tv CNN Special Report CNN August 25, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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we are watching the global markets the tuesday turn around fizz led before the closing bell. >> sit down, you weren't called. sit down. sit down. sit down. >> sit down and go back to univision. donald trump clashes with an anchor from the spanish language tv channel. french prosecutors say there's clear evidence the alleged gunman on a high-speed train wanted to kill everyone on board. >> hello, everybody. great to have you with us. we'd like to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm john vause. >> i'm rosemary church and this
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is "cnn newsroom." >> shanghai stocks went from positive to negative territory and back again. no big losses, at least not yet. this after china's central bank announced a rate cut and the amount of cash banks are required to hold. both moves intended to stimulate economic growth. >> let's see how that is impacting trading right now. specifically let's look to japan's nikkei. it ended 3.96 yesterday. look at it now. in positive territory, 1.26. in australia, only slightly down. hang seng up slightly there. and the kospi up 1.2. let's bring up the shanghai composite numbers. we saw it end very low yesterday. down 7% at one point. now up .8%. very important there.
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tuesday the dow surged 400 points only to fall back ending with a loss of about 200 points. let's go to hong kong now. andrew stevens is standing by. watching with the shanghai composite. it was up and down. we laughed. we rooid cried. no one seems to know what is going on and what to make of the moves by the central bank. >> i guess the best way of looking at it, if the markets were a collect i have thing they would be taking a deep breath about now, john. it has been crazy ride. the volatility today is much, much less in shanghai than we have seen over the past couple of days some that is a good sign. it looks like investors have got some sort of relief from the fact that the chinese government has finally acted in how they would interpret their own interest, or in the interest of shareholders to cut the interest rates and the reserve
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requirements. it's hardly a party, though, as you can see there. it does bring stability at least for the moment, at least for now. it is so difficult to read the markets at the moment. particularly after we saw what happened in new york overnight. before the open, new york was pointing to 600- point gain and ended up with 1.3% loss. it is really, really difficult to judge where this markets will go from here. when you get this volatility, you know, reason tends to go out the window, it follows the herd. the herd instinct. that's what we have been seeing. seeing this sort of stability so far today is actually a very good sign. >> the interest rate cut and the cut in the reserve requirement will take some time to work through the economy before it is felt. but in terms of the stock market, at best it was a shot of confidence. is that what we are seeing today? >> i think that's the best way. it was symbol ic. it was the investors in hang
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shy. remember, these are unsophisticated retail investors looking to the government for help they bought in to the markets -- a lot of them bought in near the top on borrowed money because the government itself was cheer leading this massive ride in the stock market. they jumped in. they got severely burnt. they have been looking for beijing to help them. beijing initially did and then they took their hands off the reins and now we they say beijing once again helping them. that's why we are seeing much volatile situation today. as far as real impact on the real economy is concerned, this is the fifth interest rate cut in nine months. whether this fund will succeed better than the last remains to be seen. finally i would say we continue to get reports coming out of hong kong from big research houses saying the chinese economy is not in as bad of a state as the markets, particularly in the u.s. think
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they are. >> i guess that is what everybody is trying to work out now, just how bad is the chinese economy. andrew stevens live in hong kong. later, we will hear from richard quest and we will have more on the steps china is taking to the markets and boost economic growth. now we turn to u.s. republican presidential candidate donald trump who's taken on yet another tv journalist. this time he's sparring with univision anchor jorge ramos and here's what happened when ramos tried to ask a question during a press conference on tuesday night. >> sit down. you weren't called. sit down, sit down. sit down. go ahead. no, you don't. you haven't been called. go back to univision. what do you say to that? security guards escorted ramos out of the room. trump is suing univision for cancelling his broadcast of the
