tv CNN International CNN April 27, 2015 11:00pm-12:01am PDT
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as rescue workers continue to pull survivors out of the rubble, the death toll in nepal rises. and rioters tear apart a major u.s. city, looting stores and setting buildings ablaze. >> coming up for you, time is running out for members of the bali 9 smuggling ring. the execution could take place within a matter of hours. i'm errol barnett welcome to the viewers in the u.s. and around the world. proosh y appreciate you tuning in and
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joining us on cnn. we want to begin with new death tolls from this weekend's earthquake in nepal. as of now it has killed, 4,352 people in nepal, india and tibet. those numbers are expected to continue to rise as officials say they don't know how many more are missing. crews have been working 'round-the-clock to find survivors in the debris. more than 8,000 people have been injured and the united nations estimates some 8 million people across nepal have been impacted by the quake and aftermath. also desperate need for food, for more than 1 million earth quake survivors. very important point to make. now, india was also impacted by this earth quake. the deaths and injuries. it has stepped up in a big way to help its neighboring nation. we are joined on the line now from new deli to talk about that effort, india was the first, among the first nations to
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deploy resources to nepal. the key question though is how much has arrived and what is the plan for getting it to those distant rural areas outside kathmandu? >> there have been some serious delays in getting the relief material into nepal. the delay, nepal, kathmandu is overwhelmed. so much pressure on the airport. dozens and dozens of aircraft trying to get in. and aircraft trying to land in nepal. because of severe congestion, many flights have had to turn around. some flights from india carrying relief supplies over the last two days have had to turn around as well. overall india has been successful in getting quite a bit of relief supplies into nepal. india has been able to send medical supplies, field hospitals, team of doctors, team
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of engineers, oxygen, food, water, tents, all of these things which are desperately need in nepal. it is not just the entire region has come together. pakistan, china, they have been contributing too. pakistan has sent aircraft, paramedics, again, medicines, water, china has contributed to the effort as well. so they are getting material into nepal, perhaps, and slower than they would have liked to. trouble in making sure the relief supplies make it to distant remote areas in nepal. these areas are tricky to get to because the roads, the best of times it is hard to reach this area. you have to keep in mind the geography of nepal, a mountainous country, very often the roads take you to remote areas, villages, are so narrow you can just, only allow one car
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to pass through at a time. on top of that you add to the devastation of the damage caused by earthquakes. getting to the remote areas is very, very difficult. they have been using helicopters to try and get to these places. but then again, finding a match of land that even for a helicopter to land in is difficult. so, relief supplies, which are sorely needed are on the way. with some delays. and yes, getting them to the remote remote areas, that perhaps -- >> mallika kapur, there on the line with us from new dehli, detailing india's efforts to help the millions of people impacted by the quake in nepal. it appears we have lost that connection. but the point, mallika was making there, important one to underscore while we have seen a lot of the devastation from kathmandu, the capital, densely populated. we don't have a full since of how bad things are in the more rural and more distant areas, the aid though that is heading into the country is on its way to those areas. we'll keep you updated on all of
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this. in the coming hours, we'll have more on this, more on the recovery efforts in nepal as well. later this hour. but first we want to turn to another big story that we're following here at cnn. taking place in the u.s. state of maryland. the large parts of city of baltimore, up in smoke, fom l following violent appropriate tests and looting. maryland's governor, declared a state of emergency. the national guard deployed to deal with rioting. buildings and cars burned late into monday night. the pictures from a short time ago. earlier monday, students joined protesters, throwing rocks and bricks at police officers. at least 15 officers have been injured. two dozen people arrested. police, want up to 5,000 additional law enforcement officials to be sent in from neighboring areas. >> what we do know is that they're criminals. they attacked officers without provocation. they have no regard for the safety of the people that live in that community.
