tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN April 22, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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huber ahead on cnn newsroom a temporary victory for abortion rights supporters as the u. s. supreme court says mifepristone can still be prescribed. for now we'll take a look at the legal and medical fallout from this decision, plus a tentative ceasefire maybe holding in sudan , while the u. s state department has a message for americans hoping to get out of the country. and later, but the kremlin is saying about the bomb dropped on the russian city of belgorod. from cnn center. this is cnn newsroom with kim bruun hoover. in a move that's being celebrated as a victory for the biden administration and abortion rights supporters across the u. s supreme court has taken steps to protect access to mifepristone and abortion medication that's been commonly used by women for decades are jessica schneider has more on the ruling and what comes next in the fight over the drug? the supreme court, stepping in to protect full
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access to the abortion pill mifepristone while the appeals process plays out below, that means it will be status quo for the administration of this drug . women can continue to take it up to 10 weeks pregnant, they can continue to receive it by mail and via telehealth visits with their health care providers , and the generic version will remain widely available. so this is exactly what the biden administration the fda what they were asking for. they warned that if there were restrictions imposed on this drug that there would just be confusion and chaos. so now this chaos is being averted. so the question is, where does this go from here, while the fifth circuit court of appeals will be hearing arguments on the underlying issue in this case, and that is whether the fda properly approved mifepristone in 2000. the first briefings in this appeal actually must be filed the fifth circuit next week and the case will be fast tracked. with these arguments set for less than a month from now on may 17th but really, regardless what the fifth circuit decides any possible changes to this drug are being put on hold
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indefinitely by the supreme court decision so women can continue to fully access to press stone until the supreme court acts again at some point, which wouldn't be for months, if at all. jessica schneider, cnn washington. in response to the court's ruling, president biden is urging americans to vote to elect a congress that would restore the protections of roe v . wade, and he's defending the food and drug administration's approval of medford first stone in a statement, the president said, my administration will continue to defend the fda as independent expert authority to review approved and regulate a wide range of prescription drugs. so the next challenge from kristen comes on may 17th before three judge panel at the fifth circuit court of appeals law professor jessica levinson explains what could happen then and how this could impact fda approval of drugs down the road. here she is. that is the full appeal on the merits on the substance of this claim. i think whoever loses will almost
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certainly appeal back up to the supreme court, at which point they also have to consider the substance of this, not just whether or not to push pause, but whether or not the district court judge was correct when he said the fda didn't follow proper procedures when improvement kristen and then when it made changes to make it easier to obtain mifepristone in 2016 and 2021. one i mean, this case obviously has everything to do with abortion. but on the other hand not that much to do with abortion in the sense that we're talking about whether or not a single federal judge has the power to undermine. what an executive agency here the fda did again almost a quarter century ago. now i think in reality, we're not going to see people challenge cholesterol, drugs or heart medication, but it could be other controversial forms of treatment. like for instance, vaccines those could be next to be challenged. dr alison adelman joins me now from portland, oregon. she's a professor of obstetrics and
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gynecology at oregon health and science university. thank you so much for being here with us. so given what we've seen from this very polarized and right leaning court did this ruling surprise you at all? well i'm incredibly relieved. we honestly didn't know how this was going to go. we were hoping for the best and preparing for the worst. and so, at least now why the legalities continue to play out. we're able to continue practicing medicine like we should. but obviously the fight over these abortion drugs is far from over. so how worried are you that this was just a temporary reprieve? well this is just a temporary reprieve. i mean, patient care and health is always adversely impacted when safe, effective care options are removed from use based on no scientific evidence to the contrary. so really, this is just a reprieve here, and we know that there are other legal attacks that are happening as we speak and around the corner. yeah and the
