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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  April 22, 2023 12:00am-1:01am PDT

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us from the united states and all around the world and leila rock, the u. s. supreme court delivers a win for abortion rights supporters and protects access to a widely used abortion pill. and fighting mars the latest ceasefire in sudan as countries way options to evacuate their citizens. and it's earth day will look at one man's quest to tackle what he calls the godzilla of climate change. man made carbon gasses. from cnn center. this is cnn newsroom with leila horak. in a striking victory for the biden administration and abortion rights supporters across the united states supreme court has moved to protect access to a commonly used drug for abortion and miscarriage. well at least for now. cnn's emily schmidt has details on what the court ruling means. all friday. all eyes were
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on the u. s supreme court each minute a minute closer to a decision about an abortion drug , which has been safely used for more than two decades. the decision when it came was to protect access to a widely used abortion drug, a move that has major consequences. the headline for right now is that myth of kristen access tomorrow is gonna be the same as it was yesterday, but that's not going to change anytime soon. this is the first big abortion related decision from the court since it overturned roe v. wade last summer at issue and april ruling by a texas judge, which blocks the fda approval of mythic kristen, often the firstart of a two dg regimen to end early pregnancy. the court's decision is a momentary win for the biden administration, which had issued court filings saying the lower courts were countermanding. the fda is scientific judgment. on all fronts, including reversing
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this texas judge. we have to work to regain the rights and freedoms that have been lost. federal appeals court has already scheduled oral arguments for mid my there's a chance the case could ultimately come back to the supreme court. but for now, doctors in states where abortion is legal, can prescribe mifepristone to their patients. in washington. i'm emily schmidt reporting. joining me now to talk about this dr suzanne gilbert glands and o b g. y n at the women's care of beverly hills doctor. thank you so much for your time, the court seems to have bought itself some time as a medical professional. are you surprised by how the court went and what larger questions? does this decision raised for you as a medical doctor? well i mean, nothing would surprise me at this point. to be perfectly honest, i'm relieved, but i think like everybody else is saying i'm tentatively relieved
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because this is far from over. how we feel is the way we felt yesterday and the way we felt six months ago, and that is that we really have entered into a period of serious decline. when it comes to what we are able to provide, and the safety that we're able to assure our patients that they can have for this extremely important and needed medical procedure, and it's a medical procedure and a medical decision. what does access to the abortion pill look like right now. and what impact have these events had on the availability of the medication? well that's a great question, because when this first started coming down, i'm here in california, where we have wide support and actually governor support for the procedure and for accessibility. but having said that, if a federal ban was to put be put into place, i would actually be unable to secure the medication. and at this time this medicine is so strictly regulated in a way that
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is so obviously political. this is not a medication that i can write a prescription for and have patient filled at the pharmacy. so i, as the provider have to stock this in the office and as soon as this started happening a couple weeks ago, i went to our office administrator to make sure that we had enough supplies available for the foreseeable future. it's very it's been very, very disconcerting and very concerning because of course, my job and my life's purpose has been to take care of women and to keep them safe. and when i can't even have tools that are fda approved and legal in the state that i practice to keep my patients safe. i really i don't even know what to say. i'm baffled after 26 years in medicine. you know? no doctor, as you alluded to there, briefly , this has become such a politically fraught issue. what impact is this having on you on your colleagues and how you practice and most importantly,
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the women and the girls that you see it's really had a very, very negative impact, and i have to say it's not newly impacting us any of us who provide abortions have been dealing with threats to our lives and our livelihoods for the entire time that i've been in practice. i think the issue here is that people the public has become more aware of was really going on. so for a lot of people who lived in large cities where they had access to care, they really weren't aware of how difficult it has been in this country for the entire time that i've been in practice, remember in medical school learning that 85% of counties in the united states at the time in the nineties did not have abortion services available, so actually, this is not news to those of us providing care. what's happened is that i've seen terrible things happening in in los angeles, where people have access people, not understanding what is available to them. people making poor decisions. people not getting care on time people being afraid to ask for help, even in a state where it remains legal. there's
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been a lot of confusion and i have dealt with things this year that i have never seen in my career complications that never needed to happen, you know, threats to people's lives and health. it's very, very serious . so this isn't a place where people actually still have asked yes, it's so my colleagues and other states in places like texas, alabama, etcetera. they are suffering and patients are suffering. and women are being harmed the opposite station of the safety issue with this particular lawsuit is insanity. the safety data is there it is. the fda doesn't approve medications, especially medications like this that are fraught politically without a lot of safety data. the safety data is there and this is an incredibly safe medication, and in fact, pregnancy itself is bar less safe, then having a medical abortion, so the lawsuit is really frivolous. when it comes to science and medicine. it's disgusting. dr suzanne gilbert
