sports like gymnastics, swimming here, is that documentary? see it on our tv. ah, there i between bellow recently, ye guess worst with minsk now accusing poland in lithuania, have using the migrant crisis to get more money from brussels while amid the builder of asylum seekers on the better russian polish border artesian rif, an ocean, a speech for the human trafficker who takes migrants into western europe and gives an exclusive insight into the shady business. they don't get caught germany put, they put them down and asylum centers. and after a while to get permits because they flow the id cards so they can't be deported. as german authorities don't know where they come from. and hundreds of her homework is to protest in london after being told they will lose their jobs unless they get because the jap, similar threats being issued in other countries to be put the story up for debate.
5:01 am
window anti vaccine. you know, we can see the importance of having the vaccine. however, i think you're just going to different level when it's compulsory. i'd expect the care workers to be immunized or we have to be careful to not let covered once again . mass a lot of the social issues that are going on. ah i good afternoon. you watching out international driscoll, 1 o'clock here in the russian capital. now the escalating standoff like the migrants on the poland, bella rouge border has spilled over into the united nations. larisse accusing poland. i'm lithuania using the crisis to get extra funding from the european union . 6 members of the security council, hurley blamed the bell russian president of trying to destabilize neighboring countries. a statement though,
5:02 am
that found little traction with the russian side. we. the current european union members of the security council condemn the orchestrated instrumentalists zation of human beings. or there is a game or for shifting blaine now or european union. remember about the reasons why these people are really, are fleeing their countries, which countries destroyed or they are countries. international organizations need to be provided with immediate and unhindered access to people. they're in to small problem for journalists for jose for go to the places where the migrants are placed . on, on the contrary, there is no excess for and chose for journalists fall into years to the areas where the $15000.00, according to some estimates polish. garth's asi cheetos were back in september, poland did introduce the state of emergency on its eastern frontier with bella race . and as we heard their journey scenarios are effectively banned from the area
5:03 am
aching, reporting and also delivering aid. they're pretty much impossible. instead, $15000.00 per year, so which is were deployed at the border to ensure that the migrants could not enter the country when it comes to sizes of asylum seekers. camp for 4th night and on the batteries to poland. frontier in the hope of gaining entry to the european union, despite the aid provided by the bell russians, humanitarian organizations, and also activists situation does still remain. di, there migrants including women and children, do have to endure freezing temperatures and the lack of basic supplies. we spoke to people at the cap, leave police pollen there. let me police yell up up your police, police know ditty with nobody with the song of the song water we have our call called very called please feel of the pupil paul on we have in your rehab and i'm nothing with our country with
5:04 am
if you got it in germany. oh to god to re so just for better life even even when we discuss the situation with independent journalist martin summers, he does the thing that poland isn't allowing angio and media at the border over a fear of bad publicity. lawyers was sort of url for a terry instinct on, on behalf of the polish authorities. what have they got to hide? why can't journalist report from a polish site? i think it's because they intend to take it fairly hard line with anybody who tries to cross the border uses to gus, possibly truncheons and so forth. but that's very bad publicity from poland, so they don't want people to be seen as well. not really presumably why they don't want journalist reporting, we need to know what's going on. and i don't think there's any emergency here that the polish authorities can justify. to say that they shouldn't have journalists reporting on it. i mean, it's not
5:05 am
a war. nobody's being killed as far as we know. why should be reporting about what's happening, what the movement of people we are currently seeing then at the bell, russian polish border is happening elsewhere too. on a much larger scale, an influx of people fleeing conflicts in the middle east did begin years ago. and they were now well established routes to try and get to western europe. and we can have a look at some of those are here to are starting from pakistan, for example, and afghanistan, they do head 3 east in europe before reaching italy and germany. and in fact, the u. n. does say to that 75000 migrants have traveled through bosnia and herzegovina since 2018 parties. murray, phenomena did manage to speak to a paypal trafficker. he was offering to take migrants into northern germany rogers wrong, although i think these people illegally cross the border because their governments did not allow them to went to europe using legal methods. they tried to flee and get as quickly as possible to european countries like germany,
5:06 am
