tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN September 14, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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well, hello and welcome to our viewers joining us from the united states and all around the world. i'm becky anderson in london where crowds are already lining up to pay their final respects to queen elizabeth. as the royal family prepares to escort her coffin from buckingham palace behind me here to the palace of westminster. >> and i'm rose mariucci ri
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church where we are tracking the fallout on wall street as european markets get underway. it's 8 a.m. in the morning here and we are just hours away from the next step in queen elizabeth ii's final journey. the late monarch's coffin rests inside buckingham palace, but later today it'll travel to westminster at the palace of westminster where she will lie in state until her funeral on monday. her arrival in london late on tuesday greeted with cheers and applause by the large crowds gathered to pay tribute and witness this moment in history.
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king charles iii is now back in london after spending most of tuesday in northern ireland where a prayer service was held for his mother. this, of course, was the first visit there since becoming the new monarch. the king, along with other members of the royal family, will follow the queen's coffin later today as a procession takes it from buckingham palace to westminster hall. our correspondents are following all of the developments for you. scott mcclain is in london where people are already lining up to see the queen lying in state. let's start with nina dos santos. i'd like to bring the map of the procession back up for you just to give us a little bit more detail about what will be happening today. >> things will kick off around 2:20 p.m. when the queen's coffin will be loaded on to a gun carriage and then it will be escorted in this procession from outside of buckingham palace
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where it spent the night in bow room with chaplains watching over it all the way to westminster hall which will pass right behind us. that, as you can see there, will be the line people are waiting in to try and greet the queen's coffin at westminster hall. they will be able to start paying their respects from 5 p.m. this evening, but for 38 minutes between 2:22 p.m. at buckingham palace and 3 p.m. in the afternoon london time, we will see that procession, very high profile, becky. obviously all eyes will be upon the most immediate members of the family. king charles iii following the procession, his mother's coffin walking with his two sons by his side. the two princes reunited. big moment here. prince william, the new prince of wales and prince harry, the duke of sussex. princess ann, the only daughter of queen elizabeth ii coming down from edinburgh where it
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landed making a 15 mile journey to buckingham palace. she will also be walking behind her husband vice admiral and her son peter phillips. the queen is survived by four children, eight grant children and 12 great grandchildren. a lot of these figures will be seen. one figure the media will be heavily focused on, meghan markle who is fair to say has had a fractious relationship. >> nina, thank you. outside of buckingham palace. scott mcclain is down by the thames. he has a view of the houses of
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parliament and behind you there and there are people already cuing as i understand it with some hours to go before the coffin reaches that building behind you. and they are given an opportunity to actually pay their last respects. >> reporter: yeah. it's remarkable to think, becky, that the people who are in line right now and we're still about nine hours to go before the public will be allowed in to file past the coffin, they'll be able to do that for maybe 30 seconds or a minute. most of the people that you talk to here, it is not about the 30 second opportunity to see a flag draped coffin, it is about being here and showing your appreciation for this monarch, this woman that so, so many people respect and appreciate and really wanted to -- want to pay their respects to. this is obviously the house of parliament. westminster hall is there.
