tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN June 13, 2013 4:00pm-5:01pm PDT
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"out front" starts right now. i'm erin burnett live from tehran tonight. the presidential election we're in the final countdown. plus a mistiery ayatollah how maini. he's the supreme leader, saying this election is crucial to, quote, dash the enemies' hopes. plus breaking news on syria from the white house. a significant development tonight. from where i'm standing right now, obviously this is a front and center story. a whole new view on syria from here in iran. let's go "out front." i'm standing live in the center of tehran, of course, the capital of this country which is in the midst of election heat.
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people will be heading to the polls for just a few hours. it's been amazing. i have seen more flyers here on the ground and people eager to go in front of the camera and put a picture of their kaercht up. that's pretty fascinating. as you see in our special report, the united states, nuclear program are front and center for this election. let me show you the front of the "tehran times." the enemy, of course, is the united states and the west, as defined by the elite supreme leader of this country. there are people, though, very passionate, but also i want to emphasize there are people disillusioned and feel the election is -- we've had rare access and we want to bring you the special report. this is a 50,000 real note.
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it's a big part of our story. one, this isn't worth much more than a dollar, maybe about 1.30 off the top of my head. it has dramatically changed in value over the past few years despite recently stabilizing. the reason for that is sanctions. we have a special report on that. something you can't see, faded in the background is the nuclear symbol. the nuclear programs here in this country is front and center. barack obama has said, the without has said this sanctions program is the toughest and bold it's in history. they've been putting sanctions against the iranian economy to try to get the iranian people to force their leaders to shut down the nuclear program. here, they believe that nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. the west of course alleges it is for building a nuclear weapon. but the nuclear symbol on one of the most common bills, it is part of the psyche here that people believe in that nuclear program. we wanted to see if the sanctions have any hope of working the we went out on the
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streets, we talked to people. we saw invite fanciest cars you could possibly see. where there's a sanction, it seems there's a way around it. we have a special report that we believe will be available for all policy makers in the united states to see tonight. first, what about this election? a lot of people have said the policy won't change, about you how passionate are people and what does it mean for the united states? we spent time going to rallies, talking to people, and here's what we saw. a hot summer day in tehran, thousands go to a rally no sigh yield jalili. the of courser wet met are passionate about the man they're chanting "death to usa" debt to israel, but their views were not that clear-cut. in the section designated for women voters, i met a doctor. >> translator: we have no problems with the american people, but resist the trampling
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on the absolute rights of iran and its people. having our rights ignored by the american government representatives force us into this resistance. >> reporter: everyone we spoke with agreed that iran wants to be respected. while all the final candidates were approved by iran's supreme leader, not all are hard-liners. the candidate is hussein rabani. he was originally a fundamentalist, but he's not actually campaigning as a reformer. the cleric has gotten some key endorsement. he's talked about being more open. i asked his campaign manager what exactly that means. would he negotiate with the united states? >> if the united states really showed interest, and being reliability actually in negotiation, i think he would do it, but it doesn't mean the first -- >> reporter: we also saw plenty of supporters from the current
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mayor in tehran. campaign posters for the popular mayor feature him side by side with the ayatollah. some young men swarmed us to speak their mind. for supporters, hope rules the day. >> translator: the biggest thing has been the sanctions imposed on our country. they have closed our country and mismanagement has been a big challenge for this government. in my opinion, with galibah all these problems would be resolved. >> joining mess is rick stengel, also here in tehran covering the elections. you know, rick, i know you were at the rally for jalali as well, when the parents of a murdered nuclear scientist were speaking, the audience erupt indeed "dret to america, death to israel." but immediately afterwards they're happy to talk to us. it seems it was more a rallying call rather than a reflection of how they felt --
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>> it's a ritual that they don't necessarily have in their hearts. they have this hospitality for foreigners like us, people go out of their way to be hospitable, to be friendly, to find out what ear interested in. iran is kind of a skids phrenic society, people have said. both those qualities exist simultaneously. >> so many people talked about how much passion exists. there was a lot of passion for the mayor, and reformist camp. everywhere you saw pockets of people who felt it. did you also feel that way? >> you know, i've surprised by how much street action you do see, and that people are following the campaign. there are some people who are disenchanted and disillusioned. some voters is file like there's no candidates for them. they're not even reformers in name. the one reformer stayed in the center. >> fair point.
