tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN August 8, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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a warm welcome to our x fos. just ahead -- >> on this vote the yeas are 50, nays are 50, the vice president votes in the affirmative and the motion to proceed. >> this is an historic investment in climate change. >> it is a win for the american people. s it is the biggest investment in climate change in history.
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>> translator: we don't want to keep going through this. every year there are strikes. >> this is where the next phase of the war will be won or lost, in trenches like this. >> live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster. >> it is monday, august 8, 9:00 a.m. here in london, 4:00 a.m. in washington where new life is being breathed into president biden's domestic agenda after senate democrats finally passed their sweeping climate health care and tax plan officially known as the inflation reduction act. vice president kamala harris cast the deciding vote after a deadlock along party lines. >> on this vote the yeas are 50, nays are 50. the senate being equally divided, the vice president votes in the affirmative and the
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motion is agreed to. >> the measure represents the largest climate investment in u.s. history with $370 billion to combat climate change. it also makes major changes to health policy such as giving medicare the power to negotiate some drug prices and it imposes a 15% corporate tax on large companies as one of the ways to fund it all. it is a remarkable turnaround for president biden's legislative goals which seemed all but dead until recent weeks. arlette saenz has been traveling with the president and filed this report. >> reporter: president biden hailed the senate passing the inflation reduction act as an important part of achieving some of the key priorities for his domestic agenda. the president spent sunday at his kay vags vacation home afte negative twice for covid over the weekend. he said today senate democrats sided with american families over special interests, voting
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to lower the cost of prescription drugs, health insurance and everyday energy costs and reduce the deficit while making the wealthiest corporations finally pay their fair share. the president added it required many proper compromises doing important things almost always does. the house should pass this as soon as possible and i look forward to signing it into law. the president's reference there to compromises acknowledges the process they had been on. this bill was often pronounced dead multiple times, but democrats have now moved forward a critical piece of the president's agenda though smaller than what the president initially proposed. but it includes historic investments in climate initiatives and health care proposals including allowing medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices for the first time. there are also additional tax measures in here to pay for the measure including a 15%
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corporate tax rate. this bill still needs to make its way through the house before heading toward the president's house but president biden is hoping that this is something that they can tout to voters heading into the midterms. the president monday is set to travel making his first official trip since being diagnosed with covid-19 to the state of kentucky where he will tour the damage after those devastating floods that occurred in the eastern part of the state. the president and first lady will be meeting with the state's governor andy baseshear and als with families and victims who have been suffering since those floods occurred. this will mark the president's first official trip traveling since he received those negative covid-19 diagnoses. the president had been cooped up at the white house for 18 days. arrest let arlette saenz, traveling with the president. and david gogin an adviser
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said while the bill won't solve all the problems, but it provides a much needed boost ahead of the midterm elections. >> biden has had a terrible lead into this, but af terrific run here in the last few weeks. some would say one of the most important significant runs since lyndon johnson was swept through with so many legislative initi initiatives. but he still has high inflation, latest poll -- too early to get good polls responding to what just happened on this bill, but we did have the last couple days a poll coming out from abc where he was down to 37% approval. that is really, really low. so he's got a lot to come back from, but for the democratic party, this is a shot of adrenalin. >> from the way democrats and republicans described the economic package, you'd think
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that they were talking about entirely different bills. democrats had nothing but praise for the measure. >> it pays down the deficit by $300 billion. it reduces the energy costs that the average family pays in very specific and concrete ways. it helps with prescription drug costs and with health care costs for millions and millions of people. >> it is a win for the american people. it is the biggest investment in climate change this history. it will lower the cost of medicine for senior citizens. it is going to help people with their health care premiums in the affordable care act. takes it is a very big deal. >> but not one single republican senator supported the legislation, they see it in a much different light. >> right now this bill actually ought to be called the war on seniors act. this is a war on medicare.
