tv CNN International CNN June 14, 2015 2:00am-3:01am PDT
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under cover agents removed from so-called hostile environments, this after reports that china and russia accessed encrypted classified documents. the shootout in dallas, texas. investigators are trying to find out why this man drove into police headquarters. and a popular tv show now adapted into a film gets mauled by critics. we'll hear from the stars next. from cnn headquarters here in atlanta, i'm george howell. this is cnn "newsroom." welcome back to our viewers in the united states and around the world. we begin this hour with the story of spy secrets cracked, putting u.s. and british agents at risk. this after russia and china reportedly decrypted files
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stolen by nsa leaker edward snowden. senior british officials tell "the sunday times" more than one million classified files were opened. the identities of special agents could be jeopardized. they have been removed from hostile countries. you will remember that edward snowden is currently living in russia where he was granted asylum. u.s. officials charge him with espionage. >> these allegations are all in an article in the "sunday times" in the u.k. they alleged that mi-6 which is the foreign intelligence unitof the british government had to pull their service members from live operations in hostile countries after they say russia
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and chinese governments dekriptd files taken by the nsa leaker edward snowden. it doesn't indicate in that article how those files were taken, whether they were handed over or somehow hacked in. of course, when edward snowden passed through the region, he spent two weeks in hong kong and then fled to russia, never spending time in mainland china and he has repeatedly himself said on the record that he never handed over or was under any pressure to hand over any files to these governments and that everything was given to journalists to break the story. it is at this stage is that agents might have been potentially been a sticky situation because of what's been taken. one important note in this article, natalie, it didn't reveal the names and locations
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of agents but rather the operational strategy of mi-6. that would be less serious. but certainly if foreign governments have access to these encrypted files it would be a serious issue indeed for the nsa and others. >> this, no doubt, will cause new debate on top of snowden's revelations. >> that's right. there's an ongoing debate whether snowden should be treated as a hero or a traitor, certainly within the u.s. the u.s. authorities, white house, and justice department want him to head home to face justice and other serious charges. and there are those who say the nsa stepped over the mark with its bulk phone tapping and say edward snowden did a favor to the american people. certainly, this will add fuel to the fire of the debate. you've had intelligence services
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in both the u.s. and the u.k. say that what edward snowden released were incredibly dangerous to national security, but at least on some level that has been rebutted by the actions of the u.s. congress and others to limit the power of the national security agency and its equivalent in the u.k. more details need to be found out about this story. again, cnn hasn't comment directly on it, but it appears at least that the spy service of the u.k. is trying to say that what edward snowden released was dangerous and it has been accessed by foreign governments. in a half hour, i'll be speaking with tom harper, the author of the sunday times article in that situation with these files that have been decrypted. in iraq, isis is ramping up its battle for a strategic oil refinery. the militants are claiming responsibility for seven car bombings around the city of
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baiji. in one instance, four suvs drove through a security checkpoint and the explosives killed 16 people. for more on the situation, let's turn to ian lee live in cairo, egypt. what more can you tell us about this fight for baiji and this oil refinery. >> this is an incredibly strategic part of iraq going from baghdad north up to mosul and also part of the supply chain for isis to resupply ramadi. both sides have an interest in taking this oil refinely, also it is iraq's largest oil refinery, but these tactics that we've seen by isis, we've seen them many times before and they have been devastating driving into the frontlines, blowing up, creating chaos and they exploit
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that chaos, we saw them do that in ramadi which eventually led to the fall of that city, but the united states trying to combat that has given iraq anti-armor weapons to destroy these vehicles, but it just shows how deadly, how violent this battle for the oil refinery is going to be. iraqi officials said they cleared it but isis showing that they haven't. >> what about the efforts to retake ramadi and now this effort to retake fallujah, talk to us how difficult it is to get isis out of this towns, because they have become entrenched for sure and also tell us about these lily pad bases that will give support to these forces on the ground. >> it's very difficult to defeat isis once they are dug in. we saw that in tikrit where they
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were anticipating it to be over within days. it took weeks. and after really u.s. air support was able to dislodge the remains of isis in that city, and when ramadi, we heard the same thing from iraqi officials that it will be days before they retook it and now we haven't really heard of a timeline when they will retake it. that's because when isis, when they dig in, they very good at these improceed vised booby trap devices. they move slowly to minimize the effect of these weapons against them, and now the shift is going toward fallujah. iranian-backed shiite militias are leading the fight in retaking fallujah.
