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tv   The Seventies  CNN  June 28, 2015 9:30pm-10:31pm PDT

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welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. i'm linda kincaid. we're following breaking news. the massive three-week man hunt for david sweat in upstate new york is finally over. right now he's in a critical condition at a hospital. state police sergeant says he saw the fugitive in a field on sunday, about two miles or three kilometers from the canadian border. the sergeant said sweat started to run, that's when he shot the convict twice in the torso. sweat was unarmed at the time. his mother says she's relieved her son is still alive and knew her son would never head to her
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house after breaking out of prison. >> oh, no. my son knows if he would have came here i would have knocked him out and had them guys taken to jail by themselves, because that's just the way i am. i've always done it to him when he was bad. >> sweat escaped from a maximum security prison with richard matt. police shot and killed matt on friday. my colleague errol barnett spoke with fbi assistant director tom fuentes. how stunning is it that david sweat and richard matt, before he was shot on friday, were able to elude authorities for weeks and at least be as frias they were for this amount of time? >> i think it is pretty amazing that they were on the run for three weeks, although, when you si see the pictures of that forest and how deep the coverage was
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this time of year, late spring, early summer in the u.s., it's not hard to believe. and for people who are outdoorsman, they know that you can be three or feet from somebody in deep woods like that and not notice. the irony is that the prisoners in that jail are allowed to wear civilian clothes, including dark forest green shoes and clothes that are blending in with the woods. >> and we are looking at sweat as he was captured. he was spot the by a lone officer who saw a man jogging and began questioning him before he realized who he was. what was likely the pray or the for that officer at that time when he knew this was david sweat? to capture him alive our to stop him from reaching the boarder which -- border which is oinlt a few miles away. >> as sweat was running and heading for the tree line. that officer knew if he made it to the tree line they could
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spend the next three weeks looking for him again in the woods. that's how quickly he might be able to disappear again or invade someone's home or cabin once he got whack in tback in t and continue the general threat to the public that he potionsed. >> what made this search so dangerous is that these men had nothing to lose. what now for david sweat in might he be offered some deal or leniency if he cooperates and admits and discusses who helped them both escape? or is there only one future for him? >> no, there is another future for him, that is that he can be a rock star. that's what usually happens. personalities like sweat and matt are very narcissistic. yes, they're psychopaths and
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vicious murderers, but it's part of their narcissism. he may be more than ready to talk when they get him, just to be the star of his own movie, to be able to say how they did it. so i think a very skilled pair of interviewers or interrogator should be able to get that out of him. i now people say he'll never talk. i don't believe it. i've worked organized crime all my career, in the fbi 30 years, also terrorists. they say they won't talk, but often they can't wait to share their story of how great they are. >> we can't forget this is a man who is charged with killing a police officer. certainly an unsavory character. >> and if i could add one more comment? >> sure. >> what irony to be captured in a town named constable. and the term cop comes from constable on patrol. >> perhaps some poetic justice there.
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>> tom fuentes, thanks for your insight from dc. >> you're welcome. this story has so many moving parts that we can't get to all right now. can you see the rest of the interview with sweat's mother on cnn.com. she says he always got into trouble and threatened his own father with a baseball bat when he was just 9 years old. in greece, the country needs to follow the extreme steps officials have taken. and a parade gets broken up by police. we'll tell you why. stay with us. i brought in some protein to help rearrange the fridge and get us energized! i'm new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength to keep you active.
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cnn cannot confirm the authenticity of this footage. at least 38 people, mostly tourists were killed when the gunman opened fire at a beach resort on friday. 15 of the victims were british citizens, and the number could double according to britain's press association. many of the victims still haven't been identified. isis is claiming responsibility for the attack, but it's unclear whether the group had a direct role. and the terror group has also claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a mosque in kuwait on the same day. ian lee got of exclusive access to the inside of the mosque. we need to warn you, some viewers may find these images disturbing. >> reporter: karnage, frozen in time. pieces of lives lost. an isis suicide bomber terrorizing a house of worship. >> we did not do anything to
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instigate this. god, we were just praying for god sake. >> reporter: video obtained by cnn shows the chaos seconds after the explosion that killed at least 27 and injured more than 200. the perpetrator named as this man, a saudi national. despite multiple arrests, many feel uneasy. >> how am i supposed to convince my son, my 13-year-old son to come to friday, to come to the mosque next time? seriously. what guarantees do i have to give him? >> reporter: among the rubble of the mosque, we find ali praying, the isis bomber killed four of his close friends. police show me where the massive explosion ripped through the mosque. the doctor aided the victims, but only after searching for his sons. >> the only thing i was thinking about, where are my kids. and then i went back to look for
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them, and then just like they were coming, doing the same thing, running to me. and they were coming to me and holding my, and i was looking at my son, and he had blood coming from his hand and foot. he was so shocked that i couhe could not even talk. >> reporter: the boys were okay, but many were not. in the hospital we find some of the youngest victims. family members have yet to tell 9-year-old ali his father was killed. for now they distract him with cartoons. 14 year old mohammed dreams of being an engineer. >> sent me flying, so i fill and it was like a library. so it was destructed and it fell on me, but then my father picked, pulled me away from the carnage, and he took me outside.
