tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN May 24, 2021 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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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 when did
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they know it? a u.s. intention report is raising new questions about the origins of the covid pandemic in china. the director of the wuhan national bio safety lab called the intel a complete lie. cnn's steven jonge joins me live from beijing. how is responding about this? >> reporter: well, rosemary, the chinese government has officially responded to the latest u.s. intelligence report with a foreign ministry spokesperson quoting a statement by the wuhan institute saying that institute had never come in contact with covid before december of 2019. up until larch, the employees researchers, no one among the people had contracted the virus. that's a very strong denial. the spokesman actually went on to give the usual spiel about the growly likelihood of a
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multiple origin theory the virus could have emerged from multiple locations around the world at the same time. and without any concrete evidence pointing a finger at a u.s.-military run lab in maryland. this is to the going to stop. and with the latest report, it's going to be intensified. remember most of what is in this latest report is not new. we have heard it before. including the fact that some researchers at the wuhan institute fell im. it was revealed by a state appointment document in the final days of the trump administration. what is new here is the fact these researchers have to be hospitalized. really in the way pointing to the severity of their symptoms that, of course, is now drawing more attention to the lab and fuelling more debate. but from the chinese perspective, though, this is not anything definitive. that's something acknowledged by u.s. intelligence officials, as women -- well.
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we don't know what the researchers were sick with. there's no definitive evidence to point to at the lab being the origin of the virus and the chinese, of course, have repeatedly pointed to a world health organization lab investigation into the lab early this year saying that experts had gone to the lab doing their mission and talk to the scientists there in the open and candid fashion. these w.h.o. expert conclusion it was extremely unlikely a virus leaked from the lab. again that was quickly disputed by the u.s. and other governments. they said the w.h.o. experts had limited access to complete raw chinese data and that kind of lack of transparency perceived a real is obviously not helping the chinese cause. any way, it's unlikely, at this point, given how politically charged the issue has become, the chinese government would change its mind. so one thing, for sure, this debate on the origins of the virus is going to rage on.
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rosemary? >> thank you. belarus's government is facing strong criticism and mounting questions over the arrest of an opposition ability vis after his plane made an emergency landing. he was on a rian air flight traveling from greece to lithuania when it was diverted. state media report it was president alexander luke shen coe who ordered a fighter jet who ordered an escort to minsk. a friend of the activist and senior advisor spoke with our reporter earlier. >> reporter: we don't know what is happening to him. imagine a young guy, journalist, flying back from athens where he
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worked and had some vacation time. coming back and suddenly he knew on the plane that the plane is turning to minsk where he might face the death penalty. of course, i can't imagine what he was thinking in that moment. and, of course, all the passengers and their four or five hours were back on the plane but he wasn't. he's probably in interrogation right now. interrogation usually takes several days. and, you know, belarus when they interrogate, they might use torture. >> reporter: why have they targeted him and gone to huge lengths to do so? >> they targeted him because he's very vocal. he's very brave. he was covering -- when elections were falsified. he was posting videos and pictures and commanded and challenged the president.
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the belarus audience -- he became the personal enemy. we're trying to release him from jail. cnn correspondents are tracking the latest developments and the growing international outrage. senior international correspondent frederick flpligh kin is in per lynn and -- berlin and nick payton walsh. it's troubling at this point in time. really there's no one who actually knows how he's doing or where he's actually being held by the authorities. i think we heard from one of the advisors there who says, also, that the opposition right now is extremely concerned about t whereabouts of him and what could happen to him. i was on the ground in belarus
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last year when the protests were taking place. you can see firsthand some of the brutality that was used by the authorities. one of the things we have to keep in mind, rosemary, is that the telegram channel that he helped found, the nextel gram channel, they brought to light a lot of police brutality that was going on at that point in time and it continues to go on. that's most probably one of the main reasons why the regime wanted to try to arrest him. and, obviously, appears to have gone to though lengths. it's correct that the opposition is saying that the torture is something that certainly is a very real responsibility when he's in police custody and he's on a terrorism list in belarus. that could mean he could face the death penalty, even, if that comes to worse. certainly a lot of concern there. as far as the incident itself is concerned, the authorities in belarus clearly stating they
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launched a fighter jet to escort the plane to minsk. it is interesting to hear. rian air said the authorities informed them there was possibly a bomb on the plane and landed them to land at nearest airport. if you look at the flight path of the plane, there are strong indications it was closer to the lithuanian capital than the belarus capital. obviously a lot of condemnation coming from eu member states from the european union, as well. a lot of folks are, obviously, saying there need to be very, very tough action very quickly and, of course, the u.s. also says it's also in contact with the european union and the member states, as well. >> yeah. and let's talk about that. nic, if i can bring you in. the u.s. and eu are outraged over the actions. what is the latest on that?
