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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 28, 2015 11:30pm-1:01am PDT

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thanks so much for staying with us. welcome back to those watching in the u.s. and around the world. i'm errol barnett. >> i'm zain asher. just past 30 minutes after the hour in atlanta. here are the headlines.
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greek authorities have imposed measures to try to prevent a run on the banks. the banks are closed for at least a week after the european central bank refused to provide more emergency funds. account holders are limited to 60 euros of cash withdrawals per day at atms. officials in bahrain say this man landed at bahrain international airport first before flying to kuwait. isis has claimed responsibility for the attack. captured fugitive david sweat is now in critical condition at a new york hospital. he was shot twice in the torso on sunday after being spotted near the canadian border. he had been on the run for three weeks after he and richard matt broke out of a maximum security prison. back to one of our main stories this evening, the greek
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crisis took a dramatic downturn over the weekend when prime minister tsipras called for a referendum on the bailout. >> reporter: among antique vases, porcelain statues and paintings of old, tourists bargain for a piece of the greek past. it's a flea market full of history with tales to match it. yanis has been selling wears here for over 50 years and 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 adventures. we are tired. we have suffered too much he tells me. this father is fed up and clearly very emotional. after five months of talks and
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negotiations we're no closer to a deal. are you frustrated in are you angry? or are you optimistic about this referendum? he tells me to be honest i was optimistic until this friday that something good will happen but now i am not. i want to believe that even in 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. the greeks tell me the creditors have been unable to unable to understand what the economic plight is like and 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 is left in us only discord, misery and
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no one feels safe. i think the greek government has handled the situation the right way so far, he says. even if we say yes to the proposals it will be as painful as going back to the drachmas. regardless of the outcome they will return to their stores once more perhaps to face a different crisis, one where these old drachmas will be more than a figure from the past. the numbers from 2015 alone are staggering. since january it has paid more than $17 billion to its lenders. but that is not half of what it has been scheduled to pay for the entire year. upcoming payments through december add up to another $20
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billion. in vienna sunday came and went without a deal between the u.s. and iran two days before the deadline set for a nuclear agreement. >> iran's top negotiator has gone home for a short visit. nic robertson tells us why it's no longer clear just what kind of deal iran might be willing to accept. . >> reporter: barely five hourings of meetings. u.s. secretary of state john kerry and the foreign minister's nuclear negotiations are on pause. zarif heading back to tehran. gaps even in this final phase too big to bridge quickly. each delegations arriving at the talks venue expressing concerns. >> they're going to be tough. it has always been tough. but not impossible. >> reporter: britain's foreign
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minister. >> we still have major differences of interpretation in detailing what was agreed. and there's going to have to be some give and take. >> reporter: three months ago at talks in switzerland, zarif agreed an outline agreement including, iran will be required to grant access to the iaea to invest suspicious sites or allegations of covert enrichment facilities anywhere in the country and agreeing to withhold nuclear research for ten to 12 years but iraq'sn's supreme leader issued new red lines, effectively rolling back zarif's commitment. arriving at the talks now, the french foreign minister had his
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red lines for iran. >> translator: a lasting limit on iran's research and development capacity. the second condition is a rigorous inspection of sites including military if needed and the third condition is the automatic return of sanctions if it violates its commitments. >> reporter: the iranian delegation is due back here tuesday, the day of the deadline. no one is giving up on talks yet but any hope of a speedy conclusion is gone the aspiration is now it will be days not weeks. nic robertson, vienna austria. >> we now have new video to show you of the fire at a water park in taiwan. the video begins just moments before a flammable powder ignited. >> and it's disturbing to watch when you realize 498 people were injured in this explosion. that's according to local state
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media. there are no deaths at this stage but that could change as well. 200 of the victims are in critical condition. so far at least, five people are being questioned in connection with that blast. almost 3,000 migrants have been pulled from small boats in the mediterranean sea in a multinational naval mission. >> that is according to the italian coast guard who say the migrants were rescued in 21 operations on sunday. the migrant boats came from libya. still to come turkey's gay pride parade. >> ends in clashing between protesters and police. details coming up.
