tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN April 24, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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us here in the united states and all around the world. you are watching cnn newsroom church just ahead. we are learning more about the mission to evacuate us diplomatic personnel from sudan and the conditions, though still their face amid the fighting between rival military groups. us president joe biden is poised to announce his bid for reelection will look at the latest polling on whether americans say he should run again. and florida governor. ron desantis has not announced his plans to run yet, but he's getting a lot of attention with a series of overseas trips this week. we're live in jerusalem with a preview of one stop. live from cnn center. this is cnn newsroom with rosemary church. good to have you with us will fragile ceasefire between sudan's warring factions has ended and now the armed conflict is in its 10th day with no end
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in sight. the fighting has ravaged many parts of the country, turning buildings into child ruins. a doctor's union says most hospitals in and around the capital are now closed. as a conflict grinds on a growing number of countries have been trying to get their citizens out in the past day, they were evacuated more than 1000 people of various nationalities. spain airlifted about 100 of them in a military plane as you can see in these images over the weekend, the u. s also evacuated dozens of embassy workers and their families, and now it's trying to help private citizens get out as well. the evacuation of u. s government personnel from sudan and was a carefully planned operation. conducted swiftly and ultimately safely. cnn's carly atwood has more details on how it all played out. this was a major evacuation in the state department obviously has evacuation plans for its embassies around the world, but
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what it did in recent days with its colleagues at the pentagon was to actually get the pieces in place to carry out that evacuation, and that was carried out on saturday night after president biden and the secretary of state gave approval for that operation, the state department releasing a photo of the secretary of state with his closest colleagues, his top state department officials monitoring the situation. asian on saturday night. and of course , this was a very fast operation . these military personnel on these aircraft flying in about 100 special forces on the ground in sudan for less than an hour as they loaded up us diplomats, their family members, some diplomats from other countries a total of just under 100 people to get out of the country. they then flew out to ethiopia. and, of course, one question remaining is the status of the u. s embassy in khartoum. according to the secretary of state that remains temporarily suspended right now effectively
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closed until the u. s government can get personnel back in the country, but they can't run that embassy without us government personnel there and when it comes to us citizens who are still in sudan. we know that hundreds of them have been in touch with the state department , top state department official said on saturday night that they don't expect that there is going to be a widespread evacuation plan for by the government for those citizens and what they are telling citizens is that they do want to be in touch with them provide as much support as they can. they are providing them with some details about convoys over land routes out of the country. that are being provided by other countries. but they're telling those citizens at this time if they want to take part in those convoys to do so at their own risk. kylie atwood, cnn, the state department. and cnn's stephanie bizarri joins us now with more so stephanie what is the latest on evacuation efforts and, of course, the fighting across sudan? good
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morning, rosemary. we're entering the 10th day of this crisis in sudan and coming out of a 72 hour ceasefire that was very fragile. indeed now fighting has slowed down this morning, and it's only been spotted seen in pockets of the capital, particularly near the airport and in areas where the military. our set concentrated, ah, phone lines are down currently in the country, and there's actually internet connectivity so as the evacuation efforts go, uh, go ahead. many countries, including france and spain, have managed to get their citizens out and other countries are attempting to get their citizens out to um and sudanese are. struggling but as electricity and power out currently but returning in some parts of the capital and hospitals are also affected, and
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many people struggling to get medical treatment rosary. and stephanie. what will likely happen to those foreign citizens who haven't yet been evacuated out of sudan? yes so the many people that appealing to their government some nigerians who are stranded there, for example , appealing to their governments to say please help us to get out and that it's a difficult situation. many people can't they can't get in or get out, and some of the sudanese themselves are asking who is going to come and save us? and they are feeling abandoned, and some are feeling increasingly angry that they are. they are not getting the help and support something. if you can get planes into country, why can't medical supplies come into the country and help us to get treated and to get hospitals going, rosemary. all right. stephanie
