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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 27, 2021 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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hope is waning as crews search for signs of life in the rubble of that collapsed condo near miami and new information is surfacing that the building had serious concrete damage. another variant of the coronavirus is causing concern around the world. scientists are trying to figure out how well vaccines will work against delta plus. and hundreds are lining up as the boss reopens on broadway, ushering crowds back into new york theaters. welcome to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber, this is "cnn
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newsroom." we begin in surfside, florida, where search and rescue operations are growing more aggressive after another body was found in the wreckage of a 12-story building collapse. this is what's left of champlain towers south after part of the tower came crashing down in seconds on thursday. five people are confirmed dead and 156 others remain unaccounted for. the miami of miami-dade county gave an up date on the search on saturday. >> our teams have been working around the clock as always to search for survivors. they have not stopped and today our search and rescue teams found another body in the rubble and as well our search has revealed some human remains.
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>> the mayor also announced the county will immediately begin an investigation of all buildings 40 years and older. major structural problems with the building were flagged back in 2018, concerns about the nearby north tower and how safe it is. with each passing hour, families grow ever more anxious for the news about their loved ones. isabela rosales has the latesest. >> reporter: the intense search and rescue has not stopped and will not stop. the mission is just too important. 156 people still unaccounted for but today, a heartbreaking discovery. >> our teams have been working around the clock as always to search for survivors. they have not stopped. >> reporter: search teams discovering another body in the rubble from thursday's partial collapse of a done dough building in surfside, florida. >> as well our search has
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revealed some human remains. >> reporter: officials relying on dna testing to identify the victims. family members of the unaccounted have all provided dna samples. >> although we're burdened with such despair and heavy hearts, we're lifted up by the faith of the miracles god with create. >> reporter: loved ones holding on to hope as crews make fire containing a fire in the rubble that drastically affected search and rescue efforts. >> we're going to do a very deep dive into why this building fell down. >> reporter: a report on the building from 2018 included concerns about structural damage. failure to replace the waterproofing in the new future will cause the extent of the concrete deterioration to expand exponentially. they are deeply troubled by the building collapse and working closely with the investigating
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authorities to understand why the structure failed. the miami of miami-dade is working on accommodating requests from the family members who visit, pray and reflect there at the site. in surfside, florida, isabel rosales. a field survey in 2018 is raising questions about the structural integrity of the building. the report revealed alarming concerns about concrete below the pool deck and parking garage. brian todd has more. >> reporter: we have news a structural confirm has acknowledged it did an inspection and report on the south tower complex in october of 2018, when it did that inspection and issued that report it found significant cracks and crumbling at various spots inside the complex. cnn previously reported the firm found instruction turl damage to a concrete slab underneath the pool deck and pound significant cracking and spalling, a crumb
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being of concrete in the parking lot. morabito found that and that is what they found. it's saddened by the collapse and working with investigators to determine the cause of this collapse. meanwhile rescuers are trying to get to anyone who might be inside, find people who could be alive. the mayor of surfside, charles brigget has called for the champagne towers north to be evacuated. brian todd, surfside, florida. >> joining know is forest landing, structural engineer with fema nine in california. thanks so much for being here with us. you've seen the detail about the structural problems and repairs needed and looked at the pictures of the building before
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the collapse. hindsight here, should the alarm bells have rung much more urgently? >> i think so. it's been several years and reading through the report, there was evidence of the concrete spalling, cracking and corrosion on the rebars and what's really concerning is it was happening in the basement, extend beyond the footprint of the building so above the basement is exterior the outside and the report said there was no slope so the water would pond until it evaporated and calcium cash night in the concrete and attempts to repair cracks you but the report also stated there was further cracking since the re
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repair which to me would be a huge red flag. >> what can you tell us about the chances of survival post collapse. you have some sobering statistics and also maybe a reason for hope. >> yes, so when a building collapses and people are trapped inside there's an initial percentage of outs that will unfortunately die right off the bat. there is another amount who are alive. they will be able to last anywhere from minutes to hourd and if uninjured they can last up to a week. the biggest opportunity to find survivors is in the first 48 hours. after the first 48 hours that diminishes greatly. there have been times they've found survivors out to a week.
