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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  April 25, 2022 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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the news continues here on cnn with the latest from ukraine. >> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. hello and a very warm welcome to our viewers in the united states and right around the world. i'm isa soares live in ukraine. where russia says the nuclear option is very much still on the table. while ukraine claims its resistance against stepped up attacks is going strong. >> rosemary church live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta. i'll have all our other top stories, including the multi-billion dollar sale of twitter. what it could mean for the social media giant, and is donald trump's return to the platform now a possibility.
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welcome to the show, everyone. it is 9:00 a.m. here in lviv, ukraine, and there is a flurry of diplomatic meetings today to push for peace yet again as russia ramp up strikes on ukraine. now, in the coming hours, u.n. secretary-general will be meeting russian president vladimir putin. the meeting in moscow. they'll be having a working lunch with russian foreign minister sergei lavrov. and in germany secretary-general lloyd austin will be holding a meeting on usually at ramstein air because. nato secretary-general ian stole enberg is expected to be there as well. this coming after austin and u.s. secretary of state antony blinken met ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy in kyiv and that happened on sunday. they're the highest-level u.s.
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officials to have traveled to ukraine since the russian invasion began. they had very strong words for moscow after their visit. have a listen. >> we want to see russia weakened to a degree that it can't do the kinds of things that it has done in invading ukraine. >> we don't know how the rest of this war will unfold, but we do know that a sovereign independent ukraine will be around a lot longer than vladimir putin is on the scene. >> meanwhile, ukraine's capital is under a nighttime curfew this week. authorities say it is to protect people in kyiv from russian attacks. the curfew comes as heavy fighting continues in eastern ukraine. nonstop russian shelling has been reporting -- reported in luhansk as well as donetsk region you can see on the map. ukraine has successfully repelled attacks as russia ramp of offensive in all directions. the russians are razing
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everything to the ground. that is exactly was his quote. he referred specifically to this. have a look at this, tiny village on the front lines which has seen intense fighting over the past week, and now really just lies in runes. ukrainian forces and russian-backed separatist pz blame each other for the destruction. now there is this new warning from russia's foreign minister. have a listen. >> translator: a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought. the danger is serious and real. and it should not be underestimated. >> let's get more on all of this. i i'd like to bring in the moscow bureau reporter for "the new york times" and joins us now from to tbilisi. ivan, thank you very much for joining us this morning. can you give us a sense of what you heard in the last 24 hours from russia's foreign minister lavrov we played there. he's saying the danger of
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nuclear war is real. why would he say that and why would he say that now, ivan? >> well, they have been saying it for a few weeks now. basically the message is russia cannot be pushed around. russia always has this weapon that you cannot counter. and basically ukraine is russia's backyard and no matter what america -- russia will continue on its course. this is the message. >> clearly coming, of course, following on from that meeting between the u.s. -- the u.s. officials here in ukraine with president zelenskyy. i think the timing is actually important to you, no doubt. >> of course, of course. everything is symbolic. russia has conducted, you know, increased missile strikes
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against a structure yesterday in ukraine. they have hit six railway stations in western ukraine, saying that this are the stations and infrastructure used to deliver weapons from the west inside ukraine into the donbas area where the fighting is raging right now. so it's the message that russia is willing to target the efforts that the west is summoning to help ukraine in this war. >> now, your reporting, ivan, for those who don't follow, focus a lot on how the reality of war is being perceived in russia. you wrote, the russian people are likely standing by president putin. what would you say you attribute that to? >> well, the thing is that the sanctions that have been imposed on russia have not really been felt in the country as acutely
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as they could been felt and will be felt in a few months' time. russia is still running on the, on the inventories, on the inertia it has accumulated before. it hasn't felt the effect of the sanctions yet. you always have to count in the factor of the media landscape that russians exist in. of course, it is basically only state-run news that russians now have access to. you can access other sources, but you need to make an effort, and with the thought of war it's hard to make sense of things for anyone. and the state news in russia, they provide the very clear pro-russian picture. >> yeah, i was going to say there are ways for them to get that information if they so desire. i think that's important to note. but you were born, and correct me, i think you were born in st.
