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tv   The Amanpour Hour  CNN  February 17, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PST

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this week, someone retired, bart andriy, who you don't know about, you don't have the designers of all your beautiful products that you have from apple and jony >> ive obviously is the most important one, but this was part of a team and he is one of the final ones of that team have designed all the beautiful things we've been using all these years. and it's a big, a big moment. these industrial designers deserve lot of credit region. >> you're pulling it because i have the iphone 15, which i just got this week and tell them what i what i traded in an iphone six. >> when you said that to me, i was like, who has an iphone six? i was like, did you drive your big meal bicycle up to the apple store when you told the panel here that i had an iphone on six, they all kind of recoil as they should. but this is a beautiful phone and now you have spatial. >> thank bart for it, right, gang. thank you all for being here. thank you for spending part of your day with us and we'll see you right back here with the iphone 15. >> next place they can picture if i do not
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>> hello, and welcome to the amanpour hour. here's where we're headed. this >> i'm >> at the munich security conference where world leaders are reacting it seemed to the deaths of russian opposition leader alexei navalny's. they're also asking whether ukraine can hold off putin's forces. and if nato can still count on americans leadership. my conversation with president volodymyr zelenskyy then in their darkest hour, you can put us in the most horrific circumstances but you can't take away our are celebration of our humanity, hollywood, a-lister, matt damon on the extraordinary power of >> music during the siege of sarajevo. the documentary he's produced about bono and u2 in bosnia, also ahead, sent to die that was somebody, somebody them babbling children asked me
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when their dad is coming home, she sobs, russia is recruiting thousands of soldiers from nepal for its >> war in ukraine many never make it home. a special report from kathmandu next, another legend of the screen, the great jodie foster joins us with kaylee real stars of true detective. >> well, you know, there's a funny thing that happens when you turn 60, i think is at least for me, i feel like there's like some weird chemical that starts going off in your body and you just don't care. >> from my archive the face of war and afghanistan's battle scars post-war lessons for ukraine, gaza, and beyond welcome to the program, everyone. i'm christiane amanpour, and this week we begin our program here in munich, where world leaders are gathering for the annual security conference. the mood though, amounts to a mountain of anxiety this year, not least given the news that russian opposition leader alexei navalny is dead, that is
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according to the russian prison business services and outspoken critic of the kremlin, a voice for freedom and a global figure for democracy. he died in a russian prison and the case is being investigated according to the kremlin long a thorn in the side of vladimir putin, a former security official, western leader says, it is an ominous message siege to the world before this news, the other crises dominating this summit, whether the seventy-five-year-old nato alliance can continue counting on america after former president and republican front runner donald trump invited russian president putin to attack any nato nation that he deems delinquent. and as trump's maga, republicans in congress store further military aid to ukraine, the real and urgent question whether kyiv can hold off putin for another year. my first interview today is with the man in the eye of the storm, the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, i spoke to him on stage as he appealed again to the world to
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support his an everyone's fight for democracy and freedom >> putin kills crew ever he wants bit an opposition leader or anyone else who seems at the target exactly to him. after the murder of alexey navalny it's absolute to perceive putin at a supposedly legitimate head of russia >> okay, who maintains power through corruption and violence coming to his so called integration. shaking his hand considering him an equal means to disdain the very nature of political power. >> all right, firstly, mr. president, thank you for being here. so a senior nato official told the ft that it is a desperate situation for you on the front lines, far worse than
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you are actually admitting your commander said that one of the reasons that they pull back was in just the last 24 hours how is there were some 20 air strikes, 150 different shells. he said that trying to erase of defka from the face of the, from the earth. do you think this will lead to a snowball of other towns and cities? he's on the front lines collapsing or what do you expect for the next months and year >> junkers is a time. thank you for that question. well, first of all, this is their tactics. they're destroying, complete all the houses of the households, buildings, and then they're trying to move into certain areas. these are small villages, are very small towns and i let me repeat it again for wished to seize them. they it has taken them two years. what we expect we expect to see, what has been promised what we have agreed upon, that we will be able to unblock the
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sky is where the russians have an advantage as soon as we can do that monday, don't know lager control the sky of been emphasizing this. there's the very furthest of the word unblock, the sky. we have started receiving where grateful to our partners we've started receive the air defense systems patriarchy. they sms and there's a we have too few of them not criticizing now, but we have too few of them in order to quickly move ahead. but the decision is very simple. >> where >> we had our air defense systems from where we had that time, people would come back, they would bring back the economy of a certain town or city. the city was practical, a protected. we have such cities. it's not very fair toward the other cities. we don't have a yard. the lines here is just wear short though such systems, but where we had such systems of air defense immediately, russia would move back because it would lose its aircraft that
