tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 20, 2015 1:00am-2:01am PDT
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a community in pain and mourning. yet, it continues to show strength and grace. after a mass shooting inside a church building. families of the victims offer their forgiveness to the admitted killer. a friend of the suspect says he wanted to start a race war. more details on that 21-year-old suspect ahead. plus there could be a fresh new lead in the man hunt for two escaped convicts in new york. police there are investigating possible sightings. we welcome our viewers here in the united states and around the world i'm george howell this is cnn newsroom.
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we start this hour here in the southern city in front of the church. i want to step out of the way a little bit. i want you to see the memorial. the memorial that has grown in front of this church. you can certainly see the flowers and balloons, the candles that are here this hour. candles lit at the entrance to this memorial. as the memorial continues to grow. this church it is a place of unity here in charleston and this city has shown an immense amount of grace in the shadow of mass murder. ♪ >> this was the scene earlier friday evening in front of
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emanuel african methodist episcopal church. hundreds took part in a prayer vigil. earlier on friday dylann roof made his first appearance in court before a judge. officials told cnn he admitted he shot and killed nine people wednesday. later, victims were in the hearing and they had a chance and opportunity to see roof in custody over a television monitor, though. and they also got a chance to speak directly to him. and amazingly, given the loss that they suffered so fresh in their minds, some even offered roof their forgiveness. >> you're representing the family of ethel lance, is that correct? >> yes. i just wanted to know -- i will
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never talk to her ever again. i will never be able to hold her again. but i forgive you and have mercy on your soul. you hurt me. you hurt a lot of people. i forgive you. >> representative of the family of myra thompson. >> say the same thing that was just said. you know i forgive you. my family forgives you. but we would like to take this opportunity to repent, repent, confess. give your life to the one that matters the most christ. so he can change it and change your ways no matter what happened to you. and you'll be okay.
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through that. better off than what you are right now. >> thank you, sir. tawan sanders. >> we welcomed you wednesday night in our bubble study with open arms. y hero. but as we say in bible study, we enjoyed you. but may god have mercy on you. >> a representative of daniel simmons. >> although my grandfather and
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the other victims died at the hands of hate, this is proof everyone's plea for your soul is proof they, they lived and loved and their legacies will live and love. so hate won't win. and i just want to thank the courts for making sure that hate doesn't win. >> thank you, ma'am, for being here. the representative of the family of cynthia hurd. >> and on behalf of my family, not allowing hate to win. i acknowledge i'm very angry. she taught me that we are the family that love built. we have no room for hate, so we have to forgive.
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and i pray god on your soul and i thank god i won't be around when your judgment day come with him. may god bless you. >> emotional heartbreaking, but very graceful comments delivered by these family members. and while the focus should have been on the family members. in fact the judge the took some liberties at this hearing and facing criticism for some controversial comments that he decided to make while talking about the nine dead victims. he added, quote, we have victims on the other side, as well. listen here to his full statement. >> charleston is a very strong community. we have big hearts we're a very loving community, and we're going to reach out to everyone, all victims and we will touch
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them. we have victims, nine of them. but we also have victims on the other side. there are victims on this young man's side of the family. nobody would've ever thrown them into the whirlwind of events they've been thrown into. we must find it in our heart that some point in time not only help those that are victims but to also help his family, as well. >> with these grieving families in the courtroom who have lost loved ones in cold blood. the notion did not sit well with a lot of people. has been called out for making credible calls. about this judge's comments in the courtroom. listen.
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>> typically, at a bond hearing, it's very pro forma. a judge goes through the charges and perhaps also goes through a series of sort of a checklist. a language very troubling for so many people. because he said the shooter's family were victims, as well. and many people are outraged. i, as a prosecutor, for many years attending just so many bond hearings. i've never seen anything like that before. and what is interesting is now we know that this judge in 2003 actually in court in a bond reduction hearing used the "n" word with an african-american defendant. he said and this is a quote, that there were three, four types of people. white people black people red necks and used the "n" word.
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he claimed he was using that to try to change the path of this defendant. the public reprimanded him for that incident and other misconduct. if any judge, any magistrate was going to hear this case a case that is an alleged hate crime, this judge should not have been on that bench. >> so, judge james goznel. does he have more involvement in this case as it moves forward? >> well i think it's the one silver lining george. his only job was to conduct this bond hearing. his role is over. many are calling for his removal from the bench based on his past history and his performance. and what we heard today. >> seems like the judge's job was to simply to do his job. but he did take a liberty there that has a lot of people scratching their heads.