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petersburg, but you left russia recently after the kremlin, of course, cracked down even harder on independent journalists there. what are some of the things that you are hearing, just about ordinary russians, friends, acquaintances, about russia is doing in ukraine, what are they telling you? >> well, this is a very, i would say, for many people this is a personal issue. and people often are reluctant to discuss politics because they are -- many people have friends in both ukraine and russia, relatives in both ukraine and russia. i grew up both in ukraine and russia, too, and many people now it seems are reluctant to discuss it because they're afraid to lose the relationships that they have because if they, for instance, if they say that they support ukraine and someone else doesn't, like i have
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relatives who support the war, i have relatives in the military. but i wouldn't discuss it with them because i wouldn't want to argue and fight with them. so it's a very divisive issue. it's very hard. i think the russian government is using it and is using, you know, the emotional standing that russians find themselves in. this wariness, they do not want to claim responsibility for the apparent war crimes russia is committing in ukraine. you know, they don't want to take responsibility for the essence of this huaraz such because that is too much of a weight on their shoulders. they're going to have to live with that, of course, and they're going to have to see the reality in the future. but so far it seems that -- i wouldn't say most russians, but many russians are trying to hide from this grim reality that they live in. >> and we will be talking to a guest the next hour about war crimes and how they are
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verifying those war crimes across the country in the next hour. so make sure if you're watching, everyone, tune in to the next hour. ivan, pardon me, thank you very much for joining us, ivan. i appreciate it. >> thank you very much. now, the demands on health care workers have increased exponentially since the beginning of the invasion. many are putting their lives at risk every day to save others. our clarissa ward and her team followed two brave paramedics as they attempted to save a wounded man during heavy russian shelling. have a look at this. >> reporter: it's the beginning of a 24-hour shift for paramedics alexandra and vladimir. they prepare their ambulance for the carnage kharkiv residents confront every day. we have two tourniquets, he
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says. every moment is precious. a loud boom signals the day's work is beginning. that's incoming now, this ambulance worker tells us. alexandra and vladimir answer the call. she says the code used when someone has been wounded by shelling. their flap jackets on, they're ready to roll out. >> so they've said they have reports one person has been injured in the shelling and they're hearing rockets as well. so we're going to see what's going on. the shells hit a residential apartment building. the paramedics need to act fast. russian forces are increasingly hitting the same target twice. it's called a double tap. a horrifying strategy to take out rescue workers as they
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respond. as we see for ourselves. get in, vladimir shouts, faster, faster, faster. take cover under the stairwell. alexandra is trying to find the wounded person, but there's no signal. at that moment, another barrage moves on. we brace for the impact. is everybody okay, alexandra asks. our team member maria has cut up her hands on broken glass.
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vladimir treats her injuries as alexandra calls the dispatch again to find where the wounded are. we've got no connection, we're sitting in the entrance, she says. and they're shelling the shut out of us. the connection keeps dropping. timely she gets through to the person who called for the ambulance. [ speaking foreign language ] tell me your dam house number, she says. i repeat, 12 g, i told you a thousand times, he replies. the man is dying. we decide to try to make a run for it. >> come on, maria, come on. come on, maria. come on. go, go. get inside.
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in the car. okay. we were just in an apartment building. they were looking for an injured man. a bunch of rounds came in and hit the next door building, so now we are getting out as fast as we can. while we run out, vladimir and alexandra run back in. we find them treating the injured man on the side of the road. the back window has been blown out by the blasts. she has shrapnel injuries and head trauma. once they've stabilized him, they rush him to the hospital. vladimir asks about his pain. the man has been deaf eenned by
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the blast. they've done their part. it's up to others now to save him. you guys are like the bravest people i've ever met. back at base, we asked them why they continue to do this work. it's normal. this is our work. of course, it's scary like for everyone, alexandra says. today you were with us in the hottest place, in the oven, but we're still alive, thank god. you feel it's your duty, your obligation, vladimir tells us, to help the people who are still here. >> reporter: and what do your parents say, what do they say, they want you to stop this war? >> it's very difficult. >> reporter: you must be scared. >> yes, yes. all day, all night.
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>> reporter: we saw your mother. she's worried to the point of hysteria, alexandra tells us. she says, you need to leave. you need to go to some safe place. why are you doing this? i have only one child. stop it. >> reporter: and what do you say? i have to do it, she says simply. and with that, they go back to cleaning their ambulance. their shift only halfway through. clarissa ward, cnn, kharkiv. >> the extraordinary work, putting themselves on the line there these paramedics to help and save others. incredible report from clarissa ward and her team. i'll be back later this hour with more from ukraine, but first rosemary church will have our other top stories after this break, including this.
