tv CNNI Simulcast CNN September 21, 2014 1:00am-2:01am PDT
1:00 am
1:01 am
why he chose albania as his first stop. and welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm natalie allen. a week after isis fighters threatened to kill alan hen any, people are pleading for his life. he was part of a volunteer group delivering relief supplies when he was abducted. the father of two was on his fourth trip to syria. in a message to isis his wife said, and we quote, alan is a peaceful, selfless man who left his family and his job as a taxi driver in the u.k. to drive in a convoy all the way to syria with his muslim colleagues, friends, to help those most in need. when he was taken, he was driving an ambulance full of food and water to be handed out to anyone in need.
1:02 am
his purpose for being there was no more and no less. this was an act of sheer compassion. she goes on to say, i cannot see how it could assist any state's cause to allow the world to see a man like alan die. i have been trying to communicate with the islamic state and the people holding alan. i have sent really important messages but they have not been responded to. i pray that the people holding alan respond to my messages and contact me before it is too late. when they hear this message, i implore the people of the islamic state to see it in their hearts to release my husband, alan henney. isis vowed to kill henning if the united states continued airstrikes. in a plea to isis, a muslim doctor who was a member of henning's group said the aide volunteer had nothing to do with the policies. she speaks to cnn about her colleague and his abduction.
1:03 am
>> is this the first time you've been away from them? >> yeah. >> reporter: taxi driver alan henning on a mercy mission to syria. that was christmas day. >> you got some presents from other members of the convoy, didn't you? >> i got a nice t-shirt some aftershave and some chocolates and some biscuits. they're all great lads. >> father of two, henning, was the only nonmuslim on the british aid convoy. the doctor and her family drove with him. >> he really wanted to make sure that he was counted as somebody that got up and did something, not just made a single donation and sat in the comfort of their own home. >> members of the 50 vehicle convoy affection nately named him gadget. >> uncle gadget as my children
1:04 am
called him, he traveled with us on several convey vois, has a love for all things that are technical and he really was -- is the guy that fixes everything. >> here we go. five is through, we're behind him. >> the convoy was taking ambulances to help syrian ambulances caught up in the war. henning dedicated his vehicle to a doctor reportedly murdered a week earlier. >> to save the life of one is to save the whole of man kind. it's one of my favorite quotes. it was a quote that alan was helping to put on the side of the ambulance. >> at the turkey/syria border, henning agreed to cross over into the battle zone with a ten person advance party. they recorded their cautious progress greeting refugees as they went. moments after that video was taken dr. shamila received a
1:05 am
desperate call. >> we received a phone call about half an hour later. it was very distressed. distraught individual on the other end of the phone to say that gadget had been taken off the -- armed gunmen had come in, masked armed gunmen had come in with the description of the group that are holding him and they had come in and they had questioned everybody. they had asked everybody for their passports and their phones and they had given the passports and the phones back but they singled out gadget and they took him. and this was something that we thought was just a temporary measure and that they were just thinking with him being a nonmuslim and being visibly english, that they would just question him further and then they would let him go. >> but as isis and rival rebel
1:06 am
factions clashed, that didn't happen. >> they just dropped a bomb here. they just dropped a bomb not far away from us. as you can see, it's not very, very far from us. >> the convoy advance team captured this video as it fled back to the border. back in henning's hard scrabble hometown in northern england, well wishers have tied yellow ribbons to lamp posts and street signs. none of his work mates at the mini cab company nor any of the neighbors down his street are talking. all are hoping. now with isis threatening to execute henning, there's a sense time is short. >> really difficult. i -- i'm just dreading, you know, we know that the deadline's coming up. we know that we've got, you know, a very small -- you know,
1:07 am
the time is running out. >> but nobody is giving up. >> i have a message for isis. i would implore you and beg of you, please spare the life of this innocent man. he is not part of your struggle. he is not to blame for the actions of western governments that you fight. >> i ask her how we should think of henning in his hour of need? >> just that smile and his -- his concern and care for everyone around him. i mean, beautiful, beautiful open heart. >> karl penhall, cnn, england. >> and there are more people pleaing for his life. three muslim leaders in england have released a video calling for alan henning's immediate release. they say executing the aide worker would be against the tenant of islam.