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miss usa pageant. they say they were with protesting the remarks about the immigrants which is why it cancelled the pageant. >> ramos was aloud back in ten minutes later. he and the republican front runner had a testy exchange over trump's immigration proposals. take a listen. >> yes. good. absolutely. good to have you back. >> thank you. [ inaudible ] i have a bigger heart than you do. i want them to come back. i want them to get documentation so they become legal. you know what it is called, management. you are not used to good management because you are always talking about government. government -- let the just tell you -- wait, wait. government is incompetent. >> with trump leading the polls in the 2016 republican race,
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he's not pulling any punches with news networks and his fellow candidates. cnn political reporter sara murray tells us about his latest targets. >> the gop front runner today battling with jeb bush. calling him a mess over his defense of the term "anchor babies. "trump tweeting with a move to get out of his anchor babies dilemma. agencies are very offended that jeb said that anchor babies apply to them. but striking back, jeb bush full of fury but light on substance. >> there's a lot of good talkers running for president. there's one in particular i'm thinking of. talking is good. it is important to be able to communicate. i have that. but i think it is more important to solve problems now in the latest exchange a signal how the
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battle for the nomination is coming down to a war of words between the two top candidates. but bush wasn't trump's only target. last night, he bashed president obama's plans to host a state dinner for the president of china. saying if he were in the white house -- >> i would not throw him a dinner. i'd get him a mcdonald's hamburger, a double, double sized big mac. we will give him a steak dinner and what he has done is sucked all of our jobs. >> reporter: even refusing to rule out a trade war with the world's second largest economy. >> you have to do that and then you bring it back to normal. you have no choice. >> reporter: trump rounding out his latest takedown by reigniting his grudge against fox news anchor megyn kelly. tweeting somebody called her a bill bow and said i liked the kelly file much better without megyn kelly. perhaps she can take another 11-day unscheduled vacation. fox news ceo roger ailes calling
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on trump to apologize today. saying donald trump's surprise and unprovoked attack on megyn kelly during her show last night is as unacceptable as it is disturbing. donald trump continued on the warpath on tuesday night in iowa going after jeb bush, going after marco rubio and even secretary of state john kerry. sara murray, cnn, dubuque, iowa. >> strudonald trump waste no tin responding to fox. he dismissed megyn kelly as a journalist. >> she should be apologizing to me. >> why? >> because i thought her questioning and attitude was inappropriate. it is a small element in my life, megyn kelly. i don't care about megyn kelly but i would not apologize. she should probably apologize to me but i just don't care. >> doesn't care. >> doesn't care. we'll take a short break.
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attack on a high-speed train. we are learning more about the desperate struggle last week where passengers sub dude a heavily armed gunman. a statering estimate from the u.n. why it says thousands of migrants will likely enter macedonia every day. we're back in a moment. ♪"once there was a hushpuppy" by dan romis man kind?eitlin ♪ are we good? go see. go look through their windows so you can understand their views. go find out just how kind the hes and shes of this mankind are. ♪
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welcome back, everyone. cnn has spoken to the wife of a man shot in the neck while attempting to subdue an alleged terrorist during last week's attack aboard a paris-bound train. right now mark moogalian is recovering from the injuries he received. he is one of five passengers hailed as heros for stopping the heavily armed gunman. >> his wife who was on the train with him has a chilling account of how this terrifying incident unfolded. >> get up. it's serious. i looked at his face. i knew he was not kidding.
