tv News RT December 8, 2022 12:00am-12:31am EST
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ah ah ah, the b b c tries to pass off a photo of a don. yes, building destroyed by ukrainian forces for one hit by russian strikes. are corresponded, investigates the site. i'm standing right next to this building right now was behind me. and i know for a fact that it was for the jury. barbara again chaotic, artillery, shutting off beautiful civilians. we've done this quite ukraine and not russia and epic making milestone. that's how china describe the upcoming summit between beijing and gulf states. as washington, more in the middle eastern countries against citing with beijing bo supporters and
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opponents of the out. the president take to the streets of peru with countries 1st female leaders born in after her predecessor is and he's been arrested as both the former and new leadership are accused by a hello and good morning from moscow to wherever you may be. catching the program. welcome to the hours most pressing new stories from around the globe. i'm carol isabel. the b. b. c has illustrated a report on russian strikes on ukraine with a picture of a building destroyed by you, craig shelling of don. yes. as artes, romano, culture of explains such incidents go in line with mainstream media as under reporting on events in the don bass, a russian forces and their don boss counterparts are traditionally portrayed by ukrainian and western mays, free media,
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as indiscriminate barbarians. their viewers and readers are often just a couple of clicks away from terrifying footage that rubs their noses into a near perfect trap. designed to demonize anything to do with the word russian. and the narrative accompanying as is often a complete fantasy. take a vis, breaking news story from the b b. c. the british broadcaster suggests that the building pictured is in ukraine and was destroyed by a russian strike. now that could not be further from the truth. how do i know that? well, i'm standing right next to this building right now was behind me. and i know for a fact that it was destroyed during barbaric and chaotic artillery shelling of peaceful civilians in the nest by ukraine and not russia. such fake news regarding the almost 9 year conflict and done boss has been servicing in western media on a regular basis. and it took
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and it's not just fake stories. it's the stories that they choose not to sell. since the start of the conflict in 2014 wester media have often turned a blind eye to mass civilian casualties, atrocities and war crimes committed by the ukraine and military and nationalist, neo nazi battalions against the civilian population. of dun boss, thousands of people, including many children, had been killed over this period and continued to fall victim to ukrainian aggression to this day. so, why does such tragedies go largely unnoticed by western main free media? we've spoken to the authorities in charge of issuing accreditations to all media, both russian and foreign. now their answer is simple. what for media is absent from don boss. you do she, us, that would be the name foreign media such as been dentist, c, r c. and, and my hair long time ago, last time the baby she was here, it was the spring of 2016 since then the hadn't been present here. you haven't got
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to fish al accreditation and therefore they aren't working hand. and then they work in a conflict zone, but on the ukrainian side of the frontline. so they come to be objective about what's happening in the don't ask republic as they don't, what can, archie has been on the ground here in the nest and logan's republics from the get gold. over this period we've seen and communicated with journalists from all over the world, most of whom have come here without any pre determined agenda. however, the presence of the so called heavy hitters such as their bbc and cnn is something a rare to the region. they prefer to cover the events from a distance while trying to convince their viewers of their so called objectivity rum on call for. i've already done this for public journalist and author, daniela's are as says, the media have become a tool in the hands of governments. i assume his carelessness, ah,
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but still that is that that doesn't excuse it. i mean the bbc of careless doesn't try very hard to be accurate. and i in this case it's really quite him. the results are really quite embarrassing. the western press is signed onto the war and therefore they have to have voluntarily transformed themselves into propaganda. arms of the western government. they have their dates, endorsed the war. they're trying to help the war effort. and therefore, lead me essentially failing to practise independent journalism and turning themselves into government now. pieces ah, the chinese foreign ministry says the upcoming summit between china and gulf countries will be a milestone for future partnerships. that's as china's president zing ping arrived in the saudi capital for the event to boost strategic cooperation in the region. he thinking to see to president, she's in pings,
