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tv   CNNI Simulcast  CNN  December 4, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am PST

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>> hey, everyone. i'm errol barnett. welcome to those of you in the
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u.s. and around the world. coming up right now -- americans take to the streets by the thousands to express their anger over what they see as a bias justice system. new details about the record of the new york city police officer at the center of the latest controversy. plus children caught in the middle of the battle against isis. how those who stayed behind in kobani are surviving somehow in a war zone. and a major typhoon bear downs in the philippines. we'll show you its latest track. how people are preparing for a potential disaster. a lot of stories to get through at this hour, but first it's been another night of protests in new york and in many cities across the state as demonstrators express their outrage about police and race relations.
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we've seen this in new york to oakland to dallas, to kansas city as well. people filling the streets for a second straight night demanding change. >> we've seen a black man being killed every 26 hours by police officers in this country. it's time we say we're fed up and this has to change. >> if you think about the civil rights movement it took ten years for anything to really happen between the protests and the boycotts and the buses to the actual civil rights act. >> our correspondents noting how african-americans are part of these demonstrations, but many nonblacks are taking to the streets, as you just saw there. decisions not to indict police officers in the deaths of african-american suspects sparked these protests. there is the case of eric garner who died after he was put in a
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chokehold by a new york policeman. you see him on the left in images with his family. and on the right, you see michael brown, an unarmed teenager who was shot and killed in ferguson, missouri, in august. now the largest protests have been in new york where thousands of people marched through manhattan, marched through times square, across the brooklyn bridge and back again. >> hey, errol. it's beginning to really calm down here in times square. and you know, earlier, we had walked a couple of blocks away and there were quite a few arrests happening. dozens of people were being arrested. people were lined up waiting to be taken away. there were also confrontations on the street. one protester was saying we were trying to get through, sir. please let us through, sir, to the police. eventually they let them through, but it's been
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interesting how people are protesting. it's a stark contrast to what we saw in ferguson. let me go back to the beginning of the evening when i got here. we actually came here, there were only a handful of folks here. and i got the opportunity to talk to a couple of different protesters and they were having a conversation about race. one pulled me aside and showed me a card he had in his wall let that said friend of the nypd. he said my brother is a cop. another chimed in and said i have a cop in my family, too. he said this isn't necessarily protesting cops. we want to protest because we deserve protection, not excessive force. that message was relayed quite strongly. you know, people at some point, actually, laid down in times square and chanted hands up don't shoot. they looked directly at the police. quite a few police in times square for a long time. but when we look at times square and the significance of times square in new york city, this is
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the place that you come to to take pictures. if you're coming from somewhere else. and there was tourists taking pictures of protests asking what was going on. one woman pulled me aside and she had her daughter with her. she said i wanted many i daughter to see this. the protests were happening and we heard them from our home and we decided to come join. and one other thing i should mention is the social media. people are holding up their smart phones while they're. hoppeding up their hands because they want to capture this. they want to put it on twit per .they're meet on facebook. you could hear right now, there are police cars still going by. most people protested peacefully, but things are calming down now.
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>> thanks. some people are throwing out the question, is this the beginning of a new civil rights snoouchlt now, you may be wondering what happened to the police officer who put eric garner in a chokehold? well, mr. pantaleo was still facing an internal review by the new york police department, and keep in mind, the u.s. justice department is also launching a federal civil rights investigation. but garner's daughter says she doesn't think this case is necessarily just about race. take a listen. >> it was about the officer's pride. it was about my mother being 6'4" and 350 pounds and he wanted to be, you know, the top cop that brings this big man down. being that my father was black and the officer was white, i mean, that's different races, but as far as the situation, i can't really say really a black and whitish shoe. it's about, you know, the police officer. abusing their power.