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bizarri. joining us live from lagos sent many things. will the 2024 u s presidential election be deja vu all over again? well that's certainly shaping up that way. president joe biden expected to announce he will run for a second term soon, perhaps this tuesday. donald trump has already announced on the republican side and his casting a large shadow over other gop hopefuls. cnn has learned. president biden is planning to name julie chavez rodriguez, a senior white house adviser over see his reelection campaign. she is the granddaughter of the late labor organizer cesar chavez, but enthusiasm for a second biden run seems to be lacking. a recent poll shows 52% of democratic voters say they don't want to see biden run again. cnn white house reporter kevin liptak has more on mr biden's expected re election announcement. we do know he's up
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at camp david this weekend. he's talking to his team, making some of these final decisions on staffing operations. that sort of thing. if he does make this announcement, i think it does two things. one kind of the nuts and bolts of it unlocks this new fundraising potential for the president, and that's no small thing. this could be potentially a $2 billion campaign, and we do also. is at the end of this week . but the other thing that this would do is sort of put to rest this ongoing speculation about whether or not he would run in the president has been saying, you know, for almost two years that he does intend to run, he said, as recently as a week ago that he planned to run, but that hasn't necessarily put all of those doubts to rest. and you know the main issue with his with president biden is his age . that is the reason why a lot of people around this country a lot of even democrats have wondered whether he would go for a second term. if president biden does run for re election, he will be asking americans to get behind the idea of a
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president serving well in to their eighties that is contributing to what you see in this poll today. and what you've seen in polls recently. is this lack of enthusiasm? really for a second biden term. this nbc poll today said that 70% of americans think that biden should not run for office that include 51% of democrats, and that is in line with a lot of other polls. now we should say that poll also included a majority of americans who said that president trump should also not run for president again, so really, not a lot of it of a lot of enthusiasm. for a rematch between these two men. but we will see how this plays out as this week unfolds. let's discuss this and more with cnn senior political analyst ron brownstein is also a senior editor at the atlantic. good to have you with us? hey where's very good to be here? so president joe biden is expected to announce his 2020 for reelection campaign tuesday . but the latest ap ino rc poll shows 52% of democrats don't
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want him to run again. how will the party deal with that level of rejection? you know? look, i think the view in the white house is that in this intensely polarized era when many political scientists and political analysts believe that voters are motivated more by their dislike of the other party than their affection for their own party that ultimately those numbers will not prove consequential. you know that if joe biden is, in fact the democratic nominee the voters in the democratic coalition who have come out in large numbers to oppose the trump era gop in 2018, 2020 and 22 will fall in line that is, i think, very clearly the dominant view in the white house and the inner biden circle. there are other democrats who are worried, though, about the level of enthusiasm that you will see for biden as the nominee and this strategy of essentially hoping for the other side. to motivate your voters right? and it's worth noting that that same poll
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also found 44% of republican voters don't want former president donald trump to run again, either. but in other polls, trump is way ahead of potential rival ron desantis as the florida governor prepares to throw his hat in the ring and also set off on a world tour that includes israel. so how do you reconcile those different poll results? and what would a biden trump rematch in 2024 look like as opposed to a biden descent. this matchup yeah, well, first in terms of the republican policy, they really are not incompatible. i mean, 44% of republicans don't want donald trump to run. and almost all of the other 50% percent of him are now saying they do want him to be the nominee. i mean, that's kind of the challenge that the rest of the party you know the rest of the candidates face. i mean, there is a big block that doesn't want trump to be the nominee again, but he remains intensely popular among the non college side of the republican party. and the thing
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that i think is most ominous or scientists or mike pence or tim scott is how similar trump's coalition looks in 2024. to the winning coalition than he had in the republican primary in 2016, and once again, he's winning about half of voters without a college education. um and about only a third or less of those with a college degree. that's probably enough to win if he can sustain that. a trump biden rematch. first of all that was much more common in the 19th century from 1819 100. think we had five cases where the to the same two candidates ran against each other and consecutive races . we've only had it once since, with eisenhower leading l. e stevenson twice in the 19 fifties in the u. s. i think most people on both sides suspect that if it's trump and biden that it would be very much a game of inches that not that much would change from 2020, except that i think democrats are confident that after the events of january six and the potential that trump will be facing multiple criminal
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indictments that his ceiling would probably be just a little lower than it was last time and that he would have a very uphill climb, desantis could have similar problems and that he's moved so far to the right on social issues alienate a lot of the same white collar suburban voters have turned away from gop under trump. but there's more unpredictability uncertainty if he's the nominee, of course. meantime the gop appears ready to risk economic disaster if president biden refuses to negotiate major spending cuts in exchange for republicans agreeing to raise the debt limit to avoid default on the federal debt is that deadline looms. so how close to the brink might this get and how dangerous is this gop strategy? well, you know, in 2011 barack obama did with joe biden very actively involved did agree to negotiate with republicans over the budget as part of the discussion about how to raise the debt ceiling and that went up to the very