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>> reporter: mohammed lost a toe, but some of the damage you can't see. >> i feel incapable, because i can't walk. i can't, like, do anything. i just sit here. and i can't do anything. and i, like i feel a lot of family members come visit me. but because i can't hear very well, so it's like i'm isolated a lot. >> reporter: there's a sense of unity in kuwait, a rare commodity these days in the middle east. sunni and shiite coming together in the face of terror. a local youth group delivers flowers to the victims. a heavy door saved this man's life, while everyone around him was killed. >> are you angry? or how do you feel? >> no, i'm not angry. i'm happy. that's what's happened. make the kuwaitis together, again, more, i see love. i see love in kuwaiti eyes.
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>> reporter: in the aftermath of the worst of humanity, the best shines through. ian lee, cnn, kuwait city, kuwait. and in france, investigators are trying to piece together motive in the attack at a u.s. chemical factory. heavily armed police took a suspect back to his home sunday to conduct more searches. authorities say he ran a delivery van into the building, causing an explosion. he admitted to killing his boss beforehand. police found the victim's head hanging from a fence at the scene. more now on our top story. the deepening debt crisis in greece as the country heads for financial collapse. banks have closed and will stay that way for at least a week. account holders will be limited as to how much they can withdraw from atms and greece could
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default as early as tuesday, which is when it must make loan payment to the international monetary fund. i'm joined on the phone from berlin with more on this. greece obviously risks defaulting on this, and will possibly move to exiting the euro zone. what sort of implications could that have? >> caller: well, it could have very serious implications, not just for greece but the entire euro zone. and we'll see that later today. the euro is already falling pretty precipitously. and you're going to have to look, this morning, i think at the other vulnerable countries in the euro zone. portugal, spain, possibly itsal, to see what bond markets say for them. this was the big fear a couple years ago that if greece fell out of the eurozone, there would
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be conte john and that would attack these other countries and have a domino effect and the entire euro project would chance. i think those fears are as great as they were then. but you can still see some c conconta concontaken. >> if he offers no concession, what's the likely hood of a last-minute ex-tense from the euro group? >> caller: well, over the past few hours, it doesn't really look very, very positive, to be honest. tsipras, the greek leader, gave a speech last night in which he seemed very defiant and blamed the eurozone leaders for pushing this crisis to the brink. they say the same thing about him. so it doesn't seem like there's a lot of common ground. and there's no indication that the two sides are talking right now. yesterday the european commission president put a proposal out there that the two
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sides had been discussing last week. he took the, sort of unusual step of publishing it for everyone to see so that greek voters could have a look at what the european union had put on the table. so it doesn't seem like there's any scope for a short-term deal at the moment. >> and so, i mean, greece claims that it's being forced into a corner. we heard the greek prime minister speaking about the fact that he thinks he's being blackmailed. what's your take on the situation as we've seen these talks go on for months? >> caller: well, i think that once the party, the leftist party came to power at the beginning of the year with a mandate, really, to end the painful austerity measures, the economic reforms that they had pushed through, spending cuts and that kind of thing, i think that poisoned the negotiating climate with europe, because he
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came in and said there's no way we're going to accept anything less than debt relief and for you to allow us to reverse these reforms. and at the beginning, the other side, the euro zone countries thought that this was just negotiating tactic. and over months, this has been kind of escalating, and i just think that there's also a lot of personal discord between the two sides at this point, between the greek finance minister, he's sort of this bombastic figure who's often offended his colleagues in the euro zone, and people like the german finance minu minlster who is a real hard liner who doesn't want to make any concessions to greece and thinks it's worth risking letting greece out of the eurozone. i think this is an untenable situation at the moment. and i don't see any easy way out of it for either side. >> no. it's really difficult times.