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>> and on that point, the new york police commissioner said the city will now retrain the entire department on the use of floor. mayor bill de blasio watched over some of the traping on thursday, as you see here. they already started this. he said garner's death is raising a lot of tough questions and it is important now to get it right. a judge ruled in releasing much of the testimony and evidence presented in the grand jury, but we did learn the jurors heard from some 50 witnesses and saw 60 exhibits during their nine months on the panel. we're also lerping about the officer at the center of the firestorm. our randi kaye reports. >> reporter: an eight-year veteran of the new york police department, officer daniel pantaleo comes from a family that has long served the city. his phatter is a retired new york city firefighter. his uncle, an officer with the nypd. >> he's the model of what we
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want a police officer to be. >> pantaleo, who is 29, has a younger sister. his mother, now retired, worked as an assistant administrator of a nursing home. he is single, according to the police union, and zrunt any children. >> he is a mature police officer who's motivated literally by serving the community. he literally, literally is an eagle scout. >> pantaleo joined the nypd in 2006 as a beat cop. and in 2011, he moved on to the street narcotics enforcement unit. a year later, he joined the anti-crime unit dealing with serious crimes like rape, murder and guns on the street. >> he is a good man. and more importantly for us all here today, he's a professional police officer. >> that same police official told cnnpantaleo had over 300 arrests with very few complaints, adding that he's not a hot head. but he has been at the center of racially motivated cases before. in the last two years, three men
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have filed lawsuit against him alleging unlawful racially motivated arrests. in one case from march 2012, two black men said they were forced out of their vehicle, hand cuffed and strip searched on the public street. >> the lawsuit alleges they were forced to pull their pants and underwear down, squat and cough. then later at the police station, the men were subjected to a second humiliating strip search and forced to lift their genitals. the charge against them were eventually thrown out. they settled with the city earlier this year for $30,000. in the second case, a man accused officer pantaleo of misrepresenting the facts to substantiate charges. the charges against this suspect were also dismissed. the man's lawsuit against officer pantaleo is still pending. and the grand jury took six months, of course, to figure everything out since the incident.
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union officials tell cnnpantaleo does want to return to the police force. he's not currently living at his permanent residence, although he is said not to be in hiding. new information out of syria where the city of kobani remains under siege by isis fighters. most of its residents have fled the nonstop fighting over the past few months. but not all of them. men, women and children are still there hanging on for dear life. and somehow getting by. a crew managed to get inside cobani. >> the war planes from above are a strange comfort. the destruction, so near complete. the fight is more now for victory alone, not for its spoils.
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here, they' even given up on hospitals. this, the last one, flattened by a car bomb. the wounded, now taken straight to the border. from inside the city, you can see what months of fighting has done. absolute devastation. it's almost possible to imagine the city sustaining life at anytime in the near future, but still the fighting persists. the shelling almost constant. so much of it caused by crude homemade devices like this. there are civilians here, those who refuse or cannot flee. and children, besieged who cannot be protected from indis-christmas nit constant shelling. usef can list their friends that have left.
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their uncle taught them to hide like this. this couldn't be further from play time, though. there are remnants of lives enjoyed, but also of lives taken ear early. this is the spot where a week earlier his young daughter was killed by a random mortar. the sort that are still falling. three to four mortars fell near us, he said that we escaped from. the second we escaped from, then the third fell on us. she was 7 years old. and she died. god bless us. he brought his six daughters and the 150 sheep they live off here after isis attacked their nearby village. he could not leave the flock or the family car and flee to safety in turkey. she was 7 years old, he says. she was so beautiful. small. people who saw her felt the need to lift her up and down and play.
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he went to her grave the day before and sat there for 30 minutes. it's the graveyard that tells you about the near future and the more distant one. a trench dug for the dead they expect. next to those they have already buried. headstones from rubble. again, a morbid playground. in washington, the u.s. house passed a sprawling $585 billion defense bill for 2015. some of that money has been earmarked to train and equip syrian rebels fighting isis. the u.s. senate is expected to
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take up that measure next week. all right, other big story today, a powerful typhoon closing in at this hour on the philippi philippines. we'll bring you the latest on emergency preparations and bring you a live look at its path and intentionty. stay with us here on cnn.