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last weekend before they cobble together a scale back deal that avoided default but left obama and biden convinced that this was not something they ever wanted to do again. and, in fact, in 2013 and 2014. when republicans came back and wanted to tie budget cuts and the debt ceiling, obama simply refused to negotiate with them. that's the posture that biden has maintained today. if you compare where republicans are to where they were in 2011, or even 2013, the majority is smaller. there are more extreme conservatives in that majority and they were then, and the speaker kevin mccarthy is even weaker than john boehner was, you know, in 2011 and 2013, so the prospect of a default by miscalculation if nothing else certainly seems greater than it was then the risk or the odds of that. hopefully, they understand the ramifications. here it is terrifying. ron desantis many. thanks yeah. appreciate your analysis. thank you. former us
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vice president mike pence, says his legal team has worked out a date to give testimony before the grand jury investigating the aftermath of the 2020 election. pence revealed the detail in an interview released sunday, but said he could not reveal a specific date or elaborate further. i think i'm limited about what i can say about the proceedings of the grand jury or the decision. of the judge, but people can be confident that will uh, will obey the law will comply with the love. pence did not say whether he's made a decision about running for president next year, but said if he does, he won't engage in personal attacks on his opponents. it's the food many nations rely upon and now it's a critical supply that could be cut off again will explain why the do seven and russia arguing
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over ukrainian grain and ukraine says drones are trying to destroy its air defenses will have details on those strikes, plus a relentless russian assault. along the front lines with that in just a while. my most important kitchen tool, my brain, so i chohoose areva plus, unlike somee others, plus is a multititasker supporting six key indicators of brain health. keep me sharp, areva think bigger. how do we decide what hel the book or not? i got you choice hotels as a hotel for every type of step like a comfort wh the kiddos spacious. that's what they all say. stay twice and get a $50 gift card. when you book direct at choice hotels .com. i'm world champion skier lindsey vonn. and never since i retired, i've had trouble falling asleep and staying asleep. you know, insomnia, which is making my
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thank you with promotional products from four imprint .com imprint for certain. another day of relentless russian shelling and missiles across eastern ukraine, left homes and other buildings damaged from her cave in the north to odessa in the south. the darkness of night couldn't hide the extensive damage the barrage caused. ukraine says the attacks spend the entire eastern front line but that its forces did not give up any ground. the ukrainian military also says iranian made drones have been trying to attack its air defenses around odessa, which you see here, a spokesperson says. it's evident russia has replenished its drone supply. the g seven is calling for the extension and full implementation of the black sea grain initiative. but russia is saying maybe not a top russian
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officials says moscow will terminate the agreement to allow ukrainian grain to transit the black sea. if the g seven bans its exports to russia, but the coalition of seven major countries in the eu says russia is trying to weaponize food meant for nations most in need. russian foreign minister sergei lavrov is due to discuss the grain deal with the secretary general on his visit to new york this week, and cnn's claire sebastian is covering all these developments for us. she joins us now live from london. good morning to you, claire. so what more are you learning about the juice, seven grain deal and russia's reaction? where's mary ? even before former president medvedev's threat to end it. if the g seven follows through with something it's considering which is de facto banning all exports to russia. this deal was on shaky ground. the background is that when it was first agreed last july, it was essentially
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one of two agreements. the second was a memorandum of understanding between russia and the united nations. to essentially allow the flow of russian food and fertilizer onto the market. russia has a list of demands to make that happen, including lifting a large swath of sanctions. things like reconnecting russia's state agricultural bank to swift and things like that. they are saying that is not happened yet. the enemy a recent briefing saying that they are working on it, but they essentially don't have the power. to lift those sanctions that they are working with the parties that do so russia's seizing on this now it's timing. also interesting because we have seen in the past week or so that several european countries have blocked the entry of ukrainian grain into that country's because of an access on the markets, undercutting local suppliers. poland of course, has now reinstated those imports of ukrainian grain, but this is a moment when the market was already looking pretty fragile and russia now threatening to end that deal. as
