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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  May 31, 2021 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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man hunt in miami after another mass shooting in the u.s., and the city's police chief has an ominous warning. it will be a long, hot, bloody summer. >> there threatening lawmakers to pay, and the world number two is out at the french open. not from her performance on the clay but her mental health. >> i feel for naomi.
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i wish i would give her a hug. i know what it's like. >> hello, and welcome to viewers around the world. this is cnn newsroom . welcome, police in south florida might be closer to cracking a murder case after the deadly shooting outside of a miami area banquet hall. at least two people were killed, and 20 hurt. the attackers as you see, jumping out of the suv, fleeing seconds later. they did find the vehicle, it
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was in a canal. violent crime is surging in miami, with the numbers catching the total for all of 2020. here is more. >> reporter: newly revleased video shows three individuals jumping out of a vehicle with handguns and assault rifles just after midnight sound. they get back in the car and take off less than ten seconds later. >> we have a total of 23 people who were shot. two were deceased on scene. >> all three of the shooter still at large. >> we need your help. we need information. we need to you come forward. if you have information to help us solve the crimes. >> reporter: miami-dade police say they found the vehicle. it was submerged in the
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dis-biscayne canal three miles from where it occurred. high emotions for those left behind. >> you killed my kid! >> reporter: clayton dilliard jr. lost his son in the shooting. >> that is the pain that affects our community right there, right before you. >> i just want to try to do my part. >> reporter: camping world ceo has pledged $100,000 award for leading whoever is responsible. >> we will bring them this justice and we will work together to fwleak cycle of silence. >> reporter: determined to get the gun violence in their city under control. >> we are investing in our young people. particularly those who have been disinvested in and
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disenfranchised from the process. none of thome are born with ak-47s in hands. none of them are born killers. >> reporter: it was two groups on social media that played a role here. here at the hospital, we are seeing family members coming and going, hoping their loved ones will be okay. matthew lipman is the executive director of 97% gun reform. he joins me now from los angeles. good to see you, matthew, there has been a search of gun purr kmass in the u.s., and almost routine horrific shootings and death. 239 mass shootings so far in 2021. the miami police chief predicted a long, hot summer of bloodiness
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given the rate of violence. do you think he's right? >> well, this year is terrible so far, so every year, it seems to get worse. as people are gathering in public places, we will see more of the mass shootings. there is a big rise in gun sales. about 400 million guns in the united states. people have about 40% of the united states owns a gun. so it's mostly, not everyone has a gun, but some people have several guns, and people seem to be using the guns as a way to communicate in a way that is killing people. >> yeah, that is an interesting way of putting it. yeah, i was reading too, that search day shall shows that a fifth of all americans who bought guns last year were first time gun owners, and one week in the spring, at least 1.2 million background checks were carried out, in a week that was a record. why do you think this surge?
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>> well, the surge is going on for a while. this is about a year and a half. it actually started before covid, a big rise in gun sales, and now, we're seeing a lot of first time gun buyers who are black people, or latinos. they are leading the gun purchasing. it's like an arms race amons people. it's like, how we used to have the united states and russia building nuclear weapons, and people are doing it because they feel the united states is a very individualistic society, and people feel a need to protect themselves. >> 99.9% of the people, michael, very good gun owners. very few people make a difference. >> you only need a few bad people if they are incredibly well armed. you touched on it. there are 393 million civilian
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owned guns in the u.s., that is according to a small arms survey, that is one for every man, woman and child with 67 million left over. people arnold the world ask, what is i with americans and guns? not just the guns per se but the types and the power of the weapons. why is it? >> well, we do have a very individualistic society, and america has the second amendment, which is the right to own a gun. so people have been owning a gun in the united states for a long time. many of the guns are extremely deadly. but really, a significant issue, there are 42,500 deaths with a gun in 2020. 23,000 of them are suicides. often, people use a handgun to kill yourself. you're going succeed. if you tried any other way, you probably will not. we talk about the big mass
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shootings with different types of guns. but really, suicides make up the vast majority of gun deaths in the united states. >> that is a really god point. the vast majority of americans, the vast majority, gun owners and republicans, want some change in the laws, like universal background checks. with support like that you think that politicians would follow out the wishes of their constituents, but that is not the case. why the lack of political will to act on things that people actually want. >> thank you for a chance to promote our organization. 97%, that is the number in the u.s. that favor background checks. there is nothing that gets 97% of the public behind it. yet, as you said, we don't have universal background checks.