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we will be watching it closely. thank you very much for joining us. we appreciate it. >> and still to come on cnn, turkey's annual gay pride parade ends with clashes between marchers and police. detail on that just ahead. also a devastating explosion in taiwan injuring people at a water park. that's next. wow. sweet new subaru, huh mitch? yep. you're selling the mitchmobile!? man, we had a lot of good times in this baby. what's your dad want for it? ..like a hundred and fifty grand, two hundred if they want that tape deck. you're not going to tell your dad about the time my hamster had babies in the backseat, are you?! that's just normal wear and tear, dude. (vo) subaru has the highest resale value of any brand... ...according to kelley blue book ...and mitch. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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we have new video to show you of the fire at a water park in taiwan. it began just moments after a flammable powder ignited. media are reporting that 498 people were injured in the explosion. there were no deaths, but more than 200 victims are in a critical condition. so far at least five people are being questioned in connection with the blast. space x is investigating why its unmanned rocket exploded. >> shows the vehicle on course, on track. the rocket blew up minutes after
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launch. it was carrying two tons of supplies for the space station crew. they're not in any danger and still have several months worth of supplies. spacefo space-ex tweeted that something was overpressurized. gay pride parades took place, but in turkey, police broke up a parade in istanbul. the reason? the muslim holy month of ramadan. arwa damon has the details. >> reporter: no one expected it to be this way. it's unclear why this year the riot police are pushing people back. riot police not firing just
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water canons, but also rubber pellets, tear gas and pepper spray. >> it's not a crime! come on! >> silence, shut up! shut up! shut up! this is turkish problem. i don't fight. >> reporter: and that clearly is one of the key issue that the lgbt community and activists are still facing. they may have won a very significant victory in the united states, but in so many other countries, there is still such a battle ahead of them. >> all right, we are at the stage of please don't kill us. you know, we don't discuss equal marriage or, or employment rights or whatever, you know, we are just demanding our basic human rights. >> reporter: many believe this is a political rae action and
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not just about the el gee blt community. president erdogan's party did not fare as well as expected in this month's elections. >> this shows how scared they are of different groups and people who have a different way of thinking. they want to have a, you know, controlled society. they want things their way, and, you know, this is just absolutely despicable. >> reporter: there's more tear gas in the air. lgbt organizers are saying that the governorship told them that they did not have permission to be holding this march this year, because it is the holy month of ramadan. but this is the first time that such an occurrence has taken place during gay pride in turkey that has been celebrated for well over a decade now. the last tu years have gone off without any sort of problems whatsoever. and everyone in the crowd here
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is absolutely shocked at the way they're being treated. this is a society that has grown used to the authorities' heavy hand. but for the lgbt community and those who continue to celebrate gay pride in the side streets, they say that this is only going to make them stronger. arwa damon, cnn, istanbul. thanks so much for joining us tonight, i'm linda kincaid. errol barnett will join me for another hour of "cnn newsroom" after a very short break. stay with us. when were you first considered a family? when you fell in love? when you got married? when you had kids? when did you first fight to be considered a family? when you fell in love? when you got married? when you had kids? family isn't defined by who you love, but how.
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the governor breathes a sigh of relief after a massive man hunt has finally taken down an escaped murderer who was on the run for weeks. and anxiety is spreading around the globe as markets react to greece's financial crisis. plus, new video shows what could be the gunman in the beach attack. a welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and those of you tuned in from all around the world. i'm errol barnett.
