tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN July 3, 2015 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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, and it may end up being much higher than that. >> the other loss we also know about, even though we don't talk about it very much, and, when we do, it's as if it were some sort of index or score. 56,000 lives plus about 150,000 seriously wounded, many of whom will never recover. so when some future politician for some reason feels the need to drag this country into a war, he might come out here to arlington and stand maybe right over there somewhere to make his announcement and to tell what he has in mind. if he can attract public support, speaking from a place like this, then his reasons for starting a new war would have to be good ones. i'm not a crook ♪
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we will, we will rock you ♪ flying at half staff, honoring those that were killed in the tunisia. >> this weekend, fears of an isis inspired attack have authorities on edge. >> and greece's financial if you tour hangs in the balance. we hear from greeks about what they think about the debt crisis. >> and the number of shark attacks along the eastern u.s. has beach goers a little nerved up. one survivor shares his story.
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>> i would be nervous to get into that water. >> i know. >> welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm george howell. >> and i'm natalie allen. and you're watching cnn "newsroom." it is 8:00 a.m. in the united kingdom where they are remembering what happened at beach resort in tunisia. >> flags have been lowered to half staff including at bumming ham buckingham palace in england. bodies will be repatriated today. phil black is with us. phil good to have you with us. what's the latest on the investigation at this point? >> reporter: george according to the authorities here there are eight people in custody, of which one is a well. but we know they are still
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looking for more. and the interior ministry here has posted an image and details of another suspect that they are looking for specifically third time they've done it this week. in this case 29-year-old man who they believe played a role not only in the resort attack a week ago. but also in the museum attack here in the capital in march which killed 22 people. the authorities are clearly working on a theory that both of these attacks, these events, were linked. and it is believed that the gunman in each massacre trained together across the border in neighboring libya. that increasingly lawless country where groups such as isis are getting a stronger foot hold day by day. we spoke it a prosecutor here yesterday who said they are being very cautious in the information they are releasing publicly because they believe they are in the process of disrupting a wider terror network that they have uncovered through the course of this investigation. and reluctant to make too much
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information known for fear of tipping off those who they believe are members and allowing them to escape. >> phil around the country, tunisia is certainly beefing up security as we have been reporting. but i with like to know what sort of differences have you seen any differences that point? >> it is not a striking difference i don't think you would say. one week from the attack security has been lifted yes. certainly in beaches and areas popular with tourists. it is more noticeable. but it is not blanket coverage. you see people patrolling. you see police and security forces own bike, on foot moving around by car. this is still a place where freedom of movement is still, well still very open. and there is no sense that the security are really lated in coverage of any particular area. but i should say a lot of the
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tourists we have spoken to don't necessarily want that. they don't believe that would be appropriate. they understand what we are talking about here and it speaks to the challenge really. a very wide area of sand and sea and large towns and so forth. the idea of cracking down and really securing this in an absolute sense, it is a real challenge. it would take extraordinary amount of work and would certainly change the atmosphere of this place dramatically. >> senior national correspondent phil black live in tunisia. thank you so much. we will stay in touch with you as this investigation continues. given what happened in tunisia, members of britain's parliament say they are willing to discuss stepping up their fight against isis inside syria. >> where they have not been. they've been inside iraq. >> we know that isil is organized and directed from northern syria. that's why prime ministers said during the debate last september
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on taking military action in iraq that and i quote, there is a strong case for us to do more in syria. >> well back in tunisia, the city has become a pipeline for radicalizing young men driving them into the arms of isis. cnn checks into that story. >> the mountains on tunisia's boreder with algeria, for months now the government launched campaigns aimed at rooting out the terror camps hiding in these barron slopes. this operation, like all those before it, failed. on the foot hills is the roadses to the town. it was in these poor streets that spark of the tunisia resolution caught flame, hoping for a better life that never came. we have nothing, nothing. but something else did. this young man spent two months
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in a tunisian jail. he said he was charged with being a terrorist. something he denies. we are not revealing his identity for his safety and the safety of his family. they thought me how to pray. we used to pray together. then one day the police raided the mosque. i stopped going to the mosque. i even stopped praying. but they weren't done with him. earlier this year the threats began arriving over facebook. it was the men from the mosque. he says they told him they knew where he lived. his sin, he hadn't joined him. a man describing himself as an isis commander told him, we've gat got a job for you. i knew it was either be killed or be a killer. it is believed that tunisian fighters were unmatched by any other national enate authorities
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identifying a very simple pipeline of recruits. many of the mothers we meet here tell us they lost sons to jihady ideology. even missing, jailed, or dead. a son prayed in the same neighbor mosque. one day last year, he disappeared. >> after ten month is we were watching the news and we heard them say they had been fighting in the mountains. as we sat there, we heard them announcing his name. and the group with him was killed in the mountains. i heard the interior minister announce it. in spite of the influence of foreign fighters the tunisia battle ground are increasingly here at home. where attacks on soft western targets grab headlines around the world. recruitment, we're told is in the mosques.
