tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN October 16, 2016 2:00am-3:01am PDT
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on the brink of battle. the coalition of forces prepares to retake mosul after more than two years of isis control. a breakthrough at the latest syria talks, leaders meet again searching for a way to bring peace to the war-torn country. donald trump is accusing hillary clinton of taking performance enhancing drugs on the same day another woman accuses him of sexual assault. i am paula newton. this is "cnn newsroom." a major battle against isis draws near and iraq and anti-isis forces set to launch an offensive from mosul. it was iraq's second largest
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city before isis -- in 2014. government troops, paramilitaries and kurdish pesh mur ga are ready to take it back. a potential humanitarian crisis, the air force has dropped leaflets on the city whereas many as 1 million people still live. the leaflets promise an isis defeat and tell residents to stay in their homes, of course, avoid those isis positions. our ben wedeman is inn you are bale. >> ben, you've been following this story for years. what seems different to you this time? is it this coalition of forces that's now gathering? >> reporter: really, paula, it's the scale of the operation. we've seen iraqi forces drive isis out of other cities, fallujah, tikrit, ramadi, and
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others. but mosul is iraq's second largest city. used to have a population of about 2 million. now there's 700,000 to a million people still there. but this is in a sense, the final battle to drive isis out of iraq. and so what we see assembled is a huge number of men and equipment for in operation. tens of thousands of members of the iraqi army. the counterterrorism force, the federal police. so-called paramilitaries, both sunni and shia. christians as well as kurdish pesh murg a fighters. there are u.s. troops on the ground to provide support, advice and there's also an american artillery battery and there are u.s.-led coalition in the air hitting isis targets
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within mosul. really, it's the scale of it. of course, it's not just a military operation. keep in mind, as i mentioned before, somewhere between 700,000 to a million people in the city. aid agencies are braced for what one official called perhaps a tsunami of people fleeing the city. they are very worried that they simply don't have the material, the resources, the manpower to deal with what they say could be a catastrophe, humanitarian catastrophe on the scale of rwanda. yes, all of the pieces are in place for this operation. there's no clear idea how long it could take. but you can bet it's going to be messy and prolonged. paula? >> absolutely with the civilians and mosul caught in the middle. ben, what do we know about the kind of resistance that isis can put up right now? >> reporter: well, we do know
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that they have, for instance, released prisoners, people being held for such offenses as smoking cigarettes, shaving and wearing the wrong clothing. these prisoners are being put to work to dig a network of tunnels and trenches around the city. we understand that isis is preparing v beds, vehicle born explosive devices to use against advancing forces. they probably will as they have in the past use the civilian population as a shield against the advancing forces much we also know that isis has told its wounded militants that they can leave the city, presumably to go to syria. perhaps to roc a. we're told 14 were executed yesterday. i'm talking about isis members who apparently, according to sources within mosul, two
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prominent leaders of the movement as well. it does seem that the day of reckoning is fast approaching. there's some within mosul among the ranks of isis who are starting to waver hoping perhaps they can take advantage of an amnesty offered by the iraqi government. paula? >> we shall see. ben wedeman there following the developments in iraq. i spoke earlier with burgess about the expected battle for mosul. he's the chair of contemporary middle east studies at the london school of economics. >> the question, paula, is not whether mosul will fall. not only to the iraqi army but also to its allies, the kurds and other militias. but how long it will take. will it take a few weeks? will it take a few months? and also, a second and very important question is the post isis reconstruction plan. will the iraqi army and the iraqi government be able to
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provide reconstruction for the 800,000 civilians in mosul. will the iraqi army and allies, the kurds and other elements in iraq be able to put the iraqi house together? i think this is the question. i'm a bit optimistic, because the americans have invested a great deal. not only in the training of the iraqi army, not only in positioning major american military assets terms of special forces, but also the americans invested a great deal of time bridging the divide between the iraqi government and the kurds, between the turkish government and the iraqi government. trying to impress on the iraqi government the need for a very important post reconstruction plan to provide food and medical supplies to the civilians in mosul. so all in all, i think it seems to me that isis is on the retreat, isis is besieged. it realizes this will be the
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last battle, the last major battle in mosul. in northern syria, meantime, activists say syrian rebel fighters are advancing on the isis held town of da beak. the town that appears in islamic prophecies as the site of an apocalyptic battle. it named -- rebels have taken control of several villages around there. a 5,000-square kilometer area will be declared a so-called safe zone and cleared of terror. major powers are working on a cease-fire, however a meeting in switzerland on saturday ended without breakthroughs. the shift now to london. nic robertson is there. you have moved to london. we discussed yesterday how there wasn't much common ground, how the expectations were low.