1:08 am
>> no matter what our differences, the killing of an innocent man is not allowed in the religion of alla and the religion of islam. however strong we feel about western foreign policy, this killing will not help anyone bring closer a solution to their grievances. in other news we're following, the white house is dealing with the aftermath of a second security incident just one day after someone breached the building. the driver failed to stop at the entrance saturday. the man eventually got out of his car. he was then a rusted and charged with unlawful entry. the man tried to enter the white house on foot from another gate. in the earlier incident friday as you can see, a man running towards the white house, authorities now say the man who jumed the white house fence and made it into the building was, indeed, armed. he was carrying a knife.
1:09 am
according to a washington post report, when the breach happened no guard dogs were released to chase him down. the intruder is set to appear before a u.s. magistrate on monday. the search continues in the state of pennsylvania for a man suspected of senseless killing of a state trooper. police have listed a shelter in place order for area residents but are still recommending people stay in their homes. investigators believe this man, 31-year-old eric frein, killed one police officer and shot and wounded another in an apparent ambush september 12th. friday, the last time there was a credible sighting of the suspect, officials said they had surrounded a property where they believed he was. they also said officers had exchanged gunfire with someone they believed was frein, but police are now only saying that the search is ongoing. 400 officers were involved in the man hunt saturday. jason carroll has more on how the operation is being carried
1:10 am
out. >> at this point investigators are trying to do everything they can to narrow their search, to shrink the search for eric frein. what they've basically been doing is working in a grid-like sort of system eliminating places that he's been, trying to cut off places where he could potentially go once again trying shrink that area where he could be moving around. they believe ever since thursday that he was in the area. he's been described as a survivalist but, you know, there is a theory that even if he is a survivalist, even if he does know this back wooded area very, very well, he still at some point might need food, might need water, might need shelter. that's what investigators are going to be banking on. they know he's already proven to be deadly. they're going to do everything in his power to catch him before he hurts someone else. back to you. >> jason carroll there for us from pennsylvania.
1:11 am
>> causing additional concern, they say frein has expressed in the pact the desire to commit mass acts of murder. fung wong has already hit the philippines. it's still on the go. where is it going next ivan cabrera has the latest. sierra leone undergoes an ebola education campaign. what's your most favorite of all? hmm...the kind i have with you. me too.
1:14 am
results of tropical storm fung-wong. as you can see, causing more dangerous weather in asia. this was the scene saturday in taiwan where police were on the scene of a bridge that collapsed from the heavy rain. flood warnings also have been posted. the system battered parts of the philippines as we showed you friday leaving at least seven people dead there, 200,000 in temporary shelters and our meteorologist ivan cabrera is tracking the storm. the point of the picture i remember, ivan, from the philippines were the two boys hanging onto the basketball net that shows you how high the water came there from fung-wong. >> yeah, the philippines meteorological association tells you when they describe the warning as to neck, to chest, to waist. they literally put warnings out like that just to let you know how high the water is going to come wherever you are. there were a lot of to neck warnings out there.
1:15 am
right now though conditions have improved markedly for lausanne here. we are now focusing in on taiwan and with good reason. the tropical storm fung-wong has been dropping a bit of these totals. they're mind blowing as well. 711 millimeters of water. that's 28 inches, 500 millimeters, 20 inches of rainfall. this is a 24 hour total. keep that in mind. that's what we were telling you about yesterday. because of the tow pop gra if i and the tropical moisture picking up. that's the southern tip of taiwan. the northern half is yet to come. we have more rain on the way. of course, before it hit taiwan it hit the philippines and these are some of the numbers town there, anywhere from 8 to 16 plus inches of rainfall. look at this thing, it's going to bisect taiwan. it made landfall hours ago. it will go north across the
1:16 am
northern taiwan, north of taipei and head into china with very heavy rainfall over the next few days. then the moisture gets transported. eventually japan is not a tropical system. important is the forecast, this, the numbers as far as how much additional rainfall we can expect. these are just some of the general numbers here depending on where you are located in taiwan because of the mountains, because of the terrain you could get significant heavier fog than what we're showing here, 100 to 200 millimeters of rainfall. even china, up towards wenzhou, we're talking 6 plus inches of rainfall there. as far as the bigger pictures here, that's our tropical system. we do have, of course, usual disturbances here along the intertropical conversion zone. we always monitor those for development. some of the models say it's going to the north and it looks
1:17 am
like it will be a good hook to the north and east away from land masses which is fantastic but for now still under the gun. taiwan, keep you posted on conditions. >> ivan, thank you. see you in a bit. well, months of political gridlock are apparently over in afghanistan. president for candidate have recently signed a unity government agreement. gahni will be signed as president. no ruling on what abdullah will be. both men had accused the other of election fraud. in nigeria an attack by the boko haram militant group has left dozens of people dead. the assault on a market in a border state happened thursday, but a mobile shutdown slowed down the passing of information. witnesses say the militants were dressed in police or military uniforms and fired rocket
1:18 am
propelled grenades. sierra leone is on the final day of a three-day nationwide lockdown to help curb the spread of ebola. the government has ordered people to stay inside their homes while 30,000 volunteers go door to door to educate people on the virus. but the aide agency, doctors without borders, has criticized that move. it says the lockdown is unlikely to stop the spread of the disease. health workers in sierra leone say the quarantine will help clear up this information. >> so far we have the vision that will continue. ebola is real, ebola kills. therefore we have to take all protective measures from the minister of health. we have to act as one and make sure that we believe because the reason why the ebola really spread is because of denial.
