tv Cross Talk RT July 26, 2023 2:30am-3:00am EDT
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as we say to the canyon presidents leave these, the african troops behind bring the canyon army instead, and let them face us. and the country that supports you mercenaries like you and buys you with their money. you can bring their army to, we swear, none of them will return home. will the student needs um, it has with gates of the east african books involvements on multiple occasions while claiming the attorney as a full submitted, sends from the rapid support force as well as it can you, how stressed is neutrality? towards the more than a 100 day conflicts, the nairobi foreign affairs official called the threats from the cities come under quotes, one where the comment, well cautious between the war insides continue across through don the latest on the post office to stop the war has taken place in togo, both political on civil, he does attend to the meeting, joining representatives from the national army yourself and boy states that the site is ready to enter the fighting or presenting a robot an action plan. so seasonally human stuff is by neighboring countries to help resolve the country. it's
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a failed piece. thoughts hosted by egypt early this month in the latest efforts. any of these folks, a journalist from suit done under political analysts from cairo, both of them have called the peacekeeping initiative from kenya miscalculation a fair risk of finance. i never can freak good. a good health. instead of, she kissed these 1st and they found a sort of article and a risky problem that's could be the part that are for print, them, travels. and in fact, a relationship. this is very important. again, this is very risky when that's a kenya. these and i think they should to stop the, the issue and know the, the solution, send a radical solution for this. and look at this issue from another vision. it's very risky. it's a, it's needed a lot of search in good understanding for the issue and the matter that's helping the answer to the piece, keeping salter, it's impossible, so to can to sedan or 3 was bars. sure. it is. i said the cities are really far as
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cost quite is, has internal facing is internal border between rebates, support far as as an army pharmacist. and right now it's a problem now face the army until we for a new government. this kind of issue can be for our rates. and we can talk about these keeper, but he has not the has or he has not the power to confirm their come or not. i think i told them to make the mistake by virginia and present them to me left many such as sensitive jumps was all they needed. some nation i was meant be in the long history, all for peacekeeping decides to then in the for the social event. so no problem, but you have to do a method problem and i think it was um, mr. pollution from the city. and then and so that was this response. and i think the exact thing now that union a president is executive because if you want to send these, keep your bosses,
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do i complexes live in the area. you'll watch it also approval on the grown by about $53.00 choices. otherwise, it's very challenging. mission, as long as the, the end of the weight is good. as soon as this helps the evening, the b one, when the worst it is possible to send the peacekeeping forces that's about for now, i want to speak to scouts and i'll be back again at the top of the hour. but do stay tuned for an interview with human rights activists and dosa of the 1st president of independence and those i'm big christine is the couch is coming up now . the welcome to actually can legacy i am most a but i have some more on the show was an a fee can lead to hopefully the ration and social justice for long and hard years. a lead. i'm
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struggling to liberate the country of mozambique from colonial powers. his legacy of freedom of justice of equality still resonates not just in his country of mozambique, but around the continent to today here in saint petersburg and russia. his daughter just seen that. michelle is engaging with the media with politicians, with young african activists to revive, instead of rate this great legacy of great african. nita says that you'll see in a way come, hello, thank you for having. so how would you summarize the legacy of your great father? it says a legacy of servant and condition of selfless need is a one of those men that left the country when he was very young,
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looking from was an beek, she went through so as a lend most of south africa botswana. and eventually he got to tons a new to fight for the freedom of mozambique. my father comes on very humble background and he experienced quite a lot of the colonial power as more and more the encroach seemed to the properties of his father. and the 2 piece capsule as he had to be baptized in order to go to school, he had biggest dreams. and unfortunately at that time, black men will not allowed to go into different areas. and so he became a nurse in fact and then comes the suppression for the people for health and from the wellbeing. and so someone needs, and he gives the best of himself for the whole life funeral for the people of mozambique for the people of southern africa, for the independence of africa and of course, of all peoples. that's the legacy that needs to be remembered. your father faced
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very harsh, collodion conditions, violent and aggressive. that's involved killing people, robbing them of their natural resources, monopolizing their fates on their lights. he responded with anger. with the 2nd, do you think this side of his legacy is still irrelevant to f? weekends who seek to liberate their country or their continent from international monopoly, power and domination. i think it's important for us to always on the spin history with the hindsight at that time, the only way that the african people could be read through the rise was actually through a struggle. and it wasn't the 1st option. you can see the public room, i did not go full on this. and but some of them had to actually start engaging in questioning. yeah, that didn't go for our was calling to didn't go for arms,
