Skip to main content

tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  December 17, 2023 2:00am-3:00am PST

2:00 am
i'm a little anxious, i'm a little excited. i'm gonna be emotional, she's gonna be emotional, but it's gonna be so worth it. i love that i can give back to one of our customers. i hope you enjoy these amazing gifts. oh my goodness. oh, you guys. i know you like wrestling, so we got you some vip tickets. you have made an impact. so have you. for you guys to be out here doing something like this, it restores a lot of faith in humanity. ♪ welcome to all of you watching here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm nick watt, ahead on "cnn newsroom," cnn has just learned that hostage talks involving
2:01 am
israel's mossad and qatar have taken place. as crowds demand the safe return of the those still held captive in gaza. heavy rain and strong winds currently battering the state of florida are making their way north. we'll have the east coast forecast. plus -- >> they're poisoning the blood of our country, that's what they've done. >> donald trump's latest anti-immigrant remarks on the campaign trail and how the biden team was calling him out. ♪ we begin with the growing anger and political pushback in israel against benjamin netanyahu military strategy to bring hostages held in gaza back
2:02 am
home. >> translator: without the military pressure, we would not have succeeded in creating an outline that led to the release of 102 hostages and only continue military pressure will lead to the release of all of our hostages. my directive to the negotiating team is based on this pressure, without which we would have nothing. >> mr. nanhu spoke afterdf troops mistakenly killed three israeli hostages while they were shirtless and waving a white flag. israel's militarw says i had no advance intelligence about those hostages and that soldiers did not expect to be approached by them. a preliminary review of the incident has been completed by the idf and sn icnn is working obtain that. meanwhile a source telling cnn that israel's spy chief, david
2:03 am
barnea, has now met with the prime minister in europe about talks of hostages. we're still waiting to get more details. but in israel, the deaths of those three hostages have created a political firestorm for mr. netanyahu, with protests continuing into the second day of saturday. elliott gotkine is monitoring developments. he joins us from london. elliott, we're going to start with the mossad meeting in qatar, how dangerous could that be, elliott. >> potentially dangerous, nick. he's the negotiations guy for the qataris and the qataris have been dealing with hamas. there's no direct contact, naturally, so the mossad chief has been speaking with doha.
2:04 am
that which give a spark to the 121 hostages still to be held captive ever since they were abducted october 7 because there will be hopes that at least something is happening. but, of course, it was only last week, there were a few developments which was david barnea was expected to go to doha. we learned that trip was cancelled by the israeli government. we also heard by sources within the united states that hamas was not prepared to talk right now. there was no weren't on the other side of the negotiating table. of course, it was difficult enough to get that first truce in place and get those 110 hostages freed by hamas, in exchange for israel releasing palestinian prisoners. now, it's become even more difficult because israel has to teak to the qataris. the qataris have to speak to the pretty could in doha. and then have to speak to the
2:05 am
fighters inside of the gaza strip who, of course, are doing their best to be protected and against being killed by the israelis. it's a much more complicated situation for sure. but certainly, this meet will go signal to the families who still have loved ones being held captive in the gaza strip for more than two months. and perhaps the government is paying heed to their demands to at least get the hostages freed back in israel as the number one priority as opposed to seemingly the fighting number one priority. >> elliott, they're doing a difficult deal here, trying to eliminate hamas and get the hostages back and trying to talk to hamas.
2:06 am
it's not an easy situation. >> as i said, nick, it's not an easy objective, but it is doing everything it can to fulfill them. the trauma of october 7 still very raw in israel. and with the israeli forces accidently killing three hostages who were very close to freedom. and we did here contrition of chief of the staff and the defense minister gallant, but they still insist the way to get the h the hostages back is to keep the pressure. >> elliott gotkine, thank you. earlier, i spoke and asked him be the pressure that israel is facing to implement the cease-fire in gaza. how that pressure impacted the
2:07 am
israeli government. >> of course, we listened very closely, and especially our good friends the americans. of course, we take what they say very seriously. and i believe what we say to them they take seriously. and we are -- as we pursue hamas and we will defeat hamas, we will destroy its military machine. we will end the war in gaza. but as we pursue that campaign, we are very aware that we have to, in the same time, apparel, work to safe guard the civilian population. we don't want to see unnecessarily death and at the same time augment humanitarianism, as you know, we have conducted the qerim shalom and make sure they receive food, medicine, water. ultimaty, the target is hamas and not gaza civilians.
