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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 12, 2022 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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or... his nose. >> welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. you're watching cnn newsroom. in the hours ahead, in just four days a lightning-fast ukrainian counter offensive this said to have retaken four months of gains from the russian military. but what is next? flying in rest, buddy queen elizabeth ii will soon leave a number. hundreds of thousands of people lined the city streets to pay their respects. we will hire million dollar save america packed, which took money from trump supporters. thought election legal challenge that never was, now the focus of federal investigators.
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as we begin day 202 of russia's war of choice, ukrainians are pushing on with their two front counter offensive which has retaken russian occupied territory at a blistering pace. in parts, ukrainian officials claim their forces are just miles from the russian border. in liberated towns and villages, there is evidence everywhere of a hasty russian retreat. tanks and other weapons left abandoned. for weeks, ukraine has been publicly hinting at a counteroffensive at the south. plans for their independence day last month or thereabouts. but it appears the russians might have been duped by abeyance which. with this major push in the northeast. numbers are hard to verify, but in less than two weeks, russia might have suffered one of its biggest losses of the war so far. here is the ukrainian president. >> since the start of september, our soldiers have already liberated 6000 square
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kilometers of ukrainian territory in the east and south. we are moving further. >> the russian ground retreat though has been followed by russian airstrikes targeting civilian infrastructure. in hockey. ukrainian gangs have been so significant, even the russians to publicly only losses as well as what was a major retreat. cnn's melissa bell and her crew gained access to new liberated areas in the northeast. and report that the fighting is ongoing in parts of the artillery fire. firing this exclusive report, and parts of our reporting are graphic. >> the tanks spoke to a hasty russian retreat. as ukrainian forces swept eastwards over the weekend. triumphantly raising the flag over coup pianists gone saturday. local police forces providing cnn with exclusive access to a key town. now meant to be under ukrainian control. >> we still feel uneasy.
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because we have been bombed for four days in a row. nothing is certainly a. which only became clear as we headed further into peons. >> shelling, everything. >> a artillery strike, too close for comfort. then a second. much closer. that was the sound of artillery landing just next to our car. armored car. we've come into coup pnc hoping to get to that flag, to see the sunday afternoon, still the scene of pretty fierce fighting. hearing the sound of outgoing artillery fire. that was the sound of incoming
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fire. the policeman tells us that our car was deliberately targeted. time for us to head back to those parts of kharkiv region now fully under ukrainian control. after six long months. >> generally yes, people are happy, they are feeling celebrating, feel great, feel redemption. >> eager to advance. >> but in villages, ukrainian investigators know all too well what they will find after bucha onboard yankee, under russian control for only a month. >> yes, according to our information, we are reporting war crimes in almost every village she says. >> this, the body of one of two civilians killed in mid february. an early victim of the invasion and evidence now of what six months of russian occupation have cost.
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melissa bell, cnn, kharkiv region. >> cnn's clare sebastian has more now on how the battlefield is changing in eastern ukraine. with analysis from the british think tank royal united services institute. >> ukraine's counteroffensive has reshaped the battlefield in a matter of days. they have taken more territory in the past week than russia has since april. so the question is, how did they do it. i want to bring in neil melvin, the director of international security studies at the royal united services institute. which is i think tank here in london. we are looking at here is the map of what ukraine has retaken. the section here. essentially an area twice the size of greater london. really in the past week. tell me, how did they do it? >> we need traumatic change, quite the surprise because everyone had been focusing on the south down here around the house on. where do we spoken before about the pressure ukrainians have been putting on here. this as it turns out was a deliberate strategy to try to pull the russians away from the
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north and then ukrainians have found the gap in the russian lines. they pushed in here very quickly. they have moved very fast. have gotten behind the russians and the russian front has collapsed and so this area now has turned back to ukrainian control. >> still it's continuing, we are hearing they are continuing to take settlements. where do you think the offensive sort of moves next? >> the challenge for russia now is there frontline has clubs. their troops are retreating. they need to try to draw a line not to stop the attack. i think what they wanted to do is at minimum hang on to this area called luhansk. which is in this core donetsk area. which has been there. the russians have dominated since 2014, when the first war began. they can't let the ukrainians into that space. so they are going to try to pull back, regroup and the ukrainians will keep advancing until they hit this new frontline. the russians will try to hold them. >> how have we gotten to the point that ukraine has managed to that question into a corner like this? what kind of difference has the western supply of weapons made
