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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  June 12, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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>> there's no one that goes the these ideas we are personal and what pro wrestling can be we wednesday night dynamite tonight at eight i tbs any minute now the fed will make a decision on interest rates. and this is an announcement coming on the heels of a promising new report on inflation. one, that house wall street buzzing ahead what this all means for your bottom line, plus echoes of the cold war, the kremlin sending no group of russian navy ships, including a nuclear-powered submarine, to cuba, that convoy now just 90 miles from us soil. >> so what message is vladimir putin trying to send with this visit and cnn getting rare and exclusive access to a site in syria that a us official, ones called a breeding ground for the next generation of isis will show you what we found there were following these
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major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central we begin with breaking news at any second now we're expecting the fed's latest decision on interest rates we're gonna go directly to our team at the moment that we have reporting from the federal reserve after a new report, that shows inflation cooling in may, expectations are high that we might get projections for a rate cut later this year. prices for everyday items flatline compared to a month earlier, marking the first time inflation has been zero in two years over the past year or so, consumer prices rose by 3.3% according to statistics from the labor department, let's start with cnn's matt egan. so matt, what is the decision? >> billboards briana, we just got this in no change in interest rates from the federal reserve. the fed is on hold for
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a seventh consecutive, meaning that means no relief from these high borrowing costs. rates are at 23 or highs, no relief yet in terms of mortgage rates, credit cards or car loans, the fed statement did make a significant change. the fifth get it. now says that there has been, quote modest further progress towards the committee's 2% inflation goal. that is an upgrade from the previous statement, which had said that there had been a lack of further progress. that is a nod to the report that we just got out today. >> now, looking ahead, the fed is still projected ding interest rate cuts this year, but it no longer is projecting three cuts. >> we knew it would come down. they fed is now projecting just one interest rate cut this year. now, remember there's only four meetings left this year after today. >> so that does raise some questions about whether there are not the fed is going to be able to start lowering interest rates before the election
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coming into this decision marcus, we're pricing in a little bit better than a 50, 50 chance of a rate cut in september. >> that's the final meeting before the election. be interested to see if that comes down. what's interesting is that fed officials, they've had weeks, if not months to debate this decision today. and it really may have all come down to just the last few hours. that's when the fed officials got the latest inflation reading and we learned that consumer prices, they didn't go up by as much as expected on a year-over-year basis. prices didn't budge on a month over month basis so that has kept alive the hope for rate cuts. but again, it's something that we're going to have to wait for that official projecting one cut before the end of the year matt egan. >> thank you so much for that update. let's bring in cnn's catherine ramp pell. she is a cnn economics and political commentator, also a columnist for the the washington post catherine seven straight meetings without cutting interest rates. not exactly. we're investors hope that we
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would be, but it's not really the bleak picture that some had been predicting. we'd see the economy in for years now oh, absolutely. if you had talked to wall street analysts a year-and-a-half ago. most of them or at least a healthy share of them, were expecting a recession and part of the reason why the fed has not cut rates despite expectations that they would their own forecasts that they would is that the economy has been so strong that we have dodged a recession that month after month after month the jobs numbers come in better than expected. inflation is the other side of this coin inflation earlier this year had been coming in a little bit hotter than expected. but as you and matt were just talking about the numbers that came out today earlier this morning, suggested that may be inflationary trends are disinflationary trends are back on track and once again, we're
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seeing the fed tried to respond to that and figure out where the economy is headed and how much stimulus or lack thereof it needs. >> catherine, what is it that causes these fluctuations and the consumer price index? it seems like some months expectations are in one place. it comes somewhere else. another month, expectations are in another place. it comes somewhere else. it's always dodging expectations. it seems like well, i look, it's forecasts are hard to make, especially about the future as the expression goes. so it's always hard to get it exactly right. i think what's interesting here is that most of the time for the past year or so when the numbers have come in, different les than economists have spec, had expected, they've come in a little bit hotter. they have shown the economy to be stronger and with the exception of today, they have generally shown inflation numbers to be a little bit higher than had been expected. and if you look at the fed's projections that came