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opponents of abortion ever have warned of that exact thing you mentioned just a moment ago. you you've been preparing for the worst. i mean, we've seen already some jurisdictions stocking up on these abortion drugs. oregon for instance, where you are a state that i think got a three year supply of the drug in anticipation, perhaps of it being restricted. so what's going on behind the scenes from a health care practitioners? perspective is these legal battles play out? yeah i mean, really. some of it depends on where you're located and what you can do within the jurisdictions that you have for us in oregon. abortion is legal , and we consider it healthcare . and so we're able to prepare with that as a backdrop, whereas our colleagues in states where abortion is banned, they're really fighting to have their patients get the best care that they can, and sometimes that means having to send them out of state. have you? have you seen out of state patients coming to you? absolutely um, since dobbs came into effect, we've seen
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patients from out of state from places that we've never seen before. you know oregon's kind of off the beaten track, so it's unusual to get patients from out of state coming in that we've really seen patients from all over the country, since the laws have changed. incredible. i mean for you know, obviously, for many women, this has been a just a nightmare. but from a physician's perspective, i mean, the uncertainty must be very disorienting and stressful as well. it's incredible, incredibly stressful. it's just heartening. um really. there's so many legal attacks in the care that we provide at the bedside. it really shouldn't be there. really. we should be just practicing medicine and being concerned about the patient in front of us and providing the best care that we can for them on the on the larger issue of access to abortion, i mean we've seen across the country, republican states tightening or eliminating access. we can see if we're going to pop up the map here. we can see how widespread
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the bans and restrtions have been those orange states there on the map cover a huge swath of the country where it's been banned or severely restricted. obviously the larger problem isn't going away. no i mean, we already knew that bans and restrictions don't make this kind of healthcare go away because it is so essential. it just creates more difficulties for patients. it creates worsening care. it creates death , um, harm and it creates immense confusion and fear among patients, which just shouldn't be there when they're trying to access healthcare. yeah and some experts have said, i mean abortion restrictions don't end up stopping abortions. they just make more unsafe abortions. is that sort of what you've seen. yeah you know, we know and we have extensive literature from around the world that abortion bans and restrictions. don't stop abortion care. they do the types of things that we don't want to see. they make care and
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safe. they push people later into pregnancy to access care. they create pregnancy complications. we already have one of the worst maternal health morbidity. mortality rates in the world among high income countries, and that's just going to worsen with not being able to have access to this really essential basic care, but because all of because of all these attacks i mean, we've heard from some doctors that that you know, in many states, it's getting harder to find doctors and nurses you know, like like yourself because they feel that they're being targeted legally. many are moving out of state. they're changing specialties or giving up the practice altogether, which is making it harder, not just in terms of access to abortion, but just getting you know. maternal and reproductive health care. what have you seen? yeah you know, we're seeing that too. we just had our recent numbers come out from our national match, which is how medical students choose specialties and we saw a huge decrease in the number of individuals choosing to become a
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b g. y n s. um and we also saw a decrease of trainees wanting to go to states where bands are and that's because of their own health and the health for their patients. so we're going to see this effect the next generation of reproductive health care providers and that's not only going to affect individuals that are doing abortion care. but as you say, maternal health care and other things in women's health yeah, it's incredibly frightening, but really appreciate getting your perspective on this important issue. dr allison edelman, thank you so much. really appreciate it. thank you. there is little sign right now that a truce is holding in sudan. civilians report more fighting between the armed forces and paramilitary group despite a 72 hour ceasefire, the u. n says one staff member from its migration agency's he 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
