tv The Amanpour Hour CNNW March 9, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PST
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>> hello, everyone, and welcome to the amanpour, our here's where we're headed this week >> the roe v. wade >> ripple effect overseas with reproductive rights under attack in america, a world first as france makes abortion a constitutional right, we have a solidarity with our american sisters, and we want to tell them that france is with her israeli hostage held by hamas for 51 days with a three children describes her hellish time in captivity. >> she's a gun sactually. it's a kind of emotional abuse that they didn't let us cry. >> also this hour creeping famine and starvation in gaza with children are now dying for lack of food and water death is better than this >> then. to ukraine's front lines where they're being forced to ration ammo. >> i think this year is gonna be the worst year in the war
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>> and for my archive via attempt to convert communism to capitalism in the early 990s. and how this failure in russia paved the way for putin welcome to the program, everyone. i'm christiane amanpour in london. we begin this hour with a history making moment in france. in direct response to lawmakers turning back the clock in the united states on international women's day, france formally enshrined the right to choose an abortion in its constitution. a decision president macron took off to the us supreme court overturned roe versus wade back in 2022. since then, almost two dozen republican led states have imposed new restrictions on a woman's right to choose, not to mention threatening access to ivf president biden used his state of the union speech to call for restoring roe versus wade >> many of you in this chamber.
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and my predecessor, a promising to pass a national ban on reproductive freedom. my god, what freedom else would you take away >> bragging about overturning roe v. wade? have no clue about the power of women if you named merrick, can people send me a congress has to force the right to choose. i promise you i will restore roe v. wade as the law of land again in a moment. i'll talk to my land shopper, a former french cabinet minister, who famously appeared fully closed in playboy to challenge gender stereotypes and extol women's right to sexual freedom but first from paris. here's correspondent melissa bell with more on how us politics galvanize the reproductive rights movement in france >> he, me, some sandals adoption said some ketuvim >> it was an overwhelming
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majority of french lawmakers gathered in versailles who voted in favor of changing france's constitution in central paris. women are celebrated. the fact that their freedom to terminate a pregnancy see would now be beyond the women of political change of funding. have villa liberty the sun. >> this will enshrine the freedom of women to choose abortion and to be a solemn guarantee that nothing will ever limit or abolish this, right, because it will have become irreversible back in 2022 the streets of paris too, had heard the cry that became so familiar as the us supreme court prepared to reverse roe versus wade >> have excuse me, by soldier use it as union with what happened in the us. >> there was a strong reaction in france by politicians probably several laws were proposed and the prime minister came to see us here at family planning to tell us how worried she was about the right to abortion. a right as hard one
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in france as it was elsewhere. >> the procedure >> only legalized in 1975 after a battle led by the lawmaker and then health minister simone veil a woman speaking to a parliament of men. >> so that's what this is. an injustice that must be stopped nearly 50 years on it is a different generation of women celebrating the fact that france is now going a step further. the friend charges baobab heavy, says her own experience with abortion at 17 was so traumatic that was in song she tried many years later to deal with it. >> what difference >> do you think it'll make to have it in thrived in the constitution, having the right to do abortion cannot be like a condition of politics. you know, it has to be something we have. no discussion >> recent polls suggest that over 80% of french population
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supports safeguarding abortion rights. >> if you put something in the constitution it automatically change people's minds. i know that my children will never think about the question about abortion >> barber says she was able to put her loneliness and shame into song but believes that france is constitutional change might help women in the future to feel neither melissa bell, cnn, paris, joining me now is my lane shopper, former french minister for gender equality, who is at the un next week to discuss these huge issues. my name shopper, welcome to us from paris can you tell me about this show of solidarity high wasn't really a solidarity. >> it's in >> proton tasting francis making history now, and zeros everywhere around the country were mobilized and the president macron decided to put
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abortion in in constitution. >> and how much did the decision of roe versus wade in the us play into this? we know that macro himself made that decision. but what did the people of france, women, feminists think when that happened? in 2022? >> yes, you know, in france we are very political people and very feminist country. so actually you're totally right. we will looking at what was happening in the us that roe versus wade. and it was a heartbreaking to see how women's rights are suffering a backlash in the us because you know, abortion is not allowed and it is three-ten in afghanistan, in iran, in some states here in europe, in hungry, in poland. but we see a us as freedom country, as a country of freedom and as a country who gave many huge feminists to a story. so we never thought roe versus wade would be attacked. like it was.