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okay, they met those. what more is there to talk about today? i know mr. kerry and sergei lavrov moved to london as well. >> reporter: what we know of who is going to attend the meeting in london and we've literally just got the list. at the moment sergei lavrov is not on the list. i think that's generally been the expectation. what you had in lucerne around switzerland was an array of the regional powers from around syria, plus the two big heavy weights, united states and russia. the idea was to thrash out any areas of commonality. talk out the issues. there were tensions in the room. secretary kerry said there was a broad agreement on broad concepts, particularly ending the war. i think that gives us an idea of the lack of specificity of some of the detail that might be required to really shape some kind of agreement. none of that, only the i idea
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that they agree the war should end. what's going to happen in london today? secretary kerry will come from that meeting and brief his allies, if you will. british prime minister is hosting it. the german foreign minister, italian foreign minister. turkey will be at the table as well. saudi arabia, who is also like turkey at the table yesterday in lucerne. you'll have jordan at the table as well. you'll have the qataris, the emirates. sort of a bench strength if you will of the allies that coalesce behind the united states in that view of trying to end the war in syria. to bring retloef aleppo. today, potentially a chance to, having heard what lavrov and iran and iraq have said around the table in switzerland, what's their response going to be?
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what can they do? what are the realities? boris johnson said the real reality from his position is, if there's a coalition and there will have to be one to implement anything that's -- it will have to be led by the united states. we'll perhaps see thinking on that today. >> the russian government and the foreign minister, outside of the meet ngs switzer land, the territorial integrity of syria continues and that they still did not like the makeup of the opposition there and that the military campaign continues. given all this and now a fact that we know for sure that russia will not be at the table in london. nik, you have to expect it will be days, if not weeks before they sit down again to get anything done. >> well, what we heard from secretary kerry when he left that meeting in switzerland last night was that there would be an
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effort to move forward from those talks. an effort to move forward quickly. a lower level participants, foreign ministry officials will perhaps begin to work as early as monday. he said there were some ideas that came up that could be fleshed out further. but nothing concrete that we were told about came out of it. obviously the real effort was to relieve the humanitarian situation in aleppo. the impetus, the effort today will be to find whatever the common position and common ground is. there is desperate ground. you just heard president erdogan off turkey dee clearing areas free. he was going to enforce a no fly zone. they have added more surface-to-air missiles. they've passed legislation that
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says russia can have permanent air force base inside syria. you can see the complexity here and how strong a position russia has on its ground with assets on the ground and the allies meeting in london today will have very little in terms of military hardware and little in terms of assad and syria. one of the things that might be considered would be more sanctions. there's been a view that the u.s. might look towards the europeans and say, you know, reduce your gas buying from russia. germ nif gets that 50% of gas from russia. the next economic type move could be unpalatable for the europeans. they may not want to go in that direction. everyone is not on the same page, paula. >> in the meantime, the bombardment in aleppo continues and the agony of many civilians there continues. nic robertson, continue to watch the talks in london. appreciate it. donald trump is attacking rival hillary clinton. he suggested saturday that
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clinton was taking performance enhancing drugs during their first two debates and said they should both take drug tests prior to their next showdown. he's made a habit in questioning clinton's health and stamina without evidence throughout this campaign. in the meantime, another woman is accusing trump of sexually assaulting her. bringing the total now to at least nine. the trump campaign categorically denied each allegation as quickly as they've surfaced. as our jessica schneider reports, this time is no different. 63-year-old kathy heller is the ninth woman to speak out claiming that donald trump kissed her without consent in the middle of a mar-a-lago brunch in the late 1990s. kathy heller first shared her story with the guardian newspaper and cnn is working to further corroborate her story. i did speak with kathy heller on the phone as well as her friend susan kline who she shared her story with a year and a half ago
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when donald trump was rising in political prominence. keller says she was at mar-a-lago on mother's day. heller says when she was introduced to trump he allegedly her pulled her toward him and kissed her. heller was startled and pulled back. she tells me her husband saw it happen, as did other members of her family. they considered it a family joke. once the "access hollywood" tape came out, it became a real issue in in presidential campaign, she realized it was no longer a laughing matter and kathy heller says she became compelled to speak out along with the eight other women. the trump campaign vigorously denying the claims. he said the media has gone too far in making this false accusation. there is no way something like this would have happened in a public place on mother's day at mr. trump's resort. it would have been the talk of palm beach for the past two decades. the reality is this.
