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barrel bombs. they are filled with nails, gasoline, and tnt. one just fell on a kindergartener. also, we begin in europe where a little while ago a girl just woke up after witnessