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when i was your age, we never had anything like this. what? wifi? wifi that works all over the house, even the basement. the basement. so i can finally throw that party... and invite shannon barnes. dream do come true. xfinity gives you reliable wifi with wall-to-wall coverage on all your devices, even when everyone is online. maybe we'll even get married one day. i wonder what i will be doing? probably still living here with mom and dad. fast reliable speeds right where you need them. that's wall-to-wall wifi on the xfinity 10g network. four for infrared.com imprint for certain >> all welcome to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world i'm kimberly hoover. this is cnn newsroom.
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>> the death toll from >> a terror attack at a russian concert hall is expected to rise still higher as moscow tries to shift the blame without evidence to ukraine back to normal for now, rather than biden signs of bill to keep the government open. but both sides have reasons to be unhappy. and the another fight is looming. and pope francis is expected to preside at palm sunday mass and the vatican after a recent health problems that led him to scale back some appearances live from atlanta. >> this is cnn newsroom with qin brunhuber the death toll. from the terror attack at a russian concert hall is now 133. and officials say they expect it to go even higher. russia has declared sunday a national day of mourning. people have been placing flowers and stuffed animals outside the hall to remember the victims investigators say they've arrested the for alleged gunman and seven other people isis has claimed responsibility for the attack
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and an isis-affiliated news agency has released graphic video that purports to show the attack now cnn has decided not to show that video. we have geo-located the video to the concert hall, but the videos identifying metadata has been erased. cnn senior international correspondent frederik pleitgen has more on the attacks and the aftermath the burned-out shell of the crocus city hall just outside moscow, even half a day after the attacks, parts of the rubble still smoldering the local governor serving the places where gunman killed so many >> use my thumb two here and three there. governor, under vorobyov asks three here they say hundreds of firefighters still on the scene of what russian president vladimir putin called, quote, a bloody and barbaric attacks his security services on high alert hoops, you could be doing running in all regions of the country, additional np, terrorists and np sabotage
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measures have been introduced. >> the >> main thing now is to prevent those who are behind this bloodbath from committing a new crime >> it was friday evening when the attackers went on their rampage, firing at people point blank, eyewitnesses say killing men, women, and children, then setting the concert all ablaze. friends and family standing by, hoping for news of their loved ones. authorities searching for the many still missing >> just do the often euthanasia i don't know what to do. this man says desperate for news of his wife. i feel completely hopeless >> moscow is >> hospitals flooded with dozens of injured russian authorities say that death toll we'll likely continue to rise >> thank you in advance for your patience. >> the us said it had warned moscow about the threat of a terror attack and isis has claimed responsibility. but russian authorities seemed intent on blaming someone else
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after several arrests overnight, the kremlin pointing the finger at key situate your nipples whose ban utility poles for direct perpetrators of the terrorist attack. all those shot and killed people were found in detail is they tried to hide and move towards ukraine where according to preliminary data a window was prepared for them on the ukrainian side to cross the state border. that's going agreement. >> ukraine denies the allegations, key of saying they had nothing to do with the attack near the scene of the attack, many are laying flowers in memory of the victims, vladimir putin has declared sunday a day of mourning, promising a russia united in grief and retribution and the bolivian, for those behind the attack. her plight, good. cnn berlin >> and cnn's clare sebastian has covered russia extensively and she joins us now from london. so claire, as we heard their putin keen to tie ukraine
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to this attack, what's ukraine's response been? >> well, they've been pretty flatly denying it. kim, the defense intelligence saying on saturday that this was absurd, that any suggestion this and of course from president putin that the attackers are trying to escape across the ukrainian border. was simply impossible because this is essentially a front line in this conflict. now, it's teeming with soldiers and intelligence officers. and then we got extremely strong words from president zelenskyy as well. at basically accusing putin of trying to just pin the blame on anyone. take a listen should know they have brought hundreds of thousands of their own terrorists here on ukrainian land to fight against us. and they don't care about what is happening inside their own country yesterday, as all this happens, instead of dealing with his fellow russian citizens, addressing them, the wimp putin was silent for 24 hours thinking about how to tie this to ukraine. it's all
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absolutely predictable so this i think gets to the heart or any hints at it of britain's relationship with his people that he is the provider of security >> in return for their acceptance of ever greater state control over their lives. i think there what may well be questions in the wake of this as to how this attack the biggest in russia in over 20 years was able to happen why the kremlin, i'm putin himself publicly dismissed western intelligence that was warning of an impending attack. but of course we do see russian propaganda coming out and getting behind this hint from president putin that ukraine may have been behind in this and running with this, i think the effort is there to prevent this from becoming a political problem from, for putin to prevent the people from in any way of laying the blame on him for this terror attack him lights and claire, in the meantime, we're falling the international incident involving a russian missile. what more are we learning