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elon musk's twitter take over. we'll have a look at the deal between the world's richest man and one of the top social media platforms. and later this hour, a new nuclear warning and huge missile from display as north korea marks a milestone military anniversary. both those stories after a very short break. you are watching "cnn newsroom." shows instantly if yoyou're below, within or ababove your range. it cheers you u on and provides guidance. connected to your healthth and your phone. visit onetouch.com t today. homegrown tomatoes...nice. i wawant to feel in control of my health, so i do what i can. what about screening for colon cancer? when caught in early stages it's more treatable. i'm cologuard. i'm noninvasive and i detect tered dna in your stool to fd 92% of colon cancers, even in early stages. early stages yep, it's for people 45 us at average risk for colon cancer, not high ris false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider if cologuard is right for you. consider it done.
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welcome back, everyone. well, billionaire elon musk is one step closer to becoming a social media mogul. the tesla c.e.o. is now set to buy twitter in a deal worth $44 billion. musk says his goal is to bolster free speech and unlock the company's tremendous potential. but there are concerns about changes he could make to the influential platform. cnn's claire sebastian joins me now from london with more on this. good to see you, claire. so, lots of questions being asked about elon musk's $44 billion twitter deal, including how far he'll likely go in allowing free speech on the platform, and will those previously banned like donald trump be allowed back on twitter. so what's being said about all of this? >> reporter: yeah, rosemary, the critical question going forward
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as we digest this very sharp turn around by the board, suddenly accepting his offer on monday. this is what he actually said in the press release on the deal going through. he said, free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy. twitter is the digital town square where the future of humanity are debated. i'll make theal goh rhythm -- algorithms authenticating humans. he wants to make transparency to give users visibility about when tweets are promoted or demoted. he will take a lighter touch when it comes to content moderation, that when there's a gray area around a tweet, that his view would be to let that tweet exist. and in terms of banning people from the platform, he says he would be more in favor of a time-out. obviously the question around former president donald trump
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will be a critical test of his views on free speech. musk hasn't commented on this, but former president trump himself speaking on fox said he would not want to return to twitter even if invited. he would rather join his own new social media platform called truth social. we see, rosemary, the deal expected to close by the end of the year. >> all right. we'll see what happens there. claire sebastian joining us live from london. many thanks. and joining me now from san francisco is josh constein, he is a principal investor and head of content at venture capital firm signal fire. good to have you with us. >> thank you for having me. >> so, news of elon musk's $44 billion twitter deal have people asking how far he will go on free speech and those banned like donald trump will be allowed back on. how far do you think musk will go with these changes to twitter? >> elon musk is a free speech absolutist. the problem is freedom of speech
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doesn't mean that you should have freedom of reach. the original laws of freedom of speech were meant to say you can say anything you want about the government in a public place. that's different than being able to say whatever you want and pushing that into the phones and homes of people around the world. and that's why i think these moderation policies that are hands off could be dangerous to those not as invincible as the richest man in the world. >> even though he says efforts to police the platform have gone too far, that's his opinion, if twitter is subjected to less regulatory scrutiny, what could that mean in terms of allowing hate speech, misinformation to remain on the platform unchad? >> -- unchallenged? >> the u.s. government has done little to -- even though there's been hubbub from republicans when they have been censored.