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what are the likely consequences for belarus? >> it's pretty hard to overstate the boundary of a plane flying between two european union capitals being forced out of the sky on what seems to have been a false pretext of a bomb threat being forced to land in a further away airport than the closest. and people being forced, it seems, off the plane. many are surprised it happened. we've had some harsh word coming out of european capitals and washington, d.c., as well. anthony blinken saying the shocking ability perpetrated by the regime endangered the lives of more than hundred passengers. there was a military jet force the aircraft to change direction. including u.s. citizens. blinken goes on to say suggesting the report of belarus
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military aircraft es urt coming the plane. and the european commission president sent note. it looks as though this morning as far as what i saw in a brief window, there were not nie u registered planes flying over belarus air space. it might be an immediate reaction. we've seen it happen in the past. there was a turkish airlines plane and chinese planes flying over that particular air space. but we may possibly see moves by the international air traffic association who also strongly condemned in a statement this particular incident and the u.n.'s body, the icao are going to look into it, too. it could potentially make limiting landings and not fly over belarus air space. something challenged in the time ahead. most importantly, it's sanctions
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here. they had a limited impact, it seems, on the thinking of the president in the time moving forward that can be more pressure on the u.s. to ramp it up. remember, too, it's a bit of overreach here, potentially. many allowed the protests movement to sub size in belarus and they began to take their attention off belarus. there's a strong possibility now the biden administration and the eu will have to ratchet up pressure on him an important ally of vladimir putin and that spells trouble for moscow when it's trying -- with washington, d.c. >> many thanks. we are now hearing from passengers on board the rian air flight. one man sitting a few rowes away from the opposition activist said there was large police presence when they landed. he also described what was going onned in -- inside the plane. >> it was announced that they
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are going to land it. so we were told to stand up and open the luggage door and take the luggage and was trying to split their things. i think he made a small mistake because it was around twenty people so he -- i think the girlfriend was arrested. so he gave it to me or other passengers and say let's say deliver it when we come back. >> the plane spent several hours on the ground before it continued on and arrived safely in the lithuanian capital. this past weekend saw another wave of gun deaths and mass shootings across the united states. not even half way into the year,
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more than ape 00 people have been shot and killed. there have been more than 200 mass shootings. that tash that chen reports from atlanta. >> reporter: a weekend of blood sheet across the country rattled many communities. especially mourning the loss of young people. >> he said mommy, my tummy hurts. she picked him up and he was bleeding on her. she had blood on her clothes. >> reporter: the sister of ayden leos pleaded with the public for help after someone shot into their mother's car friday morning in an apparent road rage incident killing the child in the backseat. >> please help us find the people that did this to my little brother. he's only six. he was so sweet. >> reporter: he just celebrated his sixth birthday last week. he was killed in orange, california in one of at least ten shooting incidents across the u.s. since friday. charlie johnson was shot and
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killed in minneapolis early saturday morning. the day he was set to graduate from the university of saint thomas in saint paul. the university president said on a day he and his family should have been celebrating his graduation from the school of engineering, we're devastated by this loss. in youngston, ohio three people are dead and five others wounded. >> as a father of four, unnecessary violence, our young people, unnecessary violence. it breaks my heart to hear when we have young men and women who die at a young age with so much potential ahead of them. so much life in front of them. >> reporter: the same is true for a child killed in south carolina late saturday night at what police say was an unauthored neighborhood concert for a teen killed in columbus, ohio at the same night at a private event promoted on social media. and a is a-year-old one of five
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people kill bid a drive by shooting. in the bronx two were injured in a subway shooting after a robbery gone wrong. according to gun violence archive, the number of gun deaths, not countinged is, is about. i 00 so far this year. this outpaces the number of gun deaths for the same period in previous years. more than to% higher than the period in to to and more than ho% than the same period in 2019. some have felt their neighborhoods perhaps grow quieter during pandemic lockdowns -- >> we're getting over covid. it looks like it's coming back. >> reporter: cnn, atlanta. and another one of those weekend shootings happened in new jersey. gunfire killed two people and wounded a dozen more in a house party. shots rang out just before midnight on saturday in fairfield, new jersey. police are still looking for a motive in the shooting and no information about any potential suspects has been released.
