tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN November 25, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am PST
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we are seeing in we are journalists. sir tell us. >> ask our commander. >> no no no. >> sir, sir, sir, it's okay, it's okay, we were told -- we are point sir, sir, we are. we are yes, but we asked, we asked sir sir point we asked. we asked and they said go. hello, and welcome to our views joining us from the
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united date and all around the world. i am layla. it is day three of the four-day truce between hamas and israel. and the israeli government now has the names of the hostages who will be freed on sunday. 13 israelis and for tai prame nationals were released on saturday but only after an hours long delayed threatened to attend the exchange. following preliminary medical checks all of the former hostages were taken to israeli hospitals for care and to be reunited with their families the deal also called for the release of 39 palestinian prisoners and detainees on saturday earlier, hamas had stalled on releasing the hostages. in a dispute over which palestinian israelis were willing to release. a group, save 187 trucks made it into gaza saturday with food, water, fuel, and medical supplies. it is only a small fraction of
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what is needed .61 of those trucks reached heavily damaged northern gaza. the most trucks in one day since the war began. elliott got ken is following all of this for you from london. a very good morning, elliott pick the second hostage- prisoner exchange completed. but after a nerve racking delay. >> that's right, layla, you can imagine the anxiety among israelis, especially among the families of abductees who were due to be released all those hours they were waiting to see if it was actually going to happen in the end, it did, and a further 13 israelis were freed after 50 days in captivity when they were objected during hamas is murderous rampage october the seventh. they are now safely back in israel .26 in total who have been freed so far by hamas. this is out of a total of 50
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which the agreement calls for. at the same time, a further 39 palestinian prisoners, women, and minors who wrote released from israeli prisons that takes it to 78 out of 150 total who are expected to be released under the terms of this agreement. now this delay apparently, according to hamas, at least, was brought about over disputes over the amount of aid that was going into israel loses into the gaza strip, excuse me but also the identity of the palestinian prisoners do to be freed i think israel was also a bit concerned about the identity of all the israeli captives being freed. this particular concern i think about one of the hostages. 13-year-old girl who was freed yesterday on saturday by hamas but there was no sign of her mother. now we don't know the precise details of the agreement between israel and hamas of course, brokered by the qatari's. it is not been published but israel says part of the deal is
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that mothers are not separated from their children when they are free to pick and that is something israel says that happened yesterday when the mother was not freed at the same time. israel is a it is unknown where she is and what happened to her. so that is something that is obviously causing more anxiety. i'm sure amid the joy, of course among the israelis and the israeli families of those who have now been reunited with their loved ones, of course a bittersweet emotion because there is still all of those hostages and 200 or so remaining in captivity with hamas inside the gaza strip. but as we say, as we enter day three of this truce, it does seem to be holding, layla. >> it seems to be holding, but as the deadline for the end of the truce nears, i am wondering, will it make things more difficult >> i think as we get there,
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course, we see these negotiations for this deal in the first place were incredibly complex. and we've also seen that the mechanics of the israeli captives being freed and the palestinian prisoners being released is also incredibly complex and all manner of things can throw this truce off and bring it to a premature end. of course it is also possible that under this agreement, israel says that for every 10 additional hostages that hamas releases, there will be another day of truce. so it is possible that it could actually go on beyond the four days that has initially been agreed. but as you say, as we closer to thdeadline we have seen this on a smaller scale with previous flareups between israel and militants inside the gaza strip. but you reach, as you close to the end of a truce or a cease-fire, there is always the possibility that things will start to unravel before they are meant to do so. as we say, the hope and so far
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we have seen this happening. the truce is holding. the freeing of the israeli captives and also foreign workers being held by hamas in the gaza strip is continuing and the release of those palestinian prisoners is also continuing and the hope is that today, on day three of this truce, things continue to go off as planned and, of course, the hype is that this truce will continue and more hostages will be freed, as well. for now, the focus is on day three of this truce and to see if there are already more delays or more surprises of the sort that we saw on saturday were things will go a bit more fully. layla? click elliott gotkine in london, thank you. on the palestinian side, 39 former prisoners are spending their first morning at home following their release by israel on saturday. they were freed and returned for the hostages headed over to israel by hamas. the former prisoners received a celebratory walk of in the
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occupied respect. >> reporter: for yet another night, the crowd had gathered to show their support of palestinian prisoners in detail need that have been released. today we have seen some 39 prisoners released among them, 33 miners, children under the age of 18 many of them held under the administrative detention, meaning no charges were laid against them no ongoing legal process. throughout the day we have seen families waiting anxiously to find out whether or not their loved ones would be listed in the 39 released on saturday. we managed to catch up with the family who were waiting to find out whether or not 17-year-old would be released. of course, we have now seen utter relief to find out that their son has now been released and held under administrative attention. please it is an undescribable feeling.