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reopen airports nationwide. he said. this would allow other countries to safely evacuate their citizens. cnn's larry maduro joins us now with more so larry what's the latest? kim this is supposed to be day two of the three day ceasefire that the two warring parties agreed to in sedan that is the sudanese armed forces and their rivals. the rapid support forces this really powerful paramilitary group, but still even today that they have to eat. people are still reported hearing gunfire and shelling and some explosions , one person telling cnn they've seen military military aircraft overhead, and there still appears to be fighting in parts of khartoum. the capital, especially around the general command headquarters, which is where the military is based, so it's not quite the quiet day they had expected, though, to be fair, competitive last eight days. this is a much quieter day overnight. we didn't hear any reports of artillery of bombardment, so this cease fire is not fully implemented. i think that's the headline here and the bigger problem here, one person telling cnn that the food
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and medical situation is quickly getting out of hand. one friend just told me that now rationing their food because they don't think they will have much to last that much longer. and at this rate within a week or so, even the local pharmacies and shops and supermarkets might run out of produce madrid out of the basic necessities that people need to stay in their homes until it's safe to go out there again and those who can are considering leaving the capital khartoum went. the worst fighting has been. how did you listen to this doctor, considering it me and my family like we're busted everything and we're considering right now, like leaving the living cartoon, 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 a harrowing situation to be in trying to
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figure out if there will be safe to leave khartoum or the safer hankering down in the house, staying away from windows and hoping that the nose trade projectiles or bullets coming into their living quarters. and even if this does hold for another day and a half until the end of the three day ceasefire, then the flight industry start on monday. that just means the number of the casualties will increase so far, 113 people have died more than 3500 wounded, and that could still be an undercount came because when the guns fall silent completely, and a full account is done, those numbers could be way higher. yeah that's right. a harrowing situation for so many there. larry meadow in nairobi. thank you so much. appreciate it. and the u. s. is making preparations to evacuate diplomatic personnel from sudan, but no final decision has been made. yet. the white house warned on friday that private citizens should not expect the u. s government to get them out of sudan. listen to this. when it comes to sudan. this is a warning of level four warning that we provided to them many months ago, basically, um,
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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 very clear on that again. it's not our standard proper procedure. cnn's kindly, atwood has more now from washington. we don't know any details about the death of this american and sudan . but what we do know is that the state department has been in touch with their family, and this comes as there have been hundreds of sudanese citizens who have died as a result of this recent outbreak in fighting now, the state department, the pentagon, they're all watching the situation incredibly closely . they're putting the resources in place to potentially carry out an evacuation of the u. s. diplomats were in the country. they haven't made a decision to do that at this point and one, of course, the challenging fact. actors here is the fact that there is this ongoing violence on the ground, so state department officials are watching closely to see if the ceasefire that has agreed to can actually be implemented. on the ground. so far, that has not actually been the case. and we
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know that the state department is also not planning at this time for the evacuation of american citizens or in the country. they're about 16,000 americans who are there. of course, many of those are joint us sudanese american citizens and we heard from state department deputy spokesperson earlier today that those americans should not be expecting any coordinated us evacuation at this time, so we'll continue. to watch that space. they said that the state department has been in touch with hundreds of americans were in sudan. kylie atwood, cnn, the state department. the leader of the russian mercenary group, wagner is denying that his forces have any involvement in the sudan conflict. any precaution dismissed a cnn investigation which found evidence that wagner had offered anti aircraft missile systems to help sudan's paramilitary group. the rapid support forces. we rsf has also rejected the notion saying and said that students armed forces are the ones
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aligning themselves with foreign groups. all of the legal woes aren't over for alec baldwin but will tell you about the major win for the actor in connection with the deadly shooting of cinematographer dana hutchins, plus the ukrainian ballet dancer swamps the stage for roll on the front lines. that decision ends on a heartbreaking note. my most important kititchen tool, my y n , so i choosose areva plus, unle some others, plus is a multitasker supporting six key indicators of brain elf. help. keep me sharp, areva think bigger. moderate to vere ulcerative colis keeps flaring in check with invoke a once daily pill when you e god unpredictable, i got rapid sytom relief, invoked and left bathroomurgency behind check. you see god in my way, i got
