tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN May 24, 2021 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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viewers joining us here in the united states and around the world. i am rosemary church. just ahead a opposition activist from bell bell araous detained. plus, marjorie taylor greene doubled down on comparing covid mask mandates to the holocaust. what could this mean for the state of her party? raising questions about the origin of covid-19, where it came from and is anybody trying to hide the truth? i will discuss with my guest, dr. celine goaler. good to have you with us. unacceptable and unprecedented and shocking. that's just some of the outrage
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pouring in over the arrest of a activist from belerus. it was the president that ordered a fighter jet to escort the plane where the vocal critic of the president was detained. the plane spent several hours on the ground before it continued on and arrived safely in the lithuanian capital. a passenger described what happened onboard. >> at one moment we just changed the direction of flight and we go down and to the left. after, let's say 2 1/2 minutes, the captain of the crew and the crew say that they are going to land in minutes and don't give a reason why. >> those actions are now drawing strong reaction. the u.s. has condemned the
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forced diversion of the flight and is calling for the activist's release. the european commission president blasted belarus outrageous actions. and fred joins us from berlin. what are you learning about the arrest of the opposition activist and what will likely happen to him now? >> well, it's quite troubling for a lot of people that he is in the detention of the authorities there in belarus, and there was a politician on cnn a couple hours ago and they believe he could indeed face torture by those authorities, and i have witnessed the brutality of the police force when i covered some of the protest that took place there last summer.
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it was really this telegram channel that he's one of the founders of that put in the light some of the police brutality going on, and there's a lot of concern about his safety and about him being in detention. one of the other things we have to keep in mind is he's on the terrorism list, there in bell araous, and there are folks in the opposition that believes he could face the death penalty even. there's a great deal of concern out there. as far as the incident itself is concerned, we heard from one of the folks who was a passenger on that flight. it's something that seems to have come almost out of nowhere as that plane was closer to the lithuanian capital than it was to mince when it was ordered to land in the capital. there was a statement that came out, and a lot of people are
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criticizing it as being fairly weak saying the plane was ordered to fly to the nearest airport, and that is not mentioned in the statement that one of the passengers was not allowed to continue but was arrested and taken off the plane there in mince. >> we talked about the u.s. and european nations' outraged by these actions. what might be the ramifications for him, do you think? >> i think this is a big test for the european union, and if you look at some of the comments made by some of the nations, the eu member nations, you see there is a lot of outrage, and the eu council has a meeting with heads of states to be there and it's the first face-to-face meeting they will have, and it's going to be one of the things that is now very urgently going to be put on the agenda there.
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there are already eu politicians, and the president of lithuania are calling for the european carriers banned from flying into belarus as well. it's really interesting, also, to see the u.s.'s role, because the u.s. put out pretty tough statements, and also the head of the senate foreign relations committee as well. they are making a point to say that it's actually the europeans that are in the lead on all of this, and they are cord tordina with their european counterparts on all of this, and you have a jet that is registered to a company in the european union and it was flying from one european capital to another european capital when it was
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forced to land, and certainly this is a big test for the european union, and there's certainly a lot of people calling for very, very tough action to happen, what exactly they are going to do is something that we could actually see fairly soon, rosemary. >> absolutely. f fred, thanks. and then they are calling on countries to help free him. >> the escalation of refreshens in belarus is the result of impunity, and countries should put much more pressure on this regime personally. >> the international air transports association is calling for an investigation
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into the diversion of the ryanair flight. it writes that it strongly condemns the action and the details are not clear, and a full investigation by competent officials is needed. dominic rob writing we are coordinating, and we mentioned the u.s. condemnation just moments ago, the statement from the secretary of state, in part the shocking act perpetrated by the regime endangers the lives of more than 120 passengers, including u.s. citizens. we stand with the people in their aspirations for a free democratic and prosperous future and support their call for the regime to respect human rights and fundamental freedoms. the political drama in the
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u.s. is stretching from capitol hill to sham election audits in arizona and georgia. national guard troops are leaving washington after more than four months. they were stationed there following the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. this comes as a vote on an independent commission to investigate the capitol riot looks doomed to fail in the senate despite having passed in the house. the 2020 election controversies continue in arizona, a maricopa county official is firing back as a contentious order, and he said there should be a suit over the baseless claim that a data election base was deleted. and local voters in georgia will be allowed to examine copies of