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brazen and in person. he said to me you, i know your mother your father, i can take your brother, your mother. i can throw a bomb over your wall. the terror caps aren't just a few of the training grounds in the mountains of northwestern tunisia. it is a contagan felt far across the borders. >> the man known as suicide bombers has been killed m a coalition air strike in syria. u.s. defense department officials say he was responsible for getting people and materials into iraq and syria and help to recruit fighters. we spoke with cnn military analyst retired colonel rick francona to get his thoughts a short while ago. >> any time you kill one of these leaders, it's a good thing. but what happens is they are
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easily replaced. the good thing is, when they are replaced replaced they are normally replaced with shn who doesn't quite have the skill set or they would have been in charge. so you constantly whittle away the organizations until haveleadership. it worked well forness afghanistan and iraq. i think that will continue to work for us. these are small steps. what we need to do is find out where the leadership is and good after them with a vengeance. and i think it is incumbent upon us to deal isis a blow a real military defeat. because as long as they appear to be successful on the battlefield, their recruitment efforts are going through the roof. if you look at what happened last week their recruitment is up because of the success they had in kuwait. in tunisia. and in france. >> that is profile indicates he was freed from prison in 2013
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during an isis raid. >> concern among u.s. security officials is growing over potential terror threats against the united states during the upcoming july 4 holiday. the u.s. air force cancelled a big fireworks and air show at a base in england. >> on thursday there was a lock down at w's navy yard. jim sciutto has been working his sources and has more from washington. >> george the alert at the navy yard here in washington started with an employee who heard noises and thought it might be gunfire but it turned out to be construction noises. this is across the country. concerns of attacks by isis supporters. tied to the july fourth weekend added here was the fact that it was a military facility there on a higher level of alert and it is a military facility that two years ago had another shooting event. but it shows you the difficulty of these decisions as they are
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happening. it is hard it keep on alert for all these things in so many places and we saw this repeated overseas. u.s. military base on a british military base on the north ef england. there the base commander is making a decision that the risks of holding a july 4th celebration outwayed the rewards of doing so. we're told by the u.s. military that this was a base decision by base committee there. it is not a european wide decision to cancel july 4th celebrations. but it is a threat level with very nonspecific threats. officials say their concern is this broad call by isis to supporters around the world to time their attacks to the muslim holy month of ramadan. but heightened concern in the u.s. about other holidays. as it happens, july fourth falling within the holy month of ramadan. great concern here. difficulty responding to these
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threats. but it raily is a measure of that nervousness. george? >> that is jim sciutto reporting there. authorities in nigeria are looking into a series of attacks that killed nearly 150 people. it looks like boko haram struck again. how is the government the new government there, dealing with what has happened? >> natalie, that's a good question. this is a critical time for the new administration. and the president during election and now pledging to take the fight to boeko what ram p.m. . even in the north, there were no checkpoints there. police were manning a few that still were around. but one could take soldiers off the streets, he wants them out of boko haram. and there is optimism that
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wasn't the case in attacks continue despite what is a multinational coalition. you see attacks on visitors where hundreds of defensive civilians have been targeted and killed. natalie? >> yes, they just continue their rampage, it seems, no matter what. thank you. /* /*. george? >> colombia's defense minister said a series of explosions are without question terrorism. the explosions happened outside the offices after pension fund management company. at least eight people were wounded. someone called it say they left a suitcase full of closes. the government is offering a $38,000 reward for anyone with information. about who basically called in those explosions.