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welcome back everyone. so it appears the republican party will gain two new contenders. >> so crowded.
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>> so crowded. for the 2016 presidential race. a video doesn't outright say chris christie for president but the words at the end leave no doubt. the new jersey governor is expected to launch his bid on tuesday. >> we expect ohio governor john kasich to announce his bid as well. and one hopeful is voicing his opposition to the same-sex marriage ruling. on sunday's "abc's this week" mike huckabee compared it to martin luther king's resistance to racism. >> he said christian leaders could be inspired by how mlk jr. pushed back during the fight for
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civil rights. he said that governors and attorneys should wait for legislation before allowing same-sex marriages. gay gay -- >> in turkey arwa damon has more. >> reporter: no one expected it to be this way. it's unclear why this year the riot police are pushing people back. police are going to gas. riot police not just firing water cannons but rubber pellets, tear gas and pepper spray. >> we are not a crime. come on why are you doing this?
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>> shut up. shut up, shut up. this is turkish problem. she said i don't fight. >> that clearly is one of the key issues that the lgbt community and activists are still facing. they may have won a significant victory in the united states but in so many other countries, there is still such a battle ahead of them. >> we are at the stage of please don't kill us. we don't discuss equal marriage or employment rights or whatever. you know we are just demanding our basic human rights. >> reporter: many believe this is a political reaction and not just about the lgbt community.
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this is still, you know this shows how scared they are of different groups and people who have a different way of thinking. they want to have a controlled society. they want things their way. and you know and this is just absolutely despicable. >> reporter: there's more tear gas in the air. lgbt organizers are saying that the governorship told them they didn't have permission to hold this march this year because is it 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 few years have gone off without any sort of problems whatsoever. and everyone in the crowd here is absolutely shocked at the way they're being treated. this is a society that has grown used to the authority's heavy hand.
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but for the lgbt community and those who continue to celebrate gay pride in the side streets they say this is only going to make them stronger. arwa damon, cnn, istanbul. >> that is a reminder of how different the united states is from other countries based on the way they are being treated. >> those water cannons they used created a lot of rainbows that people were sharing online. >> interesting. equal rights supporters turned out in parts of asia including in seoul where thousands hit the streets. >> an estimated 7,000 people took part be in this march for gay pride. some waved rainbow flags and others walked arm and arm. >> and in the philippines a mass wedding in ma nil louisiana thenila.
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gay marriage is banned in the philippines under what is known as, quote, the family code. we're going to take a quick break on cnn. when we come back novak djokovic denies cheating claims after before defending his title at wimbledon later on today. we'll have the details coming up. automated voice: to file a claim, please state your name. carnie wilson. thank you. can you hold on? ♪ hold on for one more day ♪
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welcome back everyone. today at wimbledon, novak djokovic will defend his title but he was also defending himself against cheating claims after someone suggested that he and his coach communicate during matches. >> today he will go into the third major of the season. serena williams will continue her quest for the grand slam today with her opening match. >> this year wimbledon may be especially challenging as the hottest weather in years moves
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into london. pedram javaheri has more. we are talking about potentially temperatures over 100 degrees fahrenheit. what precautions do players and spectators need to take. >> on sunday it was raining in london and officials during the rain were planning what to expect during the coming couple of days. more ambulances are going to be brought in outside the venue just in case the temperatures get this hot. in 2013 andy murray won the championship for wimbledon on the day of the championship the temperatures reach 30 degrees. so what we get close to on tuesday. on that day, 79 people were treated for heat exhaustion. the temperatures get close to 30 by tuesday. by midweek we're talking 34 degrees. the hottest ever was in june of 1976. this will be comparable to that. and this pattern is very very dangerous when it comes to the
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extreme heat in this region especially since we have not felt the heat in this region since 2012 in london. but a marked warming trend into the mid-80s fahrenheit and stays warm with temperatures around 80 fahrenheit. but to the south the excessive heat is building. 44 degrees or 110 fahrenheit. people are doing what they can to cool off. we are about five minutes shy of 9:00 in the morning and it is 25 celsius or 77 fahrenheit already. here is what people are doing in madrid on sunday where the temperatures were in the upper 30s, cooling off anywhere they. can the southerly flow with the air pushing in to europe. paris gets in on its hottest temperatures since august of 2012. that is over 100 fahrenheit if you are going to paris.