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a local minister said he heard at least nine shots and saw people running from the house. ahead on cnn, how the u.s. is winning in the race to vaccinate against covid and one of new york's largest crowd since the start of the pandemic gathers to watch the nba playoffs. it's the most comfortable, body-sensising, automatically-responding, energy-building, dually-adjustable, dad-powering, wellness-boosting, foot-warming, temperature-balancing, recovery-assisting, effortlessly life-changing... proven quality night sleep we've ever made. and now, save $1,000 on the new sleep number 360 special edition smart bed now $1799 plus, free premium delivery when you add a base. ends monday
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here in the united states, promising new signs in the fight against covid is the. the cdc said draft states and washington, d.c., have fully vaccinated at least half of their adult populations. nationwide more than so million people of all ages are now fully vaccinated. it is an astonishing achievement when you consider the first vaccine authorized for use by the fda was given in december. cnn medical analyst has more on the latest data. the threshold is really important. that's when we saw cases really start to decline in israel, in the ub, and then a bit ahead of us in the vaccine rollout.
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that's when we start to see the impact. it's not herd immunity. you're seeing a dramatic increase in hospitalizations and deaths. it's a critical tipping point in vaccinations. how do we get the remaining people vaccinated? i think you have a combination of access, issues, barriers. for example, the latin x population in the u.s. having spanish language services is a major challenge for many of them. they're not able to get information in spanish, make an appointment in spanish, seek services at a vabs nation clinic and have somebody there explaining things to them in spanish. and then things like having paid time off work. not just for the day you get vaccinated but let's say you have side effects. you could end up needing to take one, two, three days off work for each vaccine that you get. and so i think we need to take into consideration that it's not just about people maybe not trust the vaccines. it's also practical every day issues that make it different
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for them to seek it out. >> the more people are vaccinated, the more events like this can happen. new york's madison square garden was host to a thousand fans. they saw the playoff game. the hawks had a slight victory. world sports has more. >> reporter: the crowd at madison square garden in new york city, the latest sign of a return to normalcy after the coronavirus pandemic. nicks fans gathering under one roof in the arena for the first game against the hawks. the largest event indoors in the state of new york since the pandemic began. nicks owner said about out% of the crowd was vaccinated fans
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felt comfortable with the guidelines in place. >> it's a great feeling. we can get back to the regular lives and move on. >> we're taking the right precautions. as long as everyone is vaccinated. i see no problems letting as many people as possible in. at the end of the day, everyone needs to be safe. obviously everyone here loves their knicks. we have to get as many people in here as possible. >> reporter: the excitement here is twofold, of course. first, the fact that fans are allowed to go back to sports the way they were used to. dare i say, it feels a little bit normal out here. at least by our typical starnds. then, of course, the fact that the knicks are pretty good. four seed in the eastern conference. they can get into the playoffs when they haven't won a playoff series in close to a decade. all in all, a good night to be a knicks fan in new york city. spain is also hoping for some return to normalcy. starting today, travelers from the uk and japan can visit spain
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on nonessential trips. the spanish prime minister has removed the need for british and japanese tourists to present a negative covid test upon arrival. let's go live now to valencia, spain. our reporter is standing by. good to see you. how buy for spain to accept tourists without testing requirements? particularly those from japan where cases are surging and very few people are vaccinated. >> reporter: yeah. i think japan still remains a concern here. i think the question really is how quickly spain can be vaccinated. right now less than 20% of the national population is fully vaccinated. in some and the areas such as here in valencia, up to 40% of the people had at least one shot. so many people here are protected. it will be a concern. i think the reality, though, is that even though spain is open for business to japan and the uk, we won't see a flood of tourists coming in.