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>> there is an outpouring of grief after a prominent football coach was murdered. >> phil walsh was allegedly stabbed to death by his 26-year-old son at the family home. walsh made his mark as a player then as an assistant coach before taking the top job this season. the team's game this weekend what's cancelled. >> you know that usual fun and passion of our game will not be there. and members and supporters will gather in a spirit of respect for mourning in support for family and friends of a great football man loved by so many. >> if in a recent interview walsh described how he was trying to reconnect with his son because coaching he said fractured their relationship.
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>> you're watching cnn "newsroom." greece is counting down to sun di's referendum just ahead. we will see why so many people say they are not really sure what they're voting on. >> also ahead, passengers plucked from the sea after a ferry capsizes in the philippines. the survivor describes what it was like. >> and a democratic race is heating up as bernie sanders gains momentum on the campaign trail. did you know that the tripadvisor you've always trusted for reviews, book!
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here is what he had to say. >> think of what is going on in the last five months. as an investment into achieving an agreement that is mutually beneficial for everyone. why is the greek economy so badly the last few months. why are the barvegsbanksed closed? they are blackmailing the government. and we're not going to do this. >> and the euro group says they are incompetence tent or inexperienced or maybe both. >> richard the reason we were elected is because they failed misserably. they will go down in global economic history as the biggest failure ever. that is why i'm sitting in this office now. so perhaps all sides should take a step back and reconsider their own contribution to the last five years of this disaster and maybe they should take very seriously the very simple
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proposition that it is time to stop extending this crisis into the future. >> richard quest. >> he puts the questions there. he does the job. there is a lot of uncertainty with all of this. so let's take a look new at how the world financial markets are react together latest news from greece. >> mariae . >> nina santos has more for us. how are they reacting on the latest trading session before greece's referendum? >> reporter: as you can see, there is nervousness. tough talk from richard but equally tough from the finance minister of greece. and yet again a lot of this ramping up really hasn't helped these markets over the course of the last week or so. it is surprisingly resilient over the last two trading sessions when it seemed as they greece was willing it make compromise but as we knew there was always a little bit more to
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it than that. and this is why i want to show you the monthly pattern in germany. key markets in france and germany, their leaders will have a huge say in what goes on if the euro group, which is the years of finance ministers finally agree to come to some kind of deal with greece over the next few days after that referendum. look how the picture is. each peak goes to show how people got very very optimistic that we might have a deal and then yet again things degenerated into the battle of wills, if you like. and so these markets, also i want to point out that single currency it itself with angela merkel stressing that europe is not in the same predicament as it was five years ago when greek got its original chunk of bail yut money bailout money. and the euro versus the dollar
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as you can see, currently holding up at the moment. if you are trading in dollars, it buys you about 90 euro cents. when it comes to the euro versus the dollar we are talking about a level of 1.10 to 1.11. it. >> all right and nina now the imf says greece will need even more money than people thought. and it is a number that is of course staggering. >> it is a number that is around 50 bill yop euros, almost twice as much natalie as the amount that the greeks originally requested when they made the surprise request over the last few days the third bailout chunk of money. irrespective of the fact that the second bailout is actually now expired. and they have run out of money. the imf says guys you need more than that. here is the caveat. remember that greece defaulted
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in the imf payment of that $1.5 billion earlier this week. the imf certainly will probably not let greece off the hook for that because it sets a very dangerous precedent. but the imf at the same time sending mixed signals here. because the imf is saying we agree with part of the greek government's rhetoric that yes this country doesn't have a hope of paying back its mountain of debt. but it is unlikely many economists say that the imf will allow greece off the hook for its debt will rely on european partners which is half billion of its own to try and find the money for that debt relief for greece. but again, referendum is the big thing this weekend for these markets. >> all right. and we will of course be watching it and covering it. thanks you so much nina santos for us there in london. thank you, nina. george? >> even with the push from the government a push to vote no. greeks remain divided.
