tv CNN International CNN April 6, 2015 11:00pm-12:01am PDT
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regime. an activist sends copies of "the interview" across the border. welcome, everyone. i'm errol barnett with you here on cnn for the next two hours. a big hello, and welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is "cnn newsroom." the growing conflict in yemen is fueling a humanitarian crisis right now. thousands of people are trying to flee amid daily air strikes. this stems from fighting between houthi rebels and those loyal to yemen's deposed president. rebels are trying to take hold of the port city of aden despite nearly two weeks of saudi-led air strikes. at least 50 people were reportedly killed monday. it's estimated that 600 people have died in this conflict so far. the war is also fueling an exodus of foreign nationals. china says it got the last of its citizens out of the country
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on monday. india is also scrambling to get its people out of sanaa. so far 2,500 have taken flight out of the city. we talked to passengers about the war they're living behind. >> reporter: the indian government have been running air evacuation flights the last few days in and out of the yemeni capital, sanaa. extraordinarily difficult condition, and they're doing it within a tight time frame as granted to them by the saudi arabian air force. they'll have half an hour to load the hundreds waiting at the sanaa airport. while we're on the ground, you see the runway is unharmed. all around it, you get a sense of the impact of those saudi air strikes. you see behind me some of the military aircraft, all destroyed. all the while we've been here,
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this houthi military police car has been circling the plane. time really is of the essence in this evacuation operation. wait we're waiting for passengers -- we're pating for the passengers to be brought on, but they're nowhere to be seen. finally, some running, all to leave their lives behind. this plane can't carry cargo because it will slow it down. all the people had to come on with only what they can carry in their hands. they rush to take their seats. finally safe. finally able to close their eyes. >> my goodness. gunshots being fired every empty. sometimes the sky full of sparkling lights. some women crying, children
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terrified. let's cross live to our reporter in jibuti in eastern africa where the flights out of sanaa have been going. and as we watched that, it's interesting when you consider that india, china, and other nations are or have evacuated their citizens out of the country. the u.s. hasn't been able to do this. it's evacuated its diplomatic staff. what are u.s. nationals stuck in the country expected to do? >> reporter: well, of course it was a u.s. national who lost his life sadly in a shelling incident a day or so ago. this is really a huge cause of concern both for those inside of yemen as they deal with the realities of the shelling every night, aerial bombardment. also, it's been a controversy in the states. the council for islamic arab
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relations has been pushing the government on this. yesterday evening d.c. time, the u.s. announced that the indian government will be having its evacuations. any american citizens trying to leave yemen should make themselves known, and they will go through the international organization migration and come out on indian air flights. it's not what a lot of activists who were pushing for were hoping for. i think they were looking for a bigger message from the u.s. government in terms of protection it offers its citizens. it has been out of character to watch, to see this unfold over so many days in a situation of such violence and for there to be no direct evacuation flights. >> quite shocking. i believe the state department had issued not only travel advisories and warnings, but any people leaving can partner with them when you consider the country is falling into a civil war. the possibility of a saudi-led ground incursion is hanging in
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the balance. it would be an escalation. how likely does that appear at this stage? >> reporter: speaking to some of the coalition partners, they say at the moment they've been told not to rule anything out. pakistan says that continues to be an option on the table as it looks to join the coalition. the reality that the saudis are dealing with as we've seen with the fierce fighting in aden and movement of the port between government loyalist hands and houthi hands is so strategic, you can't underplay how important it is for anyone seeking to control yemen. we haven't really seen the impacts that the saudis are looking for at this stage in the aerial bombardment campaign. it hasn't seemed to break the back of the houthi control and houthi underhand. so for many military analysts, they're saying, well, unfortunately that has to now be