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that's where the body will lie in state. eventually the lineup will snake past the houses of parliament down across the lambet bridge and to where it's starting and then heading this way. right now by my count it is roughly about 1/4 of a mile long. about 400 meters long or so. the first couple people actually spent the night here and then many other people have come since this morning. i just want to introduce you to two folks really quickly. this is steven and his son luke. i just wonder, guys, why was it so important for you guys to be here? >> oh, well i think we're in this thought where we started off by getting a slightly used prime minister and we're going to end it by burying the monarch and in between, you know, all these days it feels like sort of
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waves and waves of history crashing over your head. i felt like that especially when i saw the accession ceremony on tv. like they're using all of these weird medieval words. it's like history is sort of, you know, stretched its hand out slapping you around the face. >> definitely his torque. i want to talk to -- if we have time here, i quickly want to talk to a couple other people as we snake along the line. remember, 33,000 people managed to snake around the coffin. they're expecting a whole heck of a lot more. these three women here -- well, one young girl, two women here, three generations have decided to come, pay their respects to the queen and i just wonder why was it so important for all three of you to be here? >> my father came and watched the coronation when he was the same age as rosie and he was on
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the front page of the newspaper and the morning edition, everest, he was in all major pages. so he had come to see the coronation. >> slept overnight? >> yeah, slept overnight with his mother. they brought blankets, umbrellas, all of this. she's 17 years. i thought it's the one thing i really want to do, to come pay last respects and rosie is very interested in the queen. has been at the council, followed her and everything she's done. it was something we want to do. we thought seeing her lie in state was the right thing to do. we'll watch the funeral on tv, i hope. >> thank you for your service. thank you so much for talking to
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us. becky, there's sort of a slice of the hundreds, maybe thousands of people in line already. this lineup expected to get a heck of a lot bigger. >> yeah. absolutely. scott mcclain down on the river thames. nina here with me. let me bring up a map to show you exactly how long that line is expected to get. it will stretch from where scott is now all the way along the river thames there past some of the iconic moments in london. london bridge, tower bridge, and could go as far as suffolk park. that's an awful long way. hundreds of thousands of people expected. i'll have a lot more from london. first, let's get you to rosemary church at cnn center in atlanta. rosemary. >> thank you so much, becky. we'll talk to you soon. russia is on the run in eastern ukraine but still launching attacks in the south. ukrainian official says at least
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two people are dead in nikolaiv near the black sea after it came under heavy shelling today. this comes after senior aide to ukraine's president said a counter offensive against russia is slowing but not stopping. he says troops are fighting to retake control of the city of lyman in the donetsk region. there are still pockets of fighting in the east. russians are looting as they pull further back. ukrainian sources are seizing abandoned russian weapons, vehicles and ammo. russia still holds huge chunks of ukrainian territory and the collapse of kremlin forces in the east does not mean they're gone for good but the pentagon says a number of russian forces are crossing back into russia. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy now says some 8,000 square kilometers, roughly 3,000 square miles, have been
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recaptured this month and he says about half of that territory is still being stabilized as his troops look for sabotage groups and collaborators. one of those liberated cities is izium, a former russian logistics hub. cnn's sam kiley was the first correspondent to go to izium after the ukrainian forces liberated it. >> reporter: it's been a stunning advance. ukraine's route of russian invaders has recaptured 6,000 square kilometers. this was held by russia now it's providing a rich harvest. the russian z symbol painted over. the guns ready to kill russians. the recapture of izium, a strategic prize accelerated by new utility donated by allies.
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>> this was hit by a very large piece of weapon. this was a school. it stores tanks, artillery pieces. there's one, two, three, four, five. we were shown into a command center into the bunkers of an old factory. >> down here we can see medical facility, call it something like that, inside this bunker. there's barracks. >> russian soldiers were sleeping in. >> reporter: the top brass with beds made of oak. >> command center. >> reporter: it's actually extraordinary. different labels for the senior officers on these school desks that have been arranged in this bunker. what looks like a bread factory.
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now they were safe down here underground but they didn't feel safe enough to stay in izium, what's critical for the ukrainian forces is if the senior officers stay on the run. if they do that, it will collapse in ukraine and threaten the longevity of one vladimir putin. this couple celebrated liberation. they told me that some of their neighbors blamed the ukrainian forces for shelling their homes but he insisted the incoming shells never hit the checkpoints or russian artillery based right outside his house and blamed the russians for false flag attacks on civilians. the russians behaved like pigs. they stole everything from the abandoned houses before they ran away. ammunition boxes stockpiled for winter fuel.
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to the ukrainian victors here, the spoils have been rich. the capture of izium has broken a key link in putin's logistics chain in the battle for the east. remarkable scene of a tank with abandoned russian how witzers. the latest ukrainian successes may not be the end of this war but not even the kremlin can deny this chapter has been a very sorry tale for russia. sam kiley, cnn in izium. cnn's claire sebastian is tracking events in ukraine from london. what more are you learning about ukraine's stunning advances, its continuing counter offensive and efforts to take back the city of
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lyman. >> reporter: we're getting a sense now of just how much of a challenge this is for ukraine as well. the scale of this operation that they are now in the middle of. president zelenskyy in his address have said they have eliminated 8,000 square kilometers of territory. 4,000 square kilometers they are undertaking what he calls stabilization measures. rooting out any remaining russian troops, arresting collaborators, things like that. the work continues in a lot of those areas. meanwhile, as you were noting, there was shelling overnight which is near the other front, southern. we know up in the lieu luhansk.