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he looked very intense. i was sitting there. he was facing the door. the sliding door. my back -- >> to the gunman. >> there's a wall there. we were at the end of the car. so there's nothing. there's the wall behind me. i didn't see anything coming. but i saw the tip of a gun, of, what do you call that, ak-47. >> yes. >> i saw that. and i knew it was serious. >> how close? >> i'm not sure. i would say. you see this bar right there? that's it. >> very close. >> yeah, not even two feet from me. from my head. then i got up. i mean i basically said what he told me to do. i got up and i went a few seats down and i sort of crouched down
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behind a seat. just went to the guy with the gun. i didn't see it because i was hidden but i heard him saying, i got the gun. >> this is your husband? >> yes, it was his voice. he said, i got the gun. then it was very fast. a few seconds i heard a shot. maybe one or two, i'm not sure. it was very loud. and then i saw my husband just, two seats that way, very close to me. >> fall to the ground. >> he fell to the ground. i was still behind the seat so i didn't see the shooter. my husband told me that after that he took his gun back but i didn't see it. i didn't see that part. >> so the gunnenman grabbed the gun away from your husband. >> yes. my husband thought he was going to shoot him again. >> meantime, one of the other heros on the train has just arrived back in the united
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states. anthony sadler seen in the gray sweatshirt landed in sacramento, california, a short time ago. the city's mayor says there will be a parade soon to honor him and the other americans who took down the suspected terrorist. that suspect in the attack now faces some very serious charges. >> french prosecutors says there is clear evidence that ayoub el khazzani sought to kill a train full of people. here's brian todd with more. >> reporter: he came out the train bathroom with no shirt on, armed with an assault rifle, an automatic pistol and more than 200 rounds of ammunition. it could have been a bloodbath. paris' chief prosecutor for the first time reveals what he says is ayoub el khazzani's intent to commit a terrorist act. >> translator: while on the train ayoub el khazzani was looking at jihadi you tube sites which called for people to carry out terrorist attacks. >> reporter: a far cry he was on the train to rob passengers.
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what the suspect didn't have, according to one of the americans who took him down is skill in firing his weapon. >> he clearly had no firearm s training what soefr. and yes, if he knew what he was do ing, or even just got lucky and did the right thing, he would have been able to operate through all eight of those magazines and we would have all been in trouble and probably wouldn't be here today. >> reporter: the prosecutor's charging ayoub el khazzani with attempting murder, attempted mass murder and membership in a terrorist organization. and cnn has learned from european security officials about ayoub el khazzani's travels before he boarded the amsterdam to paris train in brussels. they say he immigrated from france spain where he was radicalized. he claims to have bounced around in cities in france, germany and belgium and claims to have been homeless in for a period living in a park in brussels. they say he was flagged for
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surveillance in france but never followed. a german security source says when he flew through berlin in may, he was flagged for a search and allowed to proceed. how could he have fallen through the cracks with two of europe's top security agencies. >> for an individual, if you are going to surveil him, you need ten, 20, 30er 0 more police to surveil someone, follow them to make sure they don't pick up on the tail. when you have up to a couple thousand frenchmen who are gone over to the battle, that means tens of thousands of people to surveil those individuals alone. >> reporter: the french prosecutor says security services are investigating who may have financed ayoub el khazzani because despite his claims of being homeless living in a park he seemed to have means. his train ticket was first class, costing 149 euros, $170 according to the prosecutor. despite having a return plane ticket for the trip to turkey he apparently never used it. according to french and german sources somehow obtaining a
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separate ticket to travel from southern turkey to istanbul to albania, brian todd, cnn, washington. graduaaut /*. guatemala has moved to impeach the president. he is accused of leading a scheme to take bribes for eliminating or reducing taxes. the company is importing products in to the country. the president denies the charge and insists he won't step down. >> from testers demanded his resignation since april. the u.n. refugee agency says up to 3,000 migrants are expected to cross in to macedonia every day in the coming months. the country reopened its border over the weekend. >> reuters reports some 500 migrants boarded a train on tuesday to head north to serbia from macedonia.