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you have small states that have an equal stay as big states. if a senator from alabama decides he doesn't want legislation on guns, he has as much say from new york or massachusetts. it's not based on population in terms of vote when it comes to legislation. so almost everybody wants something. unless you get people from specific states u you're not getting it, and regular flag laws, universal background checks are favored by gun owners. it's ridiculous, it's a basic thing. it's ridiculous. >> and the country is almost numb to mass shooting after mass shooting. i have to leave it there, matthew lipman, always good to see you. >> thank you. now the battle lines are drawn between democrats and republicans in texas over one of the most restricted bills on
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voting access in the country. democrats blocked the measure with a dramatic walk out. >> it looks to me like democrats left the house floor. >> that left republicans without enough lawmakers to vote. texas is part of a national push by the republican-led states to pass laws that limit voting options. it's all based on former president donald trump's lies that the 2020 election was somehow stolen from him. greg abbott says he will bring the bill back in a special session at some point. texas democrats say they are not giving up. >> it was the worst of the worst. so, we were determined to kill the bill any way we could.
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some republican leaders in the country is going to have to say, you know, enough is enough. this is nonsense. this is based on a lie. maybe governor abbott will reach that realization, and if he calls a special session, we will fight him every step of the way. >> cnn's political analyst tells me there is no mistaking the objective of the texas bill, and that is to make it harder for people who support democrats to vote. >> this texas bill, michael, as the package suggests, is really a gauntlet thrown down for the congressional democrats. it's as tight as anything we have seen. and particularly, harris county, the fourth largest county in the country, and 300,000 more people
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voted in 2020 than in 2016. you they is a cause for celebration. but instead, the republican controlled legislature have banned many of the innovations, the 24-hour voting, the drive-through voting, they have banned this access. the texans say, we have done all we can to prevent this. now is in your hands, congress, and the white house, and that is an accurate assessment of the situation. >> now, monday was memorial day in the united states, and president joe biden paid his respects at arlington national cemetery with a personal and passionate speech. and it came also with a serious winning, and in the days ahead, he will shift from reflection to pushing forward. phil mattingly explains.
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>> reporter: for president biden a deeply personal day of remembrance, always a heavy moment for any commander in chief, and a president clinging tightly to the member of his son. >> i always feel beau close to me on memorial day. >> reporter: an iraq war veteran who died of brain cancer six years ago. >> yesterday marked the anniversary of his death. and it's a hard time for me and my family, just like it is for so many of you. kit hurt to remember, but the hurt is how we feel and how we heal. >> reporter: reflecting on true sacrifice, biden drew attention to all of those who who gave for their country. >> the freedom has been secured by young men and women who answered the call in history and
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gave everything in the service of an idea. the idea of america. >> reporter: using it to under score hayes long-held view of the stakes of this moment. >> democracy itself is in peril here at home and around the world. what happen we do now what we do now, how we honor the memory of the fallen, will determine whether or not democracy will long endure. >> reporter: and responsible for from all americans. >> democracy thriving from infrastructure. >> reporter: turning to the infrastructure of the country itself in a crucial week, and a rough road ahead for the investment plan. >> we need a clear direction. >> reporter: pete buttigieg setting a clear deadline as they inch forward, telling jake tapper dfsh.