2:08 am
>> now, al jazeera is accusing them of assassinating one of their journalists. saying their deliberately targeting its journalists in the conflict, something israel strongly denies. cnn's melissa bell has the story. and a warn, her report contains graphic and distressing images. rrl the sounds of yet another family in gaza torn apart by this. nothing it seems can shield the civilians from the nightmare of this war, neither age, nor profession. journalists are meant to be protected. a reflection of the importance of their work shining a light on the dark horrors of the conflicts now in its 11th week. instead, it has yet taken yet
2:09 am
another journalist's life. a cameraman for al jazeera was killed according to the network in the southern city of schan younis. >> translator: we made the report, we filmed and we were done. the civil defense was with us. while we were leaving, they hit us with a rocket. >> reporter: al jazeera's bureau chief injured alongside his colleague, the cost of this war was already unimaginable. he lost his wife, daughter, son and grandson in an israeli air strike in late october, learning that his family had been killed while on air. his 15-year-old so al jazeera said had hop to become a jonalist like this father. the network issued a statement on friday saying it holds israel accountable for systematically targeting and killing journalists and their families. >> translator: this is a knew
2:10 am
crime against palestinian journalists that adds to the crimes of the israeli occupation. >> reporter: cnn cannot independently verify the allegations. on saturday, the idf told cnn it has never and will never deliberately target journalists. but just days ago, cnn's own reporting and analysis suggests that it was israeli tank fire that killed journalists in southern lebanon in october. the idf said the incident is still under investigation. within gaza, this man is one of 60 journalists killed since the conflict began according to the figures for the committee to protect journalists. making this the deadliest war for reporters since tracking began in 1992. now, while he buried his family just weeks ago is grieving once again. and once again, saying good-bye
2:11 am
as the light of gaza's journalism signjournal ism m shines a l little fainter. melissa bell, cnn. as the deadly fighghting bebetween israel and hamas continues so, too, does a dire huhumanitarianan crisis. cnn has gathered a list of organizationons on the g ground responding. you can find details on how you can help in the special section of our website, cnn.com/impact. almost 50 million people are under threat of severe weather today, as a strong storm system moving out of the gulf of mexico is expected to bring flooding, power outages and travel headaches across the east coast through monday. cnn meteorologist elisa raffa has the latest. >> reporter: the heavy rain continues in florida this morning, as flood watches continue through your sunday morning. some of that torrential rain
2:12 am
continuing to work its way up the east coast. coastal flooding also a concern. onshore wind continuing to wash that ocean, coastal erosion possible for some of the beaches. the flood warning has extended from d.c. to philly to maine. 60 million in threat of flooding across 17 states. the severe risk works its way up through sunday. see that level 2 out of 5 from wilmington to charleston, the greatest threat force, -mile-per-hour winds and you see that spinning through with the heavy rain where you can see downpours from charlotte and points east. it continues to work its way up with the heavy rain and gusty winds from the mid-atlantic up into the northeast, going into monday. new york, boston could all see pretty hefty downpours as we start out the work week here. rain totals, we're looking at
2:13 am
pretty wide spread 2 to 4 inches of rain from the carolinas up through the mid-atlantic from new york and boston. some minor concerns for some of those rivers and streams that they'll have to keep watching as we start out the work week. on top of this, the system is going to continue to strengthen off the coast so those winds continue to spin and pop. looking at wind gusts from the carolinas, inland, probably 30 to 40 miles per hour. but on the coast, outer banks could see gusts up to 60 miles per hour. tame i think on the tip from long island, 60-mile-per-hour gusts up into massachusetts, into maine where you've got high wind watches already in effect. you can see the ground colors, the air showing where you have the wind alerts that stretch up into the northeast, again, that's through monday. next, hopes that dialogue can break the deadlock. u.s. lawmakers on capitol hill are set to resume talks on aid packages to israel and ukraine. as the republicans demand
2:14 am
exchanges closer to home. and dangerous anti-immigrant rhetoric from the republican party's front-runner for the presidential nomination. what donald trump said at a campaign rally on saturday. ththat's aheadad.
