tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN November 21, 2018 12:00am-1:00am PST
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♪thisi'm gonna let it shine. ♪ it's energy saving time, ♪ i'm gonna reduce mine. ♪ californians all align ♪ to let our great state shine. ♪ let it shine, ♪ the power's ours to let it shine! ♪ hello and welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm bianca nobilo and this is "cnn newsroom." donald trump suggests the kingdom won't be punished for the killing of an american journalist. plus, u.s. stocks take a tumble. all of the gains made this year have been erased. and crews are finally getting control of the wildfires burning in california. but a new threat may be just
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around the corner. it's been more than two years since donald trump beat hillary clinton for the u.s. presidency. but apparently, he cannot seem to accept his victory and move on. "the new york times" reports that trump wanted the justice department to prosecute clinton and former fbi director james comey. but the white house counsel warned him against it, telling the president it could lead to his impeachment. a report tells cnn that mr. trump has wanted updates into clinton. and mr. trump seems satisfied of saudi arabia's explanation of the murder of jamal khashoggi. he said he would not take reaction against riyadh for khashog khashoggi's death. the president is defying intense pressure from u.s. lawmakers to
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impose stronger sanctions. it insists the cia did not reach a definitive conclusion and the truth may never be known. >> they didn't make a determination. it's just like i said. maybe he did, maybe he didn't. they did not make that asse assessme assessment. the cia has looked at it and studied it a lot. maybe he did. maybe he didn't. let's go to istanbul and the latest. president trump is saying maybe he did, maybe he didn't, referring to the crown prince's knowledge of the killing. how are those remarks likely to be received across the region? >> reporter: well, you know, i don't think it will be much of a surprise, the president's stance. i think he's made it pretty clear from day one that his priority here, as he mentioned,
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is his relationship with saudi arabia, that he's described as a spectacular ally. i think that statement, the way it was written and delivered, that had people surprised in this region. we're talked about a polarized region. you have some countries that are in the saudi camp. they will be pleased with this reaction from the united states. this stance from the president. there's other countries, u.s. allies, that will be concerned and worried about this reaction, whether it is turkey, a nato ally, that saw the killing. it took place at the consulate, on their territory. you know, they see this as a violation of turkey sovereignty, a nato ally that was hoping other countries, especially the united states, would take a stronger stance and make sure
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this doesn't happen again. and then, you've got other countries, for example. qatar. i'm sure they will not see this kind of reaction from the united states. some countries were hoping that, perhaps, this would be a defining moment. this is the moment that the united states will draw a line. they have been concerned about what some would see as the reckless leadership of the crown prince and his policies in the region. maybe the united states, an international community, to an extent, was turning a blind eye to some of the actions of the saudis in the region. they thought maybe this was the moment that that would all change but clearly not. this is about people. over the last few weeks, i've spoken to activists and dissidents, opposition figures
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in this region who will tell you it is never easy to be critical of governments in this part of the world. they always felt that their life is in danger. but with the killing of jamal khashoggi, they say they fear for their lives even more right now. they were saying, unless the international community, unless the united states, holds the saudis accountable for that killing, they fear there will be many more jamals. >> thank you for your reporting. for more, now, on the implications on this, kate andrews joins us. thank you for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> you know your economics. and the president has said explicit explicitly, that any deal with saudi arabia would cost hundreds
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of thousands of jobs. do you think it's wise for a president to be explicit about that transactional thinking? >> i do. a lot of americans have felt uncomfortable with our relationship with saudi arabia. it feels tactical. we want to have allies in the region, especially with countries like aairan becoming more aggressive over the years. but no one has come out and said, we're going to turn a blind eye about a murder because we value the investment and the american jobs. i any, as horrible as i found donald trump's comments, i think they're timely. i think it's important that americans recognize the trade-off that goes on with saudi arabia. it's one of our biggest hypocrisies. we're a country that claims to hand up for human rights and we turn a blind eye on so many occasions. not only to this horrific murder. but to the treatment of women and minorities in saudi arabia. perhaps more people will look up
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and say the president is being honest about our relationship with saudi arabia and maybe we should take a stand. >> and in the areas that the president doesn't turn a blind eye. these are reports that the president was trying to prosecute hillary clinton and james comey. what do you make of them? >> in america, we don't bully our political foes. to implicate somebody you were running against in an election after the fact is worrying. for donald trump, he knows that with hillary clinton being investigated, that plays to his base. that helped him in the election. he got a bump in the polls. there's no question from his tactical point of view, he wants to see the investigation. i think he's a bad winner. when you were introducing us on cnn, he is struggling to accept the fact that he won. this isn't about her anymore.