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major operations. we haven't gone under way yet. close by, warfare these lily pad outposts where the united states is training iraqi forces. they are training the iraqi military and also the sunni tribal fighters which will be crucial in retaking the cities within anbar province which is predominantly sunni. >> ian, thank you so much for your reporting there. turkish soldiers are trying to keep some 1,500 syrians from crossing into turkey. the soldiers fired water at some of the syrians who approached on the border on saturday. meanwhile, syrian kurds say they are advancing toward militants in an isis-held town. police in the city of dallas, texas, are trying to
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figure out a motive on a terrifying shooting attack on their police headquarters. the suspect was killed in by a sniper hours after attacking officers, all from an armored van. >> late saturday, the fbi, atf and dallas police department continue to digitally map the crime scene. we were told by police investigators they believe the first shots by the suspect were fired from the street. he later entered the armored vehicle and continued on with his brazen attack against police, smashing squad cars and exchanging gunfire with officers. police say it was an automatic weapon. the caliber or type, that's going to be given in details in a press conference on sunday, but they believe that only one suspect was involved. he was fatally shot by s.w.a.t. team snipers in a shootout that ended 20 miles away from here. initially one of the concerns immediately after the shooting
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were explosives and on our tour of the crime scene we were taken to one of those spots where a pipe bomb detonated, causing some damage to a car. no one was injured. that is a fortunate thing. police will begin to put together the pieces of motive. >> that was condition's nick -- cnn's nick valencia. james boulware had a record of custody issues. he had never to indicate that he would target police officers. the suspect's father spoke to our affiliate. he explained why his son might have been angry about police. >> he made comments for the police being responsible for losing his son and all of this and i told him they are doing his job. i'm sorry that did it? did he deserve to get killed? once he shot the police station,
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it's up for grabs. they gave him no justice whatsoever. >> the judge in bowl wear's case says she was threatened several times by him since the trial in april. she told cnn that it didn't surprise her that he did something like this. we move on to upstate new york where the manhunt continues for two escaped killers. more than 800 law enforcements are on the hunt for these men. they are following up on hundreds of leads that have developed in this week long manhunt. they are hoping to get more information from the prison worker. she's accused of giving them tools to cut through the walls of their cells. larry levine shared his thoughts on how they escaped.
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>> >> to get through the wall, that's a matter of taking a hammer or something. they had a lot of time to do it. someone, whether it be joyce mitchell or another correctional worker. if we talk about how they actually escaped through the pipe, i've had a chance to analyze this, and the cuts on that pipe, that steam pipe, they are too perfect at both ends. they are too precise. i believe that a correctional worker or maybe a contractor actually got into the catwalk ahead of time and sliced the holes for them at both ends. remember, that it's a perfect cut. now, let's talk about the one at the other end that they popped out of. they would have had to have cut that from the inside. you are not going to be able to make a perfect cut like that from inside the pipe just using a hack saw blade. it looks to me like it's professionally done. they are doing a big manhunt around the prison still, and i believe with the blod hounds and everything, and all the officers, if they were there,
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they would have found them. my understanding is that they tracked them to a gas station where there was a sandwich shop, a convenience store and they lost the trail. i mean, it's real possible, these guys jumped in a trash dumpster and you haven't heard about this anywhere, they have jumped into a trash dumpster. trash truck came by, took them to a landfill which could be hundreds of miles away or maybe they put that dumpster on the back of a train car which means it could be thousands of miles away. i don't think they are going to catch these guys anywhere near the prison. they are gone. in the meantime, police in texas have been warned those fugitives may be headed that way because one of them, richard matt, has ties to the area in texas. there are seven new cases of middle east respiratory syndrome in south korea. this comes just a day after health officials said the outbreak was slowing down. they did warn more mers cases
