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the winner. >> trump is unquestionably a political survivor. >> this is what the end result is he is the first president to be impeached twice. >> the only president to be convicted of 34 felonies and charged with 54 more and just one of two former presidents who were shot. and survived shocking assassination attempts i had on my side, donald trump has survived it all to now run again. >> for an office. he refuses to admit he wants lost we all, by
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that very simple golden rule, mind your own damn business but government has neglecting the hostages no reason on earth. they're still there. he's willing to sacrifice everything so that he can remain on his share he just arrived in indonesia and this visit will be a challenge. >> it will test his strength and fortitude by from london. >> this cnn newsroom with max foster and christina macfarlane hello, and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us from the united states and all around the world. >> i'm christina macfarlane. it's tuesday, september 3rd. it's 9:00 a.m. here in london, 4:00 a.m. in washington, where there are exactly nine weeks to
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go until election day, one week until kamala harris and donald trump's square off in their first and possibly only debate, harris enlisted the help of president joe biden in the swing state of pennsylvania, as she made her case to labor union voters, the vice president is scheduled to lay out more of her economic agenda in new hampshire on wednesday well, the latest poll continues to show a neck and neck race between her and trump last night, not paid too much attention to the polls that's like labor always does out here running like we are the underdogs in this race because we know well, harris is running mate tim walz spoke with voters in wisconsin. >> another battleground state. he leaned into his background as a high school coach with nods to both baseball and football fans we respect differences. that's your opinion. look, we're setting
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here together brewers in twins, fans, vikings impact look we respected. but on things like health care and what books i read and democracy, we all live by that very simple golden rule mind your own damn business more now from cnn's senior white house correspondent, kayla tausche president joe biden, and vice president kamala harris, appearing on the campaign trail for the first time since harris ascended to the top of the ticket. president biden delivering a forceful defense of his onetime running mate, who is now running to succeed him as president, celebrating the work that they've done for the last three-and-a-half years, particularly when it comes to organized labor. >> law, progress and kamala going to build on that progress and she's going to build on i'll be on the sidelines but i'll do everything i can to help while the two exhibited their characteristic and stylistic differences, they were in lockstep on much of
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their message that that democrats running for office this year are the ones who have a platform that will promote and provide more benefits for those to our members of unions donald trump and j.d. >> vance on the republican side, they say, have no platform that would do the same, but they did have one area of agreement, in particular where the two were in lockstep and that was the endorsement of american ownership for iconic pittsburgh-based company, u.s. steel currently at the center of a $15 billion takeover by a japanese rival shareholders have approved the deal, but union members have voiced their opposition. and today, vice president harris, echoing president biden's own opposition, which he staked out in pittsburgh last april. >> everywhere i go, i tell people you may not be a union member, but you've got to thank unions for that five-day workweek because when you wages
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go up, everybody's wages go up when union workplaces are safer, workplaces are safer when unions are strong america is strong it's a singular issue, but it's emblematic of the debate in middle america that is resisting the control of foreign interests and foreign ownership and keeping american manufacturing wholly owned and strong going into the future. >> there's just 64 days left before the election. and this is a message that is going to be carried throughout the heartland. president biden will be campaigning and making official visits in michigan and wisconsin. vice president harris will be visiting new hampshire. were she'll be delivering a speech, rolling out the next phase of her economic no plan. kayla
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tausche, cnn, pittsburgh, pennsylvania, well, donald trump did not hold any campaign events on labor day, but his campaign was paying defense over this comment from sunday it's so crazy that my poll numbers go up. >> whoever heard you get indicted for interfering with a presidential election where you have every right to do it you get indicted and you poll numbers go up well, the trump campaign says the former president misspoken was not admitting that he interfered in the election. >> trump is scheduled to appear in a fox news town hall on wednesday, followed by rallies in north carolina and wisconsin later this week now israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is facing mounting pressure to secure a ceasefire deal after the killing of six hostages in gaza on monday, israel saw a general strike and a second straight day of major protests across the country,