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you say lavrov, the foreign minister, he has now arrived in new york set to discuss this. this, of course, has a huge amount at stake for the global food markets. as mary and claire . you've been investigating the mysterious fleet of oil tankers that help moscow continue to export its oil under sanctions. what did you find? yes i mean, we've just been talking about how russia's war is upended global food markets. it is also upended global energy markets. we know now that some of the most stringent sanctions that the west has imposed on russia were on energy. europe has banned most imports of russian oil and refined products by c. that means that asia is picking up most of the slack while at the same time the g seven price gap allows russian oil to keep flowing as long as it's sold under the cap. all of this means that the way russian oil is being transported has changed fundamentally and that is leading to potential consequences for the transparency of those supply chains and potentially also for
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the environment. take a look. this calm blue sea of southern greece, now a new hub for russia's oil trade, taken in mid march. this satellite image shows oil tankers arranged in pairs, experts say most of them involved in akagera transfer data shows transactions like these have surged in recent months this year, on average five times more per month dotting the picturesque waters near greece's kalamata ports compared to 2021, according to cargo tracking firm kept plan. it's sort of become a ship to ship hub where smaller vessels come in from russian ports. they transfer the cargoes onto larger vessels. and then those larger vessels will head off through to asia from the rise in ship to ship transfers is part of a big shift in shipping patterns. a european union ban on most seaborne russian crude oil and refined products means russian exports now travel much longer
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distances to reach asian customers. and he says well, smaller vessels are better for docking at russian ports. they're not ideal for long haul voyage is the fact that it has loaded hs fo, which is fuel oil sanctions have also given rise to what right calls the great fleet tankers sold since russia's invasion of ukraine and his data shows exclusively now transporting russian oil or refined products, as some western ship has started to avoid it, using tracking data and corroborating with experts, we were able to pinpoint it one of those great fleet ships. in this image. here it is that larger vessel and we traced this apparent transaction back in time, the smaller vessel ducking in st petersburg in late february, where, according to kepler, it picked up a cargo of fuel oil. then we tracked it all around western europe and back here to the mediterranean, the greek coast at which point capital of data shows. it unloaded its cargo onto that
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larger, great action ship. that ship, then transited the suez canal apparently en route to asia. it's not illegal what they're doing. it's essentially a story of the transfer of ownership. oil tanker sales have surged in the past year and among them, kepler says, that same tanker here it is again tracked to the russian ports of novorossiysk in december. think tank vessels value estimates 105 tankers of a similar size changed hands in 2022. double the volume of the previous year . it also says around a third of sales this year what a newly formed companies or undisclosed buyers. at the international maritime organization in london that shift in ownership, reinforcing safety concerns around ship to ship transfers were unable to determine the level of compliance with the imo safety and environmental protection regime. the worst case scenario would be a casualty where transfer line
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breaks and you have a major spill or you have an explosion and fire. there's myriad things that can go wrong in a ship to ship transfer. it's a situation that's not going away as russia's war redraws the global energy map, creating a new logistics system increasingly controlled by lesser known players and loaded with potential risks. more as me this gray activity as expert pointed out is not necessarily illegal. the g seven price cap, as i said, allows russian oil and refined products to keep flowing . the worry is that if the oil price goes up, that means it's harder and harder to comply with the g seven price cap, and then we could see the gravely become more and more important and ship to ship transfers as they have been in the past with sanctions on iran and venezuela. become part of a sanctions evasion playbook. as of yet, experts
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telling us they're not seeing a lot of so called dark activity out there. all right. thanks for that investigation clear sebastian in london. well, the akp's filing suit after mississippi's governor signs legislation expanding state control over policing in the city of jackson will explain why that's next. prime minister benjamin netanyahu says he will meet florida's governor when he travels to israel. what this could mean for both sides. that's next. what's the number one retinol brand used most by dermatologists. neutrogena rapid wrininkle repair smooths the lok of fine lines in one week, deep wrinkles in four so you can kiss wrinkles. goodbye neutrogena. this is annie. she started school for dogs b had trouble getting alone. she needed to grow smart business loans .com. found them a bank which got them an s b a loan th a great rate. it was ft. it was easy. they
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making major changes to its judicial system. the n double acp calls the action a state takeover of the capital city and has filed a lawsuit. cnn's isabel razali's has details. at the heart of this controversial questions about racial justice and representation. the legislators who introduce these laws is bills represent areas outside of jackson. the state legislature is primarily republican and white. but the city of jackson is primarily democratic and over 80% black supporters of this new bill of these new laws, they point to the crime rate in jackson, which has seen homicide rate per year that has doubled over the past 10 years, peaking in 2021 the murder rate, 12 times the national average, making jackson one of the deadliest cities in the us let's dig a little deeper now into these new laws. here's