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but in this situation and was i'm deep for tomorrow and he's people to say, the only way we can do this is actually raising our arms and start and fighting. and that's when then they engage different, other need is in other nations in the continent, and then the world to actually support and to either a tourism beek deliberation of mozambique was always intertwined within the variation of the other people. you know, according to the empowerment collodion powers still existing and present in africa in the ministry shape. we have thousands of french and american, and hundreds of precious soldiers in west africa and many other areas. and sometimes they ways wars against the notion of the governments and, and the continents such as what happened in 2011. and, for example, libya and i'll try to away from, from, from this year, a young i frequence from around the continental. how do you think they could engage
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with such legacy as that of your father? absolutely. taking us inspiration. and we need to us by a to be as great as that. we need to look at total continents and say, we being tended to, when you talk about the presence of all these foreign forces, you're really talking about in the context of coming to continue in getting the resources. right. it's the niecy on is the, is, is the or the, yeah, so the goal about these was being somehow fucked in a different shape. it is not very different from the reason they were there in 1920 . that's love. it's almost the same reason they were there with the process of colonization, but this is a different way of doing it, and it forces as not to pick up um, but i think after everything that we've learned from our lead us with the level of education, we need to invest in our people, but the young people who i have to change it to who have a very sense, a very big sense of being african and wanting to do the best with the content they
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need to night. you know, if you look at the creation of the way you, it was executive because africans were saying, we need to create a sense of independence. that is no mozambique without independence or only thing, my boy. and so you look him by what is being lock. you ensure that then was, i'm big provides, you know, the ways so that they can have the railways to get the products we have, for example, dams in wasn't big. it's good looking, say south africa, can we provide electricity as will creates a sense of independence and that's what our parents for, for that is why some of them were actually tools somewhere. and michelle was assassinated because she had said that until south africa was free, was them because not going to be for you. believe your father was assessing, makes it really somewhere. michelle was assessing by extend the forces. absolutely . if so, forces that needed to change the game and saw that africa and it wasn't because
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they did not like what he stood for and what he taught his nation. i'm african, absolutely the social think tegra to the sense of justice and freedom for the people mozambique had been free because somebody a and i was a neil, for example, had given us the grounds to train our troops. right. and so we were doing the same with the amc, for example, somewhere it was a man of extreme verticality. and he had said to, you know, with was in beacon, south africa, we a, one time it was 35000000. there was a very huge meeting that he had been one of the biggest squares and he said, we will die for the internet and independence of south africa. and, and that, that, that, that happened. he of course, died in an airplane accident in mysterious circumstances. i would rather say i'm, i'm, it wasn't, it wasn't always serious and it wasn't an accident. it was a crash. you keep coming back to 2 issues,
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2 sides of your father's legacy education. and his plan, a frequentist vision. the stack of education for us. he had associated philosophy of change, a wanted people to change and the minds and the hot and build up a new understanding of their position and society. he wanted equality, vanity, and he wanted the economic resources of the country to be distributed equally. your father was associates. absolutely. is that so relevant to today's the attitude in africa? i think it is absolutely relevant. it's perhaps not in the context that it was at that time. but we need to find a formula that actually response to the needs of the people. at this particular time, we need to look at the results of independence. our countries had an increase in the level of education, reducing literacy, for example, because it was focus, the governments were focused on saying, and then we give it to cation for free. we give access to health, feel free,
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and then you know, you can actually start looking at other areas of areas of development. unfortunately, we have seen lots of resources on that. you know, access to education, access to health, access to water is not something that our people can actually enjoy a free. and that, of course, has a big impediment, is a big impediment full social development, full economic development. and of course, it is also on politics. the 2nd day mentioned that you touched on is he's on a free can vision. he believes that mozambique does not exist by itself, but it's part of the big picture biggest sol, as he called it. how can was him beat be part of the bigger continentals africa? and how can this be expressed in v as terms of the economy of politics, like vacation, or on a sides of african life?