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should be anticipated. a hospital has been shut down after being link to more than 70 cases of virus. even though mers isn't spread to the general public, tourism has suffered. kathy novak has that story. >> a trip to the country in crisis mode battling a mers outbreak, a dose of hand sanitizer, a selfie, and they are off. there are free face masks for everyone and the bus company has sanitized everything. you can smell the disinif he n can -- disinfectant. >> when i first arrived in seoul, the first thing i did was get on a bus like this one. we've been riding this one for half an hour now and the whole time there have been empty seats available. >> bus drivers noticed it too. i've seen a huge decrease in the number of tourists, he says. normally at the museum, war memorial and palaces, it's so
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busy. these days, it is hard to fill seats on the bus. even though mers hasn't spread to the public, the fear is enough to keep many visitors away. daniel glifbrake thought about canceling too. >> we talked about it. but since we got here, we're not worried anymore. >> they are getting off at a popular shopping destination. it's usually packed with people buying cosmetics, clothes, and food. now the shoppers are absent. the korean tourism organization says package tours are down by 80% cared to this time last year. hong kong and macau told their citizens not to travel here unless absolutely necessary. the ones who came anyway are taking precautions. >> we wear the mask on every public transportations. always wash our hands because hong kong, more than ten years
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before we have the sars. >> the sars outbreak killed hundreds and had lingering economic effects. the bank of korea is so concerned about the effect of the outbreak here, it cut its main interest rate to a record low. there is at least one sector doing well at the moment. it's not a bad time to be in the surgical mask business. kathy novak, cnn, seoul. you are watching cnn "newsroom." hillary clinton spells out her presidential campaign strategy. ahead, democratic front runners big rally and broad message. plus, a woman who survived an abduction by boko haram is facing a new battle at home. why she's standing up for herself and standing up for her baby. your discover card, you can now use freeze it to prevent new purchases on your account in seconds. and once you find it, you can switch it right on again. you're back! freeze it, only from discover.
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welcome back to cnn "newsroom." i'm george howell. u.s. presidential hopeful hillary clinton is vowing to fight for middle class americans, setting a populist tone in her second white house run. she held her first major campaign rally saturday in the state of new york. she laid out the major issues she plans to tackle as part of our campaign. our brianna keilar was at that rally. >> hillary clinton got personal here at first campaign rally, talking about her mother dorothy
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rodham who had a very hard scrabble childhood, but got by by teachers. she talk about he will nor and franklin roosevelt. she channeled the economic populism that was their brand. she talk about equal pay for women, paid family medical leave as well as the availability of affordable childcare. she's the democratic frontrunner so this speech wasn't so much about scans -- distancing herself from the dmts that she's up against but really against the entire republican field. >> there may be some new voices in the presidential republican choir, but they are all singing the same old song, a song called
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"yesterday." [ cheers and applause ] >> you know the one, all our troubles look as though they are here to stay, and we need a place to hide away. they believe in yesterday. and you are lucky i didn't try singing that too, i'll tell you. these republicans trip over themselves, promising lower taxes for the wealthy and fewer rules for the biggest corporations without regard for how that will make income inequality even worse. we've heard this tune before, and we know how it turns out. >> hillary clinton did not distance herself from president obama. she embraced his policies, a sign that she's really trying to keep the coalition together that helped propel him into the white house. minorities as well as women and gay americans, she talked a lot
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about rights for gay americans, criminal justice reform, and she called for comprehensive kbrimgs reform. she also showed some humanity. she says she's not going to get it right and she made a nod to the mistakes she's made in the past. brianna keilar, cnn new york. jake tapper sat down with someone who will play a role in hillary's campaign. her husband. you can watch his wide ranging interview with former president bill clinton on state of the union. >> in another sign of warming relations between cuba and the united states three u.s. senators met on saturday with the cuban vice president. he is said to be the next president. in january, a bill was introduced to end the travel ban to cuba i should say for u.s.
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citizens. thousands of people want the nick ka war gawn government to not build a canal. the government says it will boost the economy. the $50 billion canal project is said to be longer, deeper and wider than the panama canal. mexican authorities have seized more than 40 tons of american from a drug hub in mexico. the drugs were reportedly found on the outskirts of tijuana on saturday. the drug were wrapped and marked with various symbols each likely pointing to a different market. flooding in a georgian capital tsiblis. we have more.