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>> the keeps saying inaction is not an action. >> reporter: negotiations that leaved two sides still apart, and the white house at $1.7 trillion and republicans, 128 billion, and senator shelly moore-capito, is expressing optimism for a good outcome. >> i think we are building the blocks to a good structure with bipartisan support. >> reporter: and president biden, the reality, if they leave the talks too soon without a deal, moderate democrats may not join them when they need every sing the volt. however, the win dopes can start
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to close. it's trying to thread a needle here, and don't think there's going to be a massive agreement, because the dar at this point is so low. maybe a smauer kale phil mattingly, cnn, the white house. we'll take a quick break here on nns newsroom, and a stunning withdraw from roland garros from the number two tennis player. why she is taking time from the support in the prime of her career. plus, athletes arrive for the tokyo games, there i s
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moved by tennis star naomi osaka announced she is withdrawing from the french open after she was fined $15,000 for
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skipping a news conference after her first match. she said last week she couldn't f participate in media events siting mental health disorders. joining me now, patrick snell. let's start with how her life changed after winning her first major. and also changed what was expected of her. >> reporter: yeah, very right. spot on. the demands placed on her, life changing. the victory in 2018 at the u.s. open in new york over childhood idol serena williams, life hasn't been the same sense. almost like she has no right to privacy, and this is her own powerful statement of intent. the first career major, so much,
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and overshadowed with serena willia williams spat with the chair umpire. and she has adapted. we have seen change in her, over the last 18 months in particular. i recall her return to tokyo in 2018 after winning fehr first slam, it was uneasy. the body language as she walked out to a bunch of reporters in tokyo, and the courageous stance, with social justice, with a different mask to represent victims last year. she has a massive following on social media as well. and this is her way of handling things right now, michael. >> yeah, might it be a factor in pulling out of the french open this isn't really a tournament
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she's done particular lirly wel. >> it's a valid point because i heard it out there. this is a tournament she has struggled, relatively speaking. the best performance was getting to round three, and two years ago as well shooch she won the first round easily sunday, but i think there's far more at stake and in play here. this is osaka using her platform once again to -- a powerful effect down the line. the question, will it lead to change? will other players follow suit? she eintimated in the statement she has gone about it in a different way. i want to go back to you, something that resonated with me, it's quote, i'm going to
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take time away from the court now, but when the time is right, i really want to work with a tour to discuss ways we can make things better for the players, press, and fans. so two things in play there. when is she coming back tomt the court? and what's the big picture here? and what change will she pe precipitate. we will see. >> she is starting a conversation that perhaps needs to be had. patrick, thanks for that. patrick snell. 52 days and counting until the start of the tokyo olympics, and with nine japanese prefecturing including tokyo under a state of emergency, the pressure is on japan to get it
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under control. olympians have started to make their way to japan. the australia softball team, among the first international athletes to travel to the games since the pandemic forced the delay. the japanese media reports spectators may have to have a negative test to attend the games. cnn is in tokyo covering the games for us. let's start with the criticism and calls for the games to be canceled, and now you have teams literally starting to arrive or dribble in. i guess that really sends a message that wrer e're going to this. >> reporter: yeah, again, great naus for those who are hoping the games the actually do place that summer, and the voices are few and far between here in
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japan. other on the south sudanese track and field team, the softballers from australia are the first teams to arrive. while the team for australia is fully vaccinated, there are more than 2.5% of the japanese population that is fully vaccinated. and only medical workers and over 65 are eligible to be vaccinated. the decision to investigation nate people who are higher risk is not sitting well with the health officials and the japanese public as well. i speak with someone who said holding the games is like holding a festival in the middle of the disaster. and regarding the vaccines, the
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ioc says 80% of people in the olympic village will be vaccinated but it doesn't include the 78,000 foreign b delegates traveling to jan pan. in march, pfizer did announce they will be donating covid-19 doses to participants. they are places where the vaccine is approved for use, and pfizer is working to establish a central location. but time is running out. there are 52 days to go before the games are set to begin, and it takes five weeks for the first dose of the pfizer vaccine before you are considered vaccinated. so it will be interesting with less tlan two months to go. >> yeah, you thought they could have sorted out vaccines earlier. blake essex in tokyo for us.
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appreciate it. all right, could the benjamin netanyahu aera about t end? we will have details when we come back. and china looking for a baby boom. why families can have up to three children. woo! i got my mo-ney! it's hard to contain yourself isn't it? uh- huh! well let it go! woooo! get a dollar for dollar match at the end of your first year. only from discover. get a dollar for dollar match at the end of your first year. you need an ecolab scientific clean here. and you need it here. and here. and here. which is why the scientific expertise that helps operating rooms stay clean is now helping the places you go every day too. seek a commitment to clean.
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and a welcome welcome back to the viewers all around the world. i'm michael holmes. israel's longest serving leader
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could lose his grip on power. analysts say benjamin netanyahu is out. a fellow right winger threw in with the centrist coalition. here is the latest from jerusalem. >> reporter: as the parties work to finalize deals, israelis could see the final days of netanyahu as prime minister. his replacement can be his former aim. trying to form a new coalition government that can change the course of israeli history. promises a new week.
