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centurylink your link to what's next. hello, and thanks for joining us here on cnn. i'm rosemary church. >> and i'm john vause. we'd like to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. the u.s. launches its new offensive against isis. the but one iraqi leader tells cnn he would welcome ground
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troops as well. plus president obama turns his attention to the ebola crisis tuesday. the staggering numbers the epidemic could reach if something is not done now. >> and the two sides of the scottish independence vote appear to be in a dead heat. we'll hear from the undecided about what could sway their opinion with just two days left. in iraq, more air strikes. a broadening battlefield, and an intense new phase-in the u.s. air campaign against isis. >> u.s. central command says american airplanes blew up six isis vehicles near sinjar and launched an air strike in a sunni area southwest of baghdad where militants were reportedly firing on iraqi security forces. and this was apparently the closest strike yet to baghdad. and this one is a first, because it had nothing to do with the
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humanitarian missions. the u.s. military has now carried out 162 air strikes in iraq since early august. meanwhile, dozens of countries and organizations have promised to use all possible means to combat isis, including military force and finding ways to cut off the group's funding. >> they issued a statement at the international conference in paris calling for rapid action. france says there's no time to lose and has already begun reconnaissance flights over iraq. >> translator: the murderers say to the world, either you are with us or we kill you. and when you are facing a group like that, there is no other possibility but to defend yourself. >> and while the international community shapes its strategy against isis, kurdish peshmerga
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forces are fighting on the front lines. >> and our anna coren spoke about the battle on the ground and what's needed to defeat the militant group. >> reporter: president bazahny, thank you for joining us. this is the first time you've spoken since president obama has described his strategy. what do you think of the president's plan? >> translator: the threats of isis is not only against the kurdish people in kurdistan. it's a threat for the whole world. it's a threat that it's affecting everyone, so we are supporting president obama's strategy, and we do hope that it's going to have results and also to expand the strategy to include the others. >> reporter: now it's the peshmerga who are the boots on the ground in northern iraq. do you feel that your forces are ready for this fight against
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isis? >> translator: i think peshmerga's proof that they are capable. it's true that from the first days from the assaults of the isis that peshmerga's had some loss, but after the securing the air strikes, peshmerga managed to control the areas to stop the expansions and the offensive of the isis and also by driving them out of the areas and the persshmergas have been successf with that. the we do believe they have initiative and are on the offensive. >> reporter: are you prepared to go outside your borders of kurdistan, let's say mosul, and fight there. >> translator: our top priority is to protect our borders and the peoples with the different proponents of the kurdish society with all the proponents that we have here. but if there would be a comprehensive program with the iraqi federal government and our allies so wherever we can, we will support any kinds of the programs against them. >> reporter: tell me, how effective have the u.s. air strikes been, considering they
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have been quite limited in their scope. >> translator: i can say that the air strikes have been very, very effective. and it has a lot of impact on the situation, and they manage to take a lot of harms and pains to the enemy. and they have been very, very precise. no collateral damages, no civilians have been hurt anywheres. >> reporter: there have been some countries that have offered to send in ground forces. do you enadvice and that happening in the future? >> translator: we have not asked for the ground forces from any countries, but any country, in which way they prefer to participate in the fight against isis, whether through sending ground forces or ammunition, we welcome any kind of these decisions and participation. >> and coming up in the next
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half hour we will have more on the threat of isis, including whether the u.s. has legal justification for striking the group in syria. now the taliban have claimed responsibility for a suicide attack in the capital. the interior ministry says tuesday morning's bombing targeted a convoy of foreign forces along kabul's international airport road. it's unclear if the blast struck the convoy directly and who may have actually been in that convoy. nato forces say they are assessing the situation and will release details later. the u.s. president is expected to announce significant new plans to control west africa's ebola epidemic. >> barack obama will receive a briefing on tuesday. after which he's expected to outline ways to combat ebola. they include the construction of treatment centers that contain up to 1700 beds, an increase of up to 3,000 military personnel to the region, medical r