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there? >> so we know that there was a barrage of missiles launched that ukraine overnight targeting kyiv in particular, but also the western city of lviv, which is very close to the polish border. and the punished i'm forces have come out and said that a micelle actually strayed into their airspace near a town on the polish side of the border. they said that happened for just a matter of seconds and 39 seconds. and it was picked up on military radar and both polish and allied aircraft were activated to secure the airspace. obviously, proton is an agent to country this is unnerving, it hints at the risks of this war potentially spreading, but there's muscle. it's not the first time this has happened that did not land on in polish territory, but certainly they are very closely monitoring this. and i will say this missile barrage overnight is something that we've seen as part of a pattern. russia stepping up these aerial attacks in lviv, in particular, this was now followed up we've learned from city officials this morning with another attack involving kinzhal
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missile striking the same, they say critical infrastructure facilities that were struck overnight. luckily, given the number of hours between those two attacks, they say that the firefighters working at the scene were able to get out in time, but the attacks are now fairly relentless. kim, clare sebastian in london. thanks so much well, it all went down to the wire, but the us has dodged a partial government shutdown after the senate passed and you spending bill in the wee hours >> saturday morning, frozen biden later signed the bill into law. kevin liptak looks at the law itself and another congressional battle looming washington >> president biden's signature on the government funding bill does take the threat of a government shutdown off the table until september. and it really does punctuate what was quite a tortured saga over the last several months to secure funding bill that would provide funding for the federal gun government for the fiscal year 2024. in a statement, president biden emphasizes that this keeps the government open. he
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says that invests in the american people and strengthens the economy and national security. but he also acknowledges this was a compromise not everyone got everything that they wanted. and you are seeing both sides emphasizing what they say. they're getting out of this bill for example, there 2000s new border patrol agents funded as part of this package, 8,000 more detention beds for migrants. and you hear republicans emphasizing how this they'll strengthen security on the southern border. what you hear democrats emphasizing is the billion dollars for federal childcare and education programs like head start. and the hundred and $20 million for cancer research also included new money for alzheimer's research. what this bill also does is cut funding to the un in agency that's responsible for getting aid to the palestinians. the biden administration has accused some members of that agency of aiding hamas. now, in
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that statement, president biden does point to the next big funding battle. on capitol hill, which is this fight over more aid to ukraine. and you'll remember president and biden has requested $60 billion in additional assistance for ukraine that has stalled on capitol capitol hill. as many republicans, particularly those closely aligned with the former president donald trump >> so if they say >> that they won't approve any more assistance to kyiv, a president biden has said that this is necess, necessary and you are hearing ever more urgent calls from the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, who has said that if american aid dries up, that ukraine could lose this war. now, the house has gone on break for easter for two weeks, so we won't see any movement on that ukraine aid in that span. what we do understand is that the house speaker mike johnson has tasked members of the house
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with coming up with some options for providing that ukraine aid. but it remains very unclear at this moment how that will move forward. in a statement, president biden says that it's time to get this done. kevin liptak cnn, washington >> clock is ticking on a huge deadline for donald trump, the former president, is now only one day away from having to post an early the half-billion-dollar bond in his new york civil fraud case. this week, trump claimed he has the cash to cover the sum. but as lawyer later clarified that saying he doesn't actually have that much cash on hand investors did approve a deal on friday that made his struggling social media platform truth social a public company which could make him billions but that is just the first of many steps for trump could actually get his hands on any cash from such a deal. meanwhile, new york's attorney general is now taking steps to possibly seize trump assets and properties if he can't pay up and turning to
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another of trump's legal cases, district attorney, fani willis is defending herself after she recently avoided being disqualified from prosecuting the former president's election subversion allegations here in georgia cnn's rafael romo has more fulton county district attorney, fani willis spent her saturday at an easter egg hunt at the event was put together by wave, an >> organization of law enforcement officers dedicated to helping children and the homeless throughout the year. >> willis was >> surprisingly candid regarding questions about last few months of her life, including for georgia election interference case against donald trump. and this candle brought about by her prior romantic relationship with special prosecutor. she appointed for the case after every i think that's happened, we wanted to know if she feels he needs to reclaim her reputation. and this was her reply >> i don't feel like my reputation leaves to be reclaimed. let's they for the record, i'm not embarrassed. mighty thing. i've done i guess my greatest crime is i