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this is a $280 billion cut in medicare. so what is going to happen is medicare will get cut and there will be seniors that don't get life saving drugs. >> we're still going to have inflation and yet at the same time they will be clollecting close to $700 billion in new tax revenue over the next five to ten years, but it won't get us through a tight time in which we're worried about coming out of a recession. >> we'll have to wait and see how wall street responds to this. let's look at how the u.s. futures are doing. they are all up, so they are seeing it in a positive light so far, but there is also inflation and interest rates of course for them to obsess with. just after 11:00 a.m. in gaza where a cease fire between israel and jihad appears to be holding, this coming two days after tensions began when israel
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launched what it calls preemptive strikes. before the ceasefire was announced sunday, palestinian militants launched rockets towards jerusalem following israeli airstrikes in gaza overnight. israeli officials say a leader of the operations in southern gaza was killed in an airstrike, he was the second militant commander killed in the israeli operation. palestinian officials say at loeast 15 children have been killed. joe biden praised the ceasefire. for those who weren't up to the developments over the weekend, how do we get to this point, elliott? >> reporter: from the israeli perspective, they were concerned that islamic jihad was planning an attack in or around the gaza
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strip and the communities that are there. and as a result, launched this operation in order to restore calm and security to those communities. and from israel's perspective, it really is job done, mission accomplished, senior official saying that they have set back islamic jihad decades taking out the two top military commanders in the gaza strip and also taking out weapons manufacturing facilities, rocket launchers, tunnels and the like as well. from islamic jihad's perspective, i suppose they have been able to demonstrate that their arsenal is growing in terms of size and sophistication. sirens went off in my part of tel aviv last night the first time, had to go down to the bomb shelter in the basement of my building. certainly islamic jihad will feel that, yes, although its to
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standing, but they live to fight another day. i don't think that anyone doubts that that day will do not just in terms of the conflict but also between the militants of hamas, the much bigger group that controls the gaza strip. never mind the even bigger threat posed by the other main iranian proxy hezbollah on the other side of the lebanese border. i can tell you that the ceasefire is holding. it was meant to come into effect around 11:30 p.m. local time. since midnight local time, there has been calm and also humanitarian and commercial goods will flowing once more. max. >> elliott in israel, thank you. ukraine is accusing russia of nuclear terror after
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explosions shook europe's largest nuclear power plant for a second day in a row. shells damaged three radiation detectors at the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant just a day after an attack that prompted warnings of a nuclear disaster from the u.n. watchdog. this as ukraine's president warns that future negotiations with moscow could be in jeopardy if officials in occupied areas hold referendums on joining russia. on sunday, cargo ship entered a ukrainian port for the first time since the invasion. two ships have left ukraine within the past few hours carrying around 60,000 tons of agricultural products. cnn covering this story from every angle. first let's goat to to david mce in kyiv. the russians blame ukrainians. what do we know? >> reporter: what we do know is this is a very alarm situation
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because since march russians have occupied that vast nuclear site and there have been allegations for some weeks now that the russians have been using that site or areas close to that site to shell across the river on to the ukrainian positions. what we know now is that there have been strikes on or near that site which is of course extremely alarming to this country, to its president zelenskyy who said that the international community needs to make more of a fuss about what he calls nuclear terror. head of the iaea over the weekend, that is the atomic watchdog, really saying that that needs to be figured out. and just a short time ago in tokyo, these are the comments from the u.n. secretary-general. >> any attack to a nuclear plant is a suicidal thing and i hope that those attacks will end and at the same time i hope that the
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iaea will be able to have success to the plant and to exercise its competencies. >> reporter: president zelenskyy pointed out that of course if there is the unthinkable, a nuclear disaster because of the ongoing conflict, it wouldn't affect just ukraine but the wider european sphere. there is of course disputes as to who is responsible for this. max. >> david, also take us through these useds of sham referendums that they are being called within the occupied areas. >> reporter: the u.s. government warned some weeks ago that in the territory that russia now controls, to get some kind of veneer of credibility, they have been looking to have these referendum, some kind of sham election to annex that
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territory. of course this is completely unacceptable to the ukrainian side. the president of ukraine saying if any attempt do that is made, it will push the prospect of talks to find a negotiated solution in this conflict even further backwards. he also made a very stark warning to any ukrainian who cooperates with the russians, basically in more words than that calling it treason. and so it is unclear whether those referendum will take place anytime soon. >> david, thank you for joining us from kyiv. let's go now to kramatorsk where we find nic robertson. you are monitoring the movements on the eastern front. >> reporter: yeah, and it is a very contradictory but dangerous situation in this area, this of course is the area where president zelenskyy said everyone -- all the civilians should leave the area because come next winter, there wouldn't be the infrastructure to support them, there wouldn't be the gas supplies to keep them warm.
