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tv   Documentary  RT  July 26, 2023 7:30pm-8:00pm EDT

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i'm sure you knew i knew it would be a sensitive so that's it. the series doing it for you and you have them by see it the story episode of it. stop to believe me writing these. yeah. you're saying you missed us and you to see the, to those and but things go mental village doesn't notice we are gambling with the future of all mankind. and we're, we're risking it for not the take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power to division with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse really once a better wills,
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and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented as 1st. can you see through their illusion going underground can hi, i'm acceptable and i'm here to plan with you whatever you do. do not watch my new show. seriously. why watch something that's so different. whitelisted opinions that he won't get anywhere else. what can i please or do you 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 my show stay main street because i'm probably going to make you uncomfortable. my show is called stretching time, but again, you probably don't want to watch it because it might just change the way inside
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the as you do, thinking but to know what to keep this key and what i'm looking for that. yeah, cuz i was online with a gun that are available that were you well with them here, but i didn't get that going. there's a possibility to start my one, but i think i think most public enough for me to send them. yeah, i'm sure it's not that you must be the phone number. it's all about the correct the mobile number. it's all about the depth of the
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when it comes to a free can legacy. i am most abraham, only that tumble was a prominent icon of african liberation for decades. he fought with his brothers and sisters in south africa against the apartheid regime. he inspired so many and still inspires so many to day in the beautiful city of saint petersburg. i have with me his daughter know my temper with come sister. thank you. my dear brother. tell us about the legacy of your late father. well, i think the 1st thing that i should say is that for south africa he was also as diplomats. he was 9 for his brilliant mind. there's a good strategist, very, very good. he was known for his analytical thinking. and the other thing i
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think that many people may not realize is the t lead. the largest and coupon strikes us only 13 movement in the 20th century. a huge, a huge achievement. and he did this mainly by using diplomatic skills. he went to the united nations. so for example, in 1974 united nations, they suspended south africa's membership because of the international opposition took part right. that was done on his watch. she went to churches internationally and take up the support of the international religious groups to stand up against the 4 types he wants to individuals. countries. he traveled the globe for 2729 years and what was his mission? his mission was to tell the world about what was happening in south africa,
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the injustices that were being done to this, of african people. and the internet national lies. that's why getting the citizens of the world and the government's to stand up and say, this is an abuse of human rights. and he did, it says successfully that ultimately, we managed to go home a back to south africa. and for him jump vote on mission accomplished. and i think that's the message that he would want people to know that he was given a jump to do and he did it. but of course in that see sold was a family mine. he just had a large family because it wasn't just me and my brothers and sister, she had hundreds of children, thousands of children who live with the world, particularly of to 20, uh, 1976. this was a uprisings when a lot of i use less the country they wants to come. they wants to take homes and
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fight against the apartheid regime. with a talent to be able to have this global vision. and the same time be present and powerful on the local level and actually linked to the younger generations of south africa. i do think in this way we can take inspiration from him and seek globin cooperation against injustice everywhere for the circumstances. now different because of international division, they're not different, they're not different. one of the things he said, which i think is so pickable today. when we look at our youth and the very hard life actually, that so many of them have to live. he says it's a country that does not care for its youth, doesn't this of its future. and i think we need to tell that to our young people. we need them to understand that we do care about them. we do worry about them. we do want them to have a future because so many, i think,
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feel despondent. they feel the voiceless, they don't know where to look for hope. but the hope is that is, is that, and people like my father them so many of my father is around the world, not just in south africa, but in all consummate outside of a continent we of course are talking about so i'd have to with me. but the african continent is full of huge need is huge, need is who taking the people and they use for to liberation to a space with. they could have self determination, and would they could decide their own destiny. now in this time, it's really important that i use understand that they can decide their own destiny is a choice. basically the use of a freak out today can actually understand he's diplomatic language and his peaceful work with the international community which proved successful as you said. or do
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you think the use of today is more engaged? sometimes in more detail lies ideologies and more. a nicolai's ways of protesting i know, fighting against injustice. you know, when he was young and he was new to the political arena. if i can put it like that, he was also considered the radical. so there's nothing wrong with young people having extreme views and holding them with passion. and the thing is to take that passion, intellectual lies that make it work for you, make it useful. feel community, whether that's in a village in a city, in a country, on the continent, in the world be useful, be productive. and i think that message is for all ages. it's not just for the use of the international living. we cannot say that in the fifty's, a 16 seventy's and eighty's or international powers were fighting against apartheid
