tv News RT April 9, 2023 2:00am-2:29am EDT
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thinking that fighting won the defense of the liberal democratic was, i think they would be the loses, ah ah, if does it then the story thought, shape the week when you recall that terror attack in st. petersburg, which kill prominent russian war journalist, bloodline to starsky. when did at least 40 other people must protest against judicial reform spread across israel. i made soaring detention in the region. mattress baked recent deadly terror attacks the victim women, the elderly and children as young as one to a shop multiple times at close range. also ahead on the program this our r t marks,
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the 20th anniversary of the us invasion of our rock recording must occur in the town of had for 24 civilians were gunned down by american troops with the top stories for the past 7 days and right up to the moment developments as well . welcome to the weekly on our team an extremist group which calls itself the national republican army house claim responsibility for the assassination of russian journalists. loveland to starsky. he was killed in a blast of st. petersburg cafe last sunday, which left at least at 40 other people wounded. that main suspect in the case, daria trump was officially been placed under arrest by a moscow court on charged with committing an act of terrorism. a statuette with a device hidden inside exploded in the venue during an event. the so name,
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national republican army, said not a dr. independently in the cafe bombing without any foreign help. the radical group was founded with they stated, aim of overthrowing the kremlin. back in august, the same group said it had carried out the killing of another russian journalist doria do gonna outside moscow. russian officials however, say ukraine was directly responsible for both murders, a charge key of has denied. well, this is funded from inside. the cafe fell in just before the deadly blast, shows the suspect, presenting mister to starsky with the statue wet even being invited to sit next to him. it's not clear if she knew the object contained an explosive device. according to the late journalist friend's story, a trap of had been acquainted with the victim and warning you may find the following footage disturbing. the blow her survivors. they attack pictured outside the building,
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many of them covered in blood pastures by try to assist those who have been wounded . the main suspect was spotted leaving the scene just moments after the blast. the man killed lovelyn tar sky, was hugely influential in the online community of war. time bloggers, the 40 year olds, really most maxim foreman. it was originally from don back and forth in the early stages of the conflict there in the loop gowns, people's militia. the of experience led to him becoming all of the most followed war journalists before his death. amassing an audience of over half a 1000000 people in the telegram platform, our t's double quarter breaks down. know how last weekend's events unfolded on a sunday evening like any other russian war correspondent, blood lend to tar ski was hosting an event centered around war zone. journalism here at this cafe, it was open admission. anyone could have attended, and a starsky told his audience of his stories of war. around 6 15 pm. his life came to
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a sudden end after an explosion reduce the cafes interior to rubble. ah. the chest lucas, the switches to a terrorist attack has just happened yet. while vlad lend to tar ski was speaking. there was an explosion in the bar. it seems that our speaker got up. according to eye witnesses, the explosion came from a small statue that a woman brought to the event a gift, apparently intended for to tar ski. russia's investigative committee said it was looking into this incident as a murder and the police were on
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a man hunt to find the woman in question. media reports began to suggest that the main suspect in the case was a woman by the name of daria trap of a, someone who had been arrested before at anti government demonstrations, and had transferred money to an extremist organization called the anti corruption foundation. around 700 police officers were deployed across the city in search of trap of the police showed up at her door with automatic weapons and even rated the residence of her mother and sister. for the time being though she was nowhere to be found. the next day, the authorities found daria trip of a at a 4 rent apartment where the russian investigative committee later confirmed her detention. not long after that, the interior ministry released a video confession and which daria trip of a admits to bringing an explosive statuette to tar ski's event. do you understand why you have been detained? i am detained for being at the scene of flatland petoskey, killing. what have you done?