2:15 am
2:16 am
2:17 am
2:18 am
♪ in the coming days, negotiations will resume in washington over funding for israel and ukraine. two american allies at war. as we reported extensively, it's bogged down amid the partisan debate over u.s. border security. cnn's priscilla alvarez reports from the white house. >> reporter: senate negotiators and biden administration officials wrapped another day of meetings on saturday, they try to reach a consensus on border policy changes to pass a key supplemental funding request. in october, the white house requested billions in additional funding for ukraine and israel, as well as for border security and other priorities. but that request has remained stalled as republicans urged the white house to attach border policy changes to that supplemental, as they're unhappy with the situation along the
2:19 am
u.s. southern border. now, president biden has said he's hope to compromise and senate negotiators, as well as white house officials have been working around the clock to discuss some potential changes. urces tell me some of th proposals include raising the asylum for asylkers and migrants as well as expanding the detortation procedure and expelling migrants at the u.s. border without giving them a chance for astyle let me. and another sticking point is parole security which allows migrants to temporarily live in the united states on a case-by-case basis. but all of these issues are complicated. and officials and negotiators are trying to find some level of compromise to, again, push that supplemental funding request forward. the president has repeatedly made the case that the request is not only for the national security of ukraine and israel, but also for u.s. national security. and he's urging all to get that
2:20 am
supplemental across the finish line. police s priscilla alvarez, cnn, the white house. former u.s. president donald trump is once again lashing out to immigrants coming into the u.s. at a campaign rally in new hampshire on saturday, he railed against migrant crossing at the u.s./mexico border, cnn has the details. >> reporter: former president donald trump returns to the granite state for the first time in a month, continuing a ramp-up of political activity in the coming week before voters cast ballots in the presidential primary. during those months, president trump continued the dark and what civil rights groups have said about zxenophobia. >> they've poisoned mental institutions and prisons across
2:21 am
the world, not just in south america, or the three or four we think about, but all over the world from africa and arab, they're pouring into our country. for former president trump who focused on the campaign visits have convinced his supporters not to be complacent. they know that they're leading in the polls. there's been a lot of coverage how much they're leading in the polls and they don't want the voters to think they don't have to show up at the caucuses or the primaries. he said, quote, leave out the rinos. and he spoke about governor sununu who enforced nikkei haley. >> what he did, his wish, whatever he can do to stop trump because he didn't like me. and i didn't like him. the thing is, i didn't like him, i always felt guilty, i gave new hampshire everything they asked for and much more, and it's hard to do is that when you can't stand the governor, right?
2:22 am
>> reporter: many in iowa, the first nominating state, their caucuses are january 15th. desantis got there saturday. haley arrives sunday and she'll be spending the rest of the week there as well. trump, meanwhile, will return to the hawkeye state on tuesday. steve contorn know, cnn, new hampshire. u.s. president joe biden's campaign has reacted to trump's campaign saying he quote, parroted adolf hitler. ron brownstein said trump's rhetoric might not help him in the general election next year. here's what he told cnn's jim acosta a little earlier. >> big picture is that the u.s. faces a situation that i believe we have not been in since arguably the two decades before the civil war. you really have to go back, i think, to john calhoun's dominance, the south's dominance in the democratic water in the
2:23 am
1840s and 1850s to look at the last time the dominant faction in one of the two parties was not committed to american democracy as we have understood tr and practiced it throughout our hist tear. and this is an extraordinarily challenging and in many ways, ominous situation, whatever happens in the 2020 election. trump has shown there is an audience in particular for all of these arguments. in polls while he was president, 90% of republicans of christianity in the u.s. is under attack. three quarters say discrimination against whites is now as big a problem as discrimination of minorities. and in polls saying the traditional life of americans is disappearing so forcing that true patriots will have to use force to preserve it. so there is an audience for this. but as you know, there is also an audience that's been mobilized to prevent this position from being implemented. we're in a position now where a
2:24 am
majority of voters are unhappy about the economy. discontented about biden, maybe think he's too old to run for another term. but it's a very different proposition to say that most americans in the end will be willing to empower someone talking so explicitly, echoing fascist leaders from the darkest moments from the 20th century. i said to you before, and i believe again, trump throws biden lifelines every day. voters are unhappy in the way it's going in the country but that doesn't mean they're willing to go this way either. >> that was ron brownstein. chileans will head to the polls in just a few hours for a referendum on a new constitution. the current one goes back to the prior dictatorship. and seen as even more conservative. it strengthens free market principles and imposes strict rules around immigration. this is the second attempt to
2:25 am