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regime on the same level. and the soviet union. for example, you gave much help to the liberation movements of africa. why some western powers supported some unjust collodion powers in the continent. do you think the fixture is still similar, or is it different? i think very often when we look at global politics, the ones that you can never know is national interest. so it isn't your national interest to go to the left, you go to the left, it has to go to the right to go to the right. and every country has its own reasons . i wouldn't want to be the one to say that this is better than that. but from my perspective, as a black south african, yes, the soviet union and many communist countries, socialist countries, they supported us for the case, for decades, many western countries, capitalist countries didn't. but then you have to punch in the middle, the scandinavian countries, fusion is the portion of the anti apartheid cause of injustice is generally on
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a coincidence. so i think it depends on the depth of relationship that you have with any given country or rulers of that country. that helps the lot, the level of education you have amongst the different communities. now, for example, with the soviet union, they understood us well. they took interest in time to understand us. we understood them well. of our young people can't university. in moscow, they learned russian. my says boyfriends was a black south african boy who had been to a russian university. he told me, tried to teach with sweet russian. um, so we know we were very comfortable with, with that kind of relationship the same with cuba and the same so many other countries, northern africa, particularly the algeria. i could say for example, a country that was usually supportive. in fact, i'll jerry, it was one of the 1st countries to give my father passport when he left south
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africa. i, you know, the seventy's and eighty's especially get dr. young in libby i was about to say, yeah, you know, i mean there's so many countries that there's not much for that. that's cool, nationally huge the importance. great, great man. so we, we have a legacy coming on legacy. if i can put it like that, there's such a talk about diplomacy from your side on yourself as a government and it's for me. i have no idea how you could approach young africans and encouraged them to take up diplomacy. it is not something that is common in social media, for example, or common gene for our young african women or 9 to, to think of this as a way of changing things. do you think diplomacy can actually be a way forward for young africans to think, for example, about they know how to unite the continent diplomatically, particularly how to approach different international powers for the good difficulty,
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that's diplomatically again, is that something that would tempt the young africans these days, my brother, what are we doing now? we're talking, we're exchanging ideas, you ask me questions, i'm answering your questions. we're having a dialogue, know, diplomacy take that would away because it distracts people and talk about relationships, building relationships, learning about each other. what are your strengths and weaknesses? what can i support you where can use to pull me? how can we create something positive and strong together? best diplomacy? but if you put the word diplomacy that many people have done to take a step back. but if you talk about making friends and building relations, understanding, fixing problems, everybody does it every single day for the challenges facing a fee comes everywhere. there are hard realities that go beyond the nice to and the,
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the pro magic approach that are harsh economic realities. house political divisions, how can we tackle these divisions and the reality is inspired by the great leaders of africa such as your father. how is this relating to your own work as a diploma, as, as, as an african woman who existed not just on the south african seen, but on the international. you have to talk again is full about communication. if you don't talk, you cannot understand anything about anybody, beautiful heavy. so for yourself to other know you talk to others and you understand. and if you have a family, you know yourself, there is no family that doesn't have polish woods business family with extreme positions. often and not taken, but you push through because you have a shared vision of what a future should look like for your family. so he will fight. you will disagree,
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do you may not to, for a while, but ultimately you have to tool because if you don't talk, nothing can become resolved. as i, and you know, honestly, for all the things that are happening in the world. if people could put aside a minute to say what we want to gather, that we are prepared to push all the other things aside. what do we want to get to do? we want our children to grow up with food in their stomachs, the roof over the hits a future if so what are we doing to make that happen? because if you say that's to your wife, when you to always fighting. yeah. and just say the children come 1st, am i right? when we have to day here in saint petersburg, attending a big gathering of talking and dialogue. and it's happening between the continent of africa and the russian federation. discussing economic corporation politic can
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be stalk and what do you think can come out of such a gathering if of course, the house in the right place. and if people are truly willing to, to have a dialogue and advance the causes of justice and social change together, can russia and africa do something good together? and you're not in your opinion. why not? and also you see, the thing is, is that what needs to change? i think is this notion that when people talk about a country is one. but when they talk about sandia, nigeria took a been gone the can. yeah. we'll come together as the consummate africa. and so there is this tendency to say there is this consonant with 53 or different countries and he has 11. if it goes to to $53.00 must be a very patient one. very patient one. yes,
