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tv   CNN International  CNN  April 21, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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xxxxxx the u.s. delivers a blunt warning over man ovitoba you'ves in the middle east. and on this earth day, a look at how chinese activists are taking on climate change. welcome to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. great to have you with us. i'm john vause and this is "cnn newsroom." and we r we start with new developments in the civil war in yemen. first up, saudi arabia says it
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is ending coalition air strikes against rebels. the month-long campaign will give away to a new diplomatic effort to end fighting. the saudi-led coalition are standing up to the insurgents and promise to impose exile when the time is rise. the former president will leave yemen and never return for a position in politics. u.s. president barack obama is warning iran against shipping weapons to rebels in yemen. his comments came during an interview with msnbc. >> what we've said to them is if there are weapons delivered to fashions within yemen that could threaten navigation, that's a problem. and we're not sending them obscure messages. we send very direct messages about it. >> u.s., saudi and egyptian ships are monitoring the coast of yemen and monitoring ships.
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now let's bring in lieutenant colonel rick francona. colonel, join the dots here because there's a lot of moving parts right now. we've got this u.s. naval build up and the saudis have called up the national guard. iranians are moving ships. we have five knots off the yemen coast with unknown cargo. what is actually happening and what is going to happen next? >> well, it appears that the saudis had some success with their air campaign. the goal of that air campaign was to get them to come to the table. it appears that they've had some limiting success with that. coupled with that, we want to keep them from gaining more weapons from the iranians. the iranians are moving at least nine ships. many we believe are carrying weapons. the usair craft carrier has been moved from the persian gulf to be in a position to intercept
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any of those deliveries. so it looks like things are going in the way of the saudis and americans right now. we'll see how this plays out. but it looks lite right now like we have brinksman ship going on between the iranians and the americans. >> the saudis have said this air campaign has, in fact, achieved their goals. have they shifted the goal post here? >> oh, i think they have. i think they have. initially, they were going to go in there and cause the return of the government of el hadi, the deposed ruler of the country. that has shifted to having negotiations but form, the former president out of there. i think they've been softeden their position a little bit because honestly, the campaign was not going well. i think thief achieved only limited objectives. >> if you look at the situation with the iranianship, they've tried to make it to port, possibly to aiden.
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how far will the u.s. go to enforce that embargo? >> we don't know. they have aircraft carriers down there. that gives them the capability if they want to. i'm not sure the united states and iran really want to get into a confrontation right now because there are other political considerations to take -- going on right now with the nuclear talks. so the situation between the two countries is very delicate. do we really want the united states to abort iranian vessels? once they enter yemeni waters, though, then we might see that happen. >> with the roosevelt out of the her shan gulf, does that mean the u.s. is not carrying out air strikes on targets? >> not at all. what we've seen is the build up of land aviation to replace that from the carriers. you're being carried out by u.s. air force fighters and coalition fighters based in countries
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around the persian gulf so the loss of that carrier doesn't affect the operations in iraq and syria. >> colonel francona, as always, we appreciate your time. thank you, sir. the captain of a migrant ship that capsized in the mediterranean over the weekend is now in jail. both are accused of man lawsuiter and human trafficking. they're among the 28 known survivors of this disaster. more than 800 others are believed to have drown. in another incident on tuesday, 446 people were rescued from a fishing boat off the coast of italy. libya says it has arrested hundreds of migrants trying to make their way to europe. on tuesday, libyan security forces detained 70 migrants waiting to board a boat to italy.
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several survive their own trips across the mediterranean describe their own journey to cnn. on the way to a new life, they've had to cheat death. beaten, robbed, shot at, that's the price of their passage. syrian mahmoud shabat fled his syrian homes two months ago leaving his family behind. >> in syria, i would have to be part of one party or isis. i would have to take up arms or kill people. but i don't want that. i only want to take care of my children, he says. this construction worker says he paid $5,800 to smugglers to take him by car to turkey and then boat to libya. in libya, another gang of
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migrant traffickers charged him $1800 to sail to italy. just before they set sail, mahmoud says libyan militia fighters stormed aboard. other men came aboard. they were wearing masks and they had guns. they searched us one by one looking for money and gold, he says. these teenagers say they've been sleeping rough in this park since they landed three weeks ago. gestures need no translation. >> very, very dangerous. >> why? >> this. this. alimai, who is christian, was traveling with other migrants through libya on two buses when he said ten isis gunmen intercepted them.
