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tv   [untitled]    January 7, 2012 5:01pm-5:31pm EST

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big question in the end he sees a commitment to the rule of law after hosting the president who is wanted by the international criminal court for crimes against humanity. and broadcasting live direct from the heart of moscow this is r t certainly glad to have you with us. freedom of speech is considered to be one of the basic principles of democracy but just weeks after the u.s. troop withdrawal from iraq we find that basic right is being violated and while iraq is learning to manage its own affairs consequences are proving brutal for some in a report now from r.t. sebastian meier we speak to some of the journalists that have faced imprisonment and torture. this spring iraqis inspired by neighboring arab countries began protesting against their government in a square in baghdad one which shares its name with the better known counterpart in
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cairo. but iraqi journalists trying to cover these protests were silenced by the government security forces in today's iraqi journalists who speak out are routinely imprisoned beaten or just simply killed it seems to be a high level of intolerance or dissent or for public criticism of either government policies or particular leaders use it fell to me a freelance journalist showed some shocking you tube footage from the protests this february that explicitly show iraqi security forces targeting him because he's a journalist. he shouts which is arabic for a journalist over and over again but it makes the police more violent three or four maybe five right police were around me one of them slap me in the head other one kicked me in the. drive me fast yousif managed to escape
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arrest thanks to two foreign journalists who intervened but since the arrest of one of his colleagues he stopped covering protests altogether became hard for for example to go to. myself i don't go there i stopped there a long time ago not because. that's scared to be arrested. you know and worried to be mistreated we tried to speak to journalists who've been arrested in baghdad but everyone was too afraid to appear on camera so we came up here to the more peaceful kurdish region to see if the situation was any different here i met a young photographer who was arrested while covering similar protests in the kurdish region but after the interview he called to tell me he was scared of reprisals from the government and asked to blur his face and change his name after his arrest in april and was imprisoned for four days and tortured. six men came to
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the room and started to shout at me and beat me with cables then they gave me electric shocks they wanted me to admit that i hadn't been at the protest. when he was finally released after four days a friend took pictures of his wounds and published them in a local magazine immediately ahmed was rearrested as a punishment for publicizing his initial arrest. came and they held me for three days and made me sign a document declaring that i would not talk to the press again back in baghdad the government spokesman admitted to r.t. that individuals in the iraqi government were indeed using their powers to silence the press that an artist that people been. using there but this is again is not protected by the government the government is there. and you can see that there are people in the midst of it for example they have misusing their power against the citizen and it is this year and that is the comfortable and some of them has been fired almost nine years after the invasion u.s.
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troops are home but what of the country they're leaving behind with politicians using the security forces to silence journalists it appears that iraq lacks any credible press freedom or freedom that is essential to any democratic country sebastian meyer or iraq. if you'd like to see more of sebastian's reports you can find them on our website or to dot com under iraq also there we are running a poll asking where you think opposed to us iraq is headed. as of right now most of you think the country is slowly slipping into chaos while third say iraqis will overthrow the current u.s. backed government and make their own way forward into the future just over a quarter of you believe iraq has already hit rock bottom and things can't get any worse there and just about three percent harbor some sort of hope that it will develop into a western style democracy log on to our t. dot com and add your voice. the u.s. and u.k.