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>> typhoon hagupit about to hit
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the philippines and millions of people are bracing for the worst. the storm is expected to make the land fall from saturday to sunday, but we don't know yet precisely where it's going to hit. a for more on the scope of the emergencies and preparations being made, we report. >> officials have identified 44 provinces, home to more than 35 million people. close to a million families lost their homes to hayan. only about 38,000 of them have moved into government housing. the rest may have to face hagupit in tents. the government has 100,000 bags of food stored in manila, ready for any emergency. but in an archipelago of more
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than 7,000 islands, the challenge is haul them where they are needed. the police and the military say they are ready to respond, having learned new techniques and protocols in the past year. they'll be guided by new maps that show which areas are vulnerable to hazards, such as storm surges, floods and landslides. >> the area was hit by a major storm just 13 months ago. let's bring in eric van dam now. he's tracking the storm's path and can give us the latest information. the radar behind you, derek, looks so ominous. but talk to us about why we don't know exactly where the storm is headed yet and why that's a really important question in these next few hours. >> well, errol, what meteorologists look for, even though this storm is about 700 kilometers in diameter, we find and look for the strongest winds around the center, or the eye wall of this hurricane, or the typhoon in this instance.
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you can see it reforming nearly perfectly over the past six hours. this is a specific indicator to meet rolts. this is a particularly strong typhoon. even though it's dropped just below the super typhoon status by about 10 kilometres per hour. it is still a formidable storm and still a very dangerous life threatening storm for the central and eastern philippines. this is the latest, 230 kilometres per hour sustained winds, higher wind gusts, this makes it, people, an equivalent to a strong category 4 atlantic hurricane. and it's. >> translator:ing on a weak category 5. now the path, the exact path is extremely important. because we all know that a shift to the north by 50 kilometers, or a shift to the south by 50 kilometers will greatly impact different parts of the philippines. with that small eye wall that i just described a moment ago on the satellite. that's where we find our
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strongest winds. that's where we find the most intense part of the storm. nonetheless, this is the three different scenarios by the top three meteorological agencies indicating where they expect land fall to actually take place. east of the island which is right here. look at tacoban to the south. this is called the cone of uncertainty. and again, it's all about that exact eye wall and where it will land. but nonetheless, areas across
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samar island and the surrounding regions, this is 700 kilometer wide storm needs to be prepared for strong winds, heavy rain leading to flash flooding, and also coastal storm surge. errol, back to you. >> and the follow-up question to that is just how prepared are people? derek, thanks very much. we're now going to cross to someone who is there on the ground in tacloban to get a sense of the situation. >> thanks so much for connecting with us. just give us a stat test update. are you confident the shelter you have right now will be enough this weekend? >> hi. well, basically right now, save the children is still on top of preparations. actually the government is taking on possible emergency
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response. right now, we are in close coordination with city government as well as with all the ngos working here. >> and just describe some of the damage you're still dealing with that was left over from last year's typhoon. this region hasn't really become whole again. >> we. right now after one year, a lot of people are still trying to recover from the aftermath of the typhoon. so basically, there are a lot of people who are still believe the construction of their houses. that's also one of our concerns since a lot of people are still seeking shelter in temporary tents, as well as makeshift houses. and we are concerned about the
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safety of the children. >> how many children are you trying to find safe shelter for? and if the storm comes directly your way, are you confident that shelter will be alk to hold up? >> well, actually, right now, i couldn't say the exact number of children that are seeking on a shelter or evacuation center, but right now, this has 26 evacuation centers here. around 19,000 people. >> 26 shelters will certainly do something to help. what should people be doing right now? >> well, basically it is really amazing to see that people when i was walking on my way home last night, i have already seen people trying to prepare for the
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storm. so upon hearing about the magnitude for this storm they're now starting to reinforce their houses. so some of the houses, they're trying to tie down their roofs to make sure it won't be blown off by wind. a lot of people are really preparing that could last about three to four days. >> we with save the children in tacloban. we certainly hope you have all
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that you need and this storm ends up being weaker than expected. thanks for your time today. a. >> thank you. >> we'll continue to bring our viewers updates on that storm as it approaches. >> now first to this, a mysterious woman all in black has been arrested for murder in abu dhabi. coming up on cnn, pli say she was targeting another american in a second plot.