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>> so there's no one to inspire that point anymore. >> >> reporter: and some of the younger people didn't want to go on camera, saying we're not going to vote, we don't believe in this process. so you can't feel a lot of people wouldn't be joining the voting. but you also had the chance to talk to essentially the religious capital of the country. what did you see there? >> we went to comb, and people talk about the revolution constantly, one of the most religious-centered places in the whole country. we spent time talking to people there. as you might imagine, support for jalali was overwhelming there. we didn't have anybody really interested in the reformist candidates. jalali, who has the no surrender, never give in, never compromise, that does appeal to a lot of people. it appeals to people who are particularly religious, appeals to men, i think. and i think he will do pretty
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well. >> i have to say, appealed to a lot of women we saw at that rally, also people, when we were talking about the sanctions today, i was amazed how many people said, yes, they're tough, but no, we are resolved. >> you know, it's funny, it sometimes seem if you compare it to american politics, sometimes just domestic issues are what concern people. in a way that's what you have here. the reason they're not talking about the most important issue, which is the nuclear negotiations, is they all agree about that. >> reporter: well said. >> they're all like no surren r surrender, no compromise. but they are -- i think voters will vote not on that, but who they think can manage the government. >> rick stengel, thank you very much. to rick's point, the 50,000 real note, on the back of it is the nuclear symbol. that gives a real sense of how pervasive that feeling in support of the nuclear program is in this country.
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what about the supreme leader? . i ayatollah seems to control everybody. plus christian amanpour will talk about the revolutionary guard, the powerful military group that controls more and more of iran. plus this -- apple is by far the most popular american brand here when it comes to electronics. just a couple weeks ago, the u.s. actually lifted sanctions when it comes to selling things like mobile phones and computers. at this apple story, that hasn't affected prices at all, so they're getting their apple products, you guessed it, from dubai. a 16 gigabyte iphone 5 unlocked costs about $ 850, 30% more than the united states action and too expensive for a lot of people here. our special report on sanctions, and whether they're actually changing what iranians think about the nuclear program, is coming up. i'm the next american success story. working for a company
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i'm live in tehran tonight. today the country is going to be holding its presidential election. but this is one of the few countries where the central candidate, the central person, the central character, the most important character is not actually running for office. that is the country's supreme leader ayatollah how maini. he has more sway in this country than any of the nominees. redsa, the ayatollah, i saw one woman who had basically a necklace around her neck with
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the two supreme leaders since the revolution saying vote for them. the supreme leader is so central to this election. how much sway does he have over it? >> he's got a lot of sway. iranians are going to be voting for a president tomorrow, but looming very large over this entire process is the supreme leader ayatollah how maini. very few things gets done without his approval. in the race for iran's presidency, the one vote that matters more than any other, analysts say, is this man's iran's supreme lead e. ayatollah ali humani. it's the highest political and overseeing judiciary and foreign policy.
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he also has final say on u.s. relations in iran's controversial nuclear program. in television debates, candidates seem to refer to the leader just as often as they refer to the iranian people. essentially they're not running for the job. they're almost auditioning for the supreme leader. >> long before he began he 20-year role, he was a fee figure in the islamic revolution that toppled the u.s.-backed shaw of iran. an assassination attempt maimed his right hand. late near t. analysts say he's stayed true to regime policy, holding a tight grip on power, keeping enemies at bay, at home and abroad. during his reign, he has defied washington and the west demand for iran to stop its controversial nuclear program.
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at home, rights groups say his regime has jailed thousands of dissidents, journalists and activis activists, many during the 2009 opposition uprising, sparked by two reformist candidates, who are now under house arrest. it's no wonder, analysts say, this time around, not a single bona fide reformist was allowed to run for the presidency. >> above all, he wants someone subservient to him. >> reporter: if history is any indication action what the supreme leader wants, he usually gets. and redsa, you know, it's amazing, just the focus on i'm going to do what the supreme leader wants, to some of the people on the street, and they talk about this election, but obviously he's getting older, only the second supreme leader since the revolution. how is his health? >> reporter: there's been all sorts of rumors throughout the
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years, erin, about his health, that he's sick, that he has cancer, but he's been motoring along and he appears healthy when he makes public appearances. he looks healthy, energetic. his aides says he exercises, hikes often, but he is getting up in age. he is 73 years old. it's possible the next president who is elected, especially if he serves eight years, could be in power when the supreme leader passes. many say that's going to be a critical transition, maybe the most critical in the history of the islamic republic, erin? >> certainly seems like that will be the most important one. as reza says, the people running for president right now won't be able to change the nuclear program, but if they're in power when the ayatollah changes, that could be the most important thing that has happened here. thanks veld to reza sighia.
