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tv   CNNI Simulcast  CNN  October 26, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am PDT

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hello, and welcome to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm rosemary church. ahead this hour, a heated political battle in the u.s. over what to do with health care workers returning from africa's ebola hot zones. a nurse tells cnn her basic human rights have been violated. more grief and heartbreak in the u.s. state of washington. the shooting at a high school claims another victim. and brazil's president ekes out a win for a second term, but that may have been the easy part. well, the debate over ebola
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policy in the u.s. is intensifying. the governors of new york and new jersey have a new policy. a mandatory quarantine for health workers returning from west africa. it comes after a new york doctor tested positive for ebola. he had been treating patients in guinea. the white house is against mandatory quarantines. new york's governor softened his stance a bit sunday and allowed workers to be quarantined at home in certain cases. >> we're staying one step ahead. we're doing everything possible. some people will say we're being too cautious. i'll take that criticism, because that's better than the alternative. >> aaron mcpike reports the white house has made its concerns clear to the states involved. >> reporter: we have heard from administration officials all weekend who are criticizing new york, new jersey and those other states for imposing these quarantine rules for health care workers who are returning from
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west africa. that's including u.s. ambassador to the u.n. samantha power who is in west africa this week as well as mr. fouchy. >> you don't want to make a negative change on something that might havebad consequences. it is important that you do it based on scientific evidence and data. and it tells us who can transmit and who can't. >> reporter: and we also heard from the white house late sunday. we got a statement from a senior administration official. i'm going to read part of that statement to you. the official says, quote, we have let the governors of new york, new jersey and other states know that we have concerns with the unintended consequences of policies not grounded in science may have on efforts to combat ebola at its source in west africa. that official says they've also let the states know they are working on new guidelines for health care workers rushing from
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that region. >> erin mcpike reporting there. one nurse condemns the policy after returning from sierra leone. she was put in quarantine and has no indication of what's going to happen next. >> i heard from my mother last night who called my concerned and said governor christi jue j said in an interview that are you quote-unquote obviously ill. this is frustrating. firstly, i don't think he's a doctor, and secondly he's never ladies on my, and thirdly, i have been asymptomatic since i've been here. i feel physically completely strong and emotionally exhausted. but for him to say i'm obviously ill, what does that mean? i don't understand what obviously ill means. but i am here to tell you that i
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am completely final physically and being held here is just, i -- >> and what is your understanding about how long you, what have they told you about tomorrow and the day after that and the day after that? >> caller: this is the other concern that i have. i have not been communicated a clear plan. my quarantine order, written by the new jersey health commissioner and even to this day no one has told me what it means or what's the plan. no one has told me how long it will last. i don't know if i'm going to be re-tested, and if so, why i would be re-tested. i'm completely asymptomatic, and the test is not even accurate if you don't have symptoms. and yesterday i spoke with the assistant health commissioner, christopher, i believe is his name. and i told him one thing. i said the only thing i have to say to you is i want an answer
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for what is my clear plan. no one has communicated with me. you have, you know, put me in a unit, without communicating medically or public health, you know, scientifically logical chain of events that need to happen next. and this, to me, is just completely unacceptable. >> and later this hour, we will hear more from this nurse about her living conditions in isolation. well, meantime, a 18 year old who was in isolation in an australian hospital has tested negative for ebola. she arrived in australia from guinea almost two weeks ago. she'd been under home quarantine until she developed a temperature and was put in isolation. results of a second ebola test are expected wednesday. well, america's ambassador to the u.n. is now in guinea. it's samantha power's first stop on a tour of the countries
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hardest hit by ebola as she assesses the global response to the virus. >> together, we can beat this epidemic. we have beaten every ebola epidemic in history, and we will do so, if we dramatically increase our involvement, and our engagement. >> the world health organization counts more than 10,000 confirmed or suspected cases of ebola in west africa. more than 4900 have been fatal. it's feared the real numbers could be much higher. the vast majority of those cases and deaths are in liberia, sierra leone and guinea. one of the four u.s. high school students wounded during a lunch time shooting on friday has died. 14 year old giez sore yaw know died. the family plans to donate her organs. three other teenagers are still
