tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN March 6, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
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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 bianca nobilo. >> i'm max foster joining you live from london. just ahead on "cnn newsroom." >> there was no release of any chemical or any hazardous material. >> clean air, clean soil, and clean water for our residents. we had a republican party that was ruled by freaks. neocons. globalists, open border zealots and fools. more voices right now in opposition or providing an alternative to donald trump is the best thing. and increasing brutal winter has claimed countless afghanistan lives this year, but so, too, has poverty. >> there's 28 million in desperate need at the moment. 28 million. ♪
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live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. it's monday, march the 6. 9:00 a.m. here in london, 4:00 a.m. in springfield, ohio, where the national transportation board is sending investigators back to the state, this time to visit a second rain derailment site, more than a month after a toxic crash in east palestine. once again, it's a norfolk southern train. >> moment of derailment was caught on camera. an ohio official said there were no chemicals released because of the accident but norfolk chemical said the train was carrying potentially hazardous chemicals. >> there was no release of any chemical or any hazardous material to the soil, to the air, to the water. we were, of course, checking that closely. so you will still continue to see the southwest office of ohio epa remain onsite until the
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cleanup is complete. >> yes, sir, there was. there was a couple liquid propane cars on there. and a couple ethanol cars. the rest of the train was made up of mixed freight. a lot of steel, unfinished automobiles. and a lot of the cars that were actually derailed were empty box cars. >> well, embattled u.s. transportation secretary pete buttigieg said that officials from the federal railroad administration will be heading to the site of the accident. meanwhile, the u.s. senate in ohio hopes to pass a safety bill, saying it doesn't trust the rail companies. >> i'm not entirely satisfied because i want to know, there are some sort of remnants of something that might have been in those cars. those cars were mostly empty. but i want to know if there were any contaminants sort of left in those mostly empty cars that might have affected clark
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county. the railroad have got a lot of questions to answer and they really didn't done it until now. >> more details from cnn's polo sandoval. >> well, the general manager of nor folks southern, the owner and operator of the railroad said there were hazardous materials transported on the train, including leing ethanol propane, but no have left the tracks. 220 cars actually left the tracks as it was leaving ohio down to birmingham, alabama. authorities focused on two train cars, two being described as diesel exhaust fluid, while the other two were hauling water solution often used to treat waste water, common industrial solutions, as they described them. however, the authorities saying that those train cars did not experience any sort of spillage. so the ahead of the epa and the
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state of ohio was saying there's no chemical release into the air, into the water and soil. so now, a lot of the focus will certainly be on a massive cleanup process under way in springfield, ohio. and also on the investigation as they try to find exactly what led to the derailment, just a little over a month after the toxic tragedy that took place in east palestine, ohio. the same rail company, in the same state, however at this point in the investigation would lead investigators toe believe they're linked but certainly a remainder that these kinds of derailments are happening according to the federal railroad transportation. roughly 1,000 happen per year. polo sandoval, new york. in georgia more than 30 people were detained at a training center known as cop city. police say a group of violent agitators used the cover of peaceful protests to conduct a coordinated attack on
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construction equipment and police operators. >> they say protesters threw large rocks and molotov cocktails, but none were injured in the incident. >> cnn's isabel rosales has the details for you. >> reporter: it comes off of a week of action which started just yesterday, by organizers here, really activists, that call themselves defenders of the forest. seven days of events, designed to draw attention to the cop city movement. protests, a rally, a portion of the nearby forest area where activists have been camping out for over a year in protest, of this project they have dubbed cop city. back in 2021, at city council, they offered as a plan to build a giant state of the art training center. $90 million, 80-acre complex
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that would be one of the largest in the u.s., a driving course, a shooting range but activists call this an urban warfare training center. seven people are recovering from an injure after a massive fire in bronx, new york. a blaze began in a commercial building being blamed on a lithium ion battery from an electric scooter. >> the fire agency saying that batteries cause a lot of damage. they say an investigation is need to find out why the battery burst into flames. lith onbatteries are inherently flam flammable. a u.s.-bound passenger flight had to return on saturday after possibly being hilt by birds. this video captured the scene as smoke filled the cabin. southwest airlines said its flight was headed from ft. lauderdale to havana when birds hit the nose of one of the engines. >> passengers used slides to
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evacuate the planes once it touched down in an emergency landing. there are no reports of injuries and people are being brie booked on other flights. i'm sure they're not rushing to get back on it. >> we were just looking out, these events apparently happen around 12,000 times and wildlife specialists scare the birds away from the planes. snow calling in southern california where some cities could see 3 feet of fresh powder over the next 24 hours. it's causing bigger problems for residents trapped in their homes with few supplies. >> in southern california, one resident has been trapped in her home tour ledge days but thankfully hasn't lost power. here's a video she took to check on neighbors. >> they don't want to leave their house but they need food, and look at the size of this, this is 15, 16, 17 feet high, maybe higher.