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for the media to wheel out a politically motivated democratic activist with legal dispute against the same resort owned by mr. trump does a disservice to the public and anyone covering this story should be embarrassed for elevating this bogus claim. now, i did talk to kathy heller. she admits that she is a hillary supporter and says she had a legal dispute with mar-a-lago. still, she was compelled to speak out. >> that was our jessica schneider there. now to another wikileaks stolen campaign e-mails. this time transcripts of speeches to goldman sachs. she's been resisting the release of it for months. it shows clinton talking about wall street's role in financial institutions and how they are regulated. also relations with russia and wikileaks itself. in 2013, remarks at a goldman sachs event, clinton joked,
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smoothing things over with foreign leaders after the release of nsa documents. clinton said it was painful. leaders who shall remain nameless and were characterized as vain, egotistical, power hungry, krunt and we knew they were. this was not fiction. the ambassadors get carried away and want to be literary people. they go off on tangents. what can i say? i had grown men cry. i mean literally. that from hillary clinton. now more than a week after releasing e-mails it hakt from -- we are not able to verify their authenticity. a new poll shows hillary clinton leading republican donald trump by four points. up 47 to 43% among likely voters. only a slight change from their last poll taken before the last debate. now, the polling was conducted during what may be the most controversial stretch of trump's
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campaign. 64% of respondents say trump's lewd comments about women caught on tape won't affect their vote. the u.s. says one its ships may have been attacked for a third time this week. they're not sure what happened exactly. we'll have the latest from yemen coming up. donald trump has reportedly said more lewd things about women. more than what we heard. some former apprentice staffers say it's all on tape. there's so. here's how benefiber® works. inside us are trillions of good microflora that support digestive health. the prebiotic fiber in benefiber® nourishes them... and what helps them, helps you. clear, taste-free, benefiber®. and what helps them, helps you. hey! we're doing the wave! all taking off with me!baby. for 42 minutes he's been trying to bring an entire stadium to its feet. you missed it buddy. (rich) why does he do it? for glory? notoriety? we don't know. waaaaave! frankly, we don't need to know. but much like this hero, courtyard is all about the game.
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syria, activists say syrian rebel fighters backed by turkey have captured the isis held town of dabiq. they're trying to clear the area of mines and booby traps. the town of dabiq appears in islamic prophecies as the site of an pock lip particular battle. they say it will be part of a 5,000 square kilometer area that will be declared a safe zone and cleared from terror. south korea says the intermediate range missile that north korea test fired saturday failed right after launch. washington is calling on pyongyang to avoid increasing tensions in the region. south korea says its military is prepared for any more so-called
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provocati provocation. u.s. officials say u.s. s. mason fired countermeasures in the red sea saturday after it detected an apparently attack from a rebel held area of yemen. it's not clear exactly what happened. officials say it might have been a radar malfunction on the destroyer instead of an actual attack. the ship and the crew were not harmed. if confirmed, it would be the third missile attack reported in this week. russia's uchb ambassador sizing up moscow's relationship with the west is blunt saying the general situation is pretty bad. tensions between russia and the u.s. are probably the worst they've been in decades. it isn't because of seer yachlt as explained by matthew chants in moscow. the carnage in syria has pushed moscow's relationship with the west to new lows.