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americans have low or no credit self is a new way to build credit. no credit score required self customers who start under 600 make on time payments of 49 point bump in their credit score , on average, download the app today. russia is reeling from a self inflicted injury, a massive explosion in one of its cities blamed on russia's own air force . cnn has been wedeman reports. this kind of destruction has been a common scene throughout ukraine since the war started, but this time it was in russia, residents of the city of belgorod close to the border with ukraine, waking up to damaged buildings and destroyed road. the culprit. russia i moscow saying one of its aircraft accidentally struck the city. cctv footage shows a first impact as the bomb penetrates
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the ground. moments later, a large explosion residents feeling lucky it wasn't worse. thank god there are no dead, the belgorod governor says russia was busy after shooting itself in the foot. ukrainian officials were meeting with allies in germany. welcome to the 11th. meeting of the ukraine defense contact group and other international partners discussing additional support for kiev ahead of a highly anticipated counter offensive more than a year later. ukraine is still standing strong. in our support has not wavered. and i'm proud of the progress that we have made together. but for ukrainians that progress has been slow. and while the front is barely shifted in months, vicious battles keep claiming lives. on friday, the odessa
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opera announcing the death of one of its performers, artists turned soldier rostislav ian kishan killed in battle protecting ukraine's future. they said he joined the armed forces on the first day of the war. cnn visited last july. he had long left for the front. like many of the dancers there those that stayed behind like katarina col. cheng co braving the stage to give odessa a sense of normalcy, dancing in defiance , but very much still struggling. i want the whole world to stop this horror so that innocent people and children stopped dying, catarina says. i asked for help and for people not to remain silent. it's silence is how they began rehearsals this friday amid tears one minute of silence for one of their own. ben wedeman, cnn kiev. ukraine's tank forces
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are getting a boost out of that security meeting in germany. barbie nato joins us from rome so barbie take us through what happened in that vital meeting and what ukraine is getting out of it. you know, there's a lot of support. this meeting comes, you know, it's not just united support for ukraine. it shows a united front against russia that is increasingly important as this war goes on, let's listen to what general mike millie had to say on the back of that meeting. 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
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motivated to fight for their country. to fight for their freedom, their democracy and their way of life. the russian black and leadership they lack will the morale is poor and the discipline is eroding. and you know, those are very, very strong words. kim. those are going to be heard in the kremlin for sure. yeah absolutely. and then barbie so on ukraine's mission to join nato, we're now getting reaction from russia on what nato had to say in response. so what more can you tell us about that? yeah. you know, there is some harsh words about that, of course, the secretary general of nato, making a surprise visit to cuba on thursday didn't sit well with russia. they're calling them from foreign ministry spokesperson calling the words that, he said on the back of that meeting, both dangerous and shortsighted with we wait to see, of course, what that means in real life, kim alright. thanks so much barbie nadeau in rome. ukraine says it has recovered the remains of about 500 of its fallen troops since
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the beginning of the war, officials say recovery teams have surveyed hundreds of locations across the country. they also recovered the remains of more than 500, russian soldiers and, according to ukraine, plans are being made to send those remains back to russia. alright still ahead of manhunt is underway in south africa. police are searching for one of the suspects in the mass shooting, which killed 10 members of the same family. stay with us. h heart attack. do they have life insurance? no we have life insurance, john tryining to find something we can n afford. fortunately in only a few minutes, select quote, found john of $500,000 policy for only $29 a month and his wife and a $500,000 policy for only $21 a month. go to select quote dot com now and get the insurance. your family needs a price you can afford. select quotewe
