tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 12, 2021 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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the capitol under the trump administration. how amateur online investigators are targeting those involved in the capitol hill riot. it is a beautiful day today here in our little southwestern corner of england in cornwall. this is the scene today. that is ruffle the view the lerl leaders will have this morning waking up. they are down a little bit that way. they will will soon resume their work sessions as part of the g7, resuming their face-to-face deliberations today. it is their first such meeting in two years. the agenda for the second day of this g7 summit focuses on rebuilding the global economy and downing street says the leaders are expect to sign a
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declaration that aims to avoid any future pandemic. here is what boris johnson said on friday. >> we need to make sure that we learn the lessons from the pandemic. we need to make sure we don't repeat some of the errors we doubt was made in the course of the last 18 months or so. and we need to make sure that we now allow our economies to recover. joo >> reporter: the g7 marks the first time for joe biden to be on the stage. if they don't see eye-to-eye with president biden, they seem to appreciate his presence. phil mattingly has those details. >> reporter: for the world's most powerful democracies, a show of unity on the world stage. >> it is genuinely wonderful to see everybody in person.
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>> reporter: smiles and warmth at the start of the g7 summit. a notable departure from the prior four years driven by one clear difference -- the u.s. president. president biden for decades a key figure in u.s. foreign policy now leading it himself. >> he is a breath of fresh air. a lot of things they want to do together. >> >> translator: i am happy the american president is present here. being able to meet joe biden is obviously important. >> reporter: with a goal to leverage the strength of the seven largest market markets to challenge down the pandemic. biden's pledge to donate 500 million vaccine doses to low and middle income countries turned today into a pledge of 1 billion doses from the entire g7. >> we are going to help lead the world out of this pandemic working alongside our global
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partners. >> reporter: to lay out the epidemic road map across the world. >> not just to build back but to build back better. >> reporter: that all too familiar phrase echoing across the atlantic. >> we need to make sure as we recover, we level up across our societies and we build back better. >> reporter: a sign of unity that underscores the embrace and days before a critical sit-down with russian vladimir putin. the two for now not scheduled to hold a joint news official but biden advisers have been clear they expect him to deliver a firm message. what that will be exactly? despite warm meetings with international leaders from the west at least, all eyes will be on geneva in a couple of days when biden meets with russian
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president vladimir putin. all of these meetings are very consciously planned in advance of that meeting for president biden to really at least in the words of his advisers, show the strength of the western democracies as he heads into that meeting with president putin. the white house officials are clear they don't expect any measurable outcomes from that meeting with putin. you seen both leaders ramp up the stakes over the last couple of days. what white house officials say repeatedly saying they want some level of predictable and stability as they certainly will raise issues that putin won't like and probably vice versa as well, what they want to come out of meeting is some level of understanding where the relationship is and where it can go here from here where they can work together on areas of mutual interests. whether that happens, that, obviously, is a open question. phil mattingly, cnn, falmouth,
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england. >> reporter: after president biden attends the nato summit in bru brussels. the russian leader says relations are the worst they have been in years. so a summit is probably necessary to clear the air. he spoke highly of president former president trump. >> i think trump is a talented individual and otherwise he would not have become u.s. president. president biden is radically different from trump because president biden is a career man. he will spent most of his adulthood in politics. think of the number of years he spent in the senate. a different kind of person and building my hope there is, yes, advantages and disadvantages but not any pulse movements on behalf of the sitting u.s.