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christiane amanpour joins me by now, iranian by birth. christiane, when you look at the elections that you've covered, what makes this one different for you? >> the two that stick out in my mind, 1997, is when muhammad mahatma was elected. it was a reform candidate who won. and for eight years of his presidency, there was a real change in iran and with iran's relations with the rest of the world. then i covered the 2009 election, which was when ahmadinejad was going for reelection. that, as we all know, resulted in the green movement, resulted in people saying that the results were flawed. it was a huge movement brutally repressed. now what we're seeing is an attempt by the iranian authorities to make sure that nothing like either one of those happens again. they don't want a reform candidate to n, and they certainly do not want to see the
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kind of mess that happened after the last election, which was broadcast around the world when people were, as i say, brutally rerepressed, people were killed, people were imprisoned, indeed many bloggers and journalists are in prison right now ahead of the elections, so there isn't the same kind of expression as there was last time. >> and of course, the man ultimately in charge of that the ayatollah. there's only been two supreme leaders since the revolution. obviously he's older. what would happen if there were a transition? >> well, look, he is in power until he dies. that is the way of the constitution and of the religious theocracy there. so eye toldo hole me-- ayatolla homeini remains there.
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the economy, politics, consult terr, media, everywhere. the revolutionary guard want to make sure they have their kind of candidate there and want their kind of candidate to win. analysts say their number one choice would be the mayor of tehran, and then sayed jalili, and then the aide to the supreme leader, and who is somebody who is conservative, but also has dealt with the west in the past. the only surprise might be if, as some analysts tell me, there is a last-minute surge toward mr. rowhani, who now has the reform movement behind him. unlikely, but that is the only surprise that could happen, erin. >> certainly that would be incredible if that happens. thanks so much to christiane. we are just hours away from the first elections in this country since 2009. 2009, the election, one probably
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seared in your memory, with some of the horrible images of what happened to protesters. why is it so different now and crucial for the united states? and then a bakery, sort of a upper middle-class neighborhood. we had a little hunger today, and we went in, and look at this, angry birds and beyond. one of the nicest bakeries i have seen. even though it took a wad of notes to pay for things. are sanctions working? our special investigation is coming up. ♪
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i'm erin burnett, live in tehran tonight, where voters in iran will be going to the polls in just a few hours the it's a very different seen. many feel disillusioned. around the world there is one image that may be burned. there were protester brutally cracked down. this time, though, it's very different on the streets. the big question is, what's changed? instantly a symbol of mass protests. the 26-year-old aspiring tour guide, who wanted to watch the protests, was cause up in the chaos.
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just days after a landslide victory. >> this demonstration is illegal. the government denied them permission to come here today. the people defied that decision. lots of marches, people shouting "down with dictator ship." get our. >> muse have i was known as a reformer. many individual he would change iran for the better, moving away from the hard-line policies. >> i would like to have a lot more respect from other countries towards my country. i want i am not satisfied with the situation we are having here. >> we hope that this time real reform will happen from within. >> reporter: this time around it's a lot different. the hero of the green movement
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is under house arrest. even the universities having closed. tehran university is right behind me, one of the biggest in the country. the students were told by the government to, well, end the school year early, take an early holiday. everyone here says that's because they don't want the students involved in protests like in 2009. back then a lot of students were involved, some of them were jailed or even expelled. >> as a matter of fact there is nothing changed, because there is no democracy. >> reporter: the candidate rallies look very different from to 2009, and locals say they see a complete communication crackdown. many internet cafes are closed. many here social media is being closely watched. an amazing thing to see how different things are. you know, they don't really want to come on camera and talk about
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it, but they don't feel their vote matters. their way of voting and protesting is to not vote at all. it will be a fascinating next 24 hours as the first round of the election happening. we have more live coverage in a couple moments when we come back, we have seen not just american products easily available, but products of america's allies. i want to mention that it's america and its allies that currently together are imposing what the white house says is the toughers and -- are these sanctions an exercise side in futility or not? the report is next. all business purchases. so you can capture your receipts,
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i want to begin the second half of our program with breaking news. i'm live in tehran, iran, and we have breaking news from the white house, which has said syria has crossed the united states' red line when it comes to chemical weapons. according to intelligence officials, this is a u.s. intelligence community report, the assad regime has used the nerve agent sarin gas multiple times, according to the intelligence community. about 150 people have been killed because of those chemical weapons.
