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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 14, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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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 rye action to wall
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street's worse day in more than two years. it's wednesday, september 14th. it is 9 a.m. here in london where queen elizabeth's coffin now rests inside buckingham palace. behind me before the next leg of her final journey begins today. in the hours ahead a procession will take her coffin from the palace to westminster hall. members of the royal family, including king charles, prince william and prince harry, will be walking in that procession. the queen will lie in state at westminster hall starting later today until her funeral on monday at westminster abbey. ahead of that, mourners are
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camping out in london waiting for their chance to see the queen's coffin and pay their respects. [ applause ] >> an outburst of emotion outside buckingham palace late tuesday as queen elizabeth arrived home for the last time. the crowd, some who waited in hours in the rain clapped and cheered as they gathered to pay their respects to brittain's longest serving monarch. the queen's coffin had arrived from edinburgh where thousands paid tribute at saint charles cathedral. king charles iii mourned hess mother in the scottish capitol before flying to bell fast and that marking his first visit to northern ireland since becoming
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the new monarch. cnn correspondents are fanned out across london following the developments for us. scott mcclain is where people are already lined up to see the queen lying in state later today. nada bashir is outside parliament and nina dos santos joins us live outside the palace. i'll start with you, nina. i think the images we'll see with king charles iii and his two sons walking behind the hearse will be fascinating. there will be echos of those two young boys following behind the coffin of their mother. >> the comparison is inescapable today, becky. it was 25 years ago on the 6th of september, so just last week, that of course they had to make that long march and walk,
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procession as part of the funeral cortege, behind their late mother, princess diana. william at the time was 15 years old and harry was just 12 years old. thereafter, harry now the duke of sussex, has spoken on multiple occasions about how he felt that it affected him so much that he said no child should ever have to walk such a long walk in the public gaze with millions of people looking on at their grief after just having lost their mother. obviously this is a very different occasion. the preparations have been underway for quite some time. it comes at a time of heightened tension between the brothers and also they have now married, they have their own families. as we know, prince harry, the duke of sussex, has distanced himself somewhat from the royal family where he's gone to america. this will be the first time with his brother 25 years later and the duchess of sussex will be
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with the queen consort and the new princess of wales. >> scott mcclain, you are down at the river with the people who are cuing. they are at the front of the cue for the opportunity to get to see the queen's coffin. it will be a closed coffin. they will be able to pay their respects amongst tens if not hundreds of thousands of people who are likely to join that cue which starts where you are in the hours to come. >> reporter: i think hundreds of thousands is more likely. we've already seen 33,000 people file past the coffin when it was in scotland for a day or two. in 2002, 23 years ago when the
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queen's body lied in state, there were 2,000 people who waited to file past it. they imagine for queen elizabeth ii there will be even more than that. right now midway through the line that has formed so far, it's a little more than 1/4 mile by my estimation, it goes to the westminster bridge, the green one and it starts over here and people at the front of the line, they have camped out. most of the people, though, in line have just started here today. the difficulty is -- well, it's tough to stand in line for long periods of time because they're not allowing large bags so you can only bring so much in the way of supply. i want to introduce you to these four ladies that came here from gilford. you had prepared to be in line for the much longer than eight hours. >> we thought we would be way back there.
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we came out and there were not many people around. we kept walking, walking. we are about 540th in the cue. not counting. >> very specific. i wonder. you were prepared to stand in line potentially overnight. why was that so important? >> just to honor her. the queen. she's been a fantastic queen. it's really sad and i want to pay my respects. >> what's the queen mean to you? >> she means everything. i think she's been wonderful. done such a good job. i wanted to say thank you and good-bye to her. >> reporter: i wonder because surely a lot of people are seeing a lot of this, the lines, the cues, this is just for 30 seconds to go in and pay your respects but is it the moment where you get to nile past the coffin or being here?