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it stays warm friday and saturday as well. across the western united states extreme heat in the pacific northwest. 111 fahrenheit hottest ever for the month of june. often what happens around the western and northwestern corner of the united states mirrors the northwest part of europe. and seattle warming up into the mid-90s. 72 fahrenheit is normal for this time of year. and 95 is what is in the forecast as we approach the holiday weekend in the u.s. >> we appreciate it. we want to keep the focus in the northwest u.s. a raging brush fire has forced evacuations as flames come close to homes. our affiliate komo reports that dozens of homes are in danger in wenatchee, washington. there is no word yet though on how big this fire is or exactly what caused it.
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space x is looking to what may have gone wrong after its latest mission to the international space station ended with an explosion. take a look at this. >> their coming back, vehicle on course, on track. >> the rocket blew up minutes after launch. >> it was carrying more than two tons of supplies including food and equipment for the space station crew. and that's our time today on "cnn newsroom." i'm errol barnett. >> i'm zain asher. thank you for watching we'll be right back with on hour of "cnn newsroom." don't go away.
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www.vitac.com just one day before a critical deadline greece closes its banks. the three-week hunt for a cop killer ends in the united states. as hundreds recover from burns after an explosion in taiwan we have dramatic new video of the moment of the blast. >> welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm zain asher. glad to be with you. >> your last hour of the day with the both of us. this is "cnn newsroom."
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it's a story we have been following all weekend. greece is one day closer to default and authorities there are scrambling to prevent a run on the banks. the banks are closed for at least a week and greeks are lining up at atms but are limited to withdrawing $67 a day in cash. >> these are capital controls. they were imposed after the european central bank refused to provide more funds. the prime minister tried to reassure the public in this televised address. >> translator: the deposits of citizens in greek banks are absolutely secured as are the payments of salaries and pensions. any difficulties which may appear must be dealt with calmly and with resolve. the calmer we can deal with difficulties the sooner we can
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overcome and than the consequences will be minor. >> isa suarez is joining me from athens to talk about this. i couldn't help but thinking about the election tsipras was so full of promises and now the country is close to default. do the greek people feel their prime minister has failed them? >> reporter: it's a mixed message to be honest. if you asked me a week ago or so people would have said that alexis tsipras has been playing his cards pretty tough. he promised to push back on austerity. many people think he has done the right thing by saying no to pension cuts and rises in v.a.t. many are proud of. that but given how things have
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changed in 24 hours and how dramatic the turn of events in greece many are in two minds to be honest. many things things will get worse and many in a state of anxiety and some i spoke to yesterday were absolutely furious. i spoke to a gentleman who was buying bread on his way to work and he was saying it may be okay in athens where you have atms opening in two hours to get cash out but people in remote parts in the village, he was saying my mother is two hours from an atm, how will she travel by taxi get to an atm and not get to a bank because she doesn't have a credit or debit card. let me give you a sense of the papers this morning too. this is interesting. this paper says when will the banks reopen? and that is the question that many are asking. the greek government said it
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will basically be a week until next month. that is post referendum but it's we have seen cases like cyprus it has taken much longer. cyrus it was almost two years also and this is a government paper. it reads no. it's calling on people to take to the streets tonight, at 7:30 to say no to the proposal by the government for a referendum. i had an opportunity to gauge the mood of the referendum. take a listen to what some had to say. among antique vases, porcelain statues and paintings of old, tourists bargain for a piece of the greek past. it's a flea market full of history with tales to match it. this man has been selling his wares here for over 50 years and never thought it would get to this. i have never seen a situation like this he says not even
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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 adventures. we are tired. we have suffered too much he tells me. having encouraged his son to travel to the uae to work this father is fed up and emotional. after five months of talks, we're not closer to a deal. are you frustrated angry or optimistic about the referendum? he tells me i was optimistic until this friday that something good will happen but now i am not. i want to believe that even in 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 understand what their economic plight is like what life has been really like for the past five years.
