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tv   Documentary  RT  June 18, 2023 7:30pm-8:01pm EDT

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fox will be pumping months. we've been talking the lives are not way to benefit the industrial companies, so it's worth nothing to do with you. great. everything is good to do with what washington, london, brussels, whatever that they want to achieve. but it's nothing is suddenly healthy, the actual citizen. so if you click, that's the unfortunate part of this country photos in the west african nation of molly overtaking to the poles to decide whether to adopt a new constitution the head of next year as presidential election of the country has undergone to cruise in the past. 3 years and so forth is of the new constitution. so it'll pay the way for a transition to civilian rule and political unrest as plague molly and ongoing jihad, as insurgency and the rule of northern areas. and critics say that french military forces stationed over the country have done little the crowd a violent, and somebody been saying they've been actually exacerbated, as molly even expelled the french ambassador last year. meanwhile,
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the power space thing kind of has published a report, recognizing rising anti french sentiments in africa. therefore, to also say the rhetoric is politically motivated and that russia is behind the message. speech is against french policy, have proliferated, in recent years, in french speaking africa. this has of function in the politics of so it's in french speaking african countries, mainly to designate, to escape good. indeed, the french pulse is used by african political leads to explain disappointing political economic go security pods. in some countries helped by russian entities, really co systems have even developed on social networks, producing anti french campaigns. while the president of the african freedom institute, doctor franklin, the obviously was mentioned in the report and to join us earlier and criticized the assessment as well as well in general french foreign policy towards the african comfortable. the result of that is not scientific. i've taught because there is no
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cd or stuff. we can a ninety's, all african problems. we show up any kind of responsibility from african 5. and i q's, and i really liked about these bags and only friends in fact, has never met eco nice. it's multi uh say cool. all responsibility mean off weekend dfcs stuff by slips played cold. oh, nice ation meal coolness, night vision and low media tardy or corporation. monday domain nation has never made these. i don't, i meant to see what is to be picked in and what is what must be ended. and that is why in fact they didn't, they that they have been the only chosen like this kid good of frequent people, do they know it just because there is no just do some documentation and that price i've never paid for full or did these us does the possible outing up the report of
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the i s the i is just a complaint of a know could on the on by what losing it's funny. just defy advantage on up here because of the weekends. uh, what continuum mo, in every way, i sort of want to put a name to 6. i sent you a piece of donation, that's the 4th. i'll click on it, it goes nothing. 10 to 2 minutes. you don't minutes. i mean, i think got it tends to be pretty so, but i do dislike by insight in that this influx of a problem for many 40 to kind of a leasing process because they have made myself the possibility of both players power. we don't speak muscular dystrophy, we don't explore reaching out because it is time to get in from to think a new place probably read out. i'll click on exploitation. we got we got i think i just bought dish and that this isn't the intellect trust. video of the 1st 40 to
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calculate that the out on able to i my jeezy rouse, but we will, we don't operate, can do munitions without doing anything for many years now. i have the lighting many books i have been doing. so, conferences, meetings, in every way in here in france into your office, i've to explain that we have to change that to release them because i'll click on people with no more except to be doing that. they have to be exploited to be absolutely slaves on the, on, on their own, a, so on their own. this new mode was to be able to because the use of optic is now a week from the j 20 to the g. 21. india is pregnant, isn't a wrench, or a body has moved to include the african union in the group of the butler 20 most powerful economies to transition to that as a whole, multi photo y p. a moody has written to his counterparts and the g 20 proposing for
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the african union to be given full membership of the grouping at a september somebody to new delhi. open out throughout the course walnut. we're going to and sharma, breaking down all the developments for us, a dramatist. the more these taking a significant 7 has the effect goes. voice on the global stages, which it was g 20 gone to boss that african union to be given full membership of the upcoming g 20 summit, which will be just rich by and you know, i made all the notes or to speak on nephews that their voice should be. 1 the 20 not phone. remember india? is this your voice? sounds somebody in january, but in good results to 20 concierge. your baby soon. so that india in lazy. i'm bring it on the g $22.00, which is largely the developing was the on the floor and also the one which is not
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lee. i'm the one file for you since the 20 of india wants to be there. why in the developing company? so i know it was last week and you all have job posted at indian ask for good partnership summit where before and it says ministers in the education coast highlighted of the role of africa. v shaping the who was that put india and it's important that african partners appreciate this. for india, the rise of africa is key to global entry. abundance needs meant was the last few years in this move by 5 minutes to include that please read. yes. obviously,
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remember india reached out to more than one when he comes please. the global view of the funding we saw several issues in deal wants to hi like one that is leading to the developing in the design a while. for example, the price of fuel and not cheap prices. india wants to bring. what does this one does not form you will be single will need to come in you, denny was. what is the pause by the time minister? easy, a really a step forward in the course. it includes the, my colleague a motor mom. he spoke with a pair of guests and essentially they said that including african states in the g 20 is not just fair, but it's also in line with today's new global reality of multi polarity to see if the union is going to seem to be involved deeper and see if you wanted to benefit
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one of those work on the portal, won't you become the just for be on? no, i just need to show you. we see there you go. the shuttle word or what but these are changing city. they're not the only sense and that's kind of what you mean like on each of these things. beautiful. what infinity put in with a gene. so when they expire,