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here? want to zoom in on this region. >> what we've seen really is a number of. things first of all, the russian initial attack probably did not have enough troops. now they've run out of momentum. they are running out of troops. running out of often irreplaceable equipment, using these new nato standard artillery and rockets that have come in. ukrainians have been destroying all of the supply lines, the stocks of these weapons. so, it has been a very slow process and then suddenly a very quick one as the russians collapse and they run out. so, also with the ukrainians have done very effectively is that they have combined their different parts of the army, the air force, the ground troops, rockets and they have moved very quickly. so the russians do not have enough forces to control this very long frontline and the ukrainians have punched through that. >> that's why we see the red, russian territory on august 28th and by september 11th. >> exactly. ukrainians came through here, they pushed on towards coupons, which is a key infrastructure
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point and then they struck south. the ski town, the russians had to basically flee it in disorder and then try to regroup beyond the river. >> i just want to show, for comparison, this was the map back on april 2nd we had seen another sort of what russia call regrouping after their withdrawal from kyiv there. but essentially, they had all of this territory up here, they had taken, they were still attacking from crimea down there. and if you compare that now to what we are seeing, it's a net loss. >> yes, the russians are saying that the police and invasion is still going according to plan, but what you see, that as you say. a series of losses for russia. they've committed troops, first of all in kyiv, then in donetsk. then down to the south, now they're trying to possibly push back. may have lost up to 80,000 troops. so 50,000 dead. 30,000 injured. thousands of tanks and armored vehicles. so for all of this, they have suffered all those losses. now ukraine is i think sensing
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that there are gaps where they can maybe move in further into the south. 15 to 20,000 russian soldiers in kherson on the western side of the river. they can't really get across. ukrainians are pushing here. it's possible the ukrainians will do a third attack somewhere along this line. they will look for gaps where the russians can't now deployed to stop them. and they will try to push and. they will keep the russians on the back foot now up until the winter. >> so russia says it will press on with its strategic games. we will have to see what that means. no melvin, thank you so much for joining us. >> ukrainian gains in recent days have been so significant. even pro russian supporters are now acknowledging that vladimir putin's war of choice is not exactly unfolding as originally planned. after, that there has been rare criticism coming from inside of russia, with deputies from 18 municipal districts calling for putin to resign. petition with a lot of signatures posted on monday on twitter.
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>> just a few, hours late queen elizabeth will make a final trip down to london and back to buckingham palace after being honored in a final farewell of scotland. in london, the queens cost will mean a buckingham palace, before it is moved to westminster holiday. where it will be lying in state until the funeral next monday. ahead of, that preparations have been underway just a short time ago. soldiers could be seen rehearsing to the queens funeral procession outside buckingham palace. >> another step in the queen's final journey, her coffin leaving her official home on monday. before the procession to st. charles cathedral, where service was then held. it's also where thousands of mourners have been piling her coffin throughout the day and
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throughout the evening and even now at the morning there. live images of people filing past. the coffin draped in the scottish flight, now one of the most moving and poignant moments on monday came when they queens for children, including king charles iii stood silently for a vigil around her casket. they came pledging to continue the queens dedicated service as the new monarch. >> i take up my new duties with thankfulness, for all that scotland has given me. with resolve to seek always the welfare of our country and its people. and with wholehearted trust in your goodwill and good council as we take forward that task together. >> live now to buckingham palace, cnn's nina dos santos once again. they've had seven years to plan for this, every step planned out meticulously, what can we expect today? >> what we are expecting as much of the ceremony to take place still in scotland and
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also in other parts of the united kingdom. the parts are composed of this country, king charles will be heading with camilla, queen consort over to northern ireland where he will be meeting with representatives of the political parties that have been voted into this assembly. the local government there that has not sat for many years. and will also take part in a special memorial service that will be happening in belfast in northern ireland. alongside not just members of the political elite of northern ireland, but also the two shook of ireland, the republic of ireland, the prime minister of that nation and the president of ireland as well, just goes to show how crucial parts of the united kingdom and also their neighboring country ireland is united in this moment of grief and mourning for the loss of his late mother. now, when it comes to the coffin of queen elizabeth the second, that will be moving
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from scotland by airplane and will land here in london on the outskirts of london and the royal air force base, probably around about six or 7 pm of the evening, accompanying that coffin on the plane will be the queen's only daughter, the princess royal and by the time it arrives here at buckingham palace later on, will be greeted by king charles the third, camilla and also members of the royal family. biden lay here overnight, watched over by chaplains in the bow room of buckingham palace, before of course heading over to westminster hall to lie in state for four days thereafter. during which, it is expected that tends, if not hundreds of thousands of people will converge upon the british capital to pay their respects to the only monarch that many people of this country have known sofa. john? >> you know, talking last hour about the equivalent of events here in terms of what la niña seen over the years. i was just one, maybe princess diana's funeral is something we can relate to in terms of the scale of what we are about to