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out today, not only for when they expect interest rate cuts to happen, but also for other metrics about the economy. they actually now show that they think inflation is going to be a little bit higher this year and a little bit higher next year than they had once thought. so this is all kind of pointing more or less in the same direction that the economy has been stronger, has been harb that comes with good things and bad things. the good things being but there are a lot of jobs being added. the bad things being that if there's a really strong consumer demand as there has been, then that can manifest in higher prices if supply canada adequately adjust yeah, the future obviously is tough to predict. i'm wondering what you think of this prognostication of one rate cut before the end of the year yeah, it's been very interesting, again to see the fed's own forecasts change. they keep on shrinking the number of interest rate cuts that they are expecting in the
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near future, or at least putting off when they would begin and so we saw today, of course, that they've now said, okay, maybe they'll only be one cut by the end of the year rather than two. if you had looked at their projections from a year ago, i think that they had anticipated more rate cuts than that. and every time that they push back those rate cuts or they say maybe will need fewer of them. maybe we'll need them later that's again a reflection of the economy doing relatively well. of course, if you are someone who is sensitive to interest rates, you're trying to buy a house, for example, you're trying to buy a car and you need to borrow, or you have your carrying a balance from month to month on your credit card statements. that's quite painful for you so you're being told the economy is great, doesn't need to see lower interest rates, but when it comes to your own pocket book, of course, that can be painful because you're hoping that the fed is going to cut rates and you can refinance or you can get a your mortgage for your first year new home that you're trying to buy at a lower rate
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and that hasn't been happening. so there are winners and losers when the economy is as strong as it has been catherine mann pill always appreciate the analysis. thanks for being with us thank you here in about two hours, the nation's top law enforcement official may be officially called out by congress for not following the rules for not fulfilling its subpoena request. the house is expected to vote on whether to hold attorney general merrick garland in contempt for not turning bring over audio of president biden's interview with special counsel robert hur republicans say they want the audio to confirm the transcript of the interview and make sure it is accurate. >> this is not just republicans who need these recordings for their oversight duties media outlets, including the ap cbs, cnn, nbc, and the washington post, among others, have filed suit to get the same audio recordings as well. because the media luck everyone else knows
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there's no substitute for recording of an interview but the white house and democrats stay the house gop wanted to quote distort for political purposes the only thing that is not been reduced is the recording itself. >> something that in the wrong hands can be easily manipulated that is not in idle concern deep fakes and misleadingly edited videos and recordings have proliferated in recent years last year, a witness testifying in a closed-door deposition told us that she was a victim of a manipulated video made by a third party, but shared widely by republicans on the judiciary committee joining me now is democratic congresswoman jasmine crockett of texas, who is on the oversight committee. congresswoman. thank you for taking time with us this afternoon in the rule vote to bring this contempt resolution up for a final vote. there were 16 members who didn't vote. that included ten republicans. do you think there's any chance that those republican begins could buck their party
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and actually tank final passage it's my hope that they find their courage and they do what's right because what we've seen this entire hundred and 18th congress is just a degradation of our institution from the inside. >> we are minimizing very serious things such as the idea of holding the attorney general in contempt considering the fact that he would technically be held and consent by people that still have subpoenas outstanding that are years old at this point, and they could care less about honoring those subpoenas to show up and testify in front of the january 6 committee we talking about an attorney general that it turned over tons of information and honestly, this is nothing more than a continuation of them trying to save face because they failed to impeach the president of the united states after the party of fiscal responsibility has spent over 20 million and reviewed over three 3.8 million pages of
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documents and done over 100 hours of testimony from witnesses. it is time for them to get down to business because the american people are honestly sick and tired of being sick and sorry. and when they lose their majority, it is going to be because they continue to not take our jobs seriously here on the hill i mean, congresswoman, we should note cnn is among those who have sued for access to these recordings the transcript of course, is public. >> the audio is not. why shouldn't the audio be really? >> i think that has been made clear. >> we know that there is a real concern as it relates to alterations and thanks, especially coming from this side, we just heard from donald trump how he basically wanted to signal to russia and he said, hey, if you're live this name, russia, right? >> so we know that there's a big concern about disinformation and misinformation. and we know that they continually perpetuated. and so the only thing that they would want to do with this it's audio is two basically misconstrue and