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so any expansion of the gene. so in these base some member consensus, how likely is this? is this proposal to succeed and what would the fe ramifications be if there were any days as one of the major hasn't changed this kind of thing? so these little sweet, they for india, we mostly in china and russia and the change in deals with lucas, the full size is the quote. what kind of is like the advice yet? because there is it in, by looking at the, with the, the, the always use it with this kind of a horse and like that may be the horse. so essentially a be difficult for them. but i, this is we say that the world has changed. you will have
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a lot of categories as i applied for food might. you might lose inclusion as the guy. but i feel like it's going to succeed because there's a lot of good with the possible kind of interest that seat and the width as much as they may not make it a thing. they have a choice. yes, they have to pay for badging has locked off in washington saying that by increasing its military presence near china, the us is simply instigating a potential conflict if unexpected military conflict where to arise between china and the us. it would not be caused by china taking provocative moves of sending military vessels and jets to a la or anywhere off the coast of california. rather, it would be triggered by us worships or plains close to china's territory in dealing with the country, the size of china mutual respect is the ground role. so this whole comes as the us secretary of state anthony, blinking it in beijing. all of a sudden he said,
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well he's, i guess, trying to cool the increasing repeat of tensions between america and china. it is the highest level of visit by us officials of china since 2018. as we understand. badging has repeatedly been refusing phone calls from washington for months. the political analyst and blog alex report advice as the us as a provocative behavior may bite back in the future. have a listen for yourself, and it's in a blink of an eye that so much attention. china is going to be put on it. i did not see any red carpet being rolled out for anthony in his i guess cumulation tour as i call it. i mean, where is joe biden in this? i mean, shouldn't he be visiting a china to try to work this out? we put a, a, a, you know, diplomatic person in charge here and the blinking any scared of, uh, an air balloon a few months ago. so i don't see much is gonna come from this at all. it would be like having a war ships off. uh, you know, the west coast of california. uh that would never happen from, you know,
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chinese military for its navy would not to put its destroyers just off the shores of, you know, los angeles. it would be an absolute ludicrous move. but yet, here we see the americans being very provocative. trump trying to see how close and how productive they can get to china. and i don't know, we could see a mistake potentially happen here in the future. the head of a u. n. agency for supporting palestinian refugees is grateful for australia to support the organization struggles to remain financially solvent. despite the assistance from multiple countries, where if an ocean has a few data, almost 6000000 registered palestinian refugees rely on the united nations relief and works agency. those who lost the homes of to 1948 horse shortly after the establishment of the state of israel. the agency has been operating for 75 years in camps across the occupied west bank in lebanon, jordan and syria,
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food healthcare education. the agency has contributed to the welfare in human development of 4 generations of palestinians. beneficiaries say the u. n. r w a is literally irreplaceable. is that if they close down, where am i supposed to go? where will i get my medication? as a woman and the refugee with 3 kids that study in school, i feel fear, i fear for their grades. i fear what is going to happen tomorrow for their future. i'm afraid even when i sleep in my bed is quite silent. home somebody's fears have grounds. the un relief agency is on the verge of financial collapse. the deficit is close to $200000000.00 with just 24 percent of the $1600000000.00. the agency size is needed for 2023 funded so far. if the money doesn't coming, half a 1000000 boys and girls will not go to school. almost 60 percent of all funds go to it occasional purposes. thousands will not get live support and medications,
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and almost 2000000 will be left without live saving humanitarian assistance. the residential stablished, any and refugee camp, say they go to u n. r w a full life threatening emergencies, as well as daily routine assistance like bank transfers. but the role of the agency goes far beyond saving or improving lives. it means hope we are, people are waiting for the right to return home. unfortunately, if we don't say anything about the u. n. r w a leaving us, it would mean we agree that we don't have any rights. let's be transparent. the u. n. r w a n u n. are the only witness to the suffer, you know, of the boasting and refugees. there is no replacement for the u. n. r w a. not even the boosting and administration issue, even they don't have the money for full listing and refugees. we are telling the u . n r w a that they are the only ones that can sustain us and know our misery. you are
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the ones witnessing our expulsion. so the for the, for the year, why there is a shortfall. most of the agencies funding comes from the united states in 2021. the u. s. was the largest contributor, followed by germany, making up about 46 percent of the total contributions the agency receives from governments. the u is traditionally a said largest give or earlier in march, the u. n. r w, a representative in gaza. and i was that some countries will reduce their donations, they see are with others and not increasing their aid as planned. he said, the world's focus on the credit in crisis wasn't one of the reasons surprise. oh, you know, this agency being collab, we'd be higher. even called the donors and, you know, other content then the amount that we asked for. if we'd be a read catastrophe, that's what it will affect the social tab click inside author's team in all of societies and politically and culturally clever to you know,
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it will take them for the long term. the agency has to be warning of an impending crisis for months on the ground. people decided to appeal to the international community using their own voices. as kind of camp is among the most densely populated, palestinian refugee camps in the occupied west bank every day in the last week. local residents gather here at the entrance by testing against the closure. all the u. n. r w a. just like for millions of others, the you and relief agency is their only hope for survival and feeling alive. they doubt that they voice will be heard across the season oceans, but they say, what other toys do they have? just as we finish filming well armed local police arrived and several cars to ask for testers to clear the road they blocked. demonstrators obeyed dismounting, the small barricade, enrolling off their banners for tomorrow. at the same time, they will return to continue the fight. where are you from ocean archie, from palestinian administration?