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all fueled by anger over those deaths and the failure to bring them the remaining hostages home despite the pressure netanyahu says he won't make any concessions and is vowing to exact a heavy price on hamas. netanyahu is also facing criticism from israel's closest ally with u.s. president joe biden flatly saying the israeli leader has not done enough to secure the hostages release on monday, mr. biden and vice president kamala harris huddled with us officials who've been working to secure a deal. u.s. president says he's close to presenting a final deal to negotiators and the cousin of carmel gat, one of the six hostages killed in gaza says, he blames benjamin netanyahu for their deaths because the prime minister's delay in reaching a deal gap was staying at her parents home when she was kidnapped during the october 7 attacks. she was one of three hostages who were expected to be released in a potential ceasefire agreement. or cousin is now expressing his anger and frustration this is exactly the opposite of what we
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want. exactly the opposite what comer would've wished for, and exactly the opposite of what the hostages that are still held in captivity deserve. they deserve to be home. they deserve to be rescued. he is going to use the murder of my cousin in order to keep the war going. and this is exactly i'm, i'm, i'm, i'm i'm furious well, cnn's nic robertson has more now from tel aviv in the face of growing demands to get all the hostages home, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, doubling down on his defiance, were asked to make concessions what message does this send hamas? >> it says killed more hostages, murder, murder hostages. you've got more concessions explaining he won't remove israeli troops from the gaza. egypt border compromise. hamas demands his only concession, rare
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contrition for the six hostage families. >> a multilanguage. behold, i told the families and i repeat this evening. >> i'm asking for your forgiveness that we didn't manage to bring them back alive. >> pressure for him to back down, rocketed sunday hundreds of thousands of israelis took to the streets demanding he made the deal, save the other hostages that energy and anger still alive on monday. although the tempo a numbers down, there demands, not changing because i feel like government has neglected they don't care about the hostages. >> we want these government cease to exist one left first and foremost. to sign must be just the whole nation watching what's at stake. hersh
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goldberg-polin's poignant funeral testament to that beg your forgiveness. >> we tried so very hard so deeply desperate i'm sorry not the cathartic homecoming. >> his family believed to be in reach. >> we became absolutely certain that you were coming home to us alive but it was not to be an american, but a son of israel, his family's pain for nations to goodbyes, the country craves and hear okay, so before i gonell and your journey it's as good as the trips your dreamed about. >> finally, my sweet boy, finally, finally, finally, finally i love every single day for the rest of my life. nic
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robertson, cnn, tel aviv or meantime, the uk is suspending some of its arms exports to israel over concerns about how the weapons might be used for the war in gaza it is with regret that i informed the house today the assessment i have received leaves me unable to conclude anything other then that for certain uk arms exports to israel that does exist a clear risk that they might be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law what about 30 of the u.k.'s 300 and arms export licenses to israel will be suspended. these includes, include components for military aircraft, including fighter jets, helicopters, and drones. british officials insist this is not an arms embargo, but israel says it's disappointed by the decision arguing it sends a very problematic message to hamas, was seen as paula hancocks has been
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following all of this live for us from abu dhabi and paul it let's just rewind a little bit yesterday, we saw benjamin netanyahu refusing to budge or actually make any concessions at all following these nationwide protests to come to a conclusion on the ceasefire deal we also saw perhaps more significantly a shift from president biden saying that he said he didn't feel netanyahu was doing enough to bring the hostages home. how significant is that common at this time when we understand the white house is working to bring forth a final, a new final draft during the ceasefire in the coming days or christina, we've been seeing this frustration that the biden administration feels. >> in particular with the israeli prime minister, more and more over recent months, recent weeks and then on monday, you did see a very blunt response by the u.s president when he was asked whether mr. netanyahu was doing
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enough, let's listen do you think it's time for prime minister netanyahu on the issue, do you think he's doing enough? >> no. >> so one word speaks volumes there, and it really goes to show just how frustrated the u.s. president has been with the lack of progress when it comes to this ceasefire hostage deal we know that on monday as well the u.s. president, along with his security officials, met in the situation room to try and come up with a final proposal. it has been called a final proposal that they can put to both sides in the hope that they will agree to that deal. we also know that jake sullivan, his national security adviser, has been speaking to the key mediators in doha, and also those egypt as well to try and hammer out this final bridging proposal, which by saying final, it really seems