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>> no question. >> to say the least. sunny hostin, thank you so much. >> the family of this admitted killer is breaking their sijs and they're extending their deepers sympathies to the victims' families and friends. the family said quote, words cannot express our shock, grief and disbelief as to what happened that night. we are devastated and saddened by what occurred. and we're learning more about dylan roof and warning signs of his hatred that were out there. signs that were visible to many long before he walked into this church building and gunned down nine innocent people. one of roof's friends spoke with our brian todd and said roof typically kept to himself. but on one drunken night mentioned the plans he had to start a race war. here's brian's story. >> reporter: the license plate saying confederate states of america, patches on his jacket
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similar bombymbols of a life descending into racial hatred. but it was the behavior a friend says that scared him. >> he was saying he wanted segregation, a race war. he wanted to be white with white and black with black. >> what did you say when he said that? >> i didn't agree with his opinion at all, and i -- we just argued about it. >> he had been friends with dylann roof in middle school, lost touch a few years ago but reconnected in recent months. he says roof recently talked about a 6-month plan he had to quote, do something crazy. he says he doesn't know details of the plan. he said one night recently roof drank a liter of vodka when roof talked about a race war, meek said and meek decided to take action. >> that same night, i took his gun and hid it. and the next morning i didn't want to get in trouble. and him saying i stole his gun, i put his gun back in his trunk. >> how do you feel about that
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now? >> terrible, but then again i can't go because i was looking out for myself really because i didn't want to get in trouble for stealing a gun. >> meek says dylann roof's parents gave him money for his 21st birthday. >> they didn't want him to have his gun. >> why not? >> i have no clue. his parents know him better. i guess it's just instinct his parents had. >> but meek said ultimately roof's parents seem to have gave in. >> his parents gave him cash for his birthday in april and both split the price of the gun in cash and gave it to dylan to go buy the gun and put it in his name. >> we don't know if roof's parents knew he was going to use the money to buy the gun. the family of dylann roof didn't respond. in a statement, the family expressed their deepest sympathies to the victims' families and said they're devastated. the family said words can't express their shock, grief and disbelief over what happened. the family's pastor from this church, also spoke on their behalf.
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>> what they've asked for and i've asked is that we continue to hold all these families in our prayers. and that the whole world, our nation charleston our community understand we love them god loves them. >> there was other bizarre behavior from his friend recently meek says. >> one day he asked me if i can videotape him burning the american flag and i said hell no he's crazy. >> now he's got a message for the loved ones. >> i'm sorry. it could have been prevented if people would've taken him serious. but dylann wasn't a serious person and no one took him serious. but if someone had taken him serious, this would have been avoided. >> meek says he woke up and saw dylann roof outside his home. roof was sleeping in his own car. he says roof gave him and other friends a ride to a nearby lake and said he'd be back that night or wednesday morning. meek says that's the last time
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he saw dylann roof. brian todd columbia south carolina. >> so when you hear that report you do get the sense there might have been a lot of pent up. there was a lot of pent up anger here. so where could all this anger be coming from? joining us for some expert analysis on this is psychologist dr. eric fisher live from the studio there in atlanta. dr. fisher thank you so much for being with us this day. obviously, you hear that story, and you see that dylann roof had warning signs out there that basically he had, you know he told a friend at one point that he wanted to start a race war and even posted pictures of himself with flags symbolic of hate. seems like he was really crying out for someone to see him. >> right. and a lot of times you see signs of people who are showing you signs. as his friend said we didn't take him seriously. what i teach people about hate is i say there are seven protective emotions that primary
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protective emotions anger, rage sarcasm and hatred. these always always protect something inside that feels weak or vulnerable our own shame or helplessness or hopelessness or fear. and clearly, from the things he stated he felt threatened by the culture of you know the african-american culture in what he even said when he went to that church. some of the comments he made. he felt like they were moving into the community. he wanted segregation. all of this is about his feelings of fear and threat that he covered up with his hatred. >> take us into the mind of a american who can walk into a building like this a house of worship, can be welcomed by its members, can sit with them for an hour. to make them feel he's not a threat. then a person who can announce himself to say as we've heard that he was there to shoot black people and then in cold blood shoot and kill nine people.