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>> i think respect. she's given 70 years of her life to our country. this is a small moment. >> reporter: thank you all. we appreciate you talking to us. becky, this is one smile place. we can give you a sense of the people that are here. people are having to stand. a lot of people are saying they got here earlier today because they figured it would be easier to be stationary. when people start filing past the coffin, that's when it will be more difficult because you'll have to be constantly adjusting your place in line and moving forward rather than get comfortable, sit, stand, go to the bathroom and hold your place. >> scott mcclain is there often
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9 south bank. all of them in the cue and the hundreds of thousands that will join them is westminster hall which is inside the palace of westminster. that is where we find na nada bashir. this is a part of the palace of westminster which has a fascinated history. i'm reminded by one of the british newspapers this is where the queen will lie in state built in 10947 by the son of william the conquer remember. henry viii's coronation. even the tennis matches. tennis balls were found by workmen apes rnls -- workmen's
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place. the family will leave here at buckingham palace at 2:22 this afternoon and make what will be a 38-minute journey, most of them by foot including king charles iii and his two sons to where you are now. what are the details? >> reporter: absolutely storied history here. this will be a day of traditions and history. this is a place where we've seen some traditions date back to the 1800s. several that lied in state, the most recent back in 2002 for the queen mother where we saw some 200,000 people and others are trying to catch a glimpse of the new monarch in the funeral
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corte. >> the princess of wales passing through whitehall. passing through downy street onwards to westminster. only when they arrive here member will be taking part in a service by the archbishop of canterbury. they will be allowed to enter westminster hall. . the queen's coffin will be draped. this will take four days. 24 hours around the clock. the queen's coffin will be guarded at all times. this is a moment of tradition and history. there are other concerns as well around this. a larges-scale event. we've seen the road closed. we are expecting hundreds of thousands of people to come here
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to central london, po westminster, to wait for that to pay their respects. this is something that is televised. people will be able to access this. they can see inside the hall of westminster. perhaps you're waiting to enter westminster hall, to get a glimpse where we will see the new king, king charles iii, as well as the prince and we are expecting hundreds of thousands of people for four full days of being here. to scott and to nina, thank you
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very much for joining us. we will have a lot more on queen owe liz beth's final journey, memorial plans and a new royal era here in the u.k. later this hour. there it is, the closing bell brought some relief for most investors on wall street. a disappointing report pushed the dow down. the dow lost 1200 points, the saupd lost 4%. that inflation report showed u.s. consumer prices rising .10 of a percent from july to ug.
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they thought it would bring down inflation. the news was a little better in terms of annual inflation. that number came in at 8.3%. the second monthly slowdown. well below 9.1% 234 june. >> let's bring in cnn's alenni. good to see you again. how are other global markets responding and what are the futures about what may lie ahead? >> reporter: look, i have to say that that inflation meeting, which increased 1.1% we know that the dao, the aspects and other very similar.
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where we saw the hang seng losing around 2b 1/36789 pores percent. this is basically the big conversation about sticky inflation. what will this mean for more if he had tightening cycle has been very a grets great amount. in europe we're seeing negative territory across the board. we say this is whiplash. anything that happens in the u.s. is reverb rated in markets around the world. what is encouraging, the u.k. inflation number for august came down just below 10%. 9.9% for the month of august, which is far better than people will not have to change their
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tans with interest rates. the next week the fed will be meeting. they're try to rerisk right now. if i take a look at the futures. they are more stable. the markets are repricing what the new risks are. was this a knee-jerk reaction. this will that ter if we get any other big kpen satisfactions. the money from the big banks, annual leicesters and. f federal work. >> aleni, thank you so much. disappointing inflation report couldn't come at a worse time
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for president biden as he spent the day with the inflation reduction act. then he went to delaware to vote. cnn's phil mattingly has our report. >> reporter: for a month white-house h had house officials name the act. inflation still running hot though there was some deceleration on the top line. grappling with reality that a persistent issue that has plagued americans across the country is not going away any time soon. that didn't dampen the president and others are pivoting to utilize it. >> there was a $3,000 pain
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point. 55 of the fortune 500 companies made $40 billion and in 2020 didn't pay a single penny in federal income but this year, even though some of the biggest companies in america flooded steepness. a corporation, they will have to pay 50%. the day of no taxes is over, i promise you. >> the gas prices that have dropped precipitously. there is good news particularly as the federal reserve gets ready to race it. a stable for the most part
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graping with in -- there were a number of victories that they plan to focus on. the pitch is as you heard, they were able to get stuff done against intractable situation. that's why the president's majority should play out. there should be head wins. heading into the election. they feel they have something to run on. phil mattingly, cnn, the white house. we'll take a short break, but as it fights to recapture more territory in the east, ukraine is getting a special visit today. coming up, what's on the agenda as the european commission president heads to kyiv. show your sore throatt who's boss. mucinex instasoothe.
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aveeno® russia is on the run in eastern ukraine but still launching attacks in the south. ukrainian officials say at least two people are dead in nikolaiv.