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as though if it is rejected by either side it raises the question, what can happen after that, but we have been hearing from from some sources familiar with these negotiations, increasing frustration, especially by that speech that the israeli prime minister gave on monday where he effectively said that hamas had to make concessions and that the israeli military had to be stationed along the border between egypt and gaza. the philadelphi corridor saying effectively that was non negotiable. now, what we heard from this source was, quote, this guy torpedoed everything in one speech. it's interesting as well, because the prime minister is focusing very much on this philadelphi corridor. but as we understand it source familiar says that this is a change in israel's position. the agreement back in may that both israel and hamas claimed to have agreed to, according to a draft seen in the israeli military, didn't mention the
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philadelphi corridor. so there is a growing growing frustration on many sides that this appears to be a changing tack from the israeli prime minister. it appears to be moving the goalposts and that frustration we're seeing inside israel as well as outside now as expected after that speech the far-right elements of netanyahu's coalition were very supportive. they said they agreed with him everyone else within the political echelon, though said that this effectively meant that we would not be seeing at hostages coming home. we've seen the defense minister yoav gallant trying to speak against the prime minister saying it is a moral disgrace that this is happening. and endangering the lives of the hostages. we have also heard from hamas, obviously taking advantage of of what is happening internally in israel at this point, saying that more hostages held in gaza would return, quote inside coffins. if israel attempted to
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try and rescue any of them militarily saying that new instructions had been given to the gods surrounding those hostages if there was going to be any attempt to rescue them. of course, propaganda, but also a note that time is running out for those hostages christina, her right. paula hancocks with the latest for us there in abu dhabi. >> thanks, paula. now, more than 10,000 hotel workers in the u.s. are on strike and they chose to kick it off on the labor day holiday weekend hospitality workers union unite here says at least 25 hotels and nine major u.s. cities participated in the strike most of which are still ongoing workers are asking for better pay, better working conditions, and addition snl staff, the union says, while many hotels have recovered from the pandemic, worker wages haven't changed spokespeople for at least two hotel chains. tell cnn they're committed to reaching deals with the union.
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here's how a local union representative described the situation many are facing and you know, i've had a lot of people with tears in her eyes. you don't have enough money to even go back and forth to work to pay for even pay for a bus. and it's really hard to i'd be in his business and smiled, agreed to guess when in the back of your mind you are trying to figure out where you're next meal is going to come from, whether you want to be able to keep your lights on now, the u.s. >> west coast will heat up later this week with more than 30 million americans under heat alerts starting wednesday, los angeles could reach 100 degrees fahrenheit almost 38 celsius by friday. it will be the highest temperature of the city has seen in two years. or the parts of california when you're could be even hotter, phoenix, arizona will also be under an excessive heat. watch. the city has hit 110 degrees fahrenheit or higher, 54 days this year, just one shy of its record set last year grand welcome for vladimir putin in mongolia,
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even though he's wanted for war crimes, why the russian president doesn't seem too worried about being arrested and later, pope francis starts his tour of southeast asia with a stop in the world's largest muslim majority country will tell you what's ahead on his schedule in indonesia and a daring rescue at sea, how sailors were saved from angry waters off the australian coast why 80% % of nfl playeyers choo to s sleep ever r smarart, but bebecause the e higherer my sle q scorore, the betetter i playa > but that't's not t the onl reason h he likes ininside firm >> i like e my side soft. >> rememember, doeoes that effortlessss comfort all nighth sleepingng on a smarart bet is you can plplay like ththis. >> yeah,h, because e else so li to sleleep cool anand i like i warmrm and cozy y and i rerealle it when wewe both get what w we want. > number dodoes that during biggesest sale of ththe year, s 50% % on asleep p number limimi ededition smarart that andnd fr dedelivery whehen you add d any,
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teteachers keeeep their classro protecteted by kililling 99.9 ' present t of germs becausese lie hands s deserve e bag protectio lysol here for healthy schools russian airstrikes have killed three people in ukraine overnight two of the victims are mother and her 8-year-old son were killed in zaporizhzhia when a missile hit a hotel complex while man was killed in the dnipro region, ukrainian officials say they shot down dozens of russian drones. >> these new deadly attacks come a day after another wide-ranging russian aerosol which wounded for people on the day the ukrainian children return to school for a new tom. ukraine successes with its incursion into russia's kursk region and its setbacks in the donetsk region are bringing the world's attention back to the war. and local businesses are reacting with urgency. cnn's