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i think the most important is looking at the geo political location of, of elizabeth. we've got access to the see in a way that many other countries have. we've got access to good land. well, this boylen guess no, actually the wrench and explanation though, we are, we actually are quite a rich nation. the now the, the, the, the, lemme is to make sure that those, those resources are actually used for the benefits of our people's. and the question then goes, yes, if we look at the process of interdependency, then you can see why it would need to develop wasn't beach and how it would benefit . also the other countries. and that's, i think more, more and more. i want to come back to the issue of interdependency and ensuring that we, we as countries um, progress as one. what did you say when a country finds itself rich enough? sure. resources that the 1st thing it should think about is how to protect these
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resources from international grids and system of one, hopefully by perhaps uniting with other neighboring countries to have a united front to have this economic corporation. but also maybe international corporation was on big as part of the continent of africa. south africa is a leading african nation. it's a lot of the brakes. a girl, a global, mainly low button, a south countries, brazil to india and china with the rising, get caught on me. oh, of russia. yeah. do you think the bricks can actually work to advance the legacy, the aspirations, the dreams, the pen figure and vision of your father, come the bricks? a group help a freak a whole together and unites and develop independently away, free from the control of the international system. of one, hopefully i think that is important as that is the relevance of breaks is really to
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try and bring a bit of a balance in international politics and in the financial system as well. and have countries that are able to say, we generate this much more, this much more. and we need to be able to say, we need to be able to dictate how it's used. we need to be able to have a discussion with international powers on a one to one and say, listen, you want to niecy on here. you need to come and fetch it at a fair price and you're not going to slave old people in order to get that. and you come to this by yourself. you need the, the, the unit to you and the power of the content and to express some show of what today you are here in st. petersburg in the russia. and i think i'm the leader is upcoming on loss to meet and discuss the economic development of the content on the but then shutting corporation with russia. what would you say to, to your content and agents? what should they think about and what division should they defend and they have
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discussions? of course, we need to engage the world with a sense of unity. we need to have a home on the agenda of development. and once we have that, then we can actually argue we can discuss on equal terms if we, um, for example, as mozambique is coming, argue for something and then so that's like august, wonderful. something different, you know, our power is taken away. but when we look at the continent, even in the regions of the african continent as a unit, right? then we have our bargaining power in a very much, in a stronger sense and, well, who am i to say anything to the office and he does. but to say that, you know, they need to respond to the needs of the people we need. they need to actually, oh, so to the cries of freedom, economic freedom and progress. i see. i love everything. but you are a young african lady. what are you doing to preserve your father's? i guess you told me about the
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a freak on legacy for him that you are discussing and creating with other defendants of the great leaders of african liberation. i have had discussions with other members of the phone. tell us about it. what is the idea of the vision? what are you trying to achieve through such show for them? you know, of the most important issue. oh, the reason we have come together as children, descendants of frequent need is, is to start looking at the legacy. we need to look at the legacy of choosing it. we need to look at the legacy of kenneth calling on only if i come with some of them. i shall in this case and say, what is it that we as african people can still learn from them? these are men that inspire a lot of, of, of young people to day. and we can see or self, many of us can see ourselves in them. and this for him is really to start bringing number one member realized a history. it's the document,
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but it's also celebrate in diverse but in common ways as well. the legacy of these, minnesota, the young people today can find themselves in the full and say, why contact the, the, somewhere on my show of the who are you prepared to engage with these young people, to have a dialogue with them? because as you know, young people might not want to always listen only they would like to have a 2 way diane, or they have their own concerns. they own aspirations, maybe some of the young african people got intelligent, educated that maybe they have critique of your father's legacy. of the legacy is of a for you can lead to this is it's bad to have such a dialogue. unless you tell one that we learn from our mistakes and move forward, i know it is imperative. in fact that we are able to look into each one of them and analyze. they were human beings and they did great things. but of course they had also the weaknesses as personality. it's important to look,
