tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN June 30, 2021 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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are you a christian author with a book that you're ready to share with the world? get published now, call for your free publisher kit today! welcome to our viewers joining us here in the yund and all around the world. i'm rosemary church. just ahead, desperation grows at the building collapse site in florida as rescue teams work through the night. the officials leading search efforts tell families with missing loved ones there is still hope. the delta variant rapidly becoming the dominant coronavirus strain in the u.s. so does that mean you should wear a mask even if you are vaccinated?
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seems the experts are sending mixed messages. and the u.s. house will vote on a bill to investigate the january 6 insurrection. thanks for joining us. it is 4:00 in the morning in south florida where rescue workers are now in their seventh day of digging through a huge mound of concrete and metal hoping against hope they meet find someone alive. on tuesday, they found a 12th victim from the still unexplained collapse of the champlain towers, 149 people remain unaccounted for. u.s. president joe biden will visit surfside tomorrow to meet with families and rescue workers. structural engineers say they are trying to pinpoint the
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trigger event behind that collapse. workers have removed more than 3 million pounds or 1.3 million kilograms of concrete from the se site. miami-dade fire chief says rescuers are facing a massive task. >> we see the magnitude of this damage, we see that building almost collapsed almost in the footprint where that building stood, 12 stories, all within that same footprint. so i'm trying to emphasize the magnitude of what we're seeing. and we still keep pushing forward. >> the town commissioner of surfside, florida says the condo association didn't do enough to alert residents about the
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problems with their building. that comes as we are hearing audio from emergency dispatchers on the neaight of the collapse. boris sanchez reports. >> we still have people standing upstairs that need to be evacuated. >> reporter: as families brace for news, new details about structural decay. in a letter first obtained by erin burnett out front, condo board president saying that the building needed $15 million in repairs telling residents in april that the concrete deterioration is accelerating, the roof situation got worse, so extensive roof repairs had to be incorporated adding that the observable damage such as in the garage is worse than the initial inspection. and that initial inspection, a 2018 survey completed by a
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consulting company outlining major structural damage including significant corrosion and cracking beneath the pool and entrance drive, and these photosed taken below the pool deck two days before collapse showing damaged concrete and standing water. notably according to the "new york times" in 2015, building management settled a lawsuit alleging water frequently seeped in through the outer walls. by 2021, the board president selling residents that new problems had been identify and warning that rebar was rusting and deteriorating beneath the surface. >> that was a total alarm going offin off that something needed to be done on an emergency basis and conversations that we're having with victims is that they were told not such a big deal, everything is fine, we can put it off. so, you know, people didn't take these warnings seriously.
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and now we see the results, you know, and it is devastating. >> reporter: an attorney feeled a class action lawsuit on behalf of residents, at least the third lawsuit filed against the building's management. his grandparents also lived in the tower to three decades and voiced concerns about water leaking into the garage more than ten years ago. >> so we're talking about de decades of peraising serious issues about water intrusion, problems with the building, and the condo association setting on their hands and waiting and waiting until it was too late to do something about it. >> reporter: officials have vowed a made tech cmade tech cou husband investigation. and that they will have a grand jury investigation what caused
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the building to collapse. of course for family members, that will be a long process. answers might not come for quite some time. boris sanchez, cnn, surfside. the condominium collapse has plenty of other residents in south florida worried that the same thing could happen to them. the mayor of miami beach says more than 500 buildings in his city are undergoing 40 year reviews. mean time newly released documents show the champlain towers condo was jen creating controversy even before it opened. builders were briefly ordered to stop construction in 1980 because of code violations. a week later, the town council granted the building an exception allowing the construction to go forward. amid the heart break of this tragedy, we're also hearing incredibler tos of survival. cnn spoke earlier with sharon
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shecter who escaped her 11th floor condo and she described what she saw. >> we had to go in the garage. we were, you know, a little concerned because apparently we were told that it collapsed. but you have no choice and we just have to get out. so it was like titanic. it felt like the movie titan he can titanic. we were trying to fight a light, i had a flashlight, i said let's just find some light because that will show an exit. finally fire rescue came and her asking people to walk on the cars and climb over the car to get to the front of the building. so one person climbed on the car but fell in because i guess it wasn't is it you aredy after all the debris was falling. so they got a ladder, they helped us. i helped people push up because they had to climb on a tire to get up, so i'm pushing people up