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in intensive care at local hospitals. police have not given a motive for jaylen fryberg's shooting. zoe galasso died shortly after the shootings. her friends tell us how sad they are. >> i want everybody to know she was an amazing person and she's going to be missed. and i just can't imagine how we're going to live without her. she was so beautiful and so funny and amazing. and we all loved her so much. >> i don't have any anger towards him. i just don't know what happened. this just doesn't make any sense. none of this makes sense. they were all very good friends. they were great friends. there's no explanation. like, he snapped for whatever reason. and it just doesn't make any
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sense. that's what makes it so hard. >> it is so shocking. and students at the school say one of their faculty members, meagan siller burger is a hero. they say the first-year teacher ran toward fryberg and stopped his rampage. we have more on what she did that may have saved lives. >> reporter: very harrowing account, i spoke to the leader of the local education association. he tells me that the teacher was in a nearby office, near the cafeteria, heard the shots, ran into the cafeteria, saw students down, was wondering what was going on and then confronted the shooter in some fashion. according to witnesses, the teacher put her hand on the shooter's arm and moments later, the shooter took his own life. at this point, the teacher not really wanting to say anything, and you can imagine why that would be the case. >> the school will be closed all this week while the students and
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community mourn. mental health counselor have also been made available. well, coming up next, a south african football star shot dead. police say the suspects are on the run. we have more details on this shocking killing. plus outrage in the west bank over teenager's death. what israelis are saying about it. the "r" word i want good digestive health... ... but i don't want to think about the word regularity. benefiber helps support good digestive health... and maintain... the "r" word. you know what it tastes like in water? water! except this water makes you feel great. benefiber. now in stick packs. i lost my sight in afghanistan, but it doesn't hold me back. i go through periods where it's hard to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. non-24 is a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70% of people who are totally blind.
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well, shocking news out of south africa, the 27 year old captain and goalkeeper of the south african national football team has been shot and killed. police say he was in a house with several other people when it happened. three of the suspects fled. the orlando pirates football club issued a statement claiming the untimely death of their number one goalkeeper. they will hold a news conference monday morning. well, for more on this, i want to bring in sports journalist graham jaffe. thank you for talking with us about this. the nation is in shock at the tragic loss. what are people saying about the circumstances surrounding his death? >> caller: it seems to me from what i'm reading so far and having seen some of the quotes from the police commissioners. it seems to have been an
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attempted house robbery that's gone all wrong. we hear about it so often in south africa these days. we don't have to go too far back to the oscar pistorias trial when that was alleged to have been an intruder. we don't know how much more we can digest as a nation. we had a former track star died in a car accident on friday. we've had the objectiscar trial now this news that greets south africa on monday morning. >> at 27 years of age, what is this young man's legacy, and how will his team cope with his sudden death? >> caller: i doubt any of the players can be coping very well at all. i was such a well-respected guy. a fantastic goalkeeper, a leader. he'd just become the captain, and when you look at the quotes from the pirates players, from his players and players worldwide, that they had the
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utmost respect for just a fantastic player and a good, good guy, and it's a senseless murder, another senseless murder in south africa. >> and graham, police are saying they will bring his killers to justice and are even offering a reward at this time. how likely is it that they will track down his killers? >> caller: you know, rosemary, i think, when it comes to these high-profile cases, it seems like the police are more, a lot stronger and a lot more determined to catch the killers, you know. a rye waeward at the end of the is not justice. at the end of the day, a life has been lost, a family has now been destroyed by these tragic circumstances, and i go back to two years ago, a good friend of mine and heavyweight boxing champion, cory saunders murdered over two years ago, and it upsets the whole society. and really, it's an absolute tragedy. >> and how is the nation digesting this?