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but you have sort of contrary indications here. just as we pitched up where we are right now, a handful of city workers were out mowing the lawns in the city here. yet we've watched as new trench systems, new heavy and expensive trempg systems have been put in place around here and that is because this town like so many others around it is experiencing very heavy she willing. the sirens go off here with repeated regularity day and night and you can hear multiple impacts. shelling has been heavy. where it is heaviest as well as in the towns and villages is along the frontfrontline. and that is where we went to see some of the soldiers, the sharpest and hardest end of this fight. >> reporter: deep in the woods at ukraine's eastern front, troops dig in, trenches here a
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lifesavers. >> fighting is fierce. we took our portion of shelling here and some were injured. >> reporter: the faces of the troops here tell a story that words cannot. this is tough duty. five days at the front, ten days resting here nearby. they joke about living like hobbits underground away from the shelling. when ukrainian officials talk about the himars rocket system and the m 777 artillery helping hold their line, these are the lines they are talking about. and these are the soldiers with the hard fight to make sure it does hold. he says we hold the line, it is humid, it rains, shells hit us all the time. but we hold the defense. there is no other way.
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of course the shelling gets on your mind, he tells me. his buddy adding but you get used to it. both set on victory they say. to get to the very frontline, we cross fields littered with russian rockets. all these trees here they are telling us were taken out by shelling. conditions here very spartan. the russians less than a mile away. days here when troops can't leave their bunkers. russia outguns them five times. this is where the next phase of the war will be won or loss in trenches like this and stretch for hundreds of miles, troops like this holding the line against possible russian advance. we manage the officer says, we've can come here to stop the enemy. we just take it, sit it out and keep on fighting.
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an incoming shell punctuates his thought. more weapons, more armor he says, and it could be us adva advancing. you really get the sense from those soldiers that if they could move forward, they will. this is very much sort of an artillery fighter, but the way that the russians have been taking ground quite literally is as we mentioned there, that they just have more firepower and they areare raining it down not only on the trenches but the houses in the towns around here and it might take them a week, it might take them a month to take some of the places around here, but they are inching forward, inching forward and incrementally getting closer to places like this which explains why i think we've seen the heavy trench systems being dug in. >> nick wo robertson, thank youy much. just ahead, parts of the
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u.s. are under flash flood watches. we'll look at the greatest danger. >> yeah, we have the big time flash flooding concerns and also record heat all over the place from portions of the midwest into areas of the northeast even in southern california. the century mark approaching that area. we'll talk about it in detail coming up. which makes waking up at 5 a.m. . to milk the cows a lilittle easier. (m(moo) mabel says for you, it''s more like 5:15. man: mom, reaeally? why olite? because its specially formulated to protect your clothing from damage inhe wash. like fading, stretching and pilling. woolite has a first of its kind formula that keeps today's fabrics looking like new. woolite damage and darks defense. frank is a fan of fast. he's a fast talker.
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another grim discovery at lake mead straddling the border nevada and arizona. human remains have been discovered in the lake's receding waters for the fourth time since may. water levels have plunged to unprecedented lows amidst drought conditions and searing heat. officials say mob involvement is mere speculation. joe biden and the first lady will meet with families in kentucky affected by the historic flooding last week. the president says the federal government will cover 100% of the costs for certain emergency services for the region. damage from the flooding is
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extensive, at least 37 people have been killed and two women remain missing. severe storms and staffing problems are causing more problems for air travelers. according to flight aware, more than 900 flights were canceled sunday and over 6400 were delayed. the department of transportation has proposed making it easier for passengers to get refunds if their flight is canceled after a flurry of complaints. pedram javaheri is joining me now. can they expect more disruption? >> we do have some storms across the southwest and portions of the midwestern u.s. so certainly some disruptions will be possible into the afternoon hours and even into the early morning hours seeing strong storms. no disruptions at air travel right now but mainly because of course travel numbers quite drop a bit when it comes to flights at these hours. but showers and thunderstorms are expected to pop up again this this afternoon. beneficial across parts of southwest where they have been under drought conditions and
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still quite a bit of states under drought but now less than the 99% numbers that we had seen in recent weeks. and we expect additional rainfall the coming several days and even into next week. notice the western half of the u.s. stays above average potential there for rainfall, eastern half of the u.s. where so much rain has come down finally seeing a bit of a break long term again. but as of right now, still watching a few thunderstorms around green bay next couple hours, milwaukee some flood alerts have been prompted, a lot of rainfall in the last few days, as much as 65 to 6 inches in the span of 24 hours. and that energy shifts a little farther toward the east, cleveland, cincinnati, nashville, disruptions are possible in the afternoon. flood risk there is slight to marginal, generally the regions hard hit in missouri and
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kentucky certainly could be on alert with some rainfall in the next several days. heat also the big story around the northeastern u.s., heat indices as high as 105 degrees including philly, new york, boston where heat remains in place there and records have been falling by the wayside. boston climbed up to 98 degrees, so big time heat in store across the northeast. >> really high temperatures. thank you, pedram. still to come, taiwan's foreign minister speaks to cnn, what he makes of the threat posed by china's military as it launches war games near taiwan. plus migrants who crossed the southern u.s. border arrived in new york city over the weekend fueling a political fight between the city's mayor and the texas governor. the story straight ahead.
