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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  April 13, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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>> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. hello. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm john vause live in lviv, ukraine, where the u.s. is now sending hundreds of millions of dollars in high-tech heavy weapons as well as helicopters and drones ahead of an expected russian military offensive in the east. and i'm kim brunhuber at cnn world headquarters in atlanta with the end of the brooklyn subway shooting manhunt after police are tipped off by the suspect himself. moscow has warned of renewed
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attacks on the ukrainian capital, kyiv, saying so-called decision-making centers will be targeted if ukrainian forces continue to plan access sabotage and carry out strikes on russian territory. there are few other details from the russian ministry of defendant but it's been two weeks now since russian forces retreated from the north after failing to take the capital. the french military now saying a large-scale russian offensive in the donbas region could happen within days, possibly ten days. but a spokesperson says russian forces are yet to make any significant territorial gains in the east, at least so far. meanwhile, ukrainian fighters claimed to have used neptune anti-ship missiles to cause serious damage to the muss kova, flagship of the russian fleet in the black sea. but russian state media says a hire onboard detonated ammunition on the guided missile cruiser, and it was evacuated. cnn cannot verify either claim. and to the south, russia claims more than 1,000 ukrainian marines surrendered in the besieged port city of mariupol.
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these images were aired on russian state television. cnn is not in mariupol. we cannot confirm this report. ukrainian officials say remaining defenders in mariupol have now managed to link up and will fight until the end. and in the city of kharkiv, video on social media appears to show explosions in civilian areas from cluster munitions. the u.n. says such attacks may amount to war crimes. for weeks, ukraine's president has been pleading for heavier firepower from the u.s. and nato, and now washington appears to be coming through, announcing a new $800 million security package. notably it includes almost a dozen soviet era mi-17 helicopters which can be used as gunships. that's something volodymyr zelenskyy asked for specifically in a call with president biden on wednesday. also included, more howitzer cannons, switchblade drones, anti-tank missiles, armored personnel carriers, protective
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equipment against chemical attacks. and the european union has also announced a $544 million package of military equipment, fuel, first aid kits. all of this comes after a direct appeal from president zelenskyy in a video message which he released, which contains from very graphic images. >> the images of bucha and mariupol have demonstrated real russians' intentions to the whole world. it could only be stopped by force of arms. it must be done now. ukraine needs weapons supplies. we need heavy artillery, armed vehicles, air defense systems, and combat aircraft, anything to repel russian forces and stop their war crimes. >> and a significant show of support by the presidents of poland, lithuania, latvia, and estonia, al traveling to the ukrainian capital to meet with president zelenskyy. they discussed aid for ukraine,
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also offering to help investigate war crimes. those war crime investigations have already begun in the city of bucha as well as surrounding areas. itn's dan rivers went there to see firsthand the devastation russian troops left behind. and a warning, the images you're about to see are very graphic. they're difficult to watch, but it's important to show them as investigators document potential war crimes. >> reporter: if there is one place in ukraine which has come to symbolize the barbarity of this war, it is bucha. the images which emerged from this town gave the world its first glimpse into the terrible consequences of a conflict prosecuted without limits. today the drive into bucha looks very different to those first hours after it was liberated on the 1st of april. this was the first evidence of the crimes perpetrated here, the bodies of civilians left decom posing where they fell.
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for more than six weeks, the world's attention has focused on the horrors unfolding in ukraine. in particular, the town of bucha to the west of kyiv. we've investigated three separate atrocities in bucha to give a sense of the widespread indiscriminate murder being carried out by the russian army. the first involves a man whose body was found at this mass grave next to st. andrews church, where investigators are beginning to uncover the scale of the slaughter in bucha during the nearly month-long russian occupation. volodymyr is just one of dozens of relatives looking for answers. the number of bodies buried here is unknown, but it's thought there are at least 115. they were hurriedly interred by locals. most were shot on the streets of bucha. now each is being carefully recovered for a full forensic
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examination. we're with volodymyr as he waits to find out if his brother, dmytro, is among the dead. as the face of each is uncovered, suddenly the awful moment of recognition.