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i pause sachi, they explode at us. who gave it to you? can i tell you later, rushes anti terrorism committee has determined that this was a terrorist attack organized by key of with the help of agents from the aforementioned extremist organization. the anti corruption foundation here for its part has denied any involvement in this attack. as it did a year ago, when there was overwhelming evidence to suggest that key of agents had killed another high profile russian journalist. daria do gonna, with the civilian assassinations piling up and the west, turning a blind eye to kias roland them. it looks like the people who risk their lives to show the world. the truth are going to have to sleep with one eye open until this conflict is over donald quarter r t st. petersburg. while the funeral of mister tar sky was held yesterday, mourners gathered up the cemetery in the capital for the last farewell to the reporter. who has posthumously awarded the order of courage. his bravery,
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one of rushes, tom ah, the 10s of thousands of people flooded the streets of israel on saturday for the 14th week in a row and protest. now the government's controversial, judicial overhauled. it comes amid rising security concerns after 2 recent deadly terror attacks in the country. all the demonstrations kicked off months bill after the government proposed changes that will give parliament the power to overturn court decisions, appoint judges, and restrict the reasons for which the prime minister could be removed from office . critics have said the reforms would take away vital checks and balances and undermined democracy industry earlier the nation's leader, benjamin netanyahu room to postpone the changes. but the protest movement phase,
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the rest will continue until the plan is buried completely. all this is happening against the trump of other attacks in the country. on friday, i car plowed into a crowd at a seaside park and television killing. i'm italian man and wounding a further 5 tours that occurred hours after a shooting that left to british is really sisters dead near. and this really settlement in the west prime minister netanyahu the 9th, the incidence of terror attacks and called up military and police reserve forces to bolster security war from the region. the really pm has accused come us of being responsible for thursday's rocket at talk to other originated from lebanese territory in response to the israel's warplane struck lebanon syrian territory too, as it blames the neighboring country for supporting the militant group or strikes hit targets in galvan as well,
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ah, well, this is southern lebanon during the early hours of friday after is really plain flew by in response to the near $100.00 rockets that were fired from the area of israel. while the bombardment of garza was on leash just minutes after a statement from mister netanyahu, in which he said the nations enemies will pay for the regression. reports also coming into the program, not hundreds of people have barricaded themselves inside the acts and mosque in east jerusalem. it follows is really police cracking down on the site this week. removing people during prayers at one of islam totally a site violent clashes inside the mos provoke sharp condemnation from the r a world . the 1st rate on alex that happened on wedding savings. and this really forces storm the building using tears beating palestinian worshippers is really police
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alleged the dozens of young men hurrying rocks and firecrackers. had tried to borrow a themselves in the side at, during our authorities said the site was off limits, doesn't holy. temple noise is also located inside the compound, a former minister for palestinian prisoners told us the new is really government's policies have fueled the latest. i think these are really very atmosphere and the condition of the job in the last month in july and the with back to especially by cation from this a lot of the so what happens in this. busy evening was this. busy a stimulus that must be that the
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policy live up to the i think without having them, without having break through the process without the commitment to the commitment to, to stay. so this will be the mind of the whole thing as we are jewish. and then all right, good, no would be between the generations and between the binion part because of that we can see more and more can ation and within the 25 mean last name is really court has extended the detention of palestinian prisoner how little a lot a for
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a further 8 months, the man was initially detained under a controversial law, which allows the arrest of palestinians on the basis of on disclosed evidence without charge or trial r t spoke with mister, i want a family who called it a hopeless situation. i'm hello, i am the father of the prisoner helen was arrested because of a post. he wrote on facebook. the court acquitted him yet and said, have been released. the intelligent services detained him administratively. so he went on a hunger strike. a deal was worked out to release him, but it fell through well. now he's been sentenced to 16 months in prison for a felony which he couldn't physically commit. he was framed by the authorities, so i'm sure my son is on his death bed. and every one knows that everyone has seen his photos. he has lost more than 50 kilo's. and since the end of his anger struck in august,
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he's been unable stand on his feet. the lettuce court ruling is totally unfair, but we can expect anything from an enemy or so when we saw him in august, we were surprised by his abysmal health condition, especially the inability to move and he sound colorless nervous, and respiratory systems are also damaged. now he has blurred vision. my husband needs treatment that the authorities refused to give it to him. when our children went to see him back in august, he was lying on a bed like a skeleton. this image of their father is now print it into their memory much at a little. while holly l y day was arrested in december 2021 and immediately went on a hunger strike to protest the israel's detainment policy. half a year after that, his release was negotiated and he ended his starvation campaign. but now is really, authorities have walk back on that agreement. sentencing him 2 additional time for allegedly trying to smuggle