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that's why they have been punished. the problem here is having elon in control means we could be returning to an earlier era of twitter with a lot more hatred and a lot more hate speech directed towards the most vulnerable people in the world. and i think the problem won't be whether the u.s. government steps in, but whether twitter's own employees boycott his policies. many of them have spent the last decade working on their safety and moderation policies to ensure a safer place for people to discuss current events. and if elon rolls those back, he could see a huge walkout from employees. and we've seen time and time again it's not user boycotts or government regulation. it's the employee walkouts that truly change policy in silicon valley. >> and we know from his statement that musk is promising to add new feature to twitter including making the algorithms open sourced, defeating the spam bots and authenticating all humans. how big an operation would that be and how will he remove spam bots without wiping out useful
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bots like the weather and others? >> that's a huge question, especially the open sourcing of the algorithm which could allow those exact same spammers to game the system and get their menacing tweets to the top of your time line. here we see elon buying twitter is the modern equivalent of hearst and pulitzer buying papers in the 1800s so they could defame their opponents and promote their businesses. unlike jeff bezos owning the "washington post," twitter is the global newspaper. instead of pressuring others into coverage, he could protect allies from punishment and silence critics. he's becoming the editor in chief to the entire world. >> do you worry that this could actually signal the end of twitter as we know it? >> twitter has become a fundamental communication utility, and i don't think it's going anywhere. in fact, that's why i believe musk is buying the company
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because he knows that it is essential to the future of communication. but that's also one of the reasons he wants to own it for self-serving purposes. it's been a huge marketing arm for tesla. and seeing that he's had regulations thrown against him and been suspended or had tweets altered or, as he puts it, censored in the past, he's trying to guarantee his mouth piece to the world because the twitter -- sorry. the tesla stock that he's actually putting in debt so he can make this purchase relies on his ability to speak to his fanatic fans about the future of electricity. >> all right. we'll all be watching to see what happens to twitter going forward under elon musk, of course. josh constein, thank you so much for joining us. appreciate it. >> my pleasure. and still to come here on cnn, empty store shelves in beijing, mass covid testing has residents fearing a lockdown is coming. the latest details and a live report just ahead. plus our live coverage on
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russia's war on ukraine continues. hear from a woman whose husband is fighting for ukraine on the front lines of mariupol. >> when he called, it could be ten or 15 seconds, and then bombing and no connection. ♪ ♪ how's he still playin'? aspercreme arthritis. full prescriription-strength. reduces inflammation. dodon't touch my piano. kick pain in the aspercreme.
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>> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. more on our breaking news story this hour. a few high-level diplomatic meetings on the conflict in ukraine will be held in the coming hours. u.s. defense secretary lloyd austin will be meeting counterparts in germany, and then u.n. secretary-general will be meeting russian president vladimir putin and foreign minister sergei lavrov. that will be happening in moscow. but russia is not giving any indication thus far it is ready for a cease-fire. have a listen to this. >> secretary-general asked very simple. you ask, we accept. you don't ask, we don't accept. >> is it time for a cease-fire? >> sorry? >> is it time for a cease-fire? did the secretary-general ask for a cease-fire will russia comply? >> i think he asked for easter cease-fire and easter is over
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right now. >> meantime, ukrainian officials say russian forces have stepped up their offenses and are trying to take the donetsk region while blockading the city of kharkiv. in the besieged southern city of mariupol, there is no way out for millions sheltering inside the steel plant. on monday, ukraine said it was unable to establish a humanitarian corridor to try and evacuate the plant. and conditions inside seem to be growing increasingly desperate as you can imagine. ukrainian forces released this video on sunday. it appears to show women as well as children sheltering in an underground bunker. one woman says the children haven't seen sunlight in more than a month and a half. and food and water as you can imagine, running out at this point. well, the sprawling steel works is the last major bastian in ukrainian defense in
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mariupol. one of the soldiers defending the city says he'll keep fighting even if it costs him his life. >> reporter: before mariupol became a hell scape, before russian military depravity turned the city into a cemetery, there was love here. just two weeks before the war began, natalka spent valentine's day with her boyfriend in the city. they took this picture at a cafe, and this one after eating, and a few days later she snapped this one of him from her window seat on the train that would take her back to kyiv. >> he kissed me and told, natalia, i don't know when i will see you again. >> reporter: resignation from a man who understood the realities of the war to come. natalka's boyfriend who we are not naming or showing for security reasons is a soldier in the battalion that has fought the russians in mariupol for months. we went to see her at her home in kyiv where she told us her
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boyfriend was given a command to, quote, fight until the last drop of blood. what did you think when he told you that? >> i recommended him to save his life, but he answered, no, i should keep on the comment. i'm a soldier and i have to be here. >> reporter: she says her boyfriend lost cell service on march 3rd. his silence was as deafening as the bombs that by then had started to fall around kyiv, forcing her and her family down into this cellar. it was in here that after two weeks she heard from him. >> when he called, it could be ten or 15 seconds, and then bombing and no connection. >> reporter: but with what connection he did have, he would send her videos of the utter destruction that surrounded him. we can't show you those for security reasons. what do you think when you watch these videos?