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>> if you can explain to our viewers why they were regard those actions as abuse of power. >> when you approach the deputy attorney general suggesting that somebody you just beat in an election should see prison time, you're going into murky territory. nobody should be above the law. and there were legitimate questions around the 2016 campaign with both candidates if some of their actions should be investigated. i'm not opposed to that in the slightest. but donald trump is president. it's his actions that need to be the most accountable. and to be spending his political capital to put his opponent behind bars is not where you want the president channeling his efforts. >> also, lots of news coming out of the white house, as we -- >> the e-mails. >> as we expected. what do you make of this story? donald trump's daughter, ivanka, reportedly using her personal e-mail account for business. explain why that's precarious
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for somebody in her decision. and are the democrats justified in their resistance to that and their intention to investigate? >> it's remarkable that a president who ran half of his campaign on the fact that hillary clinton had this private e-mail server, was sending work e-mails from a private account, to be in a position, that not just his daughter, but a senior member on his team, has e-mails on her private account. the reason they were able to find her e-mails is she didn't have them on a private server. there are differences. but legally, you're not supposed to have documents on your personal e-mail or personal computer. they are sensitive. they could be classified information. that can be a threat to american security. but also, we have mid-level managers in government getting jail time for fined for far less explicitly bad circumstances in where they put a work e-mail on
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their private tone or taking something out of the office. it feels like there's a two-tier system here for the hillary clinton and ivankas in the world and then everybody else. >> thank you for going over the politics with us. thank you. now, the trading day is just getting started in the financial capitals of europe. stocks in london, frankfurt, paris and zurich are looking to rebound. it's early to get a drax direction of the day. hong kong's shanghai has modest gains. on wall street, the dow dropped 550 points, wiping out all its gains for the year. tech companies like apple, amazon, facebook and netflix have been a drag on nasdaq, as well. let's head to abu dhabi and the emerging markets director,
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jo what is driving the nervous sentiment? >> it's being led by wall street. there's no doubt about that, bian bianca. we've seen the washout on wall street on the last two months of trading. how much do we need to see further selling before we correct after years of gains. we were down better than 600 points. with the loss of 550 points, it's messy. the s&p 500, the broader index of the technology companies is down 10% from the september highs. let's bring up the asian tokyo and south korea are down slightly. that was the wider trend, down slightly throughout asia. not bad considering what we saw. you talked about the technology sell-off. this is a predominant theme.