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the mail-in ballots. meanwhile, republican marjorie taylor greene is doubling down on her comments on the mask mandate in the house, and she's comparing them the steps the nazis took to control the jewish population, and greene said this. >> i stand by all of my statements. i said nothing wrong. i think any rational jewish person did not like what happened in nazi germany, and they would not like what is happening with overbearing mask mandates. >> cnn's suzanne malveaux has more on the backlash to the congresswoman's controversial remarks. >> there are a number of lawmakers calling congresswoman marjorie taylor greene's comments outrageous and ignorant, although there doesn't seem to be much appetite from
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the leadership to censure her or punish her, and she has been taken off assignments from previous comments she made considered controversial. some of the lawmakers are speaking out on television and others on twitter, democrats as well as republican colleagues, those colleagues who have been critical mainly of trump, we heard from freshman congressman peter myer, and she's somebody that supported the idea of having an independent bipartisan commission to investigate the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol, and he voted for impeachment of the president. he had some words to say, some criticism about greene's comments and just where she is taking the party. >> any comparisons to the holocaust is beyond reprehensible. this is -- i don't even have
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words to describe how disappointing it is to see this hyperbolic speech that frankly amps up and plays into a lot of the anti-semitism that we have been seeing in our society today. vicious attacks on the streets of new york and in los angeles that should be that i do condemn that in the strongest terms. there's no excuse for that. >> liz cheney is weighing in as well, and she was voted out of her leadership position and she doubled down and has become a standard bearer if you will of the party's truth telling. she tweeted saying this is evil lunacy, and she was joined by adam king zinger. and then you had democratic
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congressman, saying that it was beyond disturbing. she's a deeply troubling person that needs to apologize and resign. gop leadership needs to address her anti-semitism. so far there are no public comments regarding her behavior from the leadership. suz suzanne malveaux, cnn in washington. cnn's senior political analyst, ron brownstein joins me from los angeles good tofr you w with us. >> marjorie taylor greene is doubling down on her offensive comparison of mask mandates to the holocaust. why isn't the gop leadership said anything about this and what might the consequences be? >> well, it's pretty revealing that liz cheney was sanctioned for calling out trump's big lie about the election and marjorie
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taylor greene has preceded unscathed for these offensive comments. two things. first, as i wrote a few months ago the evidence is growing at the extremist wing in the gop, and polling by conservative think tank, a majority of republican voters said it's changing so fast. this is not only rhetorical. this is having real world consequences, as we saw making masking a cultural war, and all 21 states where the highest share of adults have been vaccinated in the u.s. were won by joe biden. 19 of the 21 where the smallest share have been vaccinated were won by donald trump, and making
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the coronavirus into a cultural war is having serious real world consequences. >> it's a real concern. meantime donald trump's big election lie is infecting the state of georgia with morbogus ballot claims, and now a judge ordered a recount, and as the gop continues its effort to support voter rights. what will all of this likely mean for the 2022 midterms? >> well, i don't know how much it's going to mean for the 2022 mid terms. it's a smaller electorate. there may be attempts to subvert the results of the votes, and it's highly likely that we could see a more serious effort to overturn the will of the voters than we did in 2020. as you look at what is happening in state after state, republicans are putting in motion building blocks, laying
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down building blocks to try and deignore or undermine a democratic win. if republicans win the house in the 2022 election, much less win the house and the senate, but we could be heading for a poe tensional constitutional crisis, and every day more evidence accumulates that that's where the party is heading. this is really a fuse that is burning under american democracy and 2024 could be more tumultuous than 2020 as a result. >> the recent house vote to create a panel to investigate the january 6th insurrection, had support from 35 republicans and while the bill has an uncertain future in the senate, what does that signal to you of what is happening to that party? >> if you look at the polling post election, roughly 75 to 80% of republican voters are perfectly fine with everything
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donald trump did after election day, and many of them believe january 6th was a false flag operation. they think it's overstated. but the fact is somewhere between one-fifth and one quarter of republican voters are very uneasy with what trump did and uneasy with a lot of things the party has done since november to call into question the election and the 35 house republicans are reflective of that portion of the republican party. i said before one of the critical questions for american politics in the next few years is what does that faction within the republican coalition do? the evidence with liz cheney being sanctioned and not marjorie taylor greene, and do they simply remain and give their votes to the republican party that many see as radicalizing or do some of them both in 2022 and especially in
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2024 drift toward the alternative biden is offering? it's critical. republicans are depending on traditional voters sticking with them even though they are uneasy with many of the things the party has done with november. >> appreciate your analysis. thanks. >> thanks for having me. with the cease-fire holding damage is being assessed in gaza and plans are being made to rebuild. we will have a report from gaza city. later, more promising signs in the battle against covid-19. we'll take a look. and remove the waste that weighs you down. it also helps lower cholesterol and slows sugar absorption to promote healthy blood sugar levels. so you can feel lighter and more energetic metamucil. support your daily digestive health. and try metamucil fiber thins.