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attendance at the 1st china arab summit is the largest and highest level diplomatic event between china and the arab world. since the founding of the people's republic of china, and it will become and when he pock making milestone in the history of china, herb relations speak, president, she state visit to saudi arabia. well elevate the china, saudi arabia, comprehensive, strategic partnership to new heights. i had of touching down re add the chinese leaders plane was provided an honorary escort by saudi military jets. the upcoming summit will cover multiple areas of cooperation between beijing and at saudi partners. a cd chan correspond, it is then re add with more details. presidency is having a busy schedule in riyadh since there are 3 major events taking place. first is of course the state visit to saudi arabia, followed by a summit between the chinese leader and leaders of the gulf cooperation council country. there's also a highly anticipated 1st ever
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a china arab summit between presidency and has of states that represent the interest of much of the arab world. now, officials have held this visit as a continuation of the long historical friendship between china and the arab region . since the ancient road, but of course, the strengthening of modern relations also played a big role. i should say there are deep synergies between the development strategies of china and the era region. walker operation expert se could naturally follow. now it speaks volumes that president, she is listening, react, admit high tension between saudi arabia and its biggest traditional allies, the united states. and on the other hand, the message that president is bringing along on the strip is to build a shared community with a common destiny with the arab world. but your political message here is that china police facing and the world's sha, both champions, multilateralism respect each other sovereignty and the right of self determination . this analysts say is a common core interest that's served as
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a foundation for economic, technological, and cultural cooperation between the 2 sides from city. and meanwhile, the white house has warned, of growing chinese influence in the middle east saying beijing might pursue goals which go against the world order. we are mindful of the influence that china is trying to grow around the world. the middle east has certainly one of those regions where they want to deepen their level of influence. we believe that many of the things they're trying to pursue in the manner in which they're trying to pursue are not conducive to preserving the international rules based order. washington re add ties were badly strained and 2018 by the killing of dissident journalists jamal. because shogi, which the united states blamed on saudi liter. prince mohammed, ben saw men tension flared again over a decision by the saudi lead. opec plus oil cartel to cut crude output, despite numerous calls from washington to raise it. we heard from jamal, what team,
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professor of history and international relations at the lebanese university. he says the u. s. is trying to maintain its influence in the region by keeping china and russia away. we know very well that the united states is very influential in saudi arabia. and it is a decisive proctor and the succession process stuff is going on. now, in saudi arabia, this is something that united states is still pursuing it as than trying to keep the middle east at bay under its influence. because this is one of a grants that the g by the united states to receive the asian powers. i mean, russia, china, and the dog. oh, oops, struck them from having access to the east, mediterranean and 2 other outposts that would give me or grant, let's say,
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and the range of bones, access to money, thyme, $3.00 brutes who has sworn in its 1st female president, dina bullard say that's as the countries now, former president, pedro castillo, has been in peach and placed under arrest both castillo and the congress that removed him, have accused each other of enacting. a qu, protestors have flooded the streets of lima, some happy others, distressed by the sudden change in leadership. one was they peruse, former vice president took over as president following a congressional vote to impeach the former leader bruce, former president. feather casio is accused of attempting to orchestrated to in response to congress as attempt to remove him from the position global expressed, mixed emotions over the unfolding political drama. the book published president pedro castillo has not been allowed to work. castillo has been sown his been slandered. this is why we are now going through what we are going through them. it
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was necessary to close this filthy congress. dina warranty. she is called this broad. we don't want to either end of this i here in defense of democracy. he grew castillo has done today, is to shut down congress and carry out who he was elected by all the peruvian people. the people are not in lima, the people are the whole country, the whole peru, and they have to learn to respect the will of the people. casias opposition has attempted to remove him since the 1st day in office dogging the former high school teacher school teacher with criminal corruption investigations while worked. his own image has been marred by a similar congressional investigation that was dismissed just 2 days before she received the presidency. the last 6 years of political turmoil have pushed the majority of peruvians to call for early elections for both congress and presidential office. we spoke to political analysts, didier ortiz, who says,