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that's because, for example, in the uk, pain is not on the green list. any tourist that is coming in from the uk is going to have to go back to quarantine when they go back home. ten days of quarantine and two pcr tests. that's a te ternt for a number of tourists who want to come here. now what is probably going to happen is that spain is already trying to ramp up its vaccination rate. it might find itself on the green list soon come the summer. it's not there yet. and so i think for spain, the focus is really on getting those vaccinations up to speed. and as you can see on the beach still, you know, covid regulations are still enforced. you have to wear a mask, if you're jogging or doing sports you don't have to, in public spaces in the open you do. that's something for visitors to be aware of when they come here. >> yeah definitely. vaccinations are key. thank you for bringing us that report from spain.
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people in gaza are making plans to rebuild. >> there's no other option. we have to keep building. we have to keep doing it again and again. >> officials are assessing the damage and the need for humanitarian aid. we'll have a live report from gaza. and tranlty in the italian alps after more than a dozen people are killed in a cable car accident. we'll have the latest just ahead
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holding, jewish visits to the temple resumed for the first time in weeks. it's known to muslims as the noble sanctuary. clash there between palestinians and israeli police early this monl month helped trigger the cross border fighting. anthony blinken will travel to the region in the coming days to meet with i had israeli and palestinian counter parts. he says that for now, the u.s. is focus on humanitarian aid in gaza but talks must eventually turn to a peaceful, political solution. >> president biden has been clear that he remains committed to a two-state solution. ultimately it is the only way to ensure israel's future as a jewish and economic state and the only way to give the palestinians the state to which they're entitled. i hope that everyone takes from this, if there isn't positive change, and particularly if we can't find a way to help
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palestinians live with more dignity and with more hope, the cycle is likely to repeat itself. >> the u.n. is allocating more than several million for relief efforts. the palestinian officials estimate reconstruction will cost tens of millions of dollars. ben wiedeman is in gaza city. he joins us now. good to see you. how daunting and difficult will it be to rebuild gaza in the midst of the humanitarian crisis and a pandemic? >> reporter: it's going to be daunting, rosemary. given there's been an israeli egyptian blockade on gaza since 2007. it's always been difficult to get building material in. of course, money is, obviously, in short supply in this improvished strip of land where the unemployment rate is running high. and despite secretary blinken's cautiously optimistic words,
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when it comes to the possibility of resolving this conflict and putting an end to this cycle of one war after another, most people here are deeply pessimistic. >> reporter: not for the first time and probably not for the last. gaza is -- it's over. for now. the rubble will be cleared and perhaps the damage repaired. yet one manmade catastrophe after another has taken heavy toll. not far from the wall separating gaza from israel, children of the extended family search for traces of the lives shattered. they had three children 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.