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but also to understand at that time, what was the agenda? what would the circumstances then we learn from those circumstances and say, okay, at this point, 50 years later, it's a different closing the but i'll, we free. what kind of freedoms do mean, joy, what kind of benefits do the people actually of the ground enjoy? and of course, what you saying is a very valid discussion that has been happening and i for guys to see what they've done, really, you know, they just creative freedom and they left and so on and so forth. but what is important is that that generation sacrifice themselves and they gave us political freedom. it is our responsibility now as young people as yet. and the reason i'm not that young anymore. but it is our supreme responsibility to transform what is our political freedom into economic empowerment. and that is something that we can do. we can we educated, we communicate with the,
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with the rest of the world. we need to be part of the investor, the of, of the i, our resolution and use all that bring the knowledge. but above everything is also being able to look at everybody and see the results is online, the results of africa. and we need to discuss the distribution and the benefits of this resources on an equal level. apart from this essential politics of liberation, african and national liberation. in the last 20 years, you have been involved in social activism in your country of mozambique. tell us a bit about that side of your life. well, it's a very interesting, you know, i'm kind of a step into the shoes of my parents. but the truth is that a difficult, you know, i went through a very difficult process. i was just, you know, the issue of women abuse in africa is very, very strong. um, it is in every way in the world, but in africa as it is, is it just a boiler it?
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and when i was abused, i took the torch and i said, you know what, i'm going to give the face. and they'll give the voice to those women who have be abused every single day and don't have the courage. and so we create them. we created a movement of victims and survivors of violence that are everywhere. you know, i, i come here to russia. i go to united states, i go to brazil, i go to africa to many parts, and i look at women and the pain is the same. and it's about time, yes, we've got educational gender, best buy. this doesn't discriminate. it has nothing to do with education, with race or with social status in that. um, you know, for that matter and it's really looking and saying, listen, we are human beings as well. us and we need to be protected and we have the rights to leave freely of gender and cultural abuse. many african people when they hear gen, that disclose, they are afraid that some foreign values will be forced imported into the
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continent and imposed upon the values of the addition of africa. to think we've been our confidence, history and value a system. we can find the bose at the sides from which we can draw strengths. we control with their nephew, and we can improve our gender relations and family relations without losing only up . or do we have own honestly, to actually import values from experiment for and societies. absolutely not. um, you just need to look at our call of our history. let's look at that because no history on the roller women has always been a very prominent one in our communities. we've had kings, you know, and i'm trying to stay on purpose. i'm not, i don't wanna call them clean, so i want to call them kings. i like to hear them stating that you thought it was a mistake, but it's not, it's we had quinn xena for example. you know,
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you had feel fox row. we had many other and they were at the status of the men and if they wouldn't work better and that just shows that women have always had a very important role. unfortunately, with history vision being a distortion in the way it has been used and it's being who is negatively. and that's why yes, i understand what you say that people get to be nervous when you talk about to gender disclosing africa. because it feels like we want to change this back to school, we want to revolutionize there's a positive side to the african family is a strong unit of social structure that can be helped to advance the good of, of the country on the continent. people are afraid that we might home the, the family unit, which is indeed deconstructed and broke down in many parts of the world's house. so it wouldn't be the constructive, you know, that's, it's actually said that you empower women, you empower village, right?
