tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN September 23, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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russia. we will look at how the vote could have a real impact on the war. canadians now are preparing for what could be the strongest storm ever to hit the eastern coast of nova scotia. we are tracking hurricane fiona at the cnn weather center. plus. >> walking out on court. having the chance to play with the likes of raf or novak in the past has been an amazing experience for me. >> tennis great roger federer gets ready to say good-bye to the sport. we have a look at the final match today. it's 10:00 a.m. across ukraine where occupied parts of the country are voting today on whether to become a part of russia. ukraine and the west call the referendums a sham. but, the votes could result in russia annexing about 15% of
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ukraine's territory already controlled by russian armed forces. vladimir putin's mobilization of 300,000 russians to join the fight is already underway across the country. video from social media shows families in the country's far east saying tearful good-byes and men boarding buses. but not everyone is willing to submit to the draft. cars lining up out of the country. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy is urging russians to continue their protests against the draft. here he is. >> 55,000 russian soldiers died in this war six months. tens of thousands are wounded. maimed. do you want more? no? then protest. fight. run away and surrender to ukrainianing ativety. these are the options for you to survive. >> let's bring in cnn's scott
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mcclain following developments. let's start with the ref renewable energy da. what effects might they have? >> these are something that have been bandied around, talked about, the possibility happening since the outset of the war. they have not come to fruition until this point. officials in these occupied territory haves been saying security situations would not allow for any kind of a vote to take place. all four of these regions all decided in unison and suddenly that they were going to hold these votes with voting beginning today. ukrainians have called these fake with no legal consequences. western leaders have denounced them. it is really difficult to, you know, it is really difficult to understate just how unusual the process is here. the voting is going to be taking place over the next five days. the first four days here is
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going to be door to door voting. so literally, you'll have officials going around house to house with ballot boxes, presumably, getting people to vote only on the fifth day of voting will people be allowed to turn up to an actual polling station. observers have pointed out the many obvious concerns here with this kind of voting. the fact that so many people have been displaced, the fact that so many people are not in the region wheres they live. ukrainian officials say half the population of kherson is outside of the region compare today the population prewar. then you have the really scary part. saying the regions who vote to join russia will be entitled to the full protection of moscow and all of the consequences and of course, those consequences have taken on a whole new meaning. this week given that vladimir putin is threatening the use of
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nuclear weapons. >> the u.n. general assembly, we heard plenty of criticism and condemnation from the u.s. and other countries. so take us through the highlights and russia's reaction. >> reporter: yeah, so russian foreign minister sergei lavrov walked into the security council chamber before he was set to speak and walked out just after. and several officials had suggested he was not in the chamber because he didn't want to hear the widespread condemnation of russia's war in ukraine. you had the u.s. secretary of state antony blinken not surprisingly particularly scathing saying that the international order, we gathered here to uphold is being shredded before our eyes saying that the fact vladimir putin chose this week to announce the draft shows his contempt for the u.n. the ukrainian foreign minister
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tried to contrast many ukrainians returned to their country tonight. now you have so many russians fleeing for the exits once this draft had been announced. when sergei lavrov did speak, he went back to the typical speech russia has given over and over again as justification for the war. i want to play what he said and contrast it with what the ukrainian foreign minister said. >> the kyiv regime owes to its sponsors. the kyiv regime has a assault on the russian language. and tramples on the rights of russians in ukraine. >> putin announced mobilization, what he really announced was his defeat. you can draft 300,000, 500,000 people, but you will never win this war. >> reporter: now u.s. state
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department official ken said afterwards that rush felt the hot breath of world opinion. not even the chinese world minister spoke up in defense of russia. >> thanks so much. scott mcclain live in london for us. thank you so much. now for more on all of this, we are joined by malcolm davis. he is speaking to us from cambra. thank you very much for being here with us. i want to start with mobilization. and the analysis for the institute for the study of war concluded that partial mobilization is unlikely to dramatically shift the tide of the war. >> reporter: this is partial mobilization. but however it occurs, however many people they mobilize, it will not deliver highly
