tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN April 28, 2018 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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after the summit, kim jung-un and moon jae-in vow to end the korean war, but they can't do it alone. so what happens next? the u.s. president and german chancellor meet in washington. they are talking trade and iran. plus this -- ♪ oh, yeah. abba isn't done yet. look out dancing queen, you have company. the band releases a new song. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the
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world. that story is coming up. we're live in atlanta. i'm natalie allen. >> a writer back there is really excited about it. i'm george howell from cnn world headquarters in atlanta. "newsroom" starts right now. and we begin with the breakthrough between south and north korea. state media are hailing it as historic. kim jung-un appeared affable and relaxed as he crossed into the south for a day long summit with president trump moon jae-in. >> at the conclusion, kim and mr. moon vowed to formally end the korean war and to denuclearize the peninsula. donald trump also tweeted his approval, he wrote korean war to end. the united states and all of its great people should be very proud of what is now taking place in korea. he also had this to say.
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>> i think i have a responsibility. i think other presidents should have done it. i think the responsibility has fallen on the shoulders of the president of the united states. and i think we have -- i think i have a responsibility to see if i can do it. and if i can't do it, it will be a very tough time is for a lot of countries and a lot of people. it is certainly something that i hope that i can do for the world. this is beyond the united states. this is a world problem. and it is something that i hope that i'm able to do for the world. >> the u.s. president taking the credit, but there is still room to go here. let's bring in paula hancocks who covered the summit. thank you for your time today. look, the day after this historic meeting between the leaders of north and south korea, what is the overall sense there in seoul for people who watched on about what they witnessed and where things go from here?
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>> reporter: i think there is a certain amount of optimism basically because the optics were just so powerful. but there is also optimism because many people in south korea want to believe that this could market change especially when you consider where we were just a matter of six months ago. the tensions were incredibly high on the korean peninsula last year. the intense nuclear missile testing was unprecedented in north korean history. so i think the fact that we are seeing these kind of images that the leaders of north and south korea embracing and smiling, stepping over on the mdl, the military demarcation line, into the south and into the north with the south korean president and then back into the south, these kind of images are extremely powerful. and certainly i think for many south koreans they will be relieved that we're talking when potential peace and not missiles. having said that, there is still a huge amount of sceptickeptici because south koreans have been here before. but the optics are good and you
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shouldn't take away from the fact that this was an extremely well planned show. denuclearization of the korean peninsula and a vow to end the korean war. together on the south side of the divide, president and supreme leader dlifsh teliver t aspirational decree, announce what would have been unimaginable just 12 months ago when the north threatened to turn seoul into a sea of fire. >> translator: today we have agreed that a complete denuclearization will be achieved. that is our common goal. >> reporter: this historic moment after a day made for division and the history books. kim jung-un gripped president moon's hand and steps over the simple concrete line that represents a korea divided for generations. hand-in-hand they take a symbolic and unscripted step
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into the north. kim is now the first to travel to the south since the armistice in 1953. >> translator: i came here with a mindset that i'm standing at the starting line of the new history of the north/south relationship. >> reporter: a unified korea remains a long way off. for now it is about guaranteeing survival. the north needs relief from biting sanctions. for the south and the watching world, it is the promise of denuclearization. but an afternoon walk in a dmz garden offers the leaders a chance for private discussion. stern faces betray an intense conference. pageant friday returns as the men meet their wives for a banquet, the menu sourced from across the peninsula offers a reminder of what unites the two before millions across both koreas and around the world wait for what will happen when donald
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trump comes to the table. it is interesting also to see how state run media has covered this. there are a number of news articles already about what happened, about the tree planting, about how they stepped over the mdl of course mentioning the fact that president moon also stepped into the northern side of the dmz. so it is a very different tone that we're seeing from north korean state run media which means that it is a different tone that the north korean people are being shown now. not speaking of a puppet government as they often did when it came to south korea as they don't believe the government is legitimate, but talking about president moon jae-in. so we're seeing a sea change as well in what the north korean people are being told. >> that is really insightful. thank you for pointing that out. and thank you for the report, paula. we'll stay in touch with you. before the summit ended, we heard even more from the south korean president and his north
