tv News RT June 8, 2023 8:00pm-8:30pm EDT
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last year to now, india is importing a lot of or from most school, the size, west and specials, and the relationship between new deleon and law school is on detroit. india is caused with russia have remain steady. we didn't let the green issue affect our ties with russia. the leaderships of both india and russia understand the importance of steady india, russian relations for stability in your ratio. so in september, when heads of states will come to new delhi for the final g 20 summit. the hosted by mr movie india has wanted to keep the issues very, very feel multilateralism in does also wanted to keep the issues that are playing in the global solid india. have them fax all this wide viewed. it's your long presidency as not only in the movement of the sun, but also global solids moments in the sun and ej wanted to talk about the various issues that i believe playing the developing nations, the food energy, fuel prices,
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for example. so we never really wanted to keep the focus of all of that, not just you created, so that position is really, really pushing and forwarding. their ukraine's foreign minister has detailed a plan to run poppies. countries presents in africa the promises of opening brand new embassies and boosting military and agricultural ties. ukraine is not a victim and not a bigger company to ask for help. we come to african friends offering mutually beneficial partnerships. we also keep working hard to ensure that the volume of ex ported, ukrainian grain keeps growing despite any obstacles. and by any obstacles, i mean russia, this is the only obstacle really, to where your crime is that foreign minister has already visited several, the african nations. they see areas signing, so take another trip in the coming months. a key evidence west and allies have repeatedly voiced concerns with the support that most scope has been getting from
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africa, as well as the neutral stance of several african nations. russia is cooperation with the content and has been developing with fellow bricks, men, most south africa hosting, the russian navy for recent trails and even inviting food into an upcoming summit in the country. and i was speaking with financial expert, regina co, c, and south africa. he says he's surprised by ukraine's intentions to boost his presence on that con. it is very difficult to understand what credit is all up to. we do begin to say the last in december when quite an i'll say, as many stuff could, eva said is going to open about 10 embassies in africa. was that to us was sort of a shock. and we know that ukraine is been in contact with russia and to immediately begin to think of opening about 10 embassies in africa that has a total de isn't, is very, very expensive in south africa, is very much a way of use position visa, the rice, and ukraine,
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and you would have observed that to ask you guys looks like and you credits, i see. but i think these are considered an effort from the worst to, to, to, to sponsor as to where ukraine's, you know, entering to advocate at the time when ab city committed just being the best interest for you claim to be in the continent when it comes to a grain deal that, that with the west to meet it always gives you such a it's just such a one sided store. they never tell you that for example, you know, cuz they say the rusher has been able to, to obstacles, to the grain. the all the in the creating a guy saying it as well, but they didn't tell you that russian, the russian captain's of, he's called that vessel type. that license is rejected. the port permits for russian boats was rejected call. good vessels were blocked from coming into these ports because they were russian. although it had grain for africa. they watched the media set off russia. it's russia blocking the great, i mean, that's a rather difficult for us to accept. yeah, the way i would expect that much of the grant that has been uh, getting a lot of, uh, the, the ports they have been going through europe and elsewhere,
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not enough to get. and we, we, we, we weren't quite suddenly as well with the top mold. um, i went to the february last year when maniac guns were trapped up in the, in, in the, in ukraine they were actually forced to not to jump into trains. it was a very sad situation and we do remember that. and we think that it cannot be no, just an easy working to ask because thinking i because of course, and this is easy to explain to investigations in ukraine. to moultrie was tom a, just over a year as head of the us news network, cnn chris licks has been abruptly dismissed him at signing ratings and reported in fighting among his staff. i'll see it as profits have shrunk, following last years allister of the previous chief, and jeff is aka, and the structuring of the short live streaming service, cnn plus a report of the cost of trying to a 100000000 bucks. and for the past few years, the tunnel has seen a significant decline in views with a drop of nearly 40 percent between 20202021. and the audience is roughly 700000
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last year. and we heard from legal and media analyst lionel in new york, he says that cnn's glory days are long gone as a channel is often not taken seriously. 40 plus years ago, i remember with cnn 1st lunch when cable 1st came into cable. when cable came into its own, cnn was so respected. uh peter or ned bernard shaw. whenever there was anything that was important, whenever something the, the goal for playing crashes, anything you turn to cnn. then it turned into like joke station. and they started to become the parodies of themselves. today they become run burgundy and ted baxter, they're jokes. the whole network is a joke. and it's become a, a soap opera. so what's gonna happen right now is cnn, but to do something really fast and i say again,
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it better be drastic because nobody wants. let me say this again. nobody wants far the news cable is dying. there is so much information right now i've gotten a phone with somebody the most exciting citizen civilian alternative. as far as news sources that are 247, i have some of the most interesting people. i've gotten more data, more news, more facts, more coverage than you can imagine. what cnn going to do. tell me what cnn is really going to ask. if i want to find out about russia, ukraine, if i want to find out about a science, or if i want to find out about what's really going on regarding joe biden, or donald trump, how can i go into cnn? never. everybody knows that you go over there, you go for it for a light hearted things for anderson cooper and, and for somebody to make a mistake or to make a gas. those days are over,
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cnn is dead. and right behind cnn is fox news because they've lost their i or your store number one, still powerful still making a lot of money. but since tucker left is the dominion lawsuit the same. and this is a, this is a harbinger of what's happening. that method that, that platform, it's over with it's, it's a new era. and so all of these great and wonderfully talented people are here on platforms that people like cnn dismiss. if i want to find out what's going on in the world, i don't go to see on it. guaranteed. egypt has banned a team of dutch archaeologists from the country off to the netherlands, held in exhibition depicting black americans fingers and other performers as a gyptian pharaohs and queen. now the exhibition who is or named translates as black land has been accused of an adequately representing egyptian culture.
