ప్రముఖ సినీ,రంగస్థల నటుడు డీఎస్ దీక్షితులు కన్నుమూత
రంగస్థల నటుడు డీఎస్ దీక్షితులు కన్నుమూశారు.
ప్రముఖ నటుడు దీక్షితులు మరణం
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: NO ACCESS UK; NO USE BY BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG; UK NATIONAL NEWSPAPER DIGITAL SITES AND APPS
SHOTLIST:
SKY EXCLUSIVE - NO ACCESS UK; NO USE BY BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG; UK NATIONAL NEWSPAPER DIGITAL SITES AND APPS
Northern Syria (no exact location available) - 17 February 2019
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"Definitely, I mean, I'm not starving. I have a roof over my head, you know? Before I was sleeping outside and (coughs) there was no medical care, so everyone was getting sick. My kids died because of sickness. So yeah..."
++BLACK++
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"It was like how they (IS), you know, showed it in the videos, like, you come, you make a family together, and then afterwards things got harder, you know, when we lost Raqqa, we had to keep moving and moving and moving, in situation like (unintelligible)."
(Reporter: Was there a point where you started to have second thoughts about your life in Islamic state, under Islamic State?)
"Just only at the end. After my son died. I realised I had to get out for the sake of my children, for the sake of my daughter and my baby."
(Reporter: It was only at the end. It was only at the end?)
"Yeah."
(Reporter: But you didn't have any regrets up until that point?)
"No."
(Reporter: What was it about Islamic State that attracted you. What did you like about it?)
"The way they showed how you can go (there). They'll take care of you. You can have your own family there. You can do anything. You're living under Islamic law."
++BLACK++
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"One of my biggest priorities is my child. Because I left because of him. So I wouldn't want him to be taken away from me. Just try to give him a better life."
++BLACK++
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: One question that people are asking is whether you can be rehabilitated?)
"It would be really hard. Everything I've been through, you know. I'm still... I'm still kind of in the mentality of you know of the whole planes over my head and having the emergency backpack and starving and all these things. It would be a really big shock to go back to the UK, make a.... start a life again."
++BLACK++
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you know whether your friend Amira Abase is still alive?)
"I don't know. I haven't heard from her in a long time."
(Reporter: And how did you feel when your other friend, Kadiza Sultana, died?)
"It was a big shock, because it was at the beginning of when we left (the UK). It was maybe a year after we left. It wasn't something I suspected. It just came as a really big shock. Like now, if I heard that Amira was dead, I wouldn't be surprised... I would be hurt, obviously, but I wouldn't be surprised, because of the situation she's still in. When Kadiza died, the situation was still good in Raqqa, you know? It just came out of nowhere."
++BLACK++
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you think you've made a mistake? When you look back at what you've been through over the last four years?)
"A mistake in going back... in going to ??
(Reporter: A mistake in coming here, living under Islamic State?)
"In a way yes. But I don't regret it because it's changed me as a person. It's made me stronger, tougher, You know? I married my husband. I wouldn't have found someone like him back in the UK. I had my kids, you know? I did have a good time there. It's just that at the end, things got harder and I couldn't take anymore and had to leave."
++BLACK++
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"Please don't give up on trying to get me back. I really don't want to stay here."
(Reporter: It must have been a terrible shock for them, when you left?)
"Because at first, obviously, they did try and help. And they did try and ask me to come back, but I kept saying no to them and then afterwards, they gave up and now I'm kind of, after four years, I'm asking them for help now. It's kind of a big slap in the face to them, but I really need their help."
(Reporter: What would you say to them?)
"I'm sorry for leaving."
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you feel that there is the possibility of a good future for you and your son?)
"Yes, if the UK are willing to take me back and help me start a new life again. Its time to move on from everything that's happened over the last four years."
STORYLINE:
A British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State (IS) group has told Sky News that she did not regret her choice, saying the experience had made her a stronger person.
Shamima Begum, 19, was speaking on Sunday, not long after giving birth to a baby boy in a camp for the displaced in northern Syria.
Begum was one of three schoolgirls from London's Bethnal Green neighbourhood who went to Syria to marry IS fighters in 2015.
Asked if she thought she had made a mistake, Begum told Sky she had no regrets.
"I married my husband, I wouldn't have found someone like him back in the UK. I had my kids, I did have a good time there."
At the time of the girls' journey to Syria, the extremist's group's online recruitment programme lured many impressionable young people to its self-proclaimed caliphate.
"The way they showed how you can go (there). They'll take care of you. You can have your own family there. You can do anything. You're living under Islamic law," Begum explained to Sky.
Begum gave birth to a girl and another boy during her time living with IS, but both fell ill and died.
She told SKY her newborn son was the reason she wanted to come back home.
She has appealed to the government to help her get back to the UK, but admitted that adjusting to life back home might be difficult.
"It would be really hard... I'm still kind of in the mentality of you know of the whole planes over my head and having the emergency backpack and starving and all these things," she said.
Asked about her school friends, she said Amira Abase was believed to still be living in Baghouz, the last, tiny area still held by the extremist fighters in eastern Syria.