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peruse, future, should be in the hands of the people and not the politicians. there's been an ever decreasing confidence in all the institutions imperial, including not only government, but media as well as civil society. so in my opinion, at this moment, the destiny of food is more than ever before in the hands of the organized masses of workers, of persons, of indigenous rights, defenders. and ultimately there from battles who hold, hold the peace in the rural country side. i think that there is no quick fix at this moment. president castillo's presidency and his mistakes and his merits are all the symptoms of what we have been through and peruvian, political life, which is instability, thievery, and ultimately a lot of egoism and individual isms which keep any political project from being coherent, let alone successful. the u. k has agreed to
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a deal with the u. s. to double liquefied natural gas exports to britain with the nation's prime minister, setting the goal of lowering prices. together the u. k and u. s. will ensure the global price of energy and the security of our national supply can never again be manipulated by the whims of a sailing regime. the partnership will bring down prices for british consumers and help and europe's dependence on russian energy wants and full. despite attempts, reports show the u. k, and europe will be facing bigger challenges to keep warm. the international energy agency said that europe is only safe this year. as last summer rush and gas help replenished reserves. meanwhile, u. s. exports of l. n. g are priced up to 4 times higher than the domestic market. energy experts point out that the u. k. u s. steel will not solve the crisis. it is a strategy that is at best short sighted and at west will only further enrich the oil and gas industry at the expense of every one else. the u. case dependents on
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russian energy exports has been comparatively low. last year, just 4 percent of gas was imported. the major portion of the u. k. supply coming from norway, international petroleum economist john foster question whether that new deal will be able to actually lower prices. what they okay, need to say is that in this announcement is that they will work together to what they say to increase energy security and drive down prices. in my view, that's meaningless. it's a hollow promise. they, us, administration, the people of washington do not regulate the price for all the other commercial terms, which the energy exports are made by private companies in the united states. i cannot see how this other deal will help you. okay. consumers for start with energy
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bills when i see about talking about the n g. u and europe doesn't need us expansion of gas from the us. europe is getting the shock treatment. moving from low cost russian gas supplied on the invite, be long term dependable contracts to high cost imported at n g from wherever, but particularly from the united states. and meanwhile, europe faces an energy crisis. it faces economic disaster. seeing how the winter moves, moves along for h, a u. s. u k initiative is a distraction, is a distraction from the european energy prices, which stems from these western sanctions on russia is not from the war of such a step toward a complete this, sophia, that's how some environmentalists have slammed a trial in the u. k. city of oxford that will require residents to get
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a permit to use their private vehicles in the center during rush hour. we think that this is one small step toward just complete to stoba using climate to net 0 as an excuse, as per usual when rules and regulations are brought into restrict people, they never actually use the real reason to start off. it's always public health, or in this case, saving the planet orchard has chosen itself to be the subject of a suicidal experiment. every one i speak to hates it. the traffic filter scheme is set to begin in 2024. local authorities say it's designed to reduce traffic and it's negative impact on the environment. under the new rules, local residents would need a special permit to drive through the restricted areas in rush hours. any driver driving through the filter without the permit would be fine. 70 pounds or around $85.00 oxford authorities claim the measures will make a city a better place to live for all residents. with some activists expressing support
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for the move. the official analysis of the scheme found that it will mean a 35 percent decrease in traffic. a 9 percent reduction in road casualties. rush hour buses will run 15 percent quicker and air pollution will improve in 91 percent of locations. this will save lives and make our city more pleasant now and for future generations. we discussed the controversial traffic filter system with radio host carry harrison and steve, gil radio, host and political commentator. we used to always get the excuse for every public policy argument that it's for the children's now, it's always for the environment and unfortunate, think bureaucratic governments all over the world tell a truth, but don't really tell the truth of what the purpose of this agenda really is i think that's why people are skeptical on that is the most dramatic thing. i have heard and probably 2 and a half weeks when i moved to los angeles 20 years ago,