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so i think in france, it's important for us to put abortion in constitution and that low is a symbol, but it is a huge symbol that we are given to women here in france in order to tell them that in france, we won't let a brush and with trading by no-one, and that in the us, we have a solidarity with our american sisters and we want to tell them that france is with her do you fear, in part, even though the right to choose is legal in france and has been since 1975, that a >> future right-wing government in your country might have threatened your rights. was that part of the reason to enshrine it constitutionally? >> it is a possibility because you never know what is going to happen when the far-right is going to have the power the far right are some populist leaders, as we saw in europe,
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as i said, but in the us to, we would never thought during barrack obama mask mandates that one day the future president is going to trial against roe versus wade. so i think it's important that we are protecting our rights and by putting abortion in constitution, we are protecting the right to every women to choose. it is not about to being pro or against abortion is about the right to choose to every woman to choose when she wants to be pregnant or not. and when she wants to give birth out to not give birth, mullin, let me just go back in history to the 1800s, famously, the french statesman alexis to talk ville extolled to talk ville extolled the gratitude that france in the world had for the us constitution. it was the admiration of the world. and he wrote about it in democracy in america. and it's constantly his words are constantly being quoted now,
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but i want to read you something from an opinion that was written for cnn, a journalist and author living in paris, she said, france still has its problems with sexism and misogyny more than i could fit into a column. but compared to today's america, france looks like the version of a feminist utopia that could only be dreamed of by greta gerwig's i'll, universe. do you agree with that? do you think it is a feminist utopia or what, what issues do women still grapple with in france? >> first of all, as a feminist myself, and as a french feminist and i was a friend from a minister for gender equality i would say that as alexandra tocqueville, i would say that american constitution is very inspiring because you have the right to preserve freedom, to proceed happiness, and it is important and i, myself think it's that much in broughton that i have a title with this of liberty in order
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to celebrate american and americans constitution. and declaration of bills. so i think it's very important. but as you know, i said because my coin, the un to two-year-old, i think two years because ago he said france is back and i was with him and i said though, france is back is back. and so is feminism. and i think you have in the us gloria steinem and many huge feminist figures. and i think in france we had simone veil that we heard. in your topic but just a previously. and i think that france is a feminist country, of feminist utopia won't say that because you know, we put it a brauchen in constitution, but it is still difficult for women in france to have access to abortion not in the low, not in the right, but in reality, when you want to have an impact i'd mantle a dr. it is very long. if you live the country
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in a little city, it could be very hard, even though chest to find a dr. who wants to see you and to give abortion so i think it's hard, it's important to put it on the low end and the constitution. it is dangerous symbol, but it is a symbol. i wouldn't say it's paradisal. so in france for women. >> okay. because exactly you said women are equal in law, but not in fact in many other issues as well, whether it's pay or whatever >> exactly. yeah. so what are you going to be telling the un with your fellow feminist? from around the world and given you where the minister for gender equality in your country, what will you be discussing and what steps to be taken in the future? >> we have writes about gender pay gap and chill, no gender equality at work between men and women. so i think emancipation, economic emancipation is key because when you have your own pay, your own salaries, send you are
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free to make your own choices. you are not in rana depending to your boss, to your husband to your family, and newark, truly free. i think freedom for women is the most improtant sink thing, but we cannot put just freedom in the low. so this is why it is so important. and this is why we have to live that struggle together with all women all around the royal governments, ngos, companies activists. and we are going in the united nation in new york in order to tell that to the world and to tell that feminist are here out together and that we want equality. now, marlin sharper. thank you so much and i just wanted to ask you to show me, your arm again. show us your tattoo the statue of liberty was a gift of the french to the united it stays, see it, it's important french american friendship is still
