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tv   Around the World  CNN  July 30, 2013 9:00am-10:01am PDT

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we are on verdict watch in the case against bradley manning. he's the army private accused of the largest leak of classified information in u.s. history. if found guilty he could be sentenced to life in prison. this hour italy's former prime minister berlusconi also awaiting a verdict. it's his final appeal against a
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tax fraud conviction. if he loses he could be banned from public office. it could be the largest jewel heist in history. welcome to "around the world." >> was he a whistle blower or a traitor? we'll learn next hour where the army private first class bradley manning has been convicted or acquitted of leaking classified documents. >> he's accused of the biggest leak of classify information in this country's history. prosecutors called him a traitor. the founder of wikileakss, the site that published the documents said manning did the right thing. >> the statements he made he was willing to take that risk. he believes that the results are so important. we call those types of people that are willing to risk not be
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a martyr for all the rest of us, we call those people heroes. bradley manning is a hero. >> let's bring in barbara starr. always a pleasure to see you. 22 charges he initially faced. he plead guilty to a dozen of them. the big one yet to come. >> that is right, michael. it's the whole issue now aiding the enemy. that's the crucial charge. about one hour from now we'll find out what the judge has ruled. if he is convicted of aiding the enemy, this 25-year-old private first class could spend the rest of his life in jail. he's plead guilty to some lesser charges that could net him a 20-year sentence. about an hour from now we'll find out her final ruling. there's no military jury in this case. it's all being decided by the
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judge. this is really underscoring this fundamental debate going on in the united states and so many places around the globe. personal privacy, keeping the government's secrets. request a whistle blower leak classify information or is this a case of a member of the united states military basically betraying this country. michael. >> appreciate that. barbara starr there at the pentagon and edward snowden will probably be watching that closely although his is a civilian issue. >> stuck in the russian transport. another big story that's playing out in washington now. that's the first direct mideast peace talks in years, three years since the two sides have come together. nobody think it's going to be easy. those are live pictures coming to us from the state department. you see the secretary of state john kerry. he's just got out of a peace talk meeting trying to get things going. he says that he knows it's going
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to be a very difficult process. >> president obama sat down this morning with the palestinian negotiators. the five key issues they have to agree onto ensure state solution are borders, security, refugees, jerusalem and as israel as a jewish state. we could learn the state of silvia berlusconi. >> the situation is tense because of what happens to him. it could affect italy's fragile coalition of government. >> today's ruling could send him
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to jail. more appropriately because it could ban him from public office. tell us about these consequences. if he's convicted, the charges of him serving jail time are slim but banning him from public office could impact the government. >> well, it's very unlikely he's going to have to serve jail time because of his age and because of an amnesty. they knock three years off his sentence automatic. he said he would rather be in jail than do community service. the bigger punishment is being banned from public office. that wouldn't be automatic. it would have to be approved by the italian senate. that's far bigger blow to him the fact he couldn't run for office and couldn't be part of the parliament as a senator. that could be a much greater
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punishment. >> he's still a man with a great deal of influence has done for some 20 years. he could pull the plug on the italian government by withdrawing his support from the coalition. that could be disasterous. >> his supporters here have said that if this conviction is uphill they'll walk out in mass. they will stage protest and block the streets of rome. there are a lot of threats. whether or not that would come to fruition we'll have to wait and see. there's a lot of people who love him and still support him. ho those people don't want to see him go. it's also a question of whether or not the judiciary is involved in the political future. does that overstep the
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boundaries of the judiciary. all those things have polarized italians. people are waiting to see what happens with this high court. >> good to see you. people look in on berlusconi and nothing seems to stick. he has a lot of support. >> he does. he's 76 years old. it's highly unlikely he'll do prison time. moving onto another fascinating story. trying to catch a thief who made off with $136 million in jewels. >> checking out your ears. this is a mystery that has everyone talking. we're learning a bit more about how it went down. >> reporter: it was brazen, it was fast and some say be work of an expert. now more details into the heist
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that has shaken the french riviera. it's now thought to be the largest gem theft in recent history. the estimated amount of jewelry now believed to be worth close to $136 million. while police scour through countless hours of surveillance video we're learning more about how one gunman managed to pull off such a huge heist. according to the deputy prosecutor he entered the lobby around 11:30 a.m. entering through normally secured doors that opened onto the promenade. >> this person knew exactly how they were going in. there was a lock that this person was able to open. >> reporter: armed with a semiautomatic pistol he held up the manager of the sale exhibit and other vendors in the presence of unarmed private
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guards without firing a single shot. he then escaped with bag containing rings, earrings and pendants. he exited by another door on the inside. officials describe the sequence of events as very fast. >> police are intrigued to if it's an inside job or noted this door and took advantage of it. they planned this with military precisi precision. >> reporter: this morning we could see them packing up what remains of the exhibition. >> all right. erin reporting for us. coming up, a teen holding a knife on a public bus in canada held at gun point by the police and then fired upon multiple times. >> now he's death has outraged people across canada. a live report is coming up. that book, you've all read it. 50 shades of grey getting blamed
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for an increasing number of people getting stuck in handcuffs and other things. >> why emergency responders believe the book is behind these bondage emergencies. a tv host in pakistan has a unique give away for ramadan. he's giving out babies. >> it's no joke. stay tuned. we'll explain shortly. when you're readyr ] to take skincare to the next level you're ready for roc® new roc® multi correxion has an exclusive 5 in 1 formula it's clinically proven to hydrate dryness, illuminate dullness lift sagging diminish the look of dark spots and smooth the appearance of wrinkles together these 5 elements create ageless looking skin roc® multi correxion 5 in 1 it's high performance skincare™ only from roc® i'll believe it when i--- [ both ] oooooh... [ female announcer ] as you get older, protein is an important part of staying active and strong.