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christiane amanpour takes a closer look at the factory in kyiv. that's ramping up its efforts to help ukraine the evidence keeps growing even here in kyiv, far from the front memorials occupy ever more space. and since ukraine's incursion into russia's kursk region the war has returned to the cities with a vengeance last night, ballistic missiles hit kyiv, destroying infrastructure, tripling the energy grid, raising fears ukrainian journalist nataliya gumenyuk tells me it's been a trade-off. >> there is no discussion whether the kursk was right. but the question is, how much we lose in pokrovsk in the donbass, it boosted the morale among the military. it showed that ukraine can do something just outside kyiv there's an urgent race against time in this factory that's building unmanned vehicles or land drones. because aerial drones
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make the front lines ever more dangerous. dressed for soldiers on both sides he is ceo and former special forces officer alexander balitsky is that's why we should have technologies to kill more russians who is with the purpose in the usings and new technologies like using drones, using and robots that's it these all-terrain, all, whether drones are meant to save more ukrainians on the front they can be controlled from as far as three kilometers away. >> here, we follow along behind they can deliver everything from ammunition to water also remove the wounded from the front lines. their production has ramped up since the full full-scale invasion of 2022. and the company insist ukraine must develop more technologically advanced systems, but asymmetrical warfare to counter russia's overwhelming manpower and they want to the much more
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self-sufficient for the long haul 30 months into this grinding conflict with the prospect of international support fading are ukrainians now ready to negotiate an end to it? all? >> it's really a matter of survival. we can't allow them to control our territory and what they suggest is unconditional capitulation. unconditional surrender, or occupation and here natalia quotes her friend and ukraine's nobel laureate, who warns, had occupation is not peace. it's just a different way of war christiane amanpour, cnn, kyiv well, sammad to abdelaziz is joining me now here to discuss ukraine and some are we were just saying that the overnight attack on zaporizhzhia, mother and a child killed. >> what more do we know about that attack? >> so a family caught in this airstrike, yet another barrage of missiles and drones fired at russia overnight, we've seen this continue on for almost two weeks now we've the latest
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victims or this mother and her eight-year-old son both killed in this attack. there staying in hotel in zaporizhzhia, that indicates they're probably displaced people. the husband and another child to 13-year-old daughter are now in hospital with serious wounds. just a reminder of the families, the people who are really stuck in the cross crosshairs of this conflict in ais ukraine tries to hit back at this uptick in russian bombardment. it's really been an uptick since the invasion of curse a few weeks after that, that's really when russian forces started barreling through with these it's drones, missiles, ballistic missiles, near daily towards ukrainian cities and towns. ukraine's foreign minister saying, we're fighting with our hands tied behind our back and he is saying that because ukrainians are pleading with the white house to lift restrictions on the use of long-range missiles. they want to be able to strike deep in the heart of russia she had to hit these sites before they fire that barrage of missiles and drones to be on. the
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offense here with russia. however, the white house is simply not convinced there is a meeting last week in which ukrainian officials provided a target list president biden's administration believes that very high value assets have probably been moved to far to be hit by those long-range missiles in the meanwhile you also have what's happening in the donbass where ukrainian troops are outmanned and outgunned. that makes that kursk offensive look less and less like a shimmering prize. if it means that russian forces still continue to barrel on through towards pokrovsk because even president zelenskyy has admitted that was the goal of entering kursk to divert russian forces away. and that does not seem to have played out on the battlefield to very tough days ahead for ukraine meanwhile, president putin trying to capture the world's attention in a very brazen and different way arriving in mongolia an icc member and icc signatory. >> and it not resulting in his arrest. in fact, more than that, they rolled out the red carpet for him. it seems president putin always trying
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to make headlines, even calling out ukraine for this strategy in kursk you know, whisking that away thing. >> i know the game they wanted to play. i know they wanted me to divert troops to kursk. i'm not falling for that. absolutely. trying to demonstrate not just strength in the face of ukrainian troops literally on russian territory, literally claiming russian land, but also trying to demonstrate that he continues to have a coalition of partners. and that's really the message there from president putin interesting. salma, thank you for now. >> now, still ahead. bangladesh is picking up the pieces following recent mass protests, which led to the ouster of its prime minister. now political prisoners are speaking out about the horrors they've faced under hasina regime eople who o