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obviously that conflict is one that's watched incredibly closely here in iran. in a sense it's been characterized as a proxy war between iran and the west in syria. "out front" correspondent chris lawrence is here with us. the use of chemical weapons, when it comes to what the united states might do in syria. i know about two thirds of the american public say in that's a red line, if crossed, they would support military action. now that it's happened, what will the united states do? >> that's the big question, the white house officials today were signaling that they could provide some military support, about you we're not specifying exactly what form that support could take, but let's look at what the rebels have requested. they brought a specific question for weapons to the u.s. and european allies just in the last week or so. they're asking for russian-made antitank weapons, asking for shoulder-fired missiles, also asking for hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunition for
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their caliche any coughs, rifles and machine guns. that's what they want. obviously they would like an enforcement of a no-fly zone, but i'm told by officials tonight any talk of a no-fly zone is probably off the table at this point. right now the question would be if the u.s. were to dive into giving them some more arms, how would they go about it, facilitate it through europeans allies, and some of the other allies in the region. >> chris, it's just the central question right now, and for americans watching, obviously it's not just about syria, but about broader american involvement militarily in the middle east. here in iran there's campaign posters from the iran committee for hezbollah, which of course also is an ally of the assad regime. the united states go ahead involved, all of a uss you have the u.s. and iranian approximate yisz head to head, fa is to face. how will this place out?
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how would iran's role change if the u.s. gets involved? >> reporter: there's no question that since the u.s. has sort of on the fence, iran has sort of gone all in to prop up assad's regime. the iranians are running out of friends in that region. hezbollah remains a prime proxy for them, and they need syria to funnel weapons to hezbollah in lebanon. by all accounts, what we are hearing from officials, there's no way that the city of could you air, which was recently recaptured could have been -- many of whom were trained in street fighting in iran. so those fighters are already tipping the balance. we know some of those fighters are now taking up strategic positions around aleppo. the rebels are concerned without rearming, without getting more ammunition, they may not hold
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off some of those hezbollah fighters who were so crucial in the last battle. erin? all right. chris lawrence, thanks to you. obviously this syria situation and this breaking news tonight could be a real turning point in the syrian situation, and also, of course, in the showdown going on between iran and the united states in that showdown, the united states has placed on iran the toughest sanctions ever. i want to quote the white house ever, the most stringent and broad sanctions in the history of the world. the goal of the sanctions is to hall and stop iran's nuclear program, which iran says is for peaceful purposes, and the united states and the west say is for building nuclear weapons, but they have to hit the heart of the economy. oil is still the most important thing hoar, about 80% of the export revenues come from that, but you may be surprised do you know that the united states actually allows the top buyers to still do business with the united states? the state department just recently formally signs a piece
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of paper. here's an exemption, you may shake your head and say how does that make sense? you may shake your head more when you hear this. chinese imports, china's the biggest single buyer are up 66% in the month of may alone. pretty stunning statistic, even though overall some of the imports, of course, have been dropping dramatically. what about regular people? are the sanctions working? here's what we saw. congested, busy action tehran is packed, tons of traffic, but the kinds of cars are mixed. tehran is a car town, so to find out if sanctions are hurting, we went to dealerships, like this one? central tehran, where i asked the manager if sapgss are hurting. >> translator: it gets more and more expensive day. importing is difficult so the prices go up. >> reporter: are they worried about buying because the prices keep going up? >> translator: everybody invests
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in something. some people invest in cars, some will invest in gold. >> reporter: that's right, buying this porsche costs $1 10uz,000 more than double the united states, but it's a good investment when prices are surging. where there's a sanction, there's often a way around it. you're probably asking where do the cars come from? after all, germany is not supposed to be sending mercedes to iran, and lexus, is certainly not supposed to be. hammond told me they're coming from dubai, doha, qatar, kuwait and ohman. that's where most of these cars are coming from. he said by far the most popular brands are the mercedes and the japanese brands, and for the x luxury car makers, that's a lexus. the more poplar cars are korean, hyundai and korean. korean brands are dominant, but sanctions make them more expensive, too.
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>> samsung is the biggest electronics brand in iran. the sanctions are a recent event. before that samsung still had the highest sales in the most number of stores. >> the store manager told me he has a third the customers than he did just months ago. sanctions, though, hurt the poor the most. so that cost me 20,000 real. that price is double for these tomatoes what it was a year ago. this is a poor neighborhood. every single one of these vegetables is grown locally. even the locally produced items have surged in price the labor costs have gone up. injure the santization costs have gone up. just in one year, the price for a tomato has doubled. these young men say they don't own unusual to afford surging food costs. >> our income is much less than it used to be, but we get buy.