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i can tell you well, i will not who exactly what we are using, but one of the latest examples we destroyed 12 aircraft of the russian federation recently. so those systems will unblock the sky and will make it possible for our soldiers to move ahead because so we'll ask me what we're expecting we have those systems and long range weapons because there's only an unfair war, it's unfair general, but it's if they are in terms of the advantages, if you have artillery with a range of up to 20 kilometers and the russians artillery has the range of up to 40 kilometers. that's the answer human being is fighting artillery. that's unfair. and this not moderately war ideology, we have to develop technology. we've started doing that. we have to develop to start building with drones. >> i've been speaking to american generals, others who said, you can win, but it depends. hens on the will of politicians in your allied
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nations in the united states and everywhere else. as you know, there is a stalling in the united states congress, the republican led that house will not address the huge weapons bill that the president is trying to get to. some of them may be here. what would you say to your republic? they can colleagues in the united states anybody who's blocking that bill, if you grant will be alone. you have to understand what well-being russia will destroy us throwing baltic, destroy poland, and they can do it >> yesterday, i had >> berdyans are saying, where he useful. i think dialogues with was john government and also with france partners and i said, we're clearly and very honestly if you will remind that was what was going on in ukraine in 2014. our people been not ready for for the war for the quick occupation of
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crimea, part of donbas. and then during, during well must say, eight years people began to be ready for such aggression not only with weapon is not the question of weapon you're ready psychologically. >> and >> my to my mind i think so. no god bless you will not have any attacks from russia, but budha, but to my mind that in europe there is no any nations for today who was ready? for invasion because >> not >> because we are stronger or better, not of course, we are the same with the same willis, but we at these all these years and you're nations didn't have and psychologically and informationally and in media, you didn't prepare your
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nation's understanding why, because nobody wants nobody wants it. i mean, that's why that's why senators have to understand only in week in unity, we can when russia and they have to understand that we will win with them or not we don't have any other way. we have only one land hour crane >> the president you are outmanned and you always say this, there are a huge, huge advantage in terms of numbers of russian forces there is a question of potentially you signing a law or changing the draft and the conscription and lowing the age from 27 to 25. are you going to do that for defending operation some number of brigades, the for they began
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to translate me yeah, it's difficult for for for for counteroffensive. you need another in other number of brigades? so the question of mobilization is a complicated thing. >> yes. and i can't share with you the number of >> victims and casualties but for example if you will, when we speak that they have too much people. >> yeah. >> and you have to know, for example, in avdiivka, i just comparing the number it's a bit, that i'm but for one deaths of ukrainians, seven grains seven deaths of russians. one to seven so i'm
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not comparing this for, and i don't want and it's stretched even to lose one person. but we didn't begin it so that you have to know, we have to understand what was going on in this small city. >> alexei navalny, like all russian opposition figures before him, knew that he had a target on his bag in the summer of 2020, he was poisoned with novichok nerve agent. you may remember the dramatic story navalny fell ill while on a flight inside russia, the pilot made an emergency landing. doctors rushed his side and he survived. he was flown out and treated right here in germany, where doctors confirm that he had been poisoned navalny quickly blamed putin, the kremlin always denied it, despite great risk. navalny wanted to return to russia, as he told me in december 2020, just four months after that no i guess. >> do you think you'll be safe when you go back
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>> well well, i don't think that i can have such a privilege being safe and russia, but i have to go back because i don't want these groups of killer exist in russia don't want putin be ruling of russia. i don't him being president, i don't want him being tsar of russia because, well, he's killing people. his reason why our, the whole country is degradative. he is a reason why people are so poor. we have a 25 million people living below the poverty line and the whole degradation of system. fortunately for me including system of assassination of people. he's the reason over that. and i want to go back and try to change it coming up next on the program, more on the legacy of war. this time, hope in war-ravaged sarajevo, three decades ago variation for the
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war-torn everywhere in the darkest times there is something about expressing ourselves and doing it gather superstar actor, producer matt damon tells the story of bono, bosnia, and bomb shelters filled with music the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight on cnn. >> the right mattress makes everything clear exactly where my passport is. >> the right mattress matters. >> will find yours at the president's day sale, save up to $700 on sealy and get a free adjustable base mattress firm >> are you still struggling with your bra? it's time for you to try next. makers of the world comfy as wireless bras for revolutionary support without under wires and sizes up to a g-code to find your new favorite brought today at next.com how has been fraud to hear thinning is getting older. >> i was under a lot of stress.