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so she scaled down her fleet to save money. and don's paying so much for at&t, he's been waiting to update his equipment! there's a smarter way to save. comcast business mobile. you could save up to 70% on your wireless bill. so you don't have to compromise. powering smarter savings. powering possibilities. and you shouldn't he joined d me. it canan.com and g get paid when you say i'm bill weir on the california coast and this is cnn welcome back to cnn newsroom. i'm christina macfarlane. if you're just joining us here are some of today's top stories protesters in israel are demanding benjamin netanyahu agreed to a ceasefire with hamas after nearly 11 months of war many are accusing the prime minister of stalling and calling for his resignation to stranded sailors are now safe after a daring rescue in a choppy seas, nearly 200 miles from australia's
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coast. their yacht was adrift after a mechanical issue and waves nearly 20 feet high delayed their rescue for several hours australia's navy and air force managed to safely grabbed them when the conditions improved. and uk prime minister keir starmer is vowing to tackle surge pricing after complaints about ticket prices for the first batch of a wasted shows went on sale this past weekend, but its regulators received hundreds of complaints about ticketmaster saying advertisements for ticket prices and available the were misleading the next two weeks will be a busy one for pope francis, who has just begun a marathon 12 day tore of southeast asia. he touched down in jakarta, indonesia earlier. today, his visit comes as the catholic church seats to grow and strengthen its presence across asia the pope is set to meet with indonesia's president and other officials on wednesday before continuing his trip to three other countries. let's go live to jakarta, where cnn's christopher lamb has been traveling with the
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pope. and i believe christopher, you're actually on that long flight to indonesia with him and you had a chance to meet him on board yes, that's right. >> christina pope francis was in good spirits when he came to the back of the plane as he always does on his trips abroadd to greet journalists individually, he shook hands, he exchange jokes and some gifts to thank the journalists for coming with him on this trip and to covering it he seemed in good spirits and with energy and he's going to need that because this is the longest trip of his pontificate, one of the longest chips at any pope has carried out. it's a very important trip for him because right at the top of the agenda is interfaith dialog. he's in indonesia here in jakarta in the world's most populous muslim country. he's going to be going to the istiqlal mosque, the largest mosque in southeast asia here in jakarta
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is going to have an interfaith dialogue meeting. and he is going to hope that message of interfaith friendship can resonate across the globe particularly whether our conflicts, which have been sparked by religious extremism today, however, is arrested day for francis. we use at the papal ambassador to indonesia as resident he has met with some refugees, some elgin isn't orphan children when he arrived, but it's going to take it easy today because tomorrow he's got a packed schedule has made meeting with the leaders of indonesia, the political leaders, and then church leaders but it's a long trip. he's going to be going to papua new guinea after indonesia then east timor, and singapore it's certainly going to be an exciting trip to follow and i've been trying to cover it as much as they can because nina and christopher, how is his health in general? because we know that the pope has had a couple of operations in part in
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previous years and also that this trip i believe is going to consist of 43 hours of air travel. how is his fitness for that we're told that. >> francis has no underlying health problem. he has had some operations. he's had some respiratory difficulties, but they are pretty the signs of old age rather than anything underlying are more serious. he has insisted that his health is good. it does have mobility problems. we make use of a wheelchair most of the time but broadly speaking, is health is fine for someone at the age of 87. but obviously, the length of air travel well, a grueling schedule, the meeting, the open-air mass is all those things are going to take a toll. so we're watching very closely to see how he manages with all that, that it is remarkable. an 87-year-old pontiff is willing to embark on such an ambitious journey. >> yeah, assign perhaps from
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him that he is not done yet. there's more work to do christopher lamb there live for us in jakarta. thanks very much now, chinese state media report, 11 people, five students, and six parents have been killed in a school. bus crash i wanted you may find some of the images we're about to show disturbing the crash happened in taiwan, city and chandon province, which is in eastern china. authorities say the bus lost control when it drove into an intersection and then crashed into the crowd waiting to walk through the gate of a middle-school 13 people were injured. the driver is being held by local police and the cause of the accident is under investigation now, there's a renewed sense of hope in bangladesh after the ouster of longtime prime minister sheikh hasina the she resigned, and fled the country last month following weeks of deadly anti-government protests critics say her 15 years in power marked by a stifling of civil freedoms and using harsh
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measures to crush dissent. and now political prisoners are sharing stories of abuse and torture at the hands of hasina's government cnn's anna coren spoke with some of them the first cases of the future against that of the police she's hanging in the face of bangladesh is ousted prime minister to sheikh hasina. >> the ultimate insult and showed defiance in a country where people on the streets achieved mounting what began as a student-led protest against government quotas in early july morphed into a mess to say no been in power for more than 15 years, ordered police to open fire over the following weeks, hundreds of people were killed. willll fences werere arrested t came to my house, they broke three doors. they took me with