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a mobile phone into jail. his family say his story is symbolic for the palestinian fight. ready? an owl? will it like gun hello was arrested for the 1st time in 2002. since then he has spent 15 years in prison because of these. he couldn't complete his education plan just before his latest arrest. kelly was supposed to discuss his graduation project, even if there was nothing left for him, but more to jim. he conceded his anger strike and never back down. nobody in the world has gone on a 172 day hunger strike answered wife and nobody but him. at the one end of the strike is considered the longest and a movement for palestinian prisoners writes, yet it is the only weapon with which these people can obtain. freedom colors strike was of the harshest kind. no food are sold. we were shocked when we realised the authorities were starving him to death instead of trying to negotiate
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a solution. at the same time, the strike made a huge splash in the media and had an impact and palestinian society in our town. there has never been such swell of support for a prisoner more than one and a half 1000. people regularly stand in solidarity with colleen. despite risking losing their job measurements with the us invasion of iraq, which left a trail of destruction knocked to a 1000000 civilians killed on countless more displaced has passed its 20th anniversary. we are continuing our special coverage of the conflict through the oil rich country into chaos. on the stabilize the region for years to come. ah, while amid the grim oliver shree the u. s. based analytics center, gallup has released the pool,
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which phone now the majority of most of them countries do not see the us of a democracy building power in iraq, particularly 72 percent of respondents do not believe quote, the u. s. is serious about encouraging the establishment of democratic systems in muslim countries. indeed, on this day, 20 years ago, a large statue of iraqi leader, saddam hussein was toppled in by world famous footage, the monument seen as a symbol of his room. the country is brought on by iraqis with the help of us marines. the event received wide coverage in western media, which headlined the day as an end to the has seen the euro. but us forces were knocked on in the country. 2 years after the invasion of iraq began, american troops, gun down $24.00 civilians. in the turn of, one of the 8 marines involved pleaded guilty to negligence. all other charges, including involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault,
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were dismissed. our team correspondent steve sweeney traveled to the country to hear 1st time the deadly incident on the legacy left behind. how deep there was a town. the very few people outside of iraq knew before 2003, but it soon became known throughout the world of the us. marines went on the rampage, massacring 24 people, like felicia, this was also a revenge attack. it followed the killing of a us soldier and a roadside bomb here. but the victims were women, the elderly and children as young as one who was shot multiple times at close range . kara, they killed my brother, my uncle, to heat my uncle for she'd mind mother. the amy survivor provoked the situation with the american at a place where the u. s. military was located, we were used to the half an hour, but then everything will be set up. they broke into the house. after that, they broke into the house of i, it al gray, airy, and killed 4 people be. it was
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a terrible day. it terrified the entire city that the american military, the militants and al qaeda, one might say, we're playing a game of cat and mouse. and ordinary citizens were the only ones who really suffered from this. every day we heard shooting in the city, the result of which was always the cold blooded murder of civilians. hundreds of innocent people died in such incidents. he described drug cray soldiers who lost control as they went on a 3 hour killing spree. la la foot, an a 20 years after the americans evaded my country. iraqis still remember this with great pain and suffering because of the disasters the americans left behind. yes, my country suffered from economic weakness due to the devastating war with iran, but life was safe in the cities and in the country as a whole. however, with the arrival of the americans, that security ended before the american invasion. there was
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a kind of social equality between different levels of society. but after the american invasion, a corrupt class emerged rising above society. previously, iraqis were kind sociable, they showed brotherly feelings towards each other and generosity. but after the americans came, drugs began to spread. families began to disintegrate, that social degradation began increasingly we began to hear about things alien to our society that a son killed his father or his family and all of this because of drugs. and it didn't come out of nowhere. am i who did, but the americans are gone by traces of the you ask, still remain in my country. they manifest themselves in the economic and social spheres in their ugliest forms. second was the people of her death or have been denied justice. out of the 8 indicted 6 or the charges dropped altogether while one was found not guilty. the only soldier to face caught merely lost rank and had his
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salary reduced, leaving the victims loved ones angry. i remember they may have been women and there may have been children and there is a squad leader. your responsibility at that point is to say, cease fire. let's not take another step. we just killed some women and children here. my responsibilities a squad leader is to make sure that none of the rest of my guys died. so no, i don't believe so. and i took it, and i believe that the u. s. president at the time, george bush and the other leaders who supported him during the occupation of my country as well as their armies bear collective responsibility for every drop of innocent blood shed in my country. any rock, any international courts must work hard to bring those criminals to justice. judicial decisions must be made to improve the transparency of fake western democracy. once again, washington has committed war crimes with impunity. and 20 years later,