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widely used abortion drug with a princeton will remain available to women in the u. s without restrictions on this follows a ruling by the u. s. supreme court on friday. the decision protects access to the drug atls plays out. but the protection could ultimately be taken away again. a lower court ruling in texas earlier this month suspended government approval of the 23 year old drug. it's the latest in a series of moves against abortion rights. new york senate democrat chuck schumer says more must be done to protect a woman's right to choose. here he is the supreme court simply sent its decision back to the lower court of appeals. we will have to make sure that they don't do the wrong thing. and we will do everything we can to do to preserve the right of women to receive this drug. they deserve it. they need it and it's certainly should be the law of the land. kristen is a key part
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of a two drug cocktail doctors used to provide abortions for their patients. medication induced abortions have become increasingly common over the past two decades. cnn's senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen explains why mifepristone is so important in these situations. and how doctors are reacting to the court's decision. obstetricians and gynecologists are breathing a sigh of relief after the supreme court decision friday night. that decision allows them in states that allow abortions to keep using mifepristone. now, medford, kristen is one of two different drugs that are used to treat women who are having abortions or miscarriages. if mifepristone had been taken off the market across the united states. that means that doctors in states that allow abortions would have only been using my the process. it'll that's the second drug now my surprise still can be used on its own from miscarriages and abortions , but studies show that it doesn't work as well. it's not
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as effective and there can be more complications and more side effects. and so doctors i've been talking to over the past two weeks have said. look why should i be giving my patients a treatment that we know isn't as good. i want to give my dot my patients the best treatments that they can get so again a sigh of relief, but this is only for a certain period. time things could change in the future. as this case winds its way through the courts. back to you. 21 year old us air national guardsman is due in court next thursday after he was accused of posting classified documents on the internet to share is detention hearing was drooling sent for earlier this week but was postponed at the last minute to share a is accused under the espionage act, but hasn't yet entered a plea. it's alleged he used his top secret clearance as an i t specialist. to post sensitive intelligence documents in a chat room on the video gaming site discord. some documents dealt with russia's war on ukraine. lot of meeting
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in germany of nations supporting ukraine. u. s defense secretary lloyd austin said he's happy with the way america's allies are dealing with the revelations surrounding the leaks. what's this? as i have discussed this issue with our allies and partners. i've been struck by your solidarity. and your commitment to reject efforts to divide us. and we will not let anything fracture our unity. austin added. he takes the situation extremely seriously. after saying for days they would drop the criminal charges against actor alec baldwin. prosecutors have officially dismissed the allegations. at least for now. baldwin was holding the gun that fired the shot, which killed cinematographer dana hutchins on the set of the movie rustin 2021 , but he's maintained he didn't pull the trigger legal move comes after new evidence surfaced that the gun had been modified the civil case against baldwin by relatives of hutchins
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is unaffected by friday's move. the funeral for a woman shot and killed after pulling into the wrong driver was held friday, mourners gathered in schuylerville, new york, to pay their final respects to 20 year old kaylene gillis. she was killed last saturday. a 65 year old man is charged with second degree murder in her death. here's what some of the mourners are saying. people feel like you have in a community where you could depend on your neighbor to be safe. if a young girl needed help. if it were for other reasons. it's very sad. it's tragic. everybody's just they're they're trying to figure out why this happened. it's you know, people are just karen. they're just hugging one another 11 1, another to understand why this happened. meanwhile a man accused in the shooting that wounded a six year old has waived his right to fight extradition. robert singletary appeared in court on florida friday, a day after he was apprehended. it's not clear when he will be returned to north