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many fleeing the war in syria. the u.n. is calling on governments in the region to do what they can to help. >> while understanding legitimate concerns facing countries in the region, obviously this is an unexpected, large number of people. we do appeal to the governments involved to implement border management measures with humanity and also in accordance with international obligations. >> this is how far the migrants have travelled from syria, crossing turkey on to greece. eventually making their way to serbia and then on to hungary. >> reaching hungary is critical, of course, as it is part of the european union's passport-free zone giving migrants easier access to europe's wealthier nations. earlier, cnn spoke to macedonia's foreign minister who says a joint european effort is needed to resolve the migrant
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crisis. >> reporter: ultimately if we don't find the solution for the conflict in syria and iraq, it is pretty unlikely any of the countries down the road is going to find a way to prevent uncontrolled migrant flows and i think that has been happening in the last several months, simply shifting the responsibility down the road. turkey is under tremendous pressure. i has more than one half million refugees on its territory. many of them are crossing in to greece. greece does what they can in terms of decreasing the pressure on the islands and we are the next border. for us, this is the swiftest way to deal with it is turn a blind eye and let them go to countries of the european union but we do not want to act in an irresponsible manner. we need a joint european answer and a joint effort in resolving this crisis. migrants will probably continue to come to european board ers
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unless the crisis in syria and iraq is solved. >> meanwhile, borders are strengthened and new barriers are going up across europe as countries struggle to deal with the influx of migrants. >> the details from senior international correspondent nic robertson in london. >> reporter: by boat, by train on foot, risking lives, ever desperate, fleeing fighting or simply looking for work. migrants are on the move in numbers not seen in generations. >> today the world finds itself facing the worst refugee crisis since the second world war. >> reporter: more than a quarter million crossing the mediterranean to europe so far this year. no end in sight, no solution
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either. >> in europe, france is struggling, fighting to deal with the people seeking refuge within our borders. >> reporter: from turkey to france, borders are being fortified. walls built every country for themselves. no grand plan from european union headquarters in brussels. >> i'm afraid it has been incoherent is the only word you can describe the policy from brussels. there's been no policy. >> reporter: in hungary, politicians holding a press conference as a new anti-migrant fence is erected behind them. the message clear -- we are tough on migrants. geoffrey robertson, the human rights lawyer predicts without a clear european strategy, europe is headed for the rocks. >> we'll see europe move right,
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move nationalists. we will see britain being the first and then may be others to leave the european union. >> reporter: the drift to the right is already happening from sweden to denmark to britain and france. greece in the far south. [ chanting ] >> reporter: right-wing parties are prospering. slow vokian prime ministers are fuelling sectarian tensions saying they will only take christian migrants. the problem is huge. criminal gangs ferrying migrants from libya to italy. hundreds dying at sea. the same from turkey to greece. once ashore, heading north through europe, through germany, france, and swede withen. bottlenecks at borders are becoming the norm. across the channel from england, a migrant city in calais. migrants recently getting tear gassed. european human rights law
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dictates governments must help migrants. >> which requires them to treat all people within their jurisdiction humanely, with a basic minimum of humanity. >> reporter: 25 years since the berlin wall came down, new barriers are going up now, faster than any time since the cold war began. they leaked back then and few expect them to work now. his fate, like those who have come before him, and the many who may follow, is up in the air, at the whim of some chilly political winds. nic robertson, cnn, london. short break. when we come back, china's government steps in with new measures to stop the stock market. we will look at whether the
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welcome back, everybody. wherever you are you are watching cnn newsroom live around the world. >> we want to check the top stories. financial markets in the asia-pacific region are mostly higher today. look at this. positive arrows for all markets. look specifically at the shanghai composite, up nearly 1%.