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it is ordinary iraqis that is still paying the price steep, sweeney on the ground in iraq, no civilians in the country. we're not the only victims of the u. s. presence there, an al jazeera correspondent was killed as a result of a u. s or a strike on the channels media bureau in baghdad, 20 years ago. still to day. no one has been accountable for the attack. a yummy at a bow during his stay in baghdad, and he was there for 4 or 5 days and he made 3 reports, and for me, each report was a reassurance of him being a safe and sound ah, [000:00:00;00]
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with a disease, kenneth, off al jazeera, did send the coordinates of its baghdad bureau to the american troops to ensure the safety of the journalists while fulfilling their work, and to assert that they are not to be part of the war. there is a sense that the office was deliberately targeted because they already knew the core to that to seem of an jo will an a levy before the fall of baghdad. on april 9th, the general atmosphere was tense possible. everything had been prepared to promote the only narrative that of the american army, jill. they didn't want any other narrative to go public. journalists in the iraqi capital were law by us,
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and they were witnesses of the truth. what the u. s. didn't want those witnesses to tell their stories about what was happening and what would happen later on, and to ha ah, according to commanders on the grounds, coalition forces came under significant enemy fire from the building where they al jazeera journalist working and consistent with the insurance right of self defense coalition forces returned fire. sadly, al jazeera correspondence was killed in this exchange. and the subtle, gloomy hunter dismissal wasn't fired accidentally unless it was intended to kill, to wreak, and his colleagues in this unfair war on iraq is like many others. this case remains unpunished. he had the hidden and then, ah, i'm people so hot and there were cummings coming from the american residence,
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describing the civilian casualties as a collateral damage, damage something inevitable, given their false message of liberating iraq from terrorism ish. and are casey of the journalists who had nothing to do with this warranty, paid the price to as an out here, as coverage of the iraq war, had been widely recognized by international organizations for its transparency, professionalism, and high standard. seen the employees who were arabs, muslims, that did it here to professional standards. what you're never going to change the truth when you say you shattered civilian houses and killed the children here with the any. and the military always talks about ethics. but what is happening on the ground is exactly the opposite. and then neither the pentagon nor any other u. s. government agency, apologize for what they had done because they knew it would have eventually been forgotten. we have lost many of our colleagues because of this concealment of fact,
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this impunity while the 2003 war was predicated on the false pretext of weapons of mass destruction being in the country and lead to decades of turmoil, here in our tea will continue to chronicle those deadly days, amber aftermath and her coverage of the us led invasion of iraq at this hour. american and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm iraq, to free its people. and to defend the world from grave danger. with food medicine and sleep
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with will time for a sunday visit to the world's apart studio is next. find out who's in the hot seat with the oxide today? writes this 247 wanting a ah hi. i'm rick sanchez, and i'm here to plead with you. whatever you do, you do not watch my new shell seriously. why watch something that's so different.
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my little opinions that you won't get anywhere else work of it please. if you have the state department, the cia weapons makers, multi $1000000000.00 corporations, choose your fax for you. go ahead. i change and whatever you do. don't watch my show stay mainstream because i'm probably going to make you uncomfortable. my show is called direct impact. but again, you probably don't want to watch it because it might just changing the way things oh mm mm mm. tone welcome to wells apart, one unforeseen yet vividly manifest. the consequence of the conflict in your plan
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is the rediscovery of national interest among the countries that are not directly involved in this war. squeezed between the rock of western sanctions, pressure and the hard place of that own economic and security realities. many nations have been forced to make carefully calibrate the choices instead of following somebody else's leave. how is this newly discovered geopolitical maturity reshaping the entire international system? well, to discuss it, i'm now joined by is a far as and i was just full professor at the school politics international relations at quite a zombie university in pakistan. dr. jasper, it's great to talk to you. thank you very much for your time. thank you. now, in one of your interviews, he talked about how pakistan needed to break with this psychological dynamic of codependence. and you were discussing both the indication
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ukraine and your broader relationship with the west. this tendency of always having to take florence and i found this very interesting because i think this is a very accurate description of what's going on in the world today. and not only with pakistan, but many other countries when they have to truly focus on what's in their interest and it's no longer rhetorical point. it's actually necessitated by live by car life and hard choices. do you think we would have been at this place in this place? if it weren't for the conflict in your brain? i just thought all of us bloated to got to know should as i feel stand good to have an ation. but i thought that gave the you thought it into my mission within the state, whether it's practical on a practical, that's the reason there is a whitening what the americans that started if the demo summit in which they wanted
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