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pretend as if what people are reading is actually not what happens. and that is a real concern if we had a party that lived up to being the ethical people that we were elected to be. then i don't think that there would be a big concern, but we know that they cannot be trusted with anything that can be manipulated. >> so if former president trump had sat for a recorded interview with robert molar or if he is reelected and sits for a recorded interview in the future. that is not something that you would want released i'm not saying that i can't tell you what's going to happen in the future. what i can tell you is that we're talking about an administration that has been completely transparent. i doubt that trump would ever sit for anything voluntarily. you know what that's what this it's president did though. he voluntarily did this. this may actually end up producing a chill on people participating in a very voluntary way because you may end up in a situation since such as this. so i think
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you would have to look at the totality of the circumstances to determine whether or not this is something that we would need in addition to the fact we know the robert hur is not some democratic stooge. we know that this is one of their guys. we know that he did everything that he could to go outside of his way to go ahead and make the case for i don't have enough to bring a case against the president of the united states. but let me go ahead and throw what i would consider to be shade on the president of the united states as much as i can and that did its own set of harm. people walked away from reading that report and felt as if the president has some sort of diminished its capacity of some sort. but you know what, for anybody that is concerned, that that may be a real thing, they will have an opportunity to see the president performed in not one, but two debates against the former president. and we can see how people fill it out, whether or not his capacity is all the way there. >> i do want to ask you quickly about hunter biden's. can
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addiction on felony gun charges. the president said last week he will not pardon his son, the white house today though, would not rule out a commutation saying he hadn't been sentenced yet should president biden rule out a commutation? >> i don't think anything should be off the table. i think that his same should do any evaluation. and while i absolutely honor the verdict that was rendered because i didn't sit there. i can i need i need to follow up with you on that. when biden said he would respect the ruling did it not seem reasonable to infer infer from that that he would respect the sentence that part i can't really tell you what the president was thinking at that time. i'm only speaking from trying to bounce and for it if you're a criminal you were criminal defense attorney. let's talk about and you're also a politician. so when you listen to a president say that they will respect the rule of law they will respect the ruling, isn't it reasonable to
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infer that they would also respect the sentence not necessarily not on the federal level. >> here's the deal and i don't think that it necessarily would be, quote, unquote disrespect because in the federal system is going to be the judge that is going to hand down the sentence. it's not going going to be the jury, the jury, listen to the evidence. the jury decided guilt versus innocence. but as it relates to sentencing, that is not going to be up to the jury this judge will hand down this sentence. i don't know if this prosecutor is going to move for what we would call an upward departure, there's a lot of things that we don't know when you're looking at an upward parts from a sentence, usually it's because somebody has a history or whatever, but we also know that this is yet another trump appointed prosecutor. so no, i don't think that it makes sense for him to the president. point blank. >> i'm sorry kept on by the president correct? >> correct. but it was still a trump appointee and i would say that he was kept on by the
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administration, not necessarily the president himself, but in addition, so all of this because we don't know the sentence, if they say gave him 100 years and that is an upward departure from what would be normal for anybody else. and it doesn't can definitely can see that the limit would know, but i'm trying and we know that none to know. >> but an upward departure means that you actually go outside of the limits what happens is what a us attorney does is they write a report so we can argue for a downward departure where someone would actually get less than what is provided by law under certain circumstances. and then the prosecution can always write to actually get more so i can't say what will happen and ultimately, the judge looks at the memos that are prepared and decides whether or not he's going to stay within the limits or fees going to go downward, or if he's going go upward on those limits? so i absolutely think that this should still be something that's on the table depending on what happens. >> yeah. no reason to expect