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carolina. he's accused of shooting six year old girl and her parents after a basketball roll into his yard. the girl and her mother had only minor injuries, but her father was hospitalized in serious condition. and in southeast washington, d c. police say seven people were shot and wounded friday night. most of the 49 guns belong 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 the condition they be demolished . 13 have been retained by the fbi, stephen panic killed 61 people attending a country music festival when he opened fire from his room at the mandalay bay hotel in las vegas. panic shot himself before police could reach him. the liquidation of his estate generated more than a million dollars and that money will be distributed to survivors of the victims who died. a manhunt is underway in south africa as police search for one of the suspects in a deadly mass shooting there. authorities say
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gunmen stormed a homestead in the eastern part of the country and killed 10 members of the same family. cnn's david mckenzie has the latest from johannesburg. even in a country that has become somewhat numb to violent crime and incidents like this. this was a shocking shooting in case that in province early friday morning now the police say that community members told them in the very early hours of the morning on friday they heard multiple gunshots in that zone of pietermaritzburg in case of an province. the police did go to inspect several gunmen were suspected in being involved and entire families say police were killed 10 people in that shooting the youngest being a 13 year old boy, the oldest, according to police over 60, the police minister said that the quick work of community members to give a tip off to police led them to several suspects they think may be linked to the
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shootings. they killed one in a action against the police in the firing between the police and the suspects, and i managed to arrest 21 got away. it's unclear what the motive of the shooting. it is and in south africa, there have been several shootings like this or similar to this in recent months, both in that province and other provinces i have to say, and recent reporting across the country and particularly in johannesburg, where i am based, there has been a sense by community members that they feel the police cannot. help them in many instances with the levels of violent crime in this country, particularly with the resources that the police have the leadership of the police again on friday, said that they are doing their best and are looking to increase resources. but the murder rates in south africa in last year was extremely high. more than 25,000 people in
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murders that the police know about this is in a country already dealing with high levels of violent crime. david mckenzie , cnn, johannesburg. just ahead cnn's wolf blitzer and unabashed visit poland to help commemorate the start of the warsaw ghetto uprising and go on a very emotional visit at the death camp. please stay with us. wash the poweredd massaging cleaner for your e ears. awesome massase in my ear, general, triplele spy flflushes earwax away. cotton swabs just pushed the wax in, but whooshes triple spray gently flushes it out by using the wish product for achieving a safe and satisfying way of cleaning the wax out of the air canal. my ear feels so clean on at get dot com
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powerful fat burner ever absolutely free r e a. d y 24 to 4 to four. cnn presents a max original heaven's gate tomorrow at 10 on cnn. cnn's wolf blitzer and dana bash recently visited poland, where they took part in events honoring the holocaust. survivors and victims commemorated a significant moment in the jewish resistance . here's some of what they experience walking through the death camp at auschwitz birkenau. i've never been here. i've never been to auschwitz.
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and never been to any of these camps. ever since i was a little boy. i knew my parents were holocaust survivors. i knew my dad was from here. he was from auschwitz was from the town here, which had seen this is so painful for me. it's so personal for me because awful and my grandparents were killed during the holocaust and two of them paternal grandparents. my dad's mom and dad. were killed here at auschwitz. and your dad's siblings didn't survive. one sister she loved. when younger sister the others were all killed. the end of the war. they were liberated bergen belsen and they were taken on this forced march or the. the death march march. that's how my great aunt died with. my dad's younger brother died on the death march great grandparents. they were hungarian. so they were safe
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until 1944 and hungary because hitler didn't invade their until close to the end of the war. so my grandparents were in the united states, and they were receiving some letters. from my grandmother's parents. and. as the letters came, they were getting more and more dire. and we have the final letter that says, until this moment at least i could hold myself together. but now i have to write a farewell letter to my dearest children. my heart is getting very heavy. i must stop after every word and collect myself in order to continue writing. and they were saying goodbye before they came here. they knew it was about to happen. what was gonna happen by that time, they know i'm looking around, and i'm thinking i don't even know if they made it into the barracks. just probably the training.