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an option that saudi arabia is looking at very closely lot. most nations would not want to be embroiled in a country with the history that yemen has had. years of turmoil and civil war. for the saudi arainians, this impacts their situation very much. >> so much resistance from the rebels, so much fighting, calculations happen hadding e d hatching each and every day. thank you. let's get the latest information out of kenya now. just days after al shabaab massacred 147 people, the country has launched air strikes against al shabaab training camps in somalia. the militants had attacked garissa university college, you may remember, about 90 mails or 145 kilometer from the somali border thursday. a military source denies that the strikes are in retaliation
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for those murders. meanwhi meanwhile, some people wonder if more could have been done to prevent the slaughter. al shabaab has said kenya is to blame for persecuting innocent muslims. a police source tells us there was early intelligence that this university in garissa was going to be attacked. the response team was stuck in nairobi. our david mckenzie explains. >> reporter: they leave nairobi's morgue after learning the worst. overcome with inconsolable grief. now their loved ones identified by a number. many like john have been waiting here for days to get word. he grasps the photo of his son. he wanted to be a teacher. he was the first in their family to go to college. >> i was very much proud of my son and the entire family was focusing on him as our flag
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bearer. >> reporter: here they are sad but also angry as new questions are asked about the operation to save the students. a police source tells cnn that kenya's anti-terror squad got the alarm early but was stuck on the tarmac in nairobi for hours waiting for transport. the source said that even politicians got to the scene before the squad. the government is defending their response, stressing that the team was able to save a lot of students. >> the question at the moment has been did our forces get out of nairobi quick enough. >> reporter: they spent hours on the tarmac waiting to go. >> there are always going to be criticisms about whether you reacted as fast as you should have or shouldn't have. tripoli seems all too familiar. in the westgate mall attack in 2013, kenya's security forces were heavily criticized for what many called the delayed and chaotic response. the siege took days to resolve.
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authorities rejected the criticism but likened the attack that gunmanmen planned and executed terror. this is where special forces ran through the fence to get the operation going. new details now of how the terrorists operated from witnesses on the scene. they say at least four gunmen were in constant contact with the commander. he gave orders over a cell phone. the attackers methodically moved through the university, killing as they went. could it have been done better? >> i think if there's a review with benefit of hindsight, you always say things can be done better. ♪ >> reporter: as kenyans pray and mourn their dead, some are left wondering if more could have been done to save them. david mckenzie, cnn, nairobi, kenya. people in nairobi have been giving blood it hospital wounded in the garissa -- blood at the
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hospital wounded in the garissa attack. doctors said there wasn't enough blood for transfusions. >> it was not their, two die. nobody knows what can happen to you tomorrow. there are people who can help you at least if you are injured. it's better. >> i really felt bad. i felt bad -- i just wanted to be part of kenyans. >> people doing what they can to help. kenyan officials hope to get 2,000 units of blood by wednesday. now to a gruesome discovery in iraq. mass graves in the city of tikrit that could contain the remains of 1,700 soldiers believed to have been executed by isis militants last june. iraqi forces liberated the city from isis less than a week ago. arwa damon was at one gravesite. we have to give a warning,
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images in her exclusive report are disturbing. >> reporter: the work is delicate. the kind of excavation usually reserved for historic artifacts. now put to grim use, to exhume the first bodies from tikrit's mass graves. a pause for a brief ceremony to honor the dead. ♪ >> reporter: the iraqi national anthem plays. the lyrics of unity float across the freshly open ground. no one yet knows who the victims are, but it doesn't matter. "i have been working on exhuming mass graves for eight years, but something like this, it's different because of the way they were killed," this man says. as many as 1,700 shia army recruits were marched to their death by isis when it swept through here in june in what is now known as the speicher
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massacre. at least eight mass graves is been identified within saddam's old presidential compound alone. >> the captives were brought through here, he's saying -- >> reporter: we retraced some of their last steps. walked down the stairs before they were shot on the banks of the tigris river. their blood still streaking the concrete. this man survived. [ crying ] >> reporter: "i swear, we were innocent. we didn't have weapons. you lied, you said you would not kill us," his voice shatters, overcome with waves of emotion. he screams out for his comrade abbas who saved him, whom he had to leave behind.
