26
26
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
looking forward to travelling with you to riyadh saudi arabia where our taxi driver will be a woman and you and i will sit in their cafe and discuss freedom in the gulf region ok angela whatever you do you think that's ever going to happen i'd like to join that trip. i want to thank all of my if you're not trained we will all be in a bus one day in riyadh here many thanks to my guest today in chicopee los angeles and in dubai and thanks to our viewers for watching us here to the next time and remember a profitable. download the official on. your own phone only pulled touch from the top story. which all life on the go. video on demand. comes. on a sense feed now with the palm of your. questions on the dot com. deadly terror attacks in the syrian city of evil lead killed knight and injuring dozens more this is the u.n. warns is powerless to implement a peace plan allows both sides lay down their arms. political pressure on ukraine grows over the treatment of former prime minister yulia timoshenko with e.u. politicians threatening to boycott the euro two thousand and twelve football champi
looking forward to travelling with you to riyadh saudi arabia where our taxi driver will be a woman and you and i will sit in their cafe and discuss freedom in the gulf region ok angela whatever you do you think that's ever going to happen i'd like to join that trip. i want to thank all of my if you're not trained we will all be in a bus one day in riyadh here many thanks to my guest today in chicopee los angeles and in dubai and thanks to our viewers for watching us here to the next time and...
38
38
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
we will all be in a bus one day in riyadh here many thanks to my guest today in chicopee los angeles and in dubai and thanks to our viewers for watching if you go to the next time and remember a crosswalk. download the official ante up location on the phone on my i pod touch from the. jaunty life on the go. video on demand on ts mine gold costs and already says feeds now in the palm of your. question on the dot com. more news today violence is once again flared up the families are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. giant corporations are the day. feel any. ill. feel any.
we will all be in a bus one day in riyadh here many thanks to my guest today in chicopee los angeles and in dubai and thanks to our viewers for watching if you go to the next time and remember a crosswalk. download the official ante up location on the phone on my i pod touch from the. jaunty life on the go. video on demand on ts mine gold costs and already says feeds now in the palm of your. question on the dot com. more news today violence is once again flared up the families are the images...
238
238
May 20, 2012
05/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 238
favorite 0
quote 0
five saudis were invited to riyadh.ach is a monarchy, and each a member of the group called the gcc or the gulf cooperation council. the saudi's hope is to turn that group into a more closely knit federation, something like the european union, they say. they feel a union of monarchies would serve as a bull worth against the region's turmoil and democracy. but it turned out that for now the gcc agreed to disagree. you see, many of the small members fear saudi domination. what were the saudis thinking? well, riyadh has a complicated role in the arab spring. on the one hand it is arming syria's opposition, but one could argue that intervention is driven by sectarian concerns. it wants to support a sunni opposition fighting a leader. it's basically shia. that leader is also supported by iran, the great shia rival to saudi arabia. in most other instances, riyadh has essentially used its deep pockets to try to contain the arab state. in bahrain it sent thousands of troops to help crush a rebellion. in jordan and morocco, ther
five saudis were invited to riyadh.ach is a monarchy, and each a member of the group called the gcc or the gulf cooperation council. the saudi's hope is to turn that group into a more closely knit federation, something like the european union, they say. they feel a union of monarchies would serve as a bull worth against the region's turmoil and democracy. but it turned out that for now the gcc agreed to disagree. you see, many of the small members fear saudi domination. what were the saudis...