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expenses, and tracking subscriptions, thought i had it all heard it out. then i got hit with two unexpected renewals and an annual fee that's when i switched to rocket money. and at that finds and cancels subscriptions, lowers bills, and automatically tracks and categorizes your spend when i signed up within seconds, i noticed i had to netflix accounts. i didn't know about. thankfully, i was able to cancel both of them with a tap hey, control of your finances and download rocket money inside politics sunday with manu raju tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. welcome back to the program. before i left the studio here in london for munich, i spoke this week with hollywood superstar matt damon about how odd and music can sustain life, even in desert, can sustain life even in desperate circumstances. the siege of sarajevo during the bosnian war was the longest in modern warfare, lasting nearly four years in the 990s before it ended 28 years ago amid the
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bloodshed and the ethnic cleansing, sarajevo is underground music scene provided an escape for many from the other side of the world. the rock band u2 sent messages of support, vowing to perform their after the war out of a new documentary, kiss the future. >> during, we would play music that's what kept us safe can inspire people to resist >> okay? got five minutes. what would you do? you do what you love the most? >> forage is grace under pressure, but that's a good definition of the people say, i was interviewed for the film about my reporting during that time and i spoke to the oscar-winning screenwriter, an actor, matt damon about producing this documentary and about that dunkin donuts super bowl ad last week, matt damon, welcome to our program. >> thank you. thank you for having me. >> it was amazing when i saw the whole documentary because, you know even though we were
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there as reporters, we didn't actually know that it was this underground local music scene thriving even, even under curfew and all the rest of it. what do you think as an artist actually about the power of art in the worst kinds of situations yeah, that's that to me. is that the most beautiful part of the movie? it's really about our humanity. and in the darkest times, there's something about expressing ourselves and doing it together. >> you know, these people were going to >> these, these underground music clubs at night to either listen to music or to play music. i mean, we have, there's a photograph in the film that we have is one of these punk rock drummers got his hand blown off on the front and literally there's a picture of him with with a drumstick duct-taped >> wear his hand >> needs to be anything. it's just music as an act of resistance and defiance, art as an act of defiance. and you can
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put us in the most horrific circumstances, but you can't take away our our celebration of our humanity and we'll, and we're willing to die for that. >> and we're going to play that clip because it is remarkable to see that level of resistance. >> audience was literally risking their lives running from two different from bridges to the theater. our sound guy die before one of those performance >> one day, my bass player came to me and said oh agenda, he lost his on the front line >> he lost his bright >> and you can see the same stuff happening in ukraine right now. there's a thriving underground art community yeah, i think i think that's built out of necessity. it's we have to have these things. we have to continue to be human beings and be together and experienced the best parts of life together or else it's just we're on the road to madness. >> i mean, bono is famously
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political in aid of humanity actually, he's, he's, he's a political guy. >> i was raised during a time where the citizenry was a lot more engaged. i mean, i grew up during the vietnam war and that was a very kind of fractious time in america, obviously in very deeply felt on all sides and the country was in quite a bit of turmoil >> i don't know if we've been somewhat anesthetized since then. i'm not sure >> but i do feel like >> certainly a band like youtube. they they've always i mean, they've, they've always been i i remember talking to edge about the fact that he almost didn't join the band because he wasn't sure if it was enough to do with his life. he wanted his life to have greater meaning being in service of others. it would've been enough to have the incredible music, but they've always, dave always tried to do more and i think that just speaks to the kind of people they are. >> so you do have a day job. you are a pretty famous, an active movie star.