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he says 20 migrants were be headed. he ran and then he turned to show me the scar where he says a bullet grazed him. his friend, now 18, left his village six years ago. he first lived in an ethiopian refugee camp. then a journey on foot and by bus through libya. he stayed for a year in libya crammed into an overkroded house before sailing for italy. he says men he describes as libyan soldiers guarded them and applied electric shock if they refused to sleep on time or ate too much. >> siere says his boat, loaded with 500 migrants, almost capsized en route from libya. >> journey, not good. the boat -- and we are shocked.
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then came to us. >> their stories sound like hell, but these are the lucky ones. survivors washed up on the shores of their promised land. cnn, sicily. wild weather continues to pound south australia for a third day even though conditions eased on thursday. 200,000 homes lost electricity in and around sydney. a cruise ship that was stuck described what it was like to be lost at sea. >> i've been on a cruise before and i've never had this experience in my whole entire life.
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i was petrified. i thought i was going to die last night. >> sydney has had back to back days of more than 1100 millimeters of rain in what's being called a once in a decade storm. the u.s. justice department says it has opened a civil rights investigation into the death of a black man who died from injuries he suffered while in police custody. protesters took to the streets on wednesday demanding answers of how freddie gray ended up with a fatal injury after being arrested last month. the protests taking place as blaufrs released the names of six officers who are under investigation. police officers across the u.s. and in baltimore are under increased scrutiny under their treatment of citizens. baltimore on police say freddie gray's arrest took not
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one stop, but three, a long route in a long time before officers realized gray was seriously injured. hits family coming out publicly for the first time today. this map shows where gray was arrested, where he was initially placed in a police van, screaming in pain, his legs apparently not fully functional. >> look at [ bleep ] legs. >> at 8:45 p.m., police made their first stop at baker and mound streets. they shackle his legs and then two more stops. police drive gray to 1100 druid avenue, they say, to check on his condition. then they drive back to pick up another prisoner. only then do they drive gray to the western district police station. police say that time is 9:24 a.m. a lawyer for the gray family disputes the police timeline. >> they don't know when he was
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injured. >> the 24-year-old died sunday, one week after falling into a coma following the arrest by baltimore police. the person who shot sh video says before he started recording, police were being physically tough with gray. >> what i would like to call a cycle move where they had the heels of his feet to his back and he was still in handcuffs and he had the knee like in the back of his neck. >> miguel marquez reporting. a deputy charged in the shooting death of an unarmed black man has pled not guilty. robert bates was granted permission to travel to the bahamas for a family trip. the victim of the family says it sends a message of apathy about the shooting. bates is due back in court for his preliminary hearing july 2nd.
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a british man is charged with manipulating the stock market back in 2010 in what was called the flash crash. because the dow jones industrial plunged 600 points in minutes before quickly jumping back. large cell orders created the appearance of heavy supply and drove prices down. they canceled most of the orders before they could be executed. police say some made millions. the prosecutor for boston bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev is unrepentant and uncaring. the same jury which found him guilty on all 30 counts will decide whether he gets life in prison or the death penalty. cairo has sentenced egypt's first democratically elected president to 20 years in prison.
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mohammed morsi and 14 others stood in a cave, convicted of violence on protesters in 2012. morsy was deposed by the military the following year. still to come on "cnn newsroom," wednesday marks the 45th birthday. we'll take a look at one woman's attention to end the pollution in china. then some say luxury communities are wasting way too much water. we'll take a look at both sides of that contest. ow how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? well, there is biotene, specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants... biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth.