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you would, you creates a woman and she's able to know that from this money i'm going to divide it in different ways. i'm sending 2 children to school and i'm doing, you know, other things. yes, you are creating a possibility of revolutionizing, but we don't disrespect. i think the challenge normally and the fear has been and the fact that with people think that the moment women, 9th, i would do be a total k or since it was a social and cultural organization and will be disrespect. no, that's not what we talking about. we are talking about being able to look at millions and millions of women and ensuring that these women can be productive in our communities. you know, we evaluate it's trends and trends of dollars that a lot because women can not participate in the economy and the economic development of all countries. so that's what we talking about culturally. yes, of course we can be, you know,
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women can be the last one to eat because they have to feed 1st the men, the children and then they each the rest. but it is something that we need to go back to our values and for women at the center on decision. and they'll be kid as they used to be. do you find the younger generation, some of the ones or the vice versa? the absolutely find the most difficult to find to speak to old a watch because there is already a set structure in the way the sink. and in the way things have to be done. young people, a lot more, very young people are still very open to understanding sits in the concepts of equality of justice and of human rights. for example, the older people might like why less out of enjoying very good discussion for when it comes to that is that the reason you're trying to bridge the gap between the new wise and the nations and the legacy of your father. because then they would have 4
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sides, they would have more data t, it would have the developing values of african families on one side. but they would also will not lose their roots. so connection with the legacy of the great african leaders. absolutely, that's something you would, you would actually attempt to achieve. absolutely, and you know, somewhat of so women is not an issue of gratitude. if actually, i mean parity of, of the resolution in, in, in our communities you see, so it's not something that you do for charity. that's it's, it's not for charity. it's because it's essential for the federal government actually all of our communities. and that is what we try to do, that's what i try to do is engage young people and say, listen. so you need to look the basic thing was that is we need to look at the women and men as valuable human beings. we can not give little value to women and less value to men. the moment we start doing that, we have a social, we have
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a community that he' suggests that is fair for men and women to be equally to raise the children. and that's the kind of message that i tried to pass. and of course it's the kind of message that my father has for, for. it's the kind of message that no my father has died for. well, this sounds like a message of liberation and progress for old men and women of africa. the assessed, as you'll see, and i thank you very much. thank you. thank you. thank you. the november 22nd 2022 outraged orthodox christians confronted ukrainian security service offices, looking entrances and exits the keys, oldest one the street. we're looking for as a russian spies among the monks. and we mean zillow seen in the season for the
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brutal crack down. one churches parishioner sits on a song about the throne being reason enough to condemn any orthodox christian attack, imprisoned, and even killed. i'm sure what i knew. i shot my hand to pick us how many miles store any store to fill our flight in. total thought i see. we used to use the same. you know, it's the same. we will send you both are used to miss dog. this saves you need the hi, i'm executive, and i'm here to plan with you whatever you do. do not watch my new show it seriously. why watch something that's so different. little opinions that he won't
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get anywhere else. welcome to please do the have the state department c i a weapons, bankers, multi 1000000000 dollar corporations. choose your fax for you. go ahead. change and whatever you do. don't want marshall state main street because i'm probably going to make you uncomfortable. my show is called stretching time, but again, you probably don't wanna watch it because it might just change the way you kind of liberal agenda received. the west now is not the reason based, but it's a kind of ways i really just create an outside to crowd of thoughts of real estate, practical objection off creating that kind of city on the hill on the
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the, with the rest of africa. some is set to kick off the president boots individually, census of the multi polar world. ok, he speaks to permanent spigots from the continents. wonderful to have relationships with other countries. but we need sions, applicant problems, not wisdom solutions for african from the states. neighboring ukraine pushed back against brussels pressure to export ukrainian. great.
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