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>> now, >> apparently you were looking to take some kind of hi, i'm out to be more with your family. i heard i read that you had told you why if you're going to take a good time out, unless christopher nolan called you, and then he did and then comes your role in oppenheimer was smart? >> i had one little carve-out in our deal. just one caveat was because chris is pretty mercurial. you never know. but most actors have a sense of his timeline. every three or so years, you may or may not get a call and so i just left myself that one out because if you get a call from him, you really want to be able to pick it up and go. i think anybody would just do the phone book with chris nolan if he called and asked my final question is going to start with a clip from a dunkin donut add no interaction. sometimes no interaction. sometimes it's really hard to be your friend
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bought me >> okay. super bowl. super bowl faun there's so many layers there, but you're close friendship with ben affleck. you work together on films on so many other issues and you remains such good friends do you ever fall out >> no. no. we've been we've been friends since i don't know. i was ten and he was eight. so that's 43 years, i guess know it's kinda beyond that. there's there can't really be a breakup and he called me i thought the idea was really funny. he's clearly making a bigger fool of himself than anybody in the commercial. so everybody else felt fine about putting the track suits on and we had a lot of pfk-1. >> so you smiling a lot while you were watching that matt damon. thank you so much. >> thank you so much >> and kiss the future is out next week exclusively at amc theaters across the united states. coming up after the break, putin cars his call up
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net far and wide >> jan occur. a young nepali mother is assuming think the worse than the poly man fighting for russia in ukraine and their families who desperately want them back >> we're here to get your side of the story >> this guy who was a crusader against human sex trafficking is actually a custom that someone at the white house blog well, the cover of a cia operative, this is horrifying. >> she's still in danger. >> staff said he was hiking the appalachian trail. when did you realize you might actually be going to prison from the beginning? >> you can't write this stuff. >> united states of scandal with jake tapper and back-to-back premieres tomorrow at nine on cnn my cry
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because it otter.ai yeah. or download the app. >> i'm elizabeth wagmeister in los angeles in >> this is cnn closed captioning bronchi by meso book.com we've offered a free book about missile filial mahfud or ten years, called 1808724901, or >> going to msal book.com >> welcome back. >> as russia's war in ukraine drags on >> moscow is looking further and further afield to feed its war machine. the united states says north korea and iran is sending moscow missiles, drones, and ammunition, but lesser known of the people they recruit from poor nations to fight on the front lines. for instance, in the poll where young men allude with the promise of significant cash. but as matthew chance found out in this special report from kathmandu, desperate families are left clueless and penniless when they're men, don't come
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home >> it should be a world apart from the battlefields of ukraine. but this himalayan state has become an unlikely nepalis light a gram chandra, who escaped the russian army with his life. i praying, please comments still fighting on the frontline he took a bullet and shrapnel in ukraine. he told me and so many nepalis killed. >> just today, i would demand that some complained. they were sent forward while russian troops held back. he tells me but the main problem was the language barrier value or sometimes you couldn't even understand where you're supposed to be going. he says, which way to point your gang? but that chaos hasn't stopped nepalis signing up. many posting upbeat videos on social media of their military
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training in russia where they're meant to be prepared for the hardships of the ukraine is in use and reality, several former nepali recruits tell cnn, they were sent into battle after barely two weeks the fight for the kremlin, armed with a rifle and a contract for a few thousand dollars a month of fortune in the par where unemployment is high well, the vast majority of nepalis fighting for russia and ukraine are doing it for the money and they come from these down at hill impoverished areas across the country. we've actually come to one of them now on the outskirts of kathmandu to meet a woman who in the past few days has learned that her husband has been killed fighting in that distant war. >> hello. >> hi namaste. namaste, i'm so he was with a unit of nepalis battling ukrainians. she tells me when he was gunned down
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>> welcome under >> roe monday, it was my husband's friend, his nepali commander in ukraine, who called me in the middle of the night and told me he'd been killed. she tells me still shocked at the news if you don't there's been no notification from the russians. she adds, nothing it's a growing frustration with russia's treatment of nepalis as cannon for the in the ukraine war shared with these protesters near the russian embassy in kathmandu melissa, hi, and the nepali foreign minister who told me he's pressed moscow to curb recruitment to no avail. >> they have told me that they will sorted out the concern of nepal >> so they've they've told you they will sort it act. yeah. but they haven't done anything yet. yet to did didn't have we don't have any information of doing it. >> there's not much information either on how many nepalis, or even fighting for
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russia about 200 according to nepali officials but multiple sources, including campaigners, lawmakers, and returning fighters tells cnn as many as 15,000 the parleys could be fighting in ukraine what we've asked the russians have been in a police, they've recruited. and how many have been killed, and what kremlin calls its special military operation. so far, there's been no response, but there are concerns here in the pile, the casualty figures maybe high cnn has learned that hundreds of the parties joined the russian military out of contact. and it's uncertain if they're dead or alive jan ocha, a young nepali mother, is assuming the worst. husband hasn't called for more than two months now that was,
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already something i'm babbling. >> children asked me when their dad is coming home, she sobs even if he doesn't love us anymore. we just want to see his face but another nepali recruited to russia's war may never be seen again matthew chance, cnn, katmandu in the park the unintended consequences they're coming up. hollywood legend jodie foster unites with boxing superstar kanye. reason for the latest season of the thrilling mystery series through detective working with you was like training with mike tyson. >> oh, without the body my god, you're here yeah >> she didn't buy any years off >> united states have scanned with jake tapper tomorrow at nine on cnn. >> i kept my one-bar tied, did almost 61 large has a lot more closed for one model, tides more concentrated cleans, so little goes a long way. >> maybe weed away some launched a library next time.