1:19 am
>> there has been some denial and so much fear. since the outbreak began, more than 2600 people in southwest africa have died and some 5,000 reported ebola cases. well, it's been a year to the day that kenya was changed by one of the most horrific attacks in recent years. coming up here, we ask how has the country been able to move on? we'll have that. our new formula not only cleans and freshens but also softens your carpet so it's always inviting. resolve. a carpet that welcomes you. oh no. who are you? daddy, this is blair, he booked this room with priceline express deals and saved a ton. i got everything i wanted. i always do. he seemed nice.
1:21 am
those pictures may look familiar to you from a year ago. a ceremony will take place later today in kenya to honor those killed in the west gate shopping center attack from a year ago. four al shabaab gunman stormed nairobi's west gate mall on a busy saturday afternoon killing a total of 57 people and wounding hundreds more. members of the terror group claim the attack was done in revenge for kenyan military operations in somalia. it took kenyan security four days to bring the siege to an end. they were later criticized for their slow response and some soldiers were seen on security cameras looting the mall after the attack. today the west gate mall is still closed with no word on when or even if it will ever reopen. those who survived are still
1:22 am
struggling to come to terms with that assault. but little did the attackers know that their horrific acts of violence would bring with it an unintended consequence. selfless heroism. we spoke with one man who risked his life to save others. >> it's been a change of attitude for people. we actually managed as kenyans to bring our hands together and stick together. i was part of the westgate rescue. i had a family tragedy. i lost my 15-month daughter in a car accident. that just happened three weeks before that.
1:23 am
she did motivate me, my daughter, to go in there and help out wherever i could. as soon as i reached there, i started asking around, where is help needed? between us and a few police officers and a few other civilians, we got together, joined forces and went and started combing the basement and every other location that we could reach to get out any survivors and get them out. the most difficult part was trying to pass certain areas. we had bodies of dead people who are shot and you can see they were trying to make their way out, trying to run for cover and they didn't really make it. we had to walk over them to get inside to actually get those guys out of the place.
1:24 am
seeing quite a bit of dead bodies, putting away little children bodies into cars, really difficult. quite traumatizing. we had food cooking 24 hours, we had tea, coffee. everything. everybody was pitching in something or the other. bringing in water, people are bringing in food, bread, just so that these few days that the officers were actually doing the entire operation were well fed, well taken care of so they can carry out their work. it was surprising how we could as kenyans get together in a few moments and hold strong throughout the entire process. >> one of the heroes of that story. our reporter is in london with us now and it was a horrendous day. oh, my goodness. you were there.