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ah! this is where my grandparents were thank your grandparents were were killed right here. yeah this is true. yes. three brothers and their like they were nothing, not people. there's so many people here because today is a special day of the living. no it's called march of the living because he's took him out of the
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death march. today we're doing the march of the living, which is so powerful. tell us why you came here today. i came here today because i represent this six million people that are behind me. whose shadow follows me wherever i go clearer, shaved our clothes off. and put our number on our arm. and i became a prisoner. this is even more special to be here because it's the 80th anniversary of the uprising ghetto and it was the most important moment for jews during the war to fight back warsaw's ghetto where polls battled for week uprising began on april 19th 1943 it was the very first day of very important jewish holiday passover. some of
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these weapons were you know, they were so primitive, so there were 50,000 people still here? yes 1000 jews who were starving. disease ridden they were either taken away or killed completely . many people died here on the spot. your parents were in the worst side ghetto married in the warsaw ghetto. how did they survive? they survived by my father's ingenuity in the late 18 was the headquarters of the resistance organization, and they lived a block away when the german army came in. of course, they were knocking down buildings and burning them down building by building building and the jews were when they were fighting, throwing molotov cocktails at the tanks and things you imagine these tanks come in, and it took about a month, and they finally had to give up. my friend michael berenbaum. it asked marc edelman , who was the last living commander of the worst, a ghetto
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uprising says did you fight? choose the way you died. edelman answered. no we fought to decide the way we would live until we died. really happy that this place. i was thinking about it, and they know it was not from myth. what you always say wolf. about when your father would see you on tv. this was revenge. for him, it was satisfied. not just to see his son on tv, but you know that child of holocaust was reporting the news. the best revenge. is to survive and thrive. that's why it's so important that we educate and we show the world what was going on, and that's what we're doing. introducingg the sleep numumber climate 3 60 smart bet only smart t but in the world that activelyly cools. warms and
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becomes a tornado when it comes ashore, and one of the funnels did just that. and then dissipated. the other waterspout was seen during offshore before it to dissipate it. there's growing concern that the upper midwest could see major flooding next week as 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 moderate flood stage. over flooding is fairly common in minnesota and the dakotas in the spring as temperatures rise in snow melts, but because of record breaking snow over the winter flooding is expected to be severe in the coming days and weeks in parts of illinois, the mississippi river is rising and already moving into people's homes and businesses, flooding garages and exterior stairwells . according to the national weather service. the river levels are at moderate flood stage there. and could reach major flood stage next week. more than two months since the train derailment that spewed toxic smoke cross east palestine
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, ohio, the state's governor is pushing to make sure the railway pays for the long term impacts of the train crash. mike dewine says officials are still conducting air, water and soil testing and working to improve the quality of life in the community. wine also told the ceo of the railway norfolk southern that it should compensate residents for potential health issues. here is there needs to be a fund set up. uh 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 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. and in southern california, seven miles of public beach had to be closed after about 250,000 gallons of sewage spilled into the los angeles river on thursday. officials say the spill was caused by an equipment malfunction, which led to an
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overflow sewage about 15 miles from long beach sanitation department finished around of cleaning on friday, but it's still not clear when the beach will reopen. around the world. today, more than a billion people will celebrate earth day learning about environmental issues and innovative ways to protect our planet and new series. cnn's chief climate correspondent bill were speaks with one man in maine who's working to restore nutrients the ocean 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
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farmers. get mad and go, go kill that thing, right? and right there on a docking main. marty's 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, carlon. 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's what removal is.
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and you can catch the whole episode of how to unscrew the planet on the whole story with anderson cooper that's on sunday night here in the us and monday morning in asia. the coronation of king charles is exactly two weeks away today and a flower show in northern england is displaying botanical version of the big event. look the harrogate flower show is crown orb and scepter made of natural blooms. there's also a coronation cloak woven from gold blossoms. organizers say the display pace tribute to the new king's love of nature and gardening. so this was our celebration of the forthcoming coronation of the king. and we felt as though there should be something appropriate to commemorate that in a positive and joyous wear and what better way than a golden clock? i am wishes what we've used them to really celebrate the forthcoming coronation. this is all inspired by a floral display for king charles, the second in 16 60.
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tens of thousands of visitors are expected at the flower show which runs through tomorrow. kensington palace is honoring the late queen elizabeth the second on what would have been her 97th birthday, released this photograph yesterday of the monarch with some of her grandchildren and great grandchildren. in a statement, the palace as the princess of wales took the photo last summer at the family as well, moral castle residents in scotland. that's where queen elizabeth passed away last september. after a 70 year reign. alright that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom i'm kim bruun, who probably back with more news after a quick break, please do this.
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you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck. bring $10 off and free shipping at blair .com. promo code blair 10. mj lee at the white house, and this is cnn. hello and welcome to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and all around the world. i'm kim bruun. huber ahead on cnn newsroom the us supreme court moves to preserve access to a widely used abortion pill protection may not last long will break down the court's ruling and where things go next . homeowners rushing to buy guns a slew of armed property owners accused of attacking innocent people for honest mistakes. well, look at the rush to get armed fast.
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