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>> i think that empty. i feel the empty, absolute empty. >> reporter: along with the videos were selfies and texts. and on his birthday a particularly special message. >> he gave me a proposition that i couldn't -- >> reporter: say no to? >> say no, yeah. >> reporter: what did he write to you? [ speaking foreign language ] >> so, i love you, and do you want to be my wife. >> reporter: a few days later a marriage certificate made it official. now a wife, she says she refuses to cry. her husband is stoic in the face of death, so she will be, too. how else to describe her reaction to the last message he sent? >> my husband told me that, natalia, please be glad because very soon it will finish. >> reporter: when you say it's going to finish very soon, what
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are the two options? >> very simple. they will alive or they will be killed. just two options. >> reporter: matt rivers, cnn, kyiv, ukraine. a beautiful love story from mariupol there. and if you would like to help people in ukraine who may need a shelter, food and water, please go to cnn.com/impact. there you'll find several ways that you can help. live from lviv, ukraine, i'm isa soares. i'm see you in about 20 minutes or so for much more on the war they're in ukraine. for now i'll hand it back to rosemary church who will pick it up after a short break, i hear. sleep number 360® smart bed is rereally smart. it senses your movement and automatically adjusts to help kekeep you boh comfortable all night. it's also temperature balanancing, o you stay cool. it's so smart it knonows exactly how long, hw well, and when y you slept. sleep number takes care of the science, a all you have to do s sleep. don't miss our weekend
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complete denuclearization and lasting peace on the korean peninsula just hours after north korea staged its latest grand military parade. on the 90th anniversary of the founding of the korean revolutionary army, kim jong-un vowed to strengthen and develop his nuclear force, quote, at the fastest possible speed. this all comes after a flurry of missile tests by north korea this year, and warnings from south korea and the u.s. that pyongyang could resume nuclear weapons tests for the first time in five years. cnn's blake joins me now from tokyo for more on all this. good to see you, blake. what more are you learning? >> reporter: you know, rosemary, north korea's highly anticipated parade celebrating the founding of the army was held last night. and according to north korean state-run media kcna, both kim jong-un and his wife were there to see it.
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during a speech delivered at the parade as you mentioned, kim not only said north korea will continue to strengthen and develop its nuclear force, but that north korea's armed forces are fully prepared for any fight. now, in the past these parades have onebeen used to unveil arsenal. kcna noting the hwasong and multiple rocket launchers were part of the celebration. while we don't know every piece of military hardware displayed last night, north korea watchers expect that the parade would likely feature weapons from kim jong-un's weapons wish list. that wish list includes items like hypersonic glide vehicles, under water nuclear weapons and a 15,000 kilometer icbm. all of those weapons have either been tested or are in development. now, so far this year, pyongyang has conducted about a dozen weapons tests. and based on last night's speech from kim jong-un, there are no
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signs that it will slow down its military development any time soon. in fact, south korean military officials have reported for weeks that the north has been working to restore tunnels at its main nuclear test site, a sign the north could be preparing for its first nuclear test in about five years as you had mentioned. it is worth noting that last night's parade took place as south korea welcomes a new president who takes office early next month. the president elect has pledged to take a hard line against north korea which he calls the main enemy of south korea. rosemary? >> all right. blake essig joining us live from tokyo. many thanks. in china, beijing is rolling out mass testing for another 16 million residents this week. that's in addition to the 3.5 million people already being tested in the capital. it's part of a bid to contain a covid outbreak described as urgent and grim.