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>> unfortunately, there's eight fatalities at this moment. a lot of this information new to cnn. to put this into perspective, this is in georgia, in the capital, tbilisi. if you can get to the video, some of the results there. unfortunately, eight people have died and several others still missing. heavy rains started just before midnight. this small waterway in the city became a raging river and i'll explain why you saw a hippopotamus in just one second, these rivers just expanded so quickly, sweeping away cars, tossing them like toys and at least one structure was washed away, too. unfortunately, the city's zoo was also flooded. so wolves, bears, big cats, even this hippopotamus escape and
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have been roaming parts of the city. these are real visuals. this is astounding stuff. some animals have been recaptured. others had to have been killed according to the news agency. officials are still searching for escaped animals and pleading with residents to stay home while the creatures are rounded up. the zoo had 600 animals including fish and birds. they have estimated they have lost at least half of the animals on the ground. the zoo is still covered with debris. it shows you how intense those floods actually were and what people will have to deal with in days and months to come to clean up after such a terrible, terrible tragedy. george. you are watching cnn "newsroom." still to come on this broadcast, an international call for help to save people in south sudan from starvation.
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm george howell. this is cnn "newsroom." good to have you with us. the headlines this hour. russia and china have reportedly decrypted files stolen by nsa leaker edward snowed p and now western intelligence spies are being pulled from their posts in
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hostile countries. senior british officials tell the sunday times more than one million classified files were opened. the unnamed official claims information could jeopardize the identities of the american and british spies. seven new cases of middle east respiratory syndrome have been confirmed in south korea according to the country's health ministry. the hospital has stopped taking new patients after having 70 new cases linked to it. mers has killed 14 people so far. isis has claimed responsibility for seven deadly car bombings around the city of baiji. four suvs were driven through a security check point and explosives detonated, killing 16 people. later, three other car bombs went off west of the city but no fatalities in that instant. police in dallas, texas, are trying to figure out why a suspect shoot at their police
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headquarters. his mother said he was a very troubled young man. he was shot and killed by a police sniper after being cornered. the international court is surging -- is urging the arrest of the sudan president bashere. south sudan is facing the threat of starvation. the international committee of the red cross is calling for urgent action to save hundreds of thousands of people. we have this story. >> reporter: villages in south sudan surrounded by vast land used to grow food during sudan's short planting season. but what is not planted cannot grow. fighting in and around a town in central south sudan has sent 100,000 people fleeing for their lives.
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>> she attacked all of our cars. they burn up all the food for the civilians and they takes all the ladies and they even kill all the young kids. brought agriculture in the region to a screeching halt. >> we're going into the rainy season. which means they have not had the chance to plant their seeds for now, they do not have any food stocks for the coming months. we're going toward a very difficult period for the people here in south sudan. >> reporter: the international committee of the red cross is providing some aid, but their staff was evacuated. crucial food deliveries to some 120,000 people was suspended and the risk of starvation looms. >> the life of people, they have nothing to eat at all. at the end of this month, people will die from starvation. >> reporter: usaid says south
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sudan is in a crisis situation and needs immediate help to avoid famine. back to our top story, according to london's "sunday times" newspaper, russia and china have decrypted files putting the lives of secret agents at risk. western intelligence agents have been removed from live operations in hostile countries. i'm joined by tom harper who is reporting this story. he joins us live. thank you for being with us. i want to dive a little deeper into the nature of your reporting. you name unnamed sources. how do senior officials at number 10 downing street know that these files were breached. >> well, i don't know the answer to that, george. all we know is that this is
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effectively the official position of the british government. we pick up on it a while ago and we've been working on it, and trying to stand it up through multiple sources, and when we approached the british government late last week with our evidence, they confirmed effectively what you read today in the sunday times, so it's obviously allegations at the moment from our point of view, and it's really for the british government to defend it. >> well, i do have to ask just in understanding the nature of what's in the files, how do they know what was in them if they were encrypted? has the british government also gotten into these files? >> well, i mean, the files came from america and the u.k., so they may already have known for some time what snowden took. again, that's not something that we're clear on, so we don't go
