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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  April 28, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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consumer cellular.
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russian missile strikes across ukraine targeting
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innocent civilians and an apartment building where 21 people have been killed so far, and crews are pulling the bodies from the rubble. search crews are on the ground in southern ukraine. and in space, the first arab astronaut to perform a space walk, and more on this nearly seven-hour space walk. and now, a flash point on the college campuses as the students are protesting controversial speakers. we are following these stories all coming in right now to "cnn news central." new images are coming out of central ukraine this morning, and they break your heart. the devastation left of a russian missile attack that is part of a wave, and you can see the pieces of the concrete
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hanging off of the building. look at how many crews are on the ground and all looking desperately to find anyone alive and help them. this is an apartment building in uman and rescuers are working around the clock to try to find survivors. in the last few hours, they are pulling out body after body, and at least 19 civilians have been killed there in uman. a woman and her 2-year-old child were killed in dunipro. and first we want to go to nic robertson where he is seeing the bodies being pulled from that building right where you are. what is the latest of what you
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seeing? >> 3 of the 19 people that you are talking about being killed here are children. the rescue workers are still looking into basement area. if you can zoom in on them there, and those firefighters, and you will notice that there are far fewer of the firefighters than there were before. what we are beginning to see here as far as the basement of the building is concerned, and remember, when the siren is going off, many people will hide in the basements and we are seeing the bodies coming out, and the diggers are clearing out the basement to see if there is anymore bodies coming out, but it is looking like they are to the end of that, but david, if you are tilting up, you can see higher up on the 8th, and the 9th floors, the apartments are completely pancaked, and we know that her friend was in one of the eighth floor apartments, and the lady survived, but the husband is in the rubble.
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somewhere up there they believe is a 13-year-old girl and her sister still up there, and the police say they will continue to search through the debris here. they are bringing in a dna team so that relatives who are here gathered around the site can give their dna to the police to use that in this recovery effort. the police say they will continue to work into the night. 109 people registered living in this building, and not clear how many were in the beds when the missile struck. many said that they heard the roar of the missile coming in, and one lady literally put her kids in the bathtub and put pillows over their heads, and she had no idea what would happen. but the mission here from the number of the workers here, it is slowing down, and this is giving you the idea, that this is really not rescue anymore. it is recovery.
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>> yeah, that is, yeah, that is going to go on for a long time now. nic, thank you for that. npw, what this is speaking to is what is the next phase of the war that we are looking at which could be starting in earnest now, and what are you learning about with the ukrainian offensives as far as preparations? >> they are tight lipped which make the comments of alexi this morning saying that preparations are coming to the end, and in a global sense, we are in a high percentage mode, and the next step is up to the general star, and the military commanders, and when it is god's will referring to the rain here and the commander, it is god's will.
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they will not announce the offensive and saying that we are ready to go. it is something that is suggesting that we are beginning to see the counter offensive, and there are e strick shuns on our reporting, too. so there is a building of an tis nation and explosion, too, of southern areas of the zaporizhzhia which has been in a defensive stance, and building up two other targets which are important in the rat cheling up. m they want to be swift, and not get into russia's heavily banned
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troops who are providing training and maybe they can pull it off, and maybe we will see it in the hours or the weeks ahead. >> nick paton walsh, and also nic robertson on the ground following this attack. thank you, both. and now, millions of people will be in the path of a storm. and now, there is a thunderstorm that is causing yosemite park to close today. widespread flooding as the swollen mississippi river is continuing to rise. and we are going to derek van dam with the threat of weather today, and what are you seeing? >> texas is the bull's eye, and they have had a rough week, and i will show you imagery of the i-35 corridor from dallas for
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worth to san antonio, and this is the greatest risk, and there is a 3 of 5 where the orange is locate, and large hail is a disticket possibly, and the hatched area, this particular location has potential for 2" or larger diameter of hail which is the experience of larger central portion of texas which is the image out of waco which is gorilla-sized hail. we have super sell thunderstorms which have the outdrafts and that is cornerstone of the storms out of texas. and you will get this undulations 30,000 feet of the freezing line and they become so large and fall to the ground, and i like a good grapefruit for
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breakfast, but falling from the sky is not what you want to experience. >> so we have gone from lacrosse to tennis ball-sized hail to grapefruit. that is a serious escalation, and so dangerous. thank you for that. in a new update, former vice president mike pence has testified before a grand jury about the circumstances surrounding the attack on the capitol january 6th. it lasted more than five hours, and he has denounced trump's efforts to overturn the election, but this is the first time that pence has had to speak under oath with the president he served. another day in court for former magazine article writer
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jean carroll, and she said, i am telling you whether i screamed or not, he raped me. she said that he attacked her character when she spoke publicly about the incident. and so what else happened in that intense cross-examination? >> yes. it happened about four hours and the most intense moments were the ones when he, trump's attorney joe tacopina repeatedly asked carroll if she was fighting for her life in that dressing room. and also asked her about the recollection of some things, and
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motive. she agreed to go to this story when the attack happened in 1995 or 1996, and only went public in 2019 when she went public with the book, and only went public when she was pitching the book. she acknowledged that on the stand, and motivated by other women coming forword and times had changed. this is what she said in the testimony, i was afraid that donald trump would retaliate and he did. i was not a pioneer. i am a follower. i saw women coming forward against harry weinstein, and i thought why don't i come forward. she knew that he would retaliate against her and this is what happened, and part of the lawsuit is a defamation part of it, and he denied it and said it is part of the book. she will be back on the stand
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and he said he is only about halfway through of his examination. and there are going to be two more witnesses who say that he attacked them. and the reason we cannot see this in person is because cameras are not allowed in the court. and now, americans are told to get out of the country in sudan now. plus, a train derailed right into the mississippi river and four people were hurt. and the question now is if the hazardous material on board could affect, and now the historic achievement high, high, high above the earth.