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what you should know. they will allow the state of mississippi to expand reach of state controlled law enforcement to the entire city of jackson. this is a force that has primarily protected the capital and the surrounding area and has not been engaged in city law enforcement force does not answer to local officials, but rather state appointed leadership. there's also major changes coming to the judicial system, which will establish a new court within the boundaries of the new capital complex improvement district. the judge there will be appointed by the republican state chief justice and the prosecuting attorneys will be appointed by the republican state attorney general. the end, filed an electronic lawsuit on friday shortly after these bills were signed into law, and here's what they said lawmakers and jackson residents have opposed both bills throughout the legislative session, citing outside attempts to increase policing without adequate training, silence, dissent from jackson residents and stripped residents of their voting power to elect judges and
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district attorneys who served their interests. we also heard from governor tate reeves before he signed those bills into law on friday. here's what he said. i won't what's best for jackson? but for us to continue to see. young kids getting killed in the streets. for us to continue to see property crimes that are happening here that are causing businesses to leave. we've got to make sure that we have all in order, and i don't think there's any doubt that if you talk to businesses, and we talked to the residents of jackson, um capitol police shows up. when there's a crime being committed in their coal. these laws go into effect . july 1st isabelle rose, olas, cnn atlanta florida's republican governor. ron desantis is in japan right now. the trip is officially part of a four country trade mission, but it
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comes amid anticipation that dissenters will announce his plans to run for president next year. earlier today, he met with the japanese prime minister formula kishida in tokyo, santos told reporters. he's not a candidate for the white house and yet i'm not. i'm not a candidate, so we'll see if and when that changes well later this week to centers will visit israel as prime minister benjamin netanyahu faces backlash for his proposal to overhaul the country's judicial system. here's what netanyahu had to say about to send his his visit. why not meet with republican governors and democratic governors? i'm not avoiding the question, and actually, i'm i'm rushing right into it and meet with every american representative governor , senator members of congress, and i think it's my job, and i think it's important for israel's bipartisan support in the united states to make a point of it. for more. let's go
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to cnn's had asked gold. she joins us live from jerusalem. good to see you heard. also israel's prime minister agreed to meet with ron desantis as part of his world trip. so what's likely to come out of that meeting for both sides given florida's governor is set to challenge donald trump for the gop nomination for president. well, this definitely sounds like for ron desantis the type of trip you would want to take before you announce your run for president to further burnish your foreign policy credentials. ron desantis is also expected to speak at an event marking the 75th anniversary of israel's founding, which is this week. this is not his first time visiting jerusalem or even visiting netanyahu he visited in 2019. where he boasted that florida was the most pro israel state in the united states. now for benjamin netanyahu, this is a pretty obvious meeting. this is a governor of a very important state with very high jewish population and also as a potential presidential candidate and will likely be a pretty friendly and easy meeting,
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especially when you look at how his relationship right now is going with the biden administration. what will be interesting to see is actually be donald trump's reaction to all of this, because if you remember when trump was an office, benjamin netanyahu and trump essentially had this bromance and trump fulfilled many of netanyahu's wish list, including recognizing jerusalem as israel's capital, moving the us embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem. but since trump left office, they've had a bit of a falling out. trump is even accused netanyahu of essentially disloyalty and there hasn't been much interaction between the two cents very interesting to see how and if donald trump will react to this meeting between the sentence and netanyahu and whether that will affect whatever potential future relationship there might be between trump and netanyahu, rosemary and handle. so you have been talking with a palestinian tv journalist about the challenges he faces reporting from israel. what did you find? rosemary so often we think about israelis and palestinians. we think that the lead these completely separate lives that
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they only meet each other in conflict. now of course, the reality on the ground, as in most places in the world is much more complicated into intertwined in that one place where that divides still, very much exists is in the media. and that's why i found this one reporter particularly interesting not only because of his personal story, but how he's breaking barriers while still facing really threats and challenges from his own community. take a look. last year, nearly every evening on israeli news channel con 11 and one of the top reporter speaks hebrew with a very slight accent . is a rare entity in israeli media. very few palestinians reporting in hebrew and not just on arab issues. how do you identify yourself? i don't know, because i was born in east jerusalem to palestinian family to a palestinian culture and i'm not ashamed to say that i'm eric palestinian. but i also live in