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korean counterpart about the peninsula's future. >> but they were short on specifics about how peace would be achieved. >> translator: we believe that the dark shadows that gloomed over the korean peninsula, the glooming of the war, have been removed and we have a path to peace. we are able to determine the fate of our people on our two sides. >> translator: the meeting today and results we were able to weave together are only the beginning and it will be the tip of the iceberg to what we are going to be able to achieve in the future. >> the u.s. secretary of defense is expressing high hopes about dealing with north korea. >> but general james mattis told reporters at the pentagon he doesn't want to assume anything at this point. listen. >> i don't have a crystal ball. i can tell you we are optimistic right now that there is opportunity here that we have never enjoyed since 1950. so we're going to have to see what they produce. but that is going to take
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diplomats working and i'm not going to calculate in advance anything. >> it is historic, but a lot of questions. let's bring in jasper kim to talk about it, director of the center for conflict management live from seoul. thank you so much for your time today. so a great deal of hopefulness around this summit, but let's talk about these vague terms and statements. first the very general agreement signed by the president moon and chairman kim to end the korean war. but given how short in detail it is, how difficult do you think it will be for these leaders to agree to specific terms? >> well, george, it all depends on trust and chemistry. these two things go hand-in-hand especially at the very top leadership command change as we will see here in the next stage with kim jung-un and donald trump. i mean all these agreements, whatever form they may come in, the 1994 agreed framework, the
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2000 framework, 2007, theyfairl they have broad language upon which the leaders can interpret and extrapolate what they want and take that home to their constituents and claim wins. is so when kim jung-un meets donald trump, they will have to barrel down on these issues. and i don't think that it will get into granular level of detail, but it will get into more detail, that is a necessity. and this is where the elected leaders on the u.s. side and south korea, that is their job, to take it past the finish line. >> again these hopeful images, but as the saying go, the devil is always in the details around the word denuclearization. what might that mean for north korea, how that might be different for south korea or for the united states? >> well, that is a great question. i think if the definition of denuclearization is broad based enough as these agreements tend to be if you parse through the language of past agreements
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between north korea and other parties, then you can interpret whatever you want in it and that is the virtue of an agreement that is very broad. of course on the flip side of it, it is not detailed enough so that it doesn't have all the steps and verification processes and the parties explicitly stated by name. so you can only get what you can take from it. these two leaders, kim jung-un and donald trump and kim jung-un and moon jae-in, they only have a limited constrained amount of time to speak about things. so if they come away with any type of agreement in form that they can hail back to their respective constituents, i think if they said we got to yes, that will be a success metric that has been met. >> so this meeting between these two leaders now in the history books. all eyes ahead now to this possible meeting between kim jung-un and the u.s. president donald trump. did friday's meeting at the dmz lay significant ground work for that and what do you believe north korea will have to do in
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the weeks ahead of it? >> yeah, well, i think the answer is an emphatic yes. what these two leaders from both koreas, i think if anything, they met the expectations probably exceeded it and the up side -- the down side is that the next iteration of this meeting between the u.s. and north korea, from the u.s.'s perspective and donald trump's perspective, he doesn't want to be upstaged at all. he doesn't want the opening act to be greater than the act itself. and that is how he sees things as a former media person. so he might be concerned about that and he will try to upstage what has just happened because the visuals and optics, the stage craft of it all, something that steven spielberg couldn't have choreographed to that level. and in terms of moving forward, it is really unclear what has to be done, but i think it all depends what happens when kim jung-un and donald trump walk into that room and they basically sniff each other out,
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can i trust this person. that is the critical issue. and the more they trust and the more detailed they will be in the agreement if there is one. >> but again, you can't underscore it more the optics will certainly be important. and what could derail those optics? the details. we'll have to wait and see. thank you so much for your time jasper kim. >> he makes a good point. maybe we can get steven spielberg to help orchestrate it, make it look good. all right. coming up here, new developments in the russian meddling investigation. remember that russian lawyer from the trump tower meeting with trump campaign officials? she is apparently not who she said she was. >> we'll tell you more about that ahead. plus the leaders of germany and the u.s., they got together on friday and they didn't exactly see eye to eye on several issues. we'll take a look ahead at one of the biggest sticking points as "cnn newsroom" pushes on. so start your search with our teams of specialists at cancer treatment centers of america.