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we thank god, he brought us out of the place we are in. it is a relief. praise be to god. >> i can't describe how i feel. i seriously can't believe it i'm in a dream, my son is with me. praise be to god and god willing every other will find my joy, god willing. i can't say anymore, may god spread joy to all the palestinian people. may god grant them happiness. we want to smile and laugh, thank god. >> over the course of this four- day truce we are expected to see a total of 150 prisoners and detainees at least released as part of that exchange agreement between israel and hamas. there are many families still hopeful that they will see their loved ones released as part of this agreement. we have been speaking to many families, many locals here and saying while they are happy and welcomed at the release of their loved ones, many of their friends and neighbors, their
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happiness is subdued. they say they have paid a heavy price for the release of these detainees and prisoners referencing the war in gaza and the mounting civilian death toll that we have seen in the gaza strip. of course, this is a very delicate, very fluid situation and it remains to be seen whether or not the terms of that truce are upheld over the next few days, whether we will continue to see these palestinian prisoners and detainees released and of course whether we continue to see the safe return of israeli hostages currently held captive by hamas in gaza. cnn. >> a policy analyst, she joins me from oakland, california. a warm welcome to cnn. tellingly, this group of detainees that has been released is very much like the first group that has been liberated, women and children, and tellingly, while some have
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been sentenced for crimes, the majority had been under administrative detention, meaning not charged, not put on trial, not convicted of anything. how common is that form of imprisonment by israel? yes, so just to take a step back , administrative detention is a policy under israeli military law that allows for palestinians to be detained in military prisons indefinitely without charge and without the ability to stand trial they are arrested and held under secret information that neither they nor their lawyers are ever privy to. and since the beginning of the military occupation of the west bank in 1967, and the military law, israel has used this policy to routinely imprison thousands of palestinians are particularly targeting activists , political leaders, students, children, right now there is about 36 children under administrative detention. people who work for nonprofits
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and human rights organizations. and this policy is above all a policy to try to crush dissent to israel's continued control over the palestinians and to try and fracture and break palestinian society so that we cannot make our demands for freedom. so right now israel has ramped up its administrative detent of policy and it has reached a 20 year high. there are 2000 palestinians in administrative detention point thousand of them were arrested in the last seven weeks alone. >> just because when you hear administrative detention, it sounds very abstract. so what kind of evidence is required for someone, a child or adult to be held under administrative detention? >> so we actually have no access to the evidence that is used to keep them in detention. this is only shared between the military judge, who is a soldier, and the israeli intelligence.