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take us into the mind of that person. how can a person do that? >> well, i think we have to look at his calculated behavior. this is something that he had thought about and prepared to do. and sometimes, being able to sit with people that you perceive are your enemy and put that act on, that i'm with you, i'm part of you, i'm participating this, is a feeling of power that they have. that he knew what the outcome was going to be before he went in there. and the ability to do that gave him some potential sense of satisfaction that of what he had done. the tragedy is that we don't see our own blindness to the emotions that we feel in understanding why they're there and what we need to do them. and that's something we'll really have to work on in our culture as a whole. >> would a person like ruth you know when faced with these -- the families of these victims. and you heard what they had to say, i'm sure earlier in the newscast. when faced with those comments
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and their forgiveness, you know they forgave him. but when faced with that do you think it registers with him? >> you know he is stuck in his own -- or people who commit crimes like that are often stuck in their own belief patterns and often surrounded by their mistrust and their own feelings of betrayal and their thoughts of how they perceive the world. he potentially may see some of that and maybe it starts to register the horrible mistake he made. and/or he may use it as justification as how he could feel manipulated even more. it all depends on sometimes the people around him. it depends on what's going on deeper inside. because we often have layers of emotions and attitudes and beliefs that we use and we call on in different situations in life. so my hope is that he'll begin to see this. and my hope is that we can see the need as communities, not just in charleston but really nationally and internationally to see the need to begin to
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understand what feeds hate. which is always going to be fear or shame or guilt or emotions underneath that. to me the power of that community to so immediately show love forgiveness and compassion is a testament and example that we should all be willing to look at within ourselves. >> a lot of people are trying to make the best sense they can out of what happened here. and a senseless murder to say the least. dr. eric fisher we appreciate your insight in helping us to understand. thank you. >> it's an honor. >> we'll have much more about the history of charleston's racial tensions here a little later in the show. and, of course you can learn much more about this story on our website at cnn.com. you can find details about this attack. more about the victims and more about the gunman. you can find expert analysis like we heard from dr. fisher and the legal and social aspects on our website there at cnn.com.
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you're watching "cnn newsroom," a possible new lead in the manhunt for two escaped murderers next on this broadcast, we show you that there may have been new sightings and new details over another prison employee who might be in hot water. kellogg's® frosted mini-wheats®... 8 layers of wheat... and one that's sweet. for the adult.... and kid - in all of us. (supergrass' "alright") (plays throughout) ♪ kellogg's frosted mini wheats® feed your inner kidult... thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you.
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom," i'm george howell live here in charleston, south carolina. other news that we are following this day. to new york state we go. where police there are investigating a possible sighting of two killers who escaped from a maximum security prison in upstate new york. investigators say that witnesses spotted two men who may have fit the descriptions of richard matt and david sweat a week after they broke out of prison. those men were about 400 miles, or that's about 600 kilometers from that prison. meanwhile, a prison officer has been suspended as part of the investigation into matt and sweat's escape. this comes after a female prison worker was arrested and charged for allegedly giving them the tools they needed to break out of prison. our jason carroll has more on the massive manhunt.
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>> their mug shots added to the faces of the nation's most hardened and dangerous criminals, richard matt and david sweat now on the u.s. marshals' most wanted list. a $50,000 reward offered on top of the $100,000 offered last week for information leading to their return. searchers have cleared more than 600 miles of trails in the rural area surrounding the clinton correctional facility where the two made their daring escape two weeks ago. >> we don't have concrete evidence they're here. we may not have concrete evidence they're somewhere else. they definitely are some place. we will find them. >> you don't know they're here. there's no evidence they could be somewhere else. doesn't that essentially mean if they could be anywhere. and if that's the case how do you search for two men who could potentially be anywhere? >> that's a good question. we said i think, from day one, they could be anywhere. we searched and continue to search exclusively and extensively in this area with our ground searchers. however, bear in mind that what you don't see is the voluminous
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leads coming into our tip line and the investigators behind the scenes. >> joyce mitchell is still the key in the escape plan. she admitted to an inappropriate relationship with sweat. also revealing that both matt and sweat planned to murder her husband lyle. but has mitchell revealed everything to her husband? >> the things she said to him alone and the things that are just so hurtful, revealing that she's said everything. she admitted there was a plot to kill him. he p doesn't think there could be anything worse than that. >> as for the clinton correctional facility prisoners no longer on lockdown no longer restricted to their cells, now that the holes they dug in their cells have been repaired. the tunnels they used to make their escape, sealed. >> that was cnn's jason carroll
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reporting from new york. cash poor greece has been thrown a temporary lifeline. the european central bank pumped emergency cash into greek banks on friday. this keeps the country afloat ahead of a crucial summit between athens and its creditors in a few days' time. greece must make a $1.7 billion repayment by june 30th or the country will face default. at the same time, greece inked a deal with russia on friday to pipe gas through greece and on into western europe. according to a russian report the cost will be covered by russia with the understanding that greece will repay its pipeline debts later. greece could also earn revenue from gas transmission fees. some say, it is a move likely to irritate other european union countries who have been restricting trade with russia over the ukraine crisis. just ahead here on "cnn newsroom," community members in
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charleston south carolina tell me how they are struggling to comprehend the recent horrific tragedy inside a church. >> i hate it that some young person had so much hate in their heart that it makes us all seem like we're all racist but i don't think that we really are. >> lack of housing, lower salaries higher incarceration rates, black lives don't matter as much in the united states. >> difficult conversations about race and identity from residents of charleston as this broadcast continues live from charleston worldwide on cnn international and cnn usa. before i had the shooting, burning, pins-and-needles of diabetic nerve pain, these feet grew up in a family of boys... married my high school sweetheart...