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. revisiting horrors of the past in a quest for closure as well as justice. 93-year-old octar groenig is facing 300,000 charges of accessory to murder. he was known as the bookkeeper of auschwitz. his case began in 1978 only to collapse and restart. but another ss guard was found
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guilty. out of the 50 plaintiffs, all auschwitz survivors, only 12 could physically make it to the court on tuesday. for more on the signatures of this trial, rabbi abraham cooper joins us now from los angeles. rabbi, thank you for being with us. they tried to prosecute groenig before, but that case was thrown out years ago. what is different this time around. >> well, german governments through the decades have a commitment to try not to welcome if their eyewitnesss left. and in many, many cases, a paper trail wasn't enough. after the conviction in germany a few years ago, the rules changed. and so people who were able to dodge the bullet decades ago were brought back before if bar of justice and, in fact, he's one of the first that actually,
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in a sense, admit at least his moral guilty and how the famous nazi hunter said at this late stage in history, we need people like him more as witnesses to history or as much as we need them as convicted criminals. and against the back drop of holocaust denial by iran and others, having someone who was there, who saw the atrocities, who was a part of the economic aspect of genocide going into an open court in germany, in a democracy, and admit his role and recall those horrors is extraordinarily important. >> this trial is very important, obviously, for the survivors and the victims of the holocaust. this haslty of ramifications for the future, for today, for victims of genocide now and tomorrow. there is no question we talk
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about the climate of genocide. we have to send a strong signal, that the perpetratorperpetrator part of the food chain they're involved will be held accountable sooner or later. god knows we've had too much genocide since the nazi holocaust. believe it or not, this trial that has an old man and a walker could have implications of some of the isis. it has geopolitical implications. you mentioned about groenig speaking out, he acknowledged the gas chambers, acknowledged the mass murder mostly because of holocaust deniers out there. does that have any bearing in this case? >> i think so far as his personal culpability, no. historically, it's important
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eyewitness testimony when he talks about a jewish child who had its head barbed against the wall because it's crying for its mother. but at the end of the day, he has to take personal responsibility for his actions. and i know he surprised me before the bar of justice, but i think at this point it's an important statement by germany, very important statement to younger generations in europe and some of the stands and soccer fans who are speaking juice to the gat claim better and did nothing about it. >> he was in auschwitz in june 1944. that's about the time the allies land in norm mandy. germany knew it was going to lose the war. it put all of its efforts to mass murder over 400,000 hungarian jus in a very, very short period of time. this man was a cog in that
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effort. >> personal responsibility, sluicely. rabbi cooper, we appreciate it. thank you, sir. >> thank you, john. wednesday is earth day, a day to raise awareness about pollution around the world. in china, the day is a harsh reminder that smog, which threatens hundreds of millions of people, but some are fighting back. like millions of her fellow chinese, her biggest worry about the environment on this earth day is up in the air. >> when i was a little, we had smog that smelled fresh. now the smog makes you want to hold your breath. >> so this young environmentalist makes that her
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mission. a challenge often made harder, she says, be by people's lack of knowledge about the causes and harms of toxic air. but things are changing. a famous atvmaker released a documentary in late february. they entered the zone and went viral online clocking over 2 00 million views in a week. >> we had impact on view. the more they know, the more quickly they will come. >> the grim picture wasn't news. >> you can probably see or not see behind me the skyline is very visible. that was me in january 2013. now i'm standing in the very same spot and the problem remains. that amazing beijing skyline behind me is still often sh rouded in a thick layer of smog
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making a day like this so special. >> which turned an issue tightly controlled by the government to an unprecedented national debate. that debate has been proved too much for the communist authorities. the information is out there. for this former singing teacher turned pollution fighter, he's noticed tougher government regulations. >> no parents wanted their children to great such air or wear masks all day long. so what i'm doing is not just to protect me or my family, but future generations. >> cnn, beijing. scientists predict we will
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increase the odds of natural disasters if the planet's climate rises more than 2 degrees celsius. cnn is launching a long-term project looking into this foop find out more at our website, cnn.com. and scientist ves stumbled on a new frog species in costa rica. it's called diane's bear heart of glass flog. it is a lot like another or famous green frog. now there's 14 times of grass frox. when we come back, iran denies it is arming the rubbles. just ahead also, a migrant recounts his struggle to each europe from africa. is a few hundred thousand doses of flu vaccine. that need to be kept at 41 degrees.