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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 the feelings of desperation and frustration, he believes that the government of alexis tsipras has played its hand well against the creditors. i think the government has handled the situation the right way. even if we say yes to the proposals it would be as painful as going back to the drachmas. regardless of the outcome of the referendum they will return to their stores once more perhaps to face a different crisis one where these old drachmas will be more than just a remnant of the past. and zain you can see the
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shutters to this national bank where we are seeing queues lining up overnight. that is closed. we are expected to shutters to be raised and for people to have access to the atms in the next hour or so. and also today we're expecting the government announce what banks may reopen. we are hearing word that some banks may be reopen the day that the pensioners will go to the bank to get their pensions. many of them don't have debit cards and won't have access to funds. but for many people here waking up to a really harsh reality. zain? >> i cannot imagine what those people in greece are going through financially but it's in terms of capital controls this will have a devastating impact on the economy, it will mean less spending and investment. isa soares live for us in
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athens. more more perspective we are joined by michael -- he joins us live now from london. thanks for your time michael. so you know we just saw our correspondent there in what is sure to be a scary morning in athens. some viewers may be waking up to these new developments. how surprised were you to see greece walk out of talks, announce a referendum for july 5th and close all local banks? >> i don't think we really expected there would be talk of a referendum. if you think about it it doesn't make sense at all. if they wanted to have a referendum which could be a good idea they should have had it this past sunday. why? because the program was still on the banks were still working and because there was no uncertainty. what we don't know is when the time the referendum happens, the question will still be on the table. because we don't know whether the offer exists greece may
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well have defaulted vis-a-vis the imf and the europeans have said that the deal exists until tuesday. so was this a calculated move or even a sensible move? absolutely not. what's worse, there were indications that even members of the negotiating team of the greek government had pretty much converged and what has leaked which is quite embarrassing for the greek government is that what was presented as an ultimatum by the greek government was not an ultimatum and the head of the commission actually sent the text that was better than the one that was being discussed because the negotiations were still going on. why did it happen? party politics. purely entirely party politics. the prime minister thought he couldn't get it through the parliament and he decided to have a rabbit out of the hat but it is something that may jeopardize things. >> i want to delve into that a
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bit more. you have said the main issue is the manner in which the greek government has approached this crisis focusing on politics and short term survival rather than what is best financially long term for the country? right? >> absolutely. and i think you can see that in a number of different ways. and the process of negotiation has created a lot of emnemies of greece. things like small details that show there is a combination of ignorance and arrogance. we have a government of activists, people who have not had government experience and if you look at what's going on this is both what has caused the problems and what may be the greatest cause of concern even if they wanted to get out of the euro there should have been a plan "b," a preparation for what will follow. as we can see plainly today,
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that was not in place. the biggest concern is what will follow if things do not manage to stick together. and what's going to be interesting is the result of the referendum. if the greek population ends up voting yes and someone suggests there may be more yes votes than no votes, then obviously the government will have to change in some shape or form. and the entire structure right now, the way these negotiations happen but also the outcome suggests that we are going to have a very dramatic week. >> certainly. and the grexit may be the next major event. michael jacobides joining us with a quote, if you think about it rationally it makes no sense at all. we appreciate your insight today. markets in asia have been reacting to the events. let me show you this right now
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the markets in the region are down across the board. most of them down more than 2%. that includes shan highghai the nikkei and the hang seng. we will look at that more in the next 30 minutes. after more than three weeks and hundreds of law enforcement officers scouring new york state a massive manhunt is finally over. cop killer david sweat is in critical condition at a new york hospital this hour after being taken down near the canadian border by a lone sergeant on foot patrol. >> he was shot twice in the torso putting an end to what can only be described as a nightmarish three weeks. >> 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
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officer, sergeant jay cook who was walking and patrolling 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 and that's when sweat began to run and sergeant cook took out his weapon shooting him two times in the torso. as we were going to constable hearing that something was happening we see a convoy of new york state police vehicles as well as two ambulances speeding along the highway with their sirens sirens sirens sirens sirens silent but their lights on. david sweat was treated here and is now in albany medical center. back to you. david sweat's capture ends a hellish three weeks and residents near the prison they
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do seem to agree. they cheered and thanked the officers who searched for sweat and his fellow escapee richard matt. cnn caught up with michael doyle who lives across the street from where david sweat was captured. >> my wife says something is going on up the street and i heard the shots and ran out with my phone and started taking pictures and the cops just swarmed like bees. >> how stunning is it that it ended across the street? >> very nerve wracking. i was outside doing beyondyard work and he was in the hedge row next to my house. >> we are hearing from david sweat's mother. she said she cried when he son was captured because she was happy he was still alive. >> it is just a sigh of relief.