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a counter offensive is sleowing but not stopping. they are trying to take control of the city of lyman in donetsk. volodymyr zelenskyy says roughly 3,000 square miles has been recaptured this month. and here was the pentagon press secretary on tuesday talking about where russian troops are headed next. >> we've seen a number of russian forces, especially in the northeast in the kharkiv region cross over the border back into russia as they've retreated from the ukrainian counter offensive. >> cnn's claire sebastian is tracking events in ukraine from her vantage point in london. she joins me now live. good morning to you has announced a surprise visit to
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kyiv and has new plans to dig out of the energy crisis. what more are you learning about this? >> reporter: the ecommission president has just delivered her annual state of the union speech. she was fully dressed in ukrainian colors. she wants you to put in additional measures to try to help ukraine's economy as they conduct the counter offensive. she wants to provide ukraine with seamless access to the european single market. she wants to connect ukraine to the european electricity grid, roa roaming, free roaming. no import duties on the ukrainian imports coming into the eu. these would be additional measures to boost it. obviously we know ukraine wants
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to join the e.u. that is an extremely long process that would help them be part of this in economic terms and energy prices, short tempt that go she to be possible to be low cost energy producers. wind, solar, nonfossil fuels, they are reaping benefits and can contribute to the eight she can give. longer term she wants to reform the electricity market. decouple gas prices from electricity markets which is one of the things that has sent energy prices soaring. these are very delicate discussions to go on with member states. this comes at a time when they have to reduce energy demand going into winter and some of
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these subsee diez. >> absolutely, claire sebastian joining us. ukrainian officials say they have liberated 300 settlements in four days in the counter offensive. residents endured months of russian occupation. cnn's melissa bell spoke with them about the emotional moments when they found out their town was invaded. >> reporter: larissa is ashamed by what little she has. mainly rice, flour and sugar. for six months she says sh e and
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her 35-year-old daughter said the support is impossible to get. most people say they left through russia. only the poorest left behind living on what they can grow, apples and watermelon mostly. her empty fridge now her primary concern. enough for one month. she's embarrassed, she said, to show the world how empty it is. but tries, nonetheless, to offer us some of the watermelon preserve she's just made before showing us around a town liberated on friday after several days of fighting. the shops now closed worked for six months only were affordable for russian soldiers, she said. >> they mobbed people. sometimes they killed. there were so many of them and they were so young. the revival a relief for her
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with only psychological abuse is worse. we were sitting in the basement for two days and then our husbands came and said our soldiers are here. it was happiness. >> reporter: happiness at the change of hands but uncertainty still about what the immediate future holds. >> our coverage of the new royal era continues in just a moment with my colleague becky anderson in london. straight ahead, a look at how king charles iii has made bridging communities and religious groups a corner stone of his public service. we're back with that in just a moment.
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom" live from buckingham palace. i'm becky anderson where the time is just after 9:30 in the morning. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up to date with what we can expect in the hours ahead. next hour troops will begin departing wellington barracks in preparation for the procession of the queen's coffin. just before 9:30 eastern time, 2:350 london time, the coffin is scheduled to depart buckingham
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palace to westminster hall which will be lying in state. the new king charles iii is looking to be a steady figure as his mother was a constant presence in the lives of millions of people in the u.k. the king and the queen consort visited northern ireland as the reasonable gone paid their respects for the late queen. the king reflected on his mother a mother's deep faith. >> she never ceased to prayer for the best of times for this place and its people. >> history watching every move the new king makes, of course. although a christian, the new monarch has made reaching out to the muslim community a corner stone of his public service as a patron of the center for islamic studies, the then prince charles
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spoke at oxford in 2010. have a listen. >> it is suggested i'm keen to stress here the need to heal this divide within us. how else can we heal the divide between east and west unless we reconcile the east and west within ourselves? >> joining me now is fa fahar izami. that is not the only speech the then prince charles has made as prince. tell me about your experience in working with him and why his effort to work is so important. >> i think one understands the fate of others if they look at
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their own fate. i think for charles the search for his faith has been very important. in his first major lecture at the center in 1993 he spoke about the indebtedness that the west has to western civilization. that might be a fact well known to historians, but for him to say this. we are talking about the civilization to which all people have con ribted and all can benefit. it's important for a person in his position to make. i think it goes down well in modern day brittain, the commonwealth and the world. >> you've known king charles iii as he is now named for some 30
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years. what do you talk about? >> he's a man of very varied interests. of course, faith, religion, architecture, environment. but also very, very concerned about many of the social issues. his ability to bring people together whether it is in brittain or internationally. he is trying to find the common threads that connects us. >> then prince charles in 1993, you eluded to a statement. he issued a rebuttal to the clash of civilizations argument. i'm quoting here, the degree of misunderstanding between the islamic and western worlds remains dangerously high. what to your mind needs to keep
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being done to building blijs and cha can king charles bring to that table? >> i think he has done a tremendous service. i didn't find the need for that. i think in this lecture he pointed out it was a crossroads and a common thread and build on those. i think it is one of the things that many of the work that the prince's trust has done in bringing young people together, international relations and so on. i think history might have pulled people apart, but it is their faiths which brings them together and we need to build on the connonalities of that. when we face so many big issues. i think that central emphasis on
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bringing together the material and the material to approach the world with a wholeness. these are things that are very important for him. >> the southampton community paying tribute to the late queen eliz elizabeth. in the seven decades the united kick come to has seen itself transformed into a multi- multi-cultural, multi-face society. he has learned arabic, a you has said he is the most pro is laemp monarch in all of bring the tear him as he takes thoemp what do
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you hope he builds on what has already been a zmeefd. >> let me start by saying her majesty, queen elizabeth granted a charter for islamic studies in 2012. the first institution of muslim tragsed of of of 666666 -- muslim society. i think more leadership that call for all to understand each other, to respect each other and to set a personal example about historical heritage.