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there. thank you so much. thank you so much. >> coming up on the show, the children starving to death in gaza and the mothers who want the world to witness this suffering. but first and israeli hostage held by hamas, but 51 days describes her time in captivity. we'll be right back vegas story of sin city next sunday at ten on cnn >> okay, everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition the first strike that energy >> ensure with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health, and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein beautiful and healthy looking eyes. >> it >> shouldn't be a compromise. >> lumify in elimination three, non irritating products developed by the experts at bausch and lomb exclusively for the sensitive eye area the cleanse, nourish, and brighten. clinically proven and formulated with clean
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>> welcome back. faced with multiple crises abroad president biden's annual state of the union address came at a critical moment in this campaign for reelection amid growing frustration over his backing of israel's war in gaza. the speech was delivered exactly five months after hamas militants attacked israel, murdering over 1,200 and kidnapping more than 240 from their homes, over 110 israeli hostages have been released from hamas captivity since the war began. >> but 100 30 remain in gaza. 99 of them believes still alive, but with no word of their condition. and almog goldstein lived to tell her harrowing story of survival in hamas captivity. her husband nadav, and eldest daughter yam, were murdered by hamas on october 7, just before she and her three remaining children or gem, girl and towel were kidnapped ten almog goldstein,
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welcome to our program. i want to know how you survive those 51 days of hell, as you say, how were you treated by your captors? and were you and your children held in the same place where you separated >> you have had their main mode because shame, farai, difficult 51 days the control of our life is taken away from us the bedtime law shalon, and i tried to look after myself and to be okay in this hellish reality but it's all in the control of our captors when we're going to eat, if we're going to eat chauvin, they tried to provide us with food. there was more at the beginning, but less later. >> but i'm sure high up a >> hot drink, a water was limited sometimes 330 milliliter and 24 hours it was
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very stressful for me the lack of water is difficult to live with. wild shortage of food, you can live with but water limitation is fairly stressful, not hollow. >> the show works for me. maga, believe me, my mind's. eye am name, know difficult conditions when you're shot in a flat, trying to open the windows a little bit, >> but they were heavy curtains, so not much ventilation i'm trying to push my body towards some balcony door each morning to get some fresh air and then towards for 35, it becomes dark >> watch and harsher. >> you use a flashlight and then candles and you're worried that the candles will cause fire rather there gosh agamani logan want to slipher
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>> i'm not going to have instructions to kill us and that they would do it we would ask them and they told us that they were guarding us at that they hoped that we were going to be okay we were not going to die they were going to die ahead of us or we were going to die together this was supposed to calm us down i asked solon, we've got we were not allowed to cry. they wanted us happy and told us to be okay. if we cried, we had to snap out of it or hide it. >> let's me either she's a gun sactually, it's a kind of emotional abuse that they didn't let us cry i got me has to sit down and stare and they would say, what are you staring
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at what are you thinking? there was no personal space? they said to us we are not thinking >> can were you abused or your children or were you abused physically by them? >> i'm like coat and on ivanka and they didn't hate us, but i did describe abuse. if he didn't understand, i will repeat not to let a person cry oh, gave them previously or take control of our life this is abuse. mental >> abuse, having chapin and xana, >> i put us in traditional clothes in order to move us from apartment to another which is supposedly an external act but a gamma. and i looked at each other. the first time we did it and we cried, love. you need to understand. they took
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our identity away. it was extremely difficult for us this is also abuse >> mushroom old cushy, not gamete >> like cotonou. >> they didn't hate us. there wasn't any sexual abuse minutes humiliated us though sometimes mocking us. should we celebrate total? no. >> and you could watch our whole extraordinary conversation online at amanpour.com still to come on the program, time is running out for the people of gaza on the brink of famine there is no food, no water, no flour, cooking oil, or anything. this woman says, death is better than this i am not guilty. >> i am resigning administration officials destroyed my cover >> politics. we're great power meets question general