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>> and there is new information on that russian attorney who is now at that infamous trump tower meeting with the trump campaign officials. jim sciutto has details for us. >> reporter: the russian lawyer who met with trump campaign officials in 2016 touted as having dirt on hillary clinton now admits that she has closer ties to the kremlin than she previously disclosed. in fact, she calls herself an informant for the russian government crititing new e-mail "new york times" reports that natalia veselitskaya someone's worked with the top prosecutor, i am a lawyer and i am an informant, she told nbc news. since 2013, i've been actively communicating with the officer h. office of the russian prosecutor junior. last year veselnitskaya said just the opposite. >> have you ever worked for the russian government, do you have connections to the russian government? >> translator: no. >> reporter: the trump tower meeting is of interest to special counsel robert mueller
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for two potential reasons. first, to see if there is evidence that the trump campaign colluded with the russian government during the campaign. and second, to see if the president attempted to obstruct justice buys helping to draft a misleading explanation for what was discussed in the meeting. ranking democrat adam schiff said the lawyer's revelation makes russia's intentions clear clearer. >> what is the importance of this admission that she wasn't a private attorney, but working in effect for the russian government? >> it corroborates of what we have seen of veselnitskaya, of her contacts within the russian government as well as her persi persistence in terms of putin's top priorities, this is someone on working on behalf of the kremlin. >> reporter: notably schiff says that veselnitskaya reached back out to trump aides after trump won the election. >> you're saying it has the impression of a quid pro quo? >> it certainly does. certainly the russians thought that they had reason to believer
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after the campaign that they now might get the help that they sought in that meeting at trump tower. >> reporter: the revelations come as republicans released a redacted report concludesing that they found no evidence of collusion between the trump campaign and russia. the republicans however did fault the campaign for meeting with the russian lawyer saying it, quote, demonstrated poor judgment. and they criticized trump's repeated praise for wikileaks. >> wikileaks, i love wikileaks. >> reporter: stating it found, quote, the trump campaign's periodic praise for and communications with wikileaks a hostile foreign organization to be highly objectionable and inconsistent with u.s. national security interests. president trump braispraised th report. >> it was a great report. no collusion which i knew anyway, no coordination, no nothing. takes wit it is a wupitc witch hunt. >> reporter: in other findings, michael flynn contacted the russian government earlier than previously known.