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it has a spillover effect for economies like china and southeast asia, in thailand, the so-called supply chain. there are worries here going into 2019 that the growth is going to be slowing down, even for christmas buying someone 2018. the u.s. economy is slowing down and the final leg is the financials themselves. president trump was cleaning on the federal reserve, saying this is a worry for us, with the federal reserve moving interest rates higher. this puts pressure on the emerging market currencies around the world and pressure on the stock markets, as well. it's a moving game here. and the u.s. president, keeping the pressure on china and the federal reserve, which keeps investors very nervous with the values we've seen on wall street for the last 24 months. >> john, there are big political
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risks that are driving markets. take us through those. >> i think we're downplaying a story that you're glued on. i'm saying downplaying the financial risks because of brexit and what is happening on downing street. or what's not happening on downing street because we don't have clarity. is not okay for the u.k. markets. this could send a shock wave through the heart of europe, i'm thinking of france and germany. the second one we should consider here, this will play out in the early trading, is italy. we talk about the political challenges of italy. but the $2 trillion risk for the rest of europe. you can have two columns going lower? 2019, the u.k. and italy. i talked about the china trade risk. the other one here is the risk of oil. donald trump when he gave the support to the crown prince of saudi arabia and for the king,
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as well, he thanked saudi arabia for not taking action on oil. for providing oil for the last six months but a strong hint, don't think about cutting oil as a quid pro quo as my support for you. this is going to make the december 6th, 7th meeting interesting in vienna. we saw a sharp sell-off of 6% to 8%. donald trump wants to keep them lower for the united states. saudi arabia and the gulf countries that i'm sitting here, would like to see it higher. they want to go to the selling pressure of 2015-'16 again. and down the road, dropping demand would mean downward pressure on oil prices. >> john, thank you for your reporting. now, i'm joined by vicki bryce, an economist for research
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and also author of the book, "economics." john was just talking about brexit and the european markets. let's talk about this. i was freezing at downing street yesterday, it seems apt. how much is riding in terms of the markets in the u.k. and in europe on getting a deal this week on signing this off? >> it's interesting. when an agreement came back, supposedly, with the full acceptance of the e.u., 27, and the negotiators in the u.k., the markets seemed happy. there was at least some progress. and the pound recovered a little bit. and then, of course, everything went wrong, given that we've had so many resignations from the cap n cabinets and other items from the ministers. and the challenge for theresa may's leadership.
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could be a vote of confidence already but it hasn't materialized. in a way, theresa may has survived and has gone back. what she hopes to do in a summit is actually sign that agreement, with all of the details being now. there's a political agreement. not just a withdraw agreement, which sets out the terms of the -- with which we're leaving the e.u., in terms of how much we have to pay. what happens to u.k. citizens here and abroad. now, she may sign that, once we get a little more information on what this -- why the political agreement for the future says because it's attached to this. there's a withdraw agreement and a political statement, in terms of what may happen in the future, in no way binding. she could sign that. she would be prime minister by sunday.
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then, does she get it through parliament. the europeans were saying, maybe we've given too many concessions to the u.k. they're not all happy about this. but it's been a compromise of business for the moment, seems happy to accept. >> presumably, a lot of the value tillty was built in. >> to a point. it changes from day-to-day. we don't know the detail of what the trading arrangement is going to be in the future. if we get a transition period from the start of march next year, we're talk about possible extending it to 2022. that suggests there's uncertainty for both sides. in reality, there would need to be so much negotiation during it. and there's a lot of concern whether in fact we might be withdrawing various things that we agreed to do on paper but not necessarily finding them
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binding, and therefore accepting them on regulation. huge areas that are not covered. 80% of the u.k. economy. you look at what's going on in europe and the serious slowdown of what's taking place. the problems with italy, which has been a little bit on that, as well. basically, when you look at europe, you wonder, is it actually entering quite a slow period of growth? suk not going to grow fast if there is a deal that's signed. the markets are going to correct a little today or beginning to look like there might be correction. not a big one. a lot remains to be seen. will the deal be approved by parliament? >> that's the big question. vicki price, thank you so much for joining us. still to come --
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welcome back. we're tracking developments in hong kong. a u.s. aircraft carrier strike group has arrived. china has blocked a warship from visiting a few months ago. this could be a sign of better ties ahead of the next g-20 summit. ivan explain to our viewers where you are, what's going on and why it's significant. >> well, bianca, i'm giving you a view from a tiny, bobbing motor boat in the harbor of hong kong of a supercarrier. behind me is the "uss ronald reagan." its presence here is