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week's lesson from london, i'm joined by a legendary hollywood >> actress making her return to the small screen and a world champion boxer stepping into a new ring. that's right. they are the stars of the new season of true detective jodie foster and kailey reese. and if you're new to the show here, here's a clip. >> i'm working on this new case >> missing scientists found on the edge of the villagers frozen solid do you want six years >> why did you hear >> because both know what really happened? >> he's my house the star has joined me here in london ahead of the show's grand finale, which is this sunday jodie foster, kelley reese welcome to the program. what attracted you about true detective in this particular series, >> isa lopez, the director, just it's such a magnificent job writing all the episodes and creating this world with
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the two true detectives that are female. now, we remember season one and matthew mcconaughey, woody harrelson, but there's something really extraordinary about the anthology and being able to say, we're gonna, we're gonna do something completely different >> so since jodi brought up season one was it the female lead character? to of this one that attracted you to it? and it's your first major on screen, right? >> yes, it's my first major onscreen as my only my third acting job as well. >> you are pot cape verde in part native american. was that also an attractive calling point for you? >> absolutely. because the representation or lack thereof that we have isn't and as people is just it's getting a lot better and i'm were just in such a great time so when i had was presented to me this character navarro was inupiaq and dominican. she was part two different worlds, part of the community that she was going to be policing. it was something that was so familiar to me because it's that balance that you have to have. you don't feel enough for either. so it just attracted me to this is very leery character.
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>> jodie foster can use a boxing champ. and she said though that is and will maybe go back to boxing tired, yeah. >> okay. >> and said that working with you was like training with mike tyson? oh, training with mike tyson oh. >> without abiding by any years-old often like it was like training like mike tyson and 86 in his prime and jodi, you know, you obviously a mentor of sorts, i guess for all the new comers and younger actresses, you decided that you wanted your character. liz donbas, to be aged up well, my age, yes >> yes. >> but putting navarro's story as the center. >> yeah. right? yeah. and i think he should probably wanted that too, but it was something that i really wanted to remind us that we were doing something that really isn't done very much just to have the central voice of the film be an indigenous voice to be looked
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through those eyes in a way, not just because we're doing representation, but because we really want to be in that body and really understand it from that perspective. and so for to do that, i'm just here to support. so i kinda reverse engineered my character of liz denver's it to support kaylee's character's journey that doesn't happen often. >> well, you know, there's a funny thing that happens when you turn 60, i think is at least for me, i feel like there's like some weird chemical that starts going off in your body and you just don't care and part of that not carrying is that you suddenly realize that it's so much more fun and more satisfying to recognize there's not your time, it's someone else's time. >> so the last major thriller detective that you play, it got an oscar clarice, et cetera. congratulations because you're nominated again this case. best supporting actress, for niha. >> tell me the story. everybody should know it. >> well, it's a story out of diana and i add, who is a
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swimmer had been a marathon swimmer for all her whole life and then came back at the age of 60, finally accomplishing her mission is 64 to swim from cuba to florida. >> and that bending and yourself, again, kinda aged up. i mean, yeah, not shy about the sun damage mosque damage that she had been worried that i mean, that takes some courage also, as i say, i was i was best supporting abs because i just i never had to get into water. i basically just stood on the boat and sucked in my stomach and my jogger bra and that was pretty much all i had to there's the whole taxi driver costs. oh, yeah. that's all meeting at the oscars, right? by the time you did that film, i think i was 12. you would 12 and you had more experience in >> yes. and i the martin scorsese or robert de niro? >> yes, i had i had made more movies than either one of them at that point. but it's, it is funny to see. i mean, of course, i have so much respect for scorsese and an arrow and