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professionals will work to train 500 health care workers per week and they hope to send 400,000 treatment kits to at-risk homes. and the united nations security council is holding an emergency meeting this thursday and more help is urgently needed. >> so far the virus has killed an estimated it 2400 people. and as erin mclaughlin reports, there are fears that number could jump exponentially. >> reporter: six months into the worst epidemic in history, the world is losing the battle to contain it. >> the international response to the disease has been a failure. >> reporter: despite dire warnings, an international calls for action, ebola continues to overwhelm and spread in west africa. >> in the three hardest hit countries, guinea, high beer yeah and sierra leone, the number of new cases is moving far faster than the capacity to
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manage them. >> reporter: dr. ian norton is part of an international team battling the outbreak in liberia. >> we're attempting to create additional beds. the demand is so great people are waiting outside the existing treatment units. the situation is difficult. we are behind the wave of disease at the moment. and our entire focus is on getting ahead of the wave. >> reporter: according to one u.s.-based research team from leading universities, this is what that wave could look like. if things improve in the arias of intervention and containment, the study estimates by october 12 there will be over 7800 ebola infections and over 4700 fatalities. but if things get worse, intervention and containment are less effective. their projections show over 54,000 infections and over
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27,000 fatalities during the same time period. at the moment, researchers say all signs point to the situation becoming more serious. one of the biggest obstacles to battling the disease -- recruiting enough staff to fight it. at least 280 medical workers have been infected since the outbreak began. half of them have died. >> it's certainly understandable, the hesitancy to come and work and fight against ebola, but with the right design of a facility, and the right training and the right personal protective equipment, then the risk to health personnel and logistic staff is minimized. >> to curb the epidemic, it is necessary to deploy assets. without this deployment we will never get the epidemic under
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control. >> reporter: medical experts say it's not too late to contain the crisis, but they are running out of time. erin mclaughlin, cnn, london. we'll take a short break here, but when we come back, two days to go before scotland decides its fate. we tell you how the british prime minister is urging voters to stay with the united kingdom. wait, wait, wait, it's wait, wait, wait...whoa, does she have special powers when she has the shroud? no. guys? it's the woven one the woven one. oh, oh that gives her invincibility. guys? no, no, no... the scarlet king is lord victor's son!! no don't. i told you! you guys are gonna be so surprised when you watch the finale!!! you're so lucky your car has wi-fi. yeah...i am. equinox from chevrolet... the first and only car company to bring built-in 4g lte wi-fi
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the british prime minister is making a last ditch attempt to keep scotland from splitting from the united kingdom. >> david cameron spoke to voters urging them and telling them that a painful divorce it would be. >> thousands gathered for a unity rally. and we spoke with the editor of the "spectator" magazine about why so many people turned out. >> they couldn't bear to stand aside and watch their country fall apart without being able to say that here in scotland, it's your decision, but we love you, too. we want you to stay in this country. >> reporter: how do you explain why so many are intending to
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vote yes, on casting a vote to break their country away from the united kingdom. >> there's a lot of frustration with the established system. the establishment parties got a big kicking. so you're getting this frustration with the political elite. and optimism. the s&p, the nationalists. and the unionists have struggled to come up with a positive message for staying with the status quo. >> reporter: you asked your readers in the last edition to write letters to the scots. and your readers, they're like love letters. they're like, don't-break-up-with-me letters. >> all of them are saying think about what makes us british. it's this unity that makes us distinct from the united kingdom. somebody born in london likes to
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think they can go to scotland as a countryman, not as a visitor. it's about who you are and what makes you. >> well, with all that in mind, the latest poll shows a statistical dead heat. 49% say yes, that they want to separate. 51% saying no, they would like to stay. >> with the race coming down to the wire like that activists are doing all they can to woo undecided voters. max foster met with some voters in glasgow. >> reporter: she won't be voting in the referendum, but her dad's decision will define the scotland that she grows up in. at this late stage in the campaign, it's about convincing the undecided voters. >> hello, sir. are you voting in the referendum? >> yes. >> did you know how you feel about it yet? >> reporter: what sort of conversations do you have with them? >> we get a lot of people that are already quite committed yes voters that want to pick up merchandise. so we have posters and badges