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so there is still hope out there. sometimes you find people out a week. that window is the first 48 hours. that's why it's really critical to get urban search and rescue teams immediately. it's' up to the local search and rescue teams. you cannot mobilize the other teams as quickly. even though i said 48 hurz, the first 24 hours is even a better chance. timing is everything. >> let's certainly hope for the best. there's certainly still a reason to hope. thank you so much for joining us. >> great. forest lang, appreciate you sharing your expertise with us. >> great. thank you. one man describes the absolute horror he saw. >> is our hoe sell. i hope these people -- i mean, there's no way.
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look at this. why are these people still in our hotel? oh my gosh, what a mess in here now. the scariest thing. i thought a tornado literally just hit and they said no, the building is gone. oh, my word. oh, my word. oh, my word. >> the man who shot that video whose voice you just heard there is daniel groves. he was in florida on a family vacation and tells us what was going through his mind the moment he realized what was happening. >> that is six minutes, a couple minutes after the building collapsed. my thing was i was just showing my family what was going on. if we lost cell service, i was recording the video for my family so they could see what was going on at that very moment and i mean i don't know. i mean, there is shock, all kind
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of everything all at ones. i was on the second floor right by the pool so in the middle of the blue hotel the solaris hotel beside t i was on the second floor. dead asleep at 1:20 in the morning, it literally sounded like a bomb going off, the loudest thing i've ever heard in my life, from a dead sleep and the whole building shook. felt like we were in the worst quake and i immediately run over, talking about 15 seconds, i run over to the windows, i couldn't see four or five feet. we are in a tornado, babe, get up, we're in ia tornado. we run into the next room, grab our kids and take off outside leaving everything in the rooms. >> one come survived by climbing through rubble in the dark holding her dog.
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she's one of them accounted on thursday. she woke up because of a noise that was unusual woke her up abankruptly and felt like the whole building was shaking and was afraid the building was going to crumble. she rushed out of her apartment, the only available stairwell has full of debris. here she is. >> it was pitch black like "titanic" finding our ware out until we get to some light. i was one of two i think that survived on my floor. i'm hoping that there's a reason why i survived, a bigger picture. >> matt hancock resigns as britain's health secretary a day after apologizing for breaching covid restrictions. we'll explain. plus dozens of hospital employees say no to vaccines mandated by their employer and now they're out of a job. stay with us.
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climate change. while covid restrictions stayed in place in the uk because of the spread of the delta variant. the uk's health ministerfhe is causing it quits after breaking social distancing rules. matt hancock was called kissing an aide. the british tabloid says they were having an affair. cnn's isa suarez is standing by. he said it sounds like hypocrisy not infidelity. >> that's his fall. coronavirus the pandemic really brazeded his profile and also his the hypocrisy around the messaging he's given and what he's doing to led to his fall as secretary of health. let me give you a sense of what we are seeing in terms of the
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british newspapers and how they are covering this. let me show you the "sunday tiles" "puritan in chief who became the minister for hypocrisy." said "the sunday times." "the observer" says hancock may have gone but impressions of integrity linger and "the daily mail" hancock quits his job and marriage. he put out a video statement where he apologized for his failings and where he needed to step down given the fact he was telling people who they ought to be doing and following rules and he was going against them. take a listen to what he said. >> i understand the enormous sacrifices that everybody in this country has made, that you have made and those of us who make these rules have got to
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stick by them and that's why i've got to resign. >> reporter: so he was under increasing pressure following the front page of "the sun" that came out on friday. you could see the cctv image of matt hancock in an embrace with one of his closest aides. it wasn't so much the morality of it or the infidelity of it of these two individuals, having this affair that really broke the camel's back. it hypocrisy. here you have a health secretary at the time who was creating these laws, who was quite tough on covid restrictions, who was telling people they couldn't hug each other. this happened on may the 6th, per "the sun" when the cctv image was taken and middle of stage two of covid restrictions. it's only a week after that photo is taken the people can start hugging, only a week after
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that photo was taken that really we see an easing of social restrictions. so you can see how people would be spitting feathers at the thought that you had a health secretary who is the architect of these rules then going about breaking them and people have been angry because as you can imagine, many people haven't been able to see their loved ones. people at the time couldn't see their family members who were dying in hospital, couldn't go to funerals, so i think it made his position untenable. there is another aspect to this that you'd see in the coming days, a question of the accusation of crimeism because julia michaelangelo was brought in as a nonexecutive director for the health department and she was brought in by him. he brought her in and she was being paid public money so many questions really being raised but critically the main one here
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is the question of hypocrisy and the fact many of the mps around him couldn't support him. >> convoluted. thanks so much for that, cnn's isa suarez, appreciate it. yet another coronavirus variant is causing alarm, this one a slightly changed version of the delta variant called delta plus. 200 cases found in 11 countries and scientists are trying to figure out how well the current vaccines work against it. >> reporter: india has survived the world's worst outbreak of covid-19 helped along by the highly transmissible delta variant. experts warn the threat is far from over.