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woelcome back. let me bring you up-to-date with the top stories. the u.s. senate passed the sweeping bill known as the inflation reduction act. not a single republican senator vote for the measure. the house is expected to take up the legislation on friday. a ceasefire between israel and islamic jihad is now in effect in gaza, it appears to be holding this hour. the truce comes after days of escalating tensions between both sides. we're tracking developments in the western pacific where chinese military drills have continued for a fifth day near taiwan. beijing began the drills thursday after promising taipei would pay a price for hosting u.s. house speaker nancy pelosi.
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she made the visit despite warnings from mainland china which considers the self-governing island part of its territory. taiwan's foreign minister spoke with will ripley. >> china has always been threatening taiwan. for years. and it is getting more serious in the last few years. and it has always been that way. whether speaker pelosi visit taiwan or not, the chinese military threat against taiwan has always been there and that is the fact that we need to deal with. >> has taiwan's democratic system ever been in more danger than it is today? >> i can tell you that taiwan is more resilient than before. look at taiwan these days, china is trying to impose trade sanctions against taiwan, trying to attract taiwan from military or nonmilitary aspect. but life goes on and taiwan
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shows resilience. >> should people in taiwan be more worried than they are about china? >> what i can say is that the people here in taiwan may worry. if you ask me, i worry a little bit. >> what do you worry about? >> i worry that china may launch a war against taiwan. but what it is doing right now is trying to scare us in the best way to deal with it, to show that china that we are not scared. >> let's bring in blake essig in taipei. really sort of strong words there coming from the foreign minister, but what can we expect in terms of those exercises? because they continue, don't they? >> reporter: yeah, look, max, just a few hours ago we learn that the people's liberation army actually was continuing to conduct drills in the area and at sea according to video posted saying that today's drills are focused on anti-submarine and
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naval action. they were supposed to end yesterday, but again continuing today. in response to the ongoing drills, a spokesperson for taiwan's ministry of defense says china's drills will give taiwan's military less time to react but that it won't back down and will respond more proactively. throughout the first four days of military exercises by china, taiwan's defense ministry says that china simulated an attack against the main island of taiwan involving cyberattacks, a large number of fighter jets and warships operating daily around the taiwan strait with many entering taiwan's air defense identification zone and some crossing taiwan strait's median line. beijing also launched nearly a dozen ballistic missiles, some flying directly over taiwan for the first time ever. but one of the key takeaways from what we saw over the past several days according to military experts is that china
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demonstrated that they can put together a blockade of taiwan that doesn't require constant naval presence offshore and that shipping and air traffic can be blocked by the threat of missiles despite the increased tensions and aggressive maneuvering by china's military around taiwan, life here in taipei really hasn't stopped. there are cars on the road, people walking around outside, the shopping district has been busy. and all weekend there were long lines outside of restaurants. almost as if people here are immune almost unfazed by the constant military threats from china and it really makes sense because the threat from china isn't something new. they have been living with it here for the past 70 plus years. so even though some of the international community are expressing concern about china's seemingly dress rehearsal for a potential attack, people here
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just aren't that worried. >> blake in taipei, thank you. u.s. customs and border patrol says hundreds of migrants are in custody after landing on or near florida's coast this weekend. in one incident, more than 300 migrants from haiti were rescued after they ran aground. officials tweeted these images showing that some had jumped from their boat. in another incident, coast guard took in on to custody at least 150 cuban migrants. officials say they are still processing them. some asylum seekers are caught in the middle between tensions between new york and texas. dozens arrived in new york city by bus this past weekend after the texas governor designated new york as a dropoff location for migrants as part of his response to u.s. border policies. polo sandoval has more.