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egyptian antiquity service has reported have gone as far as to say, the event falsified history. and the band comes with a major blow to the dutch team. it has been active and excavations in egypt for decades. however, the response from the netherlands has been swift. that is in decent. this exhibition has been made with great care. scientists don't blame each other like that's. i therefore want that qualification to be taken back. we're not going to make excuses, and we will not to just the exhibition it hard for me to college or society. how us so full. but i think what is minister, he says some museums are simply trying to rewrite history, or do they think that some moves who are b good. i do believe some of the people by making that the origin of ancient egypt was black already had like, made a different look through. they made this exhibit to show to me that if it
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d t was glad. and if you did the black car, you'll have done that it's done over netflix and they did show me about dr. black. was that just look through those people. i had a g p they i looked at. i think it's great, correct to me. because if you look at the black, getting to them goes there on the egypt indemnity $25.00 at the end of the egyptian history, they have nothing to do with the origin of isn't these are but describe are busy and i really think that i that i'm not accurate. that makes sense. and therefore it does the good for the egypt disease or type in the lady said with this kind of people, but they cannot 3 life history because history is dated on facts.
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and those people out of wrote, using the fact that story does continue right now online, at the thought called me to call and get to that. that way you can always check out gab motor seat and have a drive to joining the the in the past decade, the global refugee crisis has more than doubled, surpassing the 100000000 markets for total displacement. this means that over 1.2
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percent of the global population has been forced to leave their homes. and these include refugees internally displaced people and asylum seekers. what is life better after seeing their home country and what happens to the whole country that opens the stores, refugee? i'm christy, i'm. you're watching the cost of everything we're today. we're going to be looking at the movement of this place, refugees, world wide, and how this affects them as well as the local population. the i never in history have we ever witnessed there being 100000000 displays people. and there is absolutely no a system that will ever be able to support 100000000 people in need without more resources. and unfortunately, the current system is extremely inefficient,
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as it cost far more to settle refugees and a western nation. then it does to support accommodations and camps for refugees as close as possible to their homes. because by settling refugees in the west, we are using the limited funds in the least efficient way so that many who cannot immigrate, suffer in under funded and under served camps. over 600000 people apply for asylum in the u and 2021. syrians, afghans and iraqis logs the most applications for asylum together. accounting for almost 40 percent of all applications in the e. u. member states with syria being the biggest. in 2021. germany received over 30 percent of asylum applicants in the u, followed by france. spain, italy, and australia. together these 5 number space received almost 3 quarters of all asylum applications in the u. jeremy is the 2nd largest host community in the world,
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nearly doubling its refugee population in less than a year with the escalation of the conflict and ukraine. it now hosts over 2200000 refugees, including over 875000 ukraine refugees, 665000 syrian refugees. as well as over a 183000 refugees from afghanistan at a 151000 from iraq. in the past decade, the global refugee population has more than doubled. in 2022, we exceeded 30000000 refugees. germany has maintained high levels of support for accepting refugees, despite the concerns about immigration and germany does not have the law enforcement necessary to keep german or refugee safe. many would argue that germany has reached the breaking point with the amount of stress refugees and migrants have placed on society. jeremy needs to cross laws to cope with the situation and find additional enforcement,
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social workers and staff to be able to sort out economic migrants from the refugees and process asylum claims before accepting more refugees. in the u. k. asylum seekers are generally barred from work until they have attained refugee status. if they do not receive an initial decision on their asylum claims within 12 months, they can only apply to certain jobs like nurses, social workers, and engineers. the food poverty is a big consequence as prices rise to run a basic household and the burden of taking refugees is draining the european economies. crime rate is up drug usage as up and many citizens are getting frustrated. refugees also have impacts and pressure is on clean water energy and the environment. and the situation is turning into a permanent reality and has produced a negative attitude in many ordinary europeans seeing them as a burden on the local economy. many syrian refugees failed to stimulate into european societies. no,
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it is no fault of their own. how our syrian supposed to integrate with the population that lives there when they can't work, because they don't know the language or the customer. and they don't know anyone. the only way to survive and their new environment is to turn to crime, to survive and support their families. another essential problem that refugees, space is housing. most refugees are sent to live in places far away from cities or in the country side. medical services and health care are generally on affordable too many who fall sick. and cultural differences is perhaps one of the most complicated challenges that refugee space, as they must learn, to submit to it, and accept it in order to become a genuine part of the refugee hosting country that they now live in racism and prejudice. our normal outcomes of the language barrier and cultural differences between the local population and the refugee families. the worst happens in schools, medical facilities, health care centers, and social service centers. when
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a refugee applies to work, even when they have all the experiences and abilities, refugees are also exempted from the rights that are given by the state to with people like enjoying the rights of minimum standard of living and security. and there unfortunately often exploit it. so now let's bring in a bill out to q 3, professor of middle east history at university of mary washington. so net bill, what is the most challenging thing for refugees to face.
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