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and our officers are working hard to bring about order. >> businesses were also looted. some set on fire. including this cvs pharmacy, an eyewitness video there. now all of the city's public schools are closed. the mayor ordered a city wide curfew beginning 10:00 p.m. for one week. >> i understand anger. but what we are seeing isn't anger, it's destruction of a community, the same community they, they say they care about they're destroying. you can't have it both ways. >> now, freddie gray's family is condemning rioting. protests turned violent after the funeral for the 25-year-old was held. gray died from a spinal cord injury one week after being arrested. the circumstances of his injury are under investigation. his mother spoke out. >> i am hurt. i want y'all to get justice for
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my son. don't do it like this here. don't tear up the whole city just for him. it's wrong. >> for the latest from baltimore, let's cross to our jason carroll joins us from there live. jason, a night filled with violence and looting. just past 2:00 a.m., have things calmed down, do officials have a handle on what has taken place? >> i can only say that it is a night that, that is still going on. a night that is still not over. take a look behind me. this was a rite-aid. set ablaze, not too long ago. fortunately fire was able to get out here fairly quickly. take a look behind me. see what they're trying to do here. they just extended the ladder to the top of the roof to try to attack the fire from the top there. they have already -- broken out many of the windows here. to let the fire try to burn itself out. they were able to get out here. get water on here.
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errol, just another example of the sad state of this city at this point. even at this hour. you heard the mayor, the governor saying they're doing their best to get the situation under control. that still has not happened as of yet. sporadic fires still breaks out at various location. this being one of them. you heard earlier today. you saw the images from the cvs store now. you have a rite-aid, also in west baltimore. these are the types of buildings the establishments that people in this community depended on. still depend on now. you have, yet another one that -- that, has gone down because of some looters and rye yetters that have come out. and, one of the challenges that -- that officials are facing out here is because baltimore is such a large city and in comparison to such, ferguson for example. some of the police are saying it is harder for them to get a handle on some of the groups that have splintered off. and caused problems look you see right out here right now. now that they have been able to
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get more reinforcements into the area. perhaps, the morning will bear better news. but for now yet another fire here in baltimore. errol. >> the sad reality, jason, that fire behind you, the others we have seen and the looting will truly dominate the headlines coming out of baltimore tomorrow and for the next few daiys whic in a way minimizes and take as way the message of thousand of peaceful protesters in the past few days. i know there are still fire alarms and fire trucks near you. can you just explain to our viewers what the flash point for all this was at freddie gray's initial arrest and subsequent death? [ sirens blaring ] >> correct. that was the flash point. another firetruck coming down. you see here, responding to the scene or perhaps another scene. and i think as you were saying, errol, that's the problem. because now this is what is dominating the news.
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it is going to the rioting, looting that we saw throughout the night. and into the early morning hours now. and the peaceful demonstrators that came out here throughout the past several dates. have been out here speaking abut injustice. their voices now not being heard. these arlt images dominating the news. perhaps in the coming days that message will get out again. for now the message in terms of coming from the city. trying to get city back under control. making it safe as the mayor said so demonstrators can come out and peacefully voice their concerns. errol. >> this has the the attention of the newly sworn in attorney general, loretta lynch calling this senseless. she sent department officials to baltimore. heard from the mayor, police commissioner, everyone watching what happened and keeping things
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saturday's earthquake in nepal left almost 1.5 million people in need of food according to the u.n. more than half of those people live near the quake's epicenter. and food trucks are heading to them today. anderson cooper looks at the quake's aftermath and what else survivors are dealing with. >> reporter: in kathmandu's square, tourists shoot this video moments before the devastating earthquake strikes. thousand of bird take to the skies, the buildings crumble, filling the air with dust.
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this video shows the chaos on the ground in the moments right after the quake. taken by a nepalese team shooting an episode for their internet show. terrified residents poured into the streets trying to escape the damaged buildings. some go to work right away clearing the rubble with their hand trying to find survivors. nepal is in a region used to earthquakes, but it is soon clear this one is massive. the destruction widespread. the casualties high. this little boy was saved after three hours of digging. rescuers tell him to look up and open his eyes. rescuers asked this woman if she is okay. i'm hurting everywhere she says. many more are found alive and pulled out of the rubble, but the recovery is slow. powerful after shocks continue to bring down buildings.
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as bbc reporter was caught in the middle of one of the aftershocks. >> as you can see everyone is running through the streets. it is actually quite hard to balance. looking up at the buildings. worried that the buildings will fall again. of course it is not actually the earthquakes that kill, it's the falling buildings. >> worried that more buildings will fall, residents are sleeping outdoors. many iconic buildings and temples have been destroyed in the quake. some centuries old. the quake also triggers a huge avalanche on mt. everest, with a direct hit on the base camp which has 18,000 feet above sea level. [ bleep ], [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. >> camp is destroyed. at least 17 were killed. including four americans. and some remain missing.