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that to happen. again, this is a prosecutor kept on by president biden clearly with his desire to do that, congresswoman jasmine crockett, we we appreciate you being with us. thank you so much absolutely still ahead. russian warships sailing less than 100 miles away from us soil, why they're in the area, and how the us military is responding. plus 84 nationals the suspected ties to isis or arrested in three major us cities. what investigators are saying about red flags that could have been missed here. and one of the world's best best-known banana companies ordered to pay me millions after being found liable for financing terrorism while i voted buttons betting my remote kid it's like your generation has evolved past traditional political symbols. >> and there's room for everyone yeah puke rainbows
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captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial ma victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money. all when 8085920400. that's when 8085920400 today, shades of the cold war in havana harbor. >> the biden administration is closely tracking the arrival of russian warships in cuba. >> and here you can see one of the russian navy's most modern ships, the admiral gorshkov arriving in havana this morning it was accompanied by a nuclear-powered submarine. the ships are expected to stay in cuba for about five days, marking the largest russian show of force with our longstanding ally in many years sentence, patrick oppmann joined us now, live from havana. >> patrick, the us is downplaying the site of russian warships. some 90 he miles from american shores. they call it routine. how is this routine
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it's not because i've lived in cuba now for a long time and yes, you have supply ships? >> yes. you have other navy ships that have come over the years. i've never seen anything like this site here behind me, 90 miles from the us and a couple hundred yards for me, you have a russian nuclear powered submarine. you have another ship which you mentioned, the admiral gorshkov just on the other side of the pier, which is capable of firing hypersonic missiles. one of the most cutting-edge ships that vladimir putin has in his arsenal. you have four russian navy ships. now in the port of havana. that's the largest convoy of ships we've seen here. and many, many years. and really no one remembers and i've talked to you a submarine coming in as this one or has the cousin there as it did this morning, it could not be more profile visit, it cannot be more symbolic message of vladimir putin is sending to
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washington, even if, as the cuban defense ministry claims that the nuclear weapons were left behind in russia. this is certainly raising the stakes the us military shadowed with planes in their own ships these russian navy vessels, as he came into the port of event of there'll be here for about five days and there'll be letting cubans tours some of these ships clearly trying to signal to havana and the rest of the world that they are moving closer with their old coat war, old cold war era ally. of course, the aid that the soviet union sent to cuba over the years is simply will not be coming. but there has been an increased amount of aid as russia moves closer again with to cuba patrick oppmann, live from havana. >> thank you so much, patrick. >> let's discuss more with cnn global affairs analyst kimberly
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dozer. >> kim, obviously, the timing of this is notable because it comes as vladimir putin is responding to president biden endorsing ukrainian attacks inside russia. so what message should the white house take from this well, putin had said that russia would respond with asymmetric actions is symmetric, meaning not a direct military attack of any sort, but just military operations and activities 32 undermine us influence. and so by sending these ships, which it's something russia has done since 2008, occasionally to the cuban ports. and also signaling that it's going to practice with local military. >> it's saying that there are consequences for supporting ukraine's against the russian invasion what a sight. >> these pictures that we're getting there from earlier today in havana, i wonder, is
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there any sort of idea of what cuba's thinking here? kim, what do they get out of increased military cooperation with russia? >> well in the rest of the world beyond the western nations that are supporting the sanctions against ukraine. >> russia is often seen as the underdog in this fight that quote, unquote, had to respond to nato expansion. >> so as much as this is a message to washington, this is a message to all of those countries that backed russia or are sympathetic to the russian point of view saying that you've seen the us meddling in our backyard now, we're meddling in. there's the fact that matter is just a couple of weeks ago, i was in estonia watching nato exercises of estonian and british and other forces practicing how to repel a possible russian attack and
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estonia is right there on russia's border. so this is a little bit of a for tat a notably can. this also comes as the biden administration has taken steps to relax sanctions on cuba to also to remove cuba from a list of countries that don't fully cooperate with the united states on counterterrorism efforts. what do you think the biden administration gained from those moves the biden administration is obviously trying to undermine russian influence and russian market control of cuba by loosening those sanctions and signaling that cuba could have warmer relationship with washington if it wanted. so you could also see this as moscow signaling to its cuban allies, don't you even think about it? >> remember, you're on our side and it's our military and our dollars that have been well rubles that have been holding you up for so many decades yeah, very interesting time.