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see. there's a big difference so in terms of threat assessment. now you have so many heads of state heading to london. 2022 is a much different world compared to 1997. >> yes, absolutely. i think various members of the policing and army that will be involved in policing this event, also considering just the logistics of the huge crowd control day going to need to implement over the next couple of days will be very much aware of that. there is various different issues that they have to plan for. on the one hand, they have to plan for the potential terrorist attacks. they have to plan for protests, they have to plan for just the possibility that people might move forward and suddenly lunge into these long crowds between the coffin to get a closer view. and as we've seen the last few days john, we're talking about people who are very elderly and young who are going to be coming to pay their respects. so this is going to be a huge policing operation. it is expected that up to three quarters of 1 million people
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could converge upon the british capital over the days to come. the four days during which the queen's coffin will be lying and stay in westminster. or before moving towards westminster abby for the official state funeral. it is a big headache, but it is one that authorities have been preparing for for many, many years. and we indeed saw them preparing just earlier about one hour and a half ago outside of buckingham palace. that is what we are going to see over the next few days. it is akin only to the type of state funeral that the uk had to deal with back in 1965 when the great wartime prime minister winston churchill died. john? >> you know thank you, you know dos santos live outside of buckingham palace. appreciate that. >> a lot more on queen elizabeth's final journey, the memorial plans and the new royal era later this hour. meantime, we will take a short break and when we come back, u.s. justice department wants to know more about donald trump's 2020 campaign fundraising. how that might be related to the u.s. capital riot. and why is the house committee
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welcome, back the federal investigation to the january 6th insurrection appears to be escalating and quickly. dozens of mid level staff from donald trump's white house and campaign have been subpoenaed by federal investigators. cnn's sara murray has details. >> cnn is learning from sources that the justice department has subpoenaed more than 30 people in former president donald trump's orbit as part of its investigation into efforts to further resolve of the 2020 election. now these include a number of big names, people like -- who was the former trump campaign director, people like dan scavino the former deputy chief of staff, and brian jacket former white house political director. others appears to be an effort by the justice department to gather as much information as possible, while on the cusp of this quite a period, a period
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that a choice to not take any overt investigative actions like we have seen influencing the outcome, or potential outcome of elections. we know from talking to sources about these subpoenas, they are very broad, some of them seeking information related to the fake electors, some of them information related to the save america pact, a political fundraising vehicle former the former president. others are asking for any documents people may have handed over to the january 6th elect committee, some are seeking just documents, some are seeking documents and testimony. this is a widen aggressive effort by the justice department indication that that investigation is intensifying. sarah murray, cnn, washington. >> and the committee will meet -- with indecision of standing over the donald trump and his vice president mike pence should be invited to appear and testify. sources tell cnn, there's no real expectation either would show, up but if an invitation should be extended for the record the committee is also expected to plan -- ahead of a final report likely
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released december. there appears to be an agreement on a special master to review material seized by the fbi in the search of donald trump's mar-a-lago home. the justice department says it is open to investigating -- who was chosen by team trump. he served as a federal judge in new york since he was nominated by then president ronald reagan. trump's attorneys have rejected both candidates by the justice department. cnn's jessica schneider has details. >> federal judge aileen cannon facing a critical decision on how the special master process should proceed, as the disagreements between trump's legal team and justice department escalated court filings. lawyers for the former president saying, the doj's criminal inquiry into the potential mishandling of classified documents is simply, a document storage dispute that is spiraled out of control, and questioning whether there was an urgent need for the fbi to search mar-a-lago. >> to have this search warrant based on a failed negotiations
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i suppose, that allowed the government to basically ransack the residents. >> trump's legal team now asking judge can into 90 request that investigators be able to continue reviewing the classified documents they seized. but also, seeming to sidestep the former presidents common refrain that he declassified all documents. only saying that trump had the authority to declassify anything he wanted, and arguing the documents found at mar-a-lago was secure and -- writing there is no indication any reported classified records were disclosed to anyone. but on one of their main disagreements, even trump ally chris christie thinks trump's team has a losing argument. >> the main thrust is that some of these may be held by executive privilege, well, there's only one executive that can assert the privilege and that is the current executive joe biden. >> josh cannon is asking trump in the doj to come to some working with on a special master review, but to little avail. each side putting up their
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preferred candidates for the job, trump's legal team on monday objecting to the doj's proposed candidates, while refusing to give reasons why. saying they will explain to the judge in private. both sides suggesting, different timelines. doj wanting the review finish by mid october as opposed to the 90-day deadline set forth by trump's side. meanwhile, court documents show a texas woman is under arrest tonight for allegedly leaving three threatening force meals for the judge, calling for her assassination. the disturbing fallout from the highly publicized court proceedings come at the same time we are learning new details about how trump repeatedly told aides after his election loss that he would refuse to leave the white house. new york times reporter maggie haberman detailing in her new book how trump told one aide, i'm just not going to leave, telling another, we are never leaving, how can you leave when you won an election. >> and things are ramping back up for the january six committee, they will be meeting on person on tuesday when they