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>> caller: not very well. you know, as i said, we've had so much in the loss the last couple weeks. crime in south africa is rampant. there's no question about that. we get these police figures sometimes that we just wonder if the crime figures are ever right. a lot of people in the country are stopping to either report crime because they believe that nothing's really being done about it. i just hope, you know, it's a horrible thing to happen, and i hope that something like this will bring the government to realize that crime is destroying this country. crime and corruption is destroying south africa. >> thank you for joining us. palestinians are angry in the west bank after the killing of a teenager that was said to be posing a threat. erin mclaughlin has more. >> reporter: these are the last moments of the 15-year-old.
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on the edge of his village in the west bank. israeli soldiers shot the palestinian-american dead. >> a real bullet. not a rebel bullet or tear gas, a real bullet. >> people say the clashes like this occur on a weekly basis. and local authorities and family members tell me that it was around here that orwa hamad was throwing stones. but the israeli military tells a different story. the military declined cnn's interview request but issued a statement saying the israeli soldiers had prejentvented an attack. they say he was hurling a molotov cocktail on road 60. they eliminated the threat by firing at the perpetrator and
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confirming a hit. the incident is under review. the u.s. state department also released a statement, calling for a speedy and transparent investigation. orwa's family says he came to the west bank to learn about his religion and culture. i was staying in a palestinian village wedged between ais raily military base and an israeli settlement. the frustrations of people here are felt throughout the west bank. >> palestinians are in the street protesting this continued occupation and all of its variables that impact them on a daily basis. and so when they are out to express this frustration, they are constantly met with force, excessive force. >> reporter: in the past six months, at least ten palestinian minors have been killed in clarks with israeli forces. the youngest was 11 years old.
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>> this young man, the whole town, the whole neighborhood, the whole area, the whole state is with him, because he's an innocent young child. >> reporter: the death of orwa hamad, a footnote to a conflict that seemingly has no end. cnn, west bank. at least 30 girls have been kidnapped by boko haram. it happened over the weekend when a town was stormed. they believe the children will be used as foot soldiers. hope is fading for the release of the schoolgirls taken in april. we return to weather now,
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and a tropical cyclone in the arabian sea may make a very rare landfall in the days ahead. we turn to ivan cabrera. >> they don't form here too often. we have a very small window for that to happen at the beginning or before the monsoon. and right after that. and so we are now post-monsoon here. and this is the time when we can get them developing here. but they usually don't develop in the arabian sea. we have more activity in the bay of bengal. but this is tropical cyclone nilofar. if you're more familiar with the western pacific basin, this would be the equivalent of a typhoon or a hurricane. but it's the same tropical feature here, an intense area of low pressure that continues to organize here, moving north-northwesterly at 7 kilometers per hour. so arabian peninsula, there's
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oman. it will get close enough to oman for some gusts and rainfall. then it will screech to a halt and head off to the north and east and curve out and be impacting with pakistan and india. this is a 48-hour forecast. the core dangerous winds should remain offshore. that's an island there getting the worse of it as far as very gusty winds in the next 24-48 hours. it has potential to peak in intensity between a category 2 and 3 by the time we get into 48 hours, but that will happen over water. so as it begins to turn towards pakistan and india, it will begin to weaken. that is excellent news, although there will be nasty swells coming out of this thing. but as it approaches in about 96 hours time, the border between
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pakistan and india, we will likely be dealing with the equivalent of a tropical storm here. and if it doshs if the center of circulation makes landfall right over pakistan, that is a rare event and it would only be the tenth storm since back in 1895. now we've had stronger storms that have hit pakistan. back in '99 we had a category 3 that killed upwards of 6,000 people. this is going to be nothing like that. this is a much weaker system. it is makely going l mainly go event. two storms reached this intensity in this basin throughout the years. >> we seem to talk more and more these days about these rare weather events, don't we? >> yes, we do. >> all right, we'll check in with you very soon. thanks so much, ivan. well, it took two rounds of voting, but brazil has finally elected its president. the results of a race that came down to the wire. that's next. so, your site gave me this "credit report card" thing.