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>> reporter: we accompany him to the place where his brother, dmytro, was killed. we find an eyewitness who was there that day and detained moments later by the same group of half a dozen russian soldiers. >> reporter: oleg's testimony matches the physical evidence here. we find a 7.62 shell casing from
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an rpk machine gun on the ground where dmytro was executed. bullet holes in the fence match oleg's description of the shooting. all the neighbors here heard shots at around 10:30 on march 26th, the day he disappeared. oleg recognizes the photo of dmytro and confirms he was shot dead here, adding another man who was with dmytro managed to escape. i asked volodymyr if he feels he got closer to the truth about how his brother died. >> reporter: dmytro's murder was just one of possibly hundreds of similar summary executions, but a mile north of the place he died is a children's camp where
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there's evidence of more organized killing. what you're about to see is a video recorded by the ukrainian authorities after they first entered the basement of the building used by the russians. their hands bound, they appear to have been shot as they knelt on the floor. while the russian government has accused ukraine of faking massacres like this, we found several pieces of evidence pointing to russian responsibility. the children's camp was marked with a "v," a symbol used by russian forces to identify themselves. russian ration packs litter the entrance to the cellar. but inside, there are more clues. you can see the bullet marks still in the wall here. the angle that the bullets came in is coming down, suggesting the person was standing over there and the victims were down here. there is actually a bullet down here which is a 545 caliber
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kalashnikov bullet with a steel core, which is only issued to the military. we were given access to this cellar because forensic teams have concluded their work. the identities of the men found here have now been established. they were sergei ma teshco, volodymyr pachenko, viktor prubko, valerie prubko, and dmytro shulmeister. dmytro's sister says he and four others refused to flee, deciding to help others to escape bucha until the russians caught them. >> reporter: two miles south of
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the children's camp is the site of another massacre, this time even larger. outside an agricultural construction agency, the bodies of eight men were found near these steps to the side of the building. three more were found elsewhere on the site. this is the scene which investigators found. this man had his hands bound behind his back and his fingernails removed. one has electrical cable tied around his feet and has been beaten across the back. a military crate with the markings of the seventh para-troop unit was found close by. inside the building was another body on a stairwell. this is where some of the most harrowing images to emerge from bucha were taken. the police have found eight bodies here and more inside. they don't know how many people were killed here in total. forensic officers are continuing to comb this building for clues, but it appears this was some
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sort of torture center. >> reporter: by filtration activities, he means selecting which prisoners would be executed. we've identified one of the dead men found here as an atowly. he was with ukraine's territorial defense. a witness who saw his body told us his cheek had been cut out. there were multiple stab wounds on his torso, and he had been shot through the chest. >> reporter: one man has spoken to us who saw, heard, and survived the massacre. speaking for the first time but still too scared to show his identity, he says russian soldiers were going house to house, rounding up civilians to decide who to execute.
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he was only spared because he could prove he'd fought in afghanistan as a soviet soldier 40 years ago. >> reporter: as the war crimes investigation starts, there are, of course, questions about whether these three cases were part of a wider campaign of orchestrated murder directed by senior leaders in russia, something i put to ukraine's prosecutor general.
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was this orchestrated, or was this from just rogue units of the russian army? >> of course it was ordered to kill civilians because we see gunshots. that's why actually it was ordered. and what you see here in bucha and other small cities, small villages which were occupied in kyiv region, actually you see it's not only war crimes. it's crimes against humanity. >> to what extent doesn't putin hold responsibility for this? >> president putin is a main war criminal of the 21st century. of course he's responsible of all of this what is going on now in ukraine. but you remember that it was in chechnya and what is after chechnya, it was in georgia. it was in syria. and he's still not responsible for all these crimes against humanity. that's why we should do everything to punish people who are responsible for this.