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will adjust one of their most consequential questions yet. should they formally request former president donald trump and former vice president mike pence to appear before the committee? >> telling our team that we don't expect either man to testify that they do believe invitation should be extended for the record. and to really show the completeness of the committee's efforts. jessica schneider, cnn washington. >> coverage of a new oil europe picks up after the break. in charles the third's first week of sovereign, beginning with grant's family. a feeling of loss as he shares the public's grief of losing their queen this month.
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viewers here in the united states and all around the world. you're watching cnn newsroom, i'm john vause. in the coming, hours the coffin carrying that late queen elizabeth will -- be flown to london. then, it will take place at buckingham palace with members of the royal family who will be waiting. by wednesday, the queen will be lying in state with -- until the funeral monday. rehearsal said preparations have been underway in london where possessions took place yesterday. a short time outside buckingham palace. controlling the king concert will sweetly -- for northern ireland where they will meet with government leaders. a prayer service, they might have well wishes as well. king charles's first day as -- new monarch and been somber as he leaves the public and saying farewell to his mother. cnn's bianca nobilo has that story. >> can charles the third first full week as sovereign began with the full force of
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britain's and circumstance. the new king adjust members of parliament and house of lords in westminster hall. >> i'm deeply grateful for the addresses and condolence. >> more than 900 years ago by his ancestor william the second, at the chain of history to achieve now belongs clearly felt. >> as i stand before you today, i can't help but feel the weight of history which surround us. >> yet, there was little chance to stand on ceremony following a rendition of the national anthem. the king swapped his four wheels for a pair of wings destined for edinburgh and the first time since friday was with his mother at the palace of -- house. as the king arrived, he paused with members of the public offering their condolences before a short ceremony on the grounds where he was -- offered the keys to the city of
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edinburgh. the distinct sound of scotland announced the arrival of the coffin. born on the shoulders of -- the queen began her final hours in her beloved scotland. down the royal mile, the queen was followed by her children, then measured footsteps echoed, the crowd deeply solemn. over these guys, 21 gun salute boomed from edinburgh castle. , i was the queen and her st. charles because he's, roll a somber service unfolded. after members of the public filed peacefully around the late queen, her coffin topped with the crown of scotland.
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following an hour-long meeting with scottish lawmakers, the king let his three siblings back to st. charles. the stood resolutely still, heads bowed, and thought alongside their mother. sadness on their faces. need ten cognitive minutes, they shared their private grief alongside members of the public as their mother said goodbye to scotland. >> frank ross as a local counselor for a number in the city's former -- which other cities like a mayor. thank you for being with us. >> thank, you yes. >> well, thank you sir. >> as the -- was there one moment for you so far where things are captured the solemn move or filling among tens of thousands or hundreds of other people who turned out to pay their respects. >> no absolutely, i think the most moving part was yesterday
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when the -- moved from the palace of hollywood house up to st. charles with the coffin covered standard of scotland and the king and his siblings walking and up the royal mile to the church. i think such a public display and was the really caught me. >> as you've done almost in total silence and all through the night, people have continued to file past her majesty's coffin. >> no absolutely. the silence was the thing that was mostly extraordinary and --
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-- not necessarily to the institute. >> i think it is very difficult, it is a very difficult to set and particular given the length of service that the queen gave. she became synonymous with the monarchy, she is the monarchy. the personal respect for her is certainly, absolutely unmeasurable. she has been for 80% of the population, she has been the only -- rock that people have been able to base their lives on for the last 70 years. >> will the outpouring of respect, the, grief the sympathy, the goodwill, with that translate into support for king charles? >> i think it already has in terms of the way that the king was welcomed into the city. when he arrived yesterday. he has been a regular visitor prior to him becoming king, and
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is well liked and respected in the capital. >> well, certainly at the stage, certainly not held in the same regard as his mother though? >> well, i don't think there's an individual in the world who is held in the same regard as his mother. she as an institution, she was an institution in her own right. and, people from across the globe recognize and have responded with respect, following her death. of total unique and a visual industry of the world. >> in terms of scottish independence, first wants to keep the monarchy in case -- is that a sentiment which is shared by most? >> it is certainly the policy of the party of the minister who's got his national party, i think if you look around the world there are many independent countries within the common wealth that such as australia, new zealand, canada who still have the monarchy as the head of state.