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and they are pulling them over and we finally for the out. and that is when you saw the lights. and you really -- the impact of what was going on. and as soon as you saw someone you knew, you just hugged and said you're a survivor. and not realizing how many people were just taken down in that part of the building. it was just devastating. absolutely defivastating. >> and the mayor of surfside is vowing to keep up the search for survivors. and he cited a miles praculous e from 2013 as a reason. >> one of questions by the family members, how long can people survive under the rubble, which was an excellent question. and there didn't seem to be a good answer to take. from may 2013 where a woman was
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pulled from the rue ens of a factory in bangladesh 17 days after the collapse. nobody is giving up hope. the work goes on full force. >> he also shared that more than $1.9 million has now been raised to help those affected by the collapse. he says some of those funds have already been distributed to families and nonprofits. officials in canada are linking an historic heatwave to a sudden spike in deaths. at least 233 people have died in british columbia since friday, a far higher toll than normal. canada shattered an all-team record high for a third straight day tuesday in a village in the west, the temperature reached 121 degrees fahrenheit.
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the blessistering heat also bei felt where seattle where highways are buckling and cracking. and it is helping fuel fires burning in northern california near the oregon border. camila bernal has more on the conditions across the west. >> reporter: it is the kind of heat that you cannot escape. >> it is like a lockdown, but we won't solve it by putting on a mask or getting a vaccine. it is scary. >> reporter: record-breaking temperatures, in portland, three of the hottest days ever recorded three days in a row. the all-time high monday, 116 degrees. in seattle, 108. >> we saw the forecast and started mobilizing immediately realizing that this was going to be a life-threatening heat event. >> reporter: 97 people taken to
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the emergency room or clinic wi heat related illnesses. >> that is total for a typical summer. >> reporter: numbers that the county says are unheard of and a burden on local hospitals. >> they are very, very full. many at capacity with conversations ongoing starting late last night and early this morning about how to free up more space. >> reporter: power outages making the situation even worse. street car services in portland suspended monday because of a system wide power outage. and a power dabl cable melting triple digit temperatures. >> kind of unfortunate. >> reporter: hundreds trying to escape the heat at cooling centers in oregon and washington state. >> red cross traditionally doesn't support cooling centers and this represents again the new normal of this is the first time its of 116 degrees. it won't be the last time. >> reporter: and jay inslee says
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it can't be fixed with air conditioning. >> we have to attack the source of this problem because this climate is changing so fast in my state, it is hurting the fundamental aspects of our culture and economy. >> reporter: the governor believes that the impacts will be seen far beyond the pacific northwest. >> everyone will get hit by this climate catastrophe. >> reporter: and the county's health officer telling me that they had to move patients tin order to make space at some emergency rooms. and she told me that the number of people taken to the hospital with heat-related illnesses which is about 100 at the moment will likely go up. it will take days many even weeks to really understand the effects of this heatwave. camila bernal, cnn, portland. >> pedram javaheri is joining us now. how much longer will these extreme temperatures persist?
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>> the extreme nature of it, that is dwind lenling in the ne couple days but we think in the middle therts whe 30s where it n the middle 20s, 120 degrees fahrenheit in british columbia. again, third consecutive day with this temperature. and it happens to be the hottest temperature northernmost temperature for this value to see it reach. you will notice #117, 118, thes are temps in the past 24 hours that have all set records. the jet stream had shifted well to the north, high pressure camped out across the region and it really set the stage for tremendous heat to beld. we had heat warnings stretching to the arctic circle. all of that beginning to weaken a little bit and this area of warm area
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begins to shift a little farther to the east. notice in portland, almost 90, cools off to 84. should be 77 this time of year. nowhere near really the next seven days. so that is the concern that the long term trend keeps us about ten degrees above average which would be considered a heatwave if we didn't just come off of one that was giving us 115 to 110 degree readings. we know that our body does a incredible job to efficiently cool itself off, but that is only when the atmosphere is dry. when you are sweating, that evaporative cooling allows your body to cool off by as much as 22% of the heat. when it is humid outside, this prohibits that evaporative cooling and of course your body tens t continues to sweat and you lose flew uids and that can alter yo overall well-being.