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the western powers again debating military action. russia upped forces in syria. >> translator: it's cold war -- >> flagship current affairs show, russia's top state news anchor issued this stark warning. global war. behavior towards russia declared it could have nuclear dimensions. it's an apocalyptic division quite literally. not since the conflict in ukraine where russia fueled an eastern rebellion after annexing crimea. the tensions in the west, particularly the united states is strained. many russians like this retired general see it very differently. >> russia is fighting u.s.
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dominance over the world. that's the reason. it's not all about syria or ukraine. so we have different views on the -- what's going on in the world. >> so these are just flash points in a much larger battle? >> of course. >> it's a battle to secure russian interests in syria to protect its last holds of influence in the middle east. ukraine, to prevent another former soviet state turning to nato in the e.u. it is a strategy analysts say that sets russia and the west -- >> since collapse of the soviet union, the west had opportunity and capacity to reshape the world according ideas which the west believed were correct and right. what we see now, there are
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attempts to believe that this arrangement, the possible war arrangement can be restored or prolonged. unfortunately, not. >> what will replace it may not be to everyone's liking. matthew chants, cnn moscow. now meteorologist derek van dam is here with a landmark climate agreement reached in rwan rwanda. it's about refrigerators and air conditioners. pardon my ignorance, but i thought this situation had been solved. it's a shocking development. >> montreal back in the '80s. so did the scientists. it's a double-edged sword. they did solve the problem with ozone layer by reducing cfcs. their substitute is harming our atmosphere in a different way. what you're looking at is the ozone history. it's a timeline of events
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basically from back in the '80s right through present moment in time. you can see that dramatic drop-off in the size of the ozone hole. that was the good news. that's what the montreal protocol solved, reducing the cfcs which by the way were part of the cooling agents in our refrigerators and within our air conditioner units. we enter in hfcs now. that's hydrofluorocarbons. i'll refer to it as hfc. well, the good news is they did what they were supposed to do, not harm the ozone layer like cfcs did. it took us 20 years to realize that this substitute for cfcs was a greenhouse gas that was 10 to 100 times more effective in trapping heat close to our atmosphere with the greenhouse
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effect than that of carbon dioxide. we talked about co 2 frequently when we talk about global warming and climate change, significant threat as well. but the hfcs are becoming a major threat. so leaders from all over the world came together in rwanda this week, came to an amendment for the protocol set in the late '80s and decided the united states, the european union, by 2019, if they could reduce the hfc production by 10% and the agreement by other countries, we have the potential to decrease our global warming by a half degree celsius, which is significant. remember, cop21 earlier this year in paris trying to curb our global warming by the end of the century by 2 degrees -- or pre industrial levels. this is significant considering that we have seen this uptick in temperatures globally. the last nine of the top ten
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warmest years have occurred since 2000. and 2016 is certainly going to go down in the record books as well. we're starting to relate a lot of these extreme weather events around the global climate change theory and aspect. the gloel warming, heavy rainey vents, strong wind events, typhoons, hurricanes and across the pacific northwest right now, we're dealing with one major storm. take a look at the footage out of oregon, paula. trees down, massive waves. this is thanks to an area of low pressure that caused some problems. 50,000 customers without power right now in oregon alone. it's not the place that's used to this wild weather. >> they had two confirmed tornadoes, which is very rare. it's been several, several years since that happened. >> derek, thank you. is the political climate changing? in ohio it's a battleground state crucial to the white house. what ohio voters think just after the break.