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india is concerned about the delta plus showing increased transmissibility, stronger binding to lung cells and potential reduction in antibody response. some indian health care experts are sounding the alarm. >> if a potential mutation happens it will again be explosive, can be more explosive or can be less explosive but it will lead to a clear. >> reporter: the delta plus variant was detected in three indian states but most cases are reported outside the country, officially said, from japan to poland to portugal to switzerland it's popping up across the globe. the united states and uk appear to be most affected with dozens of cases already. dr. ravi gupta said the impact on spread is limited. >> it does in some people help the virus to get around our immune defenses but only to a small teeing and it's some people so that's why it has to
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be taken in context. >> reporter: should we concerned about vaccine efficacy when it comes to the plus variant? >> the delta is enough to worry about. >> reporter: even without the one additional mutation the delta variant say formidable enemy. the strain is set to become the most dominant one globally and the u.s. is braced for impact. >> the delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the u.s. to our attempt to eliminate covid-19. >> reporter: the british government delayed the easing of restrictions, largely due to the variant. as tourism season begins, europe is watching nervously. eu modeling forecasts the delta variant will make up 90% of infections in the block by the end of august. but as the virus morphs and mutates, experts say the best defense against it remains the same, vaccination.
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cnn, london. there's a debate here in the u.s. over whether companies can compel employees to get covid vaccines. more than 150 hospital workers are out of a job after refusing to do so. the number includes those who resign and terminated. houston methodist hospital required the vaccination to keep jobs and some held protests and losing a battle in court. one employee preferred giving up her job to getting a vaccine. >> when i found out they were going to mandate it, my husband and i had a very difficult conversation. i was like okay, do i need to go ahead and do it? i don't want to, but to keep my job, which also has insurance for our family. it was a very hard decision. i love the people that i work with, and then the connection of
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the patients, but we both agreed that it's not for us and there's not enough research about it. >> joining me from pasadena, california, is labor law expert thomas lens. thank you so much for being here. i want to start with the basics. can your employer say get the shot or you're fired. >> yes, under federal law in the united states an employer can require that employees receive immunization. there are a couple of exceptions related to religion or health condition, say disability but generally speaking, yes, an employer can require vaccination. >> some employees are challenging this in the courts. do they have any chance of succeeding here? >> well, i think that the law is pretty clear on this, unless
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they meet one of those exceptions, they have a minimal chance of success but i think since this issue was so politicized it's not going to stop people from trying. >> yes, absolutely. you know, one of the thorny things many companies are grappling with then is how to identify who has been vaccinated and who hasn't. if you're allowed to go maskless at work, only if vaccinated, how do you prove it? do you require people to wear a badge or a bracelet? can you do that? >> well, employers can require employees to provide proof of vaccination, and employers need to be careful if let's say they obtain the card, an employee might get after vaccination, but frankly, most employers are choosing not to do that, because
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it creates employee relations problems, employees are fearful that their privacy might be compromised, and employers often don't want to deal with the record keeping and keeping such information separate. so many employers are opting to have employees self-attest instead. >> what about organizations that aren't companies. indiana university a public institution are taken to court because they aren't allowed to go on campus unless they get the vaccine. do you think that will stand up in court? >> well, that's a great question. i think that because they are attending a state university and government is subject to due process and equal protection obligations, that private companies typically are not, there is i think perhaps a
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different likelihood that they could potentially succeed, and much is going to depend i think on the consistency of such rules not only in terms of how they're written but how they're applied. >> yes, exactly, consistency is the key here. it seems to be all over the place, some states have strict protocols like california, where you are. some are going in the other direction like montana, which passed a law discouraging employers from asking about vaccination status. can they do that? can they stop employers from doing something that could protect the employee's health? gl >> it's going to create interesting conflicts between state and federal law. i think states can certainly try but to the extent federal law allows otherwise, i think those state enactments may well be void. >> all right, so then from an employee perspective, there's been a lot of debate about the rights workers have to know about outbreaks in their