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and pictures that we're seeing here. kim dozer. thank you. as always, we appreciate it thanks still ahead. new details about the operation to detain eight men living in the us with suspected ties to isis how investigators tracked them down after they had already made it across the border next wednesday cnn celebrates june it's special performances by john legend, patty lewbel, smokey robinson. we still have a lot of work to do. >> juneteenth, celebrating freedom and legacy. next wednesday oh, and cnn shallow cancer is it's a long road. >> it's hard. but st. joe does gotten us through it st,. jude. is hope that you have a chance at life and it goes such a long way. but every child diagnosed with cancer, because the research is being shared all
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healthier. with the aura ring the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn't be higher. >> the president and the former president's one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on max, federal agents have arrested eight people from tajikistan after investigators discovered possible links to
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isis sources telling cnn immigration officials made the arrests in los angeles, new york, and and philadelphia. cnn security correspondent josh campbell joins us now with the details. josh, what are your sources saying about how these men were identified this is interesting. >> i'm told that this was the us government targeting isis actors abroad, essentially surveilling them that allowed them to identify these members that were here inside the us that had these potential ties to isis. the particularly interesting in light of the recent debates we've heard over the us intelligence community surveillance authorities. we know, for example, earlier this year in congress, particularly conservatives were quite, quite critical of the us intelligence community's ability to actually do these foreign surveillance operations. but we saw in this case that that allowed them to actually identify potential threats here at home. here's what we know about those group members and what actually went down. i'm told from law enforcement sources that these eight
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individuals had entered the us via the us southern border at that time, they were vetted. but there were no red flags that were raised at the time it was later that the investigation determined that no, they actually had these potential ties to isis, which of course causes the federal for law enforcement agencies to then jump into action. there was this question about whether the agency should surveil them or take them into custody, you know, when i was working counterterrorism cases, that was always a big question. do you do what's called illuminating the network that is investigating, trying to determine who is who, what are they trying to do? is there a potential plot here? this instance, guys, i'm told that the decision was made by senior us officials that they were going to roll the group up and kick them out, talk to us, josh, about this moment that we're in because senior fbi and dhs leaders have also raised concerns about an elevated threat environment that's right. >> fbi director chris re has said that he i can't remember a time when all these different
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types of threats were actually elevated at the same time. and of course, the department of homeland security recently issued assessment of its own. i'll read you part of that. they say that while sustained counterterrorism pressure a significantly degraded the ability of foreign terrorist organizations to target us interests, foreign terror groups like al-qaeda, and isis are seeking to rebuild overseas and they maintain worldwide networks of supporters that could seek to target the homeland. and of course, these assessments aren't academic. we see that the threat from isis remains. you look just three months ago in moscow so we're 139 people were killed at a concert venue when four nationals from tajikistan allegedly conducted this terrorist attack. and as part of that attack, we saw that they set fire to this facility. multiple people were inside and died. and as that was still going on, the fire isis then claim responsibility releasing videos of these actors. so certainly the threat of myosis remains the big concern for us law enforcement is trying trying to stop interdict any
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potential threats here at home. >> even all these years later, still a threat, not just in the united states, but as you pointed out, josh around the world, josh campbell. thank you so much. still ahead. cnn is getting rare access inside a prison for suspected isis fighters, as well as a detention camp housing families why a us official called one of these sites a breeding ground for the next generation of isis devastating and sudden our of tsunamis. it happened in far away lands and it's easy to think it can't happen here if one hits home we'd be ready. silent birth with liam schreiber, sunday at night on cnn. >> can the riva support your brain health married janet. >> hey eddie know appraiser, franck. franck, bread. how are you? >> fred fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory, joined the neretva brain health challenge in two seconds, eric will read elias
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book.com if you or a 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 cnn has gained extraordinary access to facilities described as training grounds for the next generation of isis. >> five years since the fall of the terror group's so-called caliphate, more than 50,000 iso suspects and their families are being held in some 27 prisons and detention camps across syria officials warn the prisons and camps present a major security threat that needs to be dealt with. but human rights groups describe them as legal black holes. cnn's clarissa ward went to these detention centers. and here's some of what she saw cell phone videos of isis is brutal justice that the world hoped it would never see again she might, mama amash shared for the first time with cnn. these images were captured in
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rocco or mosley in 2016 they were taken in 2022 in the al-hol camp in northern syria the sprawling dumping ground for the women and children captured after isis was defeated five years after the fall of the caliphate, isis is ideology lives on here security officials warn it is a ticking time bomb ungovernable and hostile to the outside world. >> you can see just how fast this places more than 40,000 people are living here. and the most dangerous part in the camp is called the annex. that's where some 6,000 foreign nationals are currently within we were granted exceptionally rare access to the annex by the