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trained, highly motivated professional fighting forces to the front line in time to make a difference. you will get large numbers of disgruntled conscripts that don't want to be there, that don't have effective training or weapons. there was a photo on twitter of some being sent off with world war ii rifles. they will get there and they will simply be cannon fodder for the ukrainian military forces so this is not a solution to avoiding defeat for russia by ukraine. >> so, the mobilization and the referendum taken together. what does that say about the state of the war from russia's point of view? >> well, they are losing, essentially. putin knows that they are losing. and, i think what has happened is that lightning offensive by the ukrainians east of kharkiv into the donbass and the steady offensive in the south toward
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kherson has demonstrated that the russians do not have the means to achieve their objectives on the battlefield. what that implies is after the winter as we go into the northern spring, when maneuver operations can begin again, you are likely to see more offensives by the ukrainians, against the russians, the russians will still be no better prepared than they are now. so they are likely to route even further. and, i think at that point we face a serious problem of putin having to face defeat or escalate. >> that's exactly my question. and i want to ask you, you said russia is losing so that may sort of explain the reporting that we have that russia's military, it is divided and that putin himself is giving directions, directly to his generals which if history is any guide is usually a bad
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sign. so, that is the question. do you think that it signals that what could have been sort of a slow motion defeat might turn into a quicker defeat or that putin gets more and more desperate, things get worse for ukraine? >> i think what will happen, the ukrainians will make appropriate advances and start to take back larger chunks of the donbass and make real progress around the south and kherson. their goal is to reoccupy ukrainian territory including crimea. and i think that at a certain point for the russians, they are facing the writing on the wall. they are facing the fact they have been militarily defeated on the battlefield. they don't have the means to turn this around short of using nuclear weapons. that doesn't really achieve much for them because of risk of escalation. i think the pressure would be
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on putin and the risk for him and removed from office in whatever way necessary. >> well that would be dramatic. if it did happen. but you know, i want to back up, you talked about nuclear weapons. the referendum that putin has announced there, that many people have said that will sort of enable them to claim that ukraine is attacking russian soil. so does that increase the likelihood, then, of conflict with the west? >> look, i think it does and we have to be aware of that. we should not dismiss out of hand the possibility of the use of weapons. but putin should know if he does that, the west will intervene and strike at russian forces across the length and breadth of ukraine. and, that will lead to an
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spiral that leads to nuclear changes and at that point, the whole world loses so i don't see how using tactical nuclear weapons achieves anything beyond ensuring the certainty of the destruction of russia and certainly bringing down the putin regime. >> yeah, well let's hope certainly that doesn't happen. really appreciate your analysis. thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you. now, some ukrainians are returning home to find many homes are simply gone. they are coming back to the newly liberated areas in the east which have been under russian control for months. many people are finding out there is not much let to come back to. >> he is trying to make his demolished house a home again one nail at a time. but without a roof, plastic sheeting on the windows will not make much of a difference.
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this is all they could salvage. this is what they found when they returned to their village of pudyanka. what can i say, he asks? see for yourself. he was born in this house 53 years ago. her reaction? pain, she says. shock. pain, terrible pain. and bitterness. the fruits of a life's labor withered on the vine. this is what happened to many of the towns and villages caught in the front lines in this war. they were totally destroyed. up the road, residents unload relief supplies trucked in into the town. the mayor is back in his office after months away. he says these arm bands were handed out to the workers in
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the local russian installed administration. food provided to collaborators. and newspapers. about 100 people were collaborators he tells me. when the russians left. he left with them. this is where town residents were brought for torture in a dark basement. as many as 30 people to a cell prisoners, he says, were seated in this chair and subjected to electric shocks. the dean spent a few day theres. he recalls his interrogators beat him first and then asked questions. they bet my on my back, and head. and shoved me on the floor and kicked me, he says. then they gave me a cigarette and started the interrogation. they asked me if i was pro ukrainian. i'm ukrainian. i said. of course i'm pro ukrainian. he was released. but his son vladimir was taken by the russians.
