tv Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown CNN September 18, 2016 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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>> this is cnn breaking news. >> welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. i'm natalie allen at cnn headquaters in atlanta and we have breaking news from the new york bombing investigation. agents and police made a traffic stop sunday night in relation to saturday's attack but at this point no one is charged with a crime and the investigation is on going and there may be another clue as well. officials tell cnn a man was seen in surveillance video at the sight of the explosion and near where police found this pressure cooker four blocks away. it was rigged with wires, duct tape and what appeared to be a cell phone. cnn producer has been working
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this story for us for the past 24 hours. and joins us now in new york with with the latest and what do you know about these arrests? >> i just want to clarify something. there's not been any arrests in this incident. five people were stopped along the bridge. more on the brooklyn side but we have been told no arrests have been made and they have questioned some people what their role and what their involvement is and it's unclear what the fbi is. and trying to figure out what happened here. if there was more than one person involved here. is there something bigger. and running down leads and this can be one of those leads that they intercepted and question some folks and pulled them over and then question.
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>> and no one has opinion taken into custody. do they know whether they have been let go at this point. >> and where they are released or where they are. the nypd told us they assisted in the traffic stop and that the individuals were taken to the fbi offices in manhattan but the fbi is motte confirming that for us. that's all we know at this point. and what their role is perhaps and this as a precaution that the fbi wanted to talk to them. what do we know in the past hours since this happened 24 hours ago other than these people being questioned? have there been any other leads? somebody was seen in surveillance video perhaps near the scene. >> so that's correct. there's two scenes here. so we have the scene where the bomb explodes on 23rd street and
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surveillance video of a man walking with a did you havel bag and then went and scoured the area and found more videos several blocks away on 27th street and also found video of the same man walking with the same did you havel bag on 27th street sort of pulling this did you havel bag along which has wheels on it. he then places this did you havel bag near where police eventually find the pressure cooker and leaves the duffel bag and empty whatever may be inside the duffel bag which is this pressure cooker that you're seeing now on this screen and take it out of the duffel bag and leave it there. it's not clear if they were involved and the police and fbi are working to figure that out. >> have they released any information about what these men
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look like? >> no, they have not released any information about what the man in the surveillance video looks like or any portions of their surveillance video and they have been very quite on what they have and what they're working with. but this has provided them with a significant crew and they have some idea of what they're looking for but they have not told us publicly what they're looking for. just that they have video but would not describe it in anyway to us. >> and lastly do we know anything about how many eyewitnesses they talked to? this was a sr. crowded area on a saturday night in new york city. >> i would say it's dozens but i don't think they learned much from witnesses. some witnesses told them some things about what they may have seen on 27th street where the man left the duffel bag and there's some witnesses they spoke to on 23rd street and they
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have been receiving a lot of leads. this afternoon there was somewhere up to about 2,000 leads and they received tips from folks but i'm sure that number has grown quite dramatically since this afternoon. >> we thank you. we know you'll get back to us if there's more developments. cnn law enforcement contributor, a retired supervisory special agent with the fbi he joins us live via skype from los angeles. thank you for speaking with us. we talked with you shortly after this story broke 24 hours ago and now we hear there are people being questioned. but nobody is in custody and they're questioning them and clearly a lot of investigators are working the story in many corners. what do you make of what we're hearing? >> as we discussed yesterday this is not going to be a who done it.
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it's not going to be very difficult to find. when you set up a bomb you usually don't wipe it town for fingerprints. you don't clean it out or take the phone. you don worry about whether you have made calls with that because it's all going to be blown up. if it doesn't go off you leave fingerprints and phone information and i'm not surprised the bureau was on this this quickly. >> so they have a lot to go on? they should. >> i would assume they do and the other sign here is if the fbi and nypd are not showing photographs to the public and saying do you know who these people are it means the fbi and nypd knows who those people are. and the fbi will door knock people. traffic stops mean there's a little bit more going on. >> that was going to be my next
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question. why they haven't released the surveillance video. . so your take is they have got some definite leads on this. do you expect that will happen at some point in the investigation? >> it's possible they'll release it but the reason they're not releasing it is that they don't have to. they don't need to release it right now. and if you get a fingerprint and you run the fingerprint, the driver's license comes up and you don't need to say do you know who this guy is. >> but they have all of these people. you know, the last thing that the mayor said was this was intentional but he didn't call it terrorism. they're still piecing this thing together and they certainly have a lot of counter terrorism information at their disposal to kind of put it across the ts and dot the i's.