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and there's houses across here. >> anita hudson said authorities haven't given her or her neighbors much information about when they'll be able to leave their homes. she said she's been shoveling snow off her roof so it doesn't collapse under the weight of all of it, she worries not everyone in the area isn't as well off as she is. more than 10 million people are under winter weather alerts from the west coast to the midwestern u.s. right now. the winter storm system is expected to reach the great lakes area with coming hours up to eight inches of snow by tuesdays. high winds are in the forecast for some cities. former president donald trump is making bids for the white house in 2024. >> in the coming weeks and month, we'll get a clearer picture who will challenge him for the nomination. >> florida governor ron desantis has not said but is seen as trump's most potential rival.
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he channeled his anger at ronald reagan library on sunday implying he could deliver the policy goals that eluded trump. >> we witnessed a great american leftist imposing leftist ideology and delivering poor results. and you've seen massive gains in states like florida, who are governing according to the tried and true principles that president reagan held dear. >> meanwhile, former maryland governor larry hogan said sunday that he will not compete in the republican primaries. and he said he's worried that the candidacy and a crowded field could help trump win that nomination. >> i don't want to have a pileup of a bunch of people fighting. right now you have trump and desantis at the top of the field, soaking up all of the oxygen getting a lot of attention and a whole lot of the rest of us in single digits. and the more of them you have, the less chance you have for
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somebody rising up. >> the former governor of arkansas takes a different view, aisha hutchinson says the more the merrier, as long as they're devoted to republican principles. >> march say message month. i want to talk about having a consistent, conservative message out there. we need to have alternatives again to donald trump we don't need to be led by arrogance and revenge in the future. we need to be led by those that are problem-solving and want to stick with the principles of our party an unite us together. so that's the message in march. april is the decision time. so, we will stick with that plan. >> donald trump got a rapturous reception yesterday at the conservative political action conference. trump took a victory lap before an adoring crowd. >> in 2016, i declared i am your voice. today, i add i am your warrior, i am your justice.