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young man thought he was going to divide this community, divide this country with the racial hatred. we are here today and all across america america. >> that man there is the mayor of charleston south carolina joseph p. riley jr. is giving a resounding speech before thousands of people at a prayer vigil friday evening. the mayor said we all have one thing in common, our hearts are broken. i've been out here speaking with people in this community, people of different races, people from all walks of life who are coming together after what happened here, and they're angry. and they are truly heartbroken. and now they're talking about how to make sure something like this does not happen again. >> reporter: with flowers in hand it's all she could do to bring them here to leave her message. >> it's just unacceptable. and it's sad.
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and it's a helpless feeling. >> what do you mean by that? >> helpless? what do you do? you just feel helpless as to what to do. think about all those families are affected and the whole community is going to be affected. >> the racially motivated shooting at this church inflamed an old wound in this historic community. a city that at one point served as the main port of entry for the african slave trade in the southern u.s. and while charleston like the rest of the nation has come along way since those days -- >> i hate it that some young person had so much hate in their heart that it makes us all seem like we're all racist, but i don't think that we really are. i don't think the majority of us are. >> jackie lewis says this latest tragedy is a reminder there is still so much work to be done when it comes to improving
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relations between people from different backgrounds who experienced the world in different ways. >> lack of housing lower salaries, higher incarceration rates, black lives don't matter as much in the united states as other lives. and that's why the movement is so important. that's why we're all working for racial justice. and when, when this kind of tragedy can happen in a house of worship with people people's hearts wide open seeking god's love and offering god's love our hearts are broken. >> it's because of where this massacre took place that hits especially hard for some dylann roof admits to killing nine people in a fit of racist rage inside a church. >> this is a place you don't bring violence. for people to want to lock their doors and everything like, you don't lock doors in a church because you're always welcome to the church. and for somebody to come in there, you know, and he was sitting next to the pastor with
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welcoming arms you know and still do that. >> people are coming together talking about everything from gun rights and whether there should be more restrictions to race relations. typically, taboo subjects in this part of the world, not today. if you look around in charleston today, this is what you see, many different people some here from the charleston area others who came in from out of town to be here in front of this church to pay their respects. despite the tragedy that happened here, many say that coming together and having a conversation is the beginning of the unity that's needed. >> we will not sit idly by. >> if i could just add, white people have to stop being silent. we have to show up and we have to recognize that white supremacy, which is what this is is it kills all of us in the end. >> it's going to take people coming together it's going to take people talking about this. there needs to be actual dialogue. >> the conversation continues as
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this community copes with great loss, with hopes to heal. >> the mayor of charleston is also wondering how the alleged suspect became so hateful that he would target an historic black church. >> as we're here with broken hearts over the nine people he killed we must acknowledge he wasn't an alien. he didn't come from outer space. he was living in our country, living in our state, and somehow his mind was filled with racial hatred. so one way to respond is we need to seek to understand that. where is this coming from? >> so we saw him today in court
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and people are just trying to figure out what was in his mind what is his state of mind? let's turn again to our psychologist in studio now, dr. eric fisher for some more insight. dr. fisher again, thanks for being with us in atlanta. listen the mayor is asking this question. people who have been out here you know you can hear each other and people asking each other. >> right. >> what would've made him do this. >> right. >> well again, i think we have to understand that these issues don't begin overnight. they happen in a culture that foster some of these beliefs. they can happen in somebody's mind who doesn't have the ability to share with other people. who kept to himself, who was very quiet, in reading one article said that his mom almost had to push him out the door to try to make friends. this is somebody again, who didn't maybe have the ability to communicate and felt potentially threatened by people around him. so we have to look at that a lot