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with other climbers still stranded, higher up on the mountain. rescue helicopters were treating not only the survivors but also the bodies. nepal is one of the poorest and least developed countries in the world, fuel and electricity are now scarce. hospitals in kathmandu are overwhelmed with the wounded and the destruction though evident in the capital remains largely unseen in some of the outlying areas. that was anderson cooper reporting there giving us a bit of an overview of what has taken place the last few days. meanwhile, nepalese living abroad are heading home. we are joined now live from the hong kong airport with that part of the story. monesha, you have been speaking with the nepalese living in hong kong who desperately want to get back hope. what have they been telling you? >> reporter: that's right, errol, i am just, a stone's throw away from one of the check
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in tedesks. we are ten minutes from check in. what people in the nepalese community have been telling us, 200 are expected to try to get on a later flight to got out there because they're worried about the people they love, the communities they have come from. there are 45,000 nepalese in hong kong. migrant labor around, not just this country. southeast asia from may pal. contributes to more than 20% of nepal's gdp. huge contingent live abroad. many of the people who have gone overseas as migrants have come from families in rural areas. the beg worry. hearing that from anderson a second ago. that in kathmandu, the damage is becoming evident. once people get out to the rural parts, that have been affected they're going to get an idea of what happened in the villages hurt by the quake. yes, waiting for people in the community. they said they're worried. concerned about their loved ones. they would look to get out there so they can help, so that they
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can find those that they haven't heard from, errol. >> it truly is -- you can understand and empathize with that sense of loss and not knowing what is happening. a lot of what we know is from densely. lated areas. don't have a sense of what is happening in the rural areas. same point made by the u.n. situation report they released not too long ago. saying they still want to get out to distant areas to try to find out, how badly people there have been impacted. but there is a long cultural connection between hong kong where you are, and nepal. a community of, i think you said, roughly 40,000 or so, living in hong kong. what is the back ground on that? >> yeah, some in the late '60s, '70s, the large contingent from the region, where the epicenter was, a large contingent came here to work for the british army. known for their marshall
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prowess. now a generation on, two generations on, their grandchildren are living here in hong kong. it is a strong community. a well-connected, tight-knit community. ly connected to the affected by the quake. you can imagine why they can't to go there. detail on the flight situation. you have probably been hearing over the last few days about ad hoc nature of flights in and out of the international airport, in kathmandu. here what we have been told by airport staff is that has been patchy with the flights. and there have been delays obviously you have to depend on flights in from kathmandu, turn around and go back. though we have a scheduled flight later this evening. anyone any guess whether that will leave on time. we are going to be meeting some members of the community to see what they help to achieve when they get there if they can get through the log jams at the airport on the other side. >> the log jam we knew this time
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yesterday were going to be an issue. the airport there, with a single runway. you have got all of the international aid, coming into the country. and, you have got this, well not just flights coming in. planes need to head out so people where you are can get back home. they may indeed need to be patient. manisha tank, live for us in hong kong on that part of the important story. indeed the situation in nepal remains dire. the u.n. situation report. in it that they say 8 million people were affected by saturday's quake. 1.4 million of them desperately need food. while walter ater and shelter it supply. nations rallying to help nepal, financial donations, relief supplies and assistance with operations. a breakdown. the european union and 15 countries are sending iing fina aid.
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now, these are some of the many countries sending search-and-rescue teams. india, sending ten helicopters to help search for survivors. south korea sending a specialist search team that worked ein haiti. charities, nongovernmental organizations helping out. logo on the screen. if you choose to help. head to cnn.com/impact. now, israel plans to air lift 25 infants born to surrogate mothers with israeli parents most of them from nepal. the country has become a destination for couples looking to have children through surrogates. with more on this, let's turn to our correspondent from kathmandu. you have been with the israel defense force on this trip. tell us about the surrogate industry in nepal for gay israelis. >> doesn't appear that he can hear me. if you can, tell us about what you have witnessed?
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on your trip to nepal. >> for most of the flights, everybody was sort offence antsy on the ground to get working. with the emergency response team. an experienced team. ready and working there. field hospitals. search-and-rescue teams. in emergency situation. they have been to haiti, japan, philippines, emergencies there. ready to handle this situation. setting up the hospital that can treat 200 people and search-and-rescue teams. as you mention, surrogate mothers, children, also a big concern for them. because many of these parents are israeli parents who used nepal, or come to nepal to have surrogate children. the number is at 25. some are in israel. some are in nepal. able to speak with an israeli couple here, traveling back to israel with their newborn. born a few days before the earthquake. difficult to describe the sense of relief there.