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and for those who have been wronged and betrayed i am your retribution. i am your retribution. >> but, his legacy of a very electee address was filled with wildly inaccurate claims on a range of topics, really, including foreign affairs, crimes, elections, joe biden's presidency and in fact his own fractures. >> so the greatest job history of any president ever. >> this claim is not even close to true. the economy lost about 2.7 million jobs over trump's four years. that is the worst, not the greatest jobs record for any modern daily president. now, i think you could fairly say, well there was a covid-19 pandemic, that hurt jobs but if you look at the first three years of trump's tenure he still wasn't the greatest. there were 6.5 million new jobs created. that is middle of the pack, not even close to the actual record which was 11.5 new jobs
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undemocratic president bill clinton in the early 1990s. let's look at a claim that trump made about the nord stream 2 pipeline from russia to germany. >> i got along very well with putin even though i ended the pipe pine. putin actually said to me if you're my friend, i'd hate like hell to see you as my enemy because i ended the pipeline. right? do you remember? nord stream 2, but i ended it, it was dead. >> president trump did not kill this pipeline. he did impose sanctions on companies instructing the pipeline but that didn't come until late 2019, nearly three years into his presidency with the pipeline 90% completed. now, the sanctions did slow down the project but also with trump's presidency, the year later, they would rebuild the pipeline itself. germany, with a few years left in trump's presidency also renewed construction of its
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waters. the pipeline was eventually completed before germany ended in 2022. trump made a big claim about his wall on the mexican border. >> as you know, i built hundreds of miles of wall and completed that task as promised. and then i began to add even more in areas that seemed to be allowing a lot of people to come in. >> i think it's obvious from the president's words that the claim he completed the wall is not true. he's saying he completed it and doing more building does not make sense. but we have the numbers to confirm it does not make sense and it was not done. an official document from u.s. protections and border protection called a border wall stab report published two days after trump left office said 258 miles of walls had been completed under trump but 280 additional miles identified for wall construction had not be completed. finally, i want to look at something trump said about is minnesota during the 2020 protests that followed the murder of george floyd by the
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minneapolis police. >> we saved minneapolis, the thing is we're not supposed to did that because it's up to the democratic governor. they never want any help. it's like they don't want to have any help having their cities destroyed. something there's something wrong with these people. >> he said the governor of minnesota wouldn't do anything about the civil unrest he, trump had to, in fact it was that democratic governor tim walls who activated the minnesota national guard to deal with the unrest. and his office told cnn in 2020 he did so in response to requests from democratic mayors of minneapolis and st. paul. now, trump did demand that walls activate the guard but in reality, he had already done so seven hours before the then president made the demand in public. daniel dale, cnn, washington. and trump does have the same pull of republican voters that he had in 2015? we canned stephanie grisham what
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she thought. >> this is going to be a revenge tour for the former president. but, you know, i wonder specifically with regard to what he said, who decides who needs the retribution? who's going to decide who's been miss mistreated? what about all of the people who had family members pass away from covid. are you retribution in that? you had a hand in that. it's a lot of bluster for him, and what his base wants to hear. and i think is the something that everybody should take seriously. a lot of people are rolling their eyes saying that's trump being trump but this is important. we need to really pay attention to realize that we're not getting the same donald trump. we're going to get a more angry and vengeful donald trump if he ho take office. they hope they have that look within moment because as we talked about in 2016 the reason trump won the primary was
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because the field was so big. i do believe if somebody like ron desantis gets in, it's early yet. these polls i know they have trump ahead i do believe if somebody gets in and willing to take him on i think there's a fighting chance there. but i'm definitely worried. i'm definitely concerned about how strong he is still after everything that people have seen over and over. ♪ russia says defense minister has visited the area of ma mariupol. in the donbas. >> meanwhile, ukrainian forces say they're holding ton a key area in bakhmut and fierce control of the city in the eastern front lines but officials are dismissing speculation of a possible
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ukrainian withdrawal. >> cnn's scott mclean is with us in london. scott, as we're alluding to, it's quite difficult to get a reactive picture of what's happening in bakhmut. what do we know and what challenges are the russians and ukrainians experiencing? >> it seems a shifting in the last couple days, you think back to last week all of the signs pointing to the potential that ukrainians may be forced to withdraw. they lost the key bridge cutting out one of the last supply routes in and out of the city. a drone reconnaissance unit was forced to withdraw. and ukrainians have faced with the possibility of having to withdraw. now the picture is a bit gray. you have the ukrainians saying in the last 24 hours, yeah, the assault continues. there's half a dozen settles in the bakhmut area that came under fire. you have analysts saying that the russians continue to make gradual progress in parts of the town. and in trying to encircle it which is obviously their goal.