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. you're watching "cnn newsroom." i'm paula newton. these are your headlines this hour. activists say syrian rebel fighters backed by turkey have captured the isis held down of dabiq in syria. turkish president says it will be part of a 5,000 square kilometer area and will be a safe zone and cleared of terror. wrapping up in switzerland with apparent -- no apparent breakthrough.
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john ker john kerry advertised the meet -- characterized the meeting as a brainstorming session. iraq's prime minister says a major battle against isis will happen soon. iraqi government forces, kurdish troops are standing by to retake mosul and other cities nearby. they've dropped thousands of leaflets on residents for them to remain inside their homes and avoid isis positions. the u.n. secretary general promised relief for victims of hurricane matthew. ban ki-moon visited there saturday and urged patience to stay strong. a u.n. base was shut down after looters attacked trucks filled with aid. hurricane matthew ripped through haiti lmg two weeks ago killing about 1,000 people and leaving close to 200,000 homeless. another woman is accusing donald trump of sexual assault. kathy heller says the republican
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candidate grabbed and kissed her two decades ago at trump's mar-a-lago resort from florida. trump's campaign tried to discredit that statement and the other eight that have resurfaced. he's not just defending himself. he's going after his opponent, hillary clinton. he said she used performance enhancing drugs at the last two debates. he wants a drug test before their next showdown. some former staff who are worked on donald trump's show the apprentice reportedly say the leaked video, the one you heard last week of the lewd remarks on women is just the tip of the iceberg. the show's creator says he legally cannot release any of those out-takes. here's senior media correspondent brian feldman. >> you're fired. >> inside the apprentice boardroom, donald trump had all of the power. now the reality tv guru who created the show could hold trump's fate in his hands.
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>> rumors are swirling that out-takes from the apprentice are more explosive than this bombshell "access hollywood" tape. >> when you're a star, you can do anything. >> and could make this casual sexist remark seem like nothing. >> but the apprentice raw footage is inaccessible. nbc, which aired the show, says burnett has it. burnett says he cannot legally share it. the production company mgm is restricted from releasing the material. >> this is contractual and common in hollywood. british born burnett is one of the biggest producers in town and has been friends with trump for years. >> my first thoughts ever about donald trump, i was selling t-shirts on venice beach reading this book, the art of the deal by donald trump. >> he wasn't selling t-shirts for long. his participation in a french adventure competition gave him
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the idea for survivor. the show was a hit. giving birth to a new genre. the voice and shark tank are among his other huge money makers. in 2004, he catapulted him to stardom. >> generally, mark wants me to do exactly what i want to do. >> when trump got married in 2005. >> my son cameron was the ring bearer at the wedding of donald and melania. >> burnett is deeply religious. in 2013 he and his wife, actress roma downey produced the bible miniseries. >> it's a calling. >> faith could be one reason burnett denies saying they're pro trump. we reject the hatred, division that has been an unfortunate part of his campaign. what about what was left on the cutsing room floor? this ap reporter says she interviewed staff members who say trump used uncomfortable sexist language behind the
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scenes. >> including talking openly about which female contestants he wanted to have sex with. >> now there's speculation and concern that someone might defy mgm and leak new tapes. brian felte eer -- >> we need to hear from the voters. poppy harlow went to a key swing state. no candidate -- no candidate has won the white house since winning that state since 1960. >> this neighborhood in cleveland, ohio, was one of the strongest for president obama in 2012. mitt romney did not get a single vote from people living in these homes. not one. people living here have been struggling economically for a long time. they still are. so the question is, will they come out in droves for hillary clinton the way they did for president obama. >> hillary. >> hillary is the best candidate. >> that's a no-brainer.