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we started crying. because he wasn't killed. >> were you afraid he was going to try to come down to this area while on the run? >> oh, no. he knows i would have knocked him out and had them take him to jail. >> have you been watching the media coverage? >> no i don't want to. i just want to know what is the matter with my son. >> and you can imagine how difficult this has been for her. sweat's mother said the guards stationed at her home didn't tell her he had been caught but just got up and left. >> her son had been exhibiting violent behavior since he was 9 years old. we turn to another story out of taiwan. we have dramatic new video to show you that captures the moments just before a fire happened at a water park in taipei. now the video shows party goers dancing just before a flammable powder sidly ignited, erupting
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in fire. state media are reporting that 498 people were injured in the explosion. >> there are no deaths to report but more than 200 victims in critical condition. so far at least five people are being questioned in connection with the blast. kathy novak reports. >> reporter: i'm at the water park where young people were dancing at the color play party. then it all went terrifyingly wrong. i have to warn you that the video we are about to show you is graphic. it shows the moment that a dance floor full of people was engulfed in flames. a fireball exploded in the air and people were screaming and running for their lives. the colorful powder may be responsible. taiwan's premiere has banned its use until further notice and the
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water park has been shut down. the event organizer has been brought in for questioning and family and friends of the victims have been asked to come here and pick up their belongings. we spoke to one who was here when the explosion happened. >> the music started and the host wanted to give us a surprise and used all the powder that was left. maybe because the lights were too hot, there was a sudden explosion. the fire came too fast and no one was able to run. everybody was burned or jumping up and down or running and some were stampede. nobody could save others and people suffered severe burns. >> he suffered minor burns to his foot but his girlfriend was worse off. so many were given first aid at the water park. they were rushed to 39 hospitals in the area. we're told that specialized burn units are overwhelmed and there
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aren't enough beds for everyone who needs that care. hospitals are appealing to the public to stay away unless absolutely necessary so they can focus on caring for all the people who were injured right here. kathy novak, cnn, taipei. >> we should note that a party organizer and lighting technician are considered suspects in the blast. they are free on bail and barred from leaving the country. >> the organizer dropped to his knees to apologize and say he is sorry for saturday's devastating accident. hundreds of tourists are fleeing tunisia after a deadly attack there. but some have decided to stay. hear their reasons next. plus gay pride marchers and police in turkey clash during a demonstration. >> they may have won a very significant victory in the united states but in so many
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welcome back everyone. tunisia is stepping up security in tourist zones following friday's deadly terror attack. at least 38 people mostly tourists were killed at a beach resort in sousse. >> the beach was reopened on sunday. 15 of the victims are british citizens and that number could double in fact according to britain's press association. for the latest developments let's bring in our phil black. he joins us live from sousse and talk about the british response to all of this. most of the victims were visiting from the uk and a large number of investigators from the uk have been deployed. >> reporter: 16 in all deployed but supported by hundreds working on this attack become in the uk. those hundreds are partly dedicated to the investigation, working out how it happened and
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who supported it where did this attack come from in origin but many are involved in supporting the british victims of this those who were there, their families back home and other people who have cut short their holidays to return to the united kingdom. that's why the uk police say this is an extraordinarily large operation for them. that's because of the warning from the british government that as many as 30 of those victims could be confirmed to be uk citizens. they are talking in approximate terms so far. they have not locked it down. they are saying that the process of officially confirming the identities of the victims is taking a bit longer than normal partly because of the location. it's remote but it is a resort area. this is where they were lying on the beach and the swimming pool. they weren't carrying identification at the time obviously. so it's just a longer slower process. but i think the british government is clearly getting
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the british people ready for a terrible outcome, confirming ultimately that the end result will be something around 30 british citizens killed in this attack. on top of the irish, the belgian and german citizens that have been confirmed so far. >> phil black live for us in sousse. looking at the footage of the local security response as armed men make that beach area secure. phil black live for us this morning, thanks very much. hundreds of tourists have been fleeing sousse since the attack but some tourists say they are not going home early. nick paton walsh has more. >> reporter: they will not with moved. a defiant stance poolside mingling with chlorine sun cream and beer. where 46 hours earlier their fellow guests were gunned down.