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that's a far cry from tuesday's close of 7.63%. look at tokyo's nikkei, up nearly 2%. it closed on tuesday down nearly 4%. so some progress there. u.s. stocks lost more than 200 points after soaring most of the day. the dow more than 11% in the past six trading days. donald trump is holding his edge over the crowded field on contenders in the 2016 race. new poll from south carolina shows trump leading other candidates, including the state's own senator lindsey graham. it is a big lead, too. trump has 30% support. senator graham has 4%. u.n. refugee agency says up to 3,000 migrants are expected to cross in to macedonia every day in the coming months. the country reopened its border over the weekend. many are refugees fleeing the war in syria. the u.n. is calling on
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governments in he region to do what they can to help. for more on the world financial markets, china is trying desperately to keep its stock markets from falling even further. >> beijing announced a number of stimulus measures which helped stocks in europe on tuesday. so far, mixed effect on the chinese stock market. richard quest has this report. >> more than 1800 points in losses, five days when the dow has been down. it's all because of china in one way or another. now everybody is looking to the chinese government for their measures to try to turn things an. this is what they have done so far. for example, cutting interest rates. china's government and the people's bank of china have cut rates from where they were over 6% back in november to where they are now just 4 1/2% at the moment. it's a strong move down, but
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some will claim it was too slow and took too long. the chinese should have been more aggressive right at the start, recognizing the problem. the chinese have also been active with stimulus packages of one description or oochlt the various measures. first of all, they have reduced the reserve requirement of the banks that makes it easier for the banks to actually lend. they have given money to brokerages and instructed firms to buy their own shares and of course they ordered executives not to sell shares in the market. all of these were designed to slow down the market selling. unfortunately, as you can see by the numbers, it simply hasn't worked. on the broader economic front, china devalued its currency, the yuan. they said they were doing this to better reflect market forces. but if you look and see how the yuan has traded, this is where
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the -- existed against the dollar. it with uz the first devaluation and the second extending of the range. it's all led to a feeling that chinese authorities are making it up as they go along. interest rates, stimulus, market movements, currencies, but everybody's really asking, where's the cohesive policy that's going to give future direction and put the chinese economy back in to good graces. richard quest, cnn, new york. the world famous white sands of one of hawaii's most popular beaches are off limits right now. >> unusually heavy rainfall overwhelmed wie keek i can's beaches. lifeguards were warned to stay out hoff the water. many say they weren't taking any
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chances >> we are not going to rent anything right now. summer is the busiest time of the year. bad day for you are a company. >> nasties indeed. >> pedram is here to talk about that. >> this could have ban bad scenario. really could have been. i looked at how much rain came down. it was the single wettest august day in history for honolulu. i did a calculation, the surface area is 70 square miles. them rainfall kwif tloent 4 billion gallons of water in six hours. >> incredible.
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>> we will show you what is happening with the record rainfall. 91 millimeters. 4 million gallons of water is kwif tloent the niagara falls in two hours. showers will continue in the coming days. national weather service island wide has issued flood watches and advisories because of the concern this will continue when it comes to heavy rainfall. we have had several tropical features in place. the bottom of the screen, remnants of a feature that impacted eastern asia. they will catch a ride on the steering currents of the atmosphere. the end result will be across the pacific northwest. that's great news. the rainfall comes here inside the next two days. 64 active fires across the u.s. 7 million acres of land have been scorched. air quality alerts across the eastern half of portions of washington, oregon, much of idaho to the state of montana as
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well. as the shift happens in the atmospheric patterns we will introduce a lot of moisture. some enhanced from the tropical features near the hawaiian islands. the next seven days an incredible amount of rainfall comes down. i've looked at this. this amount of rainfall, the multiple days of rainfall in the forecast for the western side of washington and oregon, we haven't had that in five months. you know the end result of the long term drought over the region. couple of days of 80-plus degree temperatures in seattle. the 60s come back. only one time this summer seattle has failed to reach 70 for a high temperature. it could happen three times inside the next seven days. notice friday through saturday, sunday, monday, tuesday, seattle like weather. folks out there enjoying that. great news for the firefighters because finally a pattern shift to what you would expect for parts of the country that have not seen rainfall in a long time. >> long time. >> thank you. years have gone by and
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british families want their questions answered about the iraq war. coming up, them status of the official inquiry. when you're not confident you have complete visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t's innovative solutions connect machines and people... to keep your internet of things in-sync, in real-time. leaving you free to focus on what matters most.