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and you also have a russian war correspondent now saying, look, he thinks there's 10,000, 12,000 ukrainian troops still inside bakhmut. and some of them were begun to withdrew. the ukrainians say, look, things have stabilized. there's a commander on the ground saying not only are they not withdrewing, they're actually bringing in new troops to shore up the positions. the bridge that i mentioned that was destroyed last week has been replaced by a temporary one, restoring that route. and also a keel highway connecting bakhmut to the next town over to the west is still within ukrainian control. so, it's really a mixed picture here. i think what's remarkable, there are still civilians trapped inside this town. the deputy mayor says there's 4,000 of them. now, whether or not that number is accurate is one thing. even if there is a smaller number, it's still pretty amazing, considering the very intense fighting taking place there. and the deputy mayor says 5 or
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10 are being evacuated every day, down from 500, or 600, taken out at the height of the evacuation which, of course, began last year. and a lot of these people aren't leaving not because they can't get out, but because they don't want to get out. it's something that we've seen over and over again in towns across the front line. people would rather sit in their homes under fire and take the risk of unknown with really the clothes on their back. >> scott mclean, thank you. a busy week lies ahead on wall street as investors await a stream of jobs data and testimony on fed chair jerome powell what to expect. and later, chris rock finally opens up about the slap heard around the world at last year's academy awards. he did it in a groundbreaking ststand-up special zblooch plusn the e days a ahead we could lea who could challenge tuturkey's president in the election. but will they stand a chance in
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it happened on friday in the town of matamoros in tamaulipas state. >> an fbi press release said the four americans had just entered the town while driving a white minivan with north carolina plates when an un20 fied passenger fired at them in another. and they visited a do not travel area. we're now just hours away from a new trading day on wall street as u.s. investors place for new jobs data displaced later in the week. let's check on the mixed futures, the dow looking slightly down. this tuesday, federal reserve chairman jerome powell will testify about the senate committee and expected before the house services committee on wednesday. he's expected to discuss the fed's plans to bring it down even further. on thursday, we're expecting to see the u.s. initial jobless
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claims as well. president joe biden is set to present his annual budget to congress concern is mounting in the u.s. around an ongoing shortage of medicine often used to treat people with breathing problems. >> the american society of health -- i'm sorry, this is the script. >> the american society of house pharmacists say the drug albuterol has been some short supply since last summer and expected to get even worse after a major supply to hospitals was shut down last week. cnn's jacqueline howard has more. >> a shortage of albuterol liquid is likely to get worse. now, this is the medicine commonly used for people with breathing problems like asthma and c "o" pd and it has been some short supply since last summer. now, one of the major manufacturers of the drug acorn operating company has suddenly shut down. and health systems are bracing themselves for a possible surge inpatients with breathing problems who have limited access
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to the medicine that they need. and the manufacturer that shut down was the only company to make a certain bottled form of albuterol. a staple in children's hospitals. we'll be watching this closely. and the impacts that it might have on patients and hospitals. back to you. now, the trend ing keto -- >> keto. >> of course, may be good for your waistline, but not your heart. >> researchers compared people on keto over 1200 eating a standard diet they found on keto had higher levels of bad cholesterol and several major events like blocked arteries, and strokes. it makes sense because it's protein and fats. >> cheese and nuts, all very good things, aren't they?