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israel and also feel israeli. in some ways, i don't know. i just say i come from jerusalem and i'm a journalist, and that's two most important things of my identity. i grew up in the old city of jerusalem, playing soccer in the al aqsa mosque compound attending a strict islamic boys school, though he now reports the news in fluent hebrew, he did not learn the language until he was 20 years old, which is just seven years ago. what prompted you to want to become a reporter back in the second intifada? i lived in the altar in jerusalem. and you remember that? the explosions and the busses and in jerusalem and i didn't know what's happening. you know, i didn't speak hebrew and i just look at the tv and i felt that i want to be there like i want to report. i want to do something. his journey to journalism was not a
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straight one working at a hotel studying accounting at a palestinian university and then learning hebrew before attending an israeli college, mswati landed an internship with the israeli public broadcaster. cons. arabic channel. and after it jumped to the network's main hebrew channel, he became jerusalem correspondent where he's covered everything from clashes between police and palestinians in refugee camps. to israeli politics. his first major scoop put the spotlight on his constant internal dilemma. how to balance pressure from his community versus the story. scotch 2020 showed how covid restrictions were being violated at the al aqsa mosque in jerusalem, one of the holiest sites in islam. the backlash was swift and i remember that my grandfather calling me and telling me that everyone there is, you know talking to him and tell him that what is grandson did was ashamed to the community , says he feels like he is an important voice for palestinians in the newsroom. here he breaks
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the ramadan fast this year with dates at his desk, teaching his colleagues the blessing. he says his family is proud of him. he also said they want him to quit when he visits them and shuafat refugee camp. he does so only late at night for his own protection, said you received death threats. do these come from israelis from palestinians? and how do you deal with that? i get this. i got death threats from both sides, but it was mainly from palestinians who i don't like the fact that i worked for israeli tv. my answer to that is, um, this is where you make things different, like i can make effect on people's lives were in israeli tv. i feel that that i'm you know, given a message for jewish people that if you give all the um, the people of citizens of east jerusalem a chance like i got everyone can be like me last
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month, was promoted to be a political correspondent and is even anchoring, vowing to continue breaking barriers with every report. and solomon is also moving from his hometown of jerusalem to the skyscrapers of television is part of his promotion. quite a rise for somebody if you think about it didn't even speak the language he reports in until seven years ago. rosemary impressive report . they had us gold. many thanks. joining us live from jerusalem, and we'll be right back. quick why burn a candle when you can switch to aiairway essential missed the portable andnd modern way y to transform fragrance infused with natural essential oils into a mist upgrade to air done. hmm what out these looks right. quick the quicker picker
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select bestsellers plus get free design services uber .com who's talking to chris wallace? season starts friday night at 10 on cnn. welcome back, everyone, well activists who fled iran finding the government is tracking them to discourage dissent. the repressive regime in tehran is even targeting the families they left behind some a abdelaziz picks up the disturbing story from paris. skin women and girls hair flowing dancing at a gathering
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in paris for women life freedom slogan of iran's anti government movement, but even here firmly within the borders of europe, activists say to france, tentacles can reach and crush voices of dissent. activists kumari fled here to france about four years ago as a political refugee since i'm here i am i can freely explained. my feelings are trying to be the voice of my people in iran that are suffering, says she soon found herself under threat again . she says iran's intelligence service was harassing her parents back home. demanding to speak to her. they taken my mother's phone and they pushed me and they forced me to call my mother's phone. and then there was a guy who answered. this man answered. your mother's exactly . kumari said she recorded the chilling call with a man she believes is a member of iranian intelligence. cnn cannot verify that had it done whatever
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actions you take against the islamic republic there in france is a crime, the man says. our family will answer for it just joined. no, sir, she responds. nowhere in the world is that the law establishment? listen he says, your mother will be taken to even prison at her age. your sister and your follower will also be taken to even prison. they will be interrogated so hard. i mean, because i don't understand how far these people can go. the islamic republic is brutally cracking down on a popular uprising that has rocked the country for months. dissidents abroad play a crucial role in this movement carrying protesters demands from the streets of iran into the halls of western governments. that's exactly why iran is expanding its repression. campaign says this activist of three decades.