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on the radar this morning, the survivek roommate in the attack that killed four idaho college students, bethany funke's attorney agreed to make her available, because she may have information unique to her experiences. officials this morning is reassuring the public that there is no hazardous material leaking into the mississippi river after a train derailment sent two cars into the water. one was carrying paint and another carrying liquid lithium carbon. and now, the base named
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robert e. lee is now going to be fort greg adams. and lieutenant charity adams was the first black officer in the women's auxiliary office, and general robert craig ending his career as a three-star general and the only living person to have a base named after him. >> i hope that this community will look with pride on the name fort gregg adams and that the name will instill pride in every soldier entering our mighty gates. >> i am sure it will. fort gregg adams is one of the army installations being renamed in honor of the confederate officers. >> stepping out of the international space station and into the history books is the
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reality of fulton arinati as he steps out to space. can you give us a sense of what they are doing right now? are these live picture here? very cool. >> yes, this is live from space, and the helmet cam for steve bowen and he is the first submarine officer to be brought on board at nasa as an astronaut. his companion is sul ton abni arinati, and they are calling him the sultan, and this is the
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second emirati to go into space. and so it is interesting to see the uae to show their presence in space. >> what does it mean that they are trying to upgrade the station's power channels? >> yeah. you know, the solar rays are old, and so they are doing to be bringing in some new upgraded solar power capability laying the groundwork for the solar rays to be installed on a later spacewalk. this is spacewalk 86 for international space station, and i remember reporting back in the early days that nobody thought that they could do meaningful work in space, and here it is spacewalk 86, and the meaningful structure can be modified and improved with human beings in the voice. >> there is so much change in how we see what is happening in
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space. and also, who is allowed to do this, because now, there are a lot of the private companies will let the public go at some point in time, and how do you see the future of space, and that being where you could go like say me and you? >> i hope so, sara. if you go with me, we could have a pretty good time. the dam is breaking finally after all of these year, because the number of people who had flown to space was on the order of 500, and now on the order of 600 and it would be nice to get 600 per day. things are changing quickly, and we have seen wa what is happening with blue origin and virgin galactic and spacex, and the united arab emirates wants to build a port in the country to allow the tourists to access space. this is clearly a trip for those
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the challenge ahead for the monarchy, and what the british people really think of the new king. scary moments as people are rushing to escape sudan, and plane was shot at as it was trying to evacuate people from khartoum. details straight ahead. you know you have a team behind you that can help yoyou. not having to worry about the fufuture makes it possible to make the present as best as it can be for everybody. dry skin is seitive skin, too. and it's natural.
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welcome back to "cnn news central." the top story this morning. apartment building is smoldering after a deadly missile attack in ukraine. the death toll has risen to at least 19 people. and then a mother and two children were also killed. they are searching for survivors in both of those incidents. and now, looking at the video from the capital khartoum, and you can see the smoke rising in distance from the air strikes, and even though the evacuations are being targeted. you can see a bullet hole in a turkish plane that was shot while trying to get the citizens out. the plane was able to land safely thankfully, but the latest incident highlights the dangers of not only getting out of sudan yourself, but trying to help people get out of the
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country. the american teacher deanna welker is sharing her harrow rowing story of how to get from khartoum to north carolina. before she left, she took a video of the smoke from outside of her apartment building. she recorded the sounds of loud gun fire and explosions. listen. cnn's kylie atwood is at the state department with the latest. what more can you tell us about welker's journey to get out of sudan. >> listen, kate. she was able to walk cnn through the journey. it began early in april when all of the gunshots started to be heard by her outside of her apartment in khartoum. she is an american teacher living there and working there.
