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#video#America
In 1986, a two-year-old girl died in a fire in the United States. Her mother's former roommate was accused of arson and imprisoned on death row. But some of the evidence turned out to be fake, and the prosecution witnesses refused to testify. Finally, after 21 years, the court recognised the verdict was a mistake and released him.
The film Imprisoned: The Man with a Cigarette is one of the episodes of the RT Documentary series about mistakes in American justice.
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#video#Spain
‘This is a weapon for war. The Spanish state will not achieve peace by sending this kind of thing.’ Colombian volunteer Alexis shows the weapons left at the Illich plant, where more than 1,300 Ukrainian army marines surrendered. Alexis wants Spaniards to know their country supplies arms to the Nazis. Alexis has been fighting on the side of the DNR for the past eight years.
The volunteer is originally from Colombia but has lived in Spain since ten years old. Before he moved to Donbass, he led an anti-fascist movement there. And in 2014, he decided to come to the DNR and defend the civilians ‘from all the madness’.
Alexis’ story will be part of a new RT Documentary film.
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#video#NATO
‘And I also think that the average American confuse NATO as this harmless defensive alliance that America underpin with its military might and economic strength. They don’t view NATO as a threat because they are part of NATO’. Military analyst Scott Ritter spoke about the attitude of the Americans towards the special operation and the position of the US authorities.
According to him, Americans are not aware of NATO's goals of expanding and undermining Russia and believe ‘the Ukrainian government’s version, of instead, they’re an innocent country that’s been attacked by its large brutal neighbour’.
But as information would come out, it’s going to be ‘a rude wake-up call to Americans to find out that the Nazi ideology was real. It was there. It was pervasive’.
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#video#SouthAfrica
Aleksey has been a fan of lions his entire life. So when an opportunity presented itself, he sold his Moscow flat and relocated to South Africa to rescue eight lions about to be put down. But now, the lions are in danger again. To ban canned hunting, the South African government plans to euthanise all captive lions.
So Aleksey has to save his pets once again. Will he succeed? Watch the video and full documentary Me and My Lions.
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#video#Italy
‘You can’t cancel Russian culture; it has always been and always will be part of the global culture’
Pupo is a famous Italian singer who is very popular in Russia. He performed his hit song, Lidia a Mosca (Lidia in Moscow), at Rome’s Russian Centre for Science and Culture. Pupo wrote the song after falling in love with a Russian girl during his first trip to Russia in 1979.
‘You can’t tell an Italian, for example, that you should cancel Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov. They are forever. How could you cancel the antiquity, art and culture of the Middle Ages, Renaissance? This applies to Russian culture too.’
Stay tuned for more thoughts on Russian culture and cancel culture in our upcoming documentary!
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#video#Honduras
Honduras is one of the most dangerous places to be a woman. The country has the highest rate of femicide, gender-based murder, in Latin America. Women are easy targets for gangs that wage war against each other on the streets of Honduras. Stepping outside your home can sometimes be deadly.
These parents lost their daughter, and they have little hope the perpetrators will be held to account. For more, watch the new documentary Honduran Femicide.
It's also available on Odysee odysee.com/@RTDocumentary:4 Watch all of our films there!
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#video#Italy
Italian activist Marinella Correggia is a staunch NATO critic. She blames the alliance for political and economic instability in countries where it has intervened.
Marinella stands with the countries affected by NATO’s military operations - Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. She wants the alliance held to account.
Learn more about this lady’s fight against NATO’s abuse of power.
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A hero rat saving lives
#video#Cambodia
Isaac is a rat that looks like a hamster, whose nose is his secret weapon. But, he is no regular rodent. Isaac is a landmine detecting hero. His remarkable sense of smell can detect the tiniest traces of TNT. He can sense the explosive up to 20 centimetres underground!
Isaac was born in Tanzania, where a Belgian NGO, APOPO, trains giant pouched rats to sniff out explosives. The little creatures learn to associate TNT with food - if they detect an explosive, they get a delicious treat.
After nine months of training and passing an exam with flying colours, Isaac was sent to Cambodia, one of the most heavily mined countries in the world. The civil war left up to five million pieces of unexploded ordnance.
We think land mine-detecting rats deserve a Disney story, but in the meantime, check out our documentary and see for yourself how adorable and clever the pouched rats are!
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Victims of fast fashion
#video#Cambodia
Meet the women who stitch your clothes. They work round the clock and earn as much as a pair of jeans costs. Like Nike, Gap, or Calvin Klein, many international brands manufacture clothes in countries with cheap labour. In the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, there are over 1,000 garment factories where nearly a million workers make T-shirts and jeans.
Most employees are women. If they get pregnant, they’re fired. Women go to great lengths to hide their pregnancy so they can keep putting food on the table. Few are aware that laws guarantee them paid maternity leave. Learn more about an unequal struggle between impoverished workers and unscrupulous employers.
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My two wives
#video#Kazakhstan
In Kazakhstan, some men take more than one wife. The second and subsequent wives are called ‘tokal’. They are usually younger than the first wife, known as ‘baibishe’. Even though polygamy is technically illegal in the country, it’s a widespread practice, and it’s gathering pace again.
‘It’s up to you whether to introduce your tokal to baibishe. But bring both on vacation’, says a commercial for a popular flights finder. For many men, polygamy is about status. Kanishbek is one of them. He’s 57 and has two wives - one lives in Almaty and the other in Nur-Sultan. Kanishbek is actively searching for more younger women who could give birth to more children.
Learn more about his story and polygamy in Kazakhstan in our documentary, Tokal. And let us know what you think of polygamy in the comments! Would you agree to a polygamous family?
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Mysterious sleeping sickness
#video#Kazakhstan
In a small Kazakh village, people suddenly fall asleep and don’t wake up for days. Since 2013, residents have been complaining of sleepiness, hallucinations and memory loss. The inexplicable sleeping sickness epidemic has gripped the village, forcing locals to flee and scientists to scratch their heads.
If you try to wake up an affected person, it seems they can’t open their eyes. People sleep and sleep. Researchers are trying to work out what’s causing the sleeping sickness. From mass psychosis to food poisoning, they’ve put forward various theories. More recently, they were looking into groundwater contamination by the uranium mines.
If you like a mystery, check out the full documentary.
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#video#SouthAfrica
Exactly 25 years ago, Nelson Mandela signed South Africa’s new constitution guaranteeing equal rights to all people regardless of race. Mandela became the first black president of a country that once had white supremacy and racial segregation laws. Under apartheid, the black population had almost no civil rights.
Decades later, South Africa remains segregated. Land distribution is a stark example. White South Africans still own 72% of rural land, where black people are labourers. Much of that land was forcibly confiscated from the African population generations ago.
Next month, the South African government will discuss a bill to expropriate white-owned land without compensation. A law would permit the seizure of land which is not used or is held for speculation.
Here’s part of an interview with Zanele Lwana of the radical ‘Black First Land First’ party that vehemently defends the bill. For more, watch our documentary.
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