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because you have 53 people talking, not one person talking back to you, but doing these 50 so you can just have home and problems and common reality and common challenges. but they also have different realities and different challenges . and again, it comes to self interest, the interest of each country is for the best event of best citizens. what we're trying to do now is the a you, is to say that we have to find ways where what happens with in us is more important than what happens outside of us. we determine ourselves, we need to be more interest spec to maybe, and we need to decide that wonderful to have relationships with other countries. but we need to say african solutions for african problems, not wisdom solutions for african problem. we also have the bricks rule, which is mainly composed of global south countries, that brazil, the india,
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south africa, of course, china, and then russia. from the north. it has been going on for years, the many trade agreements, political agreements. and it seems that more frequent countries want to join the bricks of rule, but julia have declared its attention to joint egypt to needs. yeah. nigeria, many other countries do you think in the bricks or group? there is a space for dialogue for, for uh, you know, benefits for all economic a change. would you as a diplomat and the someone who has be active in the continent and internationally dissing the brick subaru that provides a good opportunity for africans to move forward. i think any group would provide a good opportunity for any countries, so long as they were looking for peace. they were looking for prosperity and they were looking for a better life, the people. and they were looking for ways in which to productively engage without
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looking for destruction, without looking for taking money and all of those kinds of things. we really are a bunch of equals, that's the way that i was brought up. and that's ways that the organization that my father led for many years. that's what they believed. we are a band of equals. did you father? think of himself as africa as christine not. what else would he think of him so far? so would you think that the pan african vision is organic and essential to his legacy hosting? so he was a pilot for goodness. yes. and i think, but, you know, the whole notion of, that's kind of thinking, if it's, if it's true and i'm polluted, can only take a survey to where we want to go as individual countries within our continent. but you know, it varies. we, we come from so many different historical backgrounds, francophone africa and different echo cousins which of these speaking arabs
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speaking africa, so many different types of africa in africa. and i think that the most important thing is that we as countries within that space, we come to a, something of an agreement as to how we move forward. and i think that's exactly what's happening, which is why other countries do wants to become part of the brakes format. many of the great icons of, of african liberation such as not set of egypt and below for judy. again, if you will leave the number of the congo and the chroma of gun. they believed that at unifying a freak out economically. having a common markets, a collaborating with the industry. and having trade agreements will help unify africans on other levels because the common good to the common economic and good would help people to communicate and feel that their interests are united
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together. and then people will forget about the political divisions or linguistic divisions. would you add the coverage d a you can union to move forward with progress towards more economic unification of the country? i think that's exactly what's what's happening. uh you see that you made a slip of the country. i said, well, they asked me for my hunt, amazing of the content and you know, when present around the post with was jeff as, as the 8th, they did a wonderful change agreement that is continental the base. and that allows us to change with each other with that over red tape that has historically been that and it seems to be holding it seems to be holding. so if we can keep that kind of momentum going, there's no reason to, to why we can't find ourselves in
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a bit vision with the wealth that is generated in africa, stays in africa. again, we have to go back to how to connect to young africans. because it's one of the most pressing issues, they are the future. and they are active in many parts of the continent in my travels around africa, i needs beautiful, educated, very energetic young people. but in my discussions with them, sometimes i feel that last, they don't know the history of the continent as well as they should. they might know the names of the icons of african history such as your great father. but they don't know exactly the details. they have the proper legacy, the, the ideas, the philosophy that what these icons of african liberation, a chief and every day in that everyday life. and would you think that people like you and others have a responsibility to actually engage with young africans and listen to them and have
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a dialogue and see how we can have even a cookie can look at the a, tell our past, including the life and work so if i want to great african icons, a cruise, you can look to land from the mistakes and to allow young africans to speak their minds and to be who they want to be. but inspired by, by our past. would that be a reasonable course of action? this engagement? i don't think it's, it's really that complicated. i think that the question to us is, when kids go to school, when our children know studying what are they learning, what is the history that they are being taught and what is a learning the learning, the history, the rest of the world. and they learning the history of a continent which countries of a learning about if you're in the north, so you're learning about no history. you're learning about history, the south. what is going on? we don't know, i don't know. but what i do know is that every thing is out there on the internet.