switzerland. some of them are on the run for 3 to 4 years. as soon as they cost that border and get into germany, it's a done deal and they are free to travel anywhere within the european union. they don't get caught in germany, but they put them down an asylum centers. and after a while, they get permits because they flow their id cards so they can't be deported as german authority. don't know where they come from. basically we were trying to help them find a better life of ways they most likely would have been caught, put in some kind of asylum center and then reported back to their home countries. now, as soon as they cross the border and get to germany, they are free. it was scary. the 1st time i did this adrenalin fear police drone arrests, a lot of my friends got caught while transporting them. the migrants were sent back and they, my friends, went to prison. most of the activities had done during the night. they're a wild animals. you wait and hedges or canals until you cross over that kind of thing. we came across all kinds of migrants from algeria to nazir,
5:07 am
egypt. i don't know, but there were all kinds which we honestly transported from the gel gina to cause in where as others trick them, stolen them left them on the side of the road, which we stole the money from them. we got no, it was who, when you look at than they look mostly poor and don't look like terrorists of become involved in this business over time for many years, having known some people wages here, a lo, so it is what it is. so for transporting them, you get paid. well, while simultaneously helping some one, it's $300.00 to $500.00 euros per person will area. i did speak to maria about that interview and also the risks that my grants are prepared to take. i remember how surprised i was to 1st hear that to max of is not his real name to go around any people across the border and that the price is between 30500. you are as the person we felt he didn't tell us the truth, but i just couldn't understand why would he lie?
5:08 am
but later off camera, he admitted, boy, he was during, during the interview, he was trying to deliberately diminish these numbers for security reasons. but in all other aspects, facts and details he gave us, i can tell you, he was quite honest. my job in the last few years at least was to transport migrants along with my team from bacel, gina where people had previously transferred them across the serbian border through improvised methods. so we picked them up and transport them obviously at night through some wooded areas. sometimes 510, sometimes 20 mostly kick is in and the clergy in a region where other people then transported the mom. the path was through serbia and also through small or big boats where they would sneak in. they also sometimes travel by laurie's. they get under a laurie, it's a tough road. they come to turkey and also bulgaria, basically through the poor country, so to speak, like albania, bosnia and then they go to cruise, ship germany, and from there i'll swear from turkey, they get transported to bulgaria,
5:09 am
while bulgaria is in the european union. if they get caught there, they get sent back to turkey because there are no asylum laws allowing them to stay there legally. so they come here because it's easy to migrate from here to the european union. you have to understand that whose web covering quite a significant part of the world. and in all trends and countries, let's say from pakistan to germany. you have to understand there are people like macs that years in migrant have to go and pay. as we heard the you and things that something like 70000 people have gone through that country in order to try to get to western europe. why is that? why is it such a popular route? first, if the shortest possible way to get to be today. but there is another reason both, and he's also famous for being loyal to that kind of people because of their pat, of its past, because they still remember how does it feel to be refugee and how does it feel run away from your roads, motherland. the war there was over more than 25 years ago,
5:10 am
but they still remember it. and i can say in a level of, of talking to people still sympathized with refugees and migrants. and another reason, the part from the countries past in the present, the reason the very high level of corruption and very complicated political system and a very high unemployment trade and all day is altogether pushed so many youngsters down the criminal business while you were filming. and pause and the you saw or managed to speak to migrant student. you who sort of going through that trying to get to western europe and heard 1st time their experience. most if you and legal migrant and you want to go to europe, you have basically 2 options to go to people like mags, but that's in case you have money. another option is to do it on your own. and i mean that's really scary. that's more dangerous, you can get caught and no one can give you any guarantee that you will ever succeed . but still many people choose this 2nd option because they don't have money. they don't have other choice. we ask max to take us on his normal journey from a to b,
5:11 am
just how he usually takes migrants, you know, to the equation border out with, in bosnia. and on the way there, while we would just try the, we saw several groups of migrants and we stopped twice. and 1st group was from gonna sunday left the country 4 months ago, right before the talib one came to power there. and another group was from pakistan and they were like 20 people there. i was, i was like shocked, and we stopped and talked. and 1st i was so surprised that they were not hiding in us and why. and they told us they have the official refugee paper is given to them by the balls and authorities. speaking about how loyal this country is to these people. so if they try to across the board and they get deported, they can only be pulled back to bosnia. so they don't have to do this whole journey from scratch from pakistan. are you going, going to tell you the value? yeah. how many? trying?