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we are getting word that the deposed miramar leader appeared in person at a court hearing for the first time since february's coup. she and other officials have been detained since the takeover, and she faces charges from possessing walkie-talkie radios to human rights violations. the assistance association for
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political prisoners reports more than 4,000 people are still under detention. with a fragile cease-fire holding the u.s. secretary of state will head to the middle east in the coming days to meet with his israeli and palestinian counterparts, and the u.s. will focus on the reconstruction and the humanitarian situation in gaza right now and insists there eventually has to be a prospect for a peaceful political solution between israel and the palestinians. >> president biden has been very clear that he remains committed to a two-state solution. look, ultimately it's the only way to ensure israel's future as a jewish and democratic state, and what i hope that everybody takes from this is that there isn't positive change and particularly if we can't find a way to help palestinians live
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with more dignity and with more hope, the cycle is likely to repeat itself. >> humanitarian aid is beginning to flow into gaza, but rebuilding all that has been destroyed is a daunting task. ben weedermen is in gaza city. how does this infrastructure get done in the midst of a humanitarian crisis? >> reporter: really the destruction of the infrastructure here is a crisis that has been in place here for almost two decades considering you go back to the beginning to september of 2000. basically gaza, home to 2 million people, has been under a joint egyptian israeli blockade since the middle of 2007, bidding in things like building
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material has been physically difficult because of the blockade, and financially difficult because not a lot of people have much money. but nonetheless people are starting at least to clear up. the feeling is that the cease-fire seems to be holding, but even as people are clearing up here, wherever you go, you hear the same thing, everyone expects at some point in the next few years there will be another war. >> not for the first time and probably not for the last, gaza is digging out. it's over for now. the rubble will be cleared and perhaps the damage repaired, yet one man made catastrophe after another has taken a heavy toll. not far from the wall separating gaza from israel, children of the extended family here search
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for traces of a life shattered. his aunt and three children were crushed to death when a bomb slammed into her home. because the bombing around us was so intense doors and windows were falling on us. we ran to be in a room, she recalls. the last bomb was on this house. she was able to crawl free. the people in this area are mostly farmers but their land often used by militants to fire rockets into israel. in the hospital plastic and reconstruction surgeon is conducting one of eight operations on this day. he first travelled to gaza as a young medical student in the 1980s and has come back regularly every since his task here never ending.
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>> you start running into patients who are injured in multiple attacks. i have had patients who have had injuries in the 2014 war and then were injured in the great return marches or injured in previous conflicts, and then again in this conflict. so you have kind of -- it becomes like an endemic disease, war injuries become like an endemic disease in gaza. >> in the neighborhood here, this man waits for a truck to take his furniture away. his home still intact after bombs obliterated the buildings just next door, but it's now in danger of collapse. he struggled to push the boulder up the hill, only for it to roll to the bottom and then to push it back up all over again. the relief of surviving the war,
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no guarantee you will make it through the next says one gaza resident. >> there's no other option. we have to keep living. we have to rebuild it again and again until one day maybe we can be free. >> in the absence of some sort of resolution such is gaza's fate. of course some sort of resolution, many people here have long concluded that contrary to what secretary blinken is saying, this is not the two-state solution. the two-state solution, they have been trying to push it through for more than two decades and it has not worked and many people are thinking there has to be another way than going back and forth and doing the same thing over and over again, and somehow expecting a different result. rosemary? >> exactly right. b just ahead, intelligence about when and where the first
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cases of covid-19 may have originated is sparking new questions. we're live in beijing with the latest. (vo) i am living with cll and i am living longer. thanks to imbruvica. imbruvica is a prescription medicine for adults with cll or chronic lymphocytic leukemia. it will not work for everyone. imbruvica is the #1 prescribed oral therapy for cll, and it's proven to help people live longer. imbruvica is not chemotherapy. imbruvica can cause serious side effects, which may lead to death.