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it connects the stories of many british citizens who live in the light. it is important to have that recognition at that level. >> very good to have you with us. now king charles iii has said he has to give up so much stuff. the charities, the foundations he has headed. i hope he can be the -- he can continue his interests. thank you very much for joining us. well, the next generation of royals are stepping into new roles after queen elizabeth's death. william has been formally appointed prince of wales. max foster has more. >> reporter: it used to be all
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high jinks and banter between will imand harry. >> pretty rich going from a ginger. even after william married, there was plenty of fun to be had over the years. over the years william rebranded from a royal to a more formal suited and booted figure, more fit for the throne. according to sources, it was a deliberate transformation as he moves steadily towards the top job. once stopped, the sources say william wasn't in a rush to take on full-time duties whilst he was settling down, first marrying his soul mate and then raising a young family. it was all about striking the right balance, but from the moment his grandmother died he became first in lynne to the
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throne and with that came a more weighty title. >> i am proud to create him prince of wales. the country whose title had been so greatly privileged to bear during so much my life and duty. >> with that, in the new prince and princess of wales will be elevated and will be asked to step up and help the king as well. william's father reinvented the prince of wales title. william and kate will have plans for making it their own but family will remain the major priority for both of them. both will be aware that the burden of royal duties are greater than they ever were, not
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just because the queen as hassed, but because these duties were always meant -- it's more stream lined than ever. the spotlight on the new prince and paralympian sprincess of wales. i'm becky anderson outside buckingham palace where the time is quarter to 10 in the morning. stay with cnn throughout the kay for continuing coverage of the queen's remembrance. let's get you back to rosemary church at cnn center. road marry? thank you very much for your reporting. just ahead hfrms lies, spicing and damming testimony.
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welcome back, everyone. while elon musk fights tooth and nail to back out of his contract to buy twitter, twitter is trying to keep him to complete the deal. they have been trying since july to scrap the deal accusing twitter of not being aware of the trump course. he has buyer's remorse and can't wake away from their agreement. meantime a former worker went before a committee with lies,
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lapses and foreign spies on the company's payroll. >> i'm here today because twitter leadership is misleading the public, lawmakers, the public and even the board of directors. >> reporter: twitter's employee coming to capitol hill. >> it's not farfetched to say the employees could take over the accounts of all senators in this room. >> reporter: peiter zatko says it is a danger to national security and democracy. what i discovered when i joined twit they are is this enormously successful company is years behind.
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>> reporter: his testimony is exclusive interview with the man. >> what i did notice when we had a person inside acting on behalf of a foreign interest as an unregistered agent, it was extremely difficult to track the people. >> last month a former twitter employee was confirmed they had a chinese government spy on their payroll. >> they simply lacked the fundamental to hunt for foreign intelligence segments. i'm reminded of one conversation with an exec sieve, i am confident we have more.
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>> reporter: as for regulators, the fdc isn't up to task. i think they're a little over their head. compared to the big companies, they're left to letting them grade their own home work. >> reporter: he came forward with these a month ago but twitter is saying today only confirms zatko's testimony is riddled with controversy. this is all coming on the same day that shareholders voted for the elon musk to go over and had -- his head. >> and we'll be right back.
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chinese leader xi jinping is abroad for the first time since
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the start of the pandemic. he has landed in kazakhstan as you can see. russian president vladimir putin is also in the country for a regional summit. the kremlin says he will meet with president xi on the sidelines. back in the united states, california's mosquito fire has now burned the equivalent of more than 1/4 of new york city. it's only 25% contained so far. that's according to cal fire. on tuesday dry conditions helped pred it to make it accurate. paris is looking to save power by shutting off the eiffel tower's famous lights an hour early. this will reduce the tower's power by 4%. starting later, the city will turn off power in public
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buil buildings. it will always be the city of lights. thank you so much for your company. i'm rosemary church. connect with me on twi twitter @rosemary cnn. mucinex instasoothe. works in seconds, laststs for hours. dry skin is s sensitive skin, too. and it's natural. treat it that way with aveeno® daily moisture. formulated with nourishing, prebiotic oa it's clinically proven to n for 24 hours. it's clinically proven to n aveeno®
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good morning to our viewers here in the u.s. and around the world. it is wednesday, september 14th and i'm brianna keilar with john berman. this morning the casket of

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