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meeting with sergey kislyak at his residence, a meeting requested by either flynn or his son. the report says that the meeting was later described by general flynn's son in an e-mail to the russian embassy as very productive. also in 2015, trump's personal lawyer michael cohen and russian american business associate felix sadr were involved in efforts to cement ties between then candidate trump and russian president vladimir putin. during an e-mail exchange about building a trump tower in moscow, sadr wrote to cohen, if, quote, putin gets on stage donald for a ribbon cutting, donald owns the republican nomination. and more revelations contained in the democratic version of the house intelligence report, evidence of communications between russians involved in that june 2016 trump tower meeting, reaching out to the trump family, and associates, days after trump's election, including discussions of possible business deals, certainly information, certainly
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communications that the special counsel robert mueller would be asking questions about as well. jim sciutto, cnn, washington. >> thank you for that report. and we saw the german chancellor angela merkel there in jim's report. she is the latest european leader to urge the u.s. president to stick with the iran nuclear deal. >> the two spoke at the white house friday and mr. trump insists that it is a bad deal for the u.s. and that no matter what the u.s. takes a hard line on iran's nuclear capabilities. >> i don't talk about whether or not i'd use military force. it is not appropriate to be talking about. but i can tell you this, they will not be doing nuclear weapons. that i can tell you. okay? they won't be doing nuclear weapons. you can bank on it. >> chancellor merkel admits the agreement is anything but perfect, but that it is important first step towards curbing iran's nuclear ambitions. and is essential for europe. >> translator: all of the region
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obviously is of prime importance to us. because it is not 1,000 kilometers away as it is the case for example between the u.s. and syria. but syria and iran are countries that are right on our doorstep. so that is of prime importance for us. and we will continue to be in very close talks on this. >> although it wasn't as chummy as the french president's visit, mr. trump and mrs. merkel say their friendship is strong and he praised her as an extraordinary woman. let's talk more about the meeting now and the iran deal with professor of international politics at city university of london. always good to have you with us. good morning. so president has hosted both leaders from germany and france, two important allies, in the past week. issue one, the iran nuclear deal. both merkel and macron want the u.s. to stay in the deal. but let's listen to what the new secretary of state mike pompeo just said about it. >> been no decision made. so the team is working and i'm sure that we'll have lots of
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conversations and deliver what the president has made clear. absent a substantial fix, absent overcoming the shortcomings, the flaur flaws of the deal, he is unlikely to stay in that deal past this may. >> there you have it right there, certainly pompeo is a hawk energy, likewise john bolton. why is the u.s. down on this agreement with iran? >> i think at the heart of it really if you go deeper into the history of u.s./iran relations since 1979, i think there is a desire fundamentally for regime change. iran's influence in the middle east region has influenced over the last decade or more particularly since the iraq war which opened up iraq itself to a greater level of influence and therefore iranian influence and also in syria and lebanon and yemen. and i think at the end, it is a roll back and containment strategy which possibly has as
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its ultimate goal regime change. so any agreements made with iran that reduce the level of sanctions against it i think is a big problem for the united states policy. so i think that they want to therefore put extra pressure on other areas which are not actually part of the original iran nuclear agreement up is as ballistic missile testing and things like that for example. >> so let's talk about considering what you just said the approach then. even though our close european allies want the u.s. to stay in, this is probably somewhat as well about america first. we do what we want in the trum t era. he certainly did things thhis w with north korea. maybe his hard line approach could work with iran? >> i think the hard line approach never really ended. i think that it was really the fact that iran had used his opportunities in the middle east very well you could say after the iraq war. and i think that the nuclear agreement if you like was a great breakthrough and victory for coercive diplomacy, but in
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the end diplomacy. so yes, of course, we can see in the north korean situation that the united states fire and fury and that kind of thing has had some effect. but i don't think -- i think it is a little bit more complicated than just the united states. a lot of other actors are involved. and kim if you like also pursued a military first, north korea first strategy as well. so i don't think that the two situations are identical, although i think the goals ultimately of the u.s. this both of those situations are very similar. i think both of them ultimately would like regime change. but i think there the biggest road blocks too any kind of progress as well. because if each feels under thre threat, that is a very big red line that is drawn that will be difficult to cross indeed. >> donald trump is willing to