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when you consider the first vaccine authorized for use by the fda was given back in december. new information is raising more questions, though, about the origins of the coronavirus. most roads in the covid origin story lead to china where the disease first appeared and people first began falling ill. but when the first symptoms or cases emerged is still in question, because some very high-level reports about the timeline are not matching up. u.s. intelligence found several researchers at the wuhan institute became ill and were hospitalized in november of 2019. yet china reported to the world world health organization saying the first patient with covid symptoms was not recorded until nearly a month later. the director of the wuhan national biosafety lab calls the u.s. intel report on those
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hospitalizations a complete lie, according to state media. cnn has reached out to the chinese foreign ministry for comment. cnn's steven chung is with us now live from beijing. how is beijing likely to respond to these new questions about the origin of covid-19? >> well, rosemary the beijing government, the foreign ministry spokesman just responded to this question a few minutes ago, and he not surprisingly, again, issued a very strong denial and pointing to a statement made by the wuhan institute last month saying this institute never game into contact with the covid-19 virus between november 2019, and so again this is the very strong denial and the spokesman
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actually went on to really have, you know, more of the chinese usual spiel about how they are increasingly looking at a multiple origin theory about the virus emerging from different locations around the world at the same time and speaking at a u.s. biomedical lab without providing concrete evidence. this back and forth is not likely to stop because of the latest intelligence reports, and it's only going to be more intensified. what is interesting here, of course, this latest report, most of what is in the report we have heard before. the only interesting new addition is in terms of these researchers being hospital sized -- hospitalized in 2019, and they stopped short of confirming the wuhan lab being the origin
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of the virus when trump was president, and they did say researchers fell ill. we don't know have a lot of definitive evidence of what the researchers were ill with. that's where the debate over the origin is not likely to stop here, rosemary. >> we need more answers, definitely. many thanks. cnn medical analyst, dr. celine gownder joins me from new york, and she's host of the podcast "epidemic." thank you, doctor, for talking with us and all that you do. >> great to be here, rosemary. >> wonderful. let's talk about the u.s. intelligence report that found several researchers at china's wuhan institute became so ill back in november of 2019 that they had to be hospitalized. we don't know if they had
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covid-19, but this is raising new debate about the origins of the covid-19 pandemic. what do you make of all of this? >> you know, rosemary, i think we need a lot more information to understand what this really means. i think for many this might seem like a red flag that you have three people who are hospitalized from that same lab. i do think it's important to understand that in the chinese context people have a lower threshold to go to the hospital for what we might be considered a cough or cold, we could go to urgent care or to our regular doctor and for a number of reasons, some of them cultural, they might present to a hospital. i think it's important not to read more into that than there is evidence for. i think what we need to know are details like what are the lab safety logs showing, other laboratory records, could we get access to the hospital care records, the patient care records for those three lab
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workers? what tests did they have while in the hospital? scanning, radiology? without that information it's really hard to make sense of what happened here. >> the problem with that, of course, is that china has been stonewalling, they have not really cooperated when it comes to trying to find the origins of the coronavirus, which then helps all of the conspiracy theories that move in this direction. of course, we're talking about an accident. some conspeiracy theories sugget it was engineered in the lab. what needs to be done? >> i think that's an excellent point. whenever you have a lack of transparency, when people behave in a way that does not appear to be trustworthy, that's when you have rumors, conspiracy theories and the like start to spread.
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i think china needs to open up its books so to speak to the w.h.o. and international teams. this was not done when the w.h.o. has really tried to get to the bottom of what has happened and there are multiple hypotheses that have yet to be investigated thoroughly. i don't think this was engineered in a lab, and could there have been an accident? yes, that needs to be investigated. could this have been a spillover from wild liar to humans? you would need to be doing widespread investigations on not just domestic animals but wildlife and the like, and what needs to be done has not been done yet. >> in the u.s. we are seeing 25 states plus washington, d.c. reaching 50% of adults being fully vaccinated, and what needs to happen to bring more states up to that standard, and target
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more people to get them vaccinated? >> the 50% threshold is really important, because that's when we saw cases really start to decline in israel, in the uk, that were a bit of us in their vaccine rollout and that's when we really start to see the impact. it's not herd immunity but we are seeing a dramatic increase in hospitalizations and deaths, and it's a tipping point in vaccination. how do we get the remaining people vaccinated? i think you still have a combination of access issues, barriers, and the latin x population, having spanish language services is still a major challenge for many of them, and they are not able to get information in spanish and make an appointment in spanish and go to a vaccination clinic and have somebody explain to them in spanish, and things like having paid time off for work, and let's say you do have side effects, and you could end up
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needing to take one, two, three days off work for each vaccine that you get. i think we need to take into consideration that it's not just about people not trusting the vaccines, but it's practical everyday issues that make it difficult for them to seek it out. >> let's hope that happens and we can get more people onboard with the vaccination process. doctor, thank you so much for talking with us. >> my pleasure. the lava from a volcanic eruption may have stopped but for many the nightmare is just beginning in the democratic republic of congo. we will have details next. and then in the alps, a cable car accident, and we'll have the latest after the break.