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he is still missing. nitali draws water from the neighborhood well. he recalls when russian soldiers asked if he and his wife had any nazis at home. this is a normal village, he chuckles. we are normal workers. soldiers took over the railway station. these are all letters and pictures sent by russian school children to the soldiers here at the railway station. the things like this. pictures. and here is a letter from alexander in the fifth grade who says you are heros. thank you for guaranteeing our safe future. misguided, disguarded messages of support for a disastrous
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war. cnn, ukraine. public outrage in iran over the death of a young woman in police custody has now spread to dozens of cities. video obtained by cnn from the pro reform activist outlet iran wire shows protesters tearing down symbols of the regime in brazen acts of defiance not seen in years. according to the media, there have been at least 17 deaths. the public outrage shows no signs of cooling off. just 22 years old, she died last week in the custody of iran's morality police after they arrested her because of how she was dressed. the government claims she died of a heart attack but her family says it doesn't believe that. hurricane fiona is far from over. after battering the caribbean, bermuda a and canada are next i line. and, they say they were
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what more can you tell us? >> it wasn't a few hours ago really that we were looking at shades of pink across this area. this is nova scotia. prince edward island. those have now been changed to warnings. this means that the canadian hurricane center knows that this storm means business and it truly does. the more immediate impacts are to bermuda so let's get get down to business. there is bermuda there. there is the center of fiona equivalent to a category 4 hurricane. 130 miles per hour for our domestic viewers. 1200 kilometers wide. the outer rain bands bringing hurricane force gusts currently to bermuda with the potential for storm surge impacts and localized flooding but this storm will pick up in forward speed. it will have a lot of momentum and has its eyes set for the canadian maritime. this could potentially be a
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once in a generation storm for these locations. just look at these projected wind gusts. charlottetown, 142 kilometers per hour saturday morning local. that's incredible. that will cause damage. this will be a very impactful storm for this particular area. the gulf of saint lawrence has the potential to experience open ocean swells of 15 meters. that is significant, too. that will change what was hurricane precipitation into snow. some snow possible out of the backside of the system. localized flooding a potential. real potential for western newfoundland and nova scotia. that is not only fiona causing the tropical mischief. we have our eyes set on the caribbean sea. that was an area of tropical
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disturbance that the national hurricane center has recognized. this area north of aruba could develop into our next named storm. computer models starting to cluster where 24 hours ago, there was quite a spread on timing and location. but now, we are really focusing our attention on the southern florida peninsula. midweek this week. lots to talk about. >> absolutely. we will be tracking it throughout the weekend. thanks so much. now, the damage that fiona left in puerto rico will take some time to repair. the storm killed two people exactly two years after hurricane maria devastated the island. 100% federal funding for debris removal authorized by president biden. as of thursday, 890,000 customers now have running water and 38% of the homes have electricity but officials cannot estimate when power will
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be restored in the hardest hit area. fiona killed two people in the dominican republic. three quarters of a million customers still don't have running water there and more than 210,000 are without power. officials say the storm destroyed more than 2,000 homes. if you want to help those affected by hurricane fiona, please go to cnn.com/impact. you can find a list of verified organizations ready to help you make a difference there. some potential military recruits in russia are rushing out of the country before military mobilization getsts underway. plus they were forcefully evicted d from their land durin colonial rule, now a group of kenyans are suing the brith government. stay with us. rae before ty even start. it's the #1 prescribed brandechronic migraine treatment. so far, more than 5 milliobotox® treatments have been given to over eight hundred and fifty thousand
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welcome back to all of you watching here in the united states. canada, and around the world. this is cnn news room. let's get you caught up with the latest developments in ukraine. in the hours ahead, four occupied regions begin their referendums on whether they want to unite with russia. the vote is supported by moscow but condemned as a sham by the west. moscow is moving ahead with its partial military mobilization. social media video shows tearful good-byes between purported recruit and their families and a new proposal looks to impose military service on immigrants from central asia but many russians are not waiting for draft letters opting instead to head across the border. the ukrainian president is calling on russians to protest
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against the mobilization. for more on that, ivan watson joins us from hong kong. ivan, the pictures of the mass exodus are certainly dramatic. so many russians trying to get out or trying to figure out other ways of escaping being dragged into the war. >> reporter: we are seeing this phenomenon in the 36, 48 hours since putin announced he was going to drag 300,000 men into the military to fight his war in ukraine. instead of scenes of patriotic russians saying we are going to go defend our country, we are seeing lines ten kilometers line reported at the borders with kazakhstan. the border crossing with georgia. people waiting 10, 12 hours to try to get through to evade the possibility of receiving draft orders to go into the russian military. we have also been hearing that