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the air was on breathable. the traffic congestion is still absolutely impossible, making the city on livable. so what has happened is people have gotten vespers and bicycles. it seems like a radical idea. but if you like, clean air, if you like to be an upright being that is able to get from a to be comfortably without being smacked by a car. sometimes you might have to limit it personal. i don't think people are just giving in their cars and driving and random. most of them are going somewhere that's not a workable system. any more than oxford, when you have a town that was built hundreds of years ago with narrow streets, it was not anticipating vehicles. you're going to have to deal with the reality of an old town with small confines and with people wanting to get in and out of those areas for work and business and to take their kids to school. he got to deal with the reality, not the idea that we can put trolleys in or some sort of a monorail system like disney world and move people around rapidly on a, on a relatively easy schedule. i would agree with steve. except let's,
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he mentioned walt disney who created disney world, which is still a modern for excellent transportation, if an effort is being made to improve things. and let's assume that the city council of oxford is some sort of democracy and that a vote was taken in the public, was involved to some degree. then we either like democracy or we don't. if in fact this is where they want to go and create a quality of life that surpasses everyone, then that's a good thing for the upright mammals that live there. so let's put the rule in place and then let the public boat, if they're not getting to vote in advanced and when they throw the city council members and put it in to see what's the public really thinks about. and i also point out that in beijing you have millions of people on bicycles, one of the most polluted cities in the world because it's not just transportation. the fuels pollution if they want cleaner air, they want a better way to get around from a to b, to have less collision, less people knocked down more people on bicycles done. let them try the experiment
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. if it fails, it fails, and it fails in front of all of us. we now know never do that again. ah, in an effort to get homeless people off the city streets, the mayor of new york has introduced a new policy that would allow police to remove and temporarily detain people. they consider mentally ill tail up mop and takes us through the streets of manhattan to explore the policies more worrying implications. since taking office new york city, mayor erick adams has been clearing out the homeless encampments that have sprung up across the city. on average, 14 encampments are torn down by authorities each day with a total of roughly $3200.00 being torn down than march. but the encampments keep springing up. so now new york city mayor has rolled out a very controversial new policy to break up homeless and camp sites. the mayor has given the green light to involuntary hospitalization of people deemed to be
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mentally ill. people can now be taken off the street and put into mental health facilities against their will, usually for the police to arrest somebody. they have to be committing a crime or posing a threat to others or to themselves. but under this new measure, which is specifically aimed at homeless people, the police can detain someone if they show signs simply of being mentally ill, such as being unable to provide for their own basic needs. the civil liberties implications here are enormous. if someone's not breaking the law and they're not threatening anyone, how can the police then detain them? whatever happens to habeas corpus? at this point, people are starting to invoke memories of psychiatric facilities being used to suppress dissidents and don't algerian states of the path. new yorkers can also recall times when interactions with law enforcement have gotten quite ugly. the death of eric garner started out as a dispute over whether or not the police should be taking him away. and we can see how that ended up,
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many or wondering if this new measure from the mayor's office is just a string of new black lives matter incident, waiting to happen. but some people look at the rising crime here in the big apple as well as the rising number of homeless encampments and wonder if taking these folks off the street might actually be doing them a favor. halo baba r t new york. huge, missing and growing 80 trillion dollars and hidden debt is now owed through international foreign currency swats. that's according to the bank for international settlements. labeled the central bank to the world central banks. the total amount of debt is comparable to last year's global g d p. and it's 4 times more than the estimated amount of dollars and global circulation. fintech interpreter, chris, i'm told my colleague peters thought the situation may increased risk for organizations such as pension funds, also risking people's money. up to different figures, say different exist,