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it is a fact that the regime of iran they have the power, but we are the opposition, but we are think numerous. we have a breach , which today the people inside and outside and nowhere is safe . i could have been killed. in january, the u. s. justice department uncovered a plot to assassinate prominent iranian dissident hot ali najib near her home in brooklyn. the state department has warned that tehran is engaged in other acts of transnational repression, too. intimidate or exact reprisal against individuals outside of the country's sovereign borders, according to a 2022 report. cnn's request for comment to iran's authorities have gone answered for now. kumari says her parents are safe , but she barely speaks to them as a precaution. how how do you still come out and do your work ? and i'm not gonna stop my activities because they are threatening me? critical
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community in exile, under threat and under pressure but unbowed and unafraid some of the disease . cnn paris and we'll be back in just a moment. the railroad luxury is can't say tongue. the rope. celine luxury is something amazing for 90% off retail. it's thousands of new finds everyday . it's all been authenticated. it's breaking rules fashion that's actually good for the planet. it's knowing i deserve this. it's knowing i belong here . whatever i wanted to be. the real real luxury is yours to define it now and get 20% offt the real real .com te supply. i wastuck.nresolved depression. sympto were in my way i needed more for my lift to an antidepressant is a
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now. 807 100020. twitter's blue checkmark chaos is getting even more complicated. after elon musk removed the verifications last week, they started popping up again on some accounts over the weekend and with it a note saying those users bought twitter blue, but there's one problem. many did not even accounts of people like pele or kobe bryant claim. they purchased twitter blue, even though they passed away long before its inception. earlier i spoke with thomas domain senior reporter with gizmodo and i asked him how this move will impact what is credibility. he took something that was incredibly valuable right? people wanted to be verified on twitter. it was sort of a status symbol. it gave you a boost in the algorithm, and he turned it into sort of a weird mark of cain that it was a sign that you're a supporter of elon musk,
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which is something that a lot of people don't want to be given how he's presented himself and it constant lot of really serious problems we saw immediately, people impersonating celebrities and, you know more importantly institutions, right? i looked at pages for the i r s right, which collects tax axes in the united states, there were at least six different accounts masquerading as the irs. this can cause really serious problems, and it's why twitter introduced this system in the first place because on a platform that's this big, insignificant. it's important to know that important people are who they say they are . so he took something that people wanted and turned it into something that people actively didn't want. there were people who after he removed all of the blue checks from the old accounts. still had them for some strange reason. that wasn't entirely clear and people were actively trying to get rid of these blue checks or confirmed that they didn't they weren't actually paying you on musk. i swear i'm not one of these people. uh it's really astonishing how badly he mismanaged this because i think
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it's something that actually could have made him a lot of money if he would handle it a little more carefully. right now, it's become a badge of honor not to have the check mark and me included. i'm sure you same. realizing what was happening, of course, max mask tried to give back some blue check marks too big celebrities , but the damage was already done with many of those bigger accounts, calling on everyone to hashtag block the blue accounts because they can't be trusted as anything but of course, paid accounts trying to cause havoc here. so what will be the impact of this effort to block paid accounts? and why didn't must realize how this would play out? in terms of what he didn't realize that i think there's honestly no other answer than what we're seeing is someone who's not thinking critically about his actions before he takes them, which is something that maybe works when you're running a company that makes rockets or cars but on social media, where you've got hundreds of millions of people, you need to proceed a little more
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carefully. i think it really is going to do long term damage to twitter as a platform it like we've already seen a number of examples of people trying to launch up alternate natives and people migrating to other systems because they just lost like you said, trust in twitter, and also it's lost kind of the fun. i think for a lot of people here, it's a move that i think has really done permanent damage to twitter's reputation. i think it's going to be difficult for it to get it back, and it could be the beginning of the end for this platform. alright. i want you to take a look now at this astonishing video from a falling skier's helmet camera, it shows a member of an expert skiing team tumbling into a deep crevasse in the french alps. incredibly the skier was unhurt . his team told cnn. they were able to get him out in five minutes, thanks to the right equipment. and this happened last year, but the team said
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it's posting the video now to remind other skiers to take proper precautions. and thank you so much for spending part of your day with me. i'm rosemary church, cnn newsroom continues with max foster and bianca nobilo next. for people who are a little intensnse about hydration neutrogena hydro boooost lightweight, clinically proven 48 hour hydration for that healthy skin glow neutrogena for people with skin over 100 million americans have low or no credit sel is a new way to build credit. no credit score
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