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i cannot imagine that being any different in independent scotland. >> for across there in edinburgh, thank, you and asked we took a look at these live images from st. charles's cathedral where these monarchs continue to -- paying their respects. also, in almost total silence, they have most of these somber ceremonies. now, just ahead, as king charles bring in says rain, a much younger generation is asking why the monarchy is needed in the first place. once again. we have live images inside st. charles's cathedral in edinburgh, we will take a look at these images when we come back in a moment. ave like rachel here how am i l looking? looking good! the most cautious driver we got amam i there? no keep gogoing how's that? i'll s say when now? is that good? lots of cars have backckup cameras now you know those are for amateurs there we go like a glove, girl (phone chimes) safe driving and drivewise can save you 40% with allstate
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>> typhoon heading now towards shanghai one of china's most popular areas. -- petrov javaheri joins us now with details on this. shanghai and tyrants do not go well together. >> when you consider the population density, john, we talk about 26 million people in a pack tropical systems so there's a lot of people taking this seriously, you take a look at the images out of taiwan, folks beginning to bring their
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boats across some of the land areas here getting it off shore. you will notice, we are talking about rainfall amounts in parts of taiwan half a meter, where upwards of 20 inches essentially with seattle's ease in the span of six months coming down in the span of three days across portions of eastern taiwan. so with the islands, southern japan, also picking up 400 millimeters or 15 inches in the span of two days. really the activity beginning to flourish, here at the tropical system is becoming a tropical depression. the most depressing one right now just north of taipei. you will notice, all guidance now in this category wishing the category strength system right across areas of shanghai. within the next 36 or so hours, -- but the initial area of rainfall, and the density if about 8 million. compare that, it is where the landfall is expected, shanghai population of 26 million equivalent to the entirety of the state of new york, and the state of massachusetts put together. it speaks to just how densely populated this region.
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is rainfall amounts, 150, 250 millilitre meters in a few spots. we are talking about 10 to 12 inches coming down in this densely populated environment. so the center is that 26 million by the way, the population says that 40 million so conditions will go downhill very quickly here. you notice anytime you get heavy rainfall national ground you can see a lot of that become observed and none of it become runoff. particularly in an urban environment like shanghai 55% of what falls out of this guy's concrete runoff, that is where flooding can become major concern in those areas. this is flooding we are considering carefully. another system behind is a forecast to be open waters, but three storms we are watching these because of these multiple -- over the next several days. john? >> starting to heat up, petra, pedram javaheri with the details. thank you. pakistan's climate change minister once past the -- devastation from an unprecedented flood emergency. heavy monsoon rains have caused rivers of lakes to --
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the story cities and towns, wasn't millions to flee their homes. rainy season ex parte is expected to last longer than, usual now -- concerning camps for those who have been displaced. live now to islamabad, cnn's -- sofia, what do we know about these former jussie -- how is pakistan coping with the natural disaster? >> john, this is something that has become a massive burden for pakistan's government, and for pakistan's economy. we have been told by pakistan climate change minister that 70% of pakistan's onion crop has been completely decimated. there is also massive concerns because of the conservative disease that has come up amongst these people who've been heavily affected. hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to leave their homes, there has been a complete delusion of water everywhere. the amount -- of which are mosquito related
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disease which is connected to mosquito bites and some during the monsoon season, that has increased by 50% in the city of karate alone, which was also affected by floods earlier in the summer, and that is something the climate change ministry has said it will be an issue in the flood affected regions in months to come. there is a health crisis looming, pakistan still does not have enough supplies, enough supply chain to provide people with this aid. the un secretary general was held a special visit over the weekend to highlight what has happened here in pakistan, and he spoke about climate garbage that he's never seen anything like this before. the world needs to come together to help the people of pakistan in a situation for example, the southern province is not improving anytime soon, the -- we have spoken to officials on the ground who said that yes, because of the fact that -- one of the largest freshwater
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lakes in the world, that had begun to overflow earlier this month, that has been breached but because of that, hundreds of thousands of people have been moved to villages, under a delusion of water. most have been told by officials on the ground that while waters have begun to recede, there are concerns that the highway which is one of the main highways in connecting the rest of the country to the port city of karachi, which is the financial heart of pakistan most of it is underwater and we continue to see, of this part of pakistan, this is something that has not been from the north to the very south of the country. why the southern regions are affected, images that we are seeing are completely submerged by water. villagers having to move in what was immense rain, to what
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we are now seeing is a man's heat, 34 degrees centigrade. immense heat expected here in the month of september, with people living under makeshift tents under this hot scorching sun without enough water, without enough food. giving birth in the heat. this is just the situation we have to continue to monitor, and continue to report on as pakistan faces this calamity. >> yeah, thank, you sofia, speaking to us. we will take a short break, you're watching cnn newsroom.