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significant. tensions have been ratcheting up between beijing and washington. and just two months ago, china refused to allow a port of call for an american warship. there's some flash points, notably, the south china sea. that's where china has blamed all of that body of water for itself, amid objections from the u.s. government. this aircraft carrier is performing maneuvers there, with other warships that are paying a visit to this chinese port. you have the trade war being waged between beijing and washington. and there are some who believe that maybe there is hope here for ratcheting down the tensions. on tuesday, just yesterday, this same vessel, welcomed a chinese delegation, welcomed a senior
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chinese military commander, aboard its deck, which is bristling with u.s. fighter jets. perhaps that can be interpreted as a sign that both sides are calling on the tensions of an anticipated face-to-face meeting between ping and donald trump. that's set to take place later this month at the g-20 summit in argentin argentina. >> how has this gesture been received where you are by people what can see what's going on? or the media? is it getting a good reception? is there a goodwill trying to soften the relationship? >> i'll just give you the personal reaction. i was pretty surprised when i saw this giant ship, again, bristling with fighter jets,
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steaming past my apartment window a couple of hours ago. it is being reported in the hong kong press. it was front page news when "uss wasp" was denied a port of call here a couple months ago. this is an example of what the u.s. navy gauges in, naval diplomacy. ports of call by u.s. warships is a sign that countries that may have a difference of opinion, not always agree, welcome each other's warships i ports. the fact this giant floating military -- piece of military equipment is being allowed here is a sign, perhaps, that the chinese are being more welcoming of the u.s. navy, despite the differences they have in other areas. i'll just remind you, this same ship leading a u.s. naval strike
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group was operating in the south china sea, the contested waters, just days ago. but now, it's being welcomed here in this chinese harbor. >> not every day you see ivan bobbing off of the coast of hong kong in a little boat. the global police organization interpol has chosen its new leader. we're live from dubai with all of the details. ds that take care of you. that's me in back in 1987, when i gave isotoner gloves to all my teammates. now i have a different set of teammates. my family. and they all want isotoner gloves for christmas because they keep getting better. there's smartouch. for selfies whenever, wherever. then there's four way stretch for flexibility. they even have smartdri. see? stays dry. so get isotoner gloves for the whole family. take care of the hands that take care of you.
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i'm bianca nobilo, with a check of the headlines this half hour. donald trump wanted the u.s. justice department to prosecute hillary clinton but was warned against it by the white house counsel. according to cnn, the president has asked for reports about investigations into his former opponent. in the aftermath of jamal khashoggi's death, there is evidence that the crown prince ordered the killing. interpol has chosen kim jong yang as the leader of interpol. he is to replace the other leader that left in mysterious circumstances. we go to dawe bubai with the la. you're in dubai where this
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election happened. talk about us about who kim jong yang is and whether this was the expected result. >> reporter: mr. kim is the former vice president of interpol. before that, he was a conventional police commissioner in south korea. he had broad support, particularly from western countries, who were very anxious, indeed, about the possible election of his rival for the ftpresidency of interpo. the rival, his name, alexander, and he was anticipated, according to many, to be likely to take the winning post. it turns out that mr. kim has
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been elected. i think that would mean there is a sigh of relief being breathed. not least because the chinese former president of interpol was arrested on his return home about six weeks ago, accused of corruption charges. interpol, at that time, was accused of its arrest of the senior official, accepting the resignation letter from him that they wouldn't be he wasn't sure he was under duress. on top of that, there was a concern that if a russian was elected to the post, that interpol might be used to chase down the opponents of vladimir putin around the world. there's been some form for that. the russians are trying to issue a red notice, falsely described as an arrest warrant, for
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opponents of the putin government. he is going to remain in post. he is also a vice president of interpol. he remains a man of influence in this international police body. for now, there is a generalized sigh of relief, that a well-known, much-respected police bureaucrat, without the political agenda is going to have the top job, bianca. >> do you think the concerns over having a russian official in the top job was rampant. some said it would be like having a fox in the hen house. were they the most influential factor behind this decision? >> reporter: well, i think that the united states made its views clear. so did the united kingdom.
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it's not strictly true that the president would be the fox in charge of the hen house. we were speaking to interpol officials earlier on. their spokeswoman saying the president's role is largely ceremonial. the access to data, which is the most sensitive aspect of this, is controlled by international interpol offices. and there's no right that a russian president or a chinese president or a british or american president, would be able to do a deep dive into the filing system, if you like, and use that to littal ends. that said, you get to change it, fashion it, select who sits on the committees. that would have given russia, certainly from the western perspective, undue influence inside interpol. but those fears are now over.