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german and british tourists finishing their holiday, their music even. it's british stiff upper lip spirit a bid not to let them win. nathan from norwich say that the jobs depend on the tourists not fleeing. >> it's all very chilling and it's just not the same as what it was. but i think that what we're going to do is just stay here until our holiday finishes and then leave. and you know we don't want to venture too far outside of the resort. we are unsure of what's going to happen. but i think we're in the safest place at the moment. >> reporter: inside the marble and calm is as though a nightmare never befell here. but this video shows the aftermath of the bloodshed at the indoor pool. the gunman scarred more than the building. >> it is extraordinary and a
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sign of the spirit of what seems to be german and british tourists who decided to continue their holiday lying in the sun in areas still riddled with bullet marks. these two wash the sand from the beach off and wander back towards the bullet holes. >> how many here? >> 40, 50. >> all german? >> 20. >> and the rest? >> british. >> and they will never leave or they're staying? >> they're staying. >> reporter: many were on a tour when the attack happened but this man was in the sea. >> suddenly it is explosions. and we saw smoke. smoke. and i look yeah -- and say to my wife hurry up hurry up. and we are sent running.
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running in this direction. and i have -- and in the sand, yeah? >> reporter: the inspector still goes to the beach where he saw many die. >> here a woman, and -- red cross, here and -- and there it was here -- a dead person. young lady. >> reporter: where he killed many on the beach is a crime scene open to the public. a memorial but also a place in the sun for some. nick paton walsh, sousse tunisia. investor are on edge as the greek economy teeters. how the markets are reacting to the news of the debt crisis.
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first the sheriff who worked with the deputy that david sweat murdered in 2002 reacts to the convict's capture. we'll be back right after this. 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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thanks for staying with us you're watching "cnn newsroom." i'm errol barnett. >> and i'm zain asher. the three-week manhunt for an escaped killer in new york is finally over. a state police sergeant spotted david sweat near the canadian border on sunday and shot him twice. he is in hospital in critical
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condition. police shot and killed richard matt on friday. the number of british citizens killed in tunisia 's terror attack could double to 30. many of the victims have not been identified. at least 307 people mostly tourists died when a gunman opened fire in sousse on friday. greek authorities are trying to prevent a run on banks as the country approaches default. the banks are closed for at least one week. account holders are limited to $67 of cash withdrawals per day at atms. >> we'll talk more about this now. global markets are reacting to developments in greece. ivan watson joins us from hong kong where markets have been down throughout the day. >> but i want to start with nina dos santos in london.
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we know that greece owes 1.6 billion euros to the imf and are supposed to make that payment on tuesday and they might default on this. what sort of impact will the capital controls and potential default have on european markets? >> well you already see from the pictures 34 minutes into the trading session so far that european markets are being hammered on the back of this news. a number of the stock markets opened down 4.5% but they are starting to settle back up a little bit. let's see how main markets are doing like the dax, these are the big markets in the single currency areas. down around 4% but it's they were incurring harder losses 20 minutes ago. they were called to open down double this amount in the futures markets. want to point out that the athens composite looks as though it is up on this chart but it is
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shut at the moment for that bank holiday that has been imposed now. we know that there is going to be a week-long bank holiday for the banks to be shut. the athens composite will be shut throughout the course of this week as a result of that. this is friday's trading session and it shows you how optimistic that we would see a deal on friday. if we can just open up the one-month chart. i want to show you how chopper it has been. and this is just june alone. a low point in the talks in the middle of the month and the optimism rose and the flat line is when the markets have been shut. it will stay flat as they remain shut and a lot of people expecting it to crumble when it does get trading, zain. >> the last thing that anyone wants is any type of contagion. we'll see what sort of impact tuesday has on the european markets as well.