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have called for syria to be expelled from two unesco human rights committees a british foreign office representative said the country's presence isn't conducive to the work of the body or its reputation the move comes as tension in the country reaches a boiling point after a suicide blast killed twenty six people in central damascus meanwhile the arab league observers that have been working in syria since the end of december are expected to present their initial report on the situation in the country on sunday julie levaquin analyst from the canada based center for research on globalization says the west has no right to exclude syria from unesco as its leaders have blood on their hands themselves. it's just something to think the president of the assad regime and it's quite absurd when you think that the u.k. and the u.s. have selves more criminals running free i mean george bush and tony blair there's
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ample evidence that they have committed war crimes the sort of the unfreeze the absurd and they want to expand on a serious from that if you have the syrian government that is being. thrown on them you're going to put someone in place that's going to further the western interest and there was a russian is an ally and of course the next step would be regime change in iran. sudan's president omar bashir wanted on genocide charges by the international criminal court has arrived in libya for a two day state visit it's his first trip to tripoli after the fall of his bitter opponent colonel gadhafi human rights groups have condemned the visit and questioned of the priorities of libya's new government but patrick asr from spike magazine believes it's the west that's set the example for libya when it comes to strengthening ties with controversial regimes in the face of human rights concerns . gordon brown shaking hands with muhammad get their feet in two thousand and nine
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at the g eight summit in italy or for example tony blair shaking hands with gadhafi in two thousand and seven just outside of his hometown where he was killed in certain two thousand and seven so i mean i think yes there are double standards here but at the same time western leaders are very open to doing this and do this themselves as well bashir did support the libyan rebels who were fighting against gadhafi and had good material reasons to do so for a long time sit down in libya get out these libya. heads and you can understand why bashir wanted gadhafi out and why now having supported speech the rebel uprising there would be some attempt to kind of welcome him. into libya no i must say that so many found of the national transitional council most of the time they weren't even in libya to the people on the council themselves so off cozying up and getting the approval of western governments to lead libya rather than orienting themselves for the libyan people and actually fighting for democracy there i find it very
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striking that you have no question. criticizing the libyans for engaging with their neighbors and sorting out diplomatic relations always just i'm staggered by the fact that these human rights groups basically we human rights as missionaries in the nineteenth century will did the bible in the ten commandments to basically civilized countries to be inferior and incapable of governing their own countries and people. egypt's parliamentary election has drawn to a close with the muslim brotherhood claiming nearly forty percent of the vote is closely followed by the radical islamist nor party secular parties have acquired only about a third of the seats earlier i spoke to middle east blogger karl shar oh who says an islamist led government is doomed to fail. look at egypt i mean to be honest everybody anticipated a big big win for the muslim brotherhood and youth but having said that the results
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that the north party in specific achieved in egypt were a bit of a surprise and i think where we need to look at there is specifically this an ability of the more secular elements in the egyptian uprising off talking to the people and kind of galvanizing them and raising their support in the elections now what it does about the arab world if you like for the future i think it will be a combination of. socially conservative politics this is in. the short term. the broad support the slowness of kind of more. if you like liberal economic policies but i have my doubts about the ability of islamist parties across the board to govern and i think it's a position shared by them as well and they will try as much as possible to form
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alliances with other groups and bring in more people and you're likely to see why their coalition is taking power both in egypt and in other countries. also ahead for you this hour delving deeper into russia's industrial heartland. archy's a close up crew takes a look at the amazing fusion of ancient traditions and thriving businesses that are getting setting the region on a path to success. we don't just keep printing money and that we don't keep inflating government so that's when most of the european countries are having trouble it's because the government is sixty percent larger than it should be so why why do you and i see this and government leaders can't because we don't get paid by the people that are behind the seats what is wrong with of the global economy and how would you fix it the president asks that question on the streets of new york. up next we continue our pathfinders series now bringing you the
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stories of foreigners who are successfully pioneering business here in russia this time we meet the man who brings scores of world renowned actors and music groups to the country bob van wrangle used to be a restaurant tour in los angeles until deciding one day to try his luck in russia something he has never regretted. i basically ended up moving to russia all by accident in one thousand and ninety eight i was asked by a russian friend in los angeles if i could bring a hollywood studio to moscow because mayor luzhkov was interested in building multiplex cinemas and wanted a hollywood studio partner i had friends that were running warner brothers they sent head of international theatres with me gosh my my first trip was very impressionable i couldn't understand how so many young people i was meeting were
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making tens of millions of dollars a year and some of them billionaires before they were thirty and these were some of the things that made me realize there's a lot of opportunity here there's not a lot of people who are doing hollywood business there hasn't been a lot of contact and interaction with celebrities i love a challenge what could be more challenging than moving to russia and trying to develop and create a business here in the us with them. i didn't know any actors but i started meeting them just to bring them to russia or working on that project the russian comedy that's going to shoot in america steven seagal is already told me bill do it a couple days for two hundred fifty thousand dollars bail kilmer's interested in helping out. then the wealthy russians started asking for other people and i just started calling everybody i knew in l.a. who knew a producer a new a director and i called them from russia after eight years i brought over eighty actors and bands to russia i think it's very important for you to go to los angeles