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and that is leading to these illnesses. >> certainly important to know. pedram javaheri, many thanks. the delta coronavirus variant may now be the most prevalent in the united states. a top researcher at a company that identifies variants says delta is responsible for about 40% of all new u.s. cases. that research has not yet been peer reviewed. the u.s. centers for disease control and prevention said tuesday that delta accounted for about 26% of new infections in the two weeks leading up to june 19. mean meantime, mixed messages from the cdc and w.h.o. on whether vaccinated people should wear masks causing some confusion. especially ahead of the united states fourth of july holiday
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weekend. l.a. county is recommending people mask up in public indoor spaces. but the top u.s. expert on infectious disease says that the cdc guidance that says that it is okay to skip the mask if you are are vaccinated still stands. >> there should be a degree of flex ibility and disdirecretion throughout the country. there will be some regions who feel given the dynamics in their city, county, that they want to go that extra mile of care. when you have 1usuch a low leve of vaccination super imposed upon a variant that has a high degree of efficiency of spread, what you will see among undervaccinat region, you will see these individual blips. almost like two americas.
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tigray fighters are re rejecting the ceasefire fueling growing fears of more violence. the ethiopian military withdrew from the tigray capital on monday. people in the northern town celebrated the departure of the allied forces but the spokesman for the liberation front calls the truce a joke and rebl els a promising to force them out of the region. larry, tigray fighters rejected k ethiopia's cease fire calling it a sick joke.
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what impact will this likely have on the region? >> reporter: it means that the region that has already seen so much violence and displacement might still be in the throes of this conflict for possibility months to come. because they might pursue what they consider an enemy fighting group to the west of the country as well and so this is not anywhere close to over. in the meantime, more than 1,000 have died since the conflict began in november, hundreds of thousands possibly more than a million displaced and the u.n. and other aid organizations say that people need food. and there is also weapons of war considered illegal such as starvation and rape being used here and so they are considering trying how to describe them, is it crimes against humanity,
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again side, what is it? and acting assistant secretary of state -- >> the government's announcement of ass cessation of hostilities does not result in improvement, and should anticipate further actions. >> the u.s. is calling for a public meeting of the u.n. security council to discuss the situation. the ceasefire, the unilateral cease fire declared two days ago by the go. which refused by the tigray fighters, many in the international community see it as a positive step if adhered to. however, when the authorities and army was leaving this region, they cut off power, they cut off internet and phone connectivity so hard to tell what is going on and that is a situation that is still ongongo.