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>> they see shrimp are double a year ago, the same with all these fish. sanctions bite, but are they working at the goal, ending iran as nuclear program? it seems for now, the answer is no. >> translator: the scientists of iran have figured it out already. what can you do now? if you build a car, you cannot make you dismantle it. "out front" tonight from the karn did i endowment. kareem, itsome of them weren't hesitant action and as we've been showing, the 50,000 note with the nuclear symbol, in a sense it feels like people are even more committed to this program, despite the fact that it's very fair to say that sanctions are taking a bite. >>. >> i'm not sure if that's actually true. they're stuck between a brutal regime and incredibly draconian
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sanctions program, which you described as the most draconian in the history. sanctions have certainly accentuated the existing maladies, incredibly high inflation, unemployment, underemployment. i think if family were probablily explained the nuclear program and asked, would you be willing to make certain nuclear compromises, you know, compromise on the amount of uranium in which you enrich, in exchange for economic incentives, i think many people would be willing to take that bargain. the problem is the regime has never allowed an open discussion about the nuclear issue in iran. of course, to your point that's not really the way it's set up here. it's a patriotic thing, but what about the fact this is the toughest sakeses regime in
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history? fidel castro sted in -- these countries have endured incredible pain. maybe they would be further without sanctions, of course, but what if the sanctions don't work? it seems like the west's eggs are in that basket. >> that's a great question, erin. the gold of sanctions is not to hurt iranian people or gratuitously debilitate the economy. it's to subject the leadership of iran, particularly the supreme leader subject him to enough pressure. but the problem is when you're dealing with these author taern regime, the economic welfare of their populations are never their first or even second tier priorities. so they are willing -- they have long willing to subject to the population, to economic hardship
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rather than compromise on their political and ideological aims. >> thank you very much. a man who knows as much about iran as anyone out there. our special coverage continues. plus big domestic news. we have deadly wildfires. plus a massive explosion at a chemical plant in louisiana. a real shock today. we're going to get to the key headlines in just a moment. the great outdoors... ...and a great deal. thanks to dad. (gasp) nope. aw! guys! grrrr let's leave the deals to hotels.com. (nice bear!) ooo! that one! nice! got it! oh my gosh this is so cool! awesome! perfect! yep, and no angry bears. the perfect place is on sale now. up to 30% off. only at hotels.com
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welcome back to a special edition of "out front." we are just hours away from voters going to the polls for the presidential elections. so much at stake for the united states. we do have breaking headlines from the united states. i want to get back to don lemon who has that. don? >> we want to get to those wildfires in colorado right now. we have just learned that two people have died in what officials are calling one of the deadliest wildfires, one of the most destructive wildfires in the state's history there. more than 15,000 acres already burned in a mandatory evacuation order is in effect.
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martin salve itch is out front tonight. >> reporter: the number is 5% containment. the cloud cover brought the temperatures down, and the temperatures during the day have been significant. the 5% is nothing when you're talking about a fire of this magnitude. they have a long way to go. the two fatalities same as a real shock. because so far despite the loss of homes, 360 is the number so far, one of the things that people had been hanging on to is the fire has not killed two people it appears, different circumstances, early this morning while attempting to evacuate the flames. over 700 firefighters are still battling the flames. more assets continue to be brought in. they were hitting it very hard they say from the air. they say the overall spread didn't move a lot, which is pretty significant given the strong winds they have been
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dealing with. they are hone to continue to battle this fire overnight. again, a long way from doing anything like getting containment, but at least if they can stop the advances, that would be considered significant. i will warn you, it was only yesterday they were talking about just 96 homes. overnight it suddenly jumped to 360. so this fire still has great potential to grow. it still is a tremendous threat, despite the assets. sometimes fire officials say despite what they have, it's nature that rules. >> we already watching. thank you, martin. 29-year-old zachary green has been named as the man killed in a massive chemical plant killed in explosion. all the plant workers are believed to be accounted for. officials say the situation is stable. aside from a controlled burn of the remaining chemicals.