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had a relationship with a man, but that's not something that i on embarrassing in any way and i know that i have not done anything that's illegal >> the racketeering case was delayed by two months following the revelations about her personal life, her decision-making credibility was also damaged in the eyes of judge scott mcafee, but the embattled fulton county district attorney said the main case was not the laid because her team never stopped working on it? >> no, it seems to be continuing to work him and i think the media and especially organizations like your own been paying attention all why that was going on. we were right and responsive briefs. we were still doing the case and the way that it needed to be done i don't feel like we've been slowed down at all. i do think that there are efforts to slow down its train, but the train is coming >> cnn reported exclusively on thursday, willis plans to press ahead ahead with her goal of putting donald trump on trial before the november election according to three people familiar with her plans, she also intends to ask the judge presiding over the georgia
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criminal case to schedule a trial date as soon as this summer and finally, let's remember that willis is seeking to get reelected in november rafael ramos, cnn atlanta >> today marks the first day of holy week leading up to easter sunday for christians. and right now at the vatican, pope francis is presiding over palm sunday mass in st. peter's square cnn, vatican correspondent christopher lamb joins us now from london. so christopher the pope he has faced recent health concerns many relief to see him now. so take us through what we're seeing today in the pope's plans for the holy week. >> let's write kim, >> this is >> the start of holy week today, marking the beginning of the most sacred week of the churches calendar when christians across the globe prepare for the celebration of easter. at now, pope francis is presiding over palm sunday mass as you can see, but he has had
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some health challenges which has led him to cancel some appointments and to stop reading speeches. he had what he said was about a flu. >> but it >> seems though that he is determined to preside over all these liturgical celebrations in the vatican and in rome. he has arrived for the palm sunday services. you might see from the images this service begins with a procession of cardinals, bishops, and ordinary catholics carrying large palms. the palms are there to recall jesus's entry into jerusalem, which christians believe was marked by people laying palms onto the, onto the >> floor as, as jesus arrived. so this is a very sacred and important liturgical service, as i say, it begins the beginning of holy week. the pope didn't take part in the procession. he has had some mobility problems for some time. he's been using a
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wheelchair for almost two years now but he's not a pope who kind of tries to hide his physical vulnerabilities yesterday, he was with a group of journalists and he said that in the past, popes were carried around in a ceremonial chair. but he uses a wheelchair, which he says is very practical. tuchel. later in the week, he's going to be going to a female prison where he's going to take part in the foot washing ritual for holy thursday and then obviously on good friday, he'll be taking part and presiding over the services to mark the suffering and death of jesus christ on good friday. in some peter's basilica. and at the colosseum. and of course, on the evening of easter sunday, saturday evening, he will preside over the high point of the liturgical year of the church, the vigil celebration of easter, and on easter sunday
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deliver his message to the world he does each easter sunday a reflection of what's going on in the world and also a blessing to the city of rome and to the globe. >> kim right? thanks so much. christopher lamb in london still to come worldwide, support pours in for princess kate after a heartbreaking cancer diagnosis, we'll head to buckingham palace for live update. that's next state wit h >> keep living you keep preparing new dove bond strength with peptide complex helps reverse the signs of three years of damage
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statements of support from king charles, that third saying that he was extremely proud of his daughter-in-law and the courage that he actually had shown in sharing her diagnosis. we heard, of course, in the duke and duchess of sussex, harry and meghan, they issued a short statement saying we wish health and healing for kate and the family and hope so they're able to do so in privacy and in peace. because we also heard from cape middleton's brother, james middleton, saying that the family had many mountains together in the past, that they would climb this one together also. now of course, in that video message shared by the princess of wales, she expressed her thanks for the understanding people had shown towards for the concern and support that people had shown her. but also she expressed her willingness to a wish for privacy for our family during this difficult time, and that has been a very big focus as for the royal family in particular the prince and princess of wales during at this difficult time, there has been quite vision media frenzy around the whereabouts and condition of the prince's whales over the last few weeks, he last public appearance was
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at a church service on christmas day. and of course it was later confirmed in january that she had undergone what she is now described as major abdominal surgery. so she hasn't been taking part in public appearances or engagements at since then sparking concern, but also sparking many conspiracy theories i'm rumors around where the princess of wales might be. this has certainly at mandel pressure on the royal family. and in this video message with quite unprecedented for a senior member of the royal family to share such intimate and private details directly via a video message address to the nation. it was clear that the prince of wales i'd wished for further privacy during this difficult time, particularly, of course, because of her three young children and she mentioned as such in that video message, the timing of that video message, of course, important being released just as the children go on their easter holiday from school. so this is a time of course, when the family will be together. very much folks because on keeping us at the public high for the time being. but the princess of wales