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into that level of detail in the story. we just publish what we believe to be the position of the british government at the moment. >> your article asserts that it is not clear if the files were hacked or if snowden gave these files over when he was in hong kong and russia. so which is it? >> well, again, sorry to just repeat myself, george, we don't know. so we haven't written that in the paper. it could be either. it could be another scenario. when you are dealing with the world of intelligence, there are so many unknowns and so many possibilities, it's difficult to state anything with certainty, and so we've been very careful just to stick to what we are able to substantiate. >> so we're just really hearing, you know, what the british government is saying at this point. the article mentions these mi-6 agents. were they directly under threat
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as a result of the information leaked or was it just a precautionary measure to move them? >> again, i'm afraid to disappoint you. we don't know. i mean, there was a suggestion that some of them may have been under threat, but the statement from senior do you think street -- douning street sources suggests that no one has come to any harm which is a positive thing from the point of view of the west. >> essentially you are reporting what the government is saying but as far as the evidence, you know, to substantiate it, you are not really able to comment or to explain that at this point, right? >> no. i mean, we pick up on the story a while back from an extremely well-placed source in the home office and then carried on trying to substantiate what was going on through various sources in various agencies throughout
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britain and then finally presented the story to the government, and they effectively confirmed what you read in today's sunday times, but obviously when you are dealing with intelligence, it's the toughest nut to crack, and unless you actually have leaked intelligence documents like snowden had, it's very difficult to say anything with certainty. >> tom harper with the sunday times joining us live in london. thank you so much for your time and explaining the report that has been filed there in the sunday times. >> thank you. this just into the cnn "newsroom." a south korean defense official stels us that north korea has fired a barrage of anti ship missiles off its east coast. south korea is monitoring their movements at this point and the military is ready. today's launch follows tests in february and may.
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this story about bees, they are crucial to the world's crops and they are slowly dying. and now scientists in africa are rushing to find out how to stop it. plus the hbo show "entourage" garnered critical acclaim as one of tv's best, but some say that success isn't translating to the big screen. that story ahead. : amopé and its premium foot care line. the new amopé pedi perfect foot file gives you soft beautiful feet effortlessly. its microlumina rotating head buffs away hard skin even on those hard-to-reach spots. it's amazing. you can see it and feel it. my new must-have for soft, beautiful feet. amopé pedi perfect. soft, beautiful feet, effortlessly. it's time to bid farewell... to this booking incredible island resort. and it's incredible island staff.
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series, jurassic world, it's set to take a big bite out of the competition. our brian stelser has the story. >> these numbers are out of this world. jurassic world was expected to be a hit no matter what. a few days ago, these experts in hollywood were expecting it to make about $120 million at the box office this weekend just in the united states. but consistently for the past few days, expectations have been rising and those projections have been rising. first to 160 million for the weekend. now the expectation is between 180 million and 200 million. let me put that into perspective. only two movies in the united states have ever opened bigger than $180 million and those are the agen -- avenger movies and superhero movies. jurassic world could be number three. it goes to show the power of a
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dine asour franchise, the first started 20 years ago with stephen spielberg and at the time remarkable computer-generated special effects with those dinosaurs. nowadays we take those computer generated effects for granted but the movie has been praised for its entertainment value, even though some critics have said it doesn't have some of the substance or intelligence of the original movie. this is a franchise that has been away for sh years -- 14 years. there were see qels, but it's been away for a long time. the studio is thrilled with how well it's doing. just this one week, they have rekrupd all their budget. people will be seeing it in the week to come and maybe most importantly the overseas box office for the film is also doing exceedingly well. studios increasingly care more about international markets than they do about the united states market. already, the movie has made $100
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million in the united kingdom and china. this is a dine asore movie that no other movie would want to compete against. 70% of the world's major crops depend on bees to survive but more and more of those bees are dying each year and that's why scientists in africa are working to solve the problem by creating what they call a super bee. cnn's robin creel has this story. >> reporter: in this african laboratory, only the strong of the bees will survive. scientists are breeding something of an african super bee. a stronger, more resilient bee. and up close, safeguarding the continent's polinators is a deadly affair. first, semen is collected from male bees. 12 bees must die to inseminate this queen. >> then squeeze it.