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>> reporter: leaders here in new york city saying that they are approaching this recent busing of migrant families from the nation's southern border here as an opportunity to send a message to the world and also to republican texas governor greg abbott about how these families should be treated and not what abbott's critics have described as pawns in a political stunt that has been ongoing since april when the governor announced that he would be offering some of the high grants processed and released an opportunity to get on the bus and then get a ride to cities like washington, d.c. and now most recently in new york. some images taken from over the weekend shows some of the recent arrivals, these potential ongoing businging of migrants, it would add strain to a homeless shelter that is already struggling to keep up with demand. mayor adams saying some 14 migrants arrived sunday, at least 50 arrived in the first
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bus on sunday, they are roughly 4,000 that the city has worked find a home for since may. mayor adams saying on sunday morning that the city certainly welcoming to these asylum seekers but saying that ob bot abbott's approach is not just cruel but also uncoordinated. >> it is really important that the governor of texas is coordinating. they are not letting us know what time the buses are leaving, they are not letting us though what are the needs of the people on the bus, they are not giving us any information on we're unable to really provide the service to the people en route. and we'd like to get that information. so only around 14 got off. some of them thought they were going to another location. but they were forced on that bus. >> reporter: mayor adams among other city officials who say that some of the recent arrivals have shared with them stories about feeling forced to take up the abbott administration's offer to get on these buses and get that ride to the northeast. cnn has reached out to governor
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abbott's office on sunday and beer we're still waiting to hear back. expecting more buses to arrive in new york city, officials here have announced that they will set up a standalone facility to provide some of these asylum seekers with things like shelter and food. for some of the migrants whose plans were not to take them here, they are also offering assistance to try to take them to other parts of the country. polo sandoval, cnn, new york. police in new mexico are asking for the public's help as they says gate the fatal shooting of four muslim men, the fear that it is triggering. and plus historic moment for colombia as the country astr inaugurates its first leftist president. that and more when we return. when you order the new lemon ricotta blueberry protein pancakes with 37 grams of protein, you get a smile on your plate.
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albuquerque is on edge after the recent killings of four muslim men. police say the murders may be linked. officials are increasing presence in mosques and are calling on the public to help locate a vehicle of interest. >> reporter: authorities thousand have a very strong lead, they say that they are looking for a specific car, a dark silver sedan, four doors, tinted windows. they believe it could be a volkswagen, either jetta or passat and they are asking for help in finding the car or the person who was driving or own this is car. because what authorities are trying to is connect the dots between the four cases. they say there are some similarities in terms of where the men were killed and how they were killed. authorities saying at the least three of them were amountbushed
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shot dead. one was from south asia and that happened late friday night just before midnight. we also know another man, 27 years old from pakistan, worked for the city of hispaniola, the mayor there describing him as a brilliant public service. he said that he was soft spoken and kind and quick to laugh. he was killed on august 1 in southeast albuquerque. but so was another man killed in the same area, 41 years old from pakistan, he went to the same mosque but he was killed on july 2 ofth. now authorities are also going back to november of 2021 to try to figure out if another killing is related because he is also a muslim man from afghanistan. he was killed outside of the business that he ran with his brother. the governor of new mexico
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saying that there will be justice. here is what she said. >> i am incredibly angry about this situation. every new mexican should stand up and against this kind of hatred. it has no place in this city and it has no place in our state. >> reporter: and the mayor of albuquerque also saying that his community is traumatized explaining how there are parents who are afraid to take their children to school. members of the community who are scared to go out to the grocery store or to get a meal, they are providing services, but really what they are promising is to find the person responsible. camila bernal, cnn, los angeles. now to colombia where they had an historic moment on sunday. [ speaking foreign language ] >> gustavo petro was officially
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sworn in before cheering supporters making him the country's first leftist president. during his first presidential speech, mr. petro stressed the importance of change in the fight against violence. he said the war on drugs has completely failed. in another history-making achievement, his running mate became the first afro colombian to hold executive powers. the two are vying to be kenya's next president wrapped up their campaigns over the weekend. they were once political allies and now very much rivals. tuesday's election will also see a record number of women on the ballot. u.s. secretary of state antony blinken has kicked off a three nation trip to africa with a visit to the historic township in south africa. america's top diplomat toured the peterson museum on sunday name after the 12-year-old boy