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>> i'm lynda kincaid. this is "cnn newsroom." after more than three weeks on the run and hundreds of law enforcement officers scouring new york, massive man hunt is finally over. >> this is a huge development, what so many have been waiting for. cop killer david sweat is now in critical condition in a new york hospital after he was taken down sunday, very close to the canadian border by a lone sergeant on foot patrol. the image you're seeing here was obtained exclusively by cnn, and as you see, it shows sweat off the officers shot him twice in the torso. >> sweat was taken by airplane to a medical center for trauma care. the hospital says sweat is being treated in a very secure unit. [ applause ] >> just look at the relief and the excitement everyone's showing there after learning of sweat's capture. residents in dannemora cheered
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the police. sweat and matt broke out there on june 6th. the governor said the nightmare for his state is now over. >> this was an extraordinary situation in many ways. the prison at dannemora is over 100 years old. this is the first escape in 100 years. and if you were writing a movie plot, they would say that this was overdone. >> now police shot and killed richard matt back on friday. jean casarez has been following this from the beginning and was in new york when sweat was captured. >> reporter: after 22 days on the run and 1300 law enforcement officers combing every part of the small towns and remote areas here in upstate new york, it all led to one new york state police officer, sergeant jay cook, who was walking and patrolling
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himself after 3:00 sunday afternoon in constable new york. he saw someone he believed resembled david sweat. he approached him, encountered him, engaged him. that's when sweat began to run and sergeant cook then took out his weapon, shooting him two times in the torso. as we were going to constable, hearing that something was happening, we suddenly see this convoy of new york state police vehicles as well as two ambulances speeding along the highway with their sirens silent, but their lights on. we followed them, and they came right here to the local medical center in malone, new york. david sweat was treated here for several hours, he now is in albany medical center. back to you. >> there has been a lot of questions about the events leading up to matt and sweat's escape from prison. jonathan gilliam, a forger special agent for the fbi says sweat could be important for learning about what happened within the clinton correctional
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facility. >> here's the thing that i think a lot of people are missing is the fact that he may hold the key to a system that is, has been corrupt the. i'm not saying everybody is corrupt in there, but a system that is corrupted. if there's one or more of these guards or these employees as we've seen that have done things you're not supposed to shall the system is corrupted. so i think this is where he's going to be very helpful, and he may actually be the most helpful part of this entire investigation. >> and one person we haven't heard anything from up until now is david sweat's mother. and she says her son always got in trouble. but she told a local tv reporter that she actually cried when her son was captured, because she was happy he was still alive. >> it's a sigh of relief. we started crying, because he wasn't killed. >> were you ever afraid that he was going to try to come down to this area while he was on the run? >> oh, no, my son knows here if
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he would have come here, i would have knocked him out and had the guys take them to the jail by themselves. >> reporter: have you been watching the news? >> no, i don't want to. i just want to know what's the matter with my son. >> she said the guard stationed at her home didn't tell her when he'd been caught. they just got up and left. >> the story has so many moving parts, interesting angles that we are not investigating at this moment. but you can delve into them at cnn.com that also has the rest of that interview with david sweat's mother. which is fascinating. she said he always did get in trouble and threatened his father with a baseball when he was 9. all of that and more at cnn.com. now to the greek debt crisis. greece's banks are closed for a week as the country appears to be headed for a default. >> and as you might ix peblt, markets reacting very nervously.
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a concern on a possible run on the banks. that's leading the government to capital controls. account holders are i willed on what they can withdraw from atms. >> in addition to long lines at cash machines, lines formed at gas stations as the sense of uneasiness grows. tsipras urged the people to remain calm and that deposits would be safe and salaries would be paid. greece has had more than six years in economic decline. isa suarez has the story in athens. >> reporter: among antiques and paintings of old, tourists bargain for a piece of the greek past. it's a flea market full of
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history. he never thought it would get to this. i have never seen a situation like this, he says. not even back in the 1960s when the country had just come out of civil war. we used to have work then. the greek public doesn't want any more ventures, we are tired. we have suffered too much he tells me. having encouraged his son to travel to the uae for work, this father is fed up and clearly very emotional. after five months of talks and negotiations, we're no closer to a deal, are you frustrated? are you angry? or are you optimistic about this referendum? he tells me to be honest, i was very opt mystic until this friday that something good will happen. but now i am not. i once believed that even the last minute we will have a deal. speaking to people here there is a growing sense of anger as well as frustration with the eu, because the greeks tell me the creditors have been unable to