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work on the nuclear program but iran is a no go. is that a bit odd to you? >> with north korea, north korea has nuclear weapons. there is nothing that you can do about it now. they tried everything. they tried sanctions and so on. and they are looking for all sorts of little bits of hope in that. but kim has completed a small but nuclear weapons program. a nuclear state. iran isn't. and its argument is we've signed all these agreements, we're not enriching uranium at the level that it can be weaponized, we are relying on russia for that and some european pals also to provide the uranium for our power plants. but we don't want to be committed forever and ever to those agreements. and hence these sunset clauses because they don't -- they fear that saudi arabia may well begin a nuclear program. and i know that that has been part of the discussion between president trump and the saudi
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regime, as well. >> interesting developments. we'll of course be watching it and we'll talk with you again about it. thanks so much. thank you. the porn star stormy daniels, her lawsuits against president trump and his personal attorney michael choen ohen is hold. a california judge delayed the case for 90 days. cohen requested it citing the ongoing criminal investigation into him and his intention to invoke his right to remain silent. he argued that he wouldn't be able to properly provide information. daniels is suing to get out of an agreement to keep quiet about her alleged affair with mr. trump. per attorney says they plan to appeal the decision. investigators in california have cracked a very old cold case. how dna evidence and ancestry records helped police catch a serial murder suspect. that is ahead. plus protests after a controversial court ruling that involves the rape of a teenage
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reporting 38 militants were killed in yemen. they targeted the interior ministry building. sources say a military base was also hit and at least five people were killed. colombian investigators say a lack of fuel caused a plane to crash that was carrying a brazilian soccer team back in 2016. 71 people died after the plane crashed in to a mountain. the report found that the company managing the charter plane did not properly calculate the amount of fuel needed. and we're learning more about how investigators cracked a string of unsolved murder and rape cases in california. >> arrested for crimes dating back to the 1970s and '80s, police say they believe joseph de'angelo is the notorious golden state killer. stephanie elam was at the court appearance in sacramento and has this report. >> reporter: during the court while handcuffed to a
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wheelchair, joseph de'angelo spoke softly while addressing the judge. he did not enter a plea to murder charges stemming from a case from 40 years ago where he allegedly killed a young married couple. an attorney for de'angelo says the 72-year-old is depressed and fragile. investigators allege he is the golden state killer, a brutal rapist and murderer who terrorized cal ifornians during the '70s and '80s. >> we all knew that we were looking for a needle in a haystack. we founds needle in the hay stack. and it was right here in sacramento. >> reporter: investigators were able to unlock the cold case with a dna sample left by the killer in one of the attacks. >> we ended up generating a dna profile from the golden state killer evidence. and then are with able to take that profile and union load it into an open source public genealogy database called ged match. ged match then is able to search
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that profile against the other public profiles that individuals have placed in there. once we got the initial dna match results, and found very distant relatives, it took us four months. >> reporter: de'angelo is a navy veteran who served aboard a missile cruiser during the vietnam war. he was also a police officer where officials say that he was fired in 1979 for stealing a can of dog repellant and a hammer from a drug store. for 27 years, he worked as a mechanic at a save mart distribution center in roseville. he retired last year. the 72-year-old was taken into custody in citrus heights, a sacramento suburb. >> when he came out of his residence, we had a team in place that was able to take him into custody. he was very surprised by that. >> reporter: for those who survived the attacks like jane carson sandler, relief mixed with shock as new details
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emerge. >> i also lived in citrus heights at this time. so he very well could have been my neighbor. which is just -- i can't imagine. i often wonder how long he had stalked me, where he had first seen me. >> reporter: carson sandler clearly remembers the moment a masked man broke into her home. >> when ran down the hall and had that flashlight in my eyes, and that big butcher knife facing my chest, he immediately said with clenched teeth, shut up or i'll kill you. >> reporter: law enforcement officials believe de'angelo is responsible for 12 murders and more than 50 rapes in at least ten counties. they say he also terrorized some of his victims by phone. >> the fact that he would call his victims years in some cases afterwards just to continuously torment them underscores the type of person he is. >> reporter: he was the type to not leave fingerprints. police were unable to identified
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their suspect until de'angelo expected next in court on may 14. >> amazing break through. across spain, thousands were on the streets after a court ruling cleared five men of a teenager's rape finding them guilty of a lesser crime. >> protesters are demamanding spain change its laws. here is he'yee isa suarez. >> reporter: thousands took to the streets after five men were cleared of a gang rain ofpe of n girl during the running of the bulls two years ago. instead they were convicted of sexual abuse which does not include violence and gave them a nine year sentence. prosecutors were seeking 22
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years for each defendant. >> translator: likewise we impose five years of freedom on probation which will take place. >> reporter: outside thedemonso chanted that is not abuse, that is wac is rape. >> translator: it causes indignation and rage. as i read more you because i'm a lawyer, the more rage i feel. first of all, i think the law should be changed in on order to adapt to international law. therefore, no is no. and there is no need of violence so that it has to be considered as rape. >> reporter: ped trand pedro sa we believe you then and we still believe you. if it wasn't group violence, then what do we understand by