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president. >> reporter: it's not cleare wil hold a meeting after the meeting. here is matthew chance. >> reporter: the russians are going there to explain the situation. not to negotiate it, not to discuss it. i put it to vladimir putin spokesman that the fact there wasn't going to be a joint news conference at the end of the summit, which would be usual and something the russians say they wanted initially when they set out on this journey in terms of developing this summit was a setback for the ruggs. the russians wanted to show vladimir putin sharing a platform with the u.s. president. the kremlin pushed back on that saying that was not the reason that they were having this summit at all. take a listen. >> the main reason is a state of relationship between our two
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countries and a critical level of the relationship that demands a summit between our two countries because this is the only way to -- this is the only way to arrange a revolution on our relationship, so prevent further -- further degradation. >> reporter: he said that basically the relationship is bad and a summit is the only way really to start the process of addressing that. there is a list as long as your arm between the issues between the united states and russian and whether it's ukraine or cyberattacks against the united states and but none of those issues, the sense i got there, is vladimir putin going to the summit prepared to back down. in his words, don't expect any breakthroughs in this summit. >> that was matthew chance
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reporting. thank you. cnn international diplomatic editor nic robertson is joining us from the site. i want to definitely into what you were explaining earlier. for joe biden of the u.s. this is an opportunity to frame or shape the global stage with team democracy, team west on the one hand and unify those allies against autocracy, whether it's china, whether it's russia. one of the challenges for these rich democracies is to show that democracy works and that democracy delivers in concrete measurable ways. how do they do that this weekend? >> reporter: well, one of the ways that justin trudeau framed it was that, you know, when governments sort of go into, you know, tightening their spending, then that allows the space for
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populace to grow and the space, the sort of pathway to autocracy. s s. one way the g7 is making sure the value is not eroded in that way is by continuing to spend heavily to sort of get their way out of this global pandemic and not making the mistakes as one of the leaders put it of what happened, i think boris johnson said after coming out of the financial shock to the world in 2008. by spending more, governments, in essence, keep their people happier, the people don't look to populace leaders and that sort of cuts down a pathway to autocracy. that is way oversimplification. what president biden is going to frame this is is try to sort of level up and bring up the poorer
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nations of the world to, you know, to have a better standard of living and that should show those nations that democracies work well for them. they are not ignored, that they don't become less citizens of the globe and, therefore, you know, those countries, developing nations, they develop along the path of autocracies rather than democracies so it's sort of tell a positive message of what democracies can do. the leaders here understand this already but it is not necessarily an easy ordinary thing to do to put it into practice. so that is the challenge. they are up against russia and china who have sort of engaged what is seen as a vaccine democracy and offering their vaccines to different countries around the world. on the back of that and in the case of china or in some cases with the road initiative is sort of bringing countries into a state of debt, into a state of requiring china's involved --
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political involvement into a path toward autocracies. a big heavy sell for autocracies that it's worthwhile their government spending to her poorer nations and something boris johnson is all about because he has cut the -- aid for the uk. >> you've covered so many of th summit. there are the headlines that come out of summit and you're good at reading between the lines there. what is the other stuff that you look at when you are covering these and you have to kind of read the signals, you know, the smoke coming out of thecarbis b? >> i think this is harder. i covered the g20 in saudi
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arabia late the last time year which was a virtual summit. what you find in the covid-controlled environment and particularly the environment of the summit, there are lesser opportunities for leaders to ask questions of their leaders directly. that is just not happening. it does fall into a partner here and i think we are seeing at the g7, that you're getting a lot of sort of presummit messaging and messages that give you the idea in bones that the white house or downing street want you to have as the takeaways from the final communication. i think a few days after a summit like this you dig into it deeper and you can see the holes and where things have been glossed over. when i look at it, i'm trying to
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sort of look beyond this sort of prespin and try to sort of engage in analysis of what is really going to come at the end that is really different and just one point on that. there has been this talk of a billion doses of vaccine to help vaccinate everyone on the planet. the critics already saying that is way, way short of what is req required. >> nic, i want to thank you for your candid answer. we are facing a huge amount of spin from richest countries in the world but we have little opportunity to cut through that. we will be doing that on cnn and we have interviews coming up. we will be interviewing boris johnson. nic robertson, thank you very much. mr. biden is receiving a warm welcome from his group of
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g7 leaders because his policy is different than his predecessor trump. >> i think trump looked at germany, france, others and saw u.s. trade deficits. he saw that is -- that's how he saw international relations and didn't frankly much that donald trump got out of g7 meetings. so i think biden has done and will continue to do here what is necessary to show to the world that donald trump is an anomaly, but let's not let the champagne flow too freely here. this is process and pats on the back and good feeling, it's not substance yet. >> there is a lot more to cover from this g7 and lots more angles to get into. it's just after 10:00 a.m. local time here. for now, i'll hand it back to kim brunhuber in atlanta and we