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>> absolutely. and the fact that the fbi and nypd is still working it after they have gotten preliminary information should tell you something. they haven't handed it off to major crimes or robbery homicide. they're taking control of this case and there's a reason for that. it's terrorism related but until they can put the numbers together and until you can make a case politically the lawyers will tell you don't call it that and politically it's not expedient to do that. >> right because yeah, that changes the narrative. thank you so much. >> new york major bill de blasio called the explosion intentional but didn't call it terrorism as
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new york's governor did. andrew cuomo spoke about the blast and how new yorkers are responding. >> this is a frightening experience for many new yorkers. we went through 9/11 obviously. 1993 we had a bombing at the world trade center and so you watch the tv, news almost on a weekly basis and you see terrorist activities and this is a frightening experience and we want to say to new yorkers there's no reason to panic. there's no reason to have your life disrupted. that's exactly what they are trying to do and we're not going to let them do it and we're going to go about our business and you should feel good that you have the best police agencies on the globe here in new york. and an abundance of caution.
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and bus terminals et cetera as part of our normal protocol and we're going to increase it by about a thousand people just to make sure that there's no continuation and frankly so that new yorkers feel that their government is doing everything they can. tomorrow morning we go back to work. >> and governor earlier today you said this is obviously an act of terrorism but you hear the different language coming from the city of new york. the mayor saying while this act was intentional the city is not quite ready to call this an act of terrorism. what is behind this kind of conflicting language and someone leaving an explosive device? many people in the city arguing doesn't that terrorize the city. >> yeah. it's frankly, jits semantics the
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mayor and i viewed the site together. the same information. the same observation and the same conclusions. and everything else is semantics. two devices planted. one exploded. one didn't. they did tremendous damage. it was an intentional bombing. it was not accidental. it was criminal. it was violent. there was no apparent link at this time to any international terrorist organization and there was no apparent political purpose and also no apparent target besides the general populous and you don't get to set off a bomb in new york or any city in this country
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without, to try to frighten people and cause terror period and do you call that terrorism? that's just semantics. all the facts are the same. you put them together and you're dealing with the best police forces on the globe i believe. we'll find who did this and bring this to justice and in the meantime we're not going to let them win. >> the governor talking with cnn there. on the same day as the explosion in new york a stabbing attack wounded nine people. one critically.
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an off duty police officer shot and killed the assailant. an isis linked news agency claimed it was one of their soldiers. evidence suggested he acted alone. the fbi says it is investigating the incident as a potential act of terror. so that's another story we're following to see there's more developments there but the assailant was shot and killed and one week after the ceasefire began in syria. residents have not seen any of the humanitarian aid they were supposed to receive. russia says the u.s. is to blame after a coalition air strike killed or wounded dozens of syrian government troops saturday. the u.s. said it thought it was hitting isis. now america's top diplomat says moscow needs to stop the grand standing and stop the show boating and get the assistance going.