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all of the movies that they've made. but yeah, my reference for them is very different. you martin scorsese had a little funny match, must actually was really young and his mother was on set the whole time and she was always like actually driving? yes. she was talking in his shirt all the time and she was like paddings, but i'm not making sure you wrote so i do have a different memory of that, i think is but that's yeah just because killers of the flower moon is another amazingly timely film. in terms of diversity and representation of indigenous people did you like the film? >> you know, there's mixed feelings about the film they're not anything negative. >> i am >> so proud of lily gladstone and the entire indigenous cast and entire osage nations she did a wonderful job, so didn't the whole cast. so i think having his platform and told this story and worked with them, it's an amazing opportunity just to continue to go forward. >> jodie foster, kaylee reyes. thank you so much, indeed. >> thank you. >> coming up from my archive,
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the hidden weapons of war, wanting civilians long after the fighting stops, we go back to afghanistan, 1990s 17 years of war, first against the soviets and now against each other have turned his country into one of the world's biggest minefields tomorrow >> laura coates examines the federal criminal charges against former president trump. >> is it going to be difficult? >> to meet this burden of proof? how >> strong is the government's case? the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight on cnn >> okay, everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition. or strength and energy. >> ensure with 27 adam is a mineral. nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein >> okay. ready to washington one second. i got it. finished my laundry yes. it's girls like one second. i use rents what's
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>> i didn't get me anything unbaked >> brick box and escaped to the best the british tv. >> if you try vaping the quit smoking, it might feel like progress. but with three times more nicotine than a pack of cigarettes, apes increased craig trapping you and in and i was craving loop new reduces cravings until they're gone for good >> why choose asleep covers? smart bad. >> can i make my side softer? >> my side firmer? sleep number. does that now say 50% on the steep number limited edition
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democrats agree. conservative republican steve garvey is the wrong choice for the senate. ...our republican opponent here on this stage has voted for donald trump twice. mr. garvey, you voted for him twice... as your own man, what is your decision? garvey is wrong for california. but garvey's surging in the polls. fox news says garvey would be a boost to republican control of the senate. stop garvey. adam schiff for senate. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message. now and see how much you can save >> this is cnn, the world's news network >> welcome back to the program. we've been talking throughout this hour about the pain and sorrow of war. but what happens when the guns fall silent we took a look back into our archive, but the necessary and often deadly process of de-mining february 1989, 35
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years ago. this week, the soviet union was forced to withdraw from afghanistan after us back resistance by the afghan mujahideen resistance by the afghan mujahideen. >> a >> defeat that mark the beginning of the end for that superpower and an event that the current russian president vladimir putin is determined to reverse. now, as ukraine tries to push back against russian forces, those very troops have laid down dense minefields, which are not only difficult to overcome now, but will still be deadly even when the war ends. i found that exact scenario in afghanistan. and in 1996, i saw up close how minds and unexploded ordinance outlaws any war >> this is the face of war and peace infants, teenagers, adults wounded by weapons that keep firing long after a conflict is be closed. in one
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month surgeons at one hospital in the afghan capital, kabul amputated 35 limbs, land mines caused almost all the injuries, almost all the injured are civilians the international committee of the red cross runs the city's only rehabilitation center. >> there is no pleasure. yeah. you know, pressure photo cairo has been fitting mine victims here for the past six years. the false leg is not about to go bust. >> it's pure terrorism is you know, perfectly when you put a mine that the demine will hit salman innocent. someone that is not a soldier, someone that you are not fighting against >> the fight against minds is being waged in the capital and the countryside. >> rock medical teams >> of sniffer dogs and 2000 patients search and destroy scraping through the soil inch by inch. it's taken three days
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just to find one mine here. it is difficult, slow, and very scary work. >> we need it i must do it for my country says shopping, hong 17 years of war, first against the soviets and now against each other, >> have turned his country into one of the world's biggest minefields. 22 square kilometers in the capital alone, only a fraction has been cleared work or last into the next century, if the funding does a mine costs $3 to make one to remove >> in the meantime, we cannot start our schools have a university, deaf people, they cannot work. the farmers, even they cannot go to the land in addition to minds, tons of unexploded weapons helped cripple economies, ruined farmland, and prevent refugees from returning home. here, a 100 in 20 millimeter mortar shell in someone's garden the alarm is sounded. this goes on