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will back with you later this area. >> thanks so much for that. great analysis there. growing calls for hearings into donald trump's justice department after stunning allegations of abuse of power by the former president and his administration. we will have the latest from washington next. stay with us. did you know prilosec otc can stop frequent heartburn before it begins? heartburn happens when stomach acid refluxes into the esophagus. prilosec otc uses a unique delayed-release formula that helps it pass through the tough stomach acid. it then works to turn down acid production, blocking heartburn at the source. with just one pill a day, you get 24-hour heartburn protection. prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. metastatic breast cancer is relentless, but i'm relentless every day. and having more days is possible with verzenio, proven to help you live significantly longer when taken with fulvestrant. verzenio + fulvestrant is for women with hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer
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here in the u.s., we are learning more about former attorney general william barr's role. now lawmakers want to hear directly from barr and his predecessor jeff sessions. >> reporter: democrats are demanding former barr and session to testify on seized records. the justice department's inspector general is initiating its own review what amounted to a roundup of noncontent records from at least two of former president trump's most spoken
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adversaries and adam schiff and eric -- >> can't go into who received these subpoenas. i can't say it was extraordinarily broad. people have nothing to do with intelligence matters that at least being reported on. it shows what a broad fishing expedition it was. >> reporter: schiff' personal office staff were caught up in the collection. "the new york times" reported the investigation was part of a leak hunt for whomever divulged information about contacts between trump associates and russia at the height of the russia probe. a source tells cnn officials thought the investigation with lend without charges but when barr took over at the justice department he continued to push leak probes and bringing in a prosecutor from new jersey.
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>> i hope trump supporters who fear big brother see that donald trump was the biggest brother we have ever seen in our country who did weaponize this to go all the way down the stack into the private communications of people he perceived as political opponents. >> reporter: president trump made it clear he wanted the doj to investigate leaks and congressman schiff. >> i've called the justice department to look into the leaks. those were criminal leaks. i think it was leaks from the intelligence committee house version and i think they leaked it and i think schiff leaked it. >> reporter: barr evaded questions from kamala harris, then senator, in a hearing in may 2019. >> attorney general barr, has anyone at the white house or president trump ask you open an investigation of anyone? >> i wouldn't -- >> yes or no. >> could you repeat that
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question? >> i will repeat it. has the president or anyone at the white house ever asked or suggested that you open an investigation of anyone. yes or no, please, sir. >> the president or anybody else? >> it seems you would remember something like that and be able to tell us? >> yeah. but i'm trying to grapple with the word "suggest." >> reporter: barr told politico when he was attorney he was not aware of any congressman records being sought in a leak case and added that trump never encouraged him to target democratic lawmakers saying trump was not aware of who we were looking at in any of the cases. barr did not become attorney general. 2 -- until 2019. the subpoenas were issued when jeff sessions was attorney general but we are told by a source that sessions was not involved any subpoenas related to the house committee since he
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had broadly recused himself invo from any matters involving russia. on friday, communications director said president biden had a different relationship with the doj than his predecessors and respects the department's independence. >> let me be absolutely clear. the behavior, these actions the the president finds them absolutely appalling. he ran for president in part because of the abuse of power by the last president and by the last attorney general. >> he added that such, quote, atrocious behavior won't be a model for how the biden administration will govern. u.s. attorney general merrick garland plans to invite republican-led efforts to restrict voting rights. on friday he outlined a number of steps the department of judge
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will take. the move comes as republicans enact new restrictions on voting after the party's presidential election loss. garland insists the right to vote is nonnegotiablea. >> we will use all issues in the voter acts and the inform and overseas citizens absentee voting act to ensure that we protect every qualified american seeking to participate in our democracy. there are many things that are opened to debate in america. but the right of all eligible citizens to vote is not one of them. >> garland also said the justice department will exam restrictive voting laws and take actions against any violations. a major vaccine pledge from g7 leaders. they are committing to donate 1
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>> i'm in cyril vannier in falmouth, england. day two of the g7 summit gets under way. topping the list is foreign policy and the global economy and the ongoing covid crisis. biden officials say a main focus on how to strategically compete with china and after nearly two years without meeting face-to-face because of the pandemic, the group is already showing signs of progress in the fight against the virus. the leaders are expected to sign an agreement that is being called the carbis day declaration, a couple of bays down from here to the west where the leaders of these democracies are working today. they will be vowing to take steps to prevent future pmeds. thfuture. a group of protesters dressed up
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in big-head kcostumes on the cornish beach. the g7 leaders were shown tossing over a giant covid dose. other balloons were predicting biden and johnson were part of an effort to promise more vaccines to poorer countries. joining me now, is jo hanna rare. you are the director of advocation for unicef uk. i'm going to pull up part of your statement and i think this is going to save us some time here. you say you welcome the donations. let me call it a pledge. the volume and speed, i'm quoting here. the volume and speed of vaccine donations needs to accelerate to ensure they get to the countries that need them most.