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seemed upbeat and positive. she said she hopes that you'll make a full recovery and that she needed it's the time and privacy to focus on her healing at this stage. but again an outpouring of support from world leaders, including us president joe biden, as well as the british prime minister rishi sunak cannot only expressed support a for the princess of wales, but also a criticize the media for the frenzy it caused over the princess of wales is private and personal matters all, right thanks so much. nada bashir in london. appreciate that >> all right. we won't give you a live look at the concert hall outside moscow that was the site of a deadly terror attack, will have the latest just a head loss or closer look at the group claiming response its ability, and we're learning more about high-level talks to free hostages held by hamas what issues are still holding up the deal that's just too steep
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giving millions of fans, like my dad and me, new ways of catching up on their favorite sport. along. we are and we do >> welcome back to all your watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. i'm kimberly, who worked this is cnn newsroom. russia says the death toll will go higher from friday's terror attack at a concert hall outside moscow investigators say they've arrested the for gunman who opened fire inside the hall. isis has claimed responsibility for the attack. the us says it warn russia that it had information that isis k or isis-khorasan was planning an attack inside russia for more on the group i want to bring in colon p. clark, who joins us from pittsburgh, pennsylvania and he's the director of policy and research at the soufan group and the author of after the caliphate, the islamic state and the
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future of the terrorist diaspora. thanks so much for joining us here. so just to start off, how certain can we be that isis was in fact behind this? >> so we can be pretty certain. we have a number of pieces of evidence or data that lead us to that conclusion. one, we have the isis claim itself and this is a group that rarely issues false claims for attacks two and far more credible, we have the us intelligence warning just about a week ago that an attack like this was imminent and this is something that should come as no surprise to anybody that watches isis, particularly isis k, it's a group that's been threatening russia through the release of its propaganda for a long time, claiming that russia has muslim blood on its hands from wars in afghanistan, chechnya, and syria >> okay, so take us >> through that a bit more specifically. i mean, generally, we've been using using the term isis, nicest case of interchangeably as shorthand here. but tell us more specifically about this
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group that, that's behind it, isis k, i mean, who are they? are they linked to the broader isis group? and then build on what you were talking about, about why they would target russia specifically >> yeah. so isis at this moment is really a global network of affiliates or think about it as franchises these are groups that exists from the sahil and africa all the way to afghan and a standard south asia. i would say isis-khorasan, the south asian group probably the strongest right now out of all of the global network of affiliates, this is the same group. if you recall, in august 2021 when the us withdrew from afghanistan, that detonated at deadly suicide bombing at the abbey gate. so this is a group that's targeted iran turkey, the united states, russia it really kind of lumps all these groups together as what it sees as a paas states are infidels. >> all right, so what do you think the goals were here there? what kind of message were they trying to send? what
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this attack and the timing so soon after the russian election so i think in many ways it's revenge again. so you go back to the soviet of invasion of afghanistan 1970, to 1989. that seems like ancient history to some, it's very modern to jihadist groups. they're still talking about this again, the wars, the brutal wars that the russians fought attached in the '90s. and then the russian intervention in syria, where vladimir putin sent his air force to prop up bashar al-assad, the dictator of syria, who's got a lot of blood on his hands from the civil war in his country. so all that together, this is very much revenge is motivation. and i think you're right about the timing. there's a couple of interesting things here but let's also think about russia's involvement in ukraine. the bandwidth of the security services are stretched, making something like this on russian soil, more likely, i saw this as a vulnerability and it's a highly opportunistic group put together this plot and in this
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case it succeeded >> you mentioned ukraine, i mean, russia and vladimir putin clearly trying to link the attack to ukraine. given the history and patterns of isis, i mean, how likely or unlikely, more precisely is it that there would be any link they're not none necessarily with the ukrainian government, but for example, that isis could be operating out of ukraine it's extremely unlikely that that's the case. we think there could be some linkages to turkey now you have to think about the kind of central asian diaspora including a healthy tajik diaspora that the islamic state khorasan pulls its leadership from, pulls it's kind of mid-level, level commanders and foot soldiers from so i'd say very, very unlikely that ukraine had anything to do with this whatsoever. but that's not going to stop the russians in the kremlin from claiming that just to make the ukrainians look bad. and basically confuse everybody. that's trying to figure out what exactly happened.