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understand what their economic plight is like, what life has been really like for the past five years. he has never felt so much pressure and with good reason, too. he tells me this is a family business that provides for seven people. my children are all unemployed. the mood here is very bad. there is no motivation left in us, only discord, misery and no one feels safe. despite these feelings of separation and desperation, they believe that tsipras has played his hand well against the creditors. i think the greek government has handled the situation the right way he says. because even if we say yes to the proposals, it will be just as bad as going back. regardless of the outcome of sunday's upcoming referendum, they both tell me they will return to their stores once more, perhaps to face a different crisis. one where old drachmas will more
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than just a remnant of the past. isa suarez, cnn, greece. >> the crisis has global investors unhappy at this moment. this is essentially uncharted territory. so here to help break it down for us is cnn's reporter. and as isa reported, you've got anger, desperation, frustration. that's among greeks, but as far as global markets are concerned, it's this add uncertainty that is really concerning people the most of what comes next here, right? >> it is the big unknown, errol, as you suggested here. this would be a precedent having the greeks exit the euro, if it comes to that. the other unknown is whether a deal can can be stitched together in the very last hour. that is still a possibility if you ra
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you read between the lines. but the other is how they respond to the crisis. at times we've seen protests, strikes at major port and airport facilities, and even attacks on the bank. if that happens, it feeds into the contagion. it could spill into debtor countries like spain, portugal, italy. we're not at that stage yet, the financial market correction is 2-2.5% in asia. it's bad but not catastrophic. we've seen the euro go down 2%. bad, but it's not going to be a fallout for theure/going forward unless the contagiousion kicks in and that's whether they can stitch together a final deal. let's not forget that the gap between greece and the eurozone is just an additional 2 billion euros. if you really want greece to go through this, over 2 billion euros. we'll see if a last-minute deal
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can be stitched together. >> the government had been staufrnsly against these capital controls, as of now, the people can only withdraw 60 euros a day, roughly $70 a day. how much hard irwill life be for greeks this week and how their that impact the local economy? >> there's also the question of how much more difficult life can get for the greeks after the last six years. they've lost 25% of the economy. to break it down, that's $10,000 per family, errol. it is severe. it's not a recession. it's a depression. as you suggested, the euro limits on a daily basis is 60 euros, about $70. that is extreme. as you know, the government was completely against the capital controls, but they were left with no choice whatsoever, errol, because the european central bank kept overe open the lifeline, but they didn't increase it. so the greeks had to hold onto whatever money they had. now addressing the nation last
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night, alexis tsipras called what the european union is doing a blackmail. but he called for calm and promis promised, promised the greek people that their bank accounts would be protected. take a listen. >> translator: the deposits of citizens in greek banks are absolutely secured as are salaries and pensions. any difficulties which may appear must be dealt with calmly and with resolve. the calmer we deal with difficulties the sooner we can overcome them and their consequences will be milder. >> to be candid, errol, it's very difficult to remain calm not knowing what's going to happen after the referendum. you could see a vote against alexis tsipras if they decide to stay in the euro. it will be interesting to see the effect it has on tourism. this is prime time for visitors.
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it represents 17.5% of their economy. there are questions raised that the greeks have a cash crunch. can the islands pay for jet fuel going back into europe and other destinations. right now jet fuel, fuel for the ferries going back and forth, even medical supplies. this is quite a dire situation, and it raises a number of questions, depending on what happens after the big vote on sunday and how the imf treats this nonpayment, perhaps, taking place on tuesday. >> and just a quick final question for you, john. breakups are never easy, are they? you know the relationship is over, but you still have to collect your stuff from the place. and follow each other online. the greek government with its finances couldn't get its act together. the ecb and creditors couldn't find a deal that was proper for them, and so essentially, we're watching this slow-motion breakup. do you think a grexit is inevitable? >> quell shlgwell, i think coul
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rescued. there's a little good cop/bad cop scenario is taking place. francois hoe laund is going to speak. but at the same time we have the austrian finance minute stir suggesting a grexit is inevitable. the german finance minister saying it's going to be very painful. there is an opportunity to pull it together, but it's getting very late in the day. >> just like when you break up with someone, they say, look, i think we can still make this work. you're illuminating a sliver of possibility that maybe there won't be a break up. thanks. and asian stocks were the first to take a hit monday morning. let's take a look at how the markets are doing at this hour.
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and you can see the nikkei is down much more now. 2.44%. the asx is down 2.34%. the shanghai composite is down 3.75% and the hang seng is down 2.68%. now it is a show of defiance. some tourists in tunisia say they are not leaving, that despite a deadly attack two days ago. hear their reasons coming up. also -- >> it's not a crime! come on! why do this! >> anger in turkey after police stop an annual gay pride parade. the reason why after the break. stay with us.