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they're trying to establish another line in the northeast. that would suggest they have given up the region. just on the distances here, we've talked about this since the beginning of the war. ukraine is a vast area. the distance between luman and others in the south is 6,000 kilometers. it would take 10 hours. you see how disparate it is and fighting. president zelenskyy told becky anderson, rosemary, on tuesday, not only are they going to continue fighting on the southern front and in the northeast, they may open up another third front. he didn't say where that would be. >> all right. claire sebastian joining us live from london.
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many thanks. time for a short break. when we come back, inflation is still on the rise in the united states and wall street is not reacting well. we will check the world's other financial markets when we come back. please stay with us. plus, shoden ashwagandha for quality sleeeep. so i can wake up refreshed. neuriva think bigger. - custom shirts help peopople feel like they're part of a team. my name is timothy chi, and i'm the ceo of weddingwire. we're very proud customers of custom ink. we keep coming ba to custom ink because of the qualityf product, the customer service and the ease of use. that moment you walk in the office and people are wearing thsame gear, you feel a sense of coectedness and belonging right away. and our shirts from custom ink help bring us together. - [announcer] custom ink has hundreds of products to help you feel connected. upload your logo, or start your design today, at customink.com one role of a lifetime... one sore throat. but she had enough. she took mucinex instasoothe sore throat lozenges.
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the closing bell couldn't come soon enough for most investors on wall street. disappointing inflation report pushed u.s. financial markets to their worst day since june of 2020. the dow lost more than 1200 points. that's close to 4%. the nasdaq fell 5% and the s&p 500 lost 4% or so. so let's bring in cnn's reporter
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who's following world markets from dubai. what a dismal day on wall street. what are the futures looking like about what might lie ahead? >> reporter: let me tell you, seeing those numbers on the screen, it was a brutal selloff. i think market participants had expected inflation had peeked in the u.s. and it comes through and everyone is sorrily disappointed. we're looking at numbers moving to the up side, which is encouraging, but we've got a few hours to go before the u.s. markets actually start. but let's take a look at europe. we have also seen to the negative, we're seeing red basically across the board. here's an encouraging number, however, out of the u.k. where inflation in august came in at
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9.9%. it will probably not change its stance what it's doing. the foots see is down .8 of a percent. we've got the cac down .6 of a percent. in asia we saw enormous pain coming through on the back of the fact we're seeing sticking inflation in the u.s. it is more broad based and pervasive. what that's going to mean for the read ral reserve's rate tightening cycle, it will become a lot more aggressive. gas prices are lower and unfortunately feeding through to food, medical and rentals. we see the nikkei down almost 3%. you've got the shanghai composite down almost 1%. we even saw the japanese yen down to levels we haven't seen since 1998. again, this is the narrative about what a u.s. recession
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might look like. is it going to be a soft or hard landing and how that's going to work out in the next couple of weeks. the federal reserve, of course, in terms of its rate decision next week. it seems like the prognosis is another hike of 75 basis points. some even saying that to really have an impact on inflation they would have to consider 100 basis points. again, this, of course, is being reflected in how the markets have been performing. are we going to see more losses, more froth taken out of the market in the next few weeks. the re-rating of risk, rosemary, and how that's going to play in terms of the tightening cycle that's going to hurt growth and hurt the economy. whether it's going to work as effectively as initially hoped. >> we'll all be watching what the fed decides to do in the end. thanks for wrapping that up for us. appreciate it. still to come, we will have more on the queen's final
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welcome back to our viewers around the world. i'm becky anderson outside buckingham palace where the time is just before half past 8 in the morning. we are continuing to bring you details of queen elizabeth's last journey as the u.k. mourns the death of the monarch. in the coming hours the queen's coffin will be taken from there,
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buckingham palace, on a gun carriage in a military procession to westminster hall, the palace of westminster. there the monarch's coffin will lie in state until monday. people have lined up to be the first in the cue to pay their respects to the queen. large crowds are expected to show up in the next few days to bid the queen a final farewell and be part of what is part of this historic moment in british history. canada is honoring the late queen elizabeth ii in the coming days. on thursday the canadian parliament will pay tribute. then on monday, september 19th, that will be a national day of mourning. prime minister justin trudeau announced a commemorative ceremony to honor her majesty's life and service. mr. trudeau said the queen's service to canadians will,
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quote, forever remain an important part of the country's history. well, i'd like to bring in ralph goodell, he's the canadian high commissioner to the u.k. it's good to have you with us. you are one of 14 high commissioners representing countries of the realm where king charles iii is now head of state who met with the newly installed monarch at the week end. just describe what happened and what was discussed. >> well, it was a very somber occasion. a lot of grief and mourning in the room for her majesty, her late majesty and all of the high commissioners from those 14 countries where the monarch is their monarch, too, wanted to extend condolences and very warm wishes from the people of all of those countries. there was -- there was also a