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abbas' father has come in hopes of recovering his son's body. "we were told we were going home," he recalls. "then they split us into small groups and brought us here. ali pretended he was shot and tumbled into a ditch. he crawled out at night finding abbas along the river shore. "we saw each other, but we were afraid. we each thought the other was a terrorist," he tells abbas' father. but abbas' ribs were broken. ali could not carry or swim with him. they spent three days hiding together. "i promised him i would come back for him, and i did. i will reach him no matter what," he pledges again, "but not today." the road has not been cleared of explosive, and ali cannot reach the area where he last saw abbas. we go back to the execution
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site. there a shia mourning site for the lives lost and the many tragedies here yet to be uncovered. arwa damon, cnn, tikrit, iraq. in the u.s., a fourth man has been indicted in connection with a plot to help isis. three men in new york have already been arrested and charged with providing support to a foreign terrorist organization, and three have pleaded not guilty. according to court documents, one of the suspects posted comments about an isis video showing the execution of iraqi forces. he said he was very happy and his eyes were joyful. . it -- testimony and closing arguments have wrapped up in the trial of boston bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev. 13 charges face sentences of life in prison or death. he's accused of detonating bombs
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with his brother at the 2013 boston marathon that killed three at the race and the shooting of a police officer a few days later. turkish officials are no longer blocking the social media site twitter inside their country. the ban was lifted when twitter agreed to remove photographs of an istanbul prosecutor held at gunpoint by militants. the istanbul police chief said the prosecutor was killed before police teams entered the room where the hostage crisis was unfolding. meanwhile, an earlier ban on youtube has also been lifted. in the last six months of 2014, twitter received almost 800 requests to take down content from governments around the world. you see it highlighted here on this map. more than 60% of those requests came from turkey. we have this information just in to the cnn newsroom from iran. eight iranian guards were killed in clashes with unidentified militants. this is near the pakistani border, according to state
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media. the attack happened in a southeastern town on monday. a local official says the militants entered iran across the border. iranian forces killed three of the attackers. that just in to cnn. eight iranian guards killed in clashes with identified militants near the pakistani border. north koreans may soon be able to see a movie that shows a graphic death scene of their leader, kim jong-un. but it's not coming in theaters. next, we'll show how they'll receive this film. hey, girl. is it crazy that your soccer trophy is talking to you right now? it kinda is. it's as crazy as you not rolling over your old 401k. cue the horns... just harness the confidence it took you to win me and call td ameritrade's rollover consultants. they'll help with the hassle by guiding you through the whole process step by step. and they'll even call your old provider. it's easy. even she could do it. able to see a movie that shows a
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last parliament. >> that was jeff speaking with me earlier, foreign policy correspondent for the "financial times." the u.k. election will be held may 7th. to other news, the controversial movie "the interview" has been sent to north korea but not in the weigh you -- not in the way you might think. depicts the fictional assassination of kim jong-un in a spy operation. a north korean defector hoping to shatter the image used balloons to send this across the border to korea. paula hancocks with more. you want us to kill the leader of north korea? >> yes. >> reporter: a silly comedy in the united states seen as an act of terrorism in north korea. a devastating cyberattack and months of recriminations followed. now the movie may have found its way into the most isolated country on earth. this man has been studying the
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wind droekz south korea for -- direction to south korea for weeks. he's sending dollar bills and political leaflets across the border. he hoped north koreans would find it funny, they didn't. but he it says doesn't matter. "the regime hates the equipment," he says, "because it shows kim jong-un as a man, not a god. he cries, he's afraid like us and gets assassinated it destroys the idolization of the leader." in the dead of night, his precious cargo hidden, lee travels from his home it an area close to the border, an area south korean police and military following him do not want us to disclose. they also asked us not to film them. these propaganda balloons infuriate north korea. its military fired on similar balloon several months ago. the south fired back. seoul it says can't stop them as they're civilians, and this is freedom of speech.