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after that happened, she had to move to a safer place. she moved to two different hotels. she spent four nights in the separate hotels, and then finally after what she says was messages from the u.s. state department telling them that they should not expect any u.s. government-led evacuation, they found out that the french embassy was going to be leading an evacuation and welcomed the u.s. citizens to get on that evacuation flight, so april 24th, flown from sudan to djibouti on a french military flight. she was along with many other teachers on the flight, and also, as you said, she is now finally home here in the united states. one thing she pointed out speaking to cnn, is that the americans who are in sudan there, they are not there for vacation, but humanitarian and educational reasons, and that is why she is making the case that the u.s. government should do more to support their evacuation
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to get out of the country. this is some to quotes that she told our colleagues about what she this about now that she is safely home, but others aren't saying, i'm out and i'm safe, but so many people that i care about and worked with aren't. i worry now, because the internet keeps going out. so it is hard to get information and find out who's where, who's safe. kate, that is is the story that we have heard from repeatedly of the americans trying to get in touch with the people back home, so even if they are in caravans back home, the concerning thing is that the family members may not hear from them hours on end. >> we asked john kirby about it when he was on the show earlier this week, they will continue to face questions about this as the cease-fire in khartoum and across the country is clearly not holding. thank you for stag on top of it. appreciate it.
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since the crisis has unfolded the biden team has put it, it is not standard practice to evacuate american citizens from war zones, but there were instances when the military has done that, and in rwanda when the marines evacuated 241 civilian citizen. and in 2004, americans were rescued from albania. and 2006, a massive evacuation effort bringing in sea and air assets to help nearly 15,000 american assets from the war between hezbollah, and also, over 1999, 2002 and 2003. >> important context.
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and campuses are swirling over freedom of speech and the political clashes over transgender rights. and days away over the coronation of king charles and in-depth look over how that country is preparing for the newest monarch. stay with us. ha-ha! it was me the whole time. -whoo-hoo! -[ laughs ] well done, ma'am. what...did i do exactly? with snapshot from progressive, you get a persalized discount for doing exactly what you're already doing -- being a safe driver. congratulations. this is a bowling trophy. yeah, it's the biggest one they had. okay, thanks. mm-hmm. oh. have a good one.
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state law in minnesota after governor tim walz signed new legislation. the campaign says that across the country 110 state bills to bar citizens from care. and it is a flash point specifically on college campuses. ellie reit has that story. >> trans lives matters. >> reporter: and that is a speech at the cpac. >> they must be brought to rights. >> reporter: he was known as transgenderism. and it sparks the debate whether
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kids these days have the right to debate controversial issue on campuses. is free speech dead on campuses? >> no, he is speaking right now, and we are not shutting him down, and we don't want him to speak, but we can hopefully drown him out. we are now enacting our right to free speech just the way that he is. >> you cannot debate intolerance, and if someone wants to inflict harm on you, are you going to debate them inflicting harm on you. >> thank you very much. that is kind of you. >> trans rights are human rights! >> reporter: as the debate started, some were removed. this has parked debates nationwide. in utah and new york last month, and stanford students heckled a law judge, and the dean declined
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cnn's request for a judge. >> and i think they take less crap as they get older and realize that hate speech is hate speech, and free speech is free speech and the two are very different. >> reporter: and then the university has to deal with the backlash, and then the group will post videos of how they were humiliated. >> it is not a surprise that these things happen, but it is trying to provoke the liberal students to having a reaction and making sure that it is filmed an edited in a way that makes the students look as bad as possible. >> reporter: the isu hospital says it has no intention to
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bring provocative speechers, but wants to provoke students to have thought into the conversation. >> there has to be a reason to put people in front of them, and in place of value, you get controversy. >> more than 11,000 people signed a petition against speakers invited to pitt and they went forward saying it upholds freedom of speech, and the speech can contradict the values of the university. they invited a trans speaker and then the speaker pulled out. and then they offered charlotte cli klimer to sub in $10,000.