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cnn's selina wang joins me from china. good to see you, selena. this has many residents concerned they could face similar draconian measures we've been seeing in shanghai. what, if anything, are authorities doing to try to improve their response in the midst of mass testing and these severe lockdowns? >> reporter: rosemary, that's right. that is the fear. beijing, this is the center of power, the capital of china, they are desperate to avoid the failures of shanghai. many in shanghai have been struggling to get food during the lockdown. authorities have been trying to reassure residents, saying, we're going to keep the super markets stocked. there are going to be enough daily essentials, prices will remain stable. but still people are worried. you've seen residents lining up at the super markets. they're panic buying. stores are getting empty. they're worried beijing could become the next shanghai. since friday, beijing has
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reported 80 total covid-19 cases. rosemary, that number sounds very low, but beijing is not taking any chances after they saw how the omicron outbreak in shanghai so quickly spiralled from a few weeks from tens to thousands. the city is rolling out mass testing to 20 million residents. they will be tested three times over the course of the next several days. many parts of the city, several parts of the city are also going into lockdown including dozens of residential communities. large gatherings have been banned and people are being asked to work from home and to not do any traveling that is not essential. in shanghai, meanwhile, rosemary, those covid cases continue to climb and people are angry and frustrated and sensors are having trouble keeping up with the volumes of complaints from people. one video circulating online and has been taken down by censors is a six-minute video called the voices of april. it includes a compilation of the desperation of residents and their criticisms of the
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government policies. it includes these shouts of residents in their lockdown homes that struggle to get enough food. pleas of a son desperately trying to get his father into a hospital. it includes the cries of babies who have been separated from their parents. and the cries of an exhausted health care worker. but despite all of this frustration, china is doubling down on its zero covid policy, betting that this is going to keep china from dealing with the explosion of covid-19 deaths that have been seen in other parts of the world. rosemary? >> all right, selena wang joining us from china. many thanks. the french presidential election may be over, but the critics of emanuel macron are hoping they can cut into his power. we will explain how they plan to do it just ahead .
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welcome back, everyone. a u.s. federal judge is keeping in place trump-era covid restrictions along the u.s./mexico border. the measures allow border authorities to turn migrants back to their home countries because of the public health crisis. the biden administration planned to end the practice known as title 42 in about a month. both democrats and republicans have spoken out in favor of the rules, and more than 20 states asked the court to keep them in place. emmanuel macron are calling on voters to deny the french
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president a parliamentary majority in upcoming legislative elections. the far -- -- could scuttle mr. macron's domestic agenda and french support for ukraine. melissa bell has that report. >> as emmanuel macron became the first french president in 20 years to win a second term. the european flag served as a reminder of would have been at stake. his rival mary le pen had promised to define europe's institutions. turning the eu of an alliance of sovereign nations. a position apparently backed by 42% of voters. >> [interpreter] to our french leaders to the european union this result bears witness to the great mistrust of the french people towards them. which they cannot ignore until the widely shared aspirations of great change.
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>> it's a change of vladimir putin has been backing for years. receiving the far right candidate just ahead of the 2017 french election. and the last week, the russian opposition leader alexei navalny lead in. urging the french to back macron, and describing the russian bank that lent le pen -- as a well-known money laundering agency in a tweet just hours ahead of the french candidate debate. >> [interpreter] you depend on the russian power you depend on mr. putin. >> [interpreter] i am a completely free woman. >> marion le pen insists the loan was a financial arrangement that her party is reimbursing and full. she remains cautious, about further sanctions against moscow. >> pretend the french or other european people could absorb the consequences of a total cut off of russian gas, oil, or raw materials. is simply a responsible.
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>> macron has gone much further than sanctions. sending 100 million euros of weaponry to kyiv. something le pen has shed she would be prudent about. she also announced she wanted a strategic rapprochement between nato and russia. >> in the end, neither her positions on nato and the eu, nor moscow, prevented mary le pen from achieving a historic score. coming within a five and a half million votes of emmanuel macron. she's now looking to june's legislative elections to try and deprive him of his governing majority. which could present challenges for francis continued support to ukraine. >> and le pen it's far from alone in europe, with allies amongst the blocks far and euroskeptic parties. many of them also historically close to moscow. by monday morning, she arrived at her headquarters defeated button vowed. vowing to start fresh fight for
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her own vision of the future. melissa bell, cnn, paris. >> and thanks so much for joining us. i'm rosemary church, more of our breaking news coverage live from ukraine right after this break. stay with us. cise are a big part of losing weight. ww's new program teaches you how to do it. i still eat the foods i want to eat and i have l lost 69 pounds, james. you're just changing your mindsetet and shifting your eating habits. for me ww is all about flexibility. there's no restrictions. more knowing means more doing. do with ww. i'm reading your aura right now. it's telling me that ww works. get you first 3 months free today at ww.com offer ends may 2nd.
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>> hello, in a very warm welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm live in ukraine, where russia says the nuclear option is very much on the table. while ukraine claims its resistance against stepped up attacks is going strong. i'm -- >> i'm rosemary church, live from atlanta. i will have all of our other top stories. including the multi billion dollar sale of twitter. what it could mean for the social media

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