change the old constitution. like the previous one, this time, it's expected to fail as well. >> till to come, as ukraine waits for much needed aid, new attacks hit multi tame parts of the country. ♪
2:26 am
2:27 am
♪ ♪
2:28 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ now, the latest developments in israel's war with hamas. cnn has just learned from a source that israel's spy chief mossad director david barnea has met with the prime minister to talk about the hostages. there's no details. meanwhile israeli prime minister
2:29 am
benjamin netanyahu appeared to suggest on saturday that new talks are under way to try to release more the captives. he spoke for the first time on friday after the idf mistakenly killing three hostages. and turning up political pressure on netanyahu. now as israel's war against hamas rages on iran-backed proxy groups like the houthi rebels in yemen are ramping up attacks against u.s. and israeli-linked targets in the region. cnn's katie bo lillis has the details. >> reporter: shooting down greens in yemen, this according to the central command. this is the latest series of attacks on targets that the
2:30 am
group says is for retribution in gaza. houthis broadly aligned military group that u.s. officials believe are oseizing control. iran does offer them training, weapons and funding. the issue for the united states here while they're deeply concerned about secured shipping on the strait and beyond so the global impact isn't impacted, they also want to avoid a situation where the israeli conflict successes in iran and united states directly. so far, u.s. officials believe that iran is calibrating its response to the israeli invasion of gaza by allowing proxy groups to launch attacks on the united states and israeli-linked targets up to a certain threshold, but not beyond. that's why, in part, that you have seen the u.s. act with restrain so far and avoid responding directly to these houthi attacks. they're trying to keep the situation from escalating. u.s. officials also largely
2:31 am
believe that they're capable of dealing with many of these houthi-launched missions. they have shot down greens and houthi missiles aren't seen as especially accurate and the cruz missiles a little more accurate but not sure they can sink a ship. they're likely to have used a swarm tactic launching multiple drones to confuse by sheer numbers. clearly, it doesn't appear this works in this instance. so, i think the thing to watch at what point does the biden administration consider that the ongoing attacks by the houthis have become so risky to shipping that they can't go unanswered. at this point, not clear that threshold has been resched. katie bo lillis, cnn, washington. to ukraine, now, and the attacks across the country this weekend. kyiv's air defense system said
2:32 am
it intercepted at least 30 out of 31 drones which targeted various regions including the capital. we've also heard that at least one person was killed in a drone attack in the hard-hit city of odesa on sunday. odesa was attacked earlier this week as well, this, as at least one person was killed in russian strikes on the southern kherson region, according to military officials down there. this police body cam footage shows a hospital being hit. and this video shows new shelling on the russian-controlled city of d donetsk, no word from there 0 or kyiv on exactly what happened. now as ukraine's counteroffense against russia seems to have stalled, so, too, the arrival major aid packages from the eu
2:33 am
and the u.s. it's dampening the mood in kyiv, even after a week that certainly, the eu agreed to open membership talks. nick paton walsh has more from the capital. >> reporter: it's really been an appalling week for ukraine. volodymyr zelenskyy returning to the country here, putting a brave face on it, stalling the fact that they now have begun memberships with the european union. but apart from that, he's travelled to washington, traveling in europe, trying to bolster the possibility of funding and he's resolutely failed. the united states government unable to get themselves together to continue the billions of funding that ukraine so desperately needs and the european union, too, being sunny about that position about the veto-hunger preventing that aid coming ukraine's way. it's a putin sympathizer who put
2:34 am
that veto in and saw the morale impact on ukraine's front lines, palpable, frankly, before we heard this bad news. the fact that it was wavering, having an impact here, facing a renewed russia with billions of dollars to spare and slowly getting its military complex together. it's really a group of fringe republicans it's fair to say that are holding this up. some suggesting ukraine should be able to present that for a fine knit price tag. some says, well, if you're losing the war, why should the u.s. give you more money. if you're winning the war, why do you need it? and you're stalemate, why negotiate for it. especially blind to two things, u.s.' history of fighting complicated wars. they should be aware of the price tag you can get into where an end goal is often elusive. and also, too, of europe piece previous century, the history of
2:35 am
what a power-hungry, territory-hungry situation can do if not stopped. desperately ukraine needing western assistance, findings it not forth come, and russia hungry to continue moving forward. we've visited many front line position information the past two weeks. in the west around kherson where ukraine is attempting a brave move across the river. there are suggestions they are not seeing the progress they want. and i did get to the far east, they are losing ground, it seems, trying to take another town of minimal strategic significance with whatever resources they can throw at it. and, too, the southern counteroffensive with the most to gain, we've seen troops there experiencing significant casualties. really struggling to hold the ground they've gained. it's going to be a bleak winter ahead. but really, it's been a staggering failure, frankly, of u.s. politicians and european