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ed lavandera has more. do we know yet what may have been caused this explosion? >> reporter: we do not know the cause yet, don. that is something that investigators will begin the process of doing and working on. much >> 600 employees inside the plant were safe and secure. we have one dramatic picture from inside the plant that someone passed along to us and it shows that ball of flame, the from of smoke going into the air workers racing from the scene to get to safety. so frightening moments inside that plant when this explosion occurred. almost 75 people injured in this blast. there are three people still in critical condition and a young man, 29 years old was killed. the explosion happened behind the tree line and for most of the days authorities asked many people to stay indoors as they were trying to assess the air quality around this plant to make sure that there were no
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problems with breathing and asking people to stay indoors to make sure everyone was safe. so governor -- louisiana governor bobby jindal says today was making sure people were safe, getting them to safety, now the work of trying to figure out what caused this explosion and who, if anyone, should be held responsible, that work begins now. >> obviously, when you've got the potential for loss of life, everybody's focus is securing lives on site and the surrounding communities, as well. once the investigation is done and a responsible party, they will be held responsible and we'll make sure we work , again with the local and federal partners to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> reporter: the shelter in place order has been lifted. officials say so far in indications of any poor air quality or chemicals up in the air that people should be worried about. >> thank you very much for that. we want to head to sanford, florida where a judge decided
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jurors in george zimmerman's second-degree murder trial will be sequestered. this is the fourth day of jury selection. zimmerman is accused of fatally shooting 17-year-old trayvon martin in february of last year. he claims he shot the florida teen in self-defense and pleaded not guilty. the trial is expected to last as long as a month. legal analysts, mark, why would the judge wait until now to seek sequester. >> she was holding out, a big deal, a lot of expense, a lot of resources are directed towards getting a jury and keeping them safe and protected, housing them. so there is a lot to it and it's a tremendous inconvenience for the jurors sitting. so all those sensitivities in there. you heard the questions being asked and all the answers coming today, it's obvious she needed to do that. people were talking about family and friends approaching them wanting to influence them
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already and they are only sitting in a jury pool now, let alone being on the jury. the judge probably thought the risk was to great to let them go home, go around family and friends and let someone influence them. she made the right decision without question. >> there was concern picking a jury they would be able to find anyone in the country that wouldn't be tainted by media coverage. >> yeah, and i never really bought into that. we've never had a jury in the united states history that we weren't able to find and have in a criminal case. so it was a matter of doing a little bit more work but not everybody follows the news. there is a lot of jurors you listen to and they are intelligent people. they choose not to stay current with what is going on, crime stories or court cases or matters like that. they are getting there. i've been more impressed than i expected to be. more intelligent people giving forth wright answers, except one, yesterday. they have been straight on.
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>> two to six weeks, does that seem on par for this type of trial? >> sdit does. >> if in fact the judge goes aheads and limits it to five minutes where this situation and the shooting and death occurred, then the case will go on the shorter end. if the door becomes open by one party or another where they get in these extraneous matters not natural vent to court it could drag on. if in fact, they keep it limited to what happened during those fateful five minutes or so, i think the case will be on the shorter side than the longer side. if the state ends up opening the door and getting into charter issues and matters such as that, we could be in for a longer trial. >> thank you, sir, appreciate you. >> thank you. more of erin burnet's live coverage from teheran. i am an american success story.
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it will be a crucial day at polling stations around the country, and we'll be going to them. one thing that really interested me talking to people on the streets today, we went to a neighborhood. it's the weekend tomorrow here but it kind of starts essentially the middle of the day thursday and a lot of people were out, absolutely packed in the bizarres and some people said, we're not going to vote. we're frustrated. some were conservative, women in full sador. one woman came from canada, dual citizen back here to stay with her parents because she wants to cast her vote. we'll be fascinateed to see what happens tomorrow when we bring you that special report from the polling stations of what actually happens here and a special report on women. 60% of the higher education degree go to women but one of the lowest employment rates for women in the world.
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what do women want and what are their big frustrations here in the country? we go behind the vail. the live coverage continues here out front live from teheran tomorrow. look forward to seeing you then. until then, ac 360 starts right until then, ac 360 starts right now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >> colorado wildfires and brutal weather and tonight, it will make your blood boil but you got to see it to believe it. few cancer charities taken hundreds of millions of dollars in donations, we found out what they are really doing with your money and not helping the people in need. later, he is on the most wanted list with osama bin laden and harder to find. he's in court back in boston, a terrifying mop boss and 19 families are mourning the loved ones he's accused of murdering. we begin with the breaking news of the fires that turned thousands of acres in colorado and hundreds of homes to ashes. the worst
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