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>> there have been decades of economic despair and a dwindling faith that politicians will help. >> i think the democratic platform is saying the same thing we have heard for the past 50 years. over and over. >> war on poverty was declared. >> jeff crosby used to be in gangs. that landed him in prison. now he's working to keep kids from the same life he lived. >> it's one of the highest crime areas in cleveland. >> this is? >> yes. >> about ten gangs over here. what's up? i think the democratic party is taking us for granted. the republican party literally ignores us except for trump. he's striving to make inroads. but he's a polarizing figure. >> because he got money. that ain't everything. >> i'm willing to vote for a clown before donald trump. really. with a red nose. >> i do agree with republicans sometimes, but i don't agree with nothing that donald trump
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stands for. >> that brings us to the second part of this ohio chapter. 200 miles south. >> we're in pike county, ohio. this place matters a lot. not for the number of votes but because of what it represents. it used to be solidly blue but it's been moving more and more red. in 2012, this was the closest county in the country. mitt romney won here by a single vote. just one vote. it's 96% white. largely blue collar and unemployment here is high. these are exactly the voters donald trump has been speaking to. with his message, if it isn't resonating here, he's in trouble. >> i'd say right now, you're looking at a coin toss. >> among union workers who, until now, have been solidly blue. have you ever seen anything like that before? >> donald trump says he's the one to bring these jobs back. he's the one to build up your
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industry. >> donald trump is saying that. that's total propaganda. where is his merchandise made? what does he have to offer to american industry? nothing. >> many here believe trump and see him as their best shot as getting ahead. since 2000, ohio has lost nearly a third of its manufacturing jobs. >> got a lot of things that is amazing that he's telling us he can do for us. >> andrew shanks runs a real estate firm here. >> it means more jobs, more better paying jobs. >> you voted for president obama in 2008. >> yes, i did. >> but her faith in the obama administration has faded. >> i think trump is a businessman and the country is a business. needs to be run as a business. >> when we met angie, she was leaning towards trump. now after the "access hollywood" tape surfaced, she's reconsidering. >> you're a lifelong democrat? >> yes. >> so you're voting for hillary this time around? >> no, i'm not. my dad is a coal miner.
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they put the coal miners out of work. >> we left ohio asking this question. why does economic pain from one town to the next push some people left and others right? >> that was our poppy harlow there. these interviews were taped before the "access hollywood" video surfaced. cnn called back the trump supporters and almost all said they still support him. they cannot wait to be reunited. the families of 21 freed chibok girls are heading back to the capital. they look forward to a long-awaited reunion. we take you live there. plus, china is preparing to send two astronauts into space. details on their mission coming up. ♪ every time i travel, it's the moments that are most rewarding. because you'll never forget them. the new marriott portfolio of hotels now has 30 brands in over 110 countries.
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21 school girls are expected to reunite with their families in nigeria's capital sometime soon. boko haram released them on thursday. david mckenzie joins us live and i can only imagine what their families are going through still waiting for them. of course, the release is not without controversy. >> reporter: will, that's right. paula. there are still questions being asked of how exactly the negotiators secured the release of these 21 girls. the news of today of course, is that some of the families have arrived here at the capital and will be reunited soon with their loved ones after 900 days. they were searching, wondering
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what had happened to their girls that in captivity became women held by the isis affiliated boko haram deep in the forest and other areas in the conflict ridden northeast. that reunion will surely be a joy for the families, but still many others wondering what negotiations going forward will do and whether they can secure more girls. we learned from a source close to the negotiations that 83 girls are being discussed to try to get them out of the clutches of boko haram which begs the question, where are the more than 100 others from chibok taken in april 2014. certainly, that will lead to fears from family members of who will come out and who has gone missing perhaps forever. paula? >> and as trying as this has been, the #bring back our girls has gotten a lot of attention.