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glands. thank you very much. now we turn our attention to sudan, where civilians have reported more fighting between the armed forces and a paramilitary group despite a 72 hour ceasefire, the u. n. says one staff member from its migration agency died in a clash on friday and that overall more than 400 people have been killed since the fighting began last week. earlier sudan's paramilitary forces announced they were ready to partially reopen airports nationwide, and they said this would allow other countries to safely evacuate their citizens. but the us is making preparations to get diplomatic personnel out of sudan. bits is private citizens should not expect an evacuation. when it comes to sudan. this is a warning of level four warning that we provided to them many months ago, basically, um, telling americans who were there to leave if they could, and also not to travel americans not to travel to sudan. so we've been
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very clear on that again. it's not our standard problem procedure. cnn's larry meadow joins us now with more larry. the humanitarian crisis in sudan is deepening. what more can you tell us? right leila, even though this is supposed to be part of that 72 hour ceasefire studying yesterday because of the eid holiday, there's still reports of gunfire and shelling and people are hearing explosions. sometimes the fighter jets overhead, so the night was quieter than any of the last seven nights we've seen , but it's not completely salad , the gun seven ft. fallen silent entirely. in sudan. some of the worst fighting has been around the capital, khartoum and people are still fleeing the capital. whenever there's been a lot in the fighting, people are trying to make it to other parts of the country. other states that they feel will be safer. a few of them have crossed over into, say, egypt. and i see, for instance, the twitter short while ago saying i'm looking for a bus to egypt for 10 people, the u. n human rights organizations, the u. n refugee
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commission for human rights as at least 10 to 20,000. people have crossed over into chad. so you see people who are fleeing the country. and especially fleeing the capital, where the fighting has centered around residential areas around the general command headquarters around the presidential palace around the airport. here's one doctor considering leaving with his family. me and my family like we're busted everything and we're considering right now, like the living the living certain but the risk of outliving our house, leaving everything like our belongings. it's just way too hard to like process like even the streets like even the journey if it takes to have, like, uh, like small sisters, young sisters, so it's really a risk like leaving the house right now, so we're trying to find like a good operator. opportunity for us to try and leave. it's an impossible situation to so many families considering taking that risk of journey outside of the relative safety of their homes
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and risked getting shot at risk getting bombed on their way to flee the capital. but both sides now say they have agreed to the ceasefire for 72 hours to celebrate eid. that's what the u n and the african union and the intergovernmental authority on development agreed on as part of the first step toward a longer ceasefire and the return to dialogue. and that's why you see, for instance, leila the rsf, saying they're open to partially reopening the airport so that any nations that want to evacuate the citizens can do so. and we've heard statements from south korea from japan from sweden from spain, all saying that they are information waiting to take out the citizens when it's safe. maduro reporting , larry thank you so much for that update. and let's discuss this further. now with sarah's sereni vasan, he is the co director of the center of governance and human rights at the university of cambridge. so good to have you with us, are you? are you stunned by the scale of the fighting and how quickly violence has spiraled
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out of control in the span of just a week? i wouldn't say i'm stunned, and i think that's because while this ignited very rapidly, there's much longer fuse in a sense, and this has been building for some time. it relates to the way that the somewhat desperate, somewhat wrongheaded attempts to try to get sudan's transition to democracy back on track after a coup in 2021 has really unraveled finally. and so there's a there's a long lead up time. um and indeed, some of the things that we're seeing suggests that there's been a lot more planning and pretty prediction by actors that this would somehow unravel. and we neglected to mention that you are the author of when peace kills politics, international intervention and unending wars in sudan in the sudan's i mean, this is a topic in a country that you have studied extensively. why does this conflict matters so much? not just regionally but internationally. it's um first
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thing has to be said it matters tremendously to sudanese. and you mentioned your reporter mentioned the reprieve for eden . you know, even mubarak told the sudanese because first and foremost, this is their horror. this is their terrifying situation, and i also think we have to caveat any of the international dimensions by saying look, first and foremost , you have to understand this from the ground and the actors on the ground. um, having said that why it matters is because in this context of sudan, the region and the regional is also in a sense the international and i'll give one example here if you take general haftar in libya quite an important force and power in that region close association with the rapid support forces, one of the armed groups in sudan that some fighting with the sudanese armed forces have tire himself has connections to the united arab emirates. the rsf has connections to the united arab emirates, also to some other influences wider, including from russia. and the usa is and themselves in some kind of