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>> all right, here in the us according to the fbi, the threat of domestic terrorism from far-right groups, for example, has eclipsed the jihadist threat. but for some, this is a wake-up call. how worried should western countries, like the us be of a similar type of a tie? >> look, we always have to be on guard against these types of attacks. i think we can't let let our defenses down. i do think that assessment is right. there's a probably a greater likelihood of a domestic attack and something international for you. it's a little bit of a different story. >> isis-k has been knocking on the >> door there for several months a number of disrupted plots, including plots length of germany and sweden. so i'd be very concerned about that something to be aware of for sure. >> i believe that there really appreciate your analysis calling clock. thanks so much. >> thank you >> israeli defense minister yoav gallant, is heading to the us today for meetings with top officials, including national security adviser, jake
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sullivan, the white house says the two we'll discuss the humanitarian crisis and the efforts to free hostages in gaza. now comes as the cia director wraps up, hostage negotiations in doha between israel and hamas israel has reportedly agreed to a so-called bridging proposal from the us regarding the number of palestinian prisoners to be released for every hostage held by hamas. that's according to cnn analyst barak ravid. he says the delegations are now waiting for a response from hamas and joining us now is cnn's paula hang cox in doha. you've been tracking the latest on all of these attempts to make a deal here, what is the latest? >> okay. my diplomats briefed on these talks confirms that that information you gave was accurate britain also said that there are a couple of outstanding issues that need to be addressed at this point. most notably the agreement on the entry of human anti-terror
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in aid into gaza. and also of israeli military repositioning in gaza. now we've heard from hamas counterproposal just about ten days ago now that they wanted all israeli military out of gaza when there was a temporary ceasefire. this has been a long-standing demand of hamas and its in a longstanding refusal by israel saying that they would not adhere to that so there are still differences between the two sides. one source but telling us that the torques did make steady progress in their words but there were still at differences between the two. now what we heard from hamas ten days ago when it came to these palestinian prisoners, specifically, was that they were suggesting between 701,000 palestinian prisoners to be released is this part of this deal. and it was understood on the other side that there would be israeli and foreign hostages. there would be that the female hostages including idea get soldiers. also the
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elderly, the sick and the wounded that would be released as part of that deal somewhere in the range of 40 people. so at this point, we know that here in doha, the technical teams are still here. the intelligence chiefs of the us and israel have left they, have left their technical teams in place. and as we heard earlier, that report that now what they are waiting for is some kind of response from hamas all right. >> and paula is still so much concern over the situation at the al-shifa hospital and the growing death toll across gaza so kim, the idf has said that they will continue this operation in a side and an >> outside al-sheikh on hospital. they say until they have targeted all the terrorists. now they say that they have killed hundreds, that they have detained hundreds they say that they have located
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weapons and terrorist infrastructure within the building itself. hamas continues to deny that it uses it's hospitals as cover. but we do know that there are still hundreds of civilians inside al-shifa hospital that are trapped. there are patient so a medical staff, also civilians, many displaced people had considered a hospital to be a safer area than others. in order to be a people to shelter, which doesn't appear to have been the case. certainly an al shifa's case, and there will also we understand now two more hospitals. i'll i'll mow and nasser hospital in the southern part of gaza, which we have heard from the palestinian red crescent have now been surrounded by israeli military. the israeli military say that they are working in that area, but the red crescent saying quote, all or teams or an extreme danger at the moment, and are unable to move a tool. so we are seeing these, these
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military activities by the yet the idf continuing specifically around hospitals, skin, or i really appreciate the updates there. paula hancock is live in doha. thanks so much. >> well, there's no >> end in sight to the grueling crisis in haiti. sila had a story about a brutal gunfight between police and gangs first-hand account of the horrific humanitarian situation on the ground that's coming up, please do stay with us >> in check. >> we hear nothing. >> a space shuttle accidents, usually not one thing. it's a series of events is that part of the wing coming apart >> space shuttle columbia to find no flight from your sunday, april 7 at nine on cnn