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neve seechlz spoke to her on tc win. >> reporter: after a heated, often unpredictable and sometimes down right ugly campaign, brazil has picked its next president. dilma rousseff of the leftist workers party one reelection against the opponent. she got 62% of the vote versus 48% of the vote. dilma rousseff gave her victory speech. she called for unity, dialog and said that she would be a better president in the second term. now the main topic during this election was definitely the economy. and it really divided the country into two camps.
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i'm thinking about the social programs that started and were expanded. we had dilma really focussing on the social programs that have been implemented in the last 12 years that the workers party has been in power. on the other hand we've heard about the macro economy. after a recession in the first part of the year. nevez also benefitted from a last-minute investigation into a bribery scandal at the state oil company, petrobras. >> all i think about is corruption, it's gotten horrible. >> reporter: she's going to have to think about building up
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investor confidence without letting go of the social programs that are widely expected of her. all of this will have to be done in a brazil left divided by attack ads and the tightest election in decades. sha shasta darlington, cnn. petro poroshenko believes most voters support what he calls ukraine's path to europe. votes are still being counted, but poroshenko believes he'll have majority support for his peace plan. but the results could cause further tensions with russia. there was no votes in parts of ukraine currently held by pro-russian rebels. voters also headed to the polls in tunisia. tunisians lined up to cast their votes for a new parliament. the elections come almost four
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years after autocratic leadership was ousted. tunisia was the first of the so-called arab spring uprises. a grim example for an uprising gone wrong, you only have to look to libya. muammar gaddafi did a better job of holding the country together than anybody since. his cousin and close aide tells cnn it's time to get the nation back on track. becky anderson reports. >> reporter: if the arab spring has taught us anything, it's that the removal of leaders who rule with an iron fist must be backed up by viable alternatives. the power vacuum left by muammar gaddafi in libya has left it messy for a country destined for
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democracy. it's also proven a tricky time for gaddafi's aides, including his cousin. he says the 2011 revolution that led to the leader's killing could have been dealt with much better. >> translator: where's the protection of citizens now? libya has been dragged to hell. libyans are falling. nato countries have withdrawing their ambassadors, leaving libya drifting in the wind. >> reporter: just as international intervention played a major rule in the outcome of the revolution, officials say external forces are at work in libya once again, trying to ensure that the power struggle between pod rat and extremist faxctions ends the wa they want it to. >> because of its wealth and
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geographic features, which is a large, porous society which is absent any kind of institutional security right now. so it's not surprising that its neighbors and its near neighbors and further neighbors have concerns. >> reporter: some like the u.s. ambassador feel that this perceived interference will delay any democratic transition. others such at libyan ambassador to the uae believes so-called political islam must be defeated at all costs. >> we are facing a monster, really. a mutation of islam that purports to be islam that is not islam, a monster that is closer to fascist ideas and to totalitarian ideas and that has nothing to do with the peace and compassion of our religion. >> reporter: one thing seems certain, any solution to libya's bloody crisis may need to involve words as well as weapon,
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and it's a conversation that he wants to be part of. >> translator: certainly not all libyans will welcome dialog. if we assume that there are 50,000 from both sides fighting right now, nonetheless, 6 million libyans will support my proposal and are ready for dialog. the international community has a responsibility to act and to contribute toward this dialog, supervise it and confront powers who do not want stability in libya. now we have a parliament elected by libyans. though we weren't part of that we accept it because we want to preserve the security and future. >> reporter: what if any role the international community will have in instigating and overseeing dialog isn't apparent. but they want the world to see they've learned from the mistakes of the last intervention. becky anderson, cnn, abu dhabi.