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workplaces and some cases workers only find out weeks or months later. shouldn't workers have the legal right to know when many people are coming back to non-socially distanced and maskless workplaces? >> i think that's a great question and i think that worker also make that case. it may vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. >> so much still to be decided as we try to figure our way through this. thanks so much for shedding some light on it, thomas lenz, really appreciate it. >> my pleasure. happy to help. the boss is taking charge again on broadway. spruce springs steen brought back his solo show to broadway saturday night, one of the first since the pandemic shut down
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performances last year. is he as one of his song says "born to run." his run will include 30 shows until early september, great news for his fans and fans of broadway. >> i'm here to see springsteen on broadway. i wanted to be in the audience on the first night broadway comes back. >> once we got the news that springsteen was the first to open, i thought that was the light at the end of the tunnel. >> this is just extra special, opening night post pandemic, everyone's going to be pumped for the boss and i think that the energy that he brings is going to be truly amazing. coming up, the death toll in florida's devastating building collapse edges up as desperate families await news of their
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loved ones unaccounted for. we're hearing from the daughter of one of the missing, facing the heartbreaking questions from her own child, that's just ahead.
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welcome back to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is "cnn newsroom." returning now to florida and the latest on the catastrophic building collapse in the city of surfside. search and rescue teams are again working through the night after another body was found in the rubble on saturday. at least five people have now been confirmed dead, 156 others are still unaccounted for. families awaiting news of their
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loved ones have been gathering at the family reunification center a few blocks away from the disaster site and after 72 hours, so many say the hardest part of it all is just not knowing. officials are relying on dna samples from families to help identify any victims. as crews continue their search, the families of the missing are facing agonizing uncertainty and praying for a miracle. cnn spoke with the children of judy spiegel, one of the 156 people still unaccounted for. >> my mom is just the best person in the world. she is so caring and loving. she like loves my kids and i'm obviously i'm dealing with my own stuff but i have to worry about my daughter. i have two daughters but one is too little to know and understand. the picture that you just saw was scarlet with my mom. but you know, my daughter keeps asking.
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we told her last night that my mom is missing and we can't find her and she told me that, well, she's really good at playing hide and seek so she's probably hiding in her house. can i go there with you? i know where she hides. i said, we have a lot of people helping. i told her i've been on the news. we're doing everything that we can. my husband told me that, you know, she asked again today. you know, have they found grandma. has mommy found grandma. >> people are putting up pictures of the missing a few blocks away from the collapsed building and also bringing flowers and candles. families have been gathering there along with people devastated by what happened. cnn spoke with one of the people who hit set up the memorial wall. >> what were those families thinking for those last ten seconds? if they were woken up by the loud sound of the first
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collapse. you know, what were they thinking? were they able to hug their loved one? were they able to tell them i love you? were they able to recognize this is the moment that, you know, that -- that maybe this is the last moment of our lives? so what i am experiencing here, it's been very moving. i have seen a lot of people go up to the memorial. you know, shed tears. i have hugged a lot of people. so it's been very moving to have a place where the community can come target together apart from everything that has to do with the government and trying to find answers. and just have a place where they can have a spiritual connection with somebody else that is, also, suffering with them. >> we have touching pictures of firefighters honoring the victims. two photos released of the chaplain and firefighters visiting the memorial site near the champlain towers. they prayed for strength and peace for the families affected by the collapse and the ongoing rescue efforts. the impact of this tragedy extends far beyond south florida. many those unaccounted for are from latin american countries. their loved ones outside the u.s. are watching the situation
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unfold from afar. matt rivers has more. >> reporter: as so many american families are awaiting news. any sort of word on the fate of their loved ones, as a result of this partial collapse. so, too, are dozens of latin american families. whose loved ones are among those that are missing. remember, there are multiple south american countries that have citizens that are among the dozens and dozens of people that remain unaccounted for, at this point. we have done some reporting over the last several days talking to different family members from some of those south american countries. and the consistent theme that we hear is that, among the worst part of all of this is just the lack of information. the lack of any sort of news on the fates of their missing family members. we know this is an international response. both, israel and mexico saying that they have sent workers, rescue workers, to try and help with the international effort. with the search-and-rescue effort that is currently underway in south florida.