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the lawyer nor the person in administrative detention is ever privy to this information. what i can tell you is how administrative detention affects the detainee and their families themselves. it is not only a gross violation of international law because of the lack of due process and the right to a fair trial, but it also has a major psychological impact on the detainees and their families because they have no idea why they are being detained. there no idea how long they are going to be detained and their lives are completely upended in their futures aren't search empirically the other thing i'm told is that many children picked up by the idf will be interrogated without a parent present and can spend days in solitary confinement. is that your experience? >> yes. that is accurate. and it is very harrowing. so when children are arrested, they are usually arrested actually when all palestinians are wrested, they are usually arrested during a late-night raid or an early morning raid
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on their home. and they are wrested without a word, they are taken, blindfolded and handcuffed, their families do not know where they have gone and often times it takes 24 hours to 48 hours to even be able to locate what detention center they are in and during that period, children have said and have testified that that is when they are experiencing a lot of torture where they are being beaten, where they are being put in stress positions. they are not treated like children or afforded any rights as children. they are criminalized like adults and they are treated with the same brutality as adults. they often go, undergo law military interrogations and they are forced to make confessions under duress and torture without the presence of their parents or a lawyer. >> and this, of course, really remarkable, the children are being tried by military courts which is quite unique, i
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understand, as well. so the other thing that is quite remarkable is the military courts in israel have, i understand, a nearly 99% conviction rate. i mean, that seems ordinary. i mean, these kids and people who come before the court don't stand a chance. >> right. well, israel, just to mention, is the only place in the world where children are charged and tried in military courts. and there is an extremely high conviction rate because this is a system that is meant to control the palestinian population. and so the children that are being detained in the system are, it is used to intimidate and punish them more largely palestinian demand for freedom. you know, since 1967, at least 1 million palestinians have been arrested. that is one fifth of the total population. so either every palestinian has been arrested or know someone who has it has become part of
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mediating the hostage deal negotiation says it is hoping to extend the truce beyond the agreed upon for days. meantime, trying on multiple to keep the current deal going. the qatari foreign affairs ministry spokesperson told cnn he is working with senior qatari officials to alleviate concerns from both sides. the other is not living up to the agreement. he also says he is working with israel, hamas, egypt, and the united states to ensure the agreed upon number of eight trucks is reaching gaza. as we reported, aid groups say 61 trucks arrived in northern gaza saturday. it is the most on a single day since october 7th. and u.s. president joe biden spoke with on day two of the hostage release, working the phones to resolve any delays in the process and to expedite the release of american hostages held by hamas cnn is with the
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president in massachusetts. >> reporter: the white house is closely watching the coming hours, waiting to hear whether any american citizens will be part of the next group of hostages that are expected to be released on sunday. no american citizens are included in the first releases that occurred on friday and saturday but the white house is there hope will that at least three americans will be coming out in the coming days. it is expected that they will be part of this larger group that had been negotiated to release 50 women and children, and the american citizens who are officials are focusing in on our to women's and also that young 4-year-old girl whose parents were killed in the october 7th attack by hamas. but it also comes as president biden has been working the phones trying to ensure that this deal and the implementation remains on track . on saturday, he spent some time on the phone speaking with
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-- there were some delays in the hostage situation concerns that things would fall apart for saturday point the president spoke with them to talk about the potential hurdles and also ways to overcome it and ultimately around 1:30 p.m. on saturday, the white house got word that the deal was moving forward. the release is moving forward and the red cross will soon trade those hostages. vice president, harris spoke to us here >> some issues and challenges around implementation. president biden spoke with to resolve those issues and i do believe they are being resolved. they are going to be continue to be diligent in doing all that we can in that regard to ensure that there is humanitarian aid going and that hostages are going out and our highest priority, of course, the american citizens. >> the white house has been unable to pinpoint the exact date that the americans will be released but they are hopeful that they will be released in the coming days and others also
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concerned about the other americans believed to be held hostage by hamas. there are about 10 americans who are unaccounted for. the president told reporters on friday that he did not know all their conditions. cnn, traveling with the president in nantucket, massachusetts. a former u.s. director of hostage rescue and recovery says it is common to have delays in agreements like these, especially since, as is considered a terrorist organization by the u.s. and the eu cares what christopher valerio told cnn's alex marker earlier. >> reporter: were you surprised that this plan was thrown into doubt earlier in the day, questions about whether it would happen all. russians whether the israeli military would start up their military operations again. where do you think that this was to be expected because of how fluid the situation has been? >> i think this is a day today deal. it is fragile.