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it's really created what many are describing as a humanitarian disaster not seen there in decades. david, from what you know and the aid agencies there, some people are talking about famine. >> well, that's right. there are pockets of famine in parts of nigeria, particularly in bore know -- they created this hash tag and started the campaign to get the girls. large scale crisis ongoing. 75,000 children are at risk of dying of starvation. millions of more need life-saving nutrition support. but the humanitarian active here are saying that those moves by them are woefully underfunded by the world's actors and they're not getting the money or the support that they need. it must be said that boko haram controls large parts of that
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state and that makes it even more difficult to reach those in desperate health. >> and the release of the girls is a negotiated release not a rescue. boko haram continues to be a problem. sniefd our david mckenzie, appreciate it. thailand's crown prince is reassuring the country of a smooth succession. the king died this past week after 70 years on the throne. he was seen as an influence in a country which had 19 military coups. they told people the -- china is getting ready to send two astronauts into space. chinese state media says the heavenly vessel is expected to blast off monday morning local time from the gobi desert. it will dock at a space lab that went into orbit last month. now, this is video from that
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launch. they'll spend 33 days there. mostly conducting science experiments. china's space program made -- they sent the first astronaut into space becoming the third country to do so. in 2008, a chinese astronaut took the country's first spacewalk. a 2013 mission included a successful manual docking with china's first space lab. a major step towards beijing's goal of a permanent space station. china has made five manned space flights to date. interviewing children on camera can be a tough assignment. it can be hard to get much more than one-word answers. when we spoke to some schoolchildren about the presidential race. they had a lot to say. than ruff. great-grandfather horatio went west during the gold rush.
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he definitely got an earful. >> at the woodward academy in college park, georgia, we talked to 8 and 9-year-old third graders. >> thank you for inviting us to your school. >> you're welcome. >> nice to meet all of you. >> you too. >> do you know that we have a presidential election coming up? >> yes it's complicated. >> who is running for president. >> trump and hillary clinton. which one is the man and which is the woman? >> hillary clinton is the girl. >> trump is the boy. >> i know about both of their stories a little. >> uh-huh. >> because trump has a wife and she's like a model kind of. and then hillary's husband or father was the president. >> well, her husband, bill clinton. she would be the second president clinton. >> yeah. >> what's the first thing the new president should do? >> make an announcement that
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houses and stuff was half the price for a whole month. >> half the price for a whole month. who agrees with that? >> half price everything. >> what do you think about the candidates yelling at each other? >> i don't like it when they do that. >> why don't you like that? >> because i don't like violence. >> they haven't touched each other, which would be inappropriate. >> it's screaming violence. >> screaming violence. did you hear they had a debate? >> yeah. >> what did you think about the debate? did you watch any of it? >> i thought it was torture. >> why was it torture? >> all the screaming. >> i'm going to show you this video to watch and tell me what you think when we're done. >> he was totally out of control. i said there's a person with a term permt that's got a problem. >> secretary clinton? >> whoo okay. >> see the shimmy of her shoulders. what did you think of that? >> cool. >> i think she's right. >> like what?
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>> kind of boogie. >> time of boogie at the debate. >> what advice would you give donald trump and hillary clinton if they were at this table? >> if they were sitting here, i would say stop interrupting people, follow the golden rule. if you interrupt the other person, then you probably will get interrupted when you're trying to say something. >> it's just that they should like calm down, take a time-out, like talk in a room that's quiet. >> your feeling is, if hillary clinton or donald trump were here, you would say take a time-out? >> no. >> chill? >> relax. >> take a chill pill. just take a chill pill. >> thank you for inviting us to your school. >> you're welcome: it's very nice. >> gary tuchman there. a the way the two candidates interacted on that stage. "saturday night live" had a field day with it. >> coverage because of a
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preexisting condition. number two, you know, if you have syria's health problems. number three -- and number three, women can't be charged -- [ laughter ] >> women can't be charged more than men for health insurance. okay? and number four -- [ laughter ] >> oh, thank goodness for comic relief. thanks for joining us. i'm paula newton for viewers in the u.s. "new day" is just ahead. for everyone else, this is life start in just a moment.
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the election is being rigged by corrupt media pushing completely false allegations and outright lies in an effort to elect her president. >> house speaker paul ryan is rejecting that assertion, that the race is fixed. >> there is no evidence that the electoral process is rigged against anybody. >> i think we should take a drug test prior to the debate. because i don't know what's going on with her. >> this just in. wikileaks releasing what it says are more hacked e-mails from the clinton campaign. >> now, the clinton camp is not saying whether or not the e-mails released by wikileaks are authentic. >> frankly alm
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