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with me in the next few months and we should meet with you hopefully make your releasing a different actors you would like to do cameos in this film the biggest challenge to overcome is gaining people's trust and performing one example is recently i was asked to bring john claude van damme to chechnya for the president's birthday and day. the city and. yet evolution is that of the other one zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero in my heart. it's a place most people are very afraid to go to of course john clyde you know his expenses need to be paid then others for him to go there and it's very frightening dealing and working with chechnyan friends knowing that if something went wrong didn't come and money is paid. who are people going to come calling and looking for asking for the money back and it took a long time for me to win people's confidence that they would send money to an
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actor or a band in advance russia costs more than a lot of other parts of the world because russians have been willing to pay more you know if russians weren't willing to pay more celebrities would be coming for less but when they have people making such big offers just to get them how can you refuse so russia's been great to help push up their prices jennifer lopez gets two million dollars to go and perform you know in russia and kazakhstan and some other places if you're american in the u.s. we understand our system how to set up a business where we can easily research any product or any idea we have to find out if it's been saturated or not in russia it's really different because it's so hard to get to the important people that make the decisions when i have to work with a person who works for someone here i get nowhere i can't do a deal because they need to see so much because their jobs on the line their names
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on the line they're so afraid it just drags on and drags on whatever i'm talking to them about when you can pick up the phone and call the head of the company or someone on the board of directors i know in a week if i can do this deal or not with them rush is just much more individual life you really need to know some important people here to have success you know i was thinking your. from here which is part of the reason i never learned russian is i just thought ok one year from now i'm sure something will come up back in the l a the us i'll go back i'll start doing movies but it is so exciting here every day and so many new things and new deals and new opportunities and that i haven't been able to leave. the world economy is heading into another year amid the dark predictions from economists about the breakup of the euro and a looming recession up next the resident takes to the streets of new york to find
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out what people think should be done to save countries that are mired in debt. today everyone's upset with how the world leaders are handling the economy so how would you fix that this week let's talk about that whole country do you think is doing a good job. let me say. you know now. what would you do to fix the problem in greece. in greece wow. i do you don't know how do you know because i know i say no no no but maybe that's why it's going all around a good word to fix is each of our problems personally so if we're all out there working hard and spending money to local communities then that's you know a way of part of building up each local community eventually the whole country gets right yes in
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a time maybe for the government to stop trying to fix it and let people and companies fix their own wallets i think that's a good answer yes to fix the economy what should they be doing. should be pumping more money into it pumping more money they've been pumping millions and billions and trillions and done a good so why is that the solution that we keep going back to the only thing we can do so we can also see just do nothing and let people sort it out themselves. people can sort of theirselves not a matter of not throwing money into the economy it's a matter of living within our means if you don't have enough revenue then you have to cut spending yes so governments are trillions of dollars in debt so it sounds like they have no money right well they have to they obviously you can't stop everything all at once but you do have to you do have to pull back and you have to come up with a reasonable plan to stop the hemorrhaging but we don't just keep printing money and we don't keep inflating government so that's when most of the european
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countries are having trouble because the government is sixty percent larger than it should be so why why do you and i see business and government leaders. can't because we don't get paid by the people that are behind the scenes and since i'm not ready for a campaign ad campaign contributions by people that he might help to american politicians are just. really so what should they be doing better. other probably trying to change its economy from an oil economy to something else we've got heaps of people with lots of brains and we need to be doing something about the environment does people with brains are in positions of power. and so it seems like with the system that's currently in place for how world leaders get elected it might be time for solutions to come from someplace else. and if you like our news coverage here on our team make sure to visit our website
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you'll love it there as well. waiting for you right now. dinosaur life russia is to get its very own version of jurassic park where fossils may get a new lease on life plus. we find out the consequences as the u.s. freezes millions of dollars in aid to palestine just months after. the u.n. cultural body. now and a more stories making headlines around the world this hour a wave of attacks by a radical muslim sect is continuing to claim multiple lives in northeastern nigeria eight people were gunned down during a service at a church while twenty were killed during a town hall meeting armed islamist group boko haram which has claimed
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responsibility for the attacks issued a three day ultimatum for christians to leave the mostly muslim north of the country. three freight trains collided in a rural part of the us state of indiana starting a fire and injuring it two of the six crew members involved one of the trains carrying mostly empty ethanol tanks was stationary when it was hit in the rear by another a third then ran into derailed carriages on the parallel track local officials said there was no spill of any hazardous material from the wreck nevertheless they ordered the evacuation of several dozen houses near the crash site as a precaution. now time for our russia close up series as we continue to explore the country's far east.