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>> reporter: the service to remember the victims of bucha at st. andrews church involves a choir now a quarter of the size it used to be. ♪ one has died, the others have fled. but the russian occupation hasn't silenced those who remain. ♪ >> reporter: but while survivors search their souls for the strength to forgive, bucha will never forget what happened here,
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and neither should we. >> that report from itn's dan rivers. thank you, dan. a visiting fellow at the group of asia institute is with us this hour from brisbane, australia. thank you for taking the time to speak with us. the growing evidence of atrocities committed by russian soldiers, if nothing else, it's now moving the needle on the level of military assistance which is being offered to ukraine. i want you to listen to the pentagon spokesman, john kirby, on this latest military package coming from the u.s. here he is. >> some of them are reinforcing capabilities that we have already been providing ukraine, and some of them are new capabilities that we have not provided to ukraine. all of them are designed to help ukraine as we talked about, help ukraine in the fight that they are in right now and the fight that they will be in, in coming
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days and weeks in the eastern part of the country. >> that new capability we're talking about is heavy artillery as well as helicopters. the soviet-era helicopters. does this demonstrate the futility of holding out on supplying those heavy weapons in the first place? it's taken weeks, if not months, to get to this point. >> i think that you're right there. unfortunately it's taken, as you say, this is now the eighth week of the war, and it's taken a long time before governments around the world have decided to fully support the ukraine. initially speaking, of course, ukraine was expected to fall relatively quickly. i think that was the view that was informed by an overly optimistic view of the russian army. all of that has fallen apart, and now we have the ukraine clearly able to hold its own. as they start giving the ukrainian forces more heavy
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weapons, the ukrainians will be able to mount offensives as well. the ukrainians are obviously very angry as your previous segment there about russian torture showed. so ukrainian forces may be able to conduct offensives right up to and possibly into russian territory. so there will be some nervousness about giving ukraine too many offensive forces, let's say. >> how significant, though, is this strike on a russian warship, the muskova, which is in the black sea? it was hit by neptune anti-ship missiles developed by the ukrainians. if their side of the story is true, and it appears that it is. >> certainly the neptune sounds like, if you like, a modern version of the harpoon missile that america made during the 1970s. so it's a small sub sonic missile, and the ship was apparently hit by two missiles. the fact that the ship then
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caught fire and exploded, and while most of the crew are believed to have left, the fact that the ship was in such a state after two missiles, does highlight that russia's forces are run down and fairly poor in a relative sense. it certainly shows that the ukraine is still a difficult enemy. bear in mind that the neptune only entered service last month, so they have turned that into an offensive weapon and achieved remarkable success extraordinarily fast. that highlights, i suppose, that the -- >> i just wanted to talk about the russian side as well. sorry. the delay is a bit of a problem. i apologize. i wanted to talk about the russian convoys we've seen. when we look at those convoys, there's no longer tanks.
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there's no longer heavy artillery. there doesn't seem to be fuel trucks. there doesn't appear to be a lot of supply trucks. there are a lot of apcs with soldiers on the outside, sitting around on the outside of those apcs. where does that say about where the russians might be right now in terms of preparations for this long-awaited offensive in the east? >> it suggests that they're possibly still up to one week away from it. their offensive in the east appears to be relatively limited in that they're just trying to capture a bit more of the eastern donbas and join up the donbas region and the crimea. every day gives the ukrainian forces time, of course, to reconstitute also. so i would suggest that the russian forces will, again, have a very difficult time pushing the ukrainians out. >> peter, thanks so much. we really appreciate you being
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with us. thank you for your time. >> thanks, john. cheers. ahead this hour, possibly another major miscalculation by the russian president, vladimir putin. finland, sweden now could be just weeks away from a decision on joining nato. also ahead, the new york city subway shooting suspect now in police custody. how an intense manhunt for the alleged gunman came to an unexpected end. hedule n now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, sasafelite replace. ♪
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we got him. >> reporter: sources telling cnn 62-year-old frank james reported himself to police by calling crime stoppers. police later spotted him walking on a manhattan street. >> he was taken into custody without incident and has been transported to an nypd facility. he will be charged with committing yesterday's appalling crime in brooklyn. >> reporter: authorities say it was james who set off smoke canisters and opened fire into a crowded subway car tuesday morning. >> we used every resource at our disposal to gather and process significant evidence that directly links mr. james to the shooting. we were able to shrink his world quickly. there was nowhere left for him to run. >> reporter: investigators determined the gun found at the scene of the attack was purchased by james in ohio in 2011, elevating him from a person of interest to a suspect. keys found at the crime scene led police to this u-haul van investigators say james rented
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in philadelphia, leading police to a storage facility and apartment there filled with ammunition. his motive in the attack still unclear, but investigators have pointed to repeated chilling rants by james on his youtube account. the latest video posted on monday, where he talked about committing violence. >> i've been through a lot [ bleep ] where i can say i wanted to kill people. i wanted to watch people die right in front of my [ bleep ] face immediately. but i thought about the fact that, hey, man, i don't want to go to [ bleep ] prison. >> reporter: james also advocating for mass shootings on social media. >> we need to see more mass shootings. no, we need to see more. there has to be more mass shootings to make [ bleep ]. no, it's not about the shooter. it's not about the shooter. it's about the environment in which he has to exist. >> reporter: other videos included james claiming he had post-traumatic stress and more rants about race, homeless people, and the policies of mayor eric adams. >> we are watching signs around
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us of those who are leaning toward violent actions, and we are ignoring them. why aren't we identifying these dangerous threats? why aren't we being more proactive instead of waiting for this to happen? >> reporter: before james' gun jammed during the shooting, ten people were shot and more than a dozen others were injured. >> i don't think i can ever ride the train again. >> reporter: all are expected to recover physically, but the mental toll of the attack will likely weigh on the victims and everyday new yorkers for some time. >> we hope this arrest brings some solace to the victims and the people of the city of new york. >> reporter: james now in federal custody, and there's still a lot of work that's being done by the scenes. investigators are still going through all of his social media, also sifting through all the evidence that they have collected, seeing if they can bring even more charges against him or maybe even zero in on a motive. that single federal charge is against him at the moment, and he will be in court on thursday. brynn gingras, cnn, new york.