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[ gunshots ] [ sirens ] >> there's plenty that's disturbing. the officer involved has been suspended with pay. joining us now is a reporter with the toronto star newspaper. tell us about the buildup of this. this is man armed with a knife but gunshots seem a little extreme here. >> well, there's been other police shootings that have caused death recently. this is the only one that we've seen on video and i think that's what's causing some of the outrage here.
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it's not totally unusual but in toronto we only saw officers fire their guns intentionally 23 times last year. >> what threat was he posing? he was on the bus on his own with a knife? >> we can see him. there were passengers on the streetcar but they exited when the police arrived. you can see the knife in one of videos. as far as we know he doesn't appear to be threatening officers but it's hard to tell. it's unclear. it's hard to make that judgment right now. >> jennifer, what do we know about him? does he have a history of violence? was he known to police? >> he's 18 years old. as far as we know he doesn't have a history of violence. his family and friends say he didn't have a history of mental illness. he came here from syria about five years ago. he was staying with friends at the time. >> to give you a little context
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of people watch ing in the unitd states, i think there were 54 murders last year in toronto. chicago 511. houston, 217. you say there's been shootings involving police. what's been the reaction to this one? >> it's getting a lot more attention because in this case we're able to see the video. we don't know what happened before the video or what happened after the cam ra was turned off. there was a police shooting death. we don't have the video and aren't able to see what took place. i think that's what's causing the outrage in the case. >> pretty disturbing. >> appreciate that. >> like nine shots fired. >> nine shots fired in all.
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there's an investigation ongoing. it's one of those things you're thinking stun grenade, taser or something. >> could have taken other action. exactly. coming up, a tv game show in pakistan is trying to boost ratings with a give away. that's nothing new but the prize is definitely a first. we'll explain, coming up. iand we're talkingl time with maria about the walmart low price guarantee. you got your list? let's go. if you find a lower advertised price they'll match it at the register. really... yeah, in a "jif". you ready? what?! that's the walmart low price guarantee backed by ad match. bring in receipts from your local stores and see for yourself.
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welcome back to "around the world." now for a bizarre story that's almost too hard to believe. >> there's a unique give away for ramadan. he's giving out babies. >> it's not a joke. >> reporter: they say having a baby is the greatst gift of all. this is the moment an abandoned baby was handed over to an unsuspecting child less couple on live tv. >> translator: i was really shocked at first. i couldn't believe we were being
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given in baby girl. i was extremely happy. >> translator: we weren't complete. this baby has made our house a home. >> reporter: 500 people make up this live studio audience for a marathon seven-hour ramadan special program. >> translator: at christmas there's santa claus to give everyone gifts. it's important for christians. for us ramadan is special and it's important to make people happy and reward them. >> would you call yourself the santa claus of islam then? >> translator: i wouldn't say that myself. i think it's a good concept to give gifts to people. it's not good to take but to give. >> reporter: it's being described as a religious scholar, tv megastar and even a
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sex symbol. his mix of religion and entertainment is followed by controversy. he cooks while men sing islamic hymns. he has a price is right bonanza give away. they can win everything from a mobile phone to a motorbike. now he's pleased, shocked and surprised people across the country in what's a tv first for pakistan, giving we ining away . >> do you think handing over a child to a child less company is trivia liezing the issue of abandoned babies. >> reporter: >> translator: i'm setting an
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example giving a child less couple a child. >> reporter: they joined forces with the tv show to raise awareness of the issue. >> translator: our team finds baby abandoned on the street, in garbage bins. why not ensure the baby is kept alive and gets a good home. we didn't just give the baby away. we have our own vetting procedure. this couple was registered with us and had four or five sessions with us. >> reporter: the couple didn't know they would be hand add two-week old baby girl to take part. they're the second couple to be given a baby on tv. adoption isn't officially recognized and there's no adoption allow but the couples will have to apply for guardianship at family court. this wasn't processed before the live broadcast. this isn't a gimmick to win the fierce ramadan ratings war in pakistan.