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streets of the capital popeyes officials were later seen picking up those remains before they were buried in a mass grave at one of the city's cemeteries. it's not clear if the gang leader himself was laid to rest. their haiti has been rocked by a massive wave of gang violence amid a political crisis that's also well gripping the country. now, gangs still control an estimated 80% of haiti's capital. they've been terrorizing the city's population forcing hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes. many of them now live in displacement camps in their own city just like this one as the head of a local hospital explains, a look at the idb 1,500 displaced people here can be 525 population >> here they've >> even organize their own children's and are now joined
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by that official in that video, jom up good. mathias is the ceo of albert schweitzer hospital, one of the few hospitals still working in haiti. and he's in power plants thank you so much for being here with us so to start, no way in or out of the country for people or supplies generally is, as you describe it, it's a city under siege. what's the latest now in terms of what you're seeing in the streets of once unfortunately the situation is only getting worse. it's been almost three weeks now that the country, the city of port-au-prince and the country of haiti has been completely cut off from the rest of the world there's no passenger traffic in or out possible and there's no cargo coming in or out into the port, which means there's certainly no medical supplies, but no food at all coming into the country. >> yeah, it's hard to believe. i mean, most hospitals aren't
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working yours is in terms of the patients what do you seeing coming through your doors these days >> we're completely overwhelmed. >> we have a 200 bad hospital that is >> well flooded over capacity >> gunshot >> victims for the first time in our history it has surpassed any kind of traffic accidents are the normal trauma cases that we see >> it will >> completely overwhelmed i mean, how exactly are you able to work given the conditions >> wall about an hour and 45 minutes outside of port-au-prince and a region called the optical needs that is also been overrun by gangs our campus, however, we have our own solar power plant. we have our own oxygen it is in generating plant. we have our own water treatment plant and we have our own campus where over 540 of our haitian heroes
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are staffed is 100% haitian hundred percent haitian, and have been able to stay on their posts >> and we have >> pre-positioned a large amount of up supplies in anticipation. but that can't last forever. >> yeah. and the collapse of the health care system, i mean, it's just another crisis that people are going through obviously beyond the immediate threat of being, being killed are starving i mean, what effect does that having? >> fading and it has you said it, right? it's the complete collapse of the health care system >> know, the population does not >> have any kind of access to health care and now food there, now over 1.4 million haitians at risk of starvation, famine
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yeah it's? just incredible. i mean, i was in haiti in the aftermath of the earthquake and you, you saw people having to live in camps in, in their own city. it's incredible that people are having to do this now because of gang violence there are quite here on the ground. i was here as well on the ground as catastrophic as that was this is now superseding that because there is simply nothing no supplies, no food coming into this country. there are 12 million haitians living here. there's no food coming into the country. and if something doesn't change and that change yesterday, this is going to turn into a massive catastrophe. >> yeah >> you talked about change. i mean, there had been plans for an international peacekeeping force. there was a lot of negative reaction to that from some haitians as well. what do you think is needed right now
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in order to help restore order and allow those critical supplies for those who need it, most that has been a bit of the narrative. i do want to clarify a couple of things. there have been two public opinion polls one conducted by reuters and one conducted by the haiti health network, which represents 250 health care organizations that are operating right here on the ground in haiti large polls of 3% error rate, both of them have shown over 70% support from the people in haiti for the immediate deployment of a multinational security force. so that is a bit of a misconception at this point. there is no other option yeah it is frightening. you talked about the need for food and how people don't have food. i mean, you are trying to help feed people, take us through how you're doing that
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>> world central kitchen, which has been a long supporter and partner of our hospital, a leader in global relief efforts. in ukraine and gaza and elsewhere around the world is allowing us, we've set up 15 community health kitchens in the past few days the demand has been the whelming. we are now as of tomorrow going to be feeding 7,000 hot meals a day and it's a drop in the bucket lesson i. wanted to end with this. i mean, obviously your focus is very much on helping the millions and need their who live with less and who are facing that day-to-day threat of violence. but you're wife, your to children, they're there with you on a personal level, a can't be easy. how worried are you for their safety >> yeah it is a difficult situation for everybody here on the ground, like i can tell you