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them and oh, my god, the physical torture that was lead we may nusrat to boost him at 23-year-old political science student, says she was beaten for hours on end the face repeatedly hit some of her teeth now, loose her right ear drum boost without the heading, it i can't listen in and i voters on got to find days in custody. new nusrat was paraded in front of the cameras the only female in the group of prominent student leaders forced to make an apology fulfill a student, if tucker alarm his detainment was even more sinister, snatched from his home before dawn. he was blindfolded, handcuffed, and believes he was taken to a notorious military intelligence facility in darker were over the years, hundreds of bangladeshi considered anti-state have been disciplined period, like that
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is no escaping from this. >> and my life will end here and no one will know the law student says for hours he was beaten with a metal rod, breaking bones in his feet a burning cigarette was then pushed into his fingers and toes as part of what they called them little gain. when i i i close my eyes i remember that i went to that horrible day once released, he discovered hasina had resigned and fled to india people, bangladesh, it is the payables country the capital now of awash with colorful murals, has a very clear message. >> they know going back as the u.n. >> investigates the hundreds of protested deaths, the people have chief nobel prize winner muhammad yunus to bring about desperately needed reform the
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government has unleashed this terror that has been electrified february it has given a voice to everyone from doctors even ritual driving as they take to the streets to make the change doesn't happen overnight especially in a country of 170 million people with the in his wallet and corruption and cronyism rain. >> mike andris, think but our people, we stand together. >> i relived there will be sunshine in future a future this generation will continue to fight for yeah such brave and resilient students. >> it was just so amazing to be in their presence. christina, look, as well as this u.n fact finding mission into the atrocities that occurred, bangladesh's interim
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government, headed by muhammad yunus has set up a commission to investigate the hundreds of suspected in post disappearances. now, human rights groups believe that more than 700 bangladeshi were disappeared under hasina's 15 year reign. and we know that at least three of them i have since been released in recent weeks. some of spoken about the horrors that they endured now the families of the missing, they welcome this commission of inquiry. it's to be headed by a retired high court judge and will submit its findings in the next few months and christina, there are calls that are growing that india, which is providing sheikh hasina refuge to send her back to bangladesh. they want her to face trial for the abuses during her reign, and particularly the families they want her to face. justice. christina back to you. >> yeah. and that's why ana reports like this outlaying the
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abuses that have happened so important, we're thank you for your reporting anna coren there live from hong kong museum of modern art or moment is nearly a century old. it celebrates the grapes and showcases artists of today just ahead how it all began and to the world's greatest competitive eaters yes, face off in a hotdog eating showdown to relish stay tuned kamala harris yellow trump, the debate. everyone's been waiting for follows. cnn for complete coverage and exclusive pre and post-debate analysis of cnn the special event, the abc news presidential defeat simulcasast nextxt tuesday a at nine easastn cnn anand streamining on math h d
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on a train, at home, at work. okay, maybe not at work. point is at xfinity. we're constantly engineering new ways to get the entertainment you love to you faster and easier than ever. that's what i do. is that love island? when you sign up to be a new vip of fabletics.com now he's been to moma. >> you'll know it's nestled in the midtown of manhattan, a museum of modern art it is a must visit for lovers everywhere museum has always exhibiting works by some of the best contemporary artists. but the moment is steeped in colorful history to cnn's richard quest takes us back to moments, beginnings the museum of modern art it was born in turbulent times when moma
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opened days after the 1929 wall street crash moments idea was simple. new york needed a museum focused on the art of today. not ancient stuff. >> this institution, when it was founded in 1929 by three extraordinary women and alfred barr as it's young director i actually had a global perspective among the first exhibitions here or exhibitions of mexican art exhibitions of american primitives exhibitions of sub continental indian art the idea has caught on and within three years, moma had outgrown its original home. >> in a 12th story apartment moving to a nearby town house. and its permanent home, steps for new york's fifth avenue the greatest artists of the 20th century hang on these walls. jackson pollock jasper