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turkey is taking a more active role in the fight against isis. they are coordinating air strikes with the u.s. led coalition. >> a u.s. military official says it may take a few days before turkey launches any air raids. this weeks after turkey allowed the u.s. to use a key base on turkish soil. >> battle between the regime and rebels. posted on-line appears to show the aftermath of government air strikes. according to the syrian
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observatory for human rights 250 people have been killed by the syrian air force in the past ten days in areas east of the capital damascus. the syrians civil war is the longest , bloodiest war of the arab spring since 2011. hundreds of thousands have been killed. the president of south sudan is expected to sign a peace deal wednesday it would end a 20 month long civil war with. forces loyal to the president have been battling rebels. the rebel leader signed the peace agreement last week. >> the u.n.'s aid chief reported on the brutality to the security council. >> i'm very concerned about the atrocities which continue to be reported. the scope and level of cruelty that characterized the attacks against civilians suggests a deep depth that goes beyond political differences. allegations include rampant killing, rape, abduction,
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looting, arson and forced displace and burning of people inside of their own homes. there's evidence of deliberate ethnic targeting and reprisals against women and girls. according to information received, hundreds of women and girls have been abducted and hundreds more subjected to sexual violence, including gang rape. >> the council is considering an arms embargo if the deal is not implemented. it has been six years since the u.k. began an inquiry this to the iraq war and there's mounting pressure for the results of the investigation to be revealed. >> families of soldiers who died are demanding a date or they will take legal action. >> roger bacon is preparing to face a difficult day, the tenth anniversary of his son's death. in september of 2005, major
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matthew baker was killed in action by a road side bomb in southern iraq. >> we're still waiting. it hurts. it really does. >> reporter: he's waiting for answers, information, a conclusion that will explain why his son went to war and why he didn't come home. >> it's when you don't know, when it is left there hanging. that it becomes really, really difficult. so, sir john has to get on with it. >> the committee will not shy away from making criticisms. >> reporter: the man in charge of britain's independent inquiry in to the iraq war. >> everybody get back, now. >> he has a huge job examining every aspect of britain's involvement in the conflict. the political decisions, intelligence, military planning and conduct, what went wrong, what lessons should be learned. the inquiry started in 2009 and
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held regular public hearings questioning key decision makers including the former prime minister who championed the case for war. >> no regret. responsibility but not a regret for moving saddam hussein. >> reporter: those hearings wrapped up in 2011 and it was expected to present the final report soon thereafter. it was debate over secret documents they want to publish including personal notes between tony blair and u.s. president bush. that was resolved. now he points to a new time-consuming obstacles. >> i'm facing a genuine difficulty. >> that's local bureaucratic jarg jargon. it is supposed to ensure fairness. the families say they are increasingly finding the inquiries process incompetent
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and cruel. >> it is running -- we can't get on with the rest of our lives without having this concluded and out of the way. >> reporter: the expectation of the inquiry has been great because the war has always been deeply unpopular here. after a six-year investigation, there's now huge demand to finally learn why britain joined an invasion without public support. bill black, cnn, london. hacker released information on millions of ashley madison users js, those affected and the owners of the cheaters website are dealing with serious and possibly deadly consequences. >> several lawsuits have been filed against the site owners and now three suicide investigations are linked to the scandal. laurie segall has all of the details. >> reporter: toronto police are looking this to suicides they
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believe might be linked to the massive data breach that left 32 million ashley madison users exposed. in the united states, a san antonio police captain committed suicide day s after the ashley madison leak. we did confirm his information was on there, although we can't make that official link. also lawsuits popping up all over the world with. big one in canada they are asking for $578 million in damaging. they are claiming a breach of contract. a lot of users, who put their valuable information out there decided to delete it. there was a delete option. their data wasn't deleted. they say that it was a breach of contract. in the united states we are looking at lawsuits in california, texas, missouri. one tidbit about one of the lawsuits in texas, they are looking at leaked documents. they say the company had an idea that there were technical issues that could lead to a data breach. this is just the beginning. the toronto police have said they are actively searching for
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the hackers. it sounds like they haven't made many leads. they put out a plea to the public to say if you have any information we will pay you $400,000 if you give us any information that lead to their arrest. >> the son of u.s. vice president joe biden is denying he had an account on that site. he said he did not create an ashley madison account with a similar name and it is certainly not his. >> the account in question was created in 2014. and it was for a robert biden. the full name of the biden's son is robert hunter biden. biden said an old e-mail address of his which he believed may have been compromised was used to create the account. time for a break. when we come back, a clumsy boy, pricey $350 oil painting and it's not good. >> oh. back in main.