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>> reporter: then the queen is placed under anesthesia. her abdomen is exposed. >> i'm injecting the semen. >> reporter: and the rest is left up to nature. until now, very little has been known about the continent's bee population. we're suiting up to go into the apiary. african bees tend to be more aggressive than american or european ones. you got to make sure all these little holes are done up correctly. there's no spaces. but on the positive side, with their aggression, it makes them more productive and more resistant to disease. >> today, scientists map out the genetics of these bees and use them to locals advantage. we're warned to keep as quiet as possible. smoke is used to interrupt the bees communication by smell and
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fool them into thinking there's a forest fire and let's hope to distract them from attacking the bee keepers and news crew. we're about to reintroduce her into her colony. she will be drousy from anesthesia at first, but in a few hours, she's expected to get rite to it and lay up to 2,000 eggs a day. she will be replaced by a younger virgin queen. only the strongest, most productive bees survive here. scientists are hoping to find the perfect genetic code. for africa's various regions to combat disease, parasites and colony collapse disorder. the program spans the continent from cameroon to ethiopia and even the island of madagascar. bees in the wild are responsible for pollinating about 70% of our major crops, but are in serious trouble. bee populations in the u.s. and europe are falling by roughly a
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third every year because of disease and pests, but the ones in africa have managed to survive. this group of scientists plans to keep it that way and provide solutions to the rest of the world. their priority, a deadly parasite which also devastates in the u.s. and europe. >> they have disease and all kinds of things. we don't want this to develop here. so you want to check. >> reporter: in the meantime, many more male drone bees will suffer the same fate, an inelegant and deadly first time all in the name of science. robin krooel, cnn, nairobi. a quarter of a million people flock to a small french town for one of the world's auto
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race is headed into its home stretch. a little more than three hours remain in the 24 hours of the race. it's the 83rd run. the cars are the stars. there are some heated moments this year like when this porsche burst into flames. the driver made it out, thankfully. a quarter of a million people converged on the french town to watch this race. the hbo series "entourage" ended in 2011 and critics say it probably should have stayed on the small screen. the stars and director of the new movie are out directing the new film saying it all matters what the viewers think. here's our report. >> there is no way we were ever going to get a fair shake from the critics. there's no way. they just weren't going to do
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it. it's just the way that they are wired. >> this movie is enormous. if it fails, you go down quicker in flames bigger than the behindenberg. >> did it surprise you? did it bruise you? >> i think they are such idiots, it's almost not comprehensible the way they have taken this on to some p.c. political thing and people who have had some success can't have a good time basically which is what it feels like. ♪ i'm ready for trouble ♪ >> these girls out here are crazy. >> one of the points that people refer to i suppose is these hedonistic, how attitudes have changed generally that make people react like this differently? >> hollywood is show nis tick in
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a lot of ways. doug ellen isn't afraid to portray that. >> he would be lying. >> it's hollywood. >> vins will not come back to this, neither will i and neither will you. >> in the words of vincent chase, good or bad, you can't let what these people say affect you. that is true. we didn't do it to cater to critics. we did it for the fans. >> it's certainly a conflict because the critics weren't so kind but we had an a-minus cinema score, which a lot of people fight for because that's the exit poll. >> my first movie as studio head and boom, i want you to star in it. >> whatever i do next, i also want to direct. >> ari -- >> does he even know how to
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direct? >> "the new york times" said we were the best television show in 2003 and now this idiot has said we're the worst movie of all time, the exit polls from the theater have clearly proven him wrong. >> maybe it's easier to take a shot at. i think it's guys spending money. beautiful money. they got everything. it's almost a jealousy thing. >> you are upset. i gave you $100 million. you agreed not to go over. >> no one is going to lose their job and we're already successful. five or six like old critics that haven't left their house in two weeks doesn't mean a lot. >> why did you stop taking the anger meds? >> i didn't think they were working. >> ari! >> i'm okay to continue.
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>> encourage, now into mexico city, it was all about the smart phone and all about the duck face. thousands of people went to the monument to child heroes i should say on saturday to try for the guinness record for the world's biggest selfie. no word on whether they made the record. the organizers the u.s. state of georgia had the record with almost 3,000 people but no one holds the title to the biggest selfie. this wraps up this hour of cnn "newsroom." we thank you for joining us. i'm george howell. for our viewers in the united states, cnn "new day" begins. for everyone else, "best of quest" starts in a moment. >> four seconds faster, there -- we're back to olympic.
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. new details this morning in the prison escape of two convicted killers. cnn had learn what had the convicted planned to do once they broke out of prids and why joyce mitchell changed her mind about helping them. >> did you have any idea when he left? >> no. he blamed them for taking his son. >> the father of j
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