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competition with egypt, which is suddenly supporting the sudan armed forces. now this is all prior to the conflict. this is not to say that they are actively supporting the conflicts right now in any material way, but that's the context within these two actors. these two state military and security actors are also related to regional international dynamics. we have saudi arabia, israel, eritrea in the region, all connected in some senses to this. chocolate so each of these countries has interest themselves. i mean specific aspects of sudan gold production security interests that that they have themselves, but also sudan is geopolitically induce strategically important. it's part of the horn of africa restive area, north africa. the arab world and in the context of indian ocean competition between a range of actors. sudan plays a pivotal role in the way different actors seek to have influenced and say, took expand this sphere of influence and control. so these actors on the
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ground are also aware of all of those dynamics at the same time, very intricate situation that you outlined there. i mean, unfortunately, there are no signs right now that things will get any better. i mean, ceasefires are announced and then broken. as soon as they're announced that these two warring generals they're showing shocking. ah little regard for sudanese citizens suffering so who has diplomatic leverage at this stage, egypt, the us arab gulf countries, or are the sudanese people on their own? well it's very hard to see where the leverage is where the such off ramps are. that can be encouraged at the moment, and that's that's the tragic situation. um what i don't think i can say is that the off ramp that is not an off ramp um, that perhaps we should stick stop and think about right now. is that the transition and the logic of the transition that has been held onto notwithstanding the fact that these two security actors at the time of the
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revolution that deposed president al bashir in 2019 the popular revolution. it was also a palace coup. both of these actors held onto power and gripped the state. from that point onwards, whenever there's been a transition towards civilian led government, they have acted to reassert their power. the coup in 2021 was exactly because of that. this unraveling has occurred again because of the transition plan, a roadmap of framework that was leading towards a civilian led government and the unification of two armed forces into one, and it's in those moments that they recognize their grip on power is being lost, and they fight back. so if we come back with another formula around dialogue, let's restore the transition. let's do a process and a roadmap. the likelihood is that we're repeating these cycles that actually feed into the logics that allow these actors to hold their control of the state something entire the different is needed. it's not clear whether leverages, but i think perhaps we need to think about the level revolutionary promise of the sudanese and the street and what they have sought
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throughout this last four years and how that needs to be more front and center rather than appeasing or trying to subdue the actors that then themselves just reinforce their their power. martha stern iverson. thank you so much for coming on. thank you. ukraine gets another boost from western allies is keith prepares for its expected counter offensive still ahead, tank units home their battle skills on us hardware and flooding fears in the upper midwest as record winter snows plus spring melt equal rising rivers. shehe's totally checking me out. she's prprobably looking at my arms or maybe just the shirt. hey i l like your shirt. you want to get out of here?
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training will be held in germany before 31 of those tanks arrived in ukraine by the end of the summer. kiev's allies also plan to set up a maintenance center for the libre tanks in poland, which could be up and running by the end of may. western countries have been donating the german may tanks to ukraine. the decisions were announced at a meeting of the ukraine defense contact group in germany, where the top u. s general make this assessment of the war. as we stand here today, the ukrainian military continues to perform very well. intense fighting in and around bach mood continues and has for several months. russia is expending significant manpower for very little game. russia is intensifying indiscriminate shelling and other cities and urban areas. and russia continues to pay severely. for its war of choice. unlike ukrainian forces, who are highly motivated to fight for their country. to fight for their freedom, their democracy and their way of life. the
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russian black and leadership they lack will the morale is poor and the discipline is eroding. for more barbie. nadeau joins us now from rome barbie. the u. s will begin training ukrainian forces on abrams tanks next month and working. tell us about that. you know, it's an interesting program. it's going to be about a 10 week training period about 250. ukrainian military people will be trained on these in germany, and it's going to be as you said a big boost to the ukrainian ukrainian military. forces there on the ground as they initiate their counter counterattack later and the international atomic energy agency chief. he's sounding the alarm. yeah that's right. you know, there's been increased and continuing shelling in the zeferino to nuclear plant, and now they had the i a has had a continual presence there this whole last period of time since
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january, but they're really concerned about the constant detonations a constant shelling, so they're sounding the alarm that it's still not a secure places under russian control. it's a very, very dangerous situation, and they're very worried about it, leila and in another development, what more can you tell us about the russian jet that accidentally dropped a bomb on the russian city of belgorod? yeah you know , there are a lot of defense experts calling this whether it's an accident or an emergency release of this bomb. they're saying if it was an emergency release, the pilot, a trained pilot certainly would have done everything he or she could to make sure that it didn't drop on a populated area, and this was hit a town, the city center of a town of about 400,000 people after 20 m. creators so it seems more of an accident than an emergency release, which is the way the russian military is trying to spin it at this point later in the doorway reporting thank you very much. 21 year old us air national guardsman is due