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tomorrow, before we wrap up this, i was program here. a team of scientists tests created the world's 1st human synthetic embryos from stem cells. to break through the size steps the need to use eggs or even spun. these are embryo like structures or at the earlier stages of development. they don't have a beating heart or a brain with, with typically go on to full and i put a center on the embryo itself. side is a one day synthetic. ambrose will help in violence be an understanding of genetic diseases. however, the invention does ray some ethical and legal issues as we had earlier when i called a gradual blevins discuss the topic with a couple of guests. right now we're at the very distant stage of development of this technology. the major break to it has a created is not in a substitute. the human embryo is just basically about dissolving many mysteries of implantation, so that the ready disgusting condition of the people miscarriages. which so many
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women worldwide are facing can be probably onset by this. but definitely as n e, i must be such fools. we have to have very, very strict legal and ethical guidelines. the country is very easy, such as would be, you know, taking a course. and similarly they can also be sort of ethical and they need this kind of stuff. so that is why, yes, we are in a very, very nascent stage of, of, of research. but there is a lot of school for many people. i mean, this is such a new breakthrough that at present there is no regulation. so is that a massive concern and do think the rules will be quickly made and brought into play fairly well, you're coming into the square science as a lead club regulation. so what do we do going forward? yeah, it's cause issues that that'd be raised. the issues that have been raised,
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legal issues, what happens to be individuals to ask you to pay a service of a subject to cameras. what happens to the tissues? how to describe the uh, the, the by lot of issues. that's why we hold, that's uh, regulations. we like the default friends rather than waiting for science to be anything less. and then the phone concerns have been raised. the synthetic embryo still have some of the features of a natural embryo, and that's why it's unethical to carry out experiments on them. what do you think about that? and it's, it's, it's a lot of a mystery. it does ring a lot of club my and a lot of confusion, especially when it comes to how then if we say that this a human embryos to be then destroyed, then once we're done doing our experiments, because if that was someone, somebody is child, then of course that would bring
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a lot of, uh, you know, uprising so there is no specific answer to that. i guess it would depend on the loss of a lot of issues like what was the purpose of that creation of that embryo and who is responsible for that embryo and you know how, what are the guidelines when it comes to embryo destruction? so far we do not have any i believe that needs to be a bigger discussion on how those embryos will be handled. i the human eye. they send me human and what drives uh, we can fly to them and who makes those decisions. yeah. and yeah, it seems that both sides of that debate and have a pretty fair finding, a pretty fair argument that it does continue online right now. what on t dot com for the meantime? thanks for joining the . the,
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the welcome to was a part of french in need is a friend. indeed, the russians are fond of repeating the same, but they could hardly expect that when faced with west sanctions and a parcel have like efforts to ostracize all things russians and the black continents will reach out its hand. most african countries are neutral in the print in conflict and some have even expressed a willingness to mediated kenneth lead to a peaceful solution. or to discuss that i'm now joined vice lousy homie founder and chief executive officer of the ladies in the front lines. it's great to talk to thank you very much for your time. thank you so much. it's an honor to be sitting in front of one of my favorites presents as of our team. so sometimes, uh,
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actually we, we have a very timely uh time for it for this discussion that i handed some jo, political latest, jo, political developments and main connection. but i want to start with the, with the title of the organization that you're represent. the ladies in the front line will even such paradoxical times when even the most basic and foundational concepts are being read, negotiated, or debated. so i have to ask you, who are the ladies, how are they different from women? and what about men and gentlemen? ladies in the front line was born almost 20 years ago and it was ladies in the front line. funding notices came from a church. someone way these were made is, is a church that were leading in business in charge of issues and entertainment. so
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we traded on ladies in the frontline for 5 years before we actually registered the company. so when we went and wanted to really stay as late as in the front line, we were told none of the names already know has been taken. so we have 12 inches but is leading ladies of africa. so we been registered leading leaders and treated as the latest for instance going to it's leading leaders of also kind of the world which was fest, leading ladies of africa. and as we started shopping around the world and becoming global, other women around the world says, why don't you include us? why is it only africa? so we've been added in the well. but ladies in the front line was about see me leaders around the world. and then leading ladies of africa and the world is, was actually now years now, but this uh, frontline part of it is very interesting because, i mean, we leave in the, in