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>> the opposition feels threatened because the boms continued. let me say this clearly. russia signed up to a cessation of hostilities, assad said he would live by it. so he needs to stop to russia and the united states can coordinate in order to avoid the terrible thing that happened yesterday which we all acknowledge and regret. >> let's get the perspective now from russia. senior international correspondent matthew chance has more now on the increasing tensions between the u.s. and russia. he's in moscow. >> well, russia says the u.s. lead coalition air strikes which killed so many syrian government troops has endangered an already shaky ceasefire. they have been trading barbs over the incident. with the latest from moscow accusing the united states not only of defending isis but also
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of engaging in a quote bloody experiment in syria. as they were battling islamic state fighters. tensions in the truce were already starting to show with both sides accusing one another of failing to see commitments. criticizing moscow for failing to assure it's ally, the syrian government that had withdrawn into rebel held eastern allepo. and dozens of rebel attacks have taken place despite a promise by washington to reign in antisyrian government fighters. all of this during a trust building phase. instead it's illustrated how little trust there is between the warring sides in this syrian
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conflict. matthew chance, cnn moscow. >> and that mistrust is having reprocousins inside of syria and we want to turn to that next. air strikes killed at least one person in alepo sunday. it's the first time the city has been bombed since the ceasefire began last monday. our senior international correspondent looks at how people there are carrying on with their lives amid the ruins. here he is. >> driving through a battered city. the ceasefire is barely holding in allepo. breaches becoming more frequent. >> still the residence denlts are cleaning up. even the youngest. >> he is 12 years old among the many displaced now finding shelter in a bombed out hospital. >> we have to keep working until
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we clear this room and the room next door because this is going to be our new home. as calm prevails, at least most of the time, the syrian government is moving an increasing number of displaced people into the bombed out ruins of former districts. >> these families were forced to move several times. born in a tent. >> we lost three homes. every one got destroyed. now we're displaced. if we had the money we would flee. >> despite the fact that the ceasefire is very fragile, the people here aren't wasting any time. they're getting to work picking up the pieces hoping that against all odds the truce may hold and while few are optimistic some say even the current ceasefire is a blessing.
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>> the ceasefire is good so far he says. i've been here a few days and the situation is better. we could hear some shelling but it's much less than before. >> as they struggle to keep the truce alive, aleppo's people hope the hard work they're putting in will not be wasted again. >> what an unreal situation there and it's hard warming no matter what these kid versus gone through. they still light up and smile and wave. it's hopeful. coming up here, fierce fighting. an indian army base is ground zero for one of the worst militant attacks in that region in decades. what is behind this? plus incidents of burned up galaxy note 7 smartphones went viral online. what the phone's maker samsung is doing to fix the problems for millions of buyers. that's ahead here. you're watching cnn live coverage.
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from the new york bombing investigation. the fbi says it's agents and police made a traffic stop sunday night in relation to what could be in relation to the attack. our cnn producer says five people were stopped but no one at this point has been arrested. or charged. the last time i talked with him about 30 minutes ago these people were still being quest n questioned. they say a man was seen at the site of saturday's explosion and where police found this pressure cooker here four blocks away. it was rigged with wires duct tape and what appeared to be a cell phone but it did not explode. one of our experts told me a few moments ago they had to release this surveillance video likely because they have strong leads in this case. so stay with us. we'll be live here for the next few hours and we'll bring you anymore develop ms. >> we turn now to the samsung
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story. samsung has begun replacing it's galaxy note 7 devices with new phones. the world's biggest smartphone maker was forced to recall 2.5 million note 7 phones after reports of the battery fires like this surfaced online. >> hey youtube. i wanted to post this and share what just happened to my note 7. >> how about that and we have seen a lot of that online. people holding these phones. showing us the problem. quite obvious. paula is live outside of samsung center and they have started replacing them paula. what do you know about how that's going? >> this is certainly a big week for some. this is inside korea. there's about 400,000 of these sold around the country and we know that from today customers are able to come into customer
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centers like this one. this is in the business district of of seoul and they can hand over their old device and be given a new device. and one man did come in and change his phone. we spoke to him and asked him how he felt about the situation and he said he was only really concerned when authorities started to say that you shouldn't take these phones or power up these phones, charge these phones or flights or buses or trains of. that's when he started to get concerned and that's when he decided to come here and exchange his device but he's still loyal to samsung. no intention of changing to another brand. another woman came in as well and bought hers online and was told she couldn't change hers here. had to physically send her
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device back. and also would stay loyal to a samsung brand. >> there does seem to be the underlying loyalty. and the recalls and exchanges happen in the u. s. and europe and see if that stretches up. >> absolutely. the question remain what is the long-term impact will be on samsung. paula handcock is live there at samsung center. >> up next we'll have the latest on saturday's new york explosion after a short break and developments in the case. also still to come, south america's first paralympic games are in the books and the athletes play tribute to a cyclist that lost his life. >> plus an army base comes under attack with deadly consequences.
