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1-50 of 214
- The wonders of internet has made the shady industry of pornography rich, but is now in death cramps due to the piracy ruining the market, and forcing the participants to perform more extreme sex.
- The shadow of Hezbollah hangs over the explosion in the port of Beirut on August 4, 2020, and the investigation looks impossible. As if this Islamist organization was protected by a divine impunity. For 40 years, its militants have infiltrated all the workings of the Lebanese state and defied justice. Of Shiite faith, they dream of establishing religious law, the Sharia, as in Iran. However, in the mid-2000s, a handful of police officers from the D.E.A., the American anti-drug agency, tried in the greatest secrecy to bring down Hezbollah. The code name of their operation: Cassandre. Their investigation begins in the United States on the still smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center. The series Hezbollah, the forbidden investigation tells the story of how Hezbollah, the "party of God", has patiently built a state within a state in Lebanon, the "Hezbollah-land", by playing on its multiple faces.
- Eva Marree was 27 years old when she was murdered by the father of her children. Despite her history of violence, the father was given full custody of the children after it was known that she had worked as an escort.
- They call it 'blue gold'. Around the world, demand for water is exploding. By 2050, at least one in four will live in a country suffering from water shortages - creating ideal conditions for a new market - Banks, investment funds and hedge funds are all rushing to invest billions of euros in anything related to water. A real monopoly has begun. The financialization of water is a battle taking place on many fronts: ideological, political, environmental, and of course, economic.
- In the space of just a few years, Chechnya has undergone a remarkable transformation. But all this progress has come at a high price. In exchange for peace, the Kremlin has turned Chechnya over to President Kadyrov, who runs it as if it were his private fiefdom.
- Gold, the enduring safe investment and symbol of wealth, comes at a high price. Mined in slave-like conditions, it has been linked to everything from funding civil wars in Africa to causing environmental disasters in Latin America. The market for gold is enormous with 70% of global production handled by just one country: Switzerland. The industry has been protected by the Swiss state for more than a century, and turning a blind eye here is standard practice. Despite attempts at reforms, a lack of transparency still remains. We travel to Peru, Congo, Dubai and Switzerland to investigate.
- ISIS forces were driven out of Mosul in July 2017. How to rebuild the city after more than 3 years of occupation?
- While winds of freedom blow through the Arab world, the Iranian youth waits. They were the first to rise up against their leaders in 2009.
- Facing the camera, they describe " the horror ". Brutal and unwilling medical acts, performed without anesthesia. The impression of being no more than " a piece of meat ", and the pain, unbearable.
- Explores the intense competition between Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezo's Blue Origin as they battle for the top spot in the U.S.'s space travel business.
- More than half a century after independence, the Algerian question remains a taboo subject in France and arouses passions. Whatever the words, whatever the decisions, there will always be a side that feels aggrieved. Why does time fail to cure resentment? From the signing of the Evian agreements in 1962 to the skid of the candidate Macron, who was in February 2017 in opposition to the "Pieds Noirs" community for comparing the colonization of Algeria to a crime against humanity. The story is told through the experiences of exiles, activists, former soldiers and politicians, all involved in the events.
- Since the end of the 19th century, Paris has been the world's espionage capital, home to between 10,000 and 15,000 secret agents. Russian, Chinese, American and Israeli spies, as well as Turks, feel at home here, conducting their operations without too much risk of being disturbed. They are the offensive players in the shadow war played out in international institutions, embassies, palaces and the most unexpected places. Intimidation, bribery, seduction and sometimes "termination with extreme prejudice": any means are good enough.
- It's the last dictatorship of Europe, caught in a Soviet time-warp, where the secret police is still called the KGB and the president rules by fear. Disappearances, political assassinations, waves of repression and mass arrests are all regular occurrences. But while half of Belarus moves closer to Russia, the other half is trying to resist.
- The global coalition against ISIS was never just about fighting terrorism. Hidden behind that rhetoric lie proxy wars and regional power-struggles. As the battles intensify, how will these larger conflicts evolve? Featuring interviews with those at the forefront of the hidden conflict against ISIS, this film delves deeper into the heart of a complex, political and seemingly interminable war.
- The North East Sea Route has always been a dream for thousands of sailors. Due to global warming, this axis is now ice-free for most of the year, the sea ice having halved. This disaster for ecology, however, whets the appetite of certain countries, including Russia, which sees it as an issue of economic development with the exploitation of gas and oil. The country has even found a strong ally with China, which is also projecting many opportunities. But the United States, which entered the race late, is reviving the threat of the hypothesis of a cold war in Antarctica.