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we also know that the u.s. government, u.s. senator marco rubio's office, trying to expedite visas for the foreign nationals who have family members who are among those missing at those -- at this juncture. trying to get family members the ability to even come to south florida, and be there, present, as these rescue efforts continue. but unfortunately, we know that the more time goes by, as each hour ticks by, the chances of finding people alive in that debris continues to go down. matt rivers, cnn, mexico city. to learn how you can help the collapse victims and their families head to cnn.com/impact. when we come back, a hot air balloon flight in new mexico ends tranlgically after the balloon crashes to the ground, with no survivors. we'll have the latest. and an historic heat wave is baking the northwestern u.s. we'll find out if there's any relief in site from this
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record-breaking hot weather. we'll ask the man who knows ahead. stay with us. 's not in his room. ♪ dad, why didn't you answer your phone? your mother loved this park. ♪ she did. this... is what freedom sounds like. and this. this is what freedom smells like. ahhh, enjoy 30 days of open-road freshness. febreze car. i don't just play someone brainy on tv - i'm an actual neuroscientist. and i love the science behind neuriva plus. unlike ordinary memory supplements, neuriva plus fuels six key indicators of brain performance.
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u.s. authorities are investigating a deadly hot air balloon crash. the balloon went down in albuquerque, new mexico, on saturday killing five people. the crash involved power lines temporarily knocking out electricity to 13,000 people. the area is popular with ballooning enthusiasts. albuquerque's mayor explained how hard the tragedy is hitting the community. >> for all of us in new mexico, you know, we think about ballooning and what it means to us. i do know this is a tragedy that is uniquely felt and uniquely hits home here in albuquerque and the ballooning community. >> officials from the federal aviation administration and national transportation safety board are supervising the investigation. according to the ntsb data, there have been at least 12 fatal balloon crashes across the
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u.s. since 2008. more than 18 million people are under excessive heat warnings across parts of the earn u.s. portland, oregon, hit 18 degrees fahrenheit over 42 degrees celsius on saturday. saturday morning was the second warmest of all times. let's bring in meteorologist derek van dam. we're not just talking about being uncomfortable. this is potentially dangerous. >> it's oppressive especially for locations throughout the pacific northwest not accustomed to this heat, don't have air conditioning built into their homes and temperatures overnight are not cooling off allowing for our bodies to regulate the excessive temperatures. if and when seattle goes into triple-digit territory today and once again tomorrow it will have happened in a three-day stretch, what took 126 years to do previously so this is just putting it into context what kind of heat we're dealing with,
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all-time record highs ever so in portland, oregon, yesterday on saturday it's never been this hot. portland airport reading 108 degrees it is incredible. these are june records. we smashed them for multiple cities across the pacific northwest, talking seattle this is interesting. they broke a daily and monthly record yesterday of 102. it glet warmer but the mt. rainier national park service the mountain behind the emerald city in the picture how the rate of melting of the ice and the snow is occurring faster than usual. the freezing temperature you have to go up to 18,700 feet according to the national park center of, something rangers and meteorologists working the region have never seen or experienced before in their career so you could imagine temperatures at the tip of one of the highest mountains in north america or at least in the united states continental united states is above freezing. you could see the forecast on monday, 107, that will smash a
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record high an all-time record high of 103 and these temperatures are running from 30 to 40 degrees fahrenheit above average. if we were to extrapolate the same amount of departure for atlanta, it would be 110 today. foo phoenix, arizona, 30 degrees above would be 136, kim, that is world record-breaking heat territory. these heat warnings into into the arctic circle as well. astounding. >> thank you, derek van dam, appreciate it. u.s. president joe biden is correcting course after his coming on bipartisan infrastructure bill drew swift fire from the other side of the highly. arlette saenz breaks down the white house's apparent about-face. >> reporter: president biden dove into his cleanup mode on saturday. just hours after that agreement had been reached, the president tied that bipartisan plan to a
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larger reconciliation bill. it's expected to just pass on democratic votes, saying we would not sign one without the other. comments frustrated republican senators working with him on that agreement. on saturday, the president acknowledged the frustration and said that republicans were understandably upset. he added, my comments also created the impression that i was issuing a veto threat on the very plan i just agreed to which was not my intent. the president went on to say he fully supports that bipart proposal and intends to support it and promote it with vigor. the white house really jumped into damage control mode trying to ease the concern of the republican senators. and moderate democrats. president biden holding a personal phone call with kyrsten sinema of arizona. after the president's statement on saturday, two of those senators, rob portman and sinema, a democrat, tweeted out their support for the original
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bipartisan agreement. the president is giving a speech in wisconsin on tuesday. this is going to be a long road ahead as the president is trying to seek the bipart stand support for the infrastructure proposal, but it's already off to a bumpy start. arlette saenz, cnn, the white house. iranian athletes demand action against tehran by the international olympic committee. stay with us.