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sleepless nights after the quakes wondering if and when they could get out of here. they knew their child needed medical care. they knew it simply wasn't going to happen here. the medical system was stretched beyond capacity. so, to see their relief when they saw an israeli rare line call in ready to take them home. the reliefimmeasurable. there are more on the ground here. some say, israeli embassy. some religious homes around the kitty. you get to the field hospital. the field hospital wants to deep side whether to deliver here, or bring them back to israel. something on israel's radar. same time. part of their mission. they're here to help. the crisis as well the they brought 95 tons of medical supplies to do so. >> really a fascinating dynamic. this isn't something i was aware of. tell us about -- i guess the surrogate industry in nepal for gay israelis.
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>> i would say it is not uncommon. known as a destination. nepal is a popular destination for israeli trekkers. and popular destination for israeli couples, israeli gay couples who are looking to have children. they can, i think they can do it in america, there are organizations in israel and here that work together to help arrange it here. one of the couples back in israel had a surrogate child a year and a half ago, born a year and a half ago. they didn't have to return for their second surrogate child. that child unfortunately, right now, is waiting to be born. should be born in the coming days here. waiting to find out if the child will be born here or will be born back in israel. i would say it is common. known. israeli couples, especially gay couples know this is an option for them if they choose to have children. they talk about it in positive terms. a positive experience. they spend a month here. >> and it is heart warming to see these young, new modern families being reunited or at least getting to a safe place.
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live from the airport at kathmandu, really the center of a lot of the activity right now giving us the israeli perspective on some of the release, relief efforts. still to come here on cnn. hear from the mayor of baltimore and the governor of maryland as protesters set fires and looted businesses, in parts of that city. plus a chaotic scene in indonesia as desperate relatives make a final plea. an update on the bali 9 case. live. after this.
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world. i'm errol barnett. our top stories this hour -- indonesia's attorney general says the executions of the so-called bali 9 could take place in the coming hours. the families of two australians, arrived in indonesia to say their good-byes. indonesia's president denied all prisoners appeals for clemency late last year. after noon at this moment in nepal where rescuers and aid groups are working to find victims and survivors of the earthquake. right now the death toll is more than 4,300. 8,000 injured. the u.n. says 1.4 million people are in need of food. >> the captain of the sewol ferry that sank last year in south korea found guilty of murder on appeal. acquitted of murder last november, but found guilty of gross negligence. prosecutors felt that wasn't sufficient and appealed. 304 people died when the ferry sank last april.
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>> violent protests and rioting in baltimore, maryland, forced the government there to declare state of emergency there. the city's may your ordered overnight city wide curfew. follows monday's funeral for freddie gray, the african-american man who died of a spinal cord injury some how while in police custody. >> now earlier cnn's don lemon spoke with baltimore's mayor and the governor of maryland about the ongoing violence there. here is their conversation. >> we have been standing by in preparation just in case the violence escalated which it did. when the mayor called, we activated. we were fully prepared. we had assets prepared. order prepared and ready to sign. as soon as the mayor called we activated it. >> i think it is -- again want to thank the governor for his support for being here for baltimore as we bring order. it is a very delicate balancing act to make sure that you
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protect people's right to free speech, their right to protest, the fact that people exploited the opportunity to protest with violence and looting doesn't mean that i don't have a duty to protect people's right to be heard. >> you said your words were twisted. that didn't mean the destruction of property. >> what i said very clearly was when you give, when you facilitate space for people to be heard, that space was exploited by those who meant to do harm to our city. that's what i was saying. very clearly. and when the, the -- when the protesters got out of hand, and started to destroy property. we used best practices, the way officers are trained to make sure that we are focusing on those that were doing the damage. and also, working to not escalate. we have seen all over, all over the country, and throughout our
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history, what happens when you use too much force to respond to an incident. it escalates and can be a lot worse. i didn't want that for my city. we are working hard to contain this and do it in a way that doesn't turn baltimore into a military state. >> are there streets in baltimore, neighborhood, areas, s still not under police control? >> right now we are focused on responding to where the individuals are out. we have control. we are responding to fire. we are responding to police. we will make sure the city is open for business tomorrow. >> an interview from just a few hours ago. while chris cuomo is also on the ground there in baltimore. earlier he describes what was happening around him. take a look. >> people down the street to the left of wha irere we are right . throwing bottles and objects to hurt the cops. they're not firing bullets back. they're firing suppression bullets with pepper spray.