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day after day, week after week. and now the red cross has called for a total global ban on land mines. since minds, of course, several casualties amongst us soldiers serving in bosnia the us military has started to consider whether or not to join the growing anti-mine campaign and advocates hope that we'll have a knock-on effect. however, there is still resistance from the many countries that make cell and stockpile minds >> meantime, >> the un red cross and other relief agencies are trying to protect the incident by teaching them how to recognize and avoid mines because they killed about 10,000 people every year. and may many more because civilians, not soldiers, are the principal victims a 13 year old girl loses her leg, collecting firewood. in societies like hers, a woman who's made aimed is not marriage material >> and much more with me. >> i was just farming my land. how did i know they were buying
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it says 16 year-old pop all the families only breadwinner. this hospital received about ten mine wounded a day. it is bracing for double that number. now that spring has come snows are mounting farmers are going out to plant again. >> it >> is so sad and according to the un latest estimates show that in 2021, more than 5,500 people were killed or maimed by land mines. most of them civilians, half of them children more than two decades after the adoption of the mine ban treaty, around 60 million people in nearly 70 countries still live with the risk of land mines on a daily basis, the united states has not signed up to that treaty. and you know that whether it's gaza or ukraine, this legacy will remain when we come back more of your questions and my answers ask amanpour is next >> dianne not guilty? i am resigning administration officials destroyed my cover
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>> politics. we're great power meets questionable decision-making. >> and then on faceless from iowa, backroom deals, cia see affairs, bribery, corruption prostitution. >> as someone who lives it's for politics when a major scandal unfolds, i have to know there's so much more to the story in knighted states of scandal with jake tapper back-to-back premieres tomorrow at nine on cnn, only the sleep number smart that lets you each choose your individual firmness and your sleep number setting an actively cools or warms up to 13 degrees on either side. now say 50% on the sleep number limited edition smartphone plus free home delivery. when you add a base, ends residents day only, it's leaped number. >> i won't let my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis symptoms to find me emerge. as, you with trump via most people's some 90% clear skin eye for months. and the majority stake clearer. i'd five years, cbs allergic reactions may occur, can fire, may increase your risk of infections and lower your
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>> financial questions answered so we didn't have to work can we get out of here? that's how you'd never asked join 18 million americans and take control of your financial future with a real-time dashboard in real life, i'm daniel lurie and i've spent my career fighting poverty, helping people right here in san francisco. i'm also a father raising two kids in the city. deeply concerned that city hall is allowing crime and lawlessness to spread. now we can do something about it by voting yes on prop e. a common sense solution that ensures we use community safety cameras to catch repeat offenders and hold them accountable. vote yes on e.
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serve.com i'm jeremy diamond didn't tel aviv and this is cnn >> welcome back. and finally, let's find out what's on your mind this week. >> hello, christiane. my name is donie hosts selectric what's your take on the one state solution for the palestinian conflict? >> so, that. is quite controversial and i'll been speaking to expert this week about what happens the day often. now, a one state solution means all palestinians, all israelis will live in one state. and then the question is, will all citizens have equal rights? will the palestinians be given equal rights in a once they >> who knows? >> but most people believe that a
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>> two-state solution is the only way to have security for all sides freedom and justice and equal rights for all sides. that is a solution that the international community and all the neighbors are working on. it is not a solution prime minister benjamin netanyahu wants and actually majority's on both sides don't yet wanted because of all the violence has happened, but it will take a major international effort. and if that doesn't happen, they say violence will continue. we will wait to see. and that is all we have time for this week. if you want to ask me a question, scan the qr code on your screen or email us common paul, cnn.com. remember to tell us your name and where you're from and don't forget, you can find all our shows online as podcasts at cnn.com slash podcast, and on all other major platforms. i'm christiane amanpour. thank you for watching and sue again from london next week

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