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is. police in the united arab
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emirates now have a woman in custody accused of murdering an american teacher. they say the suspect came close to claiming a second victim. >> 48 hours after the stabbing death of an american woman in a shopping mall toilet, uae police raid the house of a woman in her late 30s and take her into custody. the woman is suspected of stabbing to death 47-year-old aboya ryan on monday. these immechanicals show a vailed figure on a mission of mall las. police say now shortly after the stab age tack, the mysterious suspect was already aiming at her next target, another u.s. citizen. this time a muslim american doctor. with a homemade bomb. fortunately this plan was foiled. but who is this woman and what
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are her motives? >> how old is the suspect, what does she do and are you dealing with this as a terror case? >> she's near ly 58 years old. and she's from the uae. and this is under investigation now. >> what authorities will say that is the suspect probably meant to spread chaos and fear. the car in which she pled the scene at the killing had several knives and walkie talkies. whatever the circumstances, they are highly unusual in a city renowned for safety. becky anderson, cnn, abu dhabi. >> after this short break, we're going to get back to the top story. the nationwide protests over the chokehold death of eric garner. we'll hear from new york's governor on this situation.
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>> we appreciate you staying with cnn. i'm errol barnett. here are the biggest stories with we're tracking for you right now. thousands of people flooded the streets of new york for the second night in a row. protesting what they call racism and harassment by police. the crowds are mostly gone at this hour. just past 2:30 in the morning there now. but earlier they marched across brooklyn, laid down in the
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strees as well. 17 people dead and 22 wounded. just hours from now, president obama will announce his choice for u.s. secretary of defense. sources tell cnn mr. obama will nominate ashton carter. he's been second in command at the pentagon. if approved by the senate, carter would be the president's fourth pentagon chief. nat is a will try once again in the coming hours to launch its or rison pace craft. the test flight is expected to last only about 4 1/2 hours. now back to the stop tory, a u.s. department review has
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uncovered a pattern of unreasonable force by police in cleveland, ho ho. now that investigation began in 2013 and carries added weight following an incident last month when an officer fatally shot a boy carrying a toy gun. we have more on that. >> the surveillance video shows a boy walking near a playground. he's 12-year-old tamir rice and he's playing with a boy. and airsoft gun that from a distance can look like a real gun. a bystander calls 911. >> there's a guy holding a pistol. it's probably fake, but he's pointing it at everybody. >> less than two seconds after police drive up, the 12-year-old, again, carrying a toy, is shot and dilled at close range. the 26-year-old police officer who shot him had only recently been hired by the cleveland police. at his previous job, officer loehmann's personnel records
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shows he was in the process of being fired. his supervisor describing an emotional meltdown. and a behavior that shows a pattern of a lack of maturitmat indiscretion and not following instructions. but the police never asked to see loehmann's personnel records, a policy the department says now changed. the department of justice laid out a stinging report on the cleveland police department. >> there's a reasonable call to believe that the cleveland police engaged in a practice of unreasonable force in violation of the fourth amendment. >> the investigation took two years saying cleveland police officers used unnecessary and significant force at a significant race, including officers who shoot at people who do not pose an imminent threat of serious bodily harm at officers, that they hit people in the head with their gun, where use of deadly force is not justified and that there are systemic deficiencies, failures by higher-ups to investigate officer-involved shootings.
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when accountability falter, trust also falters. a federal court will now keep tabs tabs. the problem is not contained by city limits. >> the tragic losses of these and far too many other americans have real raised urgent national questions. they have sparkd an important conversation about the sense of trust that must exist between law enforcement and the communities that they serve and protect. >> eric holder has announced a similar investigation into the eric garner case. the garner family says that does give them hope for a different outcome. and earlier, new york's governor told cnn it is a step in the right direction, but there has to be more change.
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take a listen. short term it will bring confidence, but long term, this is an opportunity to really do a soup to nuts comprehensive review of the system. and let's talk about police officer training and this chokehold and why did you need so many bodies jumping on an individual to hold him down. cameras and transparency and accountability, the role of the grand jury, should these das be bringing these cases? let's have a real discussion. this keep happensing and happening and happening. and it's corrosive. the issues that relate to this entire issue, earlier i
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discussed some of the proposed changes. a private investigator and security specialist. i asked him how police now can fix the perception they use excessive force in minority communities. >> it is fixed through two layers, the community has to get involved with the police department. to the extent where there is an interface to community input, there are progressive cities, progressive departments where they have community of citizen review boards. they asked this person a series of questions, relevant to why they would want to be a part of the police department. the sz review boards only have the power of recommendation.