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the hes and shes of this mankind are. bill's got a very tough 13lie here...... looks like we have some sort of sea monster in the water hazard here. i believe that's a "kraken", bruce. it looks like he's going to go with a nine iron. that may not be enough club... well he's definitely going to lose a stroke on this hole. if you're a golf commentator, you whisper. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. this golf course is electric...
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one needs extra medical attention. the smaller cub weighed three ounces at birth. that's 85 grams. it hasn't been keeping on weight. in the mild wild, mother pandas who have twins often nurture one panda and abandon the other. they have been switching the cubs every couple of hours. they are monitoring the tiny panda around the clock to make sure it gets the care and nutrients it needs. they are ugly. >> yes, but i eventually they grow to beautiful. >> true. a brazilian -- is getting a new lease on life thanks to printing. it was rescued from an animal fair by police. the top part of her beak was broken, possibly after mistreated by wildlife traffickers. it meant she couldn't eat or take care of herself properly. >> they used a 3-d printer to make her a new beat beak.
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it took her three days to get used to it. now she is happily back to eating worms and bugs and stuff. >> love that story. >> pretty cool. probably a museum curators worst nightmare, a visitor accidentally knocking over a valuable piece of art. >> a young kid, a boy lost his balance and tripped and big cup of soda. the painting worth $1.5 million. we have more on this. >> reporter: it's the kind of preteen blunder that makes any parent cringe. a 12-year-old boy in a taipei art exhibition loses his balance, stumbles over a rope barrier and tears a hole in a 17th century masterpiece. his clumsy mishap caught on surveillance camera and seen across the internet. the painting is flowers, around
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350 years old. and experts say it is worth $1.5 million. luckily for the boy, organizers are not asking the family to pay for the cost of restoring the damaged artwork. >>. >> translator: it is obvious he didn't mean to push the painting. i think he may have been focusing on what the teacher was saying and his eyes were elsewhere and he stepped fleent form and had a fall. >> it left the hole the size of a fist in the canvas. art experts in taiwan have started the repair. >> we will begin the restoration work by enhancing the canvas of the painting and mending the part torn on the backside. we will return to restoring the paints on the front side. >> reporter: the oil painting is insured and due to be shipped back to italy this week for further repairs before returned to its owner. and despite the damage, exhibit organizers say they have no plans to move the paintings further away from the public. calling this a one-time
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accident. cnn. >> when i saw it, thank goodness that wasn't my kid. that's all. >> i would have thought they would put more distance between the painting. >> he tripped. >> could have happened to anybody. >> thank you for watching. i'm rosemary church. >> i am john vause. we will be back after a short break. stay with us. no sixth grader's ever sat with the eighth grade girls. but your jansport backpack is
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excuse me. sit down. you weren't called. sit down, sit down, sit down. >> on the offensive, donald trump clashes with one of the biggest latino news anchors with dramatic results. stock markets headed in different directions after beijing steps in to stop the losses in shanghai. million dollar slip up what happened to a teenager after he accidentally crashed in to a priceless piece of art. great to have you with us. we'd like to welcome our viewer necessary united states and around the world. i'm john vause. them second hour of "cnn newsroom" begins right now
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