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feeling of some anticipation. a new monarch was in place, not just british monarch but our monarch too and what would that be like? what would his priorities be? where would he travel first? there was a sense of history in the room. this has never happened in the last 70 years. this is the critical transformation of power or transfer of power in countries that have a constitutional monarch and that role as head of state, separate from the more political head of government, that's a very critical distinction. >> let's talk about the priorities that you believe and perhaps share with what king charles iii believes should be his priorities for canada? >> well, to start with, i think
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canada will be anxious to have him continue the tra zigs his mother had of traveling to canada frequently. she was there 22 times, more than any other country in the world. she would often say this is my home away from home. when i go to canada it feels like i'm coming home. prince charles, as he then was, has been in canada 19 times. so not quite as many as his mother but pretty close. so it will be important for him to be hands on, to be present, to travel, meet people, relate to people. that's really important in a country like canada with all of our multi-cultural diversity, with our vast geography. the second largest land mass on the face of the earth. so getting from st. john's newfoundland to vancouver, bring the british columbia is a
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challenge. the indigenous people is exceedingly important. reconciliation and healing after residential schools and so fofrmt that is a set of issues in which the crown has a very important role to play. >> you are from saskatchewan. the queen did express her condolences to the horrible attacks that happened there near the indigenous areas. the matter of indigenous peoples and the monarchy is extremely complicated. just explain the feelings about the monarchy and how you believe that relationship will develop going forward. >> it is exceedingly complex and delicate and exceedingly important for canadians to find and to follow successfully the path of reconciliation, to build
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bonds rather than barriers. the queen was working very hard on those issues. from the point of view of indigenous people, in one sense the monarchy con jujures up thed bad memories . on the other hand their treaty relationship is with the crown, not with any government, with the crown and, therefore, there are -- there are instantly mixed feelings. but the crown can play a very positive constructive role in finding the path forward. king charles is already well acquainted with indigenous people. he has visited, he has met, he has listened and understood, most recently in the spring when
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he was visiting canada and very successfully so. he also has a very big asset in the governor general of canada. her excellency, mary simon, a very distinguished indigenous leader herself. and this is a remarkable set of circumstances where the queen's vice regal representative in canada is an indigenous woman. >> fascinating. she will be here. >> she will be. >> who else will attend? >> the -- according to protocol, and nobody does protocol quite as well as the british, but according to protocol, the three official mourners are the governor general, the prime minister and the high commissioner. there will be others in the canadian delegation and that is being worked on right now. it's tremendously difficult because quite literally thousands would want to come and
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only a handful can. there will be very strong representation in the cortege and otherwise from the canadian armed forces, from the royal canadian mounted police. the queen was the honorary colonel and the rcmp. >> it was on her first visit just before she became queen in 1951, this was a visit on behalf of her father. she said, i want to just -- she said, i am sure that nowhere under the sun could one find a land more full of hope, of happiness and of fine, loyal, generous-hearted people. words of queen elizabeth ii. >> we are very grateful for those sentiments. she once when traveling somewhere else in the world, a world leader asked her, where are you going next, your majesty?
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she said, i'm going them canada. >> ralph goodale, thank you for joining us. cnn's dahn nada is outside of t house of parliament. that is westminster hall behind you, the queen's coffin will lie in state and the opportunity for people around this country and visitors to this country will file past and pay their last respects. that is a hall with a storied history built a thousand years ago by -- in the rein of william the conquerer back in something like 1097. what are you seeing and hearing where you are? >> well, look, becky, this certainly is an historic day taking place in an historic building. that ceremonial procession will start in a few hours. we'll see the queen's coffin in
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that procession from buckingham palace passing through whitehall, past downing street. the palace of westminster where, of course, the queen's coffin will be placed to lie in state in westminster hall. people are expected to take part in cuing and gathering around in southern london to pay their respects as she lies in state for the next four days. king charles iii will be taking part in that procession alongside william, the prince of wales and harry who will be walking behind the coffin. this is an historic day. other members of the royal family will be taking part in that. they will be received by the archbishop of canter berry.