2:36 am
unity to get those civilians to continue to move. it will impact ukraine's earliest january, a deep, dark, few months ahead for the ukrainians who have held on so long. nick paton walsh, cnn, kyiv. >> earlier, i spoke with timothy miliano, president of the school of economics, we discussed the wide aspects of the war specifically. ♪ west, and having second thoughts about aid, as another brutal winter closes in on ukraine. >> we haven't gotten the support from the united states. and we haven't gotten the support from the eu. we have gotten the formal opening of negotiations with the u.s. succession in the victory and in the immediate long-term victory, there will be barriers and milestones away. so, you are correct. there's no funding. and the uk in particular has
2:37 am
fallen. there's one person who is able to hold off aid, while there is a broad consensus, by the eu that this aid should be given. the u.s. is slightly politics, also shows you that ukraine just got caught in the crosshairs of this debate about the southern border control. and it's really, really unfortunate. and it would be, frankly, ridiculous if ukraine is going to lose because of this domestic political issues. >> and how is president zelenskyy trying to spin is this back home? i imagine, this hits morale with everybody in ukraine, as you've just described, been fighting, waiting suffering long and hard is zelenskyy managing to spin this as not the disaster that perhaps it is? >> well, it's a little bit
2:38 am
different domestically in ukraine. in the world, in the mass, this is very black and white. ukraine needs help, ukraine needs aid. it's not getting it. is ukraine winning, is ukraine losing, is there a stalemate. in ukraine, it feels very, very different. we get attacked by russia daily, at least in kyiv, and in the south. so, for example, i myself experienced seven air alerts on thursday, missiles on wednesday. on monday, drones your night over my head tonight. so, it's every day. so, sometimes, we do not have a choice. and my morale is much more affected by what i fear about my friends dieing in the front lines, rather than the aid. >> in less than a month, voters in taiwan will go to the polls to choose a new president and more than 100 legislators.
2:39 am
taiwan intelligence has warned that china is once again working to influence the voting through disinformation and other tactics. cnn's senior international correspondent will ripley has the details. >> reporter: a chilling picture of weaponized chinese disinformation. deepfake videos, doctored audio, caststing a sinisterer shadodow taiwiwan's u upcoming elelectio. cnn inside a closed-door briefing with senior intelligence officials in taipei, beijing's goal, they say, lasting the candidates in the presidential race. a senior security official tells cnn, chinese leaders held a secret meeting in the mainland last month, hashing out election interference plans. the meeting chaired by the
2:40 am
fourth-ranking leader of china's communist party. he warned officials to be more discrete telling cnn, they even say the chinese military is involved. claiming a psychological warfare in the mainland is targeting with disinformation. the mainland's internal affairs office says elections are china's internal affairs and add allow no interference with external forces. taiwanese officials say the secret of gathering just days after xi jinping travelled to san francisco. a four-hour marathon meeting with president joe biden. president biden told president xi not to interfere in chthe election, is china going to adhere to that? >> i don't think so because it keeps doing it. >> reporter: taiwan's democratic progressive party.
2:41 am
since taking power, the dpp prioritizes with washington over beijing. defying the chinese party's preferred political agenda, a more china friendly platform, championed by two opposition parties currently trailing in the polls. >> for china, it's all about how to sway the people in the middle. i mean, the swing voters. >> reporter: he said the methods include spreading disinformation, malicious rumors deliberately planted. trashing politicians seen as tough on china. from false claims the ruling party's vice presidential candidate say u.s. citizen. to fabricating indication of mass surveillance over taiwanese individuals. fact-checked in realtime by journalists in this taipei newsroom. >> usually, we have a lot of rumors and disinformation, but not so political.
2:42 am
but now because of the election coming and this mainly political and malicious ones. >> reporter: for grim warning, misinformation is at an all-time high, and not just in taiwan. is china also trying to influence the u.s. election? >> definitely. they actually have real engagement with real people. so they're getting better and better. >> reporter: distorting the truth, endangering democracy, one vote at a time. here in taipei, it's not just psychological warfare they're worried about. officials are also accusing china of military and economic coercion. on friday, beijing filing a trade probe against taiwan, which could hurt the economy just weeks before the election. we've reached out repeatedly for taiwan's foreign affairs section for comment. no word yet. one of the most powerful men at the vatican will now spend
2:43 am
years in prison. ahead, the rise and fall of one of italy's most prominent cardinals.
2:44 am
2:45 am
loving this pay bump in our allowance. wonder where mom and dad got the extra money? maybe they won the lottery? maybe they inherited a fortune? maybe buried treasure? maybe it fell off a truck? maybe they heard that xfinity customers can save hundreds when they buy one unlimted line and get one free. now i can buy that electric scooter! i'm starting a private-equity fund that specializes in midcap. you do you. visit xfinitymobile.com today.