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we ran to the inner 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 this hospital, plastic and reconstructive surgeon is conducting one of eight operations on this day. he first traveled to gaza as a young medical student and come back regularly ever since. his task here never ending. >> you start running into patients who are injured in multiple attacks. so i've had patients who had injuries in the 2014 war and then injured in the great return -- or in previous conflicts and again in this
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conflict. so you have a ton of -- it comes like an a disease. >> reporter: in this neighborhood, this person waits for a truck to take his furniture away. his home intact after bombs destroyed the buildings next door. it's now in danger of collapse. his struggle to push the boulder up the hill for it to roll to the bottom only to push it back up over again. the relief of surviving this war no guarantee you'll make it through the next, said the gaza resident. >> there's no other option. we have to keep living. we have to rebuild again and again until one day maybe we can be free. >> reporter: in the absence of some sort of resolution, such is
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gaza's fate. and the worry here in fwa za at the moment is with the continuing tensions in jerusalem around the neighborhood where palestinian families are under the threat of forced eviction and tensions around the temple mount it could lead to another explosion. just like we saw two weeks ago. and the worry is that unlike, you know, there was seven years, rosemary, between the last war and this war, it may be the next war might come much sooner. rosemary? >> that's the big worry. ben wiedeman joining us live from gaza. many thanks. the united states plans to restrict visas to those linked to the humanitarian crisis in ethiopia's region. u.s. secretary of state announced the decision sunday under the measure the u.s. would -- vie is as for any
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current or formerth open began or government officials. members of the security forces or anyone involved in undermining the resolution of the crisis. no one was named as a specific target. cnn has investigated atrocities being committed there, including sexual violence, mass killings, and the blocking of aid to an area on the brink of --. myanmar's ousted leader aun san suu kyi appeared in court today. that's according to local media reports. she faces at least five charges, including violating a state sequence law. she and other government officials have been detained since the country's military ceased power in february. that news coming a a human rights group said at least l is people have been killed by security forces since the start
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it's a terrible moment for me and our community and the whole of italy. especially in this moment where we were beginning to restart. e we're encouraging everyone to get out. to stay out so we can recover from the terrible moment that everyone has lived through. instead, this is a fateful destiny. a terrible diaster. people were killed and we're
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learning that authorities are opening a multiple manslaughter investigation. cnn contributor joining us live from rome. what is the latest on the tragic cable car accident? >> they sorting through the pieces trying to understand what went wrong. why there wasn't some sort of a cable safety cable that stopped the cable car, which was traveling at half capacity due to covid regulation. why it broke loose and there wasn't some safety mechanism in place. there's a child still fighting for his life now in a hospital. of course, he lost both parents in this tragic accident. authorities have opened, a you mentioned, the manslaughter investigation. that gives them extra breath in terms of the access of information about the company that ran the cable car service and about the service itself.
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automations are being conducted today. families will be given back the remains of their loved ones in the next few days and we expect the funerals to take place. >> it's hard to grasp what a nightmare for though families. the the trail running community in china is mourning the deaths of people after extreme weather hit a hundred kilometer mountain ridge on sunday. frigid temperatures, gale force wind set in hours after the race began. eight people were hospitalized. one survivor said he and about a others had to take shelter if a cabin and wait for rescuers. other describe a harrowing experience. >>translator: at the beginning, i had a little bit of strength in my hand. i could pinch myself. later my hand and feet no longer had feeling.
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i bit my tongue and my lip with my teeth. my hands were already on the ground. i lowered my head and hit my hand vigorously to maintain a certain level of clarity. i thought i must see my family again. >> in central africa, a frantic search for hundreds of children missing and separated from their families after a deadly volcanic eruption. this is the democratic republic of congo. smoke and lava covering the landscape where entire villages used to be. the volcano erupted this weekend killing at least 11 people and sending thousands of others running for their lives. >> translator: we were in the market and then we had to run without our belongings. when we returned to the city, the houses were burned and so people were left destitute. i got into an accident and got hurt. so we're a peel -- appealing for assistance and food.
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we need food because we don't know where we're going to get it from. >> about l,000 people crossed the board entire neighboring rwanda for food and shelter. humanitarian officials said people are not yet panicking but they are very worried. kenya's population has grown in recent years and that along with poaching and climate change has been disastrous for the country's wildlife. just ahead, how kenya is taking action to reverse course. plus, we'll show you how hong kong's art community is navigating the national security law passed in china last career. that's just ahead.