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johns, andy warhol whole made their names on the walls of the moma today's artists use the moma as a launching pad taking careers to new new heights. >> that was stunned when moma reached out to me, the offer me the exhibition. it was fdr who was on the radio who talked about the purpose and the mission of the izium of modern art. and he distinctly pointed out that first of all, art belongs to the people, brands of the museum of modern the making of this museum has plane we are dedicating this building to the cause of peace today, this museum is considered the epicenter the modern world and it's a position that directed glenn lowry takes very seriously. i worry about everything i worry about whether anybody will show up at the museum in the morning, literally will people bothered to come to the museum? i worry about whether it's going to
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rain or not, because when it rains, more people come to the museum so i'm one of those people that looks at a sunny day and goes, oh, no, not another beautiful well day. because i know i know that if it's bad weather, more people will visit the museums over its 95 year history. the moma has weathered many storm devastating fire in the late 1950s, wiped out some of its prized treasures, many others are scooted to safety by employees undaunted by the fight on recently at the moment undergone expansions, relocations, and corroborations, galore so i think the institution not as a fixed entity magen the british museum, or the louvre, or the metropolitan, they're historical institutions, their responsibility is to tell this very long story in a very measured in order away we are a work in progress perhaps that's the beauty of the
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museum of modern art always changing always reinventing itself. much like the aren't that fills its galleries. richard quest, cnn, new york love, moment. >> now, coming up, australian youtubers capture amazing video of a whale toss singh, a snorkeler, into the air. the full story on that coming up wiwith moderatate to severere p psoriaiasis, my skskin was no o longer mine. >> my acactive psoriatatic arthriritis joint t symptoms h me back k don'n't lelet symptom define y you ememerge as youou withthdrawn via a most bulso 90 clear r skskin at fourur months the majoririty stayed d clearer eyeyed five yeyears from p phi proven to o significanantly rer joint painin, stiffnesess, and whwhaling, it't's justst six d a year afterer two startrter dose cbs allelergic reaeactions maya ococcur, can fire, m may increa your r risk of infectionons and lower yoyour a ability to o fig that. >> tell yoyour doctor r if you e
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slslip-ins checkck these outut, haharry, handsds-free sketetche let't's justst stepping g in th on a amongst t the dreamy lake, their real and native eau hands-free, but sketches, slippers welcome back. >> now last week, a couple of australia youtubers won an excursion of the gold coast, swimming with whales when they captured what they're calling an incredible encounter on video, a humpback launching a snorkeler, high into the air pat haney of nine use has more swim like no other one moment. this man is in the water. the next, the heir as the tile of a while as big as a bus, launches him from the sea then youtube is max in jacqueline was snorkeling with humpbacks in waters off the gulf coast when they captured the gentle giants, moment of mayhem, there
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we were super excited obviously at the opportunity to submit wales is pretty rare, but they didn't expect an experience what this unique, it got wild, surrounded by three wild the couple were keeping an eye on one beneath them when the unbelievable haven't all of a sudden, there was commotion behind us and we turned around and someone we didn't know at the time who it was, but someone was on top of the tail of a while, the man on the tile was one of their tour guides lifted from the water biola voice good day. everyone was just in such like adrenaline, i think like had this adrenaline rushing through your body, but to we'll go out to skyping uninjured after taking flight was the first time this happened to him? >> yeah. but he was very ecstatic about it. it was like a relatively gentle experience from what we could tell. >> now, we go while of a tile grazie that was insane thing. i've ever experienced in my life. pat haney know i mean,
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honestly, just a little bit too close for comfort now, finally, joey chestnut has devoured his way to another personal best breaking his own world record for it's in hot dogs now. but among youth been following this, there was a showdown between the two biggest names in professional competitive eating during a netflix labor day event in las vegas, chestnut ate, get this 83 hot dogs and buns in just ten and minutes. is longtime rival, takeru kobayashi fell behind and could not catch up. he put away just 60 dogs now, we've been having a little chat about this here in the studio because i have never seen this event take place in my life, but apparently is a big deal and chestnut is eating eight hot dogs a minute how on earth does someone physically do that? because clearly the bread, the been, look at that. how does he get that down so fast, it's going to get in your way, right? isn't a bread going to
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slow you down? i do not understand the technique to this anyone who wants to let me know, get in touch, but it also seems pretty gross to me, so i don't think i'm gonna go back and watch this one anytime that will do it though, for us here at cnn newsroom, i'm christina macfarlane in london, cnn this morning is up next. >> stay with us ththis is whata you want. >> this is what you need that's a good day at the office for me do not buy generic c viagrara until youou out this program, , giving awaw 100 0 milligrarams genericic vi fofor jujust $0.8787 cvs and
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