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>> we'll take a short break now. but just ahead. a nurse went to west africa to help ebola patients. now she's in an isolation tent even though she says she's not sick. she'll describe her conditions for us. that's coming up. [ bell rings ] hi michael! looking good! trying to keep up with you! i told my producer karen that i take metamucil because it helps me feel fuller between meals. it's just one small change that can help lead to good things. now she's breaking up with the vending machine. nope. i call that the meta effect. [ female announcer ] 4-in-1 multi-health metamucil now clinically proven to help you feel less hungry between meals. and promotes heart health. experience the meta effect with our new multi-health wellness line and see how one small change can lead to good things.
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welcome back to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm rosemary church and want to check the headlines for you this hour. another teenager has died from a shooting at a washington school. gia soriano died. she was shot by jaylen fryberg. one of the teens died on friday
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and the fryberg killed himself. dilma rousseff has won a second term as president of brazil. she got more than 51% of the vote in sunday's runoff election. her opponent conceded defeat and called her to con gratulate her. the captain of a south african football league has been killed. south african police say there was an altercation at a house where seven people were. the suspects fled and a press conference is expected later today. a nurse who is quarantined under new jersey's ebola policy,
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kaci hickox was put in isolation after returning from sierra leone. she's tested negative for ebola twice now. she tells candy crowley more about the conditions in her isolation tent. take a listen. >> reporter: can you describe to me, like where you are right now? what does it look like? are you in the hospital? in a room? are you -- >> i am outside of the university hospital itself. in a, building i believe, although i can only say what i can see. i am in a tent within the building. and i, you know, it's just a basic tent structure. there's a hospital bed. they bring me food. i have a porta potty type restroom. no shower facility and no connection with the outside
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world except my iphone which i insisted that i brought with me when i arrived late friday night. >> let me ask you this from a different point of view. you have been over in sierra leone, i think, everyone would salute someone who really does put their life on the line to go over and help others, and we have heard over and over again while you have been away how vital it is for all countries to send workers, doctors, nurses, other health care workers to fight this disease where it is in order to, you know, save those countries as well as protect the rest of the world. but understanding that the doctor who is now in quarantine in new york city was home seven or eight days before he spiked a bit of a fever and then was put into isolation, do you understand the need of governors, be they from new jersey or new york or illinois to say we can't take this risk?
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that somebody is out there with a fever or will spike a fever eight or nine days after they arrive. we need to make sure that they're in isolation till we know they are past the danger zone. do you understand that? psyche? >> caller: i completely don't understand it. it is not based on any clear public health evidence. and it's not the recommendation of public health and medical experts at this point. you know, i think we have to be very careful about letting politicians make medical and public health decisions. >> and hickox is taking legal actions. her attorney is filing paperwork in the next few days. the u.s.-led coalition has launched more air strikes against isis targets in syria
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and iraq over the weekend. in kobani, smoke rises over the horizon. there were explosions to the south and east of the city. a human rights group says more than 800 people have been confirmed dead in kobani since isis started attacking there several weeks ago, but the actual death toll is probably twice that many. the four western hostages recently beheaded by isis endured months of psychological and physical torture. that is according to the new york times which reports americans james foley and steven sotloff and britain's david haines and alan henning were all treated differently by two different groups of militants. it says one group would starve, beat and threaten them with execution, while another group would treat them more kindly by
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bringing them sweets and discussing their possible freedom. well, iraq says it dealt a blow to isis over the weekend by regaining control over an area near baghdad. shia militia men were seen celebrating after taking the area just south of the iraqi capital. international fears are growing over isis's ability to recruit jihadists abroad and inspire lone wolf terror attacks. we examine denmark's so-called de-radicalization program. >> reporter: there are an estimated 100 danish fighters in syria. that is a lot for a small country. denmark has one of europe's highest rates of jihadi fighters, and it faces a dilemma, what to do when these fighters return home. omar recently returned from syria.