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>> that is important to point out. larry, many thanks. thousands of people have been killed in the conflict that has been going on thousand for eight months. millions have been displaced and hin hundreds of thousands face starvation. the u.n. says that the feeding is keeping aid from reaching people who need it. earlier i spoke with unicef's global spokesman james elder about what the u.s. and u.n. need to do now. >> absolute accountability when it comes to sexual violence which has beaeen rife against girls and women. and the cease fear, again, the united nations use different partners. we know what to do, but when we have access blocked, when right now we have no telecommunications, we have no roads open, no phone leaines, n electricity, so friday's meeting
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hopefully we fix those things and we get a cease fear that holds. remember these people have done so much themselves. aid agencies are tireless, but the moms and dads that i saw on the ground who would give their last piece of food to someone walking past who lost that he ever home or would carry a neighbor's cheild because they couldn't walk any further, thes. we need to take advantage of the ceasefire and we must alert now. >> and the u.n. security council is set to discuss the cry isis friday. the pentagon says more than 30 rockets were feared at u.s. forces in syria on monday. u.s. officials say that they are working under the assumption iranian backed militias are responsible. officials say that the rockets
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fired at the base where a more powerful longer range version of those more commonly used by iran-backed militias. there were no injuries among the u.s. forces. but the pentagon says that two buildings were damaged. the rocket fire came a day after the u.s. launched air strikes on iranian backed made learn shail. several officials say that the u.s. could again esh withdrawing troops from afghanistan in a matter etter o, well ahead of the september 11th dead lline deadline. as many as 1,000 troops could remain to assist with security at the u.s. embassy in kabul and the city's airport. this is among concerns over the skirt situation in the country as military officials warn that afghanistan could devolve into several war. time for a short break. when we come back, a key vote in
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u.s. infrastructure. a key issue on the president's mind tuesday. he traveled to. >> alan westin: w >> alan westin: where he made his case wisconsin for the bipartisan infrastructure proposal he agreed to last week. he says that it would benefit middle class families across the country. >> bipartisan group of senators got together and they forged an agreement to move forward on the key priorities of my america jobs plan. one of them is setting in front of me. as a result, this is a generational investment, a jen reaction al investment to modernize our infrastructure creating millions of good paying jobs. >> members of the u.s. capitol police and the washington, d.c. metro police are expected to be in the house fgallery today whe lawmakers vote on a select committee to investigate the january 6 insurrection. ryan nobles has more from
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capitol hill. >> reporter: on wednesday the house is expected to pass a resolution that would form a select committee to investigate the january 6 insurrection. now, this was something that was necessitated in nancy pelosi's mind after it the senate blocked her attempts to form an independent bipartisan commission that would operate outside the congress made up of people not made up of congress. this house select committee instead will be appointed by pelosi and it will be made up of members of the house of representatives. pelosi will pick eight of those members and in consultation with minority leader kevin mccarthy another five will be chosen. pelosi made it clear that she can veto mccarthy's choices if she does not believe that they will be responsible in conducting their best on this committee. pelosi is also considering among her ate pieight picking selects
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republican. republicans are expected to vote against this measure by a pretty wide far again. the house gop steve scalise sending out what they call a leadership recommendation enstr eninstructing them that no vote is appropriate. and there are even a fair number of house republicans who voted in favor of that independent commission who have now said that they do not support this select committee because they believe that it will be overwill he partisan, among them the ranking member on homeland security congressman john katko of new york who described this as being the opposite of bipartisan. and regardless of the fact that most republicans won't support this measure, it should pass without a problem and that will give pelosi the opportunity to start putting the select sxhsxhet i committee together and it will have subpoena power and it could also call before it kevin
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mccarthy to testify about what he knew as to what happened on january 6 including that phone call that he had with the former president donald trump as his supporters were breaking into the capitol on that day. ryan nobles, cnn, capitol hill. chaotic twist in the new york city mayoral raes. the board of elections elised a new tally of votes in the democratic primary and then backtracked just hours later. officials say that they had mistakenly included more than 100,000 test ballots in their count. this is also the city's first time using a ranked choice voting system. andhe mistake is creating uncertainty about the ability of officials to manage the final count. and maricopa county, arizona will not reuse any of the voting equipment turned over for a so-called and you had eithitudi
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elections. they say that they have grave concerns that private contractor may havehave compromise the machines. authorities are concerned about security threats surrounding the election. >> reporter: in the past america had a very good solution for dealing with such traitors. execution. >> you are listening to a threat against election defenders stated on far right outlet one america news network. bill gates tweeted his response calling it hateful, dangerous. and this kind of receipt totore is why td braces for what may be coming. the months' long and you had