1:25 am
i was here when it was breaking out and we went through it live trying to figure out what was going on. as you said before, there's so much that has not been resolved. no justice against those who caused it. >> there is a trial that is ongoing expected to resume on the tuesday so a little over a year after the attacks, but there is a sense that the state's case is not extraordinarily strong. if it was, we would have been so much further along. this trial has continuously been adjourned. the men involved in it believe that they just -- well, their defense lawyers say that they were just at the wrong place at the wrong time. and even if there is a compelling case that the state will be able to build, why has it taken it so long to get there? these are the questions that we ask all the time by those
1:26 am
impacted by the attack. there are so few people in nairobi who were not in some way impacted by this attack, natalie. why has it taken so long? why has there not been a hearing by the government? the government promised there would be a committee formed to question a lot of -- the many ways in which the government responses are lacking. why hasn't that moved forward? why isn't there anything from the forensic investigation? there is so little that is tangible. so little that people can look to saying i am close to discovering why this happened to me and my family and that's really been the biggest barrier for kenyans in terms of finding some kind of closure in this and what they've done as the interview we there was saying, they've turned to themselves and they've looked within themselves to try and take that healing forward, natalie. >> i can't imagine, too, what it's like to have to see that mall every day as they go on with their lives. it is still closed down.
1:27 am
no one knows if it will ever open again. who would want to go there as well. it was such a popular place for people there. what about the bigger picture of the shabab threat? african union forces have moved into shabab territory. are they making in roads? >> they are. they are about two turns away from shabab hartland which is where the al shabaab leader who was killed recently, that's where he was struck. also, a lot of the high level leadership come together. effectively their capitol city. defenses within the next week or two we will see a decisive push. given how weak the kenyan response has been domestically inside kenya, the question that's being asked now is even if al shabaab are pushed out of somalia, when the kenyans have again and again been caught out in terms of their border security with somalia, does that just push the problem back into
1:28 am
kenya given that there are a lot of concerns about the radicalization along the coast in mumbasa. if kenya is not able to put its domestic house in order in terms of security, will they really be able to reap many benefits. you talked about people having to walk past westgate still in the heart of nairobi, it is really difficult. a lot of kenyan friends i was speaking to about how they are dealing with this anniversary coming up. one of them said something to me, natalie, that was really touching. he said, i still look for exit signs whenever i go anywhere in nairobi. i think that's going to take a long time to go away. >> absolutely. that is certainly a poignant expression of his fear. well, thank you. as we mentioned, there will be a candlelight vigil later today in kenya. we'll cover that for you and have it here on cnn. we have this jun in.
1:29 am
cnn reuters reporting a blast near the egyptian foreign ministry in cairo. a witness who heard the explosion also said sirens were heard in the area. we have very little information right now. that's all we have but we're trying to dig into this story and get you more as we learn more about it. new fighting in syria has caused another wave of refugees. 60,000, 60,000 came over the turkish border in one day walking with everything they have in their arms. we'll go live to iraq for the latest on the fighting and the humanitarian crisis that continues to grow right after this.
1:32 am
viewers in the united states and around the world, i'm natalie allen. you're watching cnn. in another security incident at the white house, authorities arrested a driver who failed to stop at the entrance to the complex saturday. he was charged with unlawful entry. and on friday, a man with a knife made it inside the white house after jumping the fence. more than 400 police officers searched saturday for a man suspected of killing a state trooper in pennsylvania. authorities are recommending people stay in their homes as the man hunt continues. police are urgently trying to find 31-year-old eric frein wanted for the september 13th ambush killing of a state trooper. another state trooper was also shot and wounded. the wife of isis hostage alan henning is pleading that her husband be released. in a message directly to the militants she says her husband was delivering aid when he was
1:33 am
captured this past december in syria. isis has vowed to kill henning if the u.s. air strikes continue. in addition to alan henning we were wondering how many other westerners are being held by isis. well, at least two unidentified americans that we know of, according to cnn national security analyst peter bergen, and there are others from two other countries, two italian women as well as a dane and japanese national are said to be among the group's newest captives. also, some 20 journalist sz as missing in syria. as the militant group makes gains across syria and iraq, tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee. turkey says more than 60 thousand syrian kurds have crossed into turkish territory this friday. as video shows you, they're carrying everything they can on their backs.