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>> i am in europe. i want itto stay in europe. >> there is no decision within the european union. i'm sure about this. >> next time we will vote yes. because we want to remain in the union. >> i think i would say no. because i'm here and i cannot leave. >> trying to play the future of gross in cards. we do not want to have our future played in cards. >> no. no no. >> i want to believe that we will go even in the last minute they will think of that and they will vote for a yes. because the majority of the people believe in europe aepnd the eurozone. >> he hewe want the government to make the decision not the people. >> only future for my country, for me my family my children
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grandchildren, is to cooperate with the other europeans and go ahead. >> the vote is very much divided there. but you know greeks have a very important decision to make. >> yes, they do. then who knows what happens after that. >> you're watching cnn "newsroom." we are learning more detail of exactly what went on in a new york prison before two inmates escaped. but this is not the enly prison in the u.s. to see its share of drama. >> yes. wait until you hear about another prison in baltimore. my goodness what went on there. plus what about this one? a flurry of shark attacks on the u.s. east coast. we hear from a survivor hailed as a hero for warning others before he was mauled.
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. this is cnn "newsroom." good to have you with us. i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen. thanks for joining us. here are our top stories. >> union flags across uk are honored for the 30 british citizens killed in a terror attack in tunisia. their bodies will be repatriated and there will be a moment of silence. the american air force cancelled a big fourth of july celebration for today and tomorrow. u.s. air force officials saying there wasn't a specific threat against the festival. they say their decision was based on the current local threat assessments. >> colombia's government is offering $38,000 reward for
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information after two blasts in downtown bogota. the explosions were outside a pension fund management company. the defense minister said it is without question terrorism. at least eight people were wounded. >> divers have found more bodies one day after a ferry capsized off the central philippines. minutes after leaving port the boat flipped over, killing at least 42 people. most of the passengers and crew on board were rescued. david santos from the philippines reports on those still missing. >> reporter: it is still ongoing for remaining passengers from the sunken ferry. thursday morning boglocal time.
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there are about a dozen people still believed to be missing. now the subjects of the ongoing search operation. 16 crew members, including the boat captain, have been -- we've been told they are now under the custody of the local police. perhaps a spark of the initial investigation. however, they have not been allowed to speak it journalists. now more than 100 passengers will survive are also recuperating in local hospital. many of the passengers panic when the boat went to one side. >> this is terrible what happened there. david santos pointing out that search is still ongoing but now let's hear a survivor describe what it was like exactly when the boat tipped over. >> we were out on the ferry and
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it was really sudden. sudden tragedy and we were by the stairs when the ferry was sudden backing up and then turning and i heard a thug on the back of the boat and then maybe that thug is the one who is making the shifting of the cargo to the right. because the ship went to kind of listing or tilting to the right of the cargo. so the boat came out kind of tilting and it was sudden that everyone was in the water. >> i went to the water. i was photoed with my husband.
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i have a life jacket. the crew of the boat give us life jacket while the boat was already moving. it was very tragic. >> we are told that ten survivors are in the hospital. they are under observation but none of them were in critical condition. >> another candidate has thrown his hat into the ring in the 2016 u.s. presidential race. a lot of hats in the ring. >> a lot of hats. >> is there enough room? >> here he he is jim webb, announcing his campaign thursday. becoming the fifth democrat to join the contest. >> and bernie sanders is gaining ground in the party's presidential race for the white house. self-described independent socialist has raised $15 million from about 250,000 individual donors. >> a full house for sanders in madison, wisconsin, though he is surging in the polls, he has a long way ahead on the campaign trail. >> reporter: hillary clinton is raising big money but bernie sanders is raising the roof.
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>> in case you haven't noticed, a lot of people here. >> reporter: almost 10,000 people flocking to his event in the liberal strong hold of madison, wisconsin. >> tonight, we have more people at a meeting for a candidate for president of the united states than any other candidate has had in 2016. >> reporter: sanders straight talking poplism making the self-described socialist compared it hillary clinton. >> i feel closer to bernie sanders than any other candidate before. he fits to well with my philosophy and morals. >> matching the fund-raising juggernaut of clinton. mostly roundtables and smaller speeches p. enthusiasm for sanders is helping showing in states that drive the nomination process.