5:12 am
6 times please just invoice and then you try again. so you have been walking on the title when did you leave bucket time? before you left you 2 years ago and you still want to go, i don't know. i don't the one, the one not going the, you're in bosnia filming, for new documentary. yeah. tell us more about that. we were filming a documentary about one turban guy living in serbian part of both now who long time ago wants to become a priest, but became a soldier instead, because the war came to his mother land and he had to defend his family and his country basically but after the war was over, more than 25 years ago, he was still looking for it somehow. and this is how he ended up working for companies like black water and how he started to leveling to places like iraq,
5:13 am
afghanistan, g, booty, israel long and all, all countries. many of them in africa with so called private security missions. so it's a very motional, very actually said documentary about this person. he that he explained to us that he was pushed 1st to doing that to be a soldier. but after that he got kind of like wor, addiction, so it'll look too much about him. but the raw, at least 2 bigger messages that i want to send 1st is that war is a so bad. but the situation in postwar zone and post conflict countries is sometimes even more dramatic. and that should be addressed. and another message which is especially important for me as a piece advocate is that there are so many wars and conflicts in more than world that people like our main character whose name is to sion will hardly be left jobless anytime soon. and that is very sad story. if an ocean of m,
5:14 am
5:15 am
if we can now look into people's minds read therefore, the question then is a what kind of consequence we, we could take fullness. i think you take the example fly, it would prevent us from lying. we wouldn't be able to lie anymore if everything becomes transparent, but what we're thinking, ah, hello again. now hundreds of people have demonstrated in london after the deadline expired for care hanged staff to get free inoculated against corona virus, with the ultimatum. now, in for so is not vaccinated will lose their jobs. it does come after a separate decision to make vaccines obligatory for health care workers and social
5:16 am
care is in england. the sect is faced losing thousands of employees if they are not fully inoculated, against caveat by april next year, unless medically exempt. what is we said? the deadline has arrived to carry home workers, and some of them shared their concerns with us. breaking the car was forcing vaccine. it's just, it's just a set to fun. what, what's the next thing that we have to do should come down to choices and it's never happened before. happen before where people have been told to take, take anything. so they're going to be really soft and not the people are going to suffer the consequences of everybody leaving. so if you just try and you're not going to be cared for, and then you've got to clean it with it. it's not going to be clean and kind of hard as it was before. no. going to get fed because of all the work is in the kitchen and then we'll say to just going to florida part the whole, the whole thing is what i made high numbers of new cases. mandatory inoculation
5:17 am
policies are becoming more prevalent around the globe. the world health organization insisting to that vaccination is a key part of stopping the pandemic. for example, singapore announced that koby patients for fusing the shots will have to pay their own medical bills and sacks and he has become the 1st german state to limit indoor restaurants, bars and clubs to those who are not collected. who have recently recovered from the disease, increased business is there to restaurant state services, and also banks must present vaccination certificates, all negative test results. and then some pay this burg here in russia is imposing mander free vaccinations for senior citizens. we discussed the impact of these measures with a panel of guests will be a better way to convince people to another to protect themselves, but also protect others. we emphasize the law on handwriting and infection control measures and being sensible. no,
5:18 am
so i am safe distance and so i just feel that the whole force compulsory takes is to another level. it just takes away the choice. and i think that the people are in the con county or the restriction is largely based on trying to prevent transmission. or just trying to get the numbers up to make sure more people are vaccinated, as they circulate in society. we want to get the numbers off because if you get the numbers up a number of positive benefits, a crew one, the person is protected from severe illness and dying. that's one second, they're most unlikely to end up in the hospital. and then the 3rd, a immunized person is infectious for a short period of time. what we're seeing is a lot of confusion in maybe even some moral panic and hysteria that's coming from a lot of these bubbles and communities that are sharing concerns about the fears of not being vaccinated or the fears are being vaccinated. i'm way still vulnerable in,
5:19 am