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and interpol is back in western safe hands. vladimir putin is probably grinding his teeth over this result. >> thanks for your reporting, sam. sam for us there in dubai with the latest on kim jong jiang being the most interpol chief. now, renault wants accusations against ghosn. renault is taking charge of day-to-day operations while it investigates the claims. how are investors reacting to all of this news? >> interesting, the share price just opened. the european markets are open. and the share price is slightly higher. the crisis, as we were seeing it, may have stalled. you have to bear in mind, this is a stock that's lost ground in the last few days. now, yesterday, what we had,
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late last night, i was here, as well, bianca, they met. they decided they would keep carlos ghosn in as chairman. they have an acting ceo in the meantime. will it be enough to satisfy the french government? to hear any moment from bruno lemaire. you have to keep in mind that it's the biggest stake holder in renault. and he said that he's not capable of leading the company. he's under arrest in japan. hopefully this interim management will be enough to please him. he was meeting with the management team this morning. we'll late to hear from him. >> what is the latest on the man himself? >> this is the thing. we have not heard from carlos ghosn. he's been under arrest since monday. japanese prosecutors have told us what he's accused of.
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he's accused of alcoholic beverage collaborating. there were other acts of misconduct flagged. and there were other reports from nhk about various exotic homes. but we have not heard from the man himself yet. it's a hard story to report on because, frankly, the one person we want to hear from is silent. >> was this the first that anybody had ever heard about allegations against him? a whistleblower report had happened at nissan. i think it was that japanese prosecutors came out with it on monday and arrested carlos ghosn. that's when it fell into media hands. and now, the board rooms of all three cars are having to decide what to do next. nissan's ceo suggested they
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welcome back. as firefighters work to contain the two wildfires burning in california, the state may be facing another big problem, heavy rain is in the forecast. that could mean flash flooding and mudslides in the areas that have been scorched. the death toll from the fires now stands at 84. many more people are still unaccounted for. crews are now racing to find more possible victims before the bad weather strikes.
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>> when the rain comes, what should happen is going to con l consolidate that material and pack it down. it's going to present more like soil. anything we find or hope to find is still there, is going to be very -- it's going to make a difficult task that much more difficult. >> meteorologist ivan cabrera joins us more with the rain moving to california. i say finally, but as you were tell megating me the last hour, gives them more problems. >> the fire without the rauinfal is already 75% contained. in a way, ironically, we don't want the rain. the rain is going to make things worse. we'll talk about the mud flows in a second here. we've had california's worst fire ever, 152,250 acres. here comes the pacific moisture. the fire late this season is not
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typic typical. we get the storms from the coast and it will come in hard and heavy. day one is today. day two, and then, day three. this is a multiday event right on top of northern california. as far as the rainfall tallies, we're talking about 3 to 5 inches. it looks like the worst area would be right over paradise here. this is not good. a three-day, five-inch rainfall event for northern california. flash flood watches are in effect. that's going to be a big threat, along with the mudslides and the debris flow, that we're expecting with the rain mixing with the burnt soil there. there you see the improvement on saturday. for the next three days, it will be raining and raining heavily. let's talk about why this is a big threat. we had the fires. they have been put out for the most part, at 75% containment.
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but the rain is going to come in. typically, when you have the vegetation, that rain is going to get absorbed by trees and brush. not the case this time. that's going to fall on cement. one thing that's going to happen, it will run down the hill quickly. when it mixes with the ash and that burnt topsoil, what you get is a muddy mess. that's going to be coming down the hills, which is why we had to evacuate folks in the foothill there's. this is going to create a significant problem, i think. we had this last year in the fire season. we have multiple deaths as a result of that. we have to watch this carefully. a big threat on top of that -- we had california here. this is going to happen wednesday, thursday and into friday. >> ivan cabrera, thank you so much. a suicide bombing in kabul has killed at least 50 people, in one of the deadliest attacks in the afghan capital this year.