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the flights are sold out. and, that the price of those tickets on planes out of the country have gone through the roof. cnn caught up with one young man, a 29-year-old who made it to the georgia capital through a bus service. he said half of his familiars ukrainian. he was angry he couldn't go see the funeral of his ukrainian grandmother who passed away nine days ago. take a listen to what he said happened when he was on the russian side of the border. >> what was if situation at the border? did it take a long time? did they ask you any questions? >> yes. but, how i think about russia. how i think about vladimir. how i think about some
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situations. where i'm going. who am i. what am i doing. >> and, another man that reached tablisi via neighboring armenia described being asked at the border about his military record. whether he had one. cnn has spoken to another man who left from moscow by train. even before putin had announced the partial mobilization when there was talk of referendums in the break away regions of ukraine. grabbed a train to belarus, to minskh. he is fleeing because he does not want to fight. authorities in kazakhstan say they have seen an up tick of 20% more passenger cars since putin made his mobilization announcement on the 21st coming
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across the border. so this is a phenomenon we are seeing a trend. and, it does not bode well for the draft effort in russia. kim? >> appreciate the reporting on this, ivan watson live in hong kong. a group of people in kenya is taking the u.k. government to court to get reparations and an apology from the royal family for the brutality suffered when the british colonized their homeland. cnn's david makenzie has been following this story and joins us live. an unusual story with a long and complex history. take us through it. >> reporter: many people across the world celebrated the lifetime of service from queen elizabeth when she passed on but for many others it is a much more complicated history. as we show you. >> and this land was part of that. >> reporter: james bee show it is legacy of the past. >> that is part of this property.
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>> reporter: their modest plot, what was once their land. some of the most fertile in kenya. now a lucrative tea mecca. it was taken from them in the name of the british crown. it's a colonial era conviction that led to generations of struggle for bee's family. >> the load i carry. that is why we are here. to look at what they took. >> reporter: in kenya and across their empire, british colonial authorities ruled with an iron fist. displacing local communities for white settlers, crushing dissent. it is a shameful history for modern britain and its royal
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family. >> the british should compensate us. they should bring us our rand. >> what the british did in africa is crimes against humanity. >> reporter: he says there is a growing moment in africa to seek justice and compensation from britain. >> restitution lies at the heart of what africans can do in order to confront british imperialism. >> what responsibility do the royals have for that? >> the royals have been central to the conquest of africa. >> i declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and to the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong. >> reporter: imperial expansion came before queen elizabeth. during her long reign, she
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presided over the disillusion of the empire. but she never publicly acknowledged her family's role in its brutality. and it didn't go unnoticed. >> most people don't appreciate the impact of queen elizabeth ii. because far from the sort of benign queen she has been projected to have been, what she was able to do was to put a soft glove over the iron fist of imperialism. to give imperialism an acceptable face. >> what happened was a sin committed by the past kings and queens and the royal family, says 83-year-old elizabeth rotich. she says her family was pushed off her land. and a sin like that follows through the generations. >> reporter: she says she mourns the queen's passing but wants an apology.
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and compensation from king charles. they can have large claim at the european court of human rights. you may remember that some ten years ago, another group of kenyans received some level of compensation as well as an apology of sorts from the british government. advocates and historians have i have been speaking to say particularly with the passing of queen elizabeth ii, they expect the calls to grow throughout regions that were once ruled by the british crown to be asking for reparations from that period. kim? >> an importanant story. thank sos much for following it. david makenzie in jojohannesbur a brutal assault caught on video in china. the main attacker found guilty on a number of charges. we'll have details straight ahead. stay with us. lasting, steroid-free remission. and a chance to visibly repair the colon lining. check. check. and check. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections,
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the main assailant in a brutal assault on women in north eastern china has been sentenced to 24 years in prison. video of the attack shocked the nation and provoked widespread anger. now what you are about to see may be hard to watch. just a warning there. the man along with four other defendants were found guilty of assaulting the women in a barbecue restaurant in june. one of the women apparently
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refused their advances. let's go live to steven in beijing who has the latest. bring us up to speed on the outcome of this terrible attack. >> reporter: yeah, kim, the verdict and sentence not surprising given the vicious nature of their crime. that viral video caused an uproar and there is some online criticism of the police. initial slow response. but they did after that manage to fairly quickly round up more than two dozen suspects. some connected to this assault. others connected to the ring leader's other alleged criminal activities. on friday, a total of 28 people were convicted for various crimes. and given sentences ranging from six months all the way to 24 years. as you mentioned. so, there is a sigh of relief among the public saying these people got what they deserve, but there are lingering concerns about whether or not