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of times emotions and beliefs and attitudes can grow in an incubator that like a cancer can come out and flare up in very painful ways to people around us and affect multitudes of people. >> so dr. fisher clearly, this suspect, dylann roof was focused on race. and today, you know given what happened here race was the conversation of the day. you saw in my report there. you know people are trying to square the circle to understand each other's differences of opinion. but, one question still remains you know. since we're talking about this issue of race you hear some people describe dylann roof as a person with a mental illness. but, again you've also studied this issue. and talk to us about the differences. because when it comes to a white suspect, are they described differently sometimes as a black suspect in a brutal murder like this? >> well there was a great
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article in the "washington post," i believe, that talked about how african-americans who may commit the same crime and be called thugs and/or terrorists we have to look at people of muslim descent would be called terrorists but a caucasian is called mentally ill. it helped me become aware to some of my own blindness. and the woman interviewed on one of your segments said i don't think we're that racist. and she said well some of us. we all have to realize that we grew up with our own blindness based on what we've seen in our culture and what we don't understand about other cultures. what we have to look at -- i've been in haiti to teach about community and try to work in my own community about building a sense of community. when you don't have trust, you can't build a community. we have to begin to build trust in every segment of our society because where there's mistrust there's fear. and where there's fear there's going to be hate anger, rage
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emotions that are protected that i discussed in the last segment. so in order for us to really truly see these issues we have to open up discussions, we have to walk across party lines, racial lines, religious lines, and the same things that were happening, you know, around the country last year in missouri they're continuing in all of our communities. and we have to see that this is something endemic, an international discussion we have to begin to have as human beings who often don't want to understand themselves let alone understand each other. >> dr. fisher you know certainly the eyes of the world are on the united states a country that you know is far long here in this grand design of inviting people bringing people into this country of many different backgrounds, different religions religions. and these moments. these moments of chaos and these tragic moments. it seems that the conversation
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at least is continuing. dr. fisher. thank you so much for taking time with us. >> my pleasure. u.s. president barack obama spoke for the second time since the massacre. and he blasted the u.s. congress for failing to pass any gun control laws during his time in office. and, he said that he cannot accept that mass shootings are now common place in the united states. >> you don't see murder on this kind of scale, with this kind of frequency in any other advanced nation on earth. every country has violent, hateful or mentally unstable people. what's different is not every country is awash with easily accessible guns. and so i refuse to act as if this is the new normal.
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>> many people around the world are looking at this and wondering why these shootings. why it keeps happening in the u.s. paula newton has more on the global reaction to another american shooting attack. >> charleston south carolina -- >> the image of a young man, america's latest mass murderer broadcast around the world. reporter for french broadcaster bfm explaining to his audience how 21-year-old dylann storm roof could face the death penalty after confessing to killing nine black worshippers on wednesday. all highlighting the shocking facts. a black church a white gunman describing it as the racist killing that is shocking america. from turkish daily, even stronger wording, the headline
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reads racist terrorism, horror in the usa. from afar the world has watched america struggle and rising tensions between the black and white communities. from miami and ferguson to baltimore and now this. in the multicultural streets of london these ever-increasing scenes are difficult to comprehend. so too, the gun debate. >> i thought, not again. and i don't know how many times this kind of thing can happen before people start doing things about guns in america. obama was right. it doesn't happen with this frequency anywhere else. >> my reaction is that every day, a young black guy wherever is being killed off by well white supremacist people that don't want to learn to change. >> america on a whole needs to sort out gun laws. >> as if to sum it up tweeted, only in america. responding to a gun ad being
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posted on the front page of charleston daily, the post and courier. this was even as the manhunt for the gunman continued. paula newton, cnn, london. >> and we will have more on the healing here in charleston in just a bit. but when we return here on "cnn newsroom," tragedy erupts in indonesia in dramatic fashion. great job! okay! here you go. good catch! alright, now for the best part. ooh, let's get those in the bowl. these are way too good to waste, right? [ male announcer ] share what you love with who you love. kellogg's frosted flakes. they're gr-r-reat!