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and stickers. >> reporter: if there's someone who's wavering, how do you try to convince them? >> some people have a variety of reasons. other people might be very worried about one specific thing. sometimes there's specific facts and figures you can give back to them. you know, if they say oh, i'm worried that the oil will run out, which is still here. even at this late stage, there are some people that their arguments against are so basic. >> my sister is an absolute yes. >> reporter: just up the road in glasgow's west end, campaigners are pounding the streets with arguments for a no vote. >> undecided voters. >> reporter: what's your sell with them, when you know they're undecided and you've got them on the doorstep? >> the sell is we have the best of both worlds in the united
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kingdom. we have a strong scottish parliament, but the benefit of the united kingdom. >> i was out with one of my oldest friends yesterday whom i haven't seen for several months. and he was explaining to me that he and his wife are voting yes. and i was quite shocked. >> reporter: so you're wavering all the time? >> i am to some extent. i was much clearer in my mind until yesterday. >> reporter: estimates for the number of undecided voters vary greatly, as many will be voting for the very first time. but what's undisputed is there'll be a very high turnout. >> a historically important date because whatever happens, scotland and england, things will never be the same again. >> we cannot change it easily back again if we make the wrong decision. so people should get involved and vote. ♪ >> reporter: in the early hours
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of the 19th of september, the results of the referendum will be announced here in edinburgh. it will define scotland and potentially redefine the whole of the u.k. once the most powerful empire in the world. max foster, cnn, edinburgh. >> be interesting to see how it turns out. >> think they'll stay. >> you think they will? just by a hair? >> very slim. >> all right. we'll see. with ongoing clashes in eastern ukraine, hundreds of troops from more than a dozen countries begin military exercises. what officials say about the drill, that's coming up. just take a closer look. it works how you want to work. with a fidelity investment professional... or managing your investments on your own. helping you find new ways to plan for retirement. and save on taxes where you can. so you can invest in the life that you want today.
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seriously. 9.5 million people have been warned of flash flooding protection in this area. keep in mind, the moisture here not going to get here in earnest until thursday morning. reports of folks across portions of phoenix and tucson already filling sandbags. but at this point, here's the center of circulation beginning to push over the safe cortez or the gulf of california, whichever you prefer. these are the cities next in line for the impact of the storm. 73 miles per hour makes this a category 1 hurricane. it is expected to push in and weaken. but as it does, all of that tropical moisture will be put down across portionis of the southwestern united states. this is the area of concern as
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far as what we have in store. if you're tuned in from douglas, arizona, safford, arizona, all across the southeastern corner, that is where the bull's eye is expected tw phoenix getting some of the isolated showers inside the next, say, 48 hours. but the damage is historic to say the least, as far as the wind speeds are concerned. you can see the damage, considerable damage to not only aircraft to the airport itself. and the wind speeds across cabo, 116 miles per hour wind speed, something like 180 kilometers per hour. officials are saying some some 239,000 customers were left
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without power at the peak of the storm. grocery stores and electronics stores looking like this as looters abound. but police officers made their way here very quickly and put an end to this. you can see what happened in the past few hours, in an area that has never before seen a storm system with the exception of the 1967 storm that came in, olivia that had identical wins and was an o-letter storm. but this does not happen too often, rosemary and john. >> moments like this bring out the best in people and the worst. >> that same thing. taking as much as you can. >> we see it every time. >> every single time, no matter where it is in the world. >> the ukrainian president, petro poroshenko plans to propose a peace plan. the deal said to be hammered out with moscow offers limited
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self-power for three years. >> nato's top commander warns that long-term peace in europe has to involve russia. >> i don't think we can ever arrive at a europe whole, free, and at peace without russia as a partner. so, for the last few years we've been trying to make russia a partner, making structure decisions, economic decisions along the fact that russia would be a constructive part of the future of europe. and now we see a very different situation, and we have to address that. the. >> nato troops and american forces are among more than 1,000 soldiers taking part in a series of training exercises in western ukraine right now. >> the exercise is being called rapid trident. a show of solidarity with kiev.