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a world where the wars and conflicts are multiplying. but i thing when you found at the organization, you meant that even in the peaceful areas like businesses and the car, the women to the performer and succeed. yeah. is it still the case? yeah, it's still the case actually finding enough we started using tension and everything was latest. and then we amazed that we ended up with 70 percent. they made a controlled entity, 30 percent of men who do not mind be led by women. i still have some people who are actually even close friends, but have my deputy cheese in of us. he has and them in and they have no qualms about it in public. i've been working with them in brakes and although they still call me check him, sometimes i forget my thoughts waiting to them just say check. and so, so it's actually 50 percent of letters to him and young people we have we seen
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it. yeah. one manually. and he does around the world for peace, prosperity and social cohesion. now a number of african countries, randy, uh, well represented and they have a good representation of women and governing structures in business. for example, in, in ronda they account for about 50 percent of government officials and 60 percent of problem and tyrants. but they haven't yet endangered. a very noticeable change is it's really about women or ladies or the particular gender, or rather the values and the principles, the qualities that we traditionally associates with feminine to that may or may not be invited by man i think was really when it was never about i have a challenging man to say it was just saying, if i'm here and i'm making a contribution, if i'm here even in this office, even if i'm making change,
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i do have a place of a table. it will not just be a pest invest houses buy with a tray of cheese. i will clean my space as a person because we will work together as a teen, men and women mid as what you get up and do not let us be somewhere in the background because as we know english are you have a history of the night which i'm in history is like most in china now you had the best remembering the front line a was and that the edit a lot of a basically just maintenance thing. i mean with, we don't coming in saying one to push a man, we are some feminist. but we, i, they as women or as ladies, because i have a favorite saying codes and it says, never has it ever been a time with it. is that which is needed,
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which is women and lives in these sites because whether we liked what we call exists, of human beings and, or across this much of the cost. so literally, you know, as i was preparing for this interview, i came across the figure that in africa, 70 percent of women are employed in informal secretaries of the economy to be the great economy, or they're doing some important work at home, taking care of the children taking care of the elderly often times when man leave for example, because of the conflict they take care of the entire communities. and i understand sort of the applied of encouraging women to go into the form of labor for us. but i also wonder if um, this informal part of what women do in society should also be acknowledged and properly rename. or even if everybody lease home from work, who's going to take care of that huge part of live, you know,
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passing on the traditions passing on care. you know, what about that person is actually the leading ladies is about stuffs from the, the premises. let's the women's culture at least as a, as a solve for can, in, in, in our cars show us. but the man, when i was to the former lead by, they go like to the mines which are out in the areas. and the women were the ones that actually took care of homes and stayed at home. these were women extra anywhere in the front. i knew the sense, but there would be no men going to work in the was hoping you're taking care of. so those are the women. so leading ladies we have across, but it's not just into the foremost sector. it is women were plenty and guiding them back yet so that they keep the children. it's why the main is a do the former way. so those exist within, i was actually thing or i came with women who are not actually told them that
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actually they, they are more on from the civil society that they, they like going out there helping women in the real areas and helping with the development. if you hear that there's a bridge that's funding all the kids come close over to go to school. those are the women, the junk food, and call, the former one says, what do we do to? so it's a, it is interesting when it comes to that, it's just women living in every, it's not just formal, it's into treatment. it's women. what housewives insist, i think it's really just because if, if these women were not taking care of the whole, so i'm going to have to be either be page or grandma would have to take care of the kids. so we don't forget those. i come from a family to very strong women, i only lost my 96 year old grandmother. left in my mother is 83. she's a life. so i always come from boots stopped to finish, finds women, and i've seen that. so i come from those types of women,
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but they have always been very strong and lived in my example. i think there is a lot of commonalities here between africa and russia and how it would actually say that africa, like russia is a she, it has and you know, vast resources and norms for until it in all areas. uh, lots of generosity and you know, x huge expansive potential, but i think in both cases that potential remains ida not fully realized or sometimes exploited by the outside or what can possibly change that in your view. yeah, actually you as soon as your colleagues, probably the reason why i have this is this partially recognition and feel at home in the issue is because in the same way like i say is my own but boost god knows about the shift because of me.

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