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rape. the official spokesman for spain's government says he will review whether the laws involving sex crimes needed to be updating. the case became known as the wolfpack after the name of a what whatsapp group. they laughed about the incident with their friends on whatsapp. since the beginning of the trial, the case sparked widespread outrage around spain. this as a number of reports of sex attacks at the annual festival have been on the rise. both the prosecution and defense say they will appeal the ruling. the men have denied any wrong doing. isa soares, cnn. well, let's hear it for those protesters. hope that works. a toddler at the center of a legal battle in the uk has died according to his parents' facebook accounts. 23 month old alfi evans had
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degenerative brain condition and had been on life support at a hospital in liverpool. >> measures were withdrawn on monday after his parents lost their legal battles. they wanted to move him to a hospital in italy for treatment, but doctors thought that it would not be in the child's best interests. people around the world followed and supported his family's pleas, including pope francis. he met with alfie's father last week in rome. still ahead here, a family's desperate journey to reach the rather. we look at the migrant caravan at the border. stay with us. listerine® cleans virtually 100%. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. bring out the bold™
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and more demonstrators are expected on the streets in the coming hours. >> pension reforms sparked the protests and a police crackdown led to more violence. president trump president ortega scrapped the reforms, but protesters are still calling him to leave office. this is driving the migrant caravan. >> many have reached tijuana right on the u.s. border, but president trump has made it clear he doesn't want them to cross. as leyla sants i can't iago rep is not stopping the families. >> reporter: the pushing, the walking, the riding, the waiting. the exhaustion. for gabriella, she says she has no choice. this is what she must do to reach this point. off in the distance behind a
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tall fence, for the first time she is getting a glimpse of the united states of america. she says it doesn't seem real that she is that close given all that they have struggled through to get here. we met hernandez in pueblo. on live tv early in her journey with a large group of central american migrants making their way north. she had just gotten off the bus and knowing she was part of a group that had become the latest target of president trump. he called them dangerous. she says a child of this age cannot be dangerous. >> reporter: we tracked her journey as the pregnant mother of two boards more than half a dozen buses for road trips totaling more than 50 hours. we've watched her wipe away are her own tears after realizing
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her is children would sit on mounds of metal on a freight train with little to no money or food, she tried to protect them. a month ago she joined more than a thousand migrants for an annual march north, a caravan calling attention to the plight of the migrant including a number of people planning to seek asylum, a legal way to enter the u.s. under federal law. trump has ordered homeland security not to let what he calls large caravans into the country. attorney general jeff sessions had already said that he would make sure enough u.s. attorneys and judges are in place at the border to rule on the cases of this caravan. about 130 of the migrants plan to turn themselves into
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authorities, volunteer attorneys are helping the migrants who get the chance to plead their case. hernandez says this is about survival. she says the gangs that control her neighborhood in honduras threatened to kill her 6-year-old son. having no faith in any sort of government protection in her own country, she fled. mexico granted many in the caravan temporary permission to be in the country. some have opted to seek asylum in mexico avoiding any possibility of ever dealing with trump. hernandez knows in the u.s. detention is likely, deportation a possibility. her concern now, her family. speak worri she worries she could be separated from her children while in custody. homeland security insists children are only separated to protect the child or if there is any doubt the child is with a legal guardian. as the caravan approaches the u.s. border, their future
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remains unknown. she didn't know what she will do if they can't get in because she can't go back to her country. and yet that uncertainty hasn't stopped them yet. leyla santiago, cnn, mexico. >> showing the difficulties they are undergoing. >> i certainly hope she gets her chance to plead her case when she gets there. >> and speaking of that, headed to the border as well, the u.s. vice president will be there, headed there monday. an administration source says mike pence is set to visit the border town. >> he will be there as part of a fundraising push. pence also visited the border on a texas trip in february. much more ahead here including the return of superstars from the 1970s. ♪ and when you get the chance,
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you are dancing queen, young and sweet only 17 ♪ ♪ >> here we go again, coming up, why fans of the disco pop darlings are celebrating across the world. if yor crohn's symptoms are holding you back, and your current treatment hasn't worked well enough, it may be time for a change. ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn's. entyvio works at the site of inflammation in the gi tract and is clinically proven to help many patients achieve both symptom relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection caused by a virus may be possible.