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the authorities have properly addressed the root causes of such an incident. from the very beginning, officials have been trying to get public attention away from gender based violence and assault against women in chinese society. rather, they have been portraying this as an isolated incident. perpetrated by local gang members. this was a government, that has been cracking down very hard on feminist activism linking it to subversive overseas forces and there is a general lack of legal support for victims of these kinds of crimes. all of these issues very much remain. but of course, as far as the government is concerned, they have now wrapped up a very high profile case that has galvanized the whole nation just a few weeks ahead of a major communist party congress where the leadership is undoubtedly going to tout their achievement ins all social causes including protecting women's rights and welfare. kim? >> beijing bureau chief steven
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jiang, thank you very much. two senior chinese officials convicted of bribery have been sentenced to life behind bars. the first minister was sentence today death after he was found guilty of accepting $16 million in bribes. the deputy of public security has been sentenced to life as well. sentences come amidst a government crack down ahead of the key communist party in congress where president xi jinping is expected to secure an unprecedented third term. all right, coming up, hong kong's government announced it is ending a controversial measure aimemed at stemming the spread of covid-19. we'll have details ahead in a live report. please do stay with us.
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hong kong's government announced it is ending a controversial measure aimed at stemming the spread of covid- 19. an important development. takes us through what brought this about now after so long and more importantly, what it means. >> reporter: for more than two- and-a-half years, hong kong has had one of the toughest quarantine regimes on the planet. now, there will be three days of self-monitoring. he announced that negative pcrest is no longer mandatory before boarding a flight to hong kong. all these measures become effective this monday september the 26th tethered to mainland
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china. tough border controls in place. at its peak, new arrivals had to pay for and spend 21 days in hotel quarantine. that was eased to seven days. last month, to three days hotel quarantine plus four days self- monitoring. now, we have just heard it is the end of hotel quarantine, but instead, replaced by three days self-monitoring starting this monday. there's a chart that we have been sharing with our audiences in the last few weeks here on cnn of the population decline. a historic one here in hong kong. experts say as a result of the city's tough pandemic policy, and the political crackdown here, a record number of people have left in the past year. 113,000 people have left in the last year. the timing is also critical. hong kong is planning to host the international rugby sevens. a high end banking conference. they are seen as opportunities for the city to open up and
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finally become asia's world city. especially as rival city singapore has already opened up and seen business booming. despite the fact this is very welcome news to residents and businesses here in hong kong, many tough pandemic measures remain in place. a mask mandate remain ins effect even for children as young as two years old. >> this is huge for hong kong residents. thanks so much for bringing that to us. roger federer is getting ready to hit the tennis court for the last time of his professional career. he is set to retire after playing a doubles match in the labor cup in london. his partner, long time friend and rival rafael nadal. they have 42 grand slam titles between them. both say they are looking forward to the partnership.
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>> super special. feels really different. you know. also walking out on court, having the chance to play with the likes of rava or novak in the past has been an amazing experience for me. so to do that one more time, i'm sure it is going to be wonderful. >> all the amazing things we shared together on and off court. be part of this historic moment. going to be something, yeah, amazing. unforgettable for me. yeah, super excited. i hope i can have a good time playing at a decent level and hopefully together, we can create a good moment and maybe win a match. >> now, federer and nadal have faced off against each other 40 times but they have actually played together at the first
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labor cup in 2017. and nasa engineers say the unmanned artemis moon rocket could launch as soon as tuesday following a successful fueling test at the kennedy space center. crews are working on a problem with leaking liquid hydrogen which forced nasa to scrub its second attempt to launch. they will meet sunday to go over the test results and discuss potential launch date. i'm kim brunhuber in atlanta. please do stay with us.
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hello and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i'm christina mack far land in for max foster. just ahead. >> translator: they beat me on my back, my head, then shoved me on the floor and kicked me. >> you have families in this courtroom here that lost children, sisters. >> is this a struggle system are we in china? i've already said i'm sorry and i'm done saying i'm sorry. >> this is a significant storm lashing bermuda but it is racing northward and it has its eyes set on the eastern sections of canada.
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