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>> yes, that would pay off my car. >> have you been offered that much? >> no. >> reporter: what does that say to you? >> they are willing to pay anything to grow their enterprise. i don't know why trans folks are to accept the premise that our humanity is up for debate. if it were to allow racial segregation in society, we would not have a debate about that. that would be unaccessible. >> reporter: and finally they did find a person to debate knowles. >> thank you for joining us, and how much did they pay you? >> a lot. >> reporter: and i decided not to debate anything other than the opening remarks.
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after it got going, no one was ushered out. >> that is freedom of speech shutdown and you can see it in modern society. >> reporter: can you see a panel of whether or not there should be legal murder? >> no. murder is objectively wrong and killing someone and i would not put it on the same line. as i said about shutting down free speech, this is a good example of the fact that clearly something is going on here. >> reporter: that loud boom was an incendiary device that was set off, and some buildings were temporarily shutdown. >> reporter: is this debate to convince some people in this room or on the internet? >> the goal is to make some leftist kid feel like an idiot.
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so i hope that leftist kids are here to oppose knowles and do so respectively. >> reporter: so the protesters burned michael knowles effigy and protected speech. >> i would not do that, because it is counter productive and what they do is to take the image of that and they say, see, putting it online, and they burn an effigy of anyone who disagrees with them. >> reporter: but she says that it is different. >> we are also taught that there is a certain amount of abuse that we need to take to push the ball forward. and gen z refuse to accept the premise. >> reporter: why do these always get reduced to free speech
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debates? >> when i back you into the corner, it is because you don't believe in free speech, and it is is the cowards' way to back down and you should say, this is what i believe and not some constitutional gloss of why you say matters. and so s, the professor weighed in that there should be some way for the learning of what the students are going to weigh in, and there should be some accountability for what is said. >> ellie, i hope people pay attention and how you told the story, because it built to an important climax at the end where you point out that sometimes in all of this, we
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have lost sight of what the actual discussion is, and that might be on purpose. >> the activists would certainly agree. >> elle, thank you. and for the first time, we are hearing from brittney griner, and her head coach joins us as the phoenix mercury prepares for the first game. >> and we are weeks away from the big monarch coronation. to find options within your budget. good lucuck young man. realtor.com to each their homeme.
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final preparations are under way in london just one week away now from the coronation of king charles. this is going to be only the second ever televised coronation of the british monarch, and the first was of course queen elizabeth and that is 70 year ago and it has many asking what this moment and the man mean for the modern world, and this week on the whole story. erica hill goes in search of those answers with a preview of king charles himself. >> reporter: when we are talking about camilla and her p.r., it was a slow steady playing the long game. from public enemy number one to where she is now, soon to be queen, crowned in westminster
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abbey. she has a consciousness of her image and also consciousness of the english royalty to which she belongs. >> charles was very jealous of diana's celebrity. >> and she fits in so much better than diana, because he is not jealous of her. >> and so you traveled to london and i am curious what people were telling you about, and regular folks about what is it going to be king charles and for so long it was queen elizabeth. >> and so we have interesting reactions, because i have covered a diamond jubilee and will and kate's wedding, and
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that was 12 years ago and so now, queen elizabeth was on the throne for 70 years and to the fact that it is a man that is interesting and we have had a woman on the throne and we didn't know much, but we know a lot about king charles, so you have heard a lot of reaction, and in this moment, too, when you are making a change after 70 years, there are questions that have always existed and getting a lot of attention, and not only now because of the change in monarch, and what is the mon monarchy, and why do we have a monarchy in 2023, and what do they do, and take a look at how we got here, and how did this tiny nation become so powerful, and how was the empire built upon and built, and a lot of young people are asking the questions, and they want a more fulsome picture. >> and it is not a pretty picture of how the empire was build. and there is something that parallel between prince harry
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and maybe king charles? >> well, this surprised me, and we assembled the scholars and journalists and those who were closest to the king and king charles and those who worked in the household, and fathe similarities of prince harry of i was carved for this and the power of good, and so many said that it reminds them of prince charles as he was waiting 70 years to take the throne to figure out what would he do as the monarch in waiting? how would he use the power essentially for good, and he was pushing back on the institution. so it is interesting. >> it is interesting, because you don't see that so much to, the public does not see that and you have to be an insider to
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abdi abdicated, and people hate for me to bring that up, including my mother. >> and we will talk about that if it should happen again. >> thank you, erica hill. speaking of watching, watch "the reign begins" this sunday with "the story" with anderson cooper" and the coronation the next week with erica and john. >> i can't wait for erica's report. the river is nearing the crest, and a waive of dead ly missile strikes in ukrkraine as bodies are recovered. ♪ ♪ ♪ be by your side... ♪ ♪ i'll be there... ♪ get refunds.com powered by innovation refunds
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