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but those recommendations go into the final of that officer if they're hired. and also disciplinary actions that's taken against officers. >> so it's a way for locals to have a voice. there. >>'s a discussion of appointing a community review board for all the major police interactions. that's one part of it. there's also the legal system in both incidents. you don't get to see what happens and a special case has to happen for us to see the actual evidence. lo and behold, the police officer never gets an indictm t indictment. that tends to be the trend. do you think there's something wrong with that system? prosecutors believed, you know, who get cozy with these cops, work with these cops on a weekly basis and then are trusted to bring case against them. does that need to change? >> it definitely needs to change. if this officer is accused of these egree joyce violations,
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why is this person given special treatment? a regular citizen that's facing criminal charges should not be done for police officer, particularly where a person who is going to be charged by a grand jury gets the opportunity to address the grand jury. this is unheard of. and this has been allowed in both the new york case where the young man was choked to death and in the ferguson, missouri, case. another interesting element to that is that there is a trend that prosecutors are allowing this for white officer, but they don't allow that same courtesy to black officers. >> well, do you have enough faith that president obama and eric holder, i mean, ironically, two black men who are at the top of thf system that doesn't seem to work for black men, do you think they will be able to do
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what's necessary to change the very kind of larger institutional racism that you seem to be referring to? >> they already have in that attorney general holder today came out and gave the decision for the position of the united states justice department in terms of the cleveland police department. >> where a 12-year-old was shot. . >> that they were deficient, they were remiss in their training and application process across the board. >> to the extent that a court appointed monitor will be in charge with monitoring the cleveland police department kboing forward. they really have been put under a federal consent decree and have been organized or observed by a federal district judge. >> they're being held accountable and watched independently? >> i totally do.
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>> of a former police officer himself and a current security specialist and private investigators. >> our affiliate talked with two police departments and discussed the pros and cons. >> we love it. it's helped us so much more than a debt krimt to our department. >> he says the video is treated as evidence, and people can't get a hold of it without an attorney or a court order. but it's a different story for police. >> we have to worry about
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people's -- you know, their rights to some sort of privacy. >> brad lemon is a resident in kansas city. we can't show you his face because of his current assignment. >> what are the most tragic circumstances that could ever happen to him? but we're arecording it. >> through the missouri sunshine laws, lemon says the public has the power to request the video. >> this is not one that you get wrong. >> are body cameras a good idea? we have a resource for you. head to our remember site.
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there's more nflgs on the body cameras, their statistics on their effectiveness. still to come for you this hour, shocking photos from inside a sterilization clinic in india. why the entire practice is now under renewed scrutiny. plus this frightening video shows a toddler falling on to train tracks. we're going to learn about her very close call after this short break. stay with us here on cnn. if aunder a microscope, put we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture everyday.
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one of many stories coming out of the middle east that has truly dominated global headlines. and the leader of the terror group was one of the candidates in our quest to find the most influential person in the region this year. becky anderson hosts a special town hall from dubain which she'll moderate a debate before revealing our pick for the influencer of 2014. >> this is not just a catastrophe, this is a cataclysm. >> we find it very hard.