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residents living near the border disagree. last october they physically intervened to stop activists from sending balloons, angry that they were being put in the line of fire which is why lee says he flies his balloons at flight and does not usually invite media. "i want my people to know the truth," he says, "that is when revolutions happen." if you do it in north yeah, you die. by sending balloons from here, it's in safety and secret. he doesn't know for sure who if anyone will see this movie. but he says he knows he has to try. paula hancocks, cnn, seoul. afghan women are being attacked for defending their rights, according to a new report. amnesty international's secretary general joins us to discuss this important issue after the break. meet the world's newest energy
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welcome back to our viewers in the u.s. and all around the world, i'm glad you're staying with me. i'm errol barnett. here's an update on our top stories right now. the civil war looms in yemen as thousands flee and hundreds die in the conflict. houthis are battling fighter loyal to yemen's ousted president in the port city of aden. at least 50 people reportedly died there on monday. the estimated death toll over the past two weeks is at 600. kenya has launched air strikes on al shabaab targets in somalia. however, the military says they are not in retaliation for thursday's massacre at garissa university college near the border. meanwhile, there will be a
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vigil in a few hours to honor the 147 people murdered at the school. the hash tag #147notjustanumber is being used to mourn the victims. u.n. security council is calling for access to the refugee camps in syria where they say some 18,000 people are trapped. isis has taken almost complete control from rebel groups. the u.n. wants the fighting to stop in order to get the refugees out. back in 2011, cnn helped draw attention to the story of an afghan woman jailed after being raped by her cousin's husband. she's since been pardoned. she was forced to marry her rapist. now, four years later, she's about to have her third child by him. she tells cnn she did it for her daughter. senior international cornel wal-- cornel nick paton walsh with the
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report. >> reporter: this is how one afghan family formed and of women's rights in kabul in 2015. first, this man rapes his wife's cousin. he was convicted and jailed for it. the beautiful girl here whose name means smile is the child from that rape. born in jail because her mother here was charged with adultery under what passes for afghan justice as her rapist was married. yet, it grew worse still. to be accepted into afghan society again, she had to marry, to marry him, become her rapist's second wife. now things are said to be okay, settled. their third child is on the way. "if i hadn't married her, according to our tradition, she couldn't have lived back in
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society. her brother didn't want to accept her back. now she doesn't have any of those problems." >> translator: i didn't want to ruin the life of my daughter or leave myself helpless, so i agreed to marry him. we are traditional people. when we get a bad name, we prefer death to living with that name in society. >> reporter: this is a home built around a crime. the man's first wife lives unseen. where little smile has a home among his seven other children. global uproar led to then-president karzai to pardon her of adultery in 2011. she was offered asylum abroad but was pushed into this deal, living here. he still denies the rape happened, saying she was told to make it up. >> translator: now she's beside me and knows it was not as big as they had shown it.
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>> translator: no, i am not thinking about it anymore. i don't have a problem with him now, and i don't want to think about the past problems. >> reporter: she did not look at her husband once in our meeting. >> translator: my life is okay, i am happy with my life. it is going on. >> reporter: while he left us to talk alone, he still stands outside. four years ago, she told me she was raped. now, she backs his story. she says her family would have taken her back -- wouldn't have taken her back until she married him. >> translator: my brothers opposed the marriage and told me to take my daughter and go to pakistan to live with them in sin. now we're married. they disowned me and won't see me again. >> reporter: at 23, can anyone have imagined that their life would have turned out like this? >> translator: no.