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>> reporter: american soldiers are now on ukrainian soil. you're looking at a few of the more than 130 soldiers. they're working shoulder to shoulder with ukrainian shoulders. nato forces are here. they both made it clear they're not here to get involved in the conflict in eastern ukraine. they're only here to practice. in many ways, this is nato and washington's way of flexing their muscles at moscow, essentially telling russia, look at our alliance, and look at the reach of our military might. we are about 20 kilometers from the polish/ukrainian border. nato says this event is designed to promote security and stability in the region, to help ukraine work more effectively with nato forces in case of a conflict. however, this event comes at a very sensitive time. about 1,000 kilometers east of
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here there is a very fragile cease-fire in a conflict where on one side you have pro-russian rebels. on the other side you have ukrainian forces. that's why critics, including moscow, say this perhaps is not the best time to have nato and american forces on ukrainian soil because it could be a provocation, something that fuels the contention. and it's very likely next door moscow will be watching closely, annoyed at what's unfolding here. cnn, ukraine. from the crisis in ukraine, there is the ongoing crisis with isis. and the u.s. is lining up support for a military showdown with the sunni militants, but right now a lot of the specifics remain unclear. the after the break we'll tell you who's in, who's out. plus a football star
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and welcome back. you're watching cnn live, all around the world. i'm john vause. >> and i'm rosemary church. and we do want to check the headlines at this hour. the u.s. is stepping up its air campaign against isis. this air strike was the closest yet to baghdad. american fighter jets also destroyed six isis vehicles near sinjar. with health officials pleading for more help controlling the obyo ebola outb
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u.s. president obama is expected to announce a plan for help. the referendum for scotland, the polls are pretty evenly split between the camps. british prime minister david cameron warned the decision will be forever. a lot of countries are signing up for the mission against isis. >> syria was exclude from coalition talks in paris. so who is on board, and who's willing to commit to possible military action? our jim sciutto takes a look. >> reporter: he is isis' third bee heading victim in weeks. britain's david haines murdered for the world to see. and like james foley and steven
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sotloff, by a british fighter. u.k. authorities say they have now positively identified him. >> we have to confront this menace. step by step, we must drive back, dismantle and ultimately destroy isil and what it stands for. >> reporter: but even america's closest ally has not committed to joining the u.s.-led military action against isis. the obama administration's version of the coalition of the willing, at the minimum, uncommitted. >> you have a coalition, i would argue the semi-willing. it's really going to be difficult, it seems to me, to get everybody focused on the same page. >> reporter: meeting in paris today, some 40 countries have offered at least some help. but a smaller group has made commitments to join military action. australia vowing up to eight
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aircraft and 200 military advisers, france, surveillance flights. jordan, intelligence gathering. saudi arabia, training rebels on its soil and blocking the funding to isis. this weekend, after a six-stop coalition binding tour through the reskron, secretary of state john kerry spoke of private commitments for much more, including arab participation in air strikes and more surprisingly, some countries offering ground troops, a step even the u.s. has ruled out. >> we're not looking to put troops on the ground. there are some who have offered to do so, but we are not looking for that at this moment, anyway. >> reporter: james jeffries sees a region still on the fence. >> there is true international consensus and agreement that isis is a real problem that will have to be dealt with, but
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there's also, particularly in the region, great fear of getting too involved. >> when the u.s. president revealed his strategy against isis, he hinted at targeting positions in syria. earlier i spoke with josh roggin about the plan. he wrote an editorial for the daily beast indicating that the u.s. may not have legal justification to strike syria. >> in the last week, president obama and his senior staff had gone to great panes to assure the american public and congress that the president has the domestic legal authority to streak isis both in iraq and syria. the administration has said exactly nothing about whether or not their planned strikes in syria comport with international law, the international law of armed conflict and the u.n. charter. in syria, the syrian government's still a sovereign
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state, and a u.n. membered country has not granted the u.s. permission. so some of syria's allies, such as russia, are calling out the obama administration for promising to violate international law. the white house hasn't decide which rule it wants to apply to this conflict. therefore they can't tell anybody why actions would comport with international law. >> you have to wonder why would the white house go out on a limb like this and start forming this broad coalition of nations before it has the international legal justification to strike isis in syria. >> there are two reasons. let's remember when the u.s. decided to join the coalition to strike ca doa gaddafi -- he thty
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to get a resolution because russia will oppose. they simply are doing this on an ad hoc basis and are so under the gun and so panicked, really, that they really haven't gotten around to it. their first concern is domestic political blow back. the international political blow back is something they feel like they can deal with later. that will have consequences for both the success and sustainability of the mission, but they haven't gotten around to figuring it out. >> that is a concern. secretary of state john kerry says almost 40 countries have agreed to take part in the fight against isis. but in reality, sunni nations are very lukewarm on taking any significant role in this fight, and without them, i mean, you have to wonder if they certainly don't take the lead in this, why