385
385
May 23, 2012
05/12
by
WMPT
tv
eye 385
favorite 0
quote 0
we just had this announcement just now from riyadh of the $3.25 billion. i spoke to a member of oxfam in yemen, what does this mean, are you happy now? because the shortfall is about a quarter of a billion, so this would be great. they said, well, yes, we're very happy, that is a good sign. but there was $5.6 billion promised by countries back in 2006, and actually most of that money hasn't come through yet. so, in terms of the urgency of the needs of the people, it's all very well saying we'll give this money to development projects, but how long is it going to take? people have now reached the point called the hunger gap, from may until the autumn, when food has run out. they're unable to grow anymore, there's very little water. what agencies are saying you don't need to supply lots of food, but just even cash. small cash handouts enable people to buy food in the market. although it is food there, it's too expensive for people to afford. >> thanks very much indeed. the inventor of the tv remote control, eugene polley, has died at the age of 96. mr. polle
we just had this announcement just now from riyadh of the $3.25 billion. i spoke to a member of oxfam in yemen, what does this mean, are you happy now? because the shortfall is about a quarter of a billion, so this would be great. they said, well, yes, we're very happy, that is a good sign. but there was $5.6 billion promised by countries back in 2006, and actually most of that money hasn't come through yet. so, in terms of the urgency of the needs of the people, it's all very well saying we'll...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
way it has now been renovated and before that it was just an ordinary small house in the borough riyadh style viceroy in this house is a good long lived as a hermit for the last ten years of his life he meditated here one day he gathered along as close to him and asked them to say a farewell prayer the longest refused to come when they say that to somebody who was still alive then is again off again saying it himself and literally came to a dead stop when the press ended in that condition he was placed in a wooden box and buried but before leaving this world it's a good offer had said that he would return. the dots on where to go off served was destroyed by save your top stories the palace of culture was built their stead but one day it was destroyed by fire the place had rejected the new culture seventy five years after that again of death anatolian and on follow the path of the two lovers and demba back then the two men were looking for there to get a final resting place they did not have an exact location instead they relied on into a ship and against all odds they found it. was . wh
way it has now been renovated and before that it was just an ordinary small house in the borough riyadh style viceroy in this house is a good long lived as a hermit for the last ten years of his life he meditated here one day he gathered along as close to him and asked them to say a farewell prayer the longest refused to come when they say that to somebody who was still alive then is again off again saying it himself and literally came to a dead stop when the press ended in that condition he...
22
22
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
here we have the fall in riyadh the defense ministers of the call coming in. to inspect the troops absolutely i don't want. to hear more from the commentary. i see you get out the defense minister of the russian federation. troops out of the muscular hairy son was already there what did picture you have. to celebrate the sixty seventh anniversary out there a victory for you want the gator to quarrel. colonel general give us all. about it. morning coming up. congratulations on the sixty seventh standard very surreal. to victory in the great patriotic war oh. well we see here the that sense minister reviewing the troops there inspecting the troops there before he reports to the newly inaugurated president vladimir putin. they can see the enormous amount of pomp and circumstance here. they put a lot of effort into this parade so they don't think. the training it's a breakthrough so it's a very great effort and everybody has to contribute to the so many sources moving but. then of course the millions of russians that have been watching this year after year after y
here we have the fall in riyadh the defense ministers of the call coming in. to inspect the troops absolutely i don't want. to hear more from the commentary. i see you get out the defense minister of the russian federation. troops out of the muscular hairy son was already there what did picture you have. to celebrate the sixty seventh anniversary out there a victory for you want the gator to quarrel. colonel general give us all. about it. morning coming up. congratulations on the sixty seventh...
133
133
May 1, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
another theme in the middle east which is the split over the n h nuclear weapons but this belief in riyadh that the lest decade has helped to -- tactics don't belie strategy. to the extent al qaeda matters, it matter for what its overall aspirations are. if an aspiration says only violence can bring change, then you've not go al qaeda. you have something that would be analogous to trade unionists or social democrats. but that takes 100 to 150 years to fully develop through the political process. if they all want to talk about is getting a new parliamentary procedure in parliament, then they have won. they are now in a plit cal process. toe sew al qaeda in that analogy to me are still the bolsheviks. >> tom, if i could, i think you touched on it a couple times. i think for a game change you watch the money. it's not about money, it's all about money, it's always about money. it's what's going to drive them and give them a capability. i think recently and i can say this in a general sense, i don't have anything to back it up, i think we've realized that and matt from his background in the tr
another theme in the middle east which is the split over the n h nuclear weapons but this belief in riyadh that the lest decade has helped to -- tactics don't belie strategy. to the extent al qaeda matters, it matter for what its overall aspirations are. if an aspiration says only violence can bring change, then you've not go al qaeda. you have something that would be analogous to trade unionists or social democrats. but that takes 100 to 150 years to fully develop through the political...