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>> translator: if this government is formed the key word is responsibility, to restore calm, not blame others, not to look for enemies, not to brand anyone who thinks differently than us as a traitor who should be killed. this is the government i will form, right, left and center, a unity government. >> reporter: in israeli politics, seven days is a e ternny, and many see netanyahu as the ultimate political survivor, few can l right him off yet. joining me now, from washington, good voice on this, and a knowledgeable one. nothing is ever certain in
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israeli politics, and what did you read in the landscape? >> never count netanyahu out. he is a master in israeli politics, but he seems to be out. after 12 consecutive years. they seem to have a coalition coming together, a broad coalition with one goal. >> that's the thing. you've got a -- it sounds redeck st. louis say, you have a center, left ring coalition with arab involvement. it sounds inclusive. will it be workable in real life? they might be united but will they agree on much else? >> they disagree on a lot.
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they agree getting him out of office but it's more than that. they agree that israel needs to come back to some kind of governing normalcy, with no state budget, no functionary, and they do have this goal of trying to come together. secondly, they are all taking a big risk in forming the coalition, and he has an interest to govern well and they will try to freeze things, and the issues they disagree on, and they will try to move forward with domestic issues, to give them dividends as a governing
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coalition. >> well to the right of netanyahu. what does that mean for any potential quote unquote process, if neftali is prime minister? is that an issue that is off the table for the foreseeable future? >> any major progress on the peace process is off the table. bennett is hard right. he says he's that way. hoe was one of the leaders of a settler council, and he is opposed to any concessions on territory. he is not governing alone. they will each have a vote toe. the other will be different. he's not a big leftist, and what
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it leaves, an attempt to to freeze the issue to wait while israel deals with other things. and other reality or themselves may unfreeze and call a crisis in the government since there is such profound -- i have been talking to people over there, and supporters of the arab parties, they just want a functioning government, and they don want huge changes here. is that your feeling? >> yeah, and we have a deeply divided -- there is a majority for the government. there is a majority that wants a functioning government, and among the citizens of israel,
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they want policing and think want things to move forward, and there are many people who are unhappy about this as well. first, netanyahu. his supporters are extremely upset, and going against the opponents of 234e9 and period of norralcy where there is at least a government that can function, and just pass a budget, this will be a huge step for israel, and even if important issues, will not see any froe -- >> thank you very much.
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>> my pleasure. china has a population of $1.4 billion people. but the government says that is not enough. young enough. beijing will start letting couples have up to three children. the late oes census shows a care. and the demanding company asks for a younger work force. yeah, change in policy but an important reason. >> that's right. when it comes to population, it's not about size, but structure. and the post important segment of the population, economists are looking at the population segment from the late teens to 59, the work force, who are rainible of working and spending. they are two of the most important pillars of any
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economic growth, and that segment of the chinese population has dropped below 900,000,063% down from a decade earlier. that is a trend, and the trend is expected to continue by many experts saying the chinese work force will peak? just a few short years and then start to shrink, and shrinking by 5% in the next decade. so for a long time, the breakneck economic growth we have been talking about, china, is due to the so-called demographic dividend, a young, cheaper work force, and if that is dissipated, that is a major crisis for the government,
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because that could mean not only economic stagnation but it can translate in social instability. the government relies on economic growth for legitimacy and also they need more people to join the work force. so all of the reasons really prompbted the latest policy announcement in terms of having -- allowing couples to have up to three children. >> all right, in beijing, appreciate it. the dangerous volume canny in congo has not stopped rumbling yet. just ahead, the risk of another full blown eruption. we'll be back. your treatment pl. new patients, take the first step with a complete exam and x-rays that are free without insurance.