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either is in its final hours. a partisan-driven exercise reviewing maricopa county's 2020 ballots despite two previous audits. the state senate promises that it will release what they call a report in the coming weeks. and this is why the elections building is being fenced by two layers. we've seen attempted breaches before last november as we watched election worker counting the vote. >> there is a security situation. >> reporter: the maricopa county elections department was suddenly is you surrounded. >> the security situation -- >> reporter: a large armed mob was shouting to break into the elections center. >> you can see a line of law enforcement here, sheriff's department and a very large crowd. >> reporter: a few sheriff's deputies were all that protected election workers as more
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scrambled to protect the vote. and the sheriff w-- >> symbolsymbolically, this is in the face of everything that we have in a nation where there is not true respect for each ot other. but now it is a necessity and that is a sad statement. >> reporter: nearly six months after the insurrection, he says the release of the report gives exsteamists another rallying event and like the leadup to january 6, the z a assist and you had arizona and you had either has been fueled by anger. >> they want to know what location is most empimpablgtsfu. >> are you getting aindication f the time line? >> no, and we should so we can best prepare how we address
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potential violence. by failing to do so, you are being reckless. >> reporter: pen zone says that the republican-controlled government has shared nearly nothing and he is left guessing. >> not an and yudit is what is happening there. it is performance art, largely a dl clown show. >> reporter: even if the bamboo hunting uv light using appears ludi ludicrous, the conspiracy believers take this as truth. >> january 6 is the ultimate symbol of the rise of extremism, necess domestic extreme echlism in thed states. if that can that on the day that election results are scheduled to be certified, we need to be
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aware that it can happenner. and take the necessary precautions for sure. >> reporter: while arizona awaits the release of this so-called report, the receipt tore rick is not calming down. and still to come, france loosening its covid restrictions as australia tightens its lock down lockdowns. how the delta variant is impacting the global feet. behind neuriva plus. i love unlike ordinary memory supplefeet.gtreet.t.t.plus. fht.erfort.. yes, please! neuriva. think bigger. i would've called yesterday. but... i could've called yesterday. but... i should've called yesterday, but...
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almost 800 doctors have died from the virus since april.wave covid-19. almost 800 doctors have died from the virus since april. with new variants, the fight is far from over. in tokyo, cases have been rising with the olympics fast approaching. the city now says that the toek l tokyo leg of the torch relay will be moved off public streets for the first eight days and have not decided on the rest of the relay. only 10% of the japanese population is fully vaccinated. in australia, an outbreak of cases around sydney has risen to around 160 infections. new south wales reported 22 cases and they are under a two week lockdown. and wheel some countries are tightening measures, france is loosening theirs. starting today, capacity restrictions will be lifted for most indoor businesses including
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restaurants and send icinemas. and let's go to angus watson who is skbeing joining us live from australia. what is the latest on the situation there? >> reporter: latest is that almost half the population of australia, some 10 million people or just over isdown or s covid-19 restrictions, told not to leave their homes for a two week period as the city and now the country fights the delta variant moving through communities at a rate too quick to contact tracers to come up with. and the backdrop to that is australia's low vaccination rate. just over 7% have two doses and that doesn't leave them very well protected as the variant
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moves through ytheir country. >> and what about the situation with vaccines, how is that progressing? >> there has been some mixed messaging as the vaccine rollout has stumbled along here in australia. there is confusion as to which age groups should get which vaccine. they are relying onpfizer advan the astrazeneca doses and there is confuse between the states and federal government as to who needs to get what. and the backdrop to that is that the pfizer doses are diminishing saying they only have enough for the next eight days of dosages. >> and cyril, while many parts of the world grapple with the new threat posed by the delta variant, france prepares to lift covid restrictions. what is the latest on that? >> reporter: there is a lot of good news on the covid front for
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france at the moment. infections are down, hospitalizations and deaths are down and france is lifting the last phase of restrictions mean that restaurant and cinemas can operate at full capacity. so france is gearing up for what should be a pretty good summer as people will be going on holiday and vaccination effort has been moving at pace with more than 600,000 people vaccinated a day which is a very high rate relative to population. short term, all good news. but median term, not so much. you see the highly contagious delta variant which has already become the dominant variant in some countries including here in the uk and caused a surge in infections is now taking over in france. a few days ago it the canned for 10% of infections, now it is 20% and french health authorities agree that it is going to cause a new wave of infections probably late summer, early