1:34 am
isis has captured dozens of villages in northern syria over the past few days. for more on this desperate refugee situation, cnn's anna coran is joining us from irbile. we saw ten seconds of video there. just one snippet of the people getting out pulling and carrying everything. holding all of their children. it's unreal what they've been going through. anything to get away from isis, anna. >> reporter: yeah, that's right, natalie. absolutely heartbreaking images that we are seeing. u.n. is telling us that 70,000, that is the number of refugees that has crossed the border from syria in the last few days. they're trying to flee to safety. that fighting obviously started several days ago. isis militants taking over more
1:35 am
than 60 of the kurdish villages in northern syria. fighting is still extremely intense in that area. the kurdish militia saying that they are going to fight to the death. they are not going to retreat from these areas, but certainly that is not helping the situation because these refugees just want to get out. initially, natalie, on friday turkish authorities were not allowing them to cross the border. interestingly enough, there were television cameras on them. they were showing these live. we're seeing some hours later turkish authorities relented and allowed the refugees. this takes the number to more than 800,000 refugees for people fleeing to turkey.
1:36 am
>> and the power of the video image and getting those pictures out and hopefully encouraged turkey to help these people just standing there stuck. what do we know about the city of cobani and any word on whether airstrikes are king though the french just joined in that campaign? >> yeah. the french have joined in the campaign. the french have said they're only going to conduct airstrikes in iraq. they're not prepared to go into syria. obviously the international community is being called on to intervene and stop a massacre, potential massacre from unfolding in cobani. there are reports for the united states to start launching airstrikes into syria. that has not happened. the united states taking its time gathering more intelligence as to what targets they can
1:37 am
strike. certainly the president is saying here in kurdistan that the international community needs to go along. there's ethnic cleansing going on and something needs to be done to stop it. this is what took place in northern iraq last month when isis descended on the village of kin jar. tens of thousands of yazidis fleeing to the mountains trying to escape the genocide. sadly, many were killed and many women were taken, natalie. we were yesterday at a refugee camp here in northwestern islam. one of the camps that has just thousands and thousands of people. we spoke to many who have escaped, many whose wives, young girls were taken by the isis
1:38 am
militants and sadly what we are hearing is that these women are being used as sex slaves. they're being sold off into forced marriages. it really is a baron act that is happening. it's what's taking place on the ground here in iraq and also in syria. >> yes, absolutely. you know, you hear the stories. they're just horrific to hear and there's so much that we haven't seen or experienced but we thank you for being there for us live from irbil, anna coran. former u.s. american president is weighing in on the western response to the isis threat. cnn's fareed zakaria host of his own show here asked former u.s. president bill clinton about whether the american strategy to take out isis would succeed. >> i saw you on the daily show say you thought we had to respond to these brutal
1:39 am
executions of americans but i want to press you. isn't that what isis wants? wasn't the purpose of the execution to bait us? >> no, but there's a difference in, for example, using argted drones and airstrikes as we did against an al qaeda effectively for years to try to take down their leadership and infrastructure and let them know they can't just decapitate people for the cheap thrill of the global media response and horrify people and get away with it and getting bogged down in the kind of war they would like us to get bogged down in that costs us a lot of lives and a lot of treasured and inevitably lead to greater civilian casualties, which is why i think the president's strategy has a chance of succeeding, because the iraqi government is now more inclusive than it has been since the fall of saddam hussein and
1:40 am
that seems to be awakening, if you will, the suny tribal leaders in fighting. we know the kurds and peshmerga are willing to fight. if we can help them and support them, i think the larger fight against isis can continue as it should, as a local struggle for the freedom and liberty of the people. >> you can hear more from the former president on fareed zakaria that airs today as 10:00 a.m. in new york and 7:00 p.m. in hong kong for our international audience. in the u.s. state of virginia concern is growing for 18-year-old university student hannah graham who vanished more than a week ago. police on saturday said they want to speak with the man they've identified as jesse matthew and that they believe he's the man seen right here in that surveillance video. police say witnesses reported seeing the young woman with a
1:41 am
man who fit matthew's description. with more on that and the search for hannah graham, here's jean calavarez. >> university of virginia students as well as others who live and work in this community want to help bring the 18-year-old sophomore back home to her family. >> so we're going to just -- >> reporter: a new day. the focus filled by hannah graham. >> i would want people out looking for one of my girls if this was -- if this was my daughter. >> primarily look for clothes, to look for items that she might have had. we know she had a phone with her. check for those things. >> have you suggested we look in large areas? >> reporter: over 1,000 volunteers from the charlotte area came out in force looking in residential areas, abandoned
1:42 am
buildings, and construction sites. pointing flashlights in manholes and drains all to help investigators figure out what happened to the 18-year-old university of virginia sophomore. >> everyone thinks their school is a bubble and nobody could do anything badly. >> reporter: friday authorities said they are interested in a man last seen with graham. >> an additional video captured at a store on the mall in the 300 block shows that same black male with dress locks with his hands around hannah graham's waist. we know from witness accounts that they entered the restaurant. we know that he purchased alcohol there and we know that hannah graham was with him. we also know that within 15 minutes they were gone from that bar and that his car was seen leaving the area on video and we have every reason to believe that miss graham was in that vehicle. >> reporter: police say the man is 32 years old, black, 6'2", 270 pounds with dreadlocks. authorities say they have searched his car and apartment,
1:43 am
saw him, talked to him, but still no arrests. >> is there probable cause to arrest him? no. there was no probable cause to arrest him. was there legally sufficient legal basis to detain him? not in the opinion of the ranking supervisor on the scene. >> no official suspects but plenty of leads as the search for hannah gram goes into next week. >> officially it's a missing person's investigation but the search location has people wondering if it's much more. >> and we will certainly keep tabs on that search there for you. coming next here, the pope is asking everyone to try to get along. we'll tell you why he's taking that message to albania where he has just arrived. from whole grain oat foods like cheerios can help lower cholesterol. thank you!