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decision-making. >> and then on faces from iowa, backroom deals, cia secrets, affairs, bribery, corruption, prostitution one who. lives for politics when a major scandal unfolds, i have to >> there's so much more to the story in knighted states of scandal with jake tapper next sunday at nine on cnn. >> how long have you been tracking the value of our car? >> should we sell it? >> we hold our low mileage as paying off. you think we should already sold to carvana. >> go to carvana and track your car's value today. >> i have moderate to severe crohn's disease. now, they're sky rosie, things are looking. up. i've got some really control that everything feel significant symptom relief at four weeks with sky rosie, including less >> abdominal pain and fewer bowel well movements. sky rosie is the first il-23 inhibitor
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>> go to deal dash.com right now and see how much you can save taiwan on business tomorrow at eight on cnn >> closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com mesothelial mom it's all we do with local get the compensation. >> you deserve 800 to eight to 44, 44 welcome back. >> the united states and jordan airdropped more food into gaza this week, amid warnings that hundreds of thousands of people are at risk of mass starvation the us vice president cation, the us inhumane and reportedly called the visiting war cabinet member benny gantz on the carpet. over it, telling israel to let more aid in cnn's nada bashir reports. now on the children paying the awful price of what the un calls this man-made hunger crisis. a
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warning that the images, are of course distressing, but the people you'll hear from make it clear that they want the world to witness. there reality >> tiny limbs, wounds protruding >> the >> constant sound of crying from children now facing starvation in gaza in this overrun hospital ward anxious mothers so what can doctors provide whatever care they still can but for some there is nothing more to be done. three >> three-year-old mila, who had been suffering from acute malnutrition now, another victim of this merciless war she was healthy. >> there was nothing wrong with her before mueller's mother says then suddenly everything dropped. she wasn't eating anything. we had no milk, no
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eggs, nothing. she used to eat eggs every day before the war. but now we have nothing across gaza, too many are feeling the pain of this deepening hunger crisis small children, it may seated and malnourished these will italy as ends final moments, his tiny fingers gripped in his mother's hand. he liked miller, would not make it about the others are still just barely holding on but there is no telling how long they will survive. >> one i'm standing beside me. >> there's >> body, dr. sanam says many children at this hospital are now dying due to a lack of food and oxygen supplies with limited aid getting in. many have grown desperate, searching for food wherever they can nine year-old mohammad says, he walks for about a mile every
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day to collect water for his family you seem sad why this journalist asks him because of the war, he says, it is all too much on tuesday, un experts accused israel of intentionally starving the palestinian people in gaza noting that the israeli military it's now targeting both civilians seeking aid and humanitarian convoys >> israel >> has denied targeting civilians and says that there is quote, no limit to the amount of humanitarian aid for civilians in gaza but the reality on the ground paints a very different picture. >> whether we should >> there is no food, no water with flour, cooking oil, or anything. this woman says death is better than this
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>> according to a senior un official at least a quarter of gaza's population is now set to be just one step away from famine. >> broken >> with aid agencies facing overwhelming obstacles in getting the bare minimum of supplies into gaza as israel's ground offensive threatens to push further into the strip's densely popular they did south time is quickly running out while international efforts to airdrop humanitarian supplies have provided some rest bite it is simply not enough with stalling negotiations, leaving little hope for an end to the suffering and hunger of the palestinian people in gaza. now the bashir cnn, london, it is indeed hard to comprehend coming up on the program. the failed attempt to convert communism into capitalism. in