Kadiza Sultana died in Raqqa in 2016, and Begum said her friend's death, so soon after their arrival in Syria, had come as a "really big shock".
==========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
SHOTLIST:
SKY EXCLUSIVE - NO ACCESS UK; NO USE BY BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG; UK NATIONAL NEWSPAPER DIGITAL SITES AND APPS
Northern Syria (no exact location available) - 17 February 2019
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"Definitely, I mean, I'm not starving. I have a roof over my head, you know? Before I was sleeping outside and (coughs) there was no medical care, so everyone was getting sick. My kids died because of sickness. So yeah..."
++BLACK++
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"It was like how they (IS), you know, showed it in the videos, like, you come, you make a family together, and then afterwards things got harder, you know, when we lost Raqqa, we had to keep moving and moving and moving, in situation like (unintelligible)."
(Reporter: Was there a point where you started to have second thoughts about your life in Islamic state, under Islamic State?)
"Just only at the end. After my son died. I realised I had to get out for the sake of my children, for the sake of my daughter and my baby."
(Reporter: It was only at the end. It was only at the end?)
"Yeah."
(Reporter: But you didn't have any regrets up until that point?)
"No."
(Reporter: What was it about Islamic State that attracted you. What did you like about it?)
"The way they showed how you can go (there). They'll take care of you. You can have your own family there. You can do anything. You're living under Islamic law."
++BLACK++
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"One of my biggest priorities is my child. Because I left because of him. So I wouldn't want him to be taken away from me. Just try to give him a better life."
++BLACK++
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: One question that people are asking is whether you can be rehabilitated?)
"It would be really hard. Everything I've been through, you know. I'm still... I'm still kind of in the mentality of you know of the whole planes over my head and having the emergency backpack and starving and all these things. It would be a really big shock to go back to the UK, make a.... start a life again."
++BLACK++
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you know whether your friend Amira Abase is still alive?)
"I don't know. I haven't heard from her in a long time."
(Reporter: And how did you feel when your other friend, Kadiza Sultana, died?)
"It was a big shock, because it was at the beginning of when we left (the UK). It was maybe a year after we left. It wasn't something I suspected. It just came as a really big shock. Like now, if I heard that Amira was dead, I wouldn't be surprised... I would be hurt, obviously, but I wouldn't be surprised, because of the situation she's still in. When Kadiza died, the situation was still good in Raqqa, you know? It just came out of nowhere."
++BLACK++
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you think you've made a mistake? When you look back at what you've been through over the last four years?)
"A mistake in going back... in going to ??
(Reporter: A mistake in coming here, living under Islamic State?)
"In a way yes. But I don't regret it because it's changed me as a person. It's made me stronger, tougher, You know? I married my husband. I wouldn't have found someone like him back in the UK. I had my kids, you know? I did have a good time there. It's just that at the end, things got harder and I couldn't take anymore and had to leave."
++BLACK++
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
"Please don't give up on trying to get me back. I really don't want to stay here."
(Reporter: It must have been a terrible shock for them, when you left?)
"Because at first, obviously, they did try and help. And they did try and ask me to come back, but I kept saying no to them and then afterwards, they gave up and now I'm kind of, after four years, I'm asking them for help now. It's kind of a big slap in the face to them, but I really need their help."
(Reporter: What would you say to them?)
"I'm sorry for leaving."
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Shamima Begum, British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State group
(Reporter: Do you feel that there is the possibility of a good future for you and your son?)
"Yes, if the UK are willing to take me back and help me start a new life again. Its time to move on from everything that's happened over the last four years."
STORYLINE:
A British teenager who ran away from home to join the Islamic State (IS) group has told Sky News that she did not regret her choice, saying the experience had made her a stronger person.
Shamima Begum, 19, was speaking on Sunday, not long after giving birth to a baby boy in a camp for the displaced in northern Syria.
Begum was one of three schoolgirls from London's Bethnal Green neighbourhood who went to Syria to marry IS fighters in 2015.
Asked if she thought she had made a mistake, Begum told Sky she had no regrets.
"I married my husband, I wouldn't have found someone like him back in the UK. I had my kids, I did have a good time there."
At the time of the girls' journey to Syria, the extremist's group's online recruitment programme lured many impressionable young people to its self-proclaimed caliphate.
"The way they showed how you can go (there). They'll take care of you. You can have your own family there. You can do anything. You're living under Islamic law," Begum explained to Sky.
Begum gave birth to a girl and another boy during her time living with IS, but both fell ill and died.
She told SKY her newborn son was the reason she wanted to come back home.
She has appealed to the government to help her get back to the UK, but admitted that adjusting to life back home might be difficult.
"It would be really hard... I'm still kind of in the mentality of you know of the whole planes over my head and having the emergency backpack and starving and all these things," she said.
Asked about her school friends, she said Amira Abase was believed to still be living in Baghouz, the last, tiny area still held by the extremist fighters in eastern Syria.
Kadiza Sultana died in Raqqa in 2016, and Begum said her friend's death, so soon after their arrival in Syria, had come as a "really big shock".
==========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.