1:44 am
1:46 am
reporting from albania, that is the pope about to get into his pope mobile and greet the people of albania. as we mentioned, he's making a one day visit to albania. his first trip to a european country outside of italy. he plans to celebrate mass in the albanian capitol. that's where he is now. and bring what the vatican is calling a message of hope. albania is mostly muslim. also, it's just a one-day trip.
1:47 am
the pope being a hard working fellow is packing a lot into this one day. following the pope's sunday trip cnn's vatican analyst, celia gallagher, as we look for the pictures of the pope setting out, let's talk about why he chose albania. this is certainly a country that's suffered over freedom of religion. >> reporter: that's right, natalie. it's an interesting, not so obvious choice for his first visit to a european country. one might think of france or germany or other powerhouses but instead he chose albania. there are a couple of reasons for it. one is as you say they suffered from 50 years under a communist dictatorship which eventually outlawed the practice of
1:48 am
religion. it was the first atheist state written into the constitution. it was illegal to practice religion. their churches, their mosques, albania is 56% muslim were either raised to the ground or were transformed into cinemas, other public places and importantly religious people were imprisoned and in many cases killed, killed by firing squa squads. there were some very important martyrdoms that happened. they have pictures, posted photos of those martyrs who were killed during that period. the pope wants to go and honor those people that were killed under the communist regime. right until 1991 they were under dictatorship. the pope wants to encourage the rebirth of christianity in
1:49 am
alban albania. it is a majority muslim country so the pope's message is to highlight the fact that there are muslims, catholics, and/or thou -- and orthodox christians working together. so the peaceful could existenc one of the messages today. natalie? >> that's certainly a message that will be so important as this country has rebounded and overcome so much. let's talk about security because there he is in his open air vehicle, which is how he wants it. very much up close with the people. this trip right here follows some comments made by an iraqi official visited rome that concerns many as far as security. can you elaborate on that? >> that's right, natalie. recently, last week, the iraqi ambassador to the vatican gave an interview in which he said he wouldn't rule out the pope being a target for isis.
1:50 am
this comment was taken by some in the press to mean that he was talking about some kind of specific threat to the pope. the vatican quickly denied that there was any specific threat to the pope at the moment and they said there were no new security measures being taken either at st. pete terse or indeed for this trip to albania. whenever the pope travels security is the major concern but it is for the pope at least a secondary concern because his first point is that he wants to be out with the people. for that reason, the vatican said nothing has changed in terms of papal travel. he's traveling in the same pope mobile. we'll see him getting out to touch the crowd a little bit. he does not want to have any kind of barrier between himself and the people himself. it's the purpose of these trips to go. the pope is called the holy father and he takes it seriously to go and be among the people.
1:51 am
>> look at the throngs of people appreciating his video and the cell phones up in the air. we look forward to seeing what his message is about the importance of people from all faiths living together in unity and we'll report that to our viewers when he does speak. thank you, deal yeah gallagher for us, out front. straight ahead here on cnn, it looks like more umbrellas than kegs, that's a shame, at this year's oktoberfest in munich. and post your job to over 30 of the web's leading job boards with a single click; then simply select the best candidates from one easy to review list. you put up one post and the next day you have all these candidates. makes my job a lot easier. [ female announcer ] over 100,000 businesses have already used zip recruiter and now you can use zip recruiter for free at a special site for tv viewers; go to ziprecruiter.com/offer5.