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it's not enough? >> in essence, yes, it's not enough and we need it more and faster. we know the route out of this pandemic is vaccines and know the only way to put an end to the pandemic for good. so we won't have new variants or g7 lockdowns so we need to share vaccines with the world. >> they pledged 1 billion doses. it is not nothing. >> it is a significant amount what we would like to see delivering a billion by the end of this year. >> 1 billion you're okay with that? you feel that is sufficient generosity? that is what we are really talking about. where do you put this marker? what is generous enough from the world's richest countries. >> >> we are all in this together and the way to get out of this is sharing vaccines. they will show the richest countries the world have a huge amount of vaccines and
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delivering successful vaccine programs and now at a point they can start sharing their vaccines with the world and continuing their own domestic rollout and it won't stop that or slow it down in any way. >> so this is where the politics get into it. because even if they are successful, you can understand, can't you, that the populations here in the uk, who have had a long brutal confined winter as i'm sure you've experienced they want to get vaccinated. people in their 20s and 30s not vaccinated yet would want to be vaccinated but doesn't stop them from wanting to be generous. where do you set that marker? >> i think what our analysis is showing is, right now, particularly in the uk, we have had a really successful vaccine rollout. if we continue that and continue to deliver it, but if we don't start sharing vaccines now with the rest of the world, we will see examples like india and see new variants and a real risk that will damage the progress we have made.
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also a risk that some of these variants might be resistant to the vaccines which would undo all of the work we have done. the mayor is supportive of the idea of sharing vaccines now. i think because they understand that unless this virus is over everywhere, unless we tackle it every where, it's not going to be over and we are going to continue to see variants and we are going to continue to see examples like india or uganda. we need to tackle this variant as quickly as we can can and that is sharing vaccines. >> how do they share the vaccines faster? >> there is a facility called covax that was established to help get vaccines to low and middle income countries, to the people that needed it the most in those countries. many g7 countries have donated money and vaccines to covax which is also but right now covax is short about 200 million
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vaccines so there are the numbers we are talking about and that is the the type of number we want to see the g7 meeting right now. >> when you say short of 200 million compared to their target? >> compared what they were planning to roll out and compared to the conversations they are with middle and low income countries what they can absorb or deliver. it's not just about vaccines but people being able to administer vaccines and health workers to go to work and administer the vaccines so it has to be a comprehensive approach. >> the rich countries just down the coastline from where we are, they can get together as they have been and pledge 1 billion but you say the infrastructure needs to be in place behind that so those get delivered. >> a lot is through covax that is set up to get these vaccines off the paper into a pledge into
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airplanes and on the tarmac and into people's arm and that facility is set up to do that but at the moment it doesn't have the vaccines to deliver as much as it wants to. >> we have seen so many times when international crisis and rich countries or not so rich countries get together and pledge money or in this case vaccines as well. two years down the road, you read something that breaks your heart that half the money that was pledged was never given or made it to the people that needed it. do you see that happening here some is that a danger? >> it is always a danger that the word on paper don't turn into action and we need that to turn into action. ultimately like we will pay the highest price if we don't deliver on the commitments we make. not just the places around the world but at home. we will have other variants and mean we will be in lockdowns so much longer and more people will die ultimately. we know how to -- we have manufactured a vaccine at an incredible time. what a major achievement. we need to get it around the world now.