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." live here in charleston south carolina with other news that we are following now from around the world. muslims around the world are celebrating the first weekend of ramadan. in india, they welcomed islam's holiest month with prayers and feasts. . muslims refrain from eating or drinking during daylight hours. 2:00 the third largest muslim population in the world.
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chinese muslims attended friday prayer service at the largest mosque in the capital city there beijing. that's also about 1,000 years old. china has about 20 million muslims. and in the country of indonesia, hundreds of migrants from myanmar and bangladesh are observing ramadan at a refugee camp. turning now to a story about a massive volcano in indonesia now. it began spewing out ash and smoke, and now there's a threat of a major eruption. thousands of people have been evacuated. let's now turn to our meteorologist at the world weather center in atlanta with more on this. >> yeah george. some of the video coming out of indonesia has been very very dramatic. this is in the island of sumatra. an avenue language of volcanic ash can be seen coming down. the plumes of ash and lava have
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been spewing from this otherwise very dormant volcano. it's been quiet for almost four centuries now starting to sporadically erupt since 2010. local officials have actually asked indonesia for more aid to assist in the evacuees as the potential for more eruptions remains high. most live within an hour of an active volcano. in indonesia, there's 130 active volcanos as this lies in a very very active volcanic part of the world. here's some of the astounding photos coming out of this region. it's amazing to think that around 150,000 people actually live within a few kilometers of this particular volcano. and many of them actually refused to live because of their livelihoods, their agriculture right around this particular region. now we're going to switch gears quickly to talk about alaskan wildfires. because it has been quite a critical situation over the
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western half of the united states and including the largest state, alaska, and we're talking about an area of high pressure that's allowed for very excessive heat to settle into this region allowing for these wildfires to spread. take a look at some of this footage coming out of this -- well this is in fact southern california one of the many fires impacting the western half of the u.s. this is the lake fire just east of big bear in southern california. it's burned about 13,000 acres. and it's at 0% containment. and the national incident fire center reporting 17 large fires just in the state of alaska. but in total, at the moment, we have had 25,409 fires so far this year in the united states alone. that's burning well over 500,000 acres. certainly a situation we're going to monitor closely here at the cnn world weather center.
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george back to you in the meantime. >> and derek, we'll stay in touch with you on this. thank you so much. you're watching "cnn newsroom." up next we are here in charleston, south carolina, this is a city that is in mourning following wednesday's church massacre. ♪ do stay with us as we pay tribute to the fallen victims in this tragedy. you know, when i started my business, a lot of people didn't believe in me. but things took off when i got a domain and built my website all at godaddy. now i can tell the doubters to stick it. hey, honey. stick it! stick it! stick it! nana? hi... stick it! can you give your mommy a message for me? stick it! get a domain website and email starting at $1/month all at godaddy.
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now, back to our top story, and welcome back here to charleston, south carolina. a city with a great deal of pain, that is trying to move forward, trying to heal that is hopeful and even families of these victims offering forgiveness to this gunman after nine church members lost their lives in a shooting at the hands of a racist gunman. among those killed was the church's pastor. the 41-year-old was also a state senator. he was elected first back when
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he was 23 years old, that made him one of the youngest people ever to serve in the south carolina legislature. he became the first pastor first became a pastor rather at the age of 18 years old, and he was married with two young children children who will now be without him. this coming father's day that is celebrated here in the u.s. ironically it was during a recent surf monoatermon that he delivered a speech about love. listen. >> that we may be filled with your love. we know that only love can conquer hate. that only love can bring it all together in your name. >> sadly, senator pinckney was one of the nine people killed in the massacre including six women
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d my business, a lot of people didn't believe in me. but things took off when i got a domain and built my website all at godaddy. now i can tell the doubters to stick it. hey, honey. stick it! stick it! stick it! nana? hi... stick it! can you give your mommy a message for me? stick it! get a domain website and email starting at $1/month all at godaddy.
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he admitted to shooting and killing nine people inside a church. during a bible study session. why did he do it? we're learning more about his possible motive. also the families of those killed. they get to confront the suspect in court, some even offer their forgiveness. and living on the edge. greece closer to default, but the government remains calm. you will have an exclusive interview with a member of the greek administration. welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world, i'm george howell, live here in charleston, south carolina. you're watching "cnn newsroom."
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