in our places what like, you know, i'm patients have visitors come in, you know, there's lots of people coming in to the hospitals and i think is unfair to just target those, those health care work because you know and force it in i think a lot of it, when we not really, i mean i went to and see vaccine. you know, we can see the importance of having to vaccine. however, i think you're just going to different level when is compulsory insensitive places? sometimes one rural patients severely, clinically honorable, etc. we've got to ask that you are safe to manage them. and therefore if you are working in that area you've got to be immunized. certainly, i don't know how many my students are vaccinated or not at universities in the u. k . really like sharing that information. it's going to create a scenario where these passports and these documents really have us looking one way or another at somebody and the social ramifications of this,
5:20 am
including the immense inequalities that could come from the treatment of each other . because of these laws and whether people conform or not, i have been talking to a lot of health care workers who have been hesitant about vaccines. a lot of them from menacing homes. and i gave them of my time effort and energy, showing them how the vaccine works, what it does, what it doesn't do, how to protect them, and in the end, most of them went on to get immunized. so we need to do our homework of inform, advise, educate as well. but when connie we, we saw so some of the anger from u. k. care home workers about being told by politicians to get a vaccination. but that will be people who remembered back to last spring and that i was fatality numbers in u. k. cow homes who are going to be thinking, if i'm putting my relative in these care homes, i want people to be vaccinated, they're going to be where it may be. find that behavior selfish? yes, i expect care workers to be immunized because unfortunately,
5:21 am
this corona virus can be infectious and could kill the elderly people without your knowing on the day you were infectious, we have to be careful to not let cove it once again. mass, a lot of the social issues that are going on in society that have been a long time affecting people, causing deaths, causing long time ambulance weights. there are lots of issues that are underlying this, that we just like co overtake here with the government instead of mandatory a covey vaccinations. what would you do to convince people to get a job is not so much about convincing people and people it be mandatory. i think it's more about giving people the choice and given them all the information that they require and letting them have the choice. so inflation in the united states is accelerated to his highest level in over 30 years. supply chain bottlenecks, coven restrictions, and also increasing energy prices. harrell contributing to adding to hives,
5:22 am
so costs ahead of the winter where joe biden has ordered that energy prices are reduced in america. and his blamed rising price is on opec for not producing enough oil. well though, in the same breath, he also wants to shut down oil pipelines in his country over environmental concerns with more his husky title, the holiday season is upon us. but if americans were hoping for at thanksgiving feast store a christmas tree laden with presents no luck, a supply chain crisis is this. here's a grinch bringing mass shortages, delivery delays on record breaking inflation. inflation hurts american spock had books and reversing this trend is a top priority for me. the largest share of the increase in prices and this report is due to rising energy costs. so the president with the tanking ratings, an angry vote has, has conveniently found the guilty party energy. and it's true that prices have
5:23 am
thought, in fact a 3rd of americans had to skip or cut back on necessities like food and medicine to pay that energy bills in recent months. you'd think that wouldn't you, that it wouldn't be the best time to even talk about shutting yet another pipeline . as we enter the winter months in temperatures drop across the midwest, the termination of the michigan or pipeline we lumped outwardly further, exacerbate shortages and price increases in home heating fuels. that's time when americans are already facing rapidly, rising energy prices, steep home heating coast, global supply shortages and skyrocketing gas prices. just the latest and a long line of not in fans of biden's energy policy. no pipelines and no drilling permits revoked and leases suspended. the white house has gone green, even if that means cutting off thousands of jobs and even your citizens to shiver. but instead of taking ownership for that part of town,
5:24 am