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the bombing targeted religious scholars who had gathered in a hall to market the birthday of the prophet muhammad. the security situation has deteriorated in recent months, despite diplomaticest ic effort end the war. in yemen, starvation is one of the most brutal killers. 75,000 children under 5 may have died from hunger or disease. for more, cnn's ben wedeman is live in beirut, lebanon. thanks for joining us. what does this new analysis tell us from how severe the humanitarian disaster is in yemen. >> reporter: well, bianca, war is always an obscenity. but this report underscores how
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horrific the war in yemen is. keep in mind, around 10,000 people have been killed in the fighting. according to save the children, around 85 children under the age of 5 have died from what they describe as severe acute mall nutriti nutrition. this is not a natural disaster. this is a manmade catastrophe caused by this war between saudi arabia, the richest country in the arab world, against a faction in yemen, which is the poorest country in the arab world. according to the u.n., 22 million people out of 28 million people are in need of some aid or food assistance. they believe that the u.n. says in 2018, 400,000 yemeni children will suffer from, again, this
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term, severe acute malnutrition, which is, as i said, starvation. yesterday, saudi arabia and the united arab emirates, which are in this war against yemen, announced they will provide $500 million in food aid to yemen. but they are spending more than that in this war against their opponent in yemen. >> ben, you referenced this was a manmade crisis. does reports like this help move the dial to bring conflicts like this to an end? does it have an effect? >> reporter: if you went through president trump's interesting statement regarding saudi arabia and the killing, the murder of
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jamal khashoggi, it's clear he doesn't care too much. he's much more interested in the money that comes from saudi arabia, than the havoc being wreaked on children under 5 in yemen, or a washington-opposed columnist. we know that martin griffith, the envoy for yemen, is trying to bring the warring parties to peace talks that are supposed to be held in sweden before the end of the year. but certainly, the signal that came from washington was, this war is not -- bringing this war to an end is not a high priority for the united states. bianca? >> ben wedeman, thank you very much for your reporting. we're going to take a short break. i'll be back with more news after this. my name is jeff sheldon, and i'm the founder of ugmonk. before shipstation it was crazy. it's great when you see a hundred orders come in, a hundred orders come in, but then you realize i've got a hundred orders i have to ship out.
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cnn spoke with zuckerberg about where the company is headed and if sheryl sandberg will remain in charge alongside him. >> there's a lot of questions about sheryl sandberg's role. can you say she will stay in her role? >> look, sheryl is an important part of this company, and is leading efforts to address the issues we've had. if you look at the progress we've made in 12 to 18 months around elections or content, sheryl is leading a lot of that work. she's been an important partner for me for ten years. i'm really proud of the work we've done together. and i hope we work together for decades more to come. >> you are ceo and chairman of facebook. that's an extraordinary amount of power, given that you rule a kingdom of 2 billion people digitally. shouldn't your power be checked? >> yes. i think that ultimately the issues that we're working on
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here, you know, things like, preventing interference in elections from other countries, finding the balance between giving people a voice and keeping people safe. these are not issues that one company can address. let me give you an example of a place where i think independent governance is helpful. one of the things we're going to start rolling out season, is basically, letting people in the community, get an independent appeal when they feel like their content is taken down in a way that doesn't fit with our community standards. now, you know, you post something. if someone else reports it, we might take it down if we find that it's hate speech or violates our policies. if you disagree, you can appeal and you'll be able to appeal to an independent body. that's an example where, that independent body will have real teeth and power and will be transparent in the decision that they're making.
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if i want to overrule that independent body, i'm not going to be able to. >> you're not stepping down as chairman? >> that's not the plan. >> that's not the plan. would anything change that? >> i mean, eventually, overtime. i'm not going to be doing this forever. but i certainly am not currently thinking that makes sense. >> facebook founder and ceo, mark zuckerberg, talking exclusively with our laurie segall. you've been watching "cnn newsroom." "early start" is next for our viewers in the united states. and everyone else, "cnn newsroom" starts after this break. welcome to emirates mr. jones. just sit back, relax and let us entertain you... ...with over 3,500 channels of entertainment, including the latest movies and box sets
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the president using the justice department to try to get to doj officials to prosecute hillary clinton. >> not stepping down as chairman. >> that's not true. >> a defiant mark zuckerberg vows to stay on the job. the embattled face to face. keep romaine lettuce off your thanksgiving table. e. coli forcing that warning from health officials. and temperatures taking an epically cold turn. windchills in the single digits in new york for thanksgiving. putting the balloons for the parade in jeopardy. >> there goes my thanksgiving plans. that's all
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