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shot and killed by police during the piftvotal anti-apartheid movement. thousands took part in those protests and more than 170 were ultimately gunned down by security forces. blinken will later visit the democratic republic of condo and rwanda as part of his tour. long awaited return home for some west africa artifacts. the museum here in london says that it will give back 72 objects including brass plaques. the museum says that they were forcibly removed from nigeria's city during britt ten's military incursion 125 years ago. the museum says it was moral and appropriate to return the pieces since they were taken by force. museum officials in nigeria say they welcome the decision. still to come, new details on the condition of anne heche
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after a fiery car crash. we'll have the latest. skip the r rinse with finish quantum. its activelift technhnology provides an unbeatable clean on 24 4 hour dried-on stains. skip the rinse with finish toto save our water. flowers are fighters. that's why the alzheimer's association walk to end alzheimer's is full of them. because flowers find a way to break through. just like we will. join the fight at alz.org/walk
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stable condition in hospital after a car accident on friday. los angeles police say she crashed into a residence and her cash bu car burst into flames. they have not been able to question her injuries. >> reporter: anne heche remains hospitalized after her car crashed and became engulfed in the flames. she is in the icu and has severe burns and has a long recovery ahead. a source close to her told that the car was traveling at a high rate of speed when it ran off the road. it took firefighters more than an hour to access, confine and fully extinguish the flames. her she was transported to a local
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hospital. and a neighbor had this to say about the resident of the home that was hit. >> she was in the house at the time. and the car stopped bilike two feet away from where she was sitting. >> reporter: and on saturday a law enforcement source familiar with the investigation told cnn authorities had yet to question anne heche about the incident saying that the injuries have prevented officers from interviewing her. the las vegas police department is investigating the crash and alleged hit and run incident. lapd says no arrests have been made. the 53-year-old actress rose to fame on the soap opera "another world." and she earned a daytime emmy award. she followed had with films like donnie brasco, six days seven
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natures. and her relationship with ellen degeneres resulted in media attention. and she felt blacklisted after going public with their relationship. i didn't do a studio picture for ten years she said who dated degeneres from 1997 to 2000. heche has appeared in numerous series including the brave, and chicago pd. she has several projects currently in post-production. amara walker, cnn, atlanta. it was an emotional weekend for american football fans as the league welcomed the newest members to the hall of fame. the class of 2022 include six players, a coach and first official to be inducted into the hall, the most emotional moment came when brian young honored his late son colby who died of cancer at the age of 15. he remembered his son as a happy kid with an infectious smile.
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>> on october 11, 2016, god called colby home. colby -- you live in our hearts. i enter the hall as a member of this 2022, '22, it was colby's favorite number. >> and only copy to be inducted is dick vermeil who steered the rams to a super bowl victory in the 1999 season. the hall's first official oversaw the implementation of instant replay in 1986. in the world of baseball, one of the most famous contracts is making history once again. bobby bonilla was an all-star
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player who retired from the game more than 20 years ago. but he is still getting paid by the new york mets. and the addendum to his unusual contract just sold at auction for $180,000. bonilla started receiving his deferred paycheck back in 2011, ten years after he stepped away from the game. the mets now pay him each july 1 a whopping $1.1 million a year. he will be 72 years old when his contract expires in 2035. an in additenglish football city had a strong win. and the 22-year-old scored both goals as man city, the reigning champions, topped west ham 2-nil on sunday. and another sensational start in france where lionel messi scored a bicycle kick as they won a
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5-nil. catching the pass before sending it over the goalkeeper. he helped them lead to a win win under their new coach. it looks like top gun mo maverick has officially sunk the titanic. according to "variety," the tom cruise summer blockbuster has moved up to seventh place all-time in u.s. box office sales. it is also now the highest grossing film in paramount pictures history, but it will take more than that to claim the number one spot dethroning "star wars: the force awakens." thanks for joining us. i'm max foster in london. "early start" with christine romans is next right here on cnn.
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as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. put uc in check and keep it there, with rinvoq. ask your gastroenterologist about rinvoq. and learn how abbvie could help you save. lysol is donating 28 million wipes to schools in need, so they can kill 99.9% of viruses and bacteria. keeping kids together here, at places like the lunch table. where they can share who they truly are. chicken nugget man. because when kids are together, they thrive. lysol. here for healthy schools.
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♪ ♪ >> on this vote, the yays are 50, the nays are 50. the senate being equally divided, the vice president votes in the affirmative, and the bill, as amended, is passed. >> a very big day in washington, and now it is monday, august 8th. 5:00 a.m. in morning. thanks for getting an early start with us. i'm chrome ends. that was vice president
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