164
164
May 6, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 164
favorite 0
quote 1
by the late 1870s, early 1880s, all had written new state constitutions and had been riyadh mitted to the union. as each stayed was re-admitted to the union, the freedman bureau left the state and left the state in the hands of its own state government. it didn't take long for those state governments to start passing different laws and different state constitutions and to find loopholes in the constitutions that they had written and by the mid 1880s, the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, while they still existed in the constitution, were virtually null and void in the deep south and this ushered in the period of jim crow. welcome to the 1910 train depot at james madison's montpelier, located between route 20 and the norfolk southern railway. in 1910, this railroad belonged to southern rail. and mr. dupont, the owner of montpelier at the time, wanted the train to stop for him and in order to have that happen, he needed to build a train station, so he did. come on inside and i'll show it to you. the history at montpelier is very interesting in the dupont era, because, of course, the dupon
by the late 1870s, early 1880s, all had written new state constitutions and had been riyadh mitted to the union. as each stayed was re-admitted to the union, the freedman bureau left the state and left the state in the hands of its own state government. it didn't take long for those state governments to start passing different laws and different state constitutions and to find loopholes in the constitutions that they had written and by the mid 1880s, the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, while...
33
33
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
from a peaceful resolution to the crises in syria and what's happening right now between israel and riyadh so both countries benefit from each other i would say if you would say it's more than what was said but it's certainly china because you could argue that russia the russian economy is self-sufficient whereas china very much is it its economic growth it's very much dependent on global stability and global economic growth you could argue that after the fall of the berlin wall the united states start to attain just. proportionate and really reasonable and ultimately unsustainable amount of global wealth and power and now what we're seeing basically is that we don't see where russia china and the brics countries rising in influence and i think that's the way it ought to be for too long we've been a huge you know pull the world and that has created a lot of issues and we're going towards a multi a world which i think is all to me more reasonable and more sustainable. look at the business news with daniel shortly but for now i'm more than two point five million houses in the united states h
from a peaceful resolution to the crises in syria and what's happening right now between israel and riyadh so both countries benefit from each other i would say if you would say it's more than what was said but it's certainly china because you could argue that russia the russian economy is self-sufficient whereas china very much is it its economic growth it's very much dependent on global stability and global economic growth you could argue that after the fall of the berlin wall the united...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
peaceful resolution through the crises in syria and what's happening right now between israel and riyadh so both countries benefits from each other i would say if you were to say who but it's more simple was to go to china because you could argue that russia the russian economy is so sufficient where china very much is its economic growth it's very much dependent on global stability and global economic growth and it imports raw commodities from around the world and export just meant that your goods store china stands to benefit greatly from a peaceful resolution to your global. crises all right well russia's visit to china comes hot on the heels of hillary clinton's visit there as well. hillary clinton is trying to drum up support for its policies on north korea and iran so what do you read into this visit i mean does the u.s. fear in other words it's losing its dominance globally. well i mean you could argue that after the fall of the berlin wall the united states started to retain this. portion it really under reasonable and ultimately unsustainable amount of global wealth and power an
peaceful resolution through the crises in syria and what's happening right now between israel and riyadh so both countries benefits from each other i would say if you were to say who but it's more simple was to go to china because you could argue that russia the russian economy is so sufficient where china very much is its economic growth it's very much dependent on global stability and global economic growth and it imports raw commodities from around the world and export just meant that your...
19
19
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
presidential election let's join us so why are a researcher from the karo center for human rights mr riyadh such violence just three weeks ahead of the presidential election how will these escalating tensions ultimately affect the vote. well it can it can definitely affect the vote but it can also affect the actually happening of elections there are serious doubts within the egyptian public. even before the clashes have started and currently as the elections might be pushed forward the same the same concerns have been voiced recently by political different political groups and parliamentarians with even rumors seeing yesterday that has asked for to postpone the elections due to the current unrest in front of advocacy of. gaffes nonetheless in the press conference today have said that this is that these are rumors and the elections will happen in july it's important to mention in this context that during the previously before the parliamentary elections last november a similar clashes have started in mohamed mahmoud and so it's particularly interesting if we are to compare how. erupt immedia
presidential election let's join us so why are a researcher from the karo center for human rights mr riyadh such violence just three weeks ahead of the presidential election how will these escalating tensions ultimately affect the vote. well it can it can definitely affect the vote but it can also affect the actually happening of elections there are serious doubts within the egyptian public. even before the clashes have started and currently as the elections might be pushed forward the same the...