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>> very good things but very high in fat. >> okay. the u.s. president travels through alabama to commemorate a landmark through the civil rights movement and makes a fresh call to protect boating rights. just one month since the dedeadly earthquake in turkey a syria, a look back at how survivors are trying to move forward. we're live in turkey, after the break. why burn a candle when you can switch to air wick essential mist? it's the modern way to transform fragrance infused with natural essential oils into a mist. air wick essential mist. connect to nature. i have moderate to severe crohn's disease. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ things are looking up ♪ ♪ i've got symptom relief ♪ ♪ control of my crohn's means everything to me. ♪ ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪
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derailment. the epa and the rail company norfolk southern said no toxic chemicals were released into the air, soil or water in this incident which happened in springfield. >> the state of california could see up to 30 inches of snow and some cities could see up to three feet of powder in the next 24 hours. it is creating problems for residents trapped in their homes with few supplies for freezing weather. u.s. president joe biden is warning that democracy is under threats. on sunday he renewed a new call for the campaign trail as cnn arlette saenz reports a republican-led house may make that goal difficult to reach. >> reporter: president biden used the anniversary of bloody sunday, a historic moment in civil rights history to renew his call for voting rights legislation. the president traveled here sunday to commemorate the 50th anniversary of bloody sunday in
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selma, alabama, talking about that moment where the 600 people marched across the edmund pettus bridge in advancement of voting rights but were severely beaten with rights officers. the president said this is a moment in history that must not be erased but that people must learn both the good and bad of american history. and the president once again pushed for voting rights legislation. something that he promised during his 2020 presidential campaign but has yet to come to fruition since he's been in the white house, take a listen to what he had to say. >> selma is a reckoning. a right to vote. a right to vote, to have your vote counted is the threshold of democracy and liberty. with it, anything is possible. without it, without that right, nothing is possible. and this fundamental right remains under assault. conservative supreme court has gutted the voting rights act over the years. >> reporter: so far, key pieces
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of legislation have floundered up on capitol hill. democrats were unable to get something across the finish line as they controlled both chambers of the capital. and now with house republicans in control on the house side, it makes that work that much more difficult. there are many activists who have become frustrated with the white house and with members on capitol hill for their inability to get new voting rights protections enshrined into law. so the president once again, making his case that voting rights need to be advanced in this country. while he gave that speech, he also marched across that bridge, that 600 activists marched across just 58 years ago, a poignant moment, reminder of the history of selma, alabama, in the civil rights movement. the president, while he was here, also talked about the tornado that ripped through this community back in january and said that there still is more work to be done for this community to recover. but his main focus here was trying to shine a spotlight in
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voting rights at a moment where legislation is stalled up in congress. arlette saenz, cnn, selma, alabama. it's been a month since a deadly earthquake rocks parts of turkey and syria. the recovery has been slow but ongoing. officials say the disaster has killed more than 51,000 people in both countries. >> more than 5700 buildings were destroyed in turkey alone with police carrying out dozens of arrested over alleged shoddy construction. turkish president erdogan promised new homes. he's up for re-election in the coming hours the opposition is expected to be release. cnn has more. with the defined issue around the election. >> reporter: it absolutely is, max, bianca, this will be an issue for challenge for the turkish government in coming months, and indeed the comes years but this is certainly a
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key focus agency the election looms. there has been significant backlash from the government not the least from opposition politicians who have criticized the government for what they describe as a response that simply wasn't rapid enough. they criticized the government for its slow response to the earthquake and also, of course, the humanitarian response following them. of course there are now 1.9 million people currently in temporary accommodations. some of them have been evacuated to other cities. some living with family members, some in accommodations such as universities and dormitories. families, sometimes, multiple generations in one tent. and we visited a number of these camps in the hatay province which was among the hardest hit regions by the earthquake. you saw them. some of these camps have very robust operations in place. others are more ad hoc, they have limited access, sanitation and medical services on the ground.