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welcome back, everybody. you're watching "cnn newsroom." i'm john vause. the captain of a migrant ship that capsized over the weekend is now in jail along with a syrian crew member. both are accused of human trafficking and man slaughter. more than 800 others are presumed dead. yemen's president is making the coalition led by saudi arabia for standing up to the rebels. saudi arabia announced tuesday it's ending air strikes against
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rebel targets in yellen. u.s. president barack obama is warning iran not to ship weapons to the rebels in yemen. the u.s., saudi and egyptian warships are following the waters off the coast. they say it gives them additional options to help with the saudi led coalition if necessary. iran says they're protecting against pirates and delivering humanitarian aid. fred reports now from tehran. escalating violence on the ground in yemen, but there may be a more difficult confrontation at sea. the u.s. sent warships to the area to intercept iranian vessels. the commander of iran's navy tells me his forces have no such intentions. >> we don't let anyone give us
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warnings or threats, he says, because we are working according to international law and regulation. and we work for the security of our country and other countrieses. the u.s. passed an arms embargo. saudi arabia accused them of providing weapons to the rebels. >> we've established a presence in that area to protect our oil tankers and other iranian ships and eps to today we've had very successful. in some instances, other countries have asks us for help. >> the iranians heavily criticize saudi arabia's campaign. workers loading supplies at this warehouse slated to go to yemen.
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>> it's mostly pain relievers? pain. >> the iranian re red crescent tells us they haven't made any officials since late march. >> iran maintains that any aid sent to yemen is purely humanitarian. with the fighting going on in yemen, it's unsure when or if -- iran and world powers continue to negotiate towards an agreement. cnn, iran. and we turn now to growing migration. statistics show illegal border crossings from north africa reached a staggering new level last year. more than 170,000 migrants arrived in italy alone, ending in one country in european union
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history. most of the migrants are from syria and more africans are coming from sub-saharan regions. one migrant is recounting his journey. he made two trips across the mediterranean and here he explains what happened during his journey. >> only one land rover. we start to go to the desert. we don't have water. we only have water mixed by petroleum, so you don't drink a lot. i say okay, if you -- if he decides to let me die, at least let me die on the sea, not on the desert. i don't want to suffer. after that, whe move to benghaz.
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we become like a -- tell us, if you are a woman, for you is more than hard for everything. until we reach tripoli, i take the first boat. after ten hours on the sea, the boat stopped. the motor doesn't work. after three more days, the coast guards of malta come to us. we were happy because at least we go to malta. but it's not like this. malta give us to the libyans and he push us back to libya. >> governments struggle to deal with the surge in migrants, some everyday ordinary people are taking on the challenge themselves.
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chris started the migrant offshore aid station last year. he says the organization have helped save thousands of lives. >> you see these boats that are packed up with people where you can't even actually see the vessel it's so packed with people. and, of course, in this latest incident, and we've seen this ourselves, women, children, packed at the bottom of these boats, backed in like sardines. they're so packed together that they're not even able to breathe. when that recent co-- packed in that vessel caused a lot of issues for them. but once that capsize happens, they can't get out, so they're trapped. we're trying to alleviate that by using unmanned drones to locate these migrants.
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doctors without boarders have joined us. wee going out now together to save lives. we need the public support. we get a lot of questions from the public saying what can we do to help you? we're calling on the public to help fund this initiative and to help save lives at sea because that is the top priority. we believe nobody deserves to die at sea. they were inspired when pope francis gave a speech criticizing what he called the global indifference to the refugee crisis. to south africa now where the pope spoke. in south africa, troops were deployed after immigrants have
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been accused of taking their jobs. four men accused in that johannesburg killing were charged with robbery and murder. mow to the u.s. drug enforcement administration is stepping down next month. michelle leonhart is stepping down after discussing d.e.a. agents having sex during an operation in colombia. president obama is selling brating a rare moment of bipartisanship. he hosted an event on tuesday. on the medicare reform bill. mr. obama thanked both parties for coming together on something that makes the country either about. republican house speaker john boehner gave a kiss on the cheek to nancy pelosi.