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his parents thought he was helping at a refugee camp. he was fighting with a jihadist brigade. he spoke to us on the condition of anonymity. >> nobody has ever talked about getting back to bomb these countries that they're trying to make it sound like in the media. >> reporter: omar is one of 16 fighters known to return home. he did a very unradical thing. he contacted the danish police program voluntarily. >> reporter: were you nervous about coming back home to denmark? >> i wasn't that nervous, because i knew i didn't do any kind of criminal act or something like that. >> reporter: here's how the program works. any returning person is eligible for employment housing and education. but they must be screened by police. anyone found to have committed a crime will be put through the courts and possibly prison. their information is also passed to danish intelligence.
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>> this is not a gift shop. you have to be motivated. you have to really want to become part of danish society. we help them find a way through the system. and what we've seen is out of the 16 who have returned, ten of them are now back in school, have a job. and it seems to us that their focus is on something else than in syria. >> reporter: police here say it is a danish solution not that special, simply a crime prevention program with a focus on jihadis, and it's voluntary. omar is one of those who decided he didn't need the help, but he has friends in the program. >> they don't help people by raiding their homes and taking away their freedom and putting them in prison. >> reporter: the program does not try to change the fundamentalist beliefs, as long as they don't advocate violence. >> they are still muslim believers, perhaps in a way that
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we would call radical, but not to an extent that as far as we can see they are a threat to society. >> reporter: omar believes the program is preventing attacks back home, but he also says he might return to syria. >> young people have a lot of feelings. so if you're going to be humble towards those returning soldiers they will be humble toward you. >> reporter: what vice do you have to somebody who wants to come back home. >> i would tell them there's nothing to fear if you want to come back. >> reporter: so, does it work? it's too soon to know. but police say the alternative would be fighters who return and simply disappear. this program is designed to help while keeping a close watch. cnn, denmark. so the big question here, how did a country like denmark, listed as one of the world's happiest places to live, see such an unusual spike in
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jihadist fighters? we will examine that tomorrow. a short break now, but just ahead, it is the end of an era for british forces. we will show you how the u.k. formally ended its combat operations in afghanistan. work in your body in thero just 5 minutes. (vo) theraflu breaks you free from your worst cold and flu symptoms. (vo) theraflu. serious power.
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helmand. a hercules transport landed and it stopped doing so here. this lowering amounted to the official end of afghan's war, they called this the end of operation ceremony. and it fell to brigadier rob tomson to receive his nation's colors. a poignant moment. >> we hold them in our hearts to the very end of our days, but what i can tell every single member of the armed forces who have served here and every family who have sent their loved ones here is that we have made a
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difference. ♪ >> reporter: the ceremony was a ca camp bastien, they gave it to the grateful afghans. >> thank you to the soldiers, sailors, for all they did and for training. >> reporter: at the height of the war, there were 40,000 international troupes. now the barracks are empty and perhaps a little eerie. this is a place all our personnel who served in helmand are familiar with. the british military haven't set up anything else on their scale since the second world war, and they may never do so again. for all intents and purposes, for the last eight years, this
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vast place has been british territory. but now our mission here is over. and for us, camp bastion is redundant, a piece of british history. last month, a service took place here to honor the british fallen, the remembrance wall on which all are named is to be resurrected in britain, the epitaph reads, when you go home, tell them of us and say, for your tomorrow we gave our today. there are few tomorrows left for the british here. the last of our equipment has just been airlifted out. and the rear guard of a few hundred soldiers will follow shortly. >> afghan officials welcomed the end of british military in the country. they say their forces are more
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than ready to assume control of security. >> translator: we definitely welcome this act. afghan security forces have been leading the fight in ground operations in the country for two years now. >> 453 british troops died in service during the afghanistan war. the last remaining american combat troops in the country are scheduled to withdraw by the end of the year. soldiers from both nations will stay on in afghanistan on training missions. the news continues right after this short break. do stay with us. on my journey across america, i've learned that when you ask someone in texas if they want "big" savings on car insurance, it's a bit like asking if they want a big hat... ...'scuse me... ...or a big steak... ...or big hair...