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we'll wait to see what happens in two days from now. we appreciate that report. >> and let's bring in ivan watts whon is watson who is in beijing. we have seen a number of corrections this past few weeks. but as we look at the global reaction to what is happening in greece how much of what we're seeing in beijing and elsewhere is connected to the fluctuations in greece? >> certainly the other asian markets were all hit. they -- for the most part lost 1 to 2% throughout trading in the day. the chinese markets are very different because due to capital controls and trade restrictions foreigners are not allowed to easily invest in china's stock market. and vice versa. chinese investors are not very exposed on international markets. but what has been happening in china for two weeks is its own
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basically free fall. the chinese shanghai composite has lost some 19% of its value over the course of the last two weeks. that's more than $2 trillion in market capital that has all been erased now in two weeks. let's put it in context, though. the shanghai composite rose spectacularly over the last year. and even with the loss over the last two weeks that continued today on slightly smaller margin of loss even with the losses of today, you still have the shanghai composite up 25% to compare to where it was exactly a year ago. so if an investor got in there early on they still have potentially made an awful lot of money.
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it's the people financial analysts say that got in in the last couple of months people who borrowed money to purchase stocks they are potentially feeling a lot of pain right now and we have been talking to some of these ordinary investors, mom and pop investors, not big banks and institutions but ordinary people who saw a chance to make a buck or rmb on the ground here. one chinese woman telling us today, i feel terrible. i've lost so much money. another woman who managed a furniture shop telling us she had come into a trading shop just to dump her stocks right now. we are anticipating more volatility in the chinese markets. this is coming at a time where china's economy as a whole is slowing down to slower levels of growth than it's seen in decades. >> you have local issues playing into the markets there. and the fear is what happens in
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greece will exacerbate the situation. thanks to our correspondents from beijing and london. the story out of greece has a lot of moving parts and it is moving quickly. we have resources to help you understand the financial situation there on our website. just head to money.cnn.com. the other breaking story is the capture of cop killer david sweat after three weeks on the run. >> a police sergeant spotted sweat on sunday and shot him twice. sweat is fighting for his life in hospital. paulo sandoval has more. >> reporter: this ises a close as we can get to where david sweat was arrested by new york state police. down this road is the location there. the police are still treating this as a crime scene. and then you look over my right
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shoulder. this is part of the tree line where police sergeant jay cook was afraid that sweat would run into hide and prolong the search that went on over three weeks. what we are seeing a sense of relief in the community. so many decided to head elsewhere where the search got too close to their doorstep. and we are hearing from broom county sheriff, who employed the deputy who was brutally shot and killed by david sweat. i spoke to him. the sheriff saying that today's events providing a sense of relief not only for the law enforcement family but his loved ones as well. this weekend will mark the anniversary that he was shot and killed on that fourth of july day. not only a reaction from upstate new york but over other parts of the state as those two shots
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ending so much uncertainty and fear for the residents here in upstate new york. our cnn law enforcement analyst tom fuentes joins us from d.c. just how stunning is it that david sweat and richard matt were able to elude authorities for weeks and at least be as free as 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 see the pictures of that forest and just how deep the coverage was this time of year you know late spring early summer in the u.s. it's not hard to believe. for people who are outdoorsman you can be three or four feet from somebody in deep woods like that and not notice. and the prisoners are allowed to wear civilian clothes include dark forest green ones that
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blend in in the woods. >> these are images of david sweat the moment he was captured. he was spotted by a lone officer who saw a man jog and began questioning him before he realized who he was. what was likely the priority for that officer at that time when he knew this was david sweat? to capture him alive or to top him reaching the border? >> i think more than stopping the boarder would be stopping him from getting back in the woods. as sweat was running and heading for the tree line, that officer knew if he made it to the tree line they could spend three more weeks look for him again in the woods. or invade someone's home or cabin once he got back in the woods and continue the threat to the general public that he posed. >> what now for david sweat? might he be offered a deal or leniency if he cooperates and you know admits and discusses