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>> i think baghdadi is the most influence because they're influencing all the influences. >> cast your vote. >> join us in die buy for a special edition of connect the world. the special airs friday central european time. >> clinics are under renewed scrutiny after a doctor allegedly used a bicycle bump to inflate women's abdomens during procedures. the use of these pumps obviously is considered highly dangerous, but there are concerns that the practice is actually widespread. >> conditions in india's government spop sored sterilization program once again under scrutiny after this image of a bicycle pump being used to
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inflate a woman's abdomen before a sterilization surgery. health officials say the medical equipment that should have been used in a procedure is a carbon d dioxide encephalator. they say a bicycle pump was used on some 56 women undergoing the procedure. authorities investigating way say the doctor who performed these sterilization surnlryes will no longer be called to the clinic. health officials say there's been no deaths or hospitalizations thus far. this. co-s months after dozen os of women died in a neighboring state after similar surgeries. health officials blame tainted drugs but are awaiting autopsy reports. the government has promoted a sterilization program to curb population growth in the world's second most populous nation, particularly in poorer, rural areas where access to other
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forms of contraception is limited. the government says the procedure is safe if proper guidelines are followed, but activists say the government should re-evaluate its family planning initiatives and upgrade basic health infrastructure in the country. >> i want to show you dramatic video. it shows an 18-month-old toddler falling on train tracks with her grandfather nearby. this took place in melbourne, australia. and look at that. her grandfather was using the ticket machine with his back towards her when she fell right on to the tracks. fortunately some good samaritans saw this happen. you see him trying to get down and help. they helped the little girl up and thankfully there was no oncoming train. the girl is okay. but did suffer serious injuries to her face. very lucky kid. >> still to come here on cnn, dancing away the blues before
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you head to work. could this catch on? it's a trend that's becoming quite popular in the uk. we'll show you what it's all about after the break.
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>> and there you have it. the title of the next james bond film, "specter."
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daniel craig will return as 007 for the 24th chapter of the 1350i franchise. filming starts monday. >> you will be shooting in some fantastic places. a magnificent facility. if you've never been here before. in london. in rome, in mexico city. in morocco. going back to the alps in the snow again in austria. >> at this moment, many of you watching might be facing the gloomy prospect of a long day at the office, right? you're trying to get ready for work. but what if your day began as a party. how morning raids are catching
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on in london and elsewhere. >> this isn't a leftover party from the night before. no, it's a new day in london. and this is the new way to kick start your morning. part exercise class, part fantasy dress, this is a hybrid that is attracting huge crowds. >> uh yo eel find your bankers and lawyers, you'll also find students and kids. it's really safe to say, you get every demographic. you've got 1,000 people in there. >> you wear what you fancy and you dance how you want.
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>> they are part of the rave generation of the 1990s. but this time around, they're keeping it very clean. >> it's what many here call conscious clubbing. there's no alcohol or drugs. instead, you can have a massage, a smoothie and even practice your tree pose. clubbers tell me it helps them feel re-energized and ready to take on a busy work day. >> everyone is so lovely. it's a great energizer. it's better than the gym. >> brings a different energy to the day. completely different energy. >> i feel very wired. and i'm ready to take on the day. i just wish it was more often than once a month. >> it is this energy that has cities hooked. berlin will soon with their own morning gloriville. bringing the total to 16.
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and now even finance and tech companies are cueing up. there's a very clear aim. >> bring, you know, team building. mainly that happiness factor. above everything else, happiness is the number one thing you will start your team needs in order to be pro-ductive. for these raifrs here, there's really no excuse for not letting your hair down. >> hmm. how did she know about this? i think she's hanging out at those clubs before she heads into the news room, quite frankly. not a bad idea. i think i would rather go to those raves after work. but i'm not heading anywhere just yet. you're watching cnn. i'm errol barnett. i'll be back after this short break with all new updates on the day's biggest stories. a dry mouth can be a common side effect.
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farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms, stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar,kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections, changes in urination, and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life ♪yeah, you do the walk of life
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need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. this is the first power plant in the country to combine solar and natural gas at the same location. during the day, we generate as much electricity as we can using solar. at night and when it's cloudy, we use more natural gas. this ensures we can produce clean electricity whenever our customers need it. ♪ introducing... a pm pain reliever that dares to work all the way until... test. . plus the 12 hour strength of aleve.
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stopping traffic, raising their voices. more pro- 'tistests. cleveland police are under scrutiny. the justice department says they're using unnecessary, unreasonable excessive force at a significant rate. >> three to four mortars fell near us. the first we escaped from, the second we escaped from then the third fell on us. >> residents of kobani share their horror stories of living in a battle zone. new details point woman who stabbed an american teacher to death in abu