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in the past few decade, many factors played a role in the decline of wildlife in kenya. with covid making conservation even more difficult, the country is taking action by conducting a wild life census. cnn's reporter joining us me from a national park in kenya. good to see you, larry. how extensive is this wildlife census? how will it work exactly?
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>> row marry, kenya is counting every animal. they're going to go all over the country to get an estimate of some of the smaller animals and the large animal like an elephant, they'll count one, two, three and get a number. we don't have a ballpark because the country has never done something like this. the fact it's investing in multimillion investigation speaks it how seriously the country takes tourism as a major source of world exchange. it contributes about so% of the jobs in the country. a hippo getting a break from curious eyes now that the pandemic stopped most tourists coming here. officials are watching closely
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conservation. five hours a day, seven days a week, researchers are in the air combing through every inch of the country's roving landscapes. the accept us is will track the consequences of climate change, poaching, and human wildlife conflicts. back on the ground, there's a growing power struggle who gave up land for some of kenya's most famous parks. their livelihood depend on their calves. during covid-19 when tourism dropped, the income for the villages disappeared. >> sure. >> what are people doing now? >> they used to build necklaces but women have -- the team here
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suspects erratic weather is affecting animal routines. >> we've seen wildlife going into places they haven't been in half a century. we never used to have -- and it's something we're investigating as scientists. >> this will cover all of kenya's parks and reserves. on land and water. the result will provide the largest ever source of data for kenya's conservation and tourism. the government said it'll help protect the millions who depend on this for their survival. they are best known for the elephant. and the unique thing they know each elephant by name.
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when the exercise is over in two months, they'll have a better sense of what they're look at. unfortunately we didn't get any elephants. e had some monkeys but they got shy. >> thank you so much for bringing us that. in hong kong, art is increasingly falling prey to politics and china's sweeping national security law. especially in protest which has virtually disappeared. cnn kristi lou shows how hong kong's art community is having to maneuver this new political reality. >> known as how long kopg's lady liberty. a symbol of defiance on display.
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not in a gallery but a children's clothing score s searched by police. a number of artists have creations on display. platform is get smaller and smaller. >> the national security law has targeted opposition activists and pro democracy figures. but art has also fallen prey to politics. >> since the law was imposed last year, there's been the virtual disappearance of protesters. the cancellation of a film screening about the 2019 pro-democracy protests and a public debate about the upcoming m plus. targeted as asia's answer. >> the museum's 8,000 item collection include work by chinese artist including a 1997
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photograph of him holding up a middle finger. when asked about the collection, kari lam told fishes to be extra cautious in making sure exhibits don't breach the new law. >> i'm sure staff are able to tell what is freedom of artistic expression and whether certain pieces are really meant to incite hatred or destroy relations between two places and undermine national security. >> hong kong has been a vibrant, international arts hub each year it hosts the asian -- the world's larmest art fair. despite the new climate, organizers are confident that the fair will stay. >> oh, absolutely. after this, i mean, especially with the pandemic and the fact -- everyone is putting in an effort to make hong kong shine this week. when as the more formal art world navigates a new reality, grassroots artists continue to do their work. while the law does not explicitly address political art, many local artists wonder
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what are the red lines. >> hong kong right now is the most dangerous place. more dangerous than ijing. it's because the flexible red line in beijing everybody knows what it can be talked about and what cannot be mentioned. in hong kong, nobody knows what that dangerous topic really is. >> reporter: throughout i had career, he consistently created political art works. in a studio we see props of the co covert art. tokens of the pandemic cast in resin made inside these new red
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new questions this morning about the origins of the coronavirus turns out several wuhan lab workers were hospitalized weeks before covid spread around the world. a fighter jet intercepts a commercial flight to detain a belarus opposition activist. a global outcry over the move by belarus's strong man. and a triumph for the ages. a historic win for phil mikkelson at the pga championship. >> that was incredible! >> amaze. welcome to our viewers. we're live in beijing, berlin,
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