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he said another couple will be given a baby in the coming days. >> i hope they give them diapers as well. all right, yeah. just swap it out. >> all babies are cute. a south african chef is told he's too obese to live in new zeala zealand. london firefighters say the book fifty shades of grey could behind the calls.
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just getting new information about that train crash this spain. we've learned the driver on the train was on the phone with railway staff when it left the rails.
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79 people were killed in that accident and scores more were injured. many of them seriously. the train was going around 100 miles per hour when it left the tracks. that's much faster than the speed limit for that section of the rail. we'll keep an eye on anymore developments. to some he's a hero and to others he's a traitor. we'll learn the verdict in the court-martial of bradley manning. prosecutors say manning gave 750,000 pages of documents to the website, wikileakss. >> the most serious charge against manning is aidsing the enemy. if convicted on that count he could be sentenced to life in prison. we'll have live coverage of that verdict in the next hour. keep it right here on cnn. we're waiting to find out berl berl
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berlusconi's fate. he's appealing his tax fraud conviction. >> it could affect fragile coalition government. he doesn't have an official role in running the government but he's still a very influential player with one important member of that coalition. as soon as we get word of that decision we'll bring that to you. now to egypt where deposed president morsi is said to be doing well. the top diplomat met with him last night. >> she's the first outside to egyptian military to meet with morsi since he was ousted almost a month ago. >> we talked for two hours. we talked in-depth. he has access to nchinformation terms of newspaper, and tv. >> the meeting's location was kept secret even for her. >> she said she didn't want to confuse it or have anything he
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said misunderstood so she's saying nothing. a chef who says his work visa was denied by new zealand immigration officials because he's too fat. >> albert and his wife moved back in 2007. >> back in may immigration officials refused to renew their work visa's saying he is too unhealthy. we're following the story in south africa. he says he doesn't want to be the poster child for immigration issues but he feels like what has happened is unfair. what else is he saying? it's not his only health issue, is it? >> well, michael this is an interesting story. he says i'm a chef from south afri africa. i moved to new zealand to start a new living.
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he moved to christ church. he went through that with his wife and is really set his roots into new zealand. he said now he's becoming a poster child for obesity and immigration and for deportation issues. all he really wants to do is make his curry of the day which he has become well known for there. take a listen to what he says as he tries to explain why he's in the middle of such a dispute. >> i think it's because we applied for our permanent resident a while back and that caused a lot of questions about my health. everything came back quite normal. my doctor did a health check on me and said that i've got a no risk of heart attack in the next five years.
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i'm dumbfounded. i don't know what it's all about. >> reporter: we should mention when he moved to new zealand he was some 353 pounds. he has dropped 70 pounds. he says he now weighs 278. officials say it's too late for him. >> the immigration officials say they didn't make their decision based on his weight but on other health issues. what do we know about this? >> reporter: yeah, the rejection letter they spelled out why his application was not approved. they site evidence of a chronic knee joint condition, glucose tolerance and an enlarged fatty liv liver. they list things that obese can lead to, diabetes, hyper tension, sleep apnea, joint cancer. health care is cheap or free in
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new sozealand. the taxpayer swrouwould have to absorb the cost of caring for him. he says i understand people have to pay for an expensive procedure. they have relatives there and have developed a life there. now that he's wanting to say they're telling him his health is the reason he can't do it. they have appealed this decision. the government will have a few weeks to decide. his doctor has written him a letter of support which is quite valuable but he feels uncomfortable. both he and and his wife kicked out of their home and living with relatives because of his health. it's been quite embarrassing for him as well. >> thanks for that. let us know what happened. other countries have rules like that. >> it's funny. you can see how he would become
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a burden on the health care system. maybe he needs to hit the treadmill. >> or head back to south africa. we'll show you how 175 prisoners skaiped and how they got out. that's next. "and one of the most efficient trucking networks," "with safe, experienced drivers." "we work directly with manufacturers," "eliminating costly markups," "and buy directly from local farmers in every region of the country." "when you see our low prices, remember the wheels turning behind the scenes, delivering for millions of americans, everyday. "dedication: that's the real walmart"
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welcome back. we take you around the world to a story of an incredible prison break. >> it's an amazing story. one of the most notorious jails in pakistan housing a lot of high profile prisoners. dozens inmates escaped. >> reporter: this was bold and well planned attack. the taliban has claimed
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responsibility for the take. a bomb disposal unit an member of the team on ground told cnn they discovered bombs up to 300 kilograms worth of explosives around the prison ready to be detonated. for suicide vests had to be diffused, four ieds and an ambulance with chemicals and explosives packed inside. the taliban walked in and announced the names of other militants. called them up and took them away. at least 175 prisoners including 35 high profile militants have escaped. this all on the eve of a presidential election here in pakistan. let's not forget parliament has the power the chief executive is the prime minister.