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new zealand's prime minister is apologizing to an auckland waitress for repeatedly pulling her a hair. the woman said in a post, it all least year apparently six different times. he called it a -- but the woman says it was bullying and harassment. she said she threatened to hit him if he didn't stop. many across california are dealing with the water shortage. there are some communities that seem to be immune from it all. >> look, right across the street at this gated subdivision. and you see lush, manicured lawns and even golf courses. critics say this defies mother nature and it is mott sustainable. still to come here, we'll look at the controversy surrounding luxurious communities.
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but first, we have a very special guest. come on out, flo! [house band playing] you have anything to say to flo? nah, i'll just let the results do the talking. [crowd booing] well, he can do that. we show our progressive direct rate and the rates of our competitors even if progressive isn't the lowest. it looks like progressive is not the lowest! ohhhh! when we return, we'll find out whether doug is the father. wait, what?
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welcome back. california is looking at a fairley dry earth day. it's in its worst drought in 1200 years. california's agricultural industry is the biggest water user. the drought has caused crops to die and thousands of acres of land to go unused. earlier this month, the governor imposed mandatory water restrictions on businesses and residents and farms. 11 trillion gallons of rainwater are needed to pull the state out of of this crisis. as california deals with its water woes, there are three high income desert communities consuming way more than their fair share. how is that stirring up a lot of controversy? >> in the middle of california's
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desert, springs an artificial oasis. >> this is what we call our duck pond. >> one duck for the ponds, another for the swans and the pontoon boats. there are canals, fountains, showcasing many water falls and nourished grass as soft as it looks. at the lake mirage racket club, this looks like a mirage as the rest of the state suffers through a punishing drought. >> it seems so ridiculous to have something so green and filled with water in the middle of the desert. >> we're one of a number of places that are like this. people do like to come to the desert for the greenness of it, the uniqueness of it. >> unique describes everywhere you look in the cochella valley, home to the world famous palm springs. >> the playground of the stars. >> the desert community builds itself in this rotary film as a beckoning oasis and it worked. celebrities, the rich, average
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tourist flocked. from 1950 to 2015 the population exploded by roughly 1500%. by 2020, estimates show the population will grow by another 20%. but all the growth comes with a very steep price for the entire state pap price paid in water. california says per capita three desert communities are among the top ten biggest daily water hogs in the entire state. while the local authorities dispute the figures because many residents only live here part-time. this is what california's deserts are supposed to look like. it's barren. nothing is growing, nothing is green. but look across the street at this gated subdivision and you see lush, manicured lawns and even golf courses. critics say this defies mother nature and it is not sustainable. local blogger casey dolean says the resorts like the one where we met are dated and secured
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from general public scrutiny and either shut off the spigotes and look beyond their gates. >> there should at least be a discussion of, hey, if there's not much water left, should nine pooles and a pond and everything else, should that be where we're giving our water to right now? probably not. >> much of the water is shared by the entire state and it's running dry. palm springs city manager argues change is happening. the city is yanking the brown grass from city hall sdwb unthinkable just a few years ago. >> history of what palm springs was and creating these desert oasises. but that's changing and that isn't going to be the case any more. >> why, then, do we see these gated communities with the pools, with their boats and swans on their pool? why did that continue? >> and you'll see that changing, as well. >> back at laj mirage racket club, roy says they are trying,
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balancing what residents want with what the state is requiring. the community has planted some drought tolerant plants, emphasis on some. cnn, rancho mirage, california. you know, it's interesting just how much water people waste. but we've been talking about the drought. over in australia and sydney, it's quite the opposite. they've had way too much water. >> they. and typically they get 4 inches or 100 millimeters. they see that on monday. they saw that again on tuesday. we talk about nor'easters in the united states. this is akin to what you would see on this corner of australia. we'll touch on exactly what happens here because the proximity of this storm system towards the land, that's about 5 degrees off the australian coastline. set the stage for the tremendous waves to batter the coastline. a lot of vessels impacted by this. that's the prime position.