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>> back with our live coverage and the breaking news is out of new york on the explosion that happened just over 24 hours ago. police and the fbi apparently made a traffic stop sunday night, a short time ago and their investigation of this weekend's bombing attack in manhattan. five people were pulled over but as of now, we're told no arrests have been made. no charges filed. 29 people were injured in saturday's explosion as a result new york's governor is adding
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1,000 more police and troops to patrol bus terminals, airports and subway stations. because they're still somebody out there and place these explosions and they don't have them yet. our cnn investigative producer has been working the scene now ever since the story broke and you're still talking with sources. what do we know about this traffic stop and what perhaps were their suspicions? >> we first learned of this maybe around an hour or so ago. a local state senator had tweeted that some -- about five people were questioned by the fbi. they were taken into custody and the fbi, the only thing that we're confirming at this hour is that they did, in fact, stop a car. they wanted to question, they did pull them over and they did
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question them. we believe they have been taken back to the fbi offices and the fbi stressed to us that yes while it is related to the explosion that occurred here in manhattan the men have not been charged and no one has been arrested. >> while you were talking we were showing video of police surrounding a car that had been roped off with police tape. that's not the car they pulled over, right? they're investigating a car they found parked somewhere in manhattan. >> yeah. so all day long there's been different cars they have investigated. some of the cars just happened to be hit by shrapnel.
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and we do not have any indication by law enforcement that the people or the person behind the explosion was driving a car. so we don't know what the relationship is to the car and the crime scene. and they felt like they needed to take it back to examine it further but besides that we don't have any further information. >> do we know if there's still roads shutdown in this area? closed off? we're about to hit a monday horng in new york city. >> i think we expect all the roads to be open by tomorrow morning or by the morning i should say. traffic is slowly being reopened and life is, you know, they're trying to sort of restore life back in this community and let people get back into their homes and live their lives. sort of i guess restore some kind of normalcy but everything should be reopened by tomorrow.
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it doesn't mean that law enforcement is going to leave the area. they're still talking to them inside the building. i think law enforcement is going to remain there but it's a question of how much longer but i think the streets will all be reopened by tomorrow. >> one of our experts said perhaps they're not releasing this video because they have enough to go on right now. we hope that's the case because even though new yorkers get back in there there certainly has to be tension or worry that whoever did this has not been involved at this point. thank you so much. >> the summer games have been handed over to tokyo with the closing ceremony has just wrapped up and we'll tell you how they finished on a poignant note. we'll have that story right
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. >> in case you're just joining us we have breaking news from the investigation into saturday's bombing in new york. the fbi made a traffic stop with police on sunday of a vehicle of interest in this case. so far though no arrests, no charges and the investigation we are told is on going. there may be another clue as well. officials tell cnn a man was seen in surveillance video at the site of the explosion and near where police found the pressure cooker four blocks away. it was rigged with wires and duct tape and a cell phone and it's been dismantled and they're using that in their investigation. in other news 17 soldiers were killed when mill tans attacked an army base sunday. four militants also died in the
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gun battle near the india pakistan border in this heavily disputed region. he called pakistan a terrorist state and stopped short of blaming the country for the attack. sunday's attack was one of the worst strikes on security forces in this region in almost three decad decades. paula newton spoke earlier with the analyst of the wilson center about this complex and potentially volatile turn of events. >> in previous years the u.s. would respond with a statement in which it would say the two sides need to work things out and have dialogue and yet that was not said this time. it was clear that the u.s. was citing with india with it's
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terrorism. >> there's a back and forth going on in india with how best to handle the conflict with pakistan and obviously terrorism issues. india practiced this restraint now and some people believe a harder line from india although it would be more dangerous might be more productive. what do you think? >> it's a tough decision for india. let's face it. it will be very difficult for india not to respond in some way. i say that for several reasons. one, this is a particularly devastating attack. 17 soldiers lost. that's a lot of soldiers. the indian military has been hit hard before but that level for a single attack is a long time. the other thing is that india responded so forcefully, verbally, even more like this. it's coming at them extremely hard in pakistan and if it does what it's done tht past, then i
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think that could make the government and particularly a hindu national government like the current one look a bit silly but that said it is very difficult. what exactly could it do? no one really knows because of the nuclear reality, the fact that pakistan and india have nuclear weapons. any response they take could certainly start to raise concerns from nuclear scenario and india doesn't want to go there. >> no one wants to go this and that scares everyone about the situation. any kind of a nuclear standoff in materials of involving more military action but given that india might be bold by the u.s. do you think there's room to take a harder line. it could still lead to a lot of tension and military tension and do you think that we're moving into a different error era of