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should the u.s. go out on a limb? >> well, the obama administration is stuck between a rock and a hard place. on the one hand they feel the need to respond to the ongoing and escalating threat posed by isis. on the other hand, they don't want to be in the position that the bush administration was in before the invasion of iraq. but that's exactly what they're doing. president obama has set specific arbitrary limits for u.s. action inside syria. he has promised there will be no boots on the ground and said that there will be an air component. arab states must commit arab troops inside syria. for a number of reasons. they are divided over what to do about syria. in an ad hoc fashion, the obama administration and secretary of state kerry are running around the world trying to prove that there's a broad consensus on
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what to do in syria, but that consensus simply does not exist. >> josh rogin talking to us there. the problem is that now the obama administration has got themselves in a corner. there's no going back now. there's no international authority. >> for the last three years they presend pretended syria wasn't a problem. ah and now it's a problem. >> it's going to be a hard one. >> they haven't done it so far. so. all right, we're turning now to the controversy in the nfl. american pro football player adrian peterson is denying a new all right alleging that he abused another child. cnn affiliate khou says this
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second incident involved a different son than the one whose wounds led to his indictment for child abuse. cnn cannot confirm the khou report. peterson's attorney says he was never charged. >> the star running back turned himself in over the weekend aft indictment on the first allegation. he was released after posting bail. the minnesota vikings deactivated peterson for last sunday's game, but the team is now standing by him. >> this is a difficult path to navigate regarding the judgment of how a parent disciplines his child. based on the extensive information that we have right now and what we know about adrian, not only as a person, but what he has also done for this community, we believe he deserves to play while the legal process plays out. >> now peterson admits he caused an injury to his son, saying he is not a perfect parent, but he
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is not a child abuser either. >> jean casarez shows us the disturbing photos that led to the indictment. >> reporter: do the pictures of adrian peterson's 4-year-old son tell a different story? >> right now there are many people in our country who feel it is a justified form of discipline. they learned it from their parents. they feel like they turned out okay. they don't necessarily believe the research which shows it leads to negative cops againsts. >> reporter: in a statement released monday by adrian peterson, he states i discipline my son as i was disciplined as a child. going on to admit he caused an unintentional injury. but deep in my heart i believe i could have been one of those kids lost on the streets without the discipline instilled in me by my parents and other relatives. it was addressed by whoopi
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goldberg in the premiere of the view. >> when i was a kid, parents bucked you. >> reporter: 49 of the 50 states allow for reasonable physical punishment. but peterson has been charged with child abuse. charles barkley says parents should be able to discipline their children. >> i'm from the south. whipping, we do that all the time. every black parent in the south is going to be in jail under those circumstances. >> reporter: peterson says he has met with a psychologist to learn other forms of discipline. >> is that going to be different than working in an office? absolutely. we need to teach athletes methods of cool down. things that they won't sluff off and say is a bunch of crap, but
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change their outlook and the way they feel so that they're not acting on a whim but on a well-thought-out plan. >> reporter: corporal punishment to a child, it's just wrong. >> you can't beat a kid to make them do what they want them to do! >> that's correct. >> the only thing that i'm proud about is the team that i played for, they did the right thing! take them off the field! >> reporter: but the vikings have not changed force, saying he will be a part of practices this week and most likely will play next weekend. >> take him off the dang field! >> people bring their own background and their own sense of right and wrong in parenting to that conversation. >> reporter: a conversation going on across america on the age-old debate whether sparing the rod spoils the child or
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helps the child. jean casarez, cnn, new york. >> and it is a big discussion, isn't it? i think all of us, a certain age, you know, when we were young, we would get the wooden spoon, the belt. we got beaten. you went to boarding school and they beat you up there. >> you get six across the backside. >> exactly. but you don't do it now. it's not acceptable. >> clearly some people do, and this is a discussion which they're having not just in the united states, but a discussion held in many countries around the world. new zealand has banned punishment for children, for hitting children. in australia there are limbs to h -- limits to how you can strike a child. you have to use an open hand. 90% of parents used to think it was okay to discipline a child by hitting them, now it's down to 75%. the number is falling. there are parents out there who believe it is not the example to
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set for a child. that the way you resolve your issues is to hit someone. >> that's right. now it's negotiation, discussion, you talk to children. there are other ways. of course with social media, it's going to be shared. somebody's watching always. >> the thing that struck me was when they used the word "whipping", because that sounds mean and painful. ahead, some say it is the worst religious persecution china has seen in years. we will bring you video of police crackdown on a christian church. a brand new start. your chance to rise and shine. with centurylink as your trusted technology partner, you can do just that. with our visionary cloud infrastructure, global broadband network and custom communications solutions, your business is more reliable - secure - agile. and with responsive, dedicated support, we help you shine every day of the week.