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the presidency is merely a figure head. >> there were 483 prisoners there. police say they have a total of 200. >> unbelievable. >> they were so well organized they were using a loud helo megaphone calling prisoners by name saying come on down. unbelievable how that's going to happen. thousands of syrians fleeing the civil war. in jordan the number of refugees there are dropping. that's not necessarily good news. >> activists and diplomats say the government has closed most of its border but they deny that. we have this exclusive report. >> reporter: this is no place to walk. some have no choice. it's the only way out of syria.
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a country exhausted by a flood of ref sews. the army wants us to see this welcome but there's something wrong with this picture. the journey must have been held he hellish for them and you can only imagine what they left behind. this is the last point they are allowed to cross. they have shot most of the rest. this is the other side of the story, the syrian town just meters from the jordanian border. no refugees are crossing here. hundreds stranded activists told us now allowed to travel the remaining meters into jordan. they sent us this video of the squaller they endure nearby
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living under trees. safety close but out of reach. >> we fled aleppo six weeks ago. we have nothing. give of jordan help us. open the border and help us. our children are getting sick. >> reporter: one local syrian rebel leader tells us jordanian arm told rebels not to escort refugees to the border as they will not be allowed to cross. they told us 15 days ago they were closing the border as jordan couldn't take anymore refugees and hadn't gotten national support. no one can come in unless they are bleeding heavily. many who try are captured by the army and taken back to syria. the u.n. has noticed a change. >> in the last two weeks we have seen the numbers drop. earlier many the year it was
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running about 2,000 to 3,000 crossing right night. now we're only seeing about 100. we know there's tens of thousands of people that want to come across and they're not coming across. why is that? we're trying to make sure the restrictions are not on the jordanian side. >> reporter: this is one reason why jordan might want less refugees. one year ago this was built to hold 5,000 syrians. now it holds 23 times that number. a fraction of the half million in jordan. top border official denies there's any closure and says violence in syria can cause numbers of refugees to fluctuate. we've not received any order to close the border. there is a reorganization of our work. something must be wrong if this vael treally is the only way ou.
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coming up, debris fleeing everywhere. trees bending and alarms sounding. we'll have a look inside a tornado. i do! let's go! here we go cinnamon toast crunch. yay! a perfect school day breakfast. i know if you find a lower advertised price they'll match it at the register. that's amazing. look at that price. i like that. they need those for school. we're always working to lower costs so you get more savings. now your kids have everything they need. all in one place. more school for your money. guaranteed. ready? wow! that's the walmart low price guarantee backed by ad match. save time and money getting your kids ready for school, bring in ads from your local stores and see for yourself.
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take a look at this amazing video from inside a tornado. >> this is in italy. it was in an industrial neighborhood near milan. at least a dozen people were hurt. several buildings and vehicles destroyed. we can take this from do not try this at home. i think he broke every rule of 1 to 100 of whatnot to do in a tornado. get away from the window. hide. now to this. actress kathryn mcfee. >> through a personal connection to west africa had an opportunity to build a preschool.