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i couldn't fulfill my wishes in life. i married this man, i cut relations with my family only to buy my daughter's future. >> reporter: global outcry, a presidential pardon, billions of american dollars on women's rights, and still it ends like this. a family built on one act. nick paton walsh, cnn, kabul. >> now women in afghanistan who promote human rights are facing a significant increase in threats and attacks, that's according to a new report by amnesty international. the group interviewed 50 women human rights offenders from 13 provinces. and amnesty says the women are targeted because they're perceived as defying cultural and religious norms concerning the role of women in afghan society. the report accuses afghan authorities of failing to provide a safe environment for these women, and it says officials failing to bring
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perpetrators and abusers to justice. amnesty also calls on the toolz stop target iing female human rights defenders. we spoke to amnesty international's sect general on the phone from kabul to talk about this. the bottom line of your report seems to be there's a lack of followup when it comes to afghan police officials seeking people who deny women justice. this sounds like something cultur cultural, something difficult to reverse. >> i think at the outset, we have consciously profiled cases where not just women are activists, we're focusing on women in public life. they could be doctors, politicians, engineers, policewomen, lawyers. you know, it's just in a sense women being targeted as emblems of women breakig through from
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the private sfeef and occupying public positions. they are being deliberately attacked. second thing is also that we have to understand it's not just the taliban. i mean the problem in afghanistan is much more deep rooted. it's a societal problem. we should not complete this. islam justifying it. i think the main point our report makes is, yes, there's long-term issues, but the question is how is the state responding. unfortunately, we've seen institutionalized innocence -- police and authorities turning the other way. what we are calling for is that all of these attacks need to be investigated. yes, the perpetrators have to be brought to just because the feeling right now is that you can attack women and get away with it and nothing is going to happen. >> we know that this is
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difficult for women in afghanistan, but there have been some improvement made. what's behind the elimination of violence against women law that was passed in 2009? did that not have an impact in bringing -- in allowing women to have access to justice? >> this is the irony. the constitution is far from itself. in 2013 there's been a 30% increase in reported cases of violence against women. only 2% of the cases, the law you mentioned has been applied. in fact, that law is currently under threat in the parliament. so i think, you know, there's been kind of a resurgence of forces attacking women and increased violence. yes, the government needs more capacity, the ministry of women affairs. but fundamentally the leadership of the country is a litmus test for the new government in afghanistan. the president, chief executive abdullah have to stand up and
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say no more, enough is enough. the international system, aid system needs to stand behind the government and say, yes, we're going to support this and not back away on afghan women. >> let's talk about the newly elected president, ghani. he was in washington last week at a number of events. touted the role of women specifically in helping to develop the country. we now know there are almost three million girls in school. there were none a few decades ago. do you at least see reasons to be hopeful thing will improve with this new government? >> the prime minister and official, i met all of them yesterday. they're not denying there's a problem. they're committed to the issue in words. now the question is how do you turn this into action. for example, only 1% of the police force in afghanistan are women. so only about 2,000 out of the
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150,000 people in the police force are women. and there are concrete barriers to why more women are not joining the police force. the women already in the police force are facing harassment and discrimination. they don't have separate changing rooms, toilets. these are concrete things the government can do. so what we need from the government now is to -- yes, the warm words and broad commitment are helpful, but we need concrete action. >> amnesty international sect general speaking to me about their efforts to keep up the pressure on not just only the afghan government but really the international community to protect women in the country and help them have access to justice. thank you very much for your time speaking to me on the line there from kabul. now u.s. intelligence leaker edward snowden is making waves again. his latest interview reveals how little americans care about e-mail surveillance. that is until they learn what e-mails the government is spying on. if you've got naked pics in your
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25 people are dead and more than 100 people missing after the single driest place on earth was hit with massive floods over the past week. our meteorologist, pedram javaheri, joins us now with more on this. it's really unfortunate pause if they would have had this gradualli, it would have been fine. it happened at once. >> in chile, no rainfall since the 1700s. some towns have not seen rain since the 1990s. one of the driest places on earth. california, of course, death valley, people know when it comes to an arid lapd scape, 40 millimeter a year, 1.58 inches comes down a year in death
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valley. and here, 2.25 inch and other areas in northern chile, those are the regions where very little to absolutely no rainfall comes down. there's a perspective of the town about 200 miles south of where the severe flooding took place. then you look at what happened in the southern portions of the area, and you get tremendous flooding even here that transpir transpired. again, another perspective, google earth image of august, 2012. then april, 2015, what is left as the river bursting its banks. and of course the terrain not accustomed to taking in significant rainfall. they only picked up roughlily one inch of rainfall will -- roughly one inch of rainfall, but that is 14 years' worth of rainfall for this part of the world. .07 inch is the average on the 26th of march, 20 millimeters came down in 24 hours. again, some areas had not seen rainfall since 1992 when it comes to populated regions.