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. welcome back. we have new amateur video. it is believed to be of the gunman in the tunisian attack. as you see here, someone running along the beach dressed in all black. cnn cannot confirm the authenticity of this footage we should note. at least 38 people, mostly
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tourists were killed when the gunman opened fire at that beach resort on friday. >> and the strip of beach where the attacker killed was reopened. isis has claimed responsibility for the attack. but it's unclear whether the group had a direct role. >> now tunisia is stepping of security in tourist zones following that shooting. tunisia media report the arab league will hold an emergency meeting on monday to discuss the attack. as we mentioned, they were expecting the death toll of britains to increase as that country deploys the biggest investigative team. talk about the british response to all this. >> reporter: sure. i think it is increasingly clear that it is britain and british
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citizens that are making up the overwhelming number of victims this this case. remember out of 38, the british government is now warning that as many as perhaps 30 of them could be british. they're speaking in very approximate terms they say, because the identification process, the process of officially confirming the identity of each of them is taking time, it's taking longer, perhaps, than it ordinarily would. one of the reasons, it's a practical concern. these are people on holiday around the beach, by the swimming pool, in swimwear. they weren't carrying i.d. with them. so that first, basic and most obvious step in identifying people, it's just simply not able to happen because of the location, the remoteness of it and so north. visual identification is tricky, dental records and that sort of thing are be being used as well. but that identification process is continuing, so it's no surprise that the british police response is as significant as it is. they have sent as many as 16
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developme investigative officers to work here on the ground. but in many ways, the bigger response is back in the uk. hundreds of officers are involved supporting the investigation but also supporting victims, their families, other british citizens whose holiday has been cut short, who had to effectively flee this low case because of that terrible attack. >> and we were just looking at footage there of what appeared to be security officials at those beach side resorts. of course tourism an essential avenue of income and revenue for a country like tunisia. what has the tunisian security response been? how visible is it? >> reporter: it's been stepped up. and it will be stepped up further in the coming days. but it's interesting in many ways, because the scene here is, well, i guess it's misleading. if you look down the stretch of coastline, you wouldn't have any
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way of knowing, really, that one of the resorts along this stretch of coast was the scene of a massacre where these 38 people were gunned down in such a horrific way. so many others were injured as well. many people here are still on holiday. people are still enjoying their holiday, including around 50 tourists who were staying in the hotel that was the target of the attack. the imperial. the hotel tells us that around 50 people have decided to stay and continue their holidays. but the one change here is the step up in security. all the resorts and hotels are being a lot more careful. we expect to see more tunisian military according to the government, very visible in the coming days. >> all right. the latest information there for us from phil black joining us live on the tunisian coastline. thank you for that. and as we've mentioned, hundreds of tourists have been fleeing the area since the attack took place. but in a show of defiance, some
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have said they are not going home early. nick payton walsh has more. >> reporter: they will not be moved. the defiant stance pool side, 46 hours earlier their fellow guests were gunned down. german tourists finishing their holiday. their music even. it's british stiff upper lip resolve. not to let them win. nathan said tunisian jobs depend on tourists not fleeing. >> it's a very different atmosphere. it's all very chilling. and it's not the same as what it was. but i think, you know, what we're going to do is stay here up until the rest of our holiday finishes and leave. we don't really want to venture too far outside of the resort. because we're still sort of unsure of what's going to happen. but yeah, i think we're in the safest place at the moment.
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>> reporter: inside the marble and calm, it's as though the horror never unfolded. staff from the u.k. here, yet the gunman scarred more than the building. >> it is extraordinary and a sign of the resilient spirit of what seems to be british and german tourists who decided to continue their holiday despite being meters away from dozens died and lying in the sun in areas still riddled with bullet marks. a man washed the sand off. >> 40. 40, 50. >> reporter: all german? >> 20. 20. >> reporter: and the rest british? >> enlish. >> yeah, british. >> reporter: and they will never leave? >> stay. >> reporter: many here, this man
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was in the sea. >> suddenly explosions. dut, dut, dut, dut, dut, smoke. smoke. and i look. yeah. and say to my wife, hurry up, hurry up, ja. this woman running in this, in this direction, and i have in the sand, ja, the dut, dut, dut, dut. >> reporter: he's from stuttgart and still goes to the beach where he saw many die. >> a woman, oh, oh, oh, oh, and red cross here and here a dead person, young, a young lady, dead. >> reporter: many were killed on
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the beach, a crime scene open to the public. a memorial. >> the suicide bomber who hit a mosque in kuwait on the same day as the tunisia attack has now been identified as a saudi citizen. the country's interior ministry says he flew into kuwait a few hours before killing 27 worshippers and injuring 200 others. >> isis has claimed responsibility for the attack. and in france, investigators are trying to piece together a motive at an attack of a u.s.-owned chemical factory. the suspect was taken back to his home to conduct more searches. they say he rammed a delivery van into a warehouse on friday, causing an explosion. >> reuters reports sahi admitted
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killing his boss beforehand. investigators found his head hanging from a fence at the scene. a devastating explosion in taiwan injures almost 500 people just partying at a water park. weigh have new video that shows the explosion as it happens. and the deadline for an iranian nuclear deal is inching closer, but the u.s. and iran are planning to miss it. those details just ahead. can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive?
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