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us back syrian democratic forces, or sdf, who control well, the camp the women here hail from more than 60 different countries several raise their right index fingers for the cameras, sign of solidarity with the islamic state do you regret your decision to join isis or wash she complains that the conditions in the camp are awful there are people in the world who will say, you went to join isis. you deserve it you deserve it. what do you say to that normally if enemy yeah. >> women need the majority of alcohols residents, our kids who have ended up here through no fault of their own un has called it a blight on the conscience of humanity it is effectively a prison camp. are women and children are
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arbitrarily and indefinitely detained a group stops us with a frantic plea. one of their sons has been arrested trying to escape the camp. >> she's asking if she can get her son back, who's in a prison? he's got me for monday need that youth much. >> we want to just send them out so the sdf wouldn't take him. she tells us once boys turn 12 here, they take them it is a troubling story. we hear over and over again the sdf says, it is their policy to separate adolescent boys because they are being radicalized by their mothers and sdf raid earlier this year netted this video of a training session for children inside the camp. the sdf claims young teenage boys are married off to repopulate the next generation of isis fighters they say may
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explain the roughly 60 births recorded here. every mother this is where some of those boys end up after they are taken the orkesh rehabilitation center conditions here are much better than the camps, but there are only 150 beds and they are all full shamil chakar grew up in cologne, germany until his parents took the family to the isis capital rocha. a shrapnel injury to his head has left shamil confused how old are you? chem omega not without if you don't know shamil was living in our whole camp with his mother and siblings until a few years ago when security forces came into their tent in the middle of the night in colombia enough for a man came and pulled me up and tied my hand behind my back. my mom was screaming. she said
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leave him alone. he tells us i didn't want to go with them. he pushed me saying put on your shoes, but i didn't hit me islam is from dagestan on russia and is one of the youngest boys here it's via mama hey you so he's saying that he is just 12-years-old. he has been here about three or four months. he was taken from his mother he doesn't even know what his last name is human rights organizations have said the separations are on a pauling violation of international law but the sdf, top general mazloum abdi defends the policy. >> no docket instead of these organizations condemning what we are doing and calling it a human rights violation, these organizations should give us help when it comes to our program that we have in place
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for years now to rehabilitate these children. but part of the problem seem it's to be that once these young boys turn 18, there's not anywhere for them to go, particularly if they can't return to their home countries and so some of them, i believe are ending up in prison taken when he said stick moves, this is not a policy that we are following to put them in prison at 18 the reality is the goal is to reintegrate them with society are thanks to clarissa ward for that very important report in to see her entire report had to cnn.com. >> we'll be right back. >> the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn't be higher. the president and the former president, one stage two very different visions for america's future that cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine life, on cnn and streaming un-backed, custom-made capsules motivate our students customer here, we love how customer it takes care
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again, that's 1871230800 the greatest general in history his body and his tomb are missing expertise. you know? begins with the hunt for alexander the great's tomb next wednesday, if not discovering and stream on max, not a landmark ruling holding the banana giant chiquita brands liable for funding of violent colombian paramilitary group linked to murders in that country. yeah, a florida jury ordered chiquita to pay 38 million to the families of eight victims killed by this violent paramilitary group, the united self-defense forces of columbia. >> chiquita, recorded those payments as security services cnn stefano pozzebon is in colombia's capital of bogota with more the ruling in florida federal courts on monday found
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banana company chiquita brands international, liable for financing. it. columbia right-wing paramilitary group that committed staying human rights violations over 20 years ago is a groundbreaking case of international litigation according to the team of attorneys that one, the arm recommend in west palm beach, chiquita was ordered to pay the relatives of victims of the outer defenses we need as they columbia or auc a criminal group connected to landowners and corporate interests in northern columbia that the united states declared a foreign terrorist organization in 2001. some details of the cases that we're read in court where brutal talk her of extra judicial executions forced displacements, and gratuitous displays of violence but the ruling on monday was celebrated as a victory for justice this money is not going to replace what's been lost.
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>> we're still talking about horrific abuses that these families have suffered but the money is important because unfortunately the language that corporations understand the best is money and so sometimes it takes a significant monetary penalty to change corporate behavior, the colombian president gustavo petro celebrated the ruling on his social media channels. chiquita is also facing league today, shown in colombia according to local media, in a statement to cnn, chiquita confirmed its intention to appeal. >> and froude the last 20 years, the company maintained that he had been a victim of extortion by the auc, but a us justice previously found that chiquita paid the auc over 100 times between 1997 and 2004 for
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$1.7 million in total. >> monday is verdicts ruled that the money was instrumental in propping up the auc and that chiquita was liable for the human rights abuse committed by the group. the cases heard in florida are only a small portion of the total number of plaintiffs against the company and a team of attorneys that brought successfully for these cases, intend to follow with further and further sooth against chiquita for cnn. this is different all possible on bogota all right, stefano. >> thank you for that report. and in the next hour or contempt of congress vote against attorney general merrick garland for defying house public ins. but do they have the numbers they need? we're going to follow the latest on that here on cnn news central for over. 25 years. >> loved sack has been rewriting the rules of comfort it's okay to change your style
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