the full out now the president i'm his people are pointing the finger elsewhere. oil is a global market, it is controlled by a car towel and they made a decision yesterday that they were not going to increase beyond what they were already planning. never mind that america has enough supply in its own backyard to turn out some barrels and bring down those prices bite and just won't turn on the taps. but opec should buy does not to blame for cold winter opec. his biden's not responsible view, struggling to pay the bills. opec his just as well. he explained it to us. otherwise this'll feel quite complicated. isn't it like the supply chain? oh, well, i'd explain it to you, but you just wouldn't understand. you hear a lot about the supply change in the news, but frankly, not a lot of people are clear, have a clear understanding whether they are with ph to here. they didn't go to school about how a supply chain works. the blame game, a classic and any politicians pay book and perfect for times of trouble. you know,
5:25 am
like when your party was humiliated in the recent elections, you're racing to ground, the least popular president and history. and now people can't even afford a warm and cozy thanksgiving and you're not even a year until presidency. already home heating, oil is up 59. the home gas heating is up 28 percent and it's going to get worse as the winter comes here. so some, projecting some economist heating cost for homes will increase 100 percent by the winter. that's a big problem. much going to cause a, you know, a big political backlash for a biden. and i don't see what else, what much he can really do about it. you know, he's talking about maybe opening to petroleum reserves. but that's not going to have much effect because the problem is american energy companies, oil and gas companies are exporting
5:26 am
a lot of this commodity. and that's giving them, you know, convenience shortages here to us that allows them no boost their prices in the us. so can he stop them from exporting? i doubt that if he opens the petroleum reserve, you know they'll just use that. an export even more brief. now in independence day in poland saw thousands of nationalists rally in the capital. warsaw on thursday some night did burn german e and l g. 2 flags event did go ahead despite being banned in previous years over concerns about violence does come to, i made a migrant crisis on poland, eastern border. as we have been reporting. place x crew dragging camp sure, carrying for astronauts is dealt with international space station. they will stay for 6 months and conduct scientific research into hired to grow plans in space with am soil commission as part of masters, multi $1000000000.00 partnership with either musk space company and the time is and
5:27 am
love to throw have intensified on the spot. nissan of la palmer, dry and put each to show here the molten lava, scorching the landscape before reaching the coast to have been no reports of casualties. although holding 7000 people have been forced to evacuate from their homes since the eruption began. 8 weeks ago. you are up to date, you can be up to half one in the afternoon in moscow, back again till blue l. look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except where such order that conflict with the 1st law show your identification. we should be very careful about artificial intelligence. and the point obviously is to place truck rather than fit with the area
5:28 am
with artificial intelligence. real summoning with a robot most protective phone existence with join me every thursday on the alex, simon, sure. and i'll be speaking to guess in the world of politics, sport, business, i'm sure business. i'll see you then. oh, there's a patch of water around the try, a seal island that's in contention between canada and the united states, northern gulf and main has suddenly become optimal for lobster. our populations here exploded one of the most valuable fisheries that's ever existed. suddenly you had me and canadian fishermen in these waters. at the same time jousting for
5:29 am
position and attention are high, violence is bound to happen. this is the last land border dispute between canada and the united states. it could be magnified to the point where there could be costs that would be significant to poke countries border dispute don't go away, they just fester. something's going to happen with their boom bus to the one business or you can't afford them. it on bread to bore in washington and coming up china president, she has been now the quote to cold war mentality unfolding. busy in the asian
5:30 am
pacific region, but presently paving the way for warmer relations with the united states will bring you in the latest from kind of very rare session. and what it means for the leader of the people's republic and in place is maintaining a grip on the united states that supply chain issue. this will take a look at the central bank plan to combat the rising figures and could rib in stock live up to the hype, or will it pulled like the mean stock before it as the new e v player has been given a higher valuation than some of the most historic names in the auto sector got a pack show today was dive right in. and we lead the program with china thing is ready properly managed differences with the united states during a keynote speech at the asia pacific economic cooperation, c e o. summit on thursday, president shooting ping warned against letting tension in the asia pacific region caused a relapse into the cold war mentality. should be looking to move ahead find.
46 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on