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this is a huge challenge for the turkish government. then, of course there is the. question of rebuild effort. with the election looming, president erdogan has been clear his government's priority is to build those areas affected within one year. when you look at the scale of devastation across southeast turkey 2 is difficult to imagine this could be done in a year. housing system is not funded as well. the turkish union for engineers and architects has criticized the government for attempting to rebuild these areas too hastiy. you see evacuation work in parts of gaziantep, and for those apartments redisplaced by the earthquakes. this is a place seeing aftershock and could see further earthquakes. and the message we're hearing from many is there need be to be further geological investigation. while there may be an dags or permanent accommodation may be
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needed this may be difficult for the government as they continue that dak lash. >> a massive job, nadal bashir, live in istanbul, thank you. in pakistan, speeches are being banned. regulators said on sunday that speeches are spreading hate speeches against state institutions. >> this, the same day that authorities tried and bailed to arrest khan, an arrest warrant said he should be taken into custody after not showing up for court. >> the saddle light has demanded a tv ban on khan's speeches. dozens of court cases against the prime minister are a mockery of justice. as millions of afghans endure a brutal wintnter, humanitarian groups are urging the taliban toto do more to hel. we'll bring you heartbreaking stories of loss, just ahead. e ultimate in comfort and support, in sizes up to an h-cup. visit knix.com
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now homeless against after a fire ripped through a rohingya refugee camp in bangladesh. the fire was in 2,000 huts on sunday. rescue and firefighting eventually gained control of the flames. >> we haven't heard reports of deaths but 5,000 people have been displaced. authorities and humanitarian groups are working to provide food and shelter to those who have been impacted. after a deadly winter in afghanistan, one of the cold nest a decade for a refugee oogs but the country's humanitarian problems won't disappear when spring arrives in just a few weeks from now. >> extreme poverty and hunger have only been made worse by the taliban, limiting aid that agencies can provide. anna coren reports. >> reporter: fresh snow tops gore province in afghanistan, creating an illusion of a winter
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wonderland. but for those who live here, there is no wonder. let alone hope. simply stay ago live is a struggle. for this family, their young son lost in battle. they huddle around his grave, offering prays for the 6-year-old who just days ago froze to dweeath. i myself my brother, that's is why i game came to visit him at the graveyard. he wasn't able to make ends meet. i had nothing to burn to keep the house warm, he explains. i checked on the children during the night and their bodies were numb. i realized my son had died at first light. this is a photo of him last year, he says. and this is his dead body. and an unprecedentedly brutal winter has claimed countless
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afghan lives this year but so, too, has extreme poverty. this has been exacerbated by the repercussions of the taliban government's dystopian gender policies. and the response by the international community. almost a year ago, the taliban banned female secondary students from attending school. that has morphed in a nationwide ban on all female education. but it was the taliban's decision in december, banning women from working from nongovernmental organizations that forced humanitarian aid groups to abruptly halt or suspend operations. >> there is 28 million afghans in desperate need at the moment. 28 million, and we're not even reaching a fraction of those. >> reporter: the norwegian refugee council is says they normally help 7,000 afghans this year, but their operation has been drasticallyally pared back.
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>> it's at its worst hour, never been as bad. >> reporter: the 35-year-old wipes away her tears as she grieves for her husband who pesh r perished in the cold. father of eight children. she's wondering how to keep her family alive. i have no education, she says, my children need food, what should i do. three of her children are girls including this 12-year-old who knows all too well what happens to poor young afghan girls who reach puberty. i am worried if we don't have food, my brothers will be forced to sell or marry me under pressure. i don't want to get married. i'm a kid. i don't want a husband. u.s. charity too young to wed
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said it's been able to provide emergency funding for the family and others. the founder said need is overwhelming and they're unable to help everyone. >> to me, it's unconscionable that the international community is not paying more attention to what's happening to women and girls in afghanistan. it's simply unexplainable why we're not doing everything in our power to change what's happening there. we have to do better. >> reporter: with the u.n. predicting two-thirds of the population will require aid this year, afghan children like this can only hope the world is listening. bianca and max, the u.n. special enjoy bennett issued his report over the weekend taking aim at the taliban's erasure of women and girls in society. remember, they can't go to school. they can't go to university. they can't be part of the workforce. the women i speak to say they feel invisible. now, this is a huge issue for
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the international community. and one of the rain reasons that international sanctions against the taliban government and the freezing of billions of dollars in afghan reserves, this u.n. report said discriminatory denial of women and girls fundamental human rights may amount to gender persecution, a crime against humanity. well, the taliban has yet to respond to these u.n. reports. max and bianca, back to you. >> anna coren, thank you. the train station manager involved in greece's deadly train collision is now in custody. it comes after his court appearance on sunday. >> 59-year-old is charged for his alleged role in last week's head-on crash between a passenger train and freight train that's left at least 57 people dead. officials say one of the train drivers received instructions to ignore a red light which led to the crash. >> translator: the accused said everything. he told the truth. he was devastated.