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>> welcome, back to the 74th american emmy awards premiered on -- network showdown between hbo and netflix. israel succession one for outstanding trauma, one of 38 awards with the ceremonies come, on both cnn and warner brothers discovery -- history was made with netflix squid game, -- become the first self created performer to win lead actor and age almost areas. also the first non-english serious to get a nomination in that category.
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back now to our top, store the new royal era and charles heads to northern ireland today for his first visit as king. queen elizabeth seen as a force of reconciliation after the violence and bloodshed known as -- mitt and number of visits to northern ireland but only made her first visit to arland in 2011. then she acknowledged a conflict had passed. >> it is a sad and regrettable reality that through the history, our islands have experienced more than their fair share of heartache, turbulence, and loss. these events have touched us all, many of us personally. >> queen elizabeth was personally impacted by the conflict when the irish republican army killed her husbands on cull in 1979. still the amount of
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reconciliation efforts in 2012 she shook hands with the former irish commander -- committed to overthrowing her role in northern ireland. during her reign, queen elizabeth helped more than -- unforgettable moments for, many and for those countries and others that were in the commonwealth there is no shortage of tributes. in hong kong, a british colony in 1990, seven or as left flowers and other grief over the queens passing. india ordered all flights to fly at half staff, the country just celebrate the 75th anniversary of independence last month. the uae and britain have had strong ties for, decades those skyscrapers were the world's tallest building lit up in tribute to the majesty. residents are paying their respects, signs of, colors -- even as queen elizabeth some are questioning the future of
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the monarchy. king rain having just begun, younger generation are seeing why the uk still has a family at all. cnn's nada bashir has the story. >> deeply admired, and widely revered, queen elizabeth leaves behind a towering legacy. trying mourners in the thousands to commemorate her life, but away from buckingham palace the prospect of a new royal era strikes a different cord. >> for my side, absolutely, -- -- >> it's nice to keep the tradition. >> they are not as important as they were back 100 years ago. >> i think it is definitely time to rethink, and i know a lot of people loved when elizabeth and don't think that same font nestles there for king charles. >> the royal family has faced criticism over its colonial past, which has acknowledged.
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the entering commonwealth, it legacy on the british empire. >> but, a poll carried out ahead of the queen's platinum jubilee found that two out of three british people still support keeping the monarchy. others are questioning in the royal families placed and modern society, particularly as the country faces a deepening cost of living crisis with energy bills and food prices soaring. >> they should definitely pull more money back from those guys and feed it into the system for people who genuinely need the help. >> now when charles takes on the challenge of cementing the royal family's place and relevance in modern britain. not a beshear, cnn, london. >> thank you for watching this hour cnn newsroom, i'm john vause, i will be back in just a moment. becky anderson taking the lead at buckingham palace. see you soon.
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>> well, oh and welcome to our viewers all around the world. i'm becky anderson at buckingham palace, and right now thousands of people are lined up in scotland to pay their respects to queen elizabeth before her coffin leaves for london later today. >> i'm john vause here in atlanta, in just four days a lightning-fast ukrainian counteroffensive is said to have reversed four months of gains by the russian military. but what is next? >>

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