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it can come collapsing down at any day. earlier in the hour you had the idf spokesman talking about the fact that one of the principles in this negotiation is a terrorist organization if they can use this, cancel this agreement day today, to their advantage. they can mentally manipulate the israeli people, terrorize them, hold the families hostages , which is exactly what happened today and then the mental roller coaster for the victims who might have thought they were being released and then put back into captivity. their resistance posture and ability to endure this start to go into a spiral when that happens. >> what does that mean for how much faith you have in this four days of pause will actually happen and the possibility of several days more beyond that? >> i would be shocked if it went smoothly, to be completely honest, which i know that is not what hostage families want to hear. but when i was doing government,
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we were very direct with the hostage families. we laid out with the conditions are and we continue to work the problem and try to find adaptive solutions but you cannot do if your faith in a terrorist organization. we do this because hostagetaking works. one only has to look back to the 1972 attack israeli hostages were taken, they were killed and massacred and two years later, speaking on the floor of the u.n. general assembly with a gun belt on so hostagetaking works, hamas knows that and they're using, this as leverage to buy time and gain leverage with israel. the other thing is, they can cancel it at any time and blame it on a drill which is what was happening today. misinformation, it doesn't have to be accurate. but they come out on top of this. please so under this deal that was struck, hamas is supposed to release 50 hostages over four days. that means that they have to
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release 24 more israeli hostages. we have frankly been surprised about the foreign nationals who have been released. there have been 15 so far. what does that tell you about who hamas has, who they can find? >> i don't think it can tell us anything about that, unfortunately. i think they have the large majority of the hostages. yes, i believe that palestinians jihad have some and some other disparate groups still holds of hostages which is why hamas wanted to be the removal of the isr, the drones so they can move around and try to collect the rest of the hostages? the release of the foreign nationals, the thai citizens in the filipino, that is to continue to erode international support for israel. it is going to put additional presser to keep this truth going for as long as possible from the
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international community. from the united states, who is supported israel from the beginning, but now we are asking them to pause for as long as we can so we can get our citizens home. that runs counter to defeating hamas, which is one of israel's sensible goals in this >> the number of journalists killed in gaza, israel, and lebanon since they are over seven hamas attack has increased to at least 57. after the community to protect journalists confirmed the death of four palestinian journalists on saturday the journalism advocacy group says 50 palestinian, for israel, and three lebanese journalists lost their lives as the israel-hamas war began last month. we're going to take a quick break for viewers in north america, we will have more coverage of the israel-hamas
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welcome back to all of our viewers in north america. you're watching cnn newsroom. a big part of the hostage deal between israel and hamas is make sure more humanitarian aid trucks through to gaza. it led to some tense moments and a delay in the handover of hostages on saturday. cnn's larry is in cairo, egypt with the details. >> even the egypt celebrated the first day of the 10th truce between israel and hamas, they too almost collapsed with hamas warned that israel had endangered the deal by not allowing enough aid trucks to come into northern gaza. that is part of the framework for the release of hostages as israel has described it. and in the end, after mediation from qatar and egypt and the united
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states, it went ahead and hostages were released in the palestinian president confirming that 187 aid trucks made it into gaza. that is another record, including 61 trucks that went into northern gaza, the largest convoy of humanitarian aid towards the northern part of the strip since october 7th. and that is important because the u.n. has warned that there is a risk of dehydration and diseases breaking out in the north where people are consuming water from unsafe sources, the healthcare system almost collapsed since the almost 50 days of bombardment of this part of the territory. the challenges with the deal on day two highlighting just how difficult this is, it is not done until it is done. it is a day at a time. qatar is discussing potentially extended this truce beyond the four days that was initially agreed upon .8 is going to keep
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coming in. the food, the fuel, the water from the cooking gas, also badly needed for palestinians that are closely watching how much of that gets to the trucks a day quota that was agreed upon as part of this deal to temporary pause in the fighting to allow for the 100 million people displaced in gaza to receive this badly needed humanitarian aid cnn, cairo >> four hostages from thailand were released on saturday this, in addition to 10 released on friday. the thai prime minister said they were taken to a hospital in israel for a checkup and are in good health. none of them needed. some 18 thai citizens are still being held hostage. journalist joins us now live from singapore. a very good day. more releases, some really good news for the families in thailand do we know anything more about their condition and
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how they have been treated? >> you mentioned that they were reported to be in good health. in fact, none of the thai prime minister himself actually posted on social media that particular bit of information adding that none of them needed emergency care point but also that they were able to communicate well and i think that is quite indicative of the state of their health. a cnn team has actually been speaking to hospital workers from that facility and that they have been taken to, the shamir medical center. it is reputed to be the fourth- largest government hospital in israel. so you can imagine the infrastructure that they had at their disposal in the care of these foreign nationals who have been released once held captive by hamas the conditions that they must have been in, the kind of trauma that former hostages would have witnessed. we know from previous reports about the 10 thai nationals that were released on friday,
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that they were undergoing assessment. we know from the filipino national who was released on friday that he was undergoing emotional assessment what they must have seen, witnessed, and experienced in the last few weeks would have been quite harrowing so this is really the beginning of the journey of healing for all of them but we also know from the hospital is they have translators available to help them communicate. there are officials there from the royal thai embassy. we know from the history of a foreign affairs in thailand that families will be contacted. and it isn't yet clear when they will rejoin their families again and a quick bit of context for those who might be wondering how come there is such a large group of thai's taken hostage. many of them are migrant workers . they go to israel to send remittances back to their families. would have been in that agricultural belt on that
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southern flank near gaza pick in so many of them being caught up in this. i want to make it very clear, though, that these hostages that have been released, this is part of a separate agreement between the thai government and other parties that have been involved that have helped them, the thai government has expressed its thanks. the details around it, though, are still unclear. yes, a lot of relief, high emotions for those families who hope to see their loved ones again very soon, leila. >> misha in singapore, thank you very much. coming up, we will hear from the nephew of a hostage just released about how she is coping with the trauma she faced her heartbreaking loss and her future.