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the school master, a wonderful woman there come down with ma r malaria. i wanted to see what we could do for her. every minute a child dies from malaria. it's something that's preventable and curable. we would never have it in the united states. you can feel overwhelmed like what can i do. that's why we're working so hard with malaria no more to end malaria deaths by 2015. join the movement. impact your world. i'll just press this, and you'll save on both. ding! ladies and gentlemen,
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what happens in the bedroom stays in the bed, right? don't that he will to london firefighters. >> they say they are getting more and more calls from people stuck in handcuffs and the fifty shades of grey may be to bloom. >> you were enjoying that kwhwha
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little too much. if there's anyone on the planet that doesn't know about this book, fill them in. >> i've got a whole assortment of items here. this is one of the "fifty shades of grey" trilogy book. it's about an s and m relationship between a college grad and banker. it means people are getting a little bit carried away. according to london fire bre good day they had 1,300 calls since the book came out. they are getting stuck in handcuffs and getting your manhood stuck in a toaster. >> what! >> clearly i've not read this book. i don't know if i want to know about the toaster relationship. >> i do. i do. how do you get your manhood
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stuck in a toaster? >> i think the bottom line is we went to an adult store for an expert advice. basically they said they sell a lot of items like the handcuffs that are safe. there's a lot of easy catches to make sure you can free yourself but when you decide to go diy, that's when you start to get to some problems. stay away from the household appliances. >> this is a problem. >> this is a problem. what it means is it costs about 300 pounds or $500 every time there's an emergency call like this. the emergency fire engine goes racing across town and find you stuck in handcuffs it ties them up so they can't fight emergencies. it's cost taxpayers more than $500,000. it's expensive and costly. >> are you going to return those items? >> oh, no. this is mine. >> that from the book of don't
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try this at home. i don't know what to say. i really don't. there's men all over the country right now who are thinking about that toaster and going oww. >> we were watching you. >> the question is would you do it if i asked you to? >> i've been very bad. i need to be punished. oh, my good. get out of here before we get in trouble. that is like head shaking, toaster. >> the visuals is scary. we're going to go to break. we'll be back. maybe. i help support bones... [ ding! ] ...the immune system... [ ding! ] ...heart health... [ ding! ] ...and muscles. [ ding! ] that can only be ensure complete! [ female announcer ] the four-in-one nutrition of ensure complete. a simple choice to help you eat right. [ major nutrition ] nutrition in charge. a simple choice to help you eat right. when she was only fifteen hours first open hold. surgery... handing her over for surgery is the hardest thing i've... ever had to do. before obamacare, insurance companies could put lifetime...
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usaa. we know what it means to serve. found a rather mysterious coffin within a coucoffin. >> archaeologist have a pretty good idea how the king ended up there. they're trying to solve the new mystery that's cropped up at the excavation site. >> dan they were pretty amazed when they made the original discovery but now the double coffin. >> reporter: yeah. this is the site that just keeps giving. they found an archaeology needle
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in hay stack. no one thought they would find a trace of him. they found a skeleton with a misshapen spine. dna proved it was richard iii. now they have gone back and excavated out of it and found a coffin within a coffin. this led casket inside a very fine stone coffin. an amazing discovery. now they are preparing to open that led casket and find out what's inside. very delicate work. they don't want to lose the information that could be contained inside. as for who they think it could be there's three candidates they are talking about. local nobles of the period, william of notingham all local dignitaries there. what's really exciting about this is the organic material
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they may find inside. he's interested in the organs of the body. that would tell him a huge amount of information what about they ate and the diet of the period and the diseases that may have killed the person. they are hoping the body is well preserved inside. >> goodness. how extraordinary. thanks so much. >> i love the coffin that keeps on giving. >> exactly. >> dan rivers there. now we'll turn to thailand where a popular beach has turned black from the huge oil spill. >> tourists have been evacuated. about 1300 gallons of oil have washed up. >> they think the spill may be worse than they first thought with more than 13,000 gallons of
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crude leaking from the ocean. this is coming from a pipeline. beautiful. it's just a tragedy there. got something for you. we want to end the show on this. >> the rubik cube. you ever try to solve one of those? >> i gave up. >> you can pull the stickies off and cheat. >> how long did it take you to do it if you did get it right, a week, a decade? check this guy out. wow. a little over seven seconds. he's australian. they have nothing better to do down there. they still do that. >> incredible. he finished the puzzle in 8.18
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seconds. >> the second place finisher wasn't too far behind. who knew they were still doing this. the '70s called they want their rubix cube back. thanks for watching "around the world" with us. cnn newsroom right now. just moments from now bradley manning accused in the largest leak of classify information in u.s. history will learn his fate. it sounded like bombs going off. multiple explosions at a propane plant just outside orlando, florida. injured eight workers. we're taking a closer look another what investigators think may have happened. green paint splattered on monuments around washington, d.c. a woman is arrested in two cases. who's behind this

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