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fall. and whether or not france will be able to deal with that new wave will fendepend on the levef vaccination. it should not be as severe as previous waves because of course many people are now vaccinated. tell that rate is 30% of the population, the adult population in france. come end of summer/early fall, what is that percentage going to be, 60%, 70%, 80%? on that number depends france's ability to face a fourth wave of covid induced by the delta variant. >> we can't let our guard down. cyril vanier, appreciate it. and kim jung-un has feared several high ranking officials in north korea after a, quote, grave incident related to covid-19. according to state media, kim accused the officials of neglecting their pandemic duties and creating a crisis for the country. it is a surprising announcement from north korea which so far has claimed zero covid cases
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during the pandemic. so let's turn to will reply. he is joining us from taiwan. good to see you. and of course you have spent many years reporting in north korea. so what do you make of this new development, officials being fired over unspecified grave covid-19 incident? >> reporter: it is really difficult to ascertain precisely what is happening inside north korea. that is exactly what south korea's unification mun i minis said, saying that we don't know what the crisis is, who these party leaders are that were called eggignorant and irresponsible. so all they can to is watch for more clues. but intelligence is very difficult perhaps more difficult than ever to glean at the moment because north korea's borders have been shut down since really the beginning of the covid pandemic. they weren w enone of the count
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to increase the level of isolation. and over the months as food started running low, medical supplies started running low, more most ngo workers are gone, out of north korea. so highly secretive country really can choose which information it wants to share with the world. just last week there was the rather report talking about kim jung-un's noticeable weight loss, and now you have north korea claiming that kim jung-un has very fiercely criticized these party officials saying that they failed in areas of organization, secientific measures when it came to protocol. and there was a grave accident now that has led to a covid relate covid-related crisis. is there an outbreak? we don't know because they have not acknowledged one official case of the virus.
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south korea ten continues to wa the situation. and the news agency did report recently that north korea was trying to get 1.7 million doses of assstrazeneca delivered bee late may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow kocovax rul late may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow covax rules late may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow covax rules late may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow covax rules late may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow covax rulese may but those shipments were held up because they were unwilling to follow covax rules. but it could be a sign that the party officials who were fired could be the fall guys for a broader system he can failure. >> we'll continue to follow the story. will ripley, appreciate it. coming up next, football is coming home. a stunning victory decades in the making at the uefa european
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for sports fans around the world. here in atlanta, the hawks kept their playoff hopes alive and england's football team stunned a long time rival. patrick snell has that and more in our minute in sports. >> thanks. we'll start right here in the u.s. where the hawks have leveled their series with the bucks. but the key headline from this, injury to greek superstarian miss owing. t ian iangiannis. he was forced to exit with a knee injury and did not return. he fell to the floor this pain and we wish him all the west in his recovery. and serena williams was forced to retire hurt at wimbledon. she lipped inslipped in the fif and eventually sinking to her knees, fighting back tears and unable to continue.
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and england have finally beaten germany. a 2-nil victory for the english. and in the quarter finals, england will face ukraine who beat sweden. a sub headed off this superb win. and now back to you. thank you, patrick and thank you for your company. i'm rosemary church. be sure to connect with me on twitter. "early start" is up next.
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i would've called yesterday. but... i could've called yesterday. but... i should've called yesterday, but... would've, could've, should've. we hear that a lot. hi. i'm jonathan, an insurance professional and manager here at colonial penn life insurance company. sometimes, people put off calling about life insurance. before you know it, another year has passed. and when they do call, they say,
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"i wish i'd called sooner." call right now for free information on the $9.95 plan. are you between age 50 and 85? you can get whole life insurance with options starting at just $9.95 a month. do i have to answer health questions to get it? there are no health questions. you cannot be turned down for any health reason, past or present. how long does this policy last? our $9.95 plan is permanent protection. can my rate increase later? never. once you're insured, your rate is locked in for life. you can get whole life insurance with options starting at just $9.95 a month. have you thought about life insurance but put it off? don't regret what you didn't do yesterday. call now and feel great about saying yes today. (announcer) call now and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner.
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ah! my helicopter has better wifi than this. you thinking what i am? great time. don't worry i have the best internet people. hello xfinity. get me xfi pronto. that was fast. yep. now we just self-install. and we're back baby. do more of what you love when you upgrade to xfinity xfi. baby ninjas? i love it.
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