141
141
May 3, 2012
05/12
by
KRON
tv
eye 141
favorite 0
quote 0
this is between south mcdowell street and washington and riyadh.he can see the traffic between -- and petaluma is slow but this is typical of this time the drive times on the bay bridge a running 16 to 17 minutes. your ride to the golden gate bridge is pretty smith. and is heating up a little bet her marin county. the take a look at the traffic map with road sensors. was see the there is little slow and the panel area. there is heavy traffic on walnut tree in walnut creek. we just picked up our first of slow traffic through saratoga and 85 northbound. 101 still looks good around and 92 and a change. here's the first some of traffic we've seen in marin county on 101. >>darya: we've had our first look of documents seized by the navy seals from the outcry that leaders of some of the lot tends headquarters. -- osama bin laden headquarters. the documents show that he and a loss of trust from his field commanders. bin laden was running to focus all of the terrorism on the you as. >>mark: police said the boy was attacked by a group of young men at rooseve
this is between south mcdowell street and washington and riyadh.he can see the traffic between -- and petaluma is slow but this is typical of this time the drive times on the bay bridge a running 16 to 17 minutes. your ride to the golden gate bridge is pretty smith. and is heating up a little bet her marin county. the take a look at the traffic map with road sensors. was see the there is little slow and the panel area. there is heavy traffic on walnut tree in walnut creek. we just picked up our...
202
202
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 0
osama was born in 1957, here in this riyadh neighborhood.was the only child his mother had with mohammed bin laden before they divorced. then, bin laden and his mother, aliyah, moved to jeddah and lived here, apart from the other wives and children. mohammed bin laden died when osama was just 10 years old. >> the school was abuzz with the news that mohammed bin laden had been killed in a plane crash. >> reporter: with so many siblings, it's hard to say how close osama was to his father or how the loss affected him. this photograph from the early 1970s shows some of the many bin laden brothers and sisters on a vacation in sweden. osama was quiet and shy. his teacher says he rarely spoke up in class. >> he didn't show any particular signs of being a leader amongst men. >> he was a shy boy. he wouldn't talk unless he needed to. he would listen more. i'm dr. hared batarfi. i met osama bin laden in the early 1970s, when we lived in this neighborhood. >> reporter: this nondescript middle-class jeddah neighborhood is where batarfi, then age 12, and
osama was born in 1957, here in this riyadh neighborhood.was the only child his mother had with mohammed bin laden before they divorced. then, bin laden and his mother, aliyah, moved to jeddah and lived here, apart from the other wives and children. mohammed bin laden died when osama was just 10 years old. >> the school was abuzz with the news that mohammed bin laden had been killed in a plane crash. >> reporter: with so many siblings, it's hard to say how close osama was to his...
157
157
May 1, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
shia sunni split anchored on rihad and tehran hostilities over nuclear- weapons and the belief in riyadh that the last decade unfairly advantage pteron and we americans love to facilitate some of that by turning iraq over to the shia and doing other things. this is playing as well. this is the tactical shift. tactics do not allow strategy. al qaeda matters for what it's overall aspirations are, and if it is not an aspiration for overall caliphate, that only violence can bring change, then you did not have al-qaeda. you have something back in the day analogous to trade unions and social democrats. but it takes time, 100 years to 150 years before you develop the political process. but if we get to the point what all the heads of -- whether they want to talk about getting a new parliamentary majority in syria, i think that ideological battle is just about won because that means the voice of the people speaking through guys who may have been revolutionary at one time but are now in the revolutionary poulson -- so al qaeda to make is the bolsheviks and they cannot do without the oxygen of vio
shia sunni split anchored on rihad and tehran hostilities over nuclear- weapons and the belief in riyadh that the last decade unfairly advantage pteron and we americans love to facilitate some of that by turning iraq over to the shia and doing other things. this is playing as well. this is the tactical shift. tactics do not allow strategy. al qaeda matters for what it's overall aspirations are, and if it is not an aspiration for overall caliphate, that only violence can bring change, then you...