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in court next thursday after he was accused of posting classified documents on the internet. jack to syria's detention hearing was originally set for earlier this week but was postponed at the last minute to sarah is accused under the espionage act but has not yet entered a plate. it's alleged he used his top secret clearance as an i t specialist post sensitive intelligence documents in a chat room on the video gaming. site discord. some documents dealt with russia's war on ukraine. months after the toxic train derailment in ohio homeowners trying to sell are finding that their homes are worth far less now than before the crash report after the break. next time on the whole story. first e electrc flight meet thehe climate warris racing to unscreww the planet. you're part ofof the movement to basically b build the oil indusy and reverse carbon removal.
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melanie's nana in washington and this is cnn. welcome back to our viewers in the united states and all around the world and layla rockin you're watching cnn newsroom now, more than two months since the train derailment that spewed toxic smoke across east palestine, ohio state's governor is pushing to make sure the railway company piece for the long term impacts of the train crash. mike the wine says officials are still conducting air, water and soil testing and working to improve the quality of life in the community. and he wants norfolk southern company to compensate residents for potential health issues. there needs to be a fund set up. ah you know fairly quickly so that people in the community who are concerned about where they're going to be in five years or 10 years or 15
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years if they have cancer or something occurs because result of this crash, they need to be assured. and so he did not disagree with that. in fact, he agreed with that, and so i expect there to be a fund set up. well, the governor deminers also says the railway should pay homeowners selling their homes the difference between what houses were valued before the train wreck and what they are worth now seen as a jason carroll spoke to some of the residents. throughout east palestine, ohio, there are signs of trouble for homeowners looking to leave. it's been a process and it's been a nightmare and we were the guinea pigs for my realtor because she wasn't even sure what was gonna happen. melissa henry's home that she remodeled. it's about a mile from where the norfolk southern train derailed in february, leading to a release of toxic chemicals from the overturned cars. she was thinking of moving before the accident, but after it happened and her family started experiencing symptoms, she
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wanted out. me and my youngest son have had bloody noses. i couldn't tell you how many times and we've never had bloody noses on the market weeks after the derailment for 150. the $1000. the first offer i had on my house was 50,000 almost 50,000 below mark. what i asked for that was like a stabbed in the gut. the low balls continued. last week, henry finally accepted an offer 25,000 below asking, which she says leaves the family very little. do you feel like in some way you should be compensated? absolutely i think everybody in this town who wants to move norfolk should pay for them to move there should we shouldn't be forced to stay somewhere. we don't feel comfortable. we don't feel safe as far as right now. yeah the bloom is off the rose a little bit. but we will see. we just don't know. harry hoffmeister has been selling real estate in the area for about 40 years and says sellers may have to accept less money or wait longer for homes to sell. he says it's too soon to tell just how much of a hit home prices have taken in
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east palestine, given norfolk southern's derailment and other factors such as a struggling economy and rising interest rates. i think they need to make things right. how you how you possibly determine what kind of losses attributed to that or not? that's somebody else's department. since the derailment , norfolk southern ceo has repeatedly been pressed on the issue. will you commit to ensuring that these families these innocent families do not leave, lose their life savings in their homes and small businesses? the right thing to do is to say yes, we will. senator i'm committed to doing what's right for the community. this week when we asked for more specifics, will cos. spokesman referred us to this previous statement. we also know residents are worried about their home values. we understand these concerns. we are committed to working with the community to
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provide tailored protection for home sellers if their property loses value due to the impact of the derailment what this tailored commitment might entail , though, remains unclear. i would say that i believe norfolk southern is doing what they can at the moment. diana elser owns a popular hot dog stand in town and lives less than a mile from the derailment. she's an example of a divide here between those who want to leave and be compensated and people like her who want to stay. why are you yelling at people that are still here? trying to make sure the town doesn't die in the meantime, because if all our small businesses go away, the town will die in the middle of it. all people like vanessa kostanic and her three year old son, i do kind of want to get out of town, you know, just for his sake, just in case just to be safe, says she has little resources and fewer places to turn for help. you know, i can't just pick up and leave like most people can. and, um so you know,
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i kind of am kind of just, you know, a little stuck. so again. what's unclear here is how some folks are going to be compensated for their losses, even after all of this time. meanwhile here in his palestinian, there are some slogans around town that read east palestine get ready for the greatest comeback in american history. some here still not giving up. jason carroll, cnn, east palestine, ohio. one person has died after a tanker truck flipped and caught fire on a bridge in groton, connecticut. that's according to cnn affiliate wfsb. take a look now at this video showing the flames and billowing smoke that shut down the bridge friday, connecticut state police said all north bentleys of the bridge have reopened, but some southbound lanes remain closed and. concern is growing that the