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that yeah >> i guess what we'll have to leave it there, but i certainly appreciate everything that you're doing there to help people there in haiti who need it. so desperately, john mock, do mathias, thank you so much for speaking with us. >> start your day with nature >> the number one pharmacist recommended >> vitamin supplement brand, sorry, body for knowing about actives. but giving 100% of them to my face the fear no more body get active serums with hyaluronic acid that quench vitamin c that brightened and pro sarah life ethan everywhere, new doves serum body washes get dove or get fomo. >> i have type two diabetes, but i'm managing its little
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loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to >> you 808 to 14000 creighton outlast, oregon in double over time and thriller to earn a >> spot in sweet 16 of march madness. andy scholes joins us now with warranty nothing more heartbreaking than to lose in double o t. but i guess nothing is as exciting as winning all right, yeah. >> yeah, you got that right. cameron? yeah. if you have creighton in your final four of your bracket, you're breathing a sigh of relief this morning because they just played an absolute thriller with oregon yesterday. and this one was just a tight game throughout the blue jays down to and they'll closing seconds. baylor sharman knocks down the jumper to tie with nine seconds to go. so we'd go to overtime and the extra period crate now up three with time winding down jermaine khuza'a, the clutch three to tie it with 18 seconds
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left. so we go to a second over time. that's when the blue jays would run away with it. creighton outscoring organ 15th two in that double ot, they would end up winning easily the 86 to 73 >> epic game >> not sure i've >> been one been part of one quite like it in 35 years. >> we're going to try to stay in the moment and just continue to love each other and continue to play at a level that we feel like we can play in an in from there we just kinda let the dominos fall where they do i didn't see stay in oakland also playing a thriller. jack gohlke falling up is ten three-point performance by making six more good. greg kampe is 14 seeded golden grizzly. they take the wolf pack to overtime, but that's when nc state they'd go in at 90 ron, they would win 79, 73, and the magical run in march for the wolf pack just continues. they want five games in five days to win the acc tournament and just make the
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tournament. now there onto the sweet 16 for the first time. since 2015 in zagat. meanwhile, just owns the first two rounds of the ncw a tournament. the bulldogs rolling, kansas at he nine is 68 to book their ticket to a nation leading night straight sweet 16 and mark view having some fund with his players with all water bottle, bath in the locker room the zags, they're going to play today's winter between perdue and utah state and that sweet 16, while view entered his locker room celebration, armed with just one water bottle, illinois codes grad under what will you came ready with a super soaker looks like lots of fund the fight and align. i beat duquesne in her into the sweet 16 for the first time since 2005 they'll play iowa state next >> i will all 41 seeds end up making that sweet 16. purdue, uconn, and houston, all inaction later today. and you can watch them across our sister networks, tnt, tbs, and
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true tv. all right. finally, caitlin clark's quest for her first national title off to a good start. clark and the hawkeyes it took a little while to get going, but clark would end up scoring 27 dished out ten assists, as well as iowa easily beat holy cross 91 to 65, nafta words clark was asked about being a little too hard on herself >> that's probably smile more, but >> i'm just like competitor. i love having fine. i love this game. i'm a perfectionist yeah i think he knows smile a little more obviously only got one more time to play in this building. and i love this place a lot. so i'm going to enjoy every single second on monday >> yeah. so clark gets one more home game in her career. she's going to face west virginia tomorrow night, kim, that one's id in an easier and i'm sure lots of people are going to be tuning into that one because i tell you what you can clark, she's old oh, he's putting on his show and lots of people into to see how far she's going to be able to go this time around. badness. >> that's it another day, another 20 point performance for her. i mean, are they unstoppable or i guess you
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know, south carolina might have something to say about that, right? >> well, yeah, we shall see know, that the women's certainly i always one of those ones seeds, but they we've got a date with a potential date with lsu in the elite a that'd be a rematch of last year's title game. i know we've got a little ways to go to get to that, but a lot of people looking forward to hoping we get a rematch natalie, dave. all right. we'll have to leave it there. thanks so much. i'm kimberly hoover for viewers in north america, cnn this morning is next for the rest the world, its spirit of seoul tonight. >> a wrongfully convicted man freed after more than a decade, i can't believe i'm seeing you face to face with jake epa reveals how the legal system failed and is very personal quest for justice. the whole story with anderson cooper tonight at eight on cnn >> i'm getting vaccinated by pneumococcal pneumonia vaccine hello mine because i'm at risk for pneumococcal pneumonia
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