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in iowa sanders jumps from 5% support in february to 15 in may. all the way to a respectable 33% shrinking clinton's lead by 26 points. and in new hampshire, the wild-haired 73-year-old senator from neighboring vermont has closed the gap to just 8 points in the latest cnn orc poll. his insurgent campaign bringing comparisons to fellow vermonter howard dean's 2004 campaign effort. like dean sanders still faces long odds. clinton crushes him in national polls by more than 40 points and her campaign just announced a record-breaking $45 million fund-raising haul for her first quarter in the race to sanders $15 million. >> they may have the money but we have the people and when the people stand together, we can win. >> we are getting more details now about the two escaped inmates from a prison in new
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york. richard matt was killed by border patrol agents after pointing a shotgun their way and his accomplice david sweat, is alive and filling police in on details of their escape. and their life in prison which at times seems a little more like a soap opera than a script. >> absolutely. but this isn't the only times inmates have pushed the boundaries. wait until you hear what's going on at a prison in baltimore. here is cnn's randy kay. >> reporter: before a sweeping investigation into the baltimore city detention center the inmates seem to be running the place. a deadly gang called the black gur rilerrilla family bringing drugs into the jail all at the direction of their leader inmate tavone white. >> there is a quote that stood out saying this is my jail. something about he is law.
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>> how does he get such a strangle hold on the entire system? largely through seducing female correctional officers into sexual relationships. white even fathered five children with four different officers all while behind bars. >> the sexual tiedynamic of the corruption is important and what the fbi thinks is this that was a way to establish power over the women and build the relationships to strengthen the bonds. they they had a play book of using sex to their benefit. >> tiffany, eight months into her pregnancy, got into an argument with another guard, who was also pregnant with white's baby. according to court documents, she said did he tell you we was having a son? do you know about our baby? the other pregnant guard responded, don't give a [ bleep ] about that baby. that's y'all baby not mine. we having one too.
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so what? two of the pregnant guards allegedly got tattoos of tavon's name. until this scandal break out in 2013 75% of the 60 correctional officers were women. according to one inmate a witness for the government up to three quarters of those female guards were involved in quote contraband smuggling and or having sexual relationships with inmates. that all began it unravel when the fbi and other law enforcement began to investigate. >> they were able to tap the contraband cell phones that gang members were using to build up a picture of the network who was connected to who. who tavone white had control over and build their case that way. >> the head of maryland's correction department accepted responsibility when charges were first brought and said people will be held accountable according to the washington post. more than 40 people charged with racketeering related charges. including tavone white.
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pleading guilty to racketeering conspiracy and this past february sentenced to 12 years in prison. 24 correctional officers were found guilty including tiffany linder and three other women who allegedly were impregnated by white. randi kay, cnn, new york. >> you are watching cnn "newsroom." there's a predator in the water heading into the u.s. holiday weekend. we are talking about shark attacks. >> aren't you mr. sunshine. >> well yeah. >> in short, we will hear it from one man who made it out alive. be careful out there, folks. >> i think i would stay out of the water. >> a solar powered plane trying to fly around the world is getting closer to its most gruelling part of the trip. we will hear from the pilot. ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one.
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well, thesharks are migrating off the coast. they are going close into the shore. parts of the u.s. east coast seem to be swimming with sharks and that's because there are. >> there have been 10 attacks in the carolinas alone this summer. and it has beach-goers on alert especially heading into the holiday weekend. >> look at all those attacks. patrick thornton seen here suffering wound to his leg and back but is a hero for warning others fighting off the shark and pulling his son to safety. telling his story to cnn's anderson cooper. >> you know when the rip curl after wave comes down and it is like white caps. >> right. >> that's kind of the way -- the shark must have been in that because when the wave crashed down i stood with my back toward the wave and as the -- as
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the surf if you will was getting pulled back into the ocean, that's when the shark bit me. >> wow it was m the wave. >> it must have come in the wave buzz because i didn't see anything. that's when it started it pull. i thought it was odd because it was a big pull. the last thing in my mind i thought there was a shark there but i noticed the shark when it actually came around my back and then it started -- it actually came around and i saw its fin. >> i got to ask, that is probably everybody's nightmare seeing a fin in the water coming toward them. what went through your mind when you saw that fin? >> well it happened so fast the very first thought i had was, i got to get jack out of here. number two, my niece and nephew were also in the ocean. i just started -- i just started shouting shark, shark. everyone out of the water.