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israeli security officials are looking over a new list of hostages that hamas says will release in the coming hours. this is according to the israeli prime minister's office becca comes after hamas turned over group of hostages saturday after an hours long delay red cross buses carried 13 israeli and four thai nationals out of gaza. in exchange, israel says
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released 39 palestinian prisoners including six women and 33 teenage boys here is a look now at the 13 israelis hamas released on saturday they include seven children, the youngest is three years old. the mystery surrounds the release of 13-year-old hello rawson. reunited with her uncle but her mother was not released with her. an israeli official tells us under the deal, mothers and children were not supposed to be separated so where her mother is and why she was not released is unknown. the 72-year-old is among the hostages who now are safely back in israel. but her love once a coping with the trauma she endured for almost seven weeks, and the news that her husband was murdered in the attack will take time. cnn's caitlin collins spoke with her nephew about how she is doing, what she experienced, and what lies
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ahead >> 72-year-old was among friday's releases, she is now in the hospital recovering tonight. her family giving her information about what happened slowly because these hostages were kept entirely in the dark in the last several weeks, nearly 50 days. adina's family had a tell her her husband was killed in the october 7th attack. her nephew joins us now. and let's just start with i am so glad that she is home and i know that this has been such a tough process for you. how is she doing tonight? please she is emotional. the feeling is mixed because early yesterday, for the first time, together with five children are alive she had no clue what happened to them >> or they near as well? >> near their houses nearby. but they survived the attack
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because powerful enough to hold the handle of the safe room. and but she also learned that we buried her husband that she had been living with for 52 years and she learned that her house is completely burned, nothing left. no house, no town, no history. so it is emotional, everyone that has been under, in the tunnel for seven weeks, to go out and first see the satellite . she didn't know what they are going to do with her. if they're going to execute her or released her. >> when she was being released, she didn't know? >> until they saw the red cross vehicle they didn't know where. >> and she was kept, she told me she was kept under ground the whole time in darkness? please she was in the tunnels, yes. >> has she been able to tell you anything more about, we heard about how complex these tunnels are, that they go on for miles underneath gaza?
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>> first of all, this information is classified, i cannot talk about this point i want to talk only about adina and also the reason i'm here is to mention that even though my uncle was murdered by them, she survived, and there are sick families there. and we are still holding this one because we care about the other 200 families that loved ones are in there, enough of this interview will go to the hostages square in order to support all the other families. >> how is she processing just everything? i mean, she knew her husband was killed but learning about what has happened to her neighborhood and also just the totality of what happened on october 7th? you must be giving her the information just not all at once. >> you are right we don't give her all the information at once. there are professional team that is supporting her.
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to grasp whatever happened to israel. this is not only a private catastrophe. this is a national and people are supporting her she needs to get the strength back. physically, even though her mind is very strong. please she is physically weak. please she is physically weak but her mind is very strong yesterday when she got out of the car, with the terrace, with hamas, the terrorist gave her a hand and she is slapping him on his hand. this is the spirit. ukraine's capital take the hit from russia's largest wave of drone attacks since the war began. and now, people whose homes were damaged are trying to pick up the pieces. that's aheadad.
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capital ever since it launched its invasion on this country in february of last year. ukrainian president, volodymyr zelenskyy, says this attack was a deliberate act of terror. in the early hours of saturday morning, loud explosions could be heard all over kyiv. as the capitals air defense systems worked in overdrive. just after just after 2:30 a.m., an unprecedented swarm of drones began to attack kyiv from multiple directions, terrorizing its more than 3 million residents. 75 shaeev drones were launched by russia. authorities say 74 were shot down. debris from one of the downed drones hit this kindergarten in the city's suburbs. meters away, hundreds of residential apartments. shattered windows, a sign of how close the war had come.