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thousands had to flee on saturday at molt and rock flowed toward their homes col du galibier >> the damage had been done col du galibier 11 people were killed as a result of the eruption col d eruption. many residents who fled on foot returned to find their homes destroyed, covered in black moment and rock. >> we were in the market and then we had to run without any belongings. when we returned to the city the houses were burned and some people were left destitute. i got into an accident and got hurt. so we're appealing for assistance and especially for food. we need food because we don't know where we are going to get
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it from. >> one ngo said roughly 600 homes were lost and five schools flattened. they say it will take months to restore the area impacted by the lava. that priority now is to build shelters for those that lost everything. it remains one of the world's most active volcanos and is considered one of the most dangerous. authorities will continue to monitor the situation. italian authorities are opening a multiple manslaughter investigation following a cable car accident that claimed the lives of 14 people on sunday. a child believed to be the only survivor is in critical condition. the accident happened when a cable snapped near the top of a
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mountain, and where the accident happened described the heartbreak circumstances. >> it's a terrible moment for me and our community and the whole of italy, especially in this moment when we were just beginning to restart. these people thought they were going on a nice day out. we are encouraging everybody to get out and stay outside and recover from this terrible moment everybody lived through, and instead this is a fateful destination a. terrible disaster. >> for more let's bring in a cnn contributor, bobby nado. >> of course the focus is on why this happened and why there was not some sort of a safety cable that could have prevented it. there's a multiple manslaughter investigation is fairly standard when a disaster such as this happens, and that gives them a wider reach in terms of
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investigating. they will be looking at the history of the particular cable car company and the focus there right now is, of course, on the 5-year-old survivor and the grave condition this child is in and lost both parents in the accident and it's a tragedy. they are saying it took about ten seconds for this cable car to plummet down, and you can imagine what horror must have been going on inside as they knew what was happening to them. >> horrendous. of course they need to find out what caused this, as you say, having some sort of safety cable would have made the difference. thank you for joining us live from rome. the trail running community in china is mourning the deaths of 21 people after extreme weather hit a 100 kilometer mountain race on saturday. fr frigid temperatures, rain, gale force winds set in hours after the race began.
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some suffered from hypothermia and others went missing, and one survivor said he and 50 others had to take shelter in a cabin and wait for rescuers. just sahead, one of the mos popular players on the pga tour makes history. while phil mickelson's championship is one for the record books. we'll take a look. to rinse, dry and shine your dishes. solve 3 problems at once with finish jetdry 3in1. our new scented oils give you our best smelling scents. now crafted with more natural ingredients
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the pandemic delayed the tokyo olympics and gave u.s. gymnast simone biles plenty of time to train and it shows in her first competition in more than 18 months, she nailed a history-making move. take a look. >> absolutely unbelievable to watch every single time. here we go. wow. >> magnificent. the 24-year-old defending world champion became the first woman to land the double pike vault, a move previously only done by men
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and that helped her to easily defender title. at age 50, golfer phil mickelson has made history of the pga championship. cnn's don riddell has more on the thrilling win from one of the all-time greats. >> one of the most beloved, and now the oldest man to win a major title breaking a record since before man walked on the moon. a the 50-year-old mickelson rolled back the years, surviving a roller coaster ride on sunday afternoon to land his sixth overall title. when i asked him to put his
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achievement into words, you could sense it was emotional. >> certainly one i will cherish my entire life. i don't know how to describe the feeling of excitement and fulfillment and accomplishment to do something when, you know, at this magnitude when very few people thought that i could. >> this was a typical mickelson moment containing spells as well as thrills, and in a career that produced so many memorable moments, this will be close to the top of the highlight reel. after the lengthy pandemic lockdown this felt like golf's welcome back party. the galleries were packed and with victory close on the 18th whole, mickelson was moved by the excitable fans and he says it's a memory he will forever cherish. >> it was a little unnerving, but it was exceptionally awesome, too.
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it was a special moment that i'll be appreciative of. >> with a place in the record books now ensured, attention will turn to the u.s. open at torrey pines in san diego, and it's the only tournament that eluded mickelson, and it's a venue where he won three times before. he couldn't do it again, could he? you never know. back to you. >> you don't. thank you so much for joining us. i am rosemary church. i'll be back with more news in just a moment. do stay with us.
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hello and welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. you're watching "cnn newsroom." new u.s. intelligence about hospita hospitalized wuhan lab workers is debating the origins of covid is the. a passenger plane forced from the sky. the brazen stunt bull will reduce pulled to get its hands on the activist. and the ambitious effort to count and conserve some of africa's most iconic wildlife. the good to have you with us. what did they know and whe
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