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welcome back, everybody. 33 minutes past the hour. of all the alleged russian atrocities exposed so far here in ukraine, of all the heartache, all the loss of people being killed, loss of life, the anguish of one mother for her child seems to reflect what is the grief of an entire nation. the boy's body was found in a well in a village west of kyiv after russian forces had retreated. a warning, the video of the
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mother at the scene is disturbing and it's really hard to watch. [ screaming ] >> she identified her son by his shoes, by his shoes. she's crying out "my little boy, my little son." she knew his shoes. a second body was also found in that well. well, genocide is a loaded word with specific legal definitions. so when the u.s. president, joe biden, used it to describe russian atrocities in ukraine, diplomats were taken aback. the white house says mr. biden was speaking to what everyone has seen but did not signal a shift in u.s. policy.
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despite the horrors already documented, not all european leaders are actually comfortable using that term. among them, the french president, emmanuel macron. here he is explaining why. >> translator: i would be careful with the term "genocide" today because they are brother nations. genocide, it carries a meaning. the ukraine people and the russian people are brother nations. what's happening now is madness. it is of an extraordinary brutality. it's the return of war to europe. but at the same time, i look at the facts. i want to try my best to continue to be able to stop this war and rebuild peace. so i'm not sure the escalation of words serves the cause. >> vladimir putin has made no secret about his concerns about an ongoing expansion of nato. but if the invasion of ukraine was meant to act as a warning for european nations not to join
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the alliance, put that down as another miscalculation. as cnn's anna stewart reports, non-aligned sweden and finland now just weeks away from a decision on whether or not they will apply for membership. >> reporter: stirred by russia's invasion of ukraine, rumblings of a momentous geopolitical shift in europe. war now uniting the west against moscow as nato's military alliance may receive new membership and move closer to russia's doorstep. standing side by side in stockholm wednesday, the prime ministers of finland and sweden say they are strongly considering joining nato. >> even though our respective security choices are independent, it's up to every country to decide for themselves. we do depend on each other in our deep security cooperation. >> there's no other way to have security guarantees that under nato's deterrence and common defense as guaranteed by nato's
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article 5. >> reporter: the benefits of collective defense growing more appealing to both sweden and finland. nato's article 5 states an attack against one ally is considered an attack against all allies. ensuring members would come to one another's defense should they be invaded. if the two countries join, nato's land border with russia would double, adding more than 1,300 kilometers along the finnish perimeter. that would likely enrage russia, potentially triggering a backlash as kremlin officials repeatedly warn against expanding nato. >> reporter: but russia's attempts to disrupt nato appear to be backfiring. instead, moscow's aggression has
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led to a dramatic shift in public sentiment, particularly in finland where support for joining nato jumped up to 68% according to a recent poll by private broadcaster mtv. >> you never know what russia is going to do, so i think they should be. if it's not nato, something has to be done to make our life safer here. >> i think russia has shown their two faces, so i think we should join nato. >> reporter: finland's prime minister says parliament is expected to make a decision in the coming weeks while sweden is anticipated to finish reviewing its security policy by the end of next month. it's possible that by june, both countries could be seeking membership in nato, expanding an alliance against russia as its brutal war in ukraine rages on. anna stewart, cnn. i'll have more from lviv at the top of the hour.