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upper midwest could see major flooding next week is several rivers continue to rise, the national weather service says right now, 10 river gauges are measuring at major flood stage and another 43 are at moderate flood stage and in parts of illinois, the mississippi river is rising and already moving into people's homes and businesses. flooding garages and exterior stairwells while according to the national weather service, the river levels are at a moderate flood stage there and could reach major flood stage next week. there were used in the worst massacre in modern us history will tell you about the fate of some of the guns. used in the las vegas shooting of 2017. dad that smell could be eight million o odor causing bacteria. good thing, adadding lissa launy
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270644. 1 809 270644. if you have diabetes, getting on decks come is the single most important thing you can do it eliminates painful finger sticks helps lower a one c and this covered by medicare before using the desk. com g seven. i was really frustrated all of that singapore pricking my a one c was still stuck. my diabetes was out of control. come to seven sensor glucose numbers to your phone or decks come receiver without painful finger sticks, the direction your glucose is heading up down or steady because seven is the most accurate. gm can make better decisions about food, medication and activity in the moment after using the desk. com g seven my a one c has never been lower. i lead line dancing three times a week, and i'm just living a great life. now. it's so easy to use next come. g seven has given me confidence and control that everything i need is right there
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called to speak to a licensed insurance agent. call 1 807 50 4500 now the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at eight on cnn. a man accused in the shooting that left a six year old injured, has waived his right to fight extradition. robert singletary appeared in court in florida friday, a day after he was apprehended. it's unclear when he'll be returned to north carolina. he's accused of shooting a six year old girl and her parents after a basketball rolled into his yard. the girl and her mother had only minor injuries, but her father was hospitalized in serious condition. well, most of the 49 guns belonging to the shooter in the 2017 las vegas massacre. have now been destroyed. an anonymous donor gave more than $60,000 to cover the value of the weapons in his arsenal on
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the condition they be demolished . 13 have been retained by the fbi. stephen paddock killed 61 people attending a country music festival when he opened fire from his room at the mandalay bay hotel in las vegas. paddock shot himself before police could reach him. the liquidation of his estate generated more than a million dollars in that money will be distributed to survivors of the victims who died. it's been 30 years since stephen lawrence, a young black man was stabbed to death on the streets of london by a group of white teens. his death prompted a moment of national reckoning about racism in the uk and in london's police force. but today the issue remains as heated as ever. cnn's kerry paul glee's reports. 30 years after the killing of stephen lawrence, the pain still endures for his father for 30 years of my life. gone. you know, my life been
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turned upside down by somebody. i don't know. lawrence was killed in a racist attack by a group of white teenagers at a london bus stop in 1993. but it took nearly two decades for two of his attackers to be convicted and sentenced the institutional racism blamed for the delayed justice remains unaddressed, first documented in an official report commissioned after lawrence's death in 1999, and then again this year in the casey review, saying the police have a culture of denial. we fully accept the findings of the casey review commissioner admitted there was still racism in the force, but stopped short of calling it institutional it's not till i use myself. ah this racism takes on many forms, including the lack of police, accountability for the deaths of black men and people of color. these are the four officers that are there 15 years ago, marcia rigg lost her brother sean,
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after he was pinned down in a police arrest while experiencing a mental health crisis. he died of cardiac arrest after he was restrained in a prone position for approximately eight minutes , according to the findings of an inquest jury. so that's the restraint. you see, it's four officers. face down in growth would excessive force to his neck. he could not breathe. police officers were cleared of gross misconduct despite the findings of an inquest jury said police had used an unnecessary level of restraint, which more than minimally contributed to rigg's death. statistics showing racism and british policing are alarming. a recent report by the charity inquest found that black people are seven times more likely to die by police restraint than their white counterparts restrained in a similar way as george floyd, whose death at the hands of us officers sparked a global protest movement against police brutality in 2020, i was horrified. it was so traumatic
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because it was because it reminded me of sean rajabhat is a leading criminal lawyer who was brought cases against the police for decades. so whether we are talking about racism, whether we're talking about misogyny, whether we're talking about homophobia or any other ills we're talking about. uh lack of will and ability to address wrongdoing. the review found the met does not represent the city it serves black, asian and other ethnic minorities make up just a fraction of the force , compared to nearly half of londoners. over the years, the anger has spilled onto the streets, sparking riots over the police killing of mark duggan in north london in 2011, a jury later ruled killing lawful. the lack of change has caused some families to despair. do you have hope they will change in the future? oh i don't think i'll ever see that. 81 years old now.