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people who have been cuing for hours overnight will be able to enter westminster hall to pay their respects to the queen. >> thank you. we'll have a lot more from london in just a few minutes. first, let's get you to rosemary church at cnn center in atlanta with some of the other news headlines of the day. rosemary. >> thank you so much, becky. we'll see you back at the top of the hour. still to come, a former twitter executive turned whistle-blower heads to capitol hill with damning allegations of lies, s lies, spies and security breaches at the top of the company. we'll be back. for 24 h hours. aveeno®
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welcome back, everyone. a former twitter executive turned whistle-blower testified before a u.s. senate committee on tuesday. peiter zatko who was the company's top security officer made allegations of lies, security lapses and foreign spies on the social media company's payroll. he also alleged that a twitter employee could take over the accounts of every senator in the room and that the company doesn't fully understand all of the user data it collects, why they got it and where it's stored. twitter has said zatko's allegations are inconsistent and
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inaccurate. joining me now from san francisco, josh constine is a principle investor of signal fire. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you so much for having me. >> so twitter whistle-blower peiter mudge zatko testified on tuesday laying out his allegations of security failures at the company. the former head of security revealing its weak defenses against hackers and disturbing foreign influencers. he said the company was a decade behind industry security standards, had safety lapses and misled the public. what are the legal and security ramifications of his testimony? >> the fact is that twitter security system is a clown show right now. they are woefully behind the times. they have completely uninstrumented their technology.
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they don't know who's looking at it. that means engineers have unrestricted access to look at user accounts and private user data. email addresses, phone numbers, i.p. addresses which can give locations. they aren't even aware there are foreign national agents on twitter's payroll from china and india. the laptops aren't secured. what that means is for any political dissidents while operating on twitter, they could be at risk of discovery by these authorities that might look to arrest or harass them. the fact that twitter's security systems are this bad raises the question about what other major networks, government agencies, et cetera that we all rely on. >> that is the question, isn't it? twitter responded by saying this. mr. zatko's allegations are riddled with inconsistencies and
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inaccuracies. what do you say to that? >> they should probably refute those specific claims rather than making the large claims. the fact is they are the ones that are behind and what they're really hoping to do is sweep this all under the rug in hopes that elon musk's acquisition offer will go through. he has offered to pay 44 billion to buy the company. now he's trying to shrilink awa from the deal especially considering twitter is valued at $31 billion. they are hoping they can slink this through. the problem is elon musk never asked about those. he asked about bots. that was not the core of the testimony. so he may still need to come up with other reasons why he should be allowed out of this deal. >> let's look at the deal. they approved the sale
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yesterday. a judge recently ruled musk can use zatko's allegations to help him back out of that twitter deal. what do you think the outcome will likely be? >> twitter has been under allegations of poor security for a long time now. peiter zatko was hired because of a massive breach where barack obama, kanye west, joe biden, their accounts were actually seized and used to share spam of solicitations to send these hackers bitcoin. the reason peiter was hired in the first place was because of these security problems. they were no mystery to elon musk. he's going to have to convince the judge twitter was woefully behind and they ignored them because they thought they would be too costly to fix. in the case of selling advertisements to china even
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though china might be able to use the clicks to find dissidents and enemies of state, twitter still sold them those ads because they wanted to max mieds the product. they're privately opened and they're always going to cut corners when it comes to security that could put users and national security in jeopardy. >> we'll watch to see what twitter does next. george constine, thank you for joining us. >> my pleasure. the united states could experience a freight rail strike on friday. we will look at the possible impact. that's next. .m. to milk the cows a little easier. (moo) mabel says for you, it's more like 5:15. man: mom, really?
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welcome back, everyone. on friday the united states could see as many as 115,000 rail freight workers walk off the job. the association of american railroads estimates a strike could cost the u.s. economy $2 billion a day. railroad and union officials have been unable to reach a deal. representatives from both sides are going to washington to try and come up with a solution. meanwhile, retailers warn a strike could cause a systemwide shutdown causing prices on many goods to soar even higher. and thank you so much for joining us this hour. i'm rosemary church. i'll be back with more news and more live coverage from our becky anderson live at buckingham palace in a few
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hello and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. live from buckingham palace. i'm becky anderson. i'll be covering all the latest developments as we prepare for the procession of queen elizabeth's coffin to the palace of westminster. and live from cnn world headquarters here in atlanta, i'm rosemary church. i'll have details on all of our other top stories including a global market ry
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