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how india handles this in the coming weeks or months. >> we could be moving into a new era in the sense that india could well decide it's worth the risk of taking an action. the sense of trying to use covert operations to take out terrorists here or there based in pakistan. doing something that would give india an opportunity to state plausible denieblt. they don't want to do anything over anything visible. >> we have been talking the past few days about the plight of syrian refugees. those that need aid. no one can get to them. they're getting no assistance. now we have a positive story that we want to share with you when we find them. a group of refugees making themselves at home and turning a
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profit. putting their expertise in the kitchen to good use. >> it's care and variety. a bit of a top chef. her family encouraged her to share her prowess for chance cain. >> we left syria so our house was destroyed and there was no school for my children says the mother of three. she landed in a kitchen in cairo along with six other syrian refugee women. it's called olive oil in arabic. now aromas fill the community center. on the menu stuffed grape leaves. the women don't always see eye to eye over recipes but
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consistency is key. >> it's a crucial signature ingredient in food and gives it that perfect combination of sweet and sour and also gives the food it's darker color. >> the end result, delicious but it goes deeper than that. >> when we cook we we bring the memories of the mothers and grandmothers to every boy girl and family that taste our food and we continue the legacy she sa says. >> she too is syrian but a long time resident. she turned her love of cooking into a passion for helping others. >> i always thought that you don't truly empower people unless you give them a source of income. it gives people back some of their dignity. it makes people less insecure about saying they're rev ryu gees. egypt is home to 150,000 syrian
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refugees. it also offers flavors of home and even specific like aleppo style chicken. typically only men work in these restaurants but it's special in that it only hires women. >> >> we have families working with us here that don't have a male breadwinner. the women depend on themselves to support their families. if it succeeds more women will be hired but success won't only be measured in just food and money. >> it's the food in any syrian home is extremely important to us now when we feel that everything else is dividing us. >> cnn, cairo. >> love that story. makes you want to try some syrian cuisine as well. just ahead here. south america's first paralympics wraps up with
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sunday night in relation to the attack. that's all they're saying. cnn producer says five people were stopped. no one has been arrested or charged as of now. also, investigators have an important clue. they say there is a man seen in surveillance video at the site of saturday's explosion and near where police found this precious cooker four blocks away. as we've been saying, it was rigged. they knew it was suspicious. they have taken it apart. and no doubt they are following all of the leads and will certainly let you know if there is indeed any more breaks. a powerful typhoon is approaching japan. our meteorologist pedram javaheri is following that one. and this is a typhoon following right behind another one. that right? that just came through taiwan, pedram? it's hard to keep up. >> correct. you know, this storm system made landfall across this region in the last couple of days to the south. we're talking about meranti. and now you take a look. we're looking at the sixth storm to make landfall across japan now since the beginning of
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august. really a remarkable setup when you consider what's happen across this region, one of which left tremendous damage across portions of japan. this particular typhoon, the latest coming in is now equivalent to a category 3 storm. so it is a powerful storm. you notice the area indicated in yellow that is all tropical storm-force winds that are going to be really pushing through parts of southern japan. eventually this includes tokyo say towards tuesday afternoon and tuesday night. if you've got travel plans across this region, this storm really takes a track that is set to impact millions of people across a densely populated corridor of japan. and a lot of rainfall. really needless to say. but pick up quarter of a meter to half a meter of rainfall in an area as you would imagine has already been fully saturated. so you get this on top of an area fully saturated, you know flooding is going to be a concern. landslides as well. another tropical storm toward portions of the united states. it is impact indirectly parts of
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mexico. it is. it actually parallels portions of baja and eventually pushes in towards the northern tip of the baja. this track, if it holds through would impact portions of southern california with rainfall beneficial. it would be potentially the final day of the summer season that we can get some rain out of this over say wednesday into thursday. also, looking into the atlantic, natalie, we've got what is left of tropical storm julia. we've got karl in the central atlantic. another storm forming off the coast of africa. julia have really remained offshore. sort of a nuisance compared to anything for the united states. but watching the storm to bring potentially some thunderstorms out towards parts of the east coast later on over the next day or so. natalie? >> i was going to say. you're an expert. i couldn't really even see julia. >> it isn't much. but that's the kind of storms we like, right? >> yeah, keep it that way. goodbye, julia, hopefully.