2:46 am
♪ a former vatican chief of staff has become the first cardinal ever to be tried and convicted of financial crimes by a vatican court after a historic full trial. 75-year-old cardinal giovanni anglo becciu was sentence to 5 1/2 years behind bars for his part in crimes. part of the case that was called the vatican trial of the century, centered around a multimillion-dollar property deal that went wrong. becciu denies the charges promising an appeal. let's bring in cnn's correspondent from london, christopher lamb. chris, some of the details are
2:47 am
extraordinary? >> yes, they are, nick, something out of a novel, it seems. the trial went on for 2 1/2 years, it involved at the center of it disastrous investments that the vatican made at a property in chelsea in london. the cardinal was convicted for his role in that disastrous investment. he was also found guilty of embezzlement of funds by sending hundreds of thousands of euros to a self-described security consultant. a woman who said that she would help free a kidnapped nun in africa. but the vatican prosecutor said she used the funds that she was sent on personal expenditure, including on high-end fashion brands. and the cardinal was also found to wrongly send funds to a charity run by his brother in sardinia. but i'd say that the trial must
2:48 am
also be looked at in terms of long-running battle that the pope has been engaged in, in the vatican, trying to bring transparency and accountability to the vatican's finances. >> christopher lamb in london, thank you very much. and we will be right back.
2:49 am
2:50 am
2:51 am
2:52 am
♪ a premier league football team captain tom locklear is in stable condition after he suffered a cardiac arrest on the pitch during a match on saturday. cnn's world sport's patrick snell has more from the player's health. >> reporter: we have witnessed truly harrowing scenes in the english premier league as the leading captain tom locklear collapsed on the field of play, during his team's away on saturday. according to the club, locklear suffered a cardiac arrest midway through the second half at the vitality stadium. both teams taken off the pitch and distressing images as the 29-year-old welsh received treatment before taken to the hospital. with players of both side had no
2:53 am
state of mind to continue after seeing their much loved teammate and friend taken off. both players walking around the pitch and the luton tower manager seemed with very high emotion. l lockyer underwent treatment and told sky sports it was due to irregular heartbeat, adding he'd been give the all-clear. luton town captain saying he was responsive and had confirmed that the captain suffered cardiac arrest on saturday but it was responsive by the time he was taken off by the stretcher. he received medical treatment which we once again thank the medical team from both sides.
2:54 am
manchester united taking to social media to declare the thoughts of everyone at united are with you, tom, while another player suffered a cardiac arrest in 2012, showing his support. on x, wishing you a speedy recovery, tom lockyer, god willing you recover well. we certainly wish you tom all the very best at this time. back to you. a closer look at the drug ketamine and the role it played in the death of "friends" star matthew perry. an autopsy report revealed that perry died from, quote, acute effects of ketamine and a subsequent drowning. perry was found unresponsive in his home in a hot tub. the star had been receiving ketamine infusion therapy for
2:55 am
depression and anxiety, a week and a half prior to his death. earlier, i asked doctor scott mist mistkovich, why it was proved deadly. >> one of the reasons it's used as an apathetic and rapidly getting into your bloodstream within 45 minutes and it dates out. there was nowhere near and was gone. they dr find it was in his stomach, and the oral ingestion is about 4, 4 1/2 hours, put this in perspective, they found 440 grams in his blood.
2:56 am
he basically had enough medication in him to be anesthetized. that's not something you want to have in your system are be around a swimming pool or behind the wheel of a car or walking along a steep edge. a british boy who had been missing for six years is now back in the uk. authorities say alex battier who is now 17 returned home after he was found near telouise, france, it's too soon to tell whether a criminal investigation will take place. >> alex is back with a family member, alongside greater manchester police. officers at toulouse before having brought him to the uk. this moment is undoubtedly huge for him and his loved ones.
2:57 am
they're glad that they've been able to see each other all this time. >> battie has been missing since age 11, after his mother and grandmother took him on a spanish holiday. his mother did not have legal guardianship at the time. i'm nick watt, thanks for spending part of your day with me. for viewers in america, "cnn this morning" is next. for the rest of the world it's "african world change makers."
2:58 am
2:59 am
3:00 am
you're probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? did we peak your interest? you can get two unlimited lines for just $30 each a month. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible, it's happening. ♪

86 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on