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welcome back. now the danger still has not passed in the democratic republic of congo where that
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volcano erupted last week. nearly half a million people fled to safety. in the report now, they still don't know when they can return to the homes that may or may not be standing. >> reporter: where did the lava flow in the congo, now harmless. a week of the ovolcano erupted. scientists have been studying it since 1995. they need a few nor days to figure out if the danger is gone. >> i'm not ruling out an eruption. i'm thinking and saying that statistically, there are few chances it can happen. >> reporter: he says the last eruption was impossible to predict. nearby residents remain on edge. >> the city is surrounded by not
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one but two active volcanos. i'm in the crater of one. any of these can erupt at any time, bringing death and destruction in their wake. the pain of the first eruption still burns. this woman returns to where her home used to be. >> translator: i don't know how i'm going to get another how. my entire business got burned in the house. >> reporter: she's stranded with six children and no income. and she doesn't think she will get any help to start over. this choir rehearses for sunday service as normal, and the church is full with displaced people. they are among the 400,000 that fled. they ended up wherever they were
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welcome, even stranger's front porches. they worry too many people in small spaces can make them sick. >> translator: we know cholera is in the area, and there is a limited number of toilets. we are worried we will get covid because we don't even have masks. >> reporter: she went back home against government advice. not man have a chance to return to. these were the neighbors. all that is left now is a mountain of lava. their homes were made of tin or wood, and without insurance or government support, they will never rebuild. even with disasters, disease and
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disp displacement, they are not far. americans marking their first maskless poll day in more than a year. why the memorial day weekend could signal a turning point for travellers? and also, greece puts vac nation efforts in overtime to attract tourists in the coming months. their plan for a covid-free getaway when we come back. the light. ♪ it comeses from within. it drives you. and it guides you. to shine your brightest. ♪ as you charge ahead. illuminating the way forward. a light maker. recognizing that the impact you make comes from the energy you create. introducing the all-electric lyriq. lighting the way. ♪
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welcome back. memorial day weekend marked a turning point for pandemic travel, in the u.s. with more than 40% of americans, now, fully vaccinated against covid-19. airports saw their most holiday travelers, since the outbreak began. as cnn's pete muntean reports, it is a stark change from one year ago. >> reporter: i am here at reagan national airport, which was a ghost town, a year ago. but the transportation security administration just said it screened 1.6 million americans, at airports across the united states, on sunday. on the same day, back in 2020,
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tsa screened only-350,000 people, nationwide. the u.s. air-travel record of the pandemic, set back on friday, when 1.96 million people flew. and now, the question is whether or not monday's numbers will reach the elusive 2 million passenger mark. a number we have not seen since march of 2020. people here tell us they are excited to get out. they feel safe about doing it. they are doing the things they haven't been able to do in more than a year. go to the beach, go visit family. start of a return to normal. but one thing that's, still, not normal is the fact that you have to wear a mask, as mandated by the federal government, an all-public forms of transportation. planes, trains, buses, boats, and also, here, in terminals. pete muntean, cnn, reagan national airport. meanwhile, greece is, quickly, working to vaccinate as many people as possible, before the summer-tourist season gets into full swing. the goal is to have covid-free islands in an effort to make
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travelers feel more confident in booking those trips. here's cnn's sam kiley. >> reporter: not exactly, the modern temple to aphrodite that mykonos has a reputation for. two weeks after the official-tourist season was declared open. museums are still locked up, many shops, shuttered. but others are getting a makeover, while plans to create more 80 covid-free islands get under way. it's the septcenterpiece of the greek plan for economic recovery driven by tourism. bur pafr the pandemic, a fifth of the population was employed in the industry. with u.s. visitors being greece's biggest spenders, athens is banking on a summer surge in american visitors and u.s. airlines are increasing flights from greece this year
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from new york, chicago, philadelphia, newark, and washington, d.c. the key is an aggressive vaccination campaign to jab every island resident by the end of june. so visitors can come, if they have been vaccinated, themselves, survived infection, or have a negative-pcr test. >> it's a covid-free island. and we wait all the tourists to arrive to to enjoy the beaches, to enjoy the life. >> reporter: getting that done may rest on ending nationwide regulations that ban music and crowds. a heart doctor, he also owns several nightclubs and hotels. his clients call in with two questions. especially, from america. >> first of all, they ask if we are all vaccinated. and second, if they can party on the island like they used to. >> so, a vaccine? party? >> yep. that's their -- that's the magic recipe. >> reporter: around 18% of greeks have been fully vaccinated.
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new covid cases are falling, and deaths are about 40, a day. for now, though, the clubs are empty. only cocktail shakers generate any rhythm. tourists are trickling back, and they are doing their best to enjoy a beach without decibels of dance music. but with more than half the residents' population vaccinated, all eyes are turning toing to athens to unleash and let the fun begin in july. >> not necessarily that the tourists need to feel that safe in order to come and party and feel safe. you know? because for example, last year, people were ready to party. was hard for us to enforce the rules on them. but i think we are all trained now, us, the clientele, the personnel, everyone. so i think, yes, this is going to be a better summer. >> reporter: that's, if a hades
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of sound is your thing. but for the more mature traveler, that can only be a relief. sam kiley, cnn, mykonos. >> thanks for watching, spending part of your day with me. i'm michael holmes. follow me on twitter and instagram @holmescnn. more cnn "newsroom," in just a moment.
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an urgent manhunt in florida, right now. a search is under way for the suspects in a mass shooting, that left two people dead, almost two dozen injured in the miami area. texa

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