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now, if you're interested, you can find out. but 1st you have to know you're interested. and that comes down to what you hear it. how do your parents know? maybe not, nothing wrong with it, but the teachers know, so we have to look at the education system all we would educating our children from the countries within the continent. so they've gone and knows what's happening in uh, i don't know in the algae area. what are the issues that of who are the heroes that do they know is it discussed? we have master can education system for this kind of thing. so i don't think we do . so if we want our children to be able to plug in to the many icons so many here is liberation heroes. so we have in africa, we needs to have a commonality of approach to how we speak of them continental the, i think when we hope that such a dialogue that we are having now on our team will help people pay attention and
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engage. but maybe we also need to be present in social media. do you have social media accounts or so that's really not. how would you engage with young africans without being on social media? like can't do that. no. not too much nonsense goes on the social media for me. i'm not interested. so i, i shouldn't probably say that, but i'm really not interested, but you would of course engage with them on other levels and different ways. of course. well, i'm happy to talk to anybody any time, but i didn't really know what you mean about social media. if you don't love things like facebook and take talking all that. no, not for me. absolutely. you know, it's, i'm, and i'm sure it's a little very useful, but i also see of a lot of very negative stuff that is affecting all youth and the kind of of, of information that, that consuming through some of the social media outlets such as, think of hopefully, so i said okay, i'm too old for that so i can be bothered with it now. well,
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we help that. we would always find new ways of engaging with the young guy generation and our continents to preserve and revise the legacy of the great leaders of 500 calibration system one more time. but thank you very much. oh is the pleasure of my brother who is a pleasure. take care the the best thing to do. so that's the see how he's doing it for you and you have them by see it the display of this of the it stopped you but even the way nice. yeah. so you're saying you missed us and you to see that you
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those them, but things go man's of them. she doesn't notice we are gambling with the future of all mankind and we're, we're risking it for not the, the russian states never is as tight as i'm in the most sense community invest, not getting all sense of the in the system must be the one else calls question about this, even though we will fan in the european union, the kremlin media mission, the state on russia, funding and supports the r t. suppose next, even our video agency,
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roughly all the band on youtube, the question, did you say you requested the is the west propaganda war against prussia? beginning to show practice stimulatory situation. your brain is being revealed is grim with anything approaching optimism, stating, nonetheless, the by didn't ministration and the inner parties soldier on wasting ukrainian blood . l look forward to talking to you all. that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings accept. we're such orders that conflict with the 1st law show
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alignment of the patient. we should be very careful about our personal intelligence . the point obviously is to place a trust, rather than to the various job. i mean with artificial intelligence. we have so many with the in the a robot must protect his phone. existence was on the 1934 france invaded algeria and straight away the friend started inhabiting it to strengthen their position. the column is known as the new. ours did the best land from day one. the local population was put into an unequal position and was briefly
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exploited. this cause and as discontent. the people of l g area began their long term bite for independence. 1954. the banner of freedom was raised by the national liberation front. a guerrilla war against the occupants broke out. the french tried to suppress, to rebuild you and using cruel measures. whole villages were wiped out, acts of georgia and executions of civil people, including pregnant women, children, and old people took place. more than 2000000 people were bored into concentration camps. however, these punitive measures didn't help. cl, jerry and patriot managed to induce france besides these negotiations. in 1962 heavy and the cords were assigned 14 l. jerry on the bass warrants independence. but this was achieved at a colossal price. algeria by rights is considered to be
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a country of martyrs. according to the calculations of historians, the french colonists are responsible for the debts of one and a half 1000000 algerians. the head to all the brig sponge things. there are no open recalls for developing countries to make payments and national currencies as president putin stress is that the dollar is being used as a political told the south african president 0 run last thursday. arrived in russia on the eve of the summit in saint petersburg, we speak with south africa, foreign minister, he says, the confident left me feeling this legacy of neo colonialism. this time uh that all continental airlines but it has the possibility of being an extremely powerful part of the world.

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