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the tokyo olympics are just 26 days away and organizers say they're enforcing strict measures to minimize the threat from coronavirus. tokyo olympic committee president says holding the games without any spectators remains an option. the olympics are supposed to be an apolitical event with athletes free to sweet without facing discrimination. some athletes in exile from iran say that's not how it he plays out. they want the international olympic committee to ban iran from participating in the games. don riddell asks them why.
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>> the international olympic committee states sports should be free and fair for all but athletes from iran say that's not the case for them. >> we have a simple question. can ioc member states torture and arrest athletes and violate the charter? are you doing anything to protect these athletes? their rights have been discriminated against every single day. >> reporter: 1998 he was a junior world champion wrestler and coached the national team for iran but constant interference from the government forced him to flee from the united states. he lives now in the united states. it called for a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play but many iranian athletes have been forced to pull out of competitions because of the unwritten rule no athlete can share the stage with an athlete from israel. >> there's somebody from israel, we are not allowed to compete
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with them but why? they said there is no why. you just not allowed to do it and if you do it, your life is in your own hands. take it or leave it. >> reporter: at the world judo championships in to 19, saed was pressured to lose his semifinal match so he wouldn't face muki in the final. iran was banned for four years, the key piece of evidence of the order being given. [ speaking in foreign language ] the chartert makes clear that sports organizations within the olympic movement shall apply political neutrality but mahdi begs to differ. his opposition to the government was known and in 2004, arrested, detained and tortures for six months. jafar said he was accused of
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being an israeli spy. >> they break my nose, many different stuff i don't want to talk about, don't want to remember it. >> reporter: the football player says she faced discrimination as a femaleat least and pictured in 2017 without her hijab, the head scarf she realized it would be too dangerous to return home to iran. ever since she and her family have been threatened. >> translator: i get sms messages from people saying we will cut off your head and send the photo to your family. >> reporter: all of the athletes live abroad and united to tell the stories of iranian athletes to the world, motivated by the execution last year of wrestler navidif company kari, put to death for a murder his families and supporters say he didn't
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commit. on the day of the alleged crime he was taking part in the anti government protests sweeping the country. now the campaign group united for navid wants the world to pay attention to their plight and calling on the international olympic committee to take action. >> i strongly believe iranian athletes are so powerful and they can bring change within the society because you know, they are the true heroes. i really love them, because you know, it's a risk for them as well. most of them they have family inside here. and they know how cruel this regime is. >> reporter: in three separate letters sent in march and april, the campaign group has supplied case studies of 20 different athletes to the ioc, these contain tmz of discrimination, harassment, reprisals, detention and torture. eight athletes are concealed because they are still living in
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iran and could well be in jeopardy. the campaign group is calling for urgent attention. they say they're determined to keep fighting and are not afraid of the consequences. >> until we get answer from ioc we're not going to give up, this is the right thing to do to raise up and it's about our dignity and we're going to go to the end. >> i died 20 years ago. if you kill me again, you just killed a dead person. i lost everything when i was in iran. what all happened to me. >> reporter: don riddell, cnn. >> cnn sought clarification on the government's official position. we asked does the government of iran acknowledge that in the past, it hasn't allowed iranian athletes to compete against israelis and will athletes be allowed to compete against israelis in the tokyo olympics and we haven't received a response. i'm kim brunhuber.
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the later on the deadly building collapse in florida when cnn continues. please do stay with us.
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this hour we'll have the very latest on the aggressive search and rescue effort at a collapsed florida condo, plus the justice department sues georgia over the state's new voting restrictions, but does attorney general garland have any hope of winning? much of the u.s. northwest swelters under a record-setting heat wave. we have a forecast for the reenl region. welcome to all of you watching in the united states, canada and around the world

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