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meet lewouis arthur charles. he is fifth in line to the throne after his grandfather, prince charmles, his father, an brother and sister. kings named louis are generally associated with france. good. >> but the choice is thought to honor prince philips' uncle. so welcome louis. it is unclear if the duke and duchess will bring the royal newborn to prince harry and meghan markle's wedding in three weeks. you wouldn't want to upstage the bride with a cute baby. so we'll see. >> but the marriage will be the big change for the bride to be. she jeg wrust wrapped up her li with an actress with a fitting story line on her tv show.
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max foster has more on the big day. >> reporter: first a note of reassurance. you didn't miss the royal wedding. if you saw meghan markle get married this week, it was only plea tend f pretends for her tv show. >> i now pronounce you man and wife. >> reporter: as her character sets off on honeymoon, markell bows out of acting to good to focus on her even higher profile role as a senior british royal. much has been made of the cost of her real life wedding. and it will almost certainly rise above $10 million when you take into account the cost of security involved. figures obtained by the press association show the last big royal wedding william and kate's
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in 2011 cost $8.8 million in securities. the rest of the expenses are being met by the royal family, so we'll never really know the true full cost. william though will serve as best man to harry, that confirmed this week. harry served in the same role for his brother in 2011 and guests raved about the speech he gave teasing william. revenge is sweet, william said this week when he was asked if he was looking forward to being best man. max foster, cnn, london. and big news as we close the hour. >> and for the swedish pop group abba, listen up. who is not a fan. the band just announced that it has recorded new songs. here is richard quest. ♪ mama mia, here i go again >> their songs still blair out at wedding parties and karaoke
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get togethers. and whose music has spawned a musical and a movie. now the group is back together more than three decades after calling it quits. >> in just a moment and we were kind of looking at each other because -- and then straight back like no time had passed at all. it was amazing. >> the question is, why now? their instragram page reveals that after ofavatars were made the group, they wanted to sing again. recording two new songs. one called "i still have faith in you." i have faith in them. in 1974, they won the euro vision song contest. and these two married couples hit the big time. amu music factory churning out
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questionable wear and a string of hits. of course appropriately for us money, money, money. some people don't know when to say no. you can even sing and dance like them at the abba museum in stockholm. the museum says abba sold 375 million albums. and once rumored to be sweden's second biggest export after volvo. but talk of a comeback was crushed only a few short years ago. >> we want people to see us as we were during the '70s, that young ambitious energetic group. >> and now thanks to modern technology, recreating their energetic self, abba is back. and so is mama mia, the movie. a sequel due this summer with new songs, a new movie and
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avatars. ♪ take a chance on me >> old fans like me will lap it up. new fans will be found. and abba will live on for the next generation. richard quest, cnn, new york. >> dancing queens are back. i'm ready. >> and we'll be right back after the break. e for just $59. it can lead you on an unexpec ted journey... ...to discover your heritage. get ancestrydna for just $59. the lowest price of the year. only tylenol® rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast, for fast pain relief. tylenol®
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