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right so it's 30 years ago, since it's something that families have found one main source of comfort each other, lawrence, you exceptionally well . thank you do and smartened up, er. without careful, careful. well i know. i know they have the kind of help that they're going through the picture. lawrence's father says he can't live in the uk anymore. the memories are just too painful, but when he does return he meets with other families going through the same ordeal. when i'm here, i think about it all the time. this is a place where i thought i'll be happy. i'm not happy here every time you you know, you hear about another death. it's like you relive it again, so it just doesn't it just doesn't go away for their only hope for justice is to keep the cases alive. katie polls cnn
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london. the met has yet to respond to cnn regarding sean rigg and stephen lawrence's cases in the accusation that the force is institutionally racist and to mark the anniversary. the met released a statement apologizing to the lawrence family stating that significant progress has been made in the last 30 years, but admitting there are still cultural and systemic failings. and staying in britain, that country's deputy prime minister and justice secretary has resigned following a report he bullied staff members, the report found dominic rap was intimidating and persistently aggressive. the allegations came from eight formal complaints about his behavior, but he is not going quietly saying the report was flawed. he says it sets a dangerous precedent, which will paralyze the ability of ministers to deliver for the british people to stand on cnn newsroom it's earth day and we'll tell you why. one scientist likens the problem of
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the globe to interact with innovative players in the trillion dollar race to remove carbon from the sea and sky were visited the gulf of maine, where a ceo named marty odd land is studying one method of carbon removal. here's a preview. while he was studying robotic engineering at dartmouth and earth systems at columbia. he realized a man made monster was destroying his beloved gulf of maine. warming it up at a rate now faster than 95% of the rest of the world. it's a godzilla. there's this thing out there, and it's like ruining everything that we love. right all the good stuff is getting ruined all the stuff that's free and fun. it's burning forest down. it's stealing our fish, devastating our crops. it's hurting our farmers. get mad and go, go kill that thing, right? and right there on a docking main. marty's
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metaphor is a lightbulb moment for me whole new way to think about a giant problem that began when people figured out how to move lots and lots of carbon that stuff of ancient life. from the slow cycle locked and rock and under oceans into the fast cycle. in the sea water and the sky and we've moved so much carbon that monster now weighs a trillion tons, give or take more than every living thing on earth . so not only do we have to stop making the monster bigger. we have to catch it, chop it up and bury the pieces back into these slow cycle was something called carbon removal. removal chopping godzilla down. we got this 400 ft. tall lizard, and we're just chopping that thing down. that sort of removal is and tune in to see bill weir's full report how to unscrew a planet airing on the whole story with anderson cooper on sunday night in the u.
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s monday morning in asia. now the nuns at a dutch convents are toasting their good fortune as they try to sell off a bumper crop of wine. they hope to move 64,000 bottles of what they call a beautiful white and a fresh rose. that's twice as much as they normally produce. the sisters credit unusually sunny and warm weather last summer, you can pick up six bottle case. for just $95 proceeds will pay for maintenance of the convent, not a bad deal and american style lager that for years has been marketed as the champagne of beers is getting a chilly reception by a group of french wine producers. on monday, belgian authorities destroyed a shipment of more than 2300 cans of the american brute miller high life. french trade group that guards the official use of the word champagne. the slogan on the label runs afoul of protections. the shipments
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