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the region is russia's main gateway to the pacific and a center of coal and wood exports to the fuel hungry asian economies and as artie's tom barton discovered ancient traditions are important when it comes to keeping the industry on track. the hub are us krege and russia's far east is becoming a growing center for export to the hungry economies in the south china south korea and japan increasing material exports of ward and coal are going out to the pacific and south and is that they were looking at in my report this monster called a coal stacker is the new face of russia's far east coast it can load over four thousand tons of coal an hour into ships at this rapidly expanding sea terminal this year they exported ten million tonnes of the stuff almost exclusively south asian markets but also board we've noticed there's
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a coal boom of coal consumption worldwide has increased so this port covers almost all of asia from the coal comes from some of russia's largest deposits five hundred kilometers inland he joins the oil and timber flowing out of the region in ever greater quantities tugboats maneuver the ships into place through storms and the winter cold and even the most modern tankers once on their way helped along by a much older technology now and this vast new ship internals are springing up to supply overseas markets will all see very foundations presented by this like house which along with four help makes a russia's gateway to the pacific hundreds of lighthouses dot the coast all the way from the border with north korea up to the arctic. victor has been manning his lighthouse for over thirty years but he's glad he's not too far out into the
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wilderness. we're close enough to the nearest town look at it other lighthouse keepers are stuck out in the tiger without even roads sometimes a ship or helicopter deliver supplies but there's no other way to come or go big has not had a ship run aground since the. early one nine hundred ninety s. he seen bears moose and tigers visit his white house and say as he never grows bored of the ever changing seascape far from feeling lonely he talks of the remand to system of being such a secluded spot on the coastline. i used to go down to the boat four am catching crabs and start a fire then my wife and kids would join me and we'd have breakfast on the shore and watch the sunrise in the summer this whole field would be bright orange and blue if you could pick to retires next year he says he's come to love the spotlight robinson crusoe on his island and while he can remember the pristine beauty of his coastline others are seeing it sail on into the future with his talk
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a little bit more about the bar often the experience of moving here from abroad is the main aholic that came here from britain a basket self is trying to upgrade itself trying to move into the out of the soviet times and into the modern modern age with industry with the also working on a new cosmodrome what do you know about the new developments here i know that is very very important to the local area and you know that it's improving transport links all the time people are finally investing in the far east which is obviously going to be very good for the economy i mean i'm here because my fiance is working for an oil refinery and they're in a more investment there and this cousin jane is going to i think only improve putin said it was one of the biggest and most important projects that's happening in russia at the moment so yes i think it's up and coming this this region as someone who's come from a different culture from outside what would you say to what the people who are
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thinking. there is possibly business which changes but should i come here what would you say to them. i mean it's worth a try how did during a russian look at this important and very few restaurants or cafes where they have an english menu and things like that i think when i don't speak russian. find it frustrating rather than bear that in mind prices ok so if prices are extortionate. you can go check. it in a venture well there we go that's an insight from someone who has made the leap out to the far east so bar ask it's not going to get any warmer here but it seems that with future with the development of the region it is going to get more connected to the outside world. i teased tom but reporting for us there now coming up we have the turbulent story of a modern day american vigilante living on the us mexico border waging a one man war on illegal immigrants that's after the headlines in just
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a couple minutes right here on our.
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i had a family i lived in a fairly nice community wasn't which was an upscale it was just like you know archie bunker society ok then they started showing up here what happened was my company. i did i could get cheap labor and they got rid of. me rosa legally legally we have to get up every morning we have to go to work and
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you know we have to pay our bills and we have to do it and that's just the american dream and if you want the american dream you have to go buy the los i figured this here's one of the major trails in the united states. i watch and they run run down my property and something about this noise. was a little mean that cockroaches from coming over the wire is protecting the country i'm the kind of guy who doesn't mind good news pants dirty so i come out here you know we're all immigrants as well that we all hear some subtle routes. to the true science technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia we've got the future covered.
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you. and of the battle for the truth archie investigates the iraqi government's continued crackdown on freedom of speech and journalists see the video there. and moving on the u.s. and u.k. call for the exclusion of syria from us goes human rights committees in the move comes as tensions runs high in syria following a suicide attack over twenty six people in central damascus. and libya welcomes sudan's president omar alba.

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