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here is a baby from the building next door. evacuating people. a mother worried bought her kid. appears her baby is okay. officer taking the child. seems to be the other parent. now going back in to get other people. >> we will continue to keep you updated on the situation there in, in baltimore, maryland as it develops. for the moment though we pivot back to our other top story. doctors and nurses in nepal struggling to help the thousand of people who desperately need medical attention. the situation there is still chaotic. we don't have enough equipment. they don't have enough beds either. some surgeries are performed in make shift operating theaters. one girl got her treatment for a serious brain injury from our own dr. sanjay gupta who just arrived in the country. here is his report. >> reporter: thousand were killed during the initial quake. without urgent medical care, many thousand more will likely
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die. we made our way into one of the busiest hospitals in kathmandu. and actually a lobby area. normally a lobby area. get an idea of how chaotic the scene is over here. this area over here they set up for people with brain injuries, spinal cord injuries. very challenging. don't have enough ventilators. don't have enough monitors. see over here, they actually are doing procedures right at the bedside because there is not enough operating room capabilities. operations performed, right in the hospital lobby. this facility so overwhelmed dozens are forced to wait outside until medical personnel can give them care. >> nearly two days after the earthquake. get an idea how bid busy things are. at the busiest hospital. emergency vehicles keep coming in. patients either being rescue. finally found. making their way through the
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traffic and chaos to get to the hospital. these patients are the lucky ones. so many patients still out there waiting to be found. >> one of the lucky ones, 8-year-old salina. her journey from the countryside taken more than a day. her grandfather explains to doctors that the family house simply collapsed on her. she spent hours in the rubble. before being rescued. selina is dazed, clearly in pain from injuries to her head. xachl m examining her cat scan, reveals. a fractured skull. blood clot. her brain is swelling. without surgery she will have damage. but look so many other earthquake victims, she will diet. as the a practicing neurosurgeon, i am asked to assist in the operation. it is called a craniotomy, conditions and equipment available are more like what you find in a war zone rather than an operating room. but the operation is a success.
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and selina will live. >> nepal's president, is also a doctor. he says his country is facing a medical calamity never been seen before. he asks for assistance. there is no doubt, nepal need all the help it can possibly get. how soon this end is unclear. as they bring in more patients from more remote areas. likely the bed, the demand for the beds is going to go up. at times they lose power. and there is still the question of after shocks and tremors. every time one happens. do you evacuate patience? do you leave them in the hospital? what do you do? a question they're trying to answer almost every single day. dr. sanjay gupta, cnn, kathmandu, nepal. >> and our meteorologist, ivan cabrera joins us to talk about it indepth. our dr. sanjay gupta has the the
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skills and was asked to. the doctor saying this is a medical calamity never bean senn before. in a hospital. most people living outside. >> living outside in tents and some cases tarps. very flimsy. the kind. need a little wind. that tarp is gone. what we have rolling through there right now, let me show you on the board here. this in the united states would have what we call severe thunderstorm warning with it here. this is actually a cluster of thunderstorms. that organized through the late night hours. and has blossomed here and hitting the area right now. a disaster for them. this will bring torrential rain over several hours. and bringing intense winds. the kinds of winds that can knock down tents. right over kathmandu. worst case scenario. this dives down. it looks like out of nowhere. further to the north and west we saw the development earlier
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tonight. as we continue over the next several hours, see showers and thunderstorms here, unfortunately, that storm is going to take a while before it fizzles and moves to the east. temperatures falling into the teens. this is concern, errol talked about. a lot of people out there with very little shelter. low teens. an issue. that is cold. need blankets for that. very cold indeed. rain continues over the next few days. have the cluster move out. through the next 24-48-72 hours. a round of showers, thundershowers through the afternoon. once again. higher elevation novell. to the north and east. i will leave you with, a little bit more on the forecast here with temperatures in the 20s. the overnight lows really that concern me with teens out there, to which to you and me wouldn't be anner to wa eissue. if you are elderly, young, an issue with the temperatures. with the rain, just awful out there now. >> all right, ivan. thank you for the update. see you again soon.
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appreciate it. do stay with cnn for latest on recovery efforts in nepal. we will have more at the top of the next hour. stay with cnn. we are back after this. and the samsung galaxy s6 edge is breaking the rules of design. can't get your hands on it because you're locked down by a carrier? break free t-mobile will pay every penny of your switching fees. get ahead of the curve and get your hands on the galaxy s6 edge for $0 down at t-mobile today.