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19, russia and how that helped pave the way for putin's rise. then to its present day consequences playing out on the front lines in ukraine there's no point in trying to paint this in any sort of light where it's good for us that russia takes ukraine >> news night with abby phillip weeknights at ten eastern on cnn pain hits fast. so get relief fast. only tylenol rapid release channels have laser drilled holes. they at least medicine fast for fast pain, holy and now get max drink topical pain relief precisely where you need it with new tylenol precise >> uh, you know ed
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and lesson from history on what motivates vladimir >> putin's brutal imperial ambitions. despite sanctions and the slog of war, the russian economy actually grew last year because of its war footing. that's a far cry from the days after the fall of the soviet union which putin called the greatest catastrophe of the 20th century back then, as the country transition from communism to capitalism, global creditors and the imf advised then-president boris yeltsin to use shock therapy. and we witnessed this western economic prescription fail miserably causing a brutal financial meltdown and widespread poverty. here's my report from the winter of 1992 where i saw the harsh conditions in st. petersburg for myself this city knows all about hunga >> and eternal flame burns
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beside the mass graves of those who died of starvation during the nazis, 900 good day siege of leningrad in world war ii. the young come to pay their respects. those old enough to remember are afraid. >> no no budget block. >> i think it will be really bad. can you imagine potatoes being three times more expensive? even if we eat only bread and potatoes, we can hardly make ends meet outside the metro stations. and at the markets st. petersburg's new porpoise are selling off their own belongings, clothes, trinkets, and even a toilet seat trying to raise a few extra rubles city officials admit they won't make it through the winter or even the next 30 days without held at the premier system that we have only half the food supplies we need for the coming months. we're expecting aid from abroad, or we're very thankful for whatever we get handouts, large and small are being delivered to the hardest hit to an old woman who must support herself and her invalid son.
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she's pathetically grateful for this gift from germany she says it lost her all winter >> in the stores. the prices are high and there's not much to buy outside the lines last well after dark. >> but it worked for walking us. >> spend my whole day working hard and i come here and there is nothing i've been to three stores already. it's intolerable >> it's going through hard times now. but this city has a remarkable history as the center of change and new beginnings it's where russian imperialism died and soviet communism was born. and now it's trying to lead a capitalist revival, trying to turn itself into a haven for international investment city officials want to turn saint petersburg into a mecca for culture and tourism. they are giving her beautiful old face a lyft, setting up joint ventures about 500 so far trying to sell
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off state stores, restaurants, and factories to private investors and trying to change the work ethic. >> and we are doing, we are the reason we live so badly is because it will work so badly as soon as we start working batter, our life will be batter. >> but even under the best of circumstances officials say it'll take at least ten to 15 years before stability and real economic growth take hold but that attempt to jolt the economy into a whole new era was a disaster for russia, leading to the kleptocrats and the oligarch's and years later, vladimir putin himself revealed that he had been forced to moonlight as a taxi driver to make ends meet a humiliation that he would never forget. or forgive >> still to >> come, we revisit one of my favorite interviews with an oscar nominee ahead of tomorrow night's academy awards. but first, we take you to ukraine's front lines as soldiers run low on ammunition
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doesn't ms a. meeting and can regain his lunch break try now for free visit otter.ai. ai or download the app >> i'll rafael romo at the georgia state capitol in atlanta. this is cnn >> welcome back. it was a close call for the ukrainian president this week after a russian missile exploded near his convoy coy for noto me is lenski was with the greek prime
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minister on a trip to the black sea port of odessa. it's a jolting reminder of just how dire the situation is. and nowhere is this war more real than on the front lines where ukraine is rationing munitions while it waits for ammo and aid from the united states cnn's nick paton walsh saw the struggle firsthand >> it's a lonely path ahead. the russians have never been louder or closer. occupied. bakhmut is just up the road but now some ukrainian tank guns are silent just when they're needed. most. here. they don't have enough shells. >> sometimes they just won't far at all for a whole day. other days is still v shooting constantly and it is loud on the other side of that hill and it's sort of surreal to hear. that sort of noise >> over there and see this tank unit having a russia, there and