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but let's go back to cnn headquarters in atlanta. kim is standing by there with the rest of the day's news. >> john, thanks so much. more than 300 people are dead after what officials call one of the worst storms south africa has ever seen. heavy rain, flooding, and mudslides have pummeled parts of the east coast since monday, destroying homes, roads and bridges. there are also widespread power outages. rescuers have been working to evacuate the affected communities. this year's first major tropical storm in the philippines has killed at least 76 people. that includes 22 who were buried under a landslide in the city of bei bei. almost 30 other people are missing and officials say 8 are injured. wind gusts as high as 50 miles per hour or 80 kilometers an hour. it's affected more than 900,000 people including about 200,000 to evacuate. boris johnson has become the first british prime minister
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caught breaking the law while in office. he's paid his fine and wants to move past party-gate, but will the british public forgive and forget? we'll look at that when we come back. stay with us. ♪ this magic moment ♪ but heinz knows there's plenty of magicic in all that chaos. ♪ so different and so new ♪ ♪ was like any other... ♪ ♪simply irresistible♪ ♪ ♪ ♪simply irresistible♪ now starting at $8.99. now that's eatin' good in the neighboood. mission control, we are go for launch. um, she's eating the rocket. ♪ lunchables! built to be eaten. you never know what opportunities life will send your way. but if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis, enbrel can help you say i'm in for what's next.
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♪ call one eight hundred,est resul eight million ♪ china is struggling to contain the surge of the ultra contagious omicron variant of the coronavirus. a new report shows at least 44 chinese cities are now under full or partial lockdowns due to covid. despite china's zero-covid policy, it's logged more than 350,000 new infections since early last month, most of them in shanghai, which is enduring the country's most severe lockdown. there's new fallout from the party-gate scandal. the british justice minister has resigned in protest of what he
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called the repeated rule-breaking and criminal breaches at downing street. this comes a day after london police issued dozens of fines over illegal parties in government buildings during covid lockdowns. the prime minister has already apologized and paid his fine, but this will leave a stain on his legacy. cnn's nada bashir explains. >> reporter: the first british prime minister found to have broken the law while in office. that now forever a part of boris johnson's legacy after he, his wife carrie, and chancellor risch xi sue na were issued a symbolic 50-pound fine or $65 by london's metropolitan police for breaking covid-19 regulations. >> on a day that happened to be my birthday, there was a brief gathering in the cabinet room shortly after 2:00 p.m., lasting for less than ten minutes. let me say immediately that i've paid the fine, and i once again
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offer a full apology. >> reporter: more than 50 fines have been shutdown to government personnel following a probe into what's become known as the party-gate scandal. gatherings at 10 downing treat and other government offices held despite strict covid regulations put in place by johnson's own government. the prime minister repeatedly assured parliament that no such gatherings took place. >> all guidance was followed completely. i have been repeatedly assured since these allegations emerged that there was no party and that -- and that no covid rules were broken. >> reporter: but the truth eventually caught up with him. >> i want to say sorry. >> reporter: a 12-page report published in january detailed an investigation of 16 gatherings that occurred across an 11-month period when the country was under strict covid restrictions and found that such gatherings
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represented a serious failure on the part of government personnel. all the while, the british people were under strict covid rules put in place by the government. hundreds dying on a daily basis. an all too familiar reality for this frontline doctor, who not only cared for countless covid patients in intensive care but also lost her own father to the virus. >> i feel vindicated, but not fully because we now have someone who is in the highest office in the country having broken the rules that they set everyone else to abide by. so i feel that his position is untenable. >> reporter: calls for the prime minister to resign have been reignited as have questions over whether johnson knowingly misled the british people and, indeed, parliament. and while johnson may have hoped the russian invasion of ukraine would provide ample distraction for what has become a divisive
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topic in the uk, new revelations around the party-gate scandal may shift the focus away from johnson's statesmanship and more towards his moral authority, with many questioning why it's one rule for the british public and another for the prime minister. nada bashir, cnn, london. a rule that kept migrants out of the u.s. is about to expire. we'll have a look at what that means for these migrants and what they're up against at they look for a better life in america. stay with us. i'm retired greg, you know this. people have their money just sitting around doing nothing... that's bad, they shohouldn't do that. they're gettining crushed by inflation. well, i feel for them. they're taking financial advice from memes. [baby spits out milk] i'll get my onesies®. ♪ “baby one more time” by britney spears ♪ good to have you back, old friend. yeah, eyes on the road, benny. welcome to a new chapter in investing. [ding] e*trade now from morgan stanley. my a1c stayed here,
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he's the most important thing in my life. i'm so lucky to get him back. your heart isn't just yours. protect it with bayer aspirin. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. what can i du with less asthma? with dupixent, i can du more... crazy commutes... crowd control- have a nice day alex (thanks ms. ellen) ...taking the stairs.