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we get about 10 of them per year. this particular one, among the most memorable of some we've seen in decades. this is a famed beach across sydney. the sandblasting some of the beach communities and pushing its way towards areas of the shop displacing it by hundreds of meters. but the temperature, the rainfall, all of them a big story out of sydney. rainfall, over 115 millimeters or so came down in 24 hours. heaviest rainfall in 13 years, that's about 5 inches if you're curious. the max temperature was 15 celsius, about 60 fahrenheit. that's the coldest april day they've seen in over 32 years. 200,000 people without power. that's the most since 2007. there's the rainfall, 238 millimeters since monday. typically they say 107 millimeters. more importantly, it is depleting. heavier rain along the coast, those are inland.
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but on the coastal communities, you will get some additional rainfall. john, you were not far away from here just a couple of days ago. this is california, 70 miles east of palm springs, the only tornado in the united states on tuesday. pretty impressive sight. you look at california as a whole, 10 tornados on average per year and 22 dornds in riverside county since 1950. 13 of them since the early 2000s. pretty impressive sight in desert center, california. >> i think they have a few more of those. >> absolutely. >> thank you. we'll take a short break here on cnn. when we come back, it was not a bull pen blowup, but a baseball manager's foul mouth anti-media red is getting a lot of attention. we'll have the tirade, just ahead.
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[burke] or how you may be covered for this... [burke] but not for something like this... [burke] talk to farmers and see what gaps could be hiding in your coverage. [sfx: yeti noise] ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum, bum - bum - bum - bum ♪ well, for reporters, it all seemed to be a pretty innocent question, asking about the status of a u.s. baseball player. that was until the team's manager went on a foul mouth tirade, dropping an "f" bomb every few seconds.
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jeanne moos counts the curses. >> it's f-bombs away. >> sick of [ bleep ]. >> cincinnati reds manager brian pyce was a one man originally of expletives. >> it's [ bleep ] hard enough to win here without having [ bleep ] we bring to the table every day. >> cincinnati inquirier reporter rowscranes counted 77 in a 5:30-minute ran. >> i've been at [ bleep ] candid as i can [ bleep ] be about this team as our players. and we've got to [ bleep ] deal with every -- >> 77 "f" bombs and 11 uses of a vulgar term of feces. two doe vine, one equine. this was about players that might help rivals. >> your job isn't to sniff out every [ bleep ] thing that is about the reds. >> a reporter said later that is precisely his job. as the rant picked up steam, the
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pace of the expletives quickened. >> i'm sick of [ bleep ] second-guessing [ bleep ]. you guys with do whatever the [ bleep ] you want but i'll tell you in, i'm not going to [ bleep ] tell you everything about this [ bleep ] club because you are going to sniff it out there in this. >> seven bleeps in seven seconds. >> if you want to crown them, crown their [ bleep ]. come after me. i'm a man! >> so then kansas city royals manager, hal mccray, still takes the cake for heaving a tape recorder that gashed a sports writer. and for brian price, he's now sort of apologized. while i stand by the content of my message, i am sorry for the choice of words. oh, they were choice already. one joker rewrote price's apology this way. i am [ bleep ] sorry for the [ bleep ] words that i used yesterday. the reds have been struggling and now their manager will have
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to manage having sworn off swear words. jeanne moos, cnn, new york. >> someone is a potty mouth. you're watching cnn. i'm john vause. "cnn newsroom" continues next hour. stay with us. this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. a mouth breather! well, put on a breathe right strip and shut your mouth. allergy medicines open your nose over time, but add a breathe right strip and pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more. so you can breathe and sleep. add breathe right to your allergy medicine. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right and look for the calming scent of breathe right lavender in the sleep aisle. why do we do it? why do we spend every waking moment, thinking about people? why are we so committed to keeping you connected?
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fighters clash on the streets there is a major change in how the battle for yemen is being waged from the sky. plus, four men appear in court accused in a horrific beating that made international headlines. and protests inside another u.s. city after an african-american man dies sustaining a fatal injury while in police custody. hello,we hello, welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm rosemary church. this is "cnn newsroom." ♪ thank you for joining us, everyone. we begin in me

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