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chile has narrow land, areas north to south. a lot of areas, if the moisture comes upstream it will flow downstream, making way down the valley to cities. that's precisely what we saw across regions of chile. and talking about rainfall in california, we have flooding across california. concern for localized flooding. and this is going to bring in much-needed rainfall and even snowfall. the high sierras have seen a foot by tomorrow night. >> thank goodness, everyone saying. >> help, but they'll take it. >> thank you very much. see you again soon. in about two months, the u.s. congress will decide whether to renew the so-called patriot act. and with it, the mass surveillance of private emails. that doesn't sit well with edward snowden. if you don't know who he is, he's a former government contractor who leaked documents about u.s. emails surveillance. he sat down with an interview for a segment of comedian john oliver's show that featured frank talk about photos of private parts. if i had knowledge that the
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u.s. government had a picture of my [ bleep ], i would be very [ bleep ] off. [ laughter ] >> well, the good news is there's no program named [ bleep ] program. the bad news is they are still collecting everybody's information. including your [ bleep ] pics. >> so if you have your e-mail somewhere like gmail posted on server overseas or transferred overseas or any time crosses outside the borders of the united states, your junk ends up in the data base. >> it doesn't have to be sending [ bleep ] to german -- >> no, even if you sent it to somebody within the united states, your wholly domestic communication between you and your wife can go to from new york to london and back and get caught up in the data base. >> an effort there to use a concept people would be interested in rather than elusive aspect, just details about your cell phone. we should let our viewers know
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that hbo is owned by cnn's parent company, time-warner. now it started with 68 teams, but only one can be crowned the national basketball champion. details on the winner and the incredible game after the break. everyone wants to switch to t-mobile. but your carrier has you locked up paying off a phone. not anymore. now t-mobile will pay off your phone. stuck in a contract? we've got you covered there too. anyone can tease you with a lower price for a limited time. only t-mobile guarantees your price will never go up.
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the duke blue devils are champions in men's college basketball for a fifth time. duke defeated the wisconsin badgers 68-63 monday night in a stunning game. all five duke championships have been won under head coach mike krzyzewski who this season became the first division one coach to win 1,000 games. blue devil fans celebrated the latest win with a massive bonfire. it's a win many didn't believe possible after the team suffered early setbacks. our rachel nichols reports. >> reporter: for the team that won the -- the team that won the title had far but a smooth path to the championship. midway through the season, one player was dismissed under a cloud of controversy. another player transferred. that left only eight players total, four of them freshmen. certainly not the ideal recipe for a championship group. as players told me in the wild
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celebration after their win, those challenges are exactly what made them tough out the come-from-behind monday and win it all. congratulations, tied at halftime. you guys fall back behind in the scoreboard. what made you know that you would come back and win the game? >> we just believed in one another. we believed in one another, we believed this coach. this team is full of fighters. no matter what the situation is, no matter what adversity we face, we've been able to overcome it the whole year. and it was just one of those moments where we came too far, we overcame too much to just lay down. >> reporter: you're a mcdonald's all american, you've had big games. not like you came out of nowhere. still, you're averaging four points a game coming into tonight. i can ask, what got into you? >> coach told me to stay ready all year. when i wasn't playing as much, he told me not to look for next
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year, keep me ready for this year. that's what i did. stayed mentally ready. thankfully i was able to come up big for us. >> it's as good a feeling as i've had in sports to win with this group. they -- they're so young and so together. so gritty, and just a pleasure to coach. it's just been a joy to coach. >> reporter: coach mike krzyzewski was devastated last year when his team was upset in the tournament's first round. then he got a text from a high school senior, jones. he wrote, "next year will be different." it was. on monday, jones scored 23 points to push duke to a title that blue devils fans will never forget. >> that was an awesome game to watch. you've been watching "cnn newsroom." i'm errol barnett. i'll be back next hour, joined once again by rosemary church. we have a few extra seconds and leave you with pictures of the
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scene of a massacre. a first look inside the kenyan university attack by terrorists. plus, racing to escape, yemenis rush to flee their war-ravaged country. and can u.s. spies access your nude photos? the new twist on the debate about government surveillance. hello, and welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm rosemary church. >> and i'm errol barnett. our last hour of the day with you, this is "cnn newsroom." the conflict in yemen grows
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