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that's how you du more with dupixent, which helps prevent asthma attacks. dupixent is not for sudden breathing problems. it's an add-on-treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma that can improve lung function for better breathing in as little as two weeks. and can reduce, or even eliminate, oral steroids. and here's something important. dupixent can cause allergic reactions that can be severe. get help right away if you have rash, chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, tingling or numbness in your limbs. tell your doctor about new or worsening joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines, including steroids, without talking to your doctor. are you ready to du more with less asthma? just ask your asthma specialist about dupixent. we need to reduce plastic waste in the environment. that's why at america's beverage companies, our bottles are made to be re-made. not all plastic is the same. we're carefully designing our bottles to be 100% recyclable, including the caps. they're collected and separated from other plastics, so they can be turned back into material
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that we use to make new bottles. that completes the circle and reduces plastic waste. please help us get every bottle back. the governor of texas is sending a message to the u.s. president -- if you let the migrants in, you have to deal them. the migrants, who were in texas awaiting immigration proceedings, took greg abbott up on his effort to bus them to washington. abbott has long been a critic of president biden's border policy.
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he said his administration should be able to meet their needs. after being dropped off near the u.s. capitol, the migrants told cnn they were treated well on the bus. critics call it a stunt by abbott who is running for re-election this year. now now, the immigration problem in texas is about to get worse. thousands of people are waiting just over the mexican border to get into the u.s. next month. that's when title 42 expires. it's a trump-era rule that kept as asylum-seekers out of the country due to covid restrictions. as rosa flores reports, for those asylum seekers, life and the waiting can be tough. >> it is amazing. look at all these papers. every single one of them. >> reporter: the sister visits migrants in mexico every week, where she says more than 7,000 of the tens of thousands among the entire border, u.s. officials say, have been waiting. >> more than seven months. >> reporter: for the lifting of title 42. >> more than eight months.
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>> reporter: that is the pandemic-health order set to end next month. for the last two years, title 42 has allowed u.s. immigration agents to swiftly expel more than 1.7 million mieg grants to mexico, including everyone here. >> what are you afraid of? they all say that they are afraid of kidnappings. since biden has been in office, human rights first has identified nearly 10,000 cases of kidnapping, torture, rape, or other violent attacks on people blocked or expelled to mexico under title 42. the migrants here feel blessed to live within the walls of a faith-based shelter, but capacity is only 1,200, sister norma says. with an additional 3,000 migrants living here, in a dangerous plaza-turned-tent city. >> the people at the plaza are in great danger. >> reporter: to meet demand, sister norma shows us how the faith-based shelter she helps
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fund is expanding to a second loez location. >> it's being built by migrants themselves. including this woman who, for her safety, we will call nora. you are emotional. tell me about that. nora says she fled honduras after her daughter was kidnapped and beaten. she says she has been at the border for one year, waiting for title 42 to be lifted, and recently, she has seen ukrainians arrive at the border and swiftly be allowed to enter the u.s. she says that she is not opposed to ukrainians entering the u.s., being exempt from title 42 because she understands that their country is in war. as the end of title 42 approaches for these migrants -- whose destination is the united states? >> whoo! >> reporter: they write their desperate pleas for help on little pieces of paper for sister norma. hoping for an end to life in limbo.
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rosa flores, cnn, mexico. >> i'm kim brunhuber at cnn center in atlanta. our coverage continues with john vause in ukraine and rosemary church here in atlanta, after the break. please, do stay with us. in jus. and we'll come t to you with a replacement you can trust. >> man: looks great. >> t tech: that's service on yor time. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ your mission: stand up to moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and take. it. on... ..ith rinvoq. rinvoq a once-daily pill can dramatically improve symptoms.. st. and for some...rinvoq rece ra fatigue. that's rinvoq relief. with ra, your overactive immune system attacks your joints. rinvoq regulates it to help stop the attack. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections,
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