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a 87 percent of all of the world's financial transactions. a settled in the us dollar. now that, that's really great. if you're the usa, right, because you're printing the money, you're controlling the money, you know how much the friends and you're basically running the global economy through your own currency. where this poses of risk is when i'm, in this case, the feds, which is the us central bank. well, i need to know how many dollars there actually are in the market. the issue with this that we're seeing now is they just don't know because you've got this off balance sheet debt, which poses a massive problem because the feds needs to find out number one where that money is, is the most important thing because they've got to send it to someone and also how much they need to print and how does this fake of your average person on the streets? obviously this effects investors, but we mentioned that some of this money belongs to pension funds. if i were a pensioner, should i be concerned by this? absolutely. you should be concerned, right, because this is money that people have been told by the governments, by companies they work for,
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give us this money and will cost it for you. but the issue is that when you're performing these swaps, what's happening is a sovereign nation is essentially placing their own currency as collateral against the dollar. now what happens then is when, if the dollar drops, they get margin calls. what's called a margin, which basically means some of that money is taken, which means the pension fund could lose shoot amounts of that. those people's money just by having essentially gambled with it in performing this swap. is there any way that countries can sort of track this money is any way that you know, this can be resolved somehow where the only way to do it is these financial institutions actually reports and are actually obliged to report that off balance sheet money. that's the biggest problem here, is that financial institutions have been able to hide this debt from the valve. so, and that's the, you know, the global economy comes together. and specifically, the us who hold us thought is that really dictate how they used around the world, say, look, you have to report that in your accounting if we get so we know how many they are, all that's really the solution, but whether they'll do it or not that's another question. there is
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a risk in general right now in the global economy. we just had the cobra pandemic where most governments, but to take to the u. s. government printed trillion billions and billions upon trillions of fresh dollars that no one can seem to account for not just here, but in terms of how the stock market just went. zoom the co, which made absolutely no sense. every market went up, but every market didn't really go up in my view because, you know, companies were performing well because they weren't because most of their employees that's be honest. what it was. they were at home, sipping a cup of tea, but the company performed hugely, i'm really that was just the influx of dollars. now you just, i think what we're seeing now is we're seeing for domino effect, these things happening. so i think we're already in big trouble. and this is just another thing that adds to that, that chaos in trouble that we've already experiencing. those were the hour's top news stories from around the globe for more up to the minute coverage, head over to r t dot com. and don't forget to follow us on rumble. odyssey and gab for more. and thanks for tuning in with you again, next hour with
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when i was wrong, when i just don't a yes to safe out these days become the advocate and engagement. it was the trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look for common ground. ah, she, she wrote in a village is 20 kilometers from mary. you pope. it was once a resort by the sea of us all with
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a population of about $1500.00. the past 7 years, it's been called a ghost village. the as of regimen took it, obey in february 2015, 80 percent of the houses were destroyed and people had to leave the nationalist battalions and the ukrainian army mind the place for 7 years. in march this year with the beginning of the special military operation. the dpr people's militia gain control of the village, russian sap as a working there now. for the 1st time in 7 years, she rock in a residence have a chance of returning. we're kind of what i'm with right now. my choice is sure to get us the model. you took all it, all new donna not showed up with students, so a build or bought a traditional shift. mm hm. a piece on our with our community up or so what, what area we spoke with the supposed check,
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every yard house and street people left in a hurry. they thought they wouldn't see their homes for a long time. gray unless they all as you see the corona bush go below, green glint grants. gay. keep what you do is we'll stop a bottom you. what other one syllable as a menu dilemma will, will normally say is christine, you, me? it's good for i was, i saw on the floor. it'll show every you because of the as all regiment, many villages, and now left with nothing but a plot of land mo, most gumble leslie, delaney burgess, sim, city of god, rodney metal. the old load of them would only anybody but the most of them. he could it be cheaper to dump at waldo smith, not a door. the many resources must of your to let you know when i leave shall ms. you .
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