142
142
May 30, 2012
05/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 142
favorite 0
quote 0
a >> i want ask about another subject riyadh on tuesday, "new york times" published an explosive exposÉow president obama personally oversees a secret kill list containing the names and daughters of individuals targeted for assassination in the u.s. drone war. according to "times," obama signs off on every targeted killing in yemen and somalia and the more complex or risky strikes in pakistan. individuals on the list include u.s. citizens as well as teenage girls as young as 17 years old. can you comment? >> the president of the u.n. is states believes he has the power to order people to kill -- the president of the united states believes he has the power to order people to be killed. i really do believe is literally the most radical power a government and president can seize, yet the obama administration has seized this power and exercised it aggressively with little controversy. "times" has disturbing details. probably of which is one of the reasons why the obama administration claims the casualties of civilians are solo from their drone attacks, which everyone knows is false, is beca
a >> i want ask about another subject riyadh on tuesday, "new york times" published an explosive exposÉow president obama personally oversees a secret kill list containing the names and daughters of individuals targeted for assassination in the u.s. drone war. according to "times," obama signs off on every targeted killing in yemen and somalia and the more complex or risky strikes in pakistan. individuals on the list include u.s. citizens as well as teenage girls as...
214
214
May 9, 2012
05/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 214
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> he grew up in riyadh.here's been very much disclosed. >> that's right. i don't think we know very much about him. we know that he's been very active in al qaeda and because of his incredible bomb-making skill, he's also been sort of mentor to others. so the fear is even if you get him, he's at the top of the target list, you know who you're looking for and we will eventually get him. >> but he's trained others? >> he's likely trained other, who may not have his creativity or innovation, but they'll have some of his skills. >> but these bombs are much more difficult to make than a big truck bomb would be. so taking him out would be helpful. >> how significant is he for al qaeda? you know, the president -- i brought this up recently, 30 of the top members of the al qaeda is out. is he someone who could become a figure head like bin laden, like a leader? >> i don't think so. he's a lot closer to killing people. he is somebody who actually could kill americans and that's not something you could say about too m
. >> he grew up in riyadh.here's been very much disclosed. >> that's right. i don't think we know very much about him. we know that he's been very active in al qaeda and because of his incredible bomb-making skill, he's also been sort of mentor to others. so the fear is even if you get him, he's at the top of the target list, you know who you're looking for and we will eventually get him. >> but he's trained others? >> he's likely trained other, who may not have his...
97
97
May 3, 2012
05/12
by
WETA
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
to communicate, move around freely in iran and was involved several years ago in a major attack in riyadh against the saudis. >> rose: so if you put on... look at all of this, what worries you the most today? >> i think what worries me is the toppling of several regimes in al qaeda gaining sanctuary in countries and some of them are very complicated, like syria. syria's got a case where the u.s. has a vested interest, i think, in encouraging democratization. >> among other reasons because syria is such an ally of iran. >> that's exactly right. at the same time, though, you've got a fractious insurgency in syria. and al qaeda in iraq has pushed a number of fighters into syria to target the assad regime. so you have to be very careful... >> rose: the iranian's are supporting assad. >> the iranians are supporting assad. now we have al qaeda in iraq targeting the assad regime. so we're not too careful on this. you end up supporting a range of jihadists, including al qaeda against the assad regime. >> my last question, i've never known the answer to the question is why we did not get osama bin
to communicate, move around freely in iran and was involved several years ago in a major attack in riyadh against the saudis. >> rose: so if you put on... look at all of this, what worries you the most today? >> i think what worries me is the toppling of several regimes in al qaeda gaining sanctuary in countries and some of them are very complicated, like syria. syria's got a case where the u.s. has a vested interest, i think, in encouraging democratization. >> among other...