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too close for yugenia and her two young daughters. >> translator: we ran into the hallway and were waiting for this to pass like always. then we heard a huge explosion. we thought our house was going to be destroyed. >> reporter: the residents in kyiv are used to hearing the air raid sirens and the explosions of the air defense systems working overtime, but nothing quite like this. for more than six hours, there was a barrage of shaev drones targeting the capital. this behind me is the result of one of those drones shot down. inside the kindergarten, oliga, one of the teachers, is distraught. "all my life i've worked here. look at the destruction," she cries. her colleague says, "everything is okay, we will clean this up, don't worry. thank god everyone is alive." 5-year-old yurislava looks through the fence at a
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playground she would frequent every day. >> translator: it was a garden. i had music and dancing classes in this building. i feel sad the drone came and destroyed my school. >> reporter: her mother, natalia, in tears, thinking this was supposed to be a safe place for her only child. >> translator: it's very painful to see this. >> reporter: residents in kyiv and across the country have been expecting this. russia has spent months stockpiling weapons specifically aimed at targeting ukraine's energy infrastructure as the temperatures plunge. and with winter now here, these people know this is just the beginning. >> translator: we've got used to this, but i don't want to get used to it. >> reporter: falling drone debris damaged several residential buildings around kyiv. the commander in chief of the ukrainian armed forces, general zaluzhnyi, says "this is war."
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>> our thanks to anna coren. the world health organization says it's received more information from china about a spike in cases of children with pneumonia or respiratory illnesses. chinese health authorities told them the rise in cases in northern china stems from typical seasonal germs and not from any new or unknown bacteria or virus. the w.h.o. adds, chinese officials report that symptoms are consistent with respiratory infections that arrive every winter. derek chauvin's attorney says the prison where his client was stabbed on friday is refusing to talk. the former minneapolis police officer is serving time at a federal prison in arizona for the murder of george floyd three years ago. his attorney says he found out about the stabbing on the news and hasn't been able to verify
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anything, despite calling the prison seven times. he says chauvin's parents are getting the same treatment. chauvin's attorney believes a lot of inmates in that prison want to make a name for themselves by killing him. a mix of rain and snow is expected to spread east across the u.s. with some cold weather to follow. here's cnn meteorologist lisa rafah. >> we've got cold settling into the central plains after a couple of inches of snow fell across parts of kansas. snow is headed off to the great lakes. we've had some snow showers in chicago as we go through the day on sunday. that will start to kick across the great lakes and meets up with this area of low pressure that developed off the carolina coast. that starts to meet up and move north, creating some heavier rain from new york up to boston. notice the snow showers too across the great lakes. that starts to kick in the wake
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of that front. that lake-effect snow could dump up to 1 foot of snow for some communities right off the coast of those lakes, like cleveland. you can see the rain totals from new york to boston. again, could be on the heftier side, up to 2 inches. after this, arctic air spilling south. first up into the great lakes, then starts to spread east across the northeast going into early parts of the week. that's by tuesday and wednesday things get chilly. take a look at some of these high temperatures. these are the daytime high temperatures. barely breaking freezing for cities like pittsburgh and syracuse, where average highs are in the middle and upper 40s. barely breaking freezing. new york, average high 51. you're looking at temperatures in the upper 30s all day on tuesday. looking at the extended, you'll see that tuesday, wednesday, thursday, some of the coldest parts of the week. temperatures do try to rebound, but overall we're going to find temperatures staying below average through the next couple of days.
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finally, once the rubber capital of the world, akron, ohio, is now more famous for being the hometown of basketball great lebron james. visitors lined up for saturday's opening of a museum dedicated to the 38-year-old's life and amazing career. he became the league's all-time leading scorer in february, and the museum takes fans on a tour from his early days to his draft, his journey into the nba, the olympics, business, and philanthropy. and in his 21 seasons so far, lebron went on championship runs with the cavaliers, the heat, the lakers, as well as olympic gold with team usa. and all proceeds from ticket sales will go back into the community. great stuff. i'm laila harrak. do stay with us. i'll be back with the latestst from t the middle e east in juj momoment.
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