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was a brutal year. >> the year let's play in almost. i mean, it's in the given the froogle is mitchum chablis militia is a little better. >> we learned they didn't fire a tool that day all the day before or the next day. the silence here is what losing sounds like so too is what these soldiers had to say. yesli and logan's of nato shirt found the dinghy still wanted for >> most is a here in an offer us equal to zero >> it's that there here are running out of tanks. >> how angry doesn't make you? >> yeah, i'm i'm absolutely off. there's no point in trying to paint this in any sort of light where it's good for us that russia takes ukraine. that's going to be very, very, very bad for us geopolitically it's here. >> chasiv yar that already
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looks like defeat those left, sounding like they'd be just about okay. when russia comes you because you will move, squeeze, muscular moves well, you know, double. she isn't a polarise, you know, yes, >> i do not the need hasn't do. i need pediatric. spin >> further south near avdiivka homes that dealt with about ten years of war just up the road finally, emptying out. >> i do >> which did it as a potential >> here, the mona lisa money in the menorah is valid i put on doors texting lecture. do merge. >> the hurley >> with said masters sra drifted danny's actually ad
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>> the skyline is bleak enough as it is, but now rumbles with russia, advanced singh ukraine said it would hold steady at three villages near here after it left avdeevka. that hasn't happened. all three are now heavily contested at best. and the noise of the russian approach is louder. >> as a whole lot >> i don't know double life i'm going have much so, so much dallas dorsky to tough skin when hughes will do the
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prokaryotes are surely the technique some units had enough shells. they said these firing american rounds in a donated paladin but still less than before >> we didn't >> see much in the way of heavy defenses around here. and the worry is, was and will be that russia does not stop >> it may >> not be huge and southern enough to make the west pay urgent attention but that's exactly what putin wants anyway nick paton walsh, cnn, chasiv yar, ukraine and up next from americans volunteering on the brutal frontlines to featuring the war in hollywood. my interview with ukrainian journalist and director mr. slough chernov, whose film 20 days in mariupol is tipped to win an oscar tomorrow tonight, we will be right back
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coventry direct today at 80039 to 7,600 or visit coventrydirect.com >> i'm kaitlan polantz in washington. and this is cnn it's. the academy awards tomorrow night with oppenheimer, odds-on to win best picture. ryan gosling is set to perform. i'm just ken, which is one of two bobby tunes nominated for best original song. i've spoken with many of the nominees this year, including jeffrey wright,
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america ferrera, sandra huller, and jodie foster. we also showcased three of the best documentary nominations including 20 days in mariupol, which shocked us with the brutality of russia's full-scale invasion of ukraine. and i asked its director, mr. slough chernov why it is still so deliberately painful to watch if we don't report everything as it is, if we don't show to people across the world to our viewers, to our audience the reality of war. it becomes acceptable. it's a big danger, and not exposing the war all its brutality for all it's absurd. >> and if >> if it's polished, if it's sanitized, then it's acceptable and that's that shouldn't be the case
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>> right >> so i see you watching and essentially you're back there yeah >> i don't even have to watch. i remember every moment, every drop of blood, but i want to say that that's exactly why we need documentaries. first, it adds very, very necessary contexts. a part of news which are very short form the contexts give viewers an audience possibility to make their own judgments. and also with all their horrifying and very important tragedies that are happening when we are bombarded by them every day these important stories has just lost. so the only way to preserve memory of irina of
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even galina of ilia in curial, all those children have died. is to make a film about it. so to be sure that the memories there did she survive no, no, no. and her child has also died two years on tens of thousands of ukrainians are dead. and the fact remains that ukraine's ability to survive and stave off putin depends entirely on politicians in washington. >> remember, you can work but all of my interviews with the oscar nominees online at amanpour and you can also find all of our shows online as podcast at cnn.com slash podcast, as well as all other major platforms i'm christiane amanpour in london. thank you for watching and see you again next week >> good
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