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we want to get you up to speed on a breaking developing story following for you today. indonesia's attorney general says the execution of the so-called bali 9 will take place in the coming hours. two australians convicted of being the leaders of the drug smuggling ring ten years age their families arrived in indonesia and made another plea to cancel the executions. >> please ask the president to use his powers and intervene and save their lives. >> the president need to show that now, and he is the only one that can stop it. it's not too late to do so. so please ask the president, please show mercy. >> coffins are ready for all of
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the convicts. indonesia's president denied all the prisoners appeals for clemency. it is hard to see a scenario where the courts will reverse their decision. and our reporter joins us now live. this appears to be the two remaining members of the bali 9, appears to be their last day. what can you tell us about what is happening now? >> well there is -- a grim sense of impending doom right now as we count down the hours. nine of ten at execution island await their fate. they were given the notice on saturday we believe. nine of the people. that is the 72-hour notice period they have to be given. we also understand from one of lawyers that didn't want to be named.
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a lot of them have been told today, 2:00 p.m. local time would be their last visit with their loved ones. and so, from here on in, after about 72-hour period. some time this afternoon. we don't have an exact time when the notices were handed out. they could be executed by firing squad. it is not just the bali 9 ring leaders, the australian national whose face the firing squad, it is also a number of mainly foreign nationals but indonesians too, some one from ghana, some one from brazil, and other countries as well. that face it. all of them have one thing in common, errol, that is they face charges on drug related crimes. late last night, the president, again facing the media, being asked why he will not give them clemency, why he will not perhaps commute their sentences to life in prison as has been appealed repeatedly from many countries including of course, australia, for the bali 9 ring
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leaders. he said, "look, as far as we are concerned every other nation need to respect our law. i will not repeat this. it is a question of the sovereignty of our law." he also said, "we are serious about our war on drugs." he is of course referring to the fact that every day in indonesia 50 people die of, death related to drugs issues. this is his way of cracking down on it. human rights groups say this is no way to deal with the drugs problem. >> it appears the president isn't changing his mind. he wants to make a point. these men are set to face their execution in the coming hours. saima mohsin live. thank you very much. people in southern chile trying to dig out from volcanic ash. they have been warned a third eruption could be coming. take-up to an area where the
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third eruption could be coming. a journey toward the crater. >> reporter: heading away and up a mountain road that lead to calbuco. we are trying to get as close as we can to the crater of the volcano. marcelo taking us to his house. a struggle. ash hasn't been cleared away. we are slipping and sliding all over the road. doing the best we can. our guide, marcelo, a farmer who lost just about everything. eventually our 4 x 4 gets stuck. we are saved by a bulldozer. we decided we can't take the car any further. we are going to get another ride. here we go.
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rumbling up the mountain. ripping through everything in our way. emerging on a lunar landscape. the driver of the bulldozer, a beekeeper here to salvage bee hives buried in ash. we continue our journey on foot. five days after the two violent eruptions the ground still smoldering. >> wow. no, if it's hot. really hot. about six kilometers from the crater, marcelo says it is too dangerous to go on. this is about as far as we can come. incredible. a bed of lava, steaming, smells like sulphur. even a hot grez breeze off bree. at the base of the volcano.
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a two or three hour trek if it weren't full of ash. here the vol kay know has wiped out just about everything. the only sound, the quiet hissing of the river. running underneath the cooling lava. shasta darlington, cnn, at the base of mount calbuco. >> you have been watching cnn. i'm errol barnett. stay with me. next hour. recovery efforts in nepal. and protests in baltimore, maryland. and the violence that followed. continues after this break. stay with us. ♪
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we don't collect killer whales seaworldfrom the wild. to know. and haven't for 35 years. with the hightest standard of animal care in the world, our whales are healthy. they're thriving. i wouldn't work here if they weren't. and government research shows they live just as long as whales in the wild. caring for these whales, we have a great responsibility to get that right. and we take it very seriously. because we love them. and we know you love them too.
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growing frustration. desperate people in nepal wait for help. also coming up this hour. baltimore burning. anger, chaos in a major u.s. city following the funeral for a young black man who died in police custody. hello, welcome to viewers in the u.s. and all around the world. i'm errol barnectt. thank you for tuning in as we continue our breaking news coverage from nepal. ♪ it isar
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