1:53 am
1:54 am
overseas visit, but as you know, she is expecting their second child and she's staying home after experiencing morning sickness. earlier this month the royal couple announced they're expecting their second child. as you may remember, she had severe morning sickness during her first pregnancy so we wish her well. her husband's nice to stand in for his wife. on to oktoberfest. rainfall on the first day in germany. let's find out what the rest of the weekend will be because you know these people really don't care whether they drink in the rain or not, do they? >> hey, listen, rain or shine, 7 million liters of beer will be consumed in the next few days in munich. yes, sometimes when it's raining you want to drink a little bit more. here's the forecast as we move in. look at the rain moving across southern germany. we find munich, we'll post it for you. you'll see some scattered
1:55 am
showers moving through. nothing torrential. a good flow coming from the north seas. that's another impulse of activity that's going to be coming in. it will translate in the form of more showers. see the 48 hour forecast, just kind of waves with the flow to the north here's -- here. a little rainier than we want. next week, looking dry. if you're headed into mid week with temperatures, it will be between 20 and 25 degrees with overnight lows, well, getting out of the single digits. down south, showers rolling through the baltics. it's missing the pope now. that action is east of croatia picking up 50 to 60 millimeters of rainfall. unsettled down south. then of course we have the front coming in with more rain to the north. that's the way it's going to go. as far as temperatures, not bad at all. upper teens to lower 20s. if you like it hot or at least
1:56 am
warm anyway, 28 degrees down towards madrid. natalie. >> thank you, ivan. i was at oktoberfest once. crazy time in munich gentleman the dress code at one canadian energy firm took a dramatic change last week. take a look ♪ it's fun to stay at the ymca >> everyone gets the ymca. they're not even going the right way. we don't care. look at that. 542 of them showed up dressed as batman. they kind of got us there. this was all to keep the caped crusaders for charity. the history's largest gathering. the old lord, 250. there they are, 542. they got the record. they're having fun at work. coming up in the next hour of our special coverage, thousands around the world will join in today's people climate march, the global initiative to fight climate change. we'll introduce you to one
1:57 am
fisherman in the united states who says he's already feeling the effects of it, farming for oysters, or trying to farm for oysters. he'll be at that march in new york. york. we'll have the story after this. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com so softens your carpet so it's always inviting. resolve. a carpet that welcomes you. from a simple misstep, to tripping over a rug, to just losing their balance. and not being able to get up from a fall can have serious, lifetime consequences. being prepared is important. philips lifeline with autoalert is more than just a medical alert button. it's an advanced fall detection system designed to get you help quickly. if you fall and you're unable to push your button, the fall detection technology within autoalert can trigger the button to automatically place a call for help. our us-based staff will make sure you get the help you need right away. this is philips lifeline. we received a fall-detected signal. do you need help? call now about philips lifeline with autoalert,
1:58 am
the only button with philips' advanced fall detection technology. we'll send you this free information kit about the importance of getting help quickly, should you happen to fall. when i fell, i couldn't press the button. i blacked out. and so having lifeline with autoalert really saved me. if they don't push the button, they're not able to push the button, it takes over and gets them the help that they need. multiple sensors inside autoalert can recognize the differences between your everyday movements and a fall. so if a fall does happen, and you're unable to push your button, autoalert can detect it and automatically place a call for help. autoalert is comfortable yet discreet, so you can wear it at all times. and because it's waterproof, you can even wear it in the shower or bathtub where many serious falls happen. over seven million people have benefitted from the lifeline service. no wonder it's recommended by over 100,000 healthcare professionals nationwide. now is the time to be prepared. sooner or later, everyone falls. make sure you have autoalert
1:59 am
2:00 am
this 3457b right here, alan henning, as many as others who have not met him is calling for the release of him. one year after the terror of kenya's westgate mall attack, we look back on how that country is coping. and later, tens of thousands around the world are rallying today to fight climate change. we'll meet one of those people and find out why he's inspired
95 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNN (San Francisco)Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1355515774)