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the g7 they know how to do that and it's in everybody's interest to do it. we are all in this together. either we go through it together and we get out of it faster or we have another year like we have had before and the route out of this, the clear pathway out of this pandemic is sharing vaccines. >> yeah, get it done. no one is safe. >> until we are all safe. >> until we are all safe. you're right. i think a level of understanding with that. just in this country, we are seeing now the indian variant and case numbers are going up, even though a successful vaccine rollout so we are understanding first-hand the importance of stemming the pandemic worldwide. joanna, thank you so much. we need to do the catch-up six months from now and see whether this has actually happened and whether it's materialized. thank you so much. >> thank you. the climate and the environments are other key issues around the g7 table this weekend. near the summit site, two artists are use an unusual
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method. anna stewart explains the meaning of mt. recycle more. >> reporter: this is mt. recycle more. instead of former u.s. presidents, this sculpture depicts the g7 leaders attending this year's summit and erected near the summit at the site, in cornwall, england, for everybody to see. they are sending a clear message to world leaders about the environment problems of electronic waste. >> basically, it's to make them sort of say you got to work together on this one and you got to do it the way we do things so we can recycle things and repair things and we don't waste
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things. >> reporter: more than 53 million tons of electronic waste were produced globally in 2019 and that number is expected to more than double by the year 2050 making it the fastest growing type of waste polluting our planet. these organizers say it's about time something is done about a problem on a global scale. >> what i'd like them to do, the leaders of the g7 conference, i'd like to talk to each other and work out a plan that isn't just shifting the problem from one country to another, you know, but actually as a plan we work on together which is how to deal with this waste. >> reporter: it may be cool took look at but it's not just art or a tourist attraction, it's a pile of junk that is a threat to the environment. >> this is just the perfect opportunity, the perfect place as well to just shove it in their face, you know?
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the world leaders, you know, need to get their act together. we all do. >> reporter: anna stewart, cnn. mt. mount recycle more. thank you for that, anna. back to my friend kim brunhuber for more news. how sleuths are helping fbi track down riroters from their homes. that is next. stay with us. mach doesn't. well, that disagreement ends right now. lactaid ice cream is the creamy, real ice cream you love that doesn't have lactose. it'll mess with every sense you have. but it'll never mess with your stomach. lactaid ice cream. available in eight epic flavors. lactaid. real ice cream that treats you right. what makes new salonpas arthritis gel so good for arthritis pain? lactaid. real ice cream
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chicago police officer has been arrested in connection with the u.s. capitol insurrection back in january. the charges include violent entry and disorderly conduct on capitol grounds. right now, the fbi is trying to track down more than 256 january rioters and the investigators are getting unusual help who
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have joined the search. sara murray reports they scour the internet on clues who may have been involved in the deadly assault. >> i got one! >> reporter: from the mob a hand reaches out with taser and leave an officer begging for his life. >> i remember yelling out that i have kids. >> reporter: they got to work. >> it was one of the more violent scenes at the capitol. >> reporter: within days, they compiled video tracing the taser and the man holding it through the crowd on january 6th. others on social media pitched in to determine the man's identity. >> you can see the suspect reaching out, putting the taser on officer fanone's neck. >> reporter: they delivered it to the fbi and huffington post reporter who later confirmed the allegedly attackerer. he has pleaded not guilty. it's not clear from the court documents whether their work will help the case against rodriguez.
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the deep state dogs is one group in a sprawling community rooting out insurrectionists on january 6th. one says it's a diverse group united by a common goal. >> what they are working for is accountability and they are going about that in different ways. whether it means publishing information or whether making tips to lawsuit. >> reporter: their efforts are also a rebuttal to republicans looking to whitewash the ho horrifying events of january 6th. >> every time i hear a laurmt t lawmaker of what happened, i think of their pictures and footage of what we have of them fleeing from what was going on. i know that they remember it too. this was a trauma for them. >> reporter: the hunters crowd source information often and assign state tags.
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others times they build files on suspects in closed groups before sharing their findings. their handiwork is sprinkled throughout the court documents. certain internet sites assigned this one the following. it led to misfires early on. >> it was a tremendous amount of desire and eagerness on the part of people who had never done this type of digging before to help out and get involved. it resulted in some misidentification. >> reporter: a set of best practices have emerged. don't toss names on social media. the fbi has arrested nearly 500 suspects related to the capitol riots and still looking for the public help in identifying more than 2506 other. >> 400, that is a small number. this will continue. what we are seeing now is only a
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drop in the bucket. >> reporter: the fbi wants to see the tips continue to come in. a spokesperson said tips matter and the public has been of tremendous assistance in this investigation. sara pmurray, cnn, washington. many may not know queen elizabeth has a sense of humor. we will bring you that ahead. stay with us. did you know prilosec otc can stop frequent heartburn before it begins? heartburn happens when stomach acid refluxes into the esophagus. prilosec otc uses a unique delayed-release formula that helps it pass through the tough stomach acid. it then works to turn down acid production, blocking heartburn at the source. with just one pill a day, you get 24-hour heartburn protection. prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn.