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at the same time i'm punching the shark. trying to get the shark away from me. and then went over to obviously grab my son. >> i assume jack heard you shouting shark. i don't know if he saw the fin as well. was he in shock? did he know what was going on? >> he just looked at me, our eyes met, and he knew by looking at my eyes that i was serious and he needed to listen and we needed to get out as soon as possible. >> you have no doubt that it was the same shark that bit you each time? >> i never saw but the folks on the beach at the time said there were two or three sharks that came up afterwards. so i believe it was the same shark but it could have been -- it could have been a different shark because by the time i got out of the ocean there were two or three sharks swimming in the same area. if i would have been in the ocean for another, you know few minutes, the other sharks showed up pretty quickly, i don't know if i would have made it out alive. >> thankfully he did.
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what a scary situation. he got everybody out, though. >> usually, you know they are looking for food. they see a flash in the waves and it is people. it is unfortunate. so we're glad he will be okay. oppressive summer heat is in much in eastern. >> the temperatures are still 5 to 10 degrees above where they should be this time of year. we look at paris p. average high temperature for this time of year 23 degrees. but if you look all the way from friday's high temperature to next thursday we're expecting mid 30s and then maybe a little bit of a break. by about midweek. but still running about 4 degrees above where it should be for this time of year. and london temperatures will probably peak about friday and going into saturday. and then we see them level off a
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little bit. more close to normal levels as we go into the next five days. this paris heat wave take a look at this on wednesday. 39.7 degrees and that was just a few degrees behind what we saw maximum temperature all time texture setback in 1947. and berlin is going to be seeringly hot as well. how dot animals in the zoo cool off? look at this. unique ways. oh this is very cute. some seals, baby seal. they feed them frozen stuff. yeah. and it's a little tricky. they put everything in the ice and then they have to wiggle it out somehow. but this was the awe moment i was telling you about. >> we're like the grim people. you're the awe people. >> all right. >> thank you. >> you're watching cnn "newsroom." a hollywood celebrity is picking a fight over vaccination.
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jim carrey's anti-immunization campaign may have backfired. introducing neutrogena hydro boost water gel. instantly quenches skin to keep it supple and hydrated day after day. formulated with hydrating hyaluronic acid which retains up to 1000 times its weight in water. this refreshing water gel plumps skin cells with intense hydration and locks it in. for supple, hydrated skin that bounces back. new hydro boost. from neutrogena.
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welcome back to cnn newsroom. this week governor of california signed a controversial new law requiring all school children to get vaccines. even if the child's family has a personal or religious objection. >> several celebrities tweeted their opposition to the move most vocal jim carrey. calling jim brown a corporate fascist and tweeted they say mercury in fish is dangerous forcing all of our children to be injected with mercury and athimerosol is no risk. make sense? >> telling cnn that thimerosol is not in most vaccines and that if it was, it's not dangerous, listen. >> the thing that gets always
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misconstrued is that ethel mercury is very different from the meth el mercury in fish which when you get an accumulation of it when fish are contaminated is a problem. it is an entirely different type of mercury. that's the misconception that's out there. >> jim carrey also posted tweets showing crying children suffering from autism. one featured a picture of alex eckles and said a trillion dollars buyes a lot of opinions. will it buy you? free vaccines a reasonable request. >> a lot of people are interested in what he is talking about here but turns out that carrey used the boy's photo without permission which made his parents very upset. especially because they say his autism stems from a genetic disorder and has nothing to do with vaccines. they put out a statement in part saying we feel mr. carrey was
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irresponsible in using our son's image to further his agenda and feel he shoesishuld ush u an apology for using our son's image without permission. mr. carrey's image was used this way, legal action would almost certainly be taken. closing in on a gruelling and somewhat dangerous flight from japan, the plane is attempting to circle will globe on solar power. >> that right. the pilot has been at the controls now for more than four days straight setting a world record. and remember this this is all done without a drop of fuel. earlier he told cnn how he stays focused in such testing circus.
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