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he said exactly what happened without fear that his words would make him bear more responsibility. if with what he said there is evidence that constitutes criminal offenses against him, it is something that justice will decide. >> visitors have been lighting candles in memory of the victims at the courthouse where the case is being heard. after nearly two decades of talks, almost 200 countries have agreed to a treaty aimed at helping protect the world's oceans. it was a historic win for environmentists on saturday that could keep 30% of the oceans under protection by the end of the decade. >> to limit fishing and certain borders control the shipping lanes require environmental checks on deep sea mining. and also includes an agreement to share marine genetic resource which is was a sticking point in negotiations since they have potentially lucrative pharmaceutical uses as well. still to come, comedian chris rock finally hits back at will smith, suggesting that slap
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finally addressing the infamous slap at last year's academy awards in his new netflix special. >> it's been almost a year since actor will smith slapped rock across the face after he made jokes about smith's wife jada pinkett smith. cnn's chloe melas reports. >> chris rock came to what everybody came to see, he finally addressed the oscar slap when will smith took to the stage at last year 's oscars an slapped him across the face. take a listen to what chris rock had to say. >> y'all know what happened to me, getting slapped by shug smith. it still hurts. i love will smith. my whole [ bleep ] life i loved him. my whole [ bleep ] life. okay.
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now, as i watch emancipation just to see him get whooped. >> this is only part of what chris rock said. he made the jokes at the end two of the-hour special that was live streamed, it was live on netflix. there were a lot of comedians and friends of his in attendance, some who opened for him. some in the audience. but the crowd erupted in laughter and cnn has reached out to will smith's camp for comment. in the special, he said he's not sitting down with oprah or anything anytime soon. for now, it's chris rock addressing the slap. i can still imagine it will still be fodder for jokes of chris rock to come. overall, people are really, really happy with the special and he's getting a lot of praise for it. for the uk residents in the cottage of windsor, the duke and
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duchess of sussex have been invited to the coronation but whether they'll attend is still up in the air. charles and camilla will be crowned may the 6th. prince harry remains silent about whether his family will attend, especially on a tour of his recent book. i understand they sent a save the date in email. that's why they probably didn't respond, it's not the actual invite. >> and then the interviews when "spare" was being released, he said a lot to need to happen between he and his family to go to the coronation. do we know anything more about the interview with the trauma specialist? >> i don't think so. all of that is trauma and how he felt differences in his family in the same way as diana did. he said he wanted to have a meeting, i think, effectively, with william and charles to settle things and that's what he's referring to. but now, the house has been
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taken away, i think that's probably added to tensions, isn't it. >> and potentially could be a very big distraction. i think it's fair to say since the release of "spare" the documentary that he's given that the childhood relations have never been worse, have never been so publicly negative as they are right now. >> and continue to be public, another interview, in case you missed the netflix series and book. >> i didn't, i watched and read both. okay, liverpool fans basking in the glow of the stunning will. >> an beating manchester 7-nil on sunday. you were excited about this. >> it was an extraordinary result. >> it was the largest victory in history between them and liveded liverpool to fifth place, to the english premier league. man u, this was their biggest defeat since 1931. it came one week after the team ended a six-year spell after
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winning the cup. >> and man united doing well since then. the nba after missing 11 games with a knee injury, steph curry got a disappointing welcome back to the court as the golden state warriors lost on the road to the l.a. lakers on sunday. >> curry made an impressive return scoring 32 points in 13 minutes. and down with a minute left to go. the loss ended a five-game winning streak for the warriors. >> thanks for joining us here on "cnn newsroom." i'm max foster. >> i'm bianca nobilo. "early start" is coming up right here on cnn. gestive system. metamucil's plant-based fiber forms a gel to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down, helps lower cholesterol and promotes healthy blood sugar levels. while its collagen peptides help support your joint structures so, start feeling lighter and more energetic
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