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at least 13 people are in a hospital after a shooting in the entertainment district of austin, texas, this morning. no fatalities are record. police say it appears to be an isolated incident. the motivate is not known but. we will keep you updated as we get more information. tokyo says they will offer vaccines to 18,000 people not everyone will be getting one and many volunteers say they haven't been given enough support from
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olympic official. you spent time talking to volunteers, listening to their concerns. do you think this latest move will make a difference and stem the tide of volunteers quitting? >> reporter: for the ones that are eligible this would definitely give them some peace of mind. many of the volunteers i've spoken to they have given little hand sanitizer and pamphlets for the protection. they say it's not clear how many volunteers are eligible for this. at best it seems like a small proportion given 70,000 olympic volunteers even though 10,000 have already quit. take a listen to what the president of tokyo 2020 had to say about this plan to vaccinate 18,000 olympic volunteers. >> translator: we expect those with frequent contact with athletes to be olympic village staff, national olympic and national paralympic staff,
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assistance, operation staff, airport staff and anti-doping staff and others. volunteers and contractors will be eligible. they will get their first dose by the under of june and after three weeks get their second dose before the games. >> reporter: there are other reasons why volunteers quit. i spoke to one student who said he is not quitting to protect his own health but quitting to make a statement he is against these games going ahead this summer. he feels edition-- organizers h trying to make the public comfortable with them. athletes are already being vaccinated. officials have said they expect more than 80% of the olympic village to be vaccinated. participants are going to contact traced by gps and social distancing and regular testing. given these restrictions you
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have the million adviser saying it is completely impossible to shut out covid-19. we are talking as many mitigation steps as possible. foreign spectators have been fanned and we don't know how many local fans will be in the stands, if any. >> thank you so much for that in tokyo for us. appreciate it. queen elizabeth's official birthday celebration is today. her real birthday is actually in april. the 95-year-old is spending it entertaining some high profile guests. she will meet tomorrow with u.s. president biden and jill biden. she was already in a festive mood on friday. >> you look like you're enjoying this? >> definitely. we have been enjoying ourselves in spite of the crisis.
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>> later, the royal family greeted the leaders at a reception and dinner. the queen was presented with a quake and a sword and, again, she showed off some sharp comic timing. >> is this going to work? >> two hands. >> what? >> there is a knife. >> i know there is! this is something more unusual! >> no one got knighted but they all got the "point" excuse all of the puns there. let's bring in you to rescue me here. the first thing that comes to my mind when i see that, how clean is a sword? i'm not sure i would want to eat that cake! >> you don't need any rescuing, my friend. great job.
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look. i think a lot of world leaders, if they were able to say so in public, would probably tell you they have found themselves on the cutting edge of one of the queen's quips. all of these things remain private so we will never know. that is just my impression. you know, kim, there was a lot of royal muscle at the g7 yesterday. a serious note here. i'm not how much of a precedent for the gun attendsing the g7. i'm sure we have seen that, yes, but prince charles heir to the throne and her grandson second in the loin to the throne, a lot of royal muscle. i wonder how much of that may or may not have been to downing street's request. i know historically downing street hasn't been above asking the queen to come and lend a hand so i'm not sure that was the case. >> fascinating stuff. we will watch her trooping the color for our official birthday today. thank you, cyril, for all of your excellent interviews there
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♪ good morning. and welcome to "new day." i'm boris sanchez. good morning, i'm amara walker in for christi paul. happening now, president biden meeting with world leaders at the g7 in england as biden sells his america is back message to allies, speaking with the world leader, not in attendance that still looms over the summit. plus, as vaccinations among children rise, there are new questions over how soon kids should get vaccinated. amid new studies showing a possible link betwee
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