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who helped them both escape or is there only one future for him? >> no. there's another future for him. and that is that he can be a rock star out of all this. and that's what usually happens. personalities like sweat and matt are very narcissistic. yet they are psychopaths and vicious murderers but that is part of their narcissism. it's all about me and they only care about themselves. he may be ready to be the star of his own movie here to say how they did it. i think a skilled pair of interrogators or interviewers should be able to get that out of him. i know people say he'll never talk. i don't believe it. i worked organized crime finance 30 years and they say they won't talk but often they can't wait to share their story. >> our analyst, tom fuentes, thanks for your insight from
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d.c. >> you're welcome. turkey's annual gay pride parade ends with clashes between marchers and police. a mission to the space station ends with a fiery explosion for the space x rocket. details on this, next. 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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we have breaking news to report out of taiwan the first death in saturday's water park explosion has now been reported. a 20-year-old woman died on monday from injuries sustained in the explosion that took place when colored powder ignited over a crowd. the hospital is reporting that the young woman suffered burns over 90% of her body. now there are some 200 people in critical condition right now. we will have more details as they become available. gay rights supporters around
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the world have flooded streets for pride parades following the u.s. supreme court's historic ruling that legalizes same-sex marriage. >> in turkey police broke up a parade in istanbul. and in this video you can see as a man is wiped off his feet as police sprayed the entire crowd with a water cannon. the reason? this is the muslim holy month of ramadan. you see the man right here just getting completely pushed over on his feet. arwa damon was there. >> reporter: no one expected it to be this way. it's unclear why this year the riot police are pushing people back. police are going to gas. riot police not just firing water cannons but also rubber
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pellets, tear gas and pepper spray. >> it's not a crime. we are not a crime. come on. why you doing this? >> shut up. shut up. shut up! this is turkish problem. i don't like -- >> reporter: and that is clearly one of the key issues 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 so still such a battle ahead of them. >> we are at the stage of please don't kill us. you know we don't discuss equal marriage or employment rights or whatever. we are just demanding our basic human rights. >> reporter: many believe this is a political reaction and not just about the lgbt community.
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the president's party did not fare as well as expected in this month's parliamentary elections. >> this shows how scared they are of people who think differently. they want a controlled society and things their way. this is absolutely despicable. >> reporter: there is more tear gas in the air. lbgt organizers said that the governorship told them they didn't have permission to hold this march this year because is it 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 well over a decade now. the last few years have gone off without any sort of problems whatsoever. and everyone in the crowd here is absolutely shocked at the way
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they're being treated. this is a society that has grown used to the authority's heavy hand. but for the lbgt community and those who continue to celebrate gay pride in the side streets, they say this is only going to make them stronger. arwa damon, cnn, istanbul. a very different reaction from gay provide events in the united states. coming up next space x launches an investigation after one of its rockets bursts into flames. the details straight ahead. ow, 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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space x is looking into what may have gone wrong after its latest mission to the international space station ended with an explosion. the rocket blew up minutes after launch. it was carrying more than 2 tons of supplies including food and equipment for the space station crew. >> the failed mission won't put them in danger though. they have several months of
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supplies, elong musk said that the rocket had too much pressure. it took off from japan on sunday and as "f" all goes asif all goes as planned it will arrive in hawaii on friday. >> it switches to battery power at night and this is the team's third attempt to make the pacific crossing the longest leg of the journey. you can watch a live stream of the plane's cockpit at solar impulse dotcom. >> i'm zain asher. >> and i'm errol barnett. stay with cnn. "early start" is next for those in the states. >> and for the international viewers, another edition of "cnn newsroom" begins right after this break.
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captured alive. investigators finally taking down the dangerous killer who escaped from prison after 22 days on the run. so what is next for inmate david sweat? greece on the brink of financial ruin this morning. the banks there shutdown. limits of how much you can take out of the atm. the country is facing decisions. we are live with the latest. >> they are effecting economies around the world. the security of the world at

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