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pedram, thank you. one of the actors who played the von trapp siblings in "the sound of music" has died. you'll probably remember this classic scene with her ♪ i am 16 going on 17, i know that i am naive ♪ ♪ fellows i meet may tell me i'm sweet, and willingly i believe ♪ >> ah, yes, she'll always be 16 for so many fans of the movie. this is a favorite moment from the movie featuring charmian carr. she died at 73 from complications of a rare form of dementia. south america's up close and personal experience with the olympic movement has now officially been handed over to japan in 20th 20th. the paralympic flame was extinguished in a closing ceremony a short time ago. and our shasta darlington was
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there. here is the wrap-up from rio. >> the 2016 paralympics closed with another musical extravaganza on sunday at the maracana stadium. also a tribute to iranian cyclist balmain who crashed during a competition on saturday, and died, casting a shadow of the rest of the competitions. he was remembered by fans and colleagues and organizers inside and outside the stadium. >> this is an absolutely tragic day for the paralympic movement and for the games here in rio. i learned about this situation at approximately 1:00 this afternoon. and it's changed the way that i've -- i feel today, obviously. and i think i should say to you all that the most sincere and deep condolences from the paralympic family.
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and i think that's important from the family go to the islamic republic of iran's national paralympic committee. >> south america's first paralympic games overall deemed a success, despite the absence of russia with their entire paralympic team banned as part of the state sponsored doping scandal. and despite serious financial problems that affected everything from seeding to staffing. it started with dismal ticket sales just a couple of weeks before the games kicked off. only 12% of tickets had been sold. but eventually brazil really caught that paralympic spirit in the end. more than 80% of tickets were sold. that's more than were sold in beijing, helped along by cheap ticket prices. some cost as little as $3. and with the weekend competitions almost completely selling out. >> rio is giving a boost to the spirit of inclusion, the spirit
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of olympicsism, and the opportunity that those who have a disability can compete. they compete on that same stage. they can be a success and they can inspire others. >> the road to rio finally coming to an end with both the olympic and paralympic flags passed off to tokyo 20th 20th. shasta darlington, cnn, rio de janeiro. >> i'm natalie allen in atlanta. my colleague george howell will be here in a few minutes with more on the new york bombings and other news from arnold the world. i'll key you back here in an hour. keep it here. you're watching cnn. it's your daily retreat. go ahead, spoil yourself. the es and es hybrid. this is the pursuit of perfection.
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searching for a suspect. the investigation continues into the explosion in new york city and a suspicious device that was found and surveillance video what could help investigators learn more. a stabbing spree in minnesota. the suspect claimed that he worked for isis. and now police considering it an act of terror. and the shaky ceasefire. the united states and russia try to mend relations over the war in syria. but the question, will it be enough? from cnn world headquarters in atlanta, welcome to our viewer here is in the united states and around the world.
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