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welcome back, everyone. christianity is coming to blows with communism in china. church leaders say they are facing the worst systematic persecution they have seen in years. >> reporter: extraordinary scenes of defiance in the middle of the night. a church congregation barricading themselves in from hundreds of riot police. it's happening in the jerusalem of china. the government has demolished scores of churches and torn down hundreds of crosses.
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>> translator: what the government here is doing here is so barbaric. today we've seep the fundamental symbol of our faith violated. and it hurts us deep inside our hearts. >> reporter: he is a respected church leader. he says the faithful now live in fear. in this amateur video obtained by cnn, named the salvation church, security footage shows the police beating the faithful and dragging them away. still christians here aren't backing down. for more than two months they've had people here day and night, 24/7 guarding the gates of this church to stop the communist party from coming in and tearing down their cross. >> translator: i'm going to hold the cross in my arms and protect it says this man. we didn't steal, we didn't rob. we didn't take drugs. what did we do? >> reporter: local authorities say they are targeting all
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illegal structures. but party documents show that churches are a focus. church leaders say their crime was to become too numerous, to intimidating for a party suspicious of the faithful. recent research shows that there could soon be more christians than communist party members. and in 15 years more christians in china than anywhere else. facts disputed by the party. he says that christians have no interest in politics. but he has a warning. >> translator: the law enforcers are breaking the law themselves. if they keep doing things this way, there's a saying that those who play with fire will get burned. >> reporter: after violent clashes, salvation church members push back the police. but they came back with reenforcements several weeks later and stripped the church of
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its cross. still, the devout say they won't stop believing here because their faith is too strong. david mckenzie, cnn, china. coming up next here on cnn, it could be the largest initial public offering the world has ever seen, the numbers behind alibaba's ipo, coming up. ♪ t-mobile's network has more data capacity than verizon or at&t. it's a network designed differently. a network designed data strong.
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doubletree by hilton. where the little things mean everything. well, alibaba has raised its initial price offering price range days before it's set to go public. the company boosted its targeted ipo price range to between $66 and $68. so you do the math. >> that values alibaba at a whopping $155 billion, dwarfing ebay. it's still a long way off from facebook and google. >> you did that calculation in your head, didn't you? that's why we're journalists. blinding winds and rains
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shut down the hong kong stock exchange, if only briefly. pedram's been following all of this. it's serious stuff when they stop making money in hong kong. >> it's the second largest stock exchange in asia. so it definitely was pretty serious for a brief period there. opened up about 1:00. this is a live picture at victoria harbor in hong kong. the outer bands of the typhoon edging away. but in the early morning hours we had 600 flight cancellations. cancellations and delays, i should say. some oil rig workers brought back to the shores because of the dangers being offshore. 30,000 vessels were called back. there you see people out on the roadways. and the perspective again, there's hong kong.
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we have winds about 130 kilometers per hour which makes it a category 1 equivalent. they are not categorized numerically, but a population of about 9 million people. one of the prime tourist destinations in china and that area getting torrential rainfall with it 2 million people in its path. a lot of people stand to be impacted by this. look at the winds. some of the higher elevations, 160 kilometer winds. that is about 100 miles per hour. and the system going right into haiphong. so this storm system, although a category 1, as you can tell with what happened in portions of hong kong, had a large scale impact. let's take you across south central china. we've had torrential rainfall independent of this typhoon that
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we touched on that left 12 fatalities and land slides and severe flooding. so certainly, we do expect conditions to begin improving and a drier trend in the forecast will be returning. but the damage is significant to say the least across this region of china in recent days. here's the perspective of how much rain we have in store for areas that we just touched on. about 150 millimeters around hong kong and haikou. that's about 6 inches of rainfall coming down across these regions. the people are used to it, but that is still a lot of water. >> there has been a lot of water this season. >> there has, a surplus. they could use that in california. >> will the remnants of odile help with the drought in that part of the u.s.? >> it is actually going to go straight into eastern arizona. and where they need it is in
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western california on the coast there. and it's not going to do much if anything. and that does it for this hour on cnn. i'm rose mary church. >> and i'm john vause. we take you to scotland, two days away for that vote on independence. up next. that's right. it's just that i'm worried about you know "hidden things..." ok, why's that? no hidden fees, from the bank where no branches equals great rates.
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