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this is something, a comet has a pretty rancid smell. an orbiter has moved within 5 miles of the comet's surface, close enough to detect rotten eggs, methanol and horse urine. they will use the information to understand how the solar system formed. that takes us to ivan cabrera. what do you think? >> i can tell you horse urine is something you want to stay away from. not good at all. they have olfactory sensors in there. stinky comet. we've been talking about this low that brought those incredible images out of athe e
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then thens on friday. more rain is going to be on the way. so this mat earn that weapatter in, we've got this other development south of athens. so yes, you will get additional rainfall. and it will be accumulating here. and because of the recent potential we had, the flooding will be there. look at this nice chunk of weather going from west to ease. mainly scotland and heading up into scandinavia, the iberian peninsula looks very warm. temperatures are climbing back into the 20s in madrid. there's that rain up to the north. glasgow getting in to the showers. mild to the west. and so that high temperature
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today will be very pleasant. look at paris at 18 and 25 in madrid. and staying cold in russia. checking in on the united states. we've had a series of storm systems, a siege, really across the northwest. torrential downpours. a lot of people without power the last couple days across seattle and portland because of the ferocious winds coming through. that was the weekend. we have another one queued up. the heaviest rainfall will fall across the olympic national park and up towards vancouver island, where here accumulations could be a lot. up to 5 inches in the next couple days because that flow continues. tuesday into wednesday, very ett
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and stormy time of it and the snow continues to fall over the higher elevations. i want to show you what's going on across the rest of the u.s. very warm temperatures have made their way from the rock eyy their way from the rock eyies h into twashington, d.c. atlanta will be very warm, almost record highs through sunday and a pocket of air begins to move in. want to leave you with some fantastic pictures of this volcano from hawaii. that lava flow is approaching and residents are warned that at a moment's notice they may have to evacuate as a result of this lava pushing further to the east. it rolled through a cemetery earlier yesterday. and it's beginning to threaten homes there. just amazing. we've been following this flow from the eruption back in the summer. so it has taken a while, but it
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is now approaching some areas where they may need to get out of the way. >> yeah, and people are packing up their things and getting out of the way. it was another weekend of american football in the u.k. thousands turned out at wimbley stadium to see the detroit lions play the atlanta falcons. for viewers in the u.s., it was a new way to kick off their sunday. >> reporter: the game here at wem wembley stadium is the 12th to be held here since 2007. it's an american game for the american audience. 6:30 in the morning on the west coast. the idea is to have a breakfast game to see if americans will watch it over their wheaties.
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we asked if they thought americans would want to watch. >> i feel sorry for people back home because they had to get up really early. they can't have their beer and liquor right now. >> it's good to see how america takes to it. >> reporter: a former player has his doubts about future breakfast kickoffs. >> i'm hesitant about, you know, you're not used to waking up and watching football at 9:00 in the morning. on sundays, usually individuals get up and go to church. they have football in the late afternoons. >> reporter: as for the game itself, it was a thrilling end after the falcons had gone up 21-0. the lions kicked a field goal to win and go 6-2. >> it was a great team we just played. >> reporter: how do you come back from such a bad first half? >> we all believe in each other.
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you fight tooth and nail. we didn't look good on offense, defense, special teams. but we got it together in the send half a second half and came away with a win. >> reporter: it was a thrilling end to the tenth regular nfl game here in london. the nfl will have to look at the ratings and the reaction for what was a breakfast bowl in the u.s. could the nfl do this more often, and does it mean that london comes ever closer to getting a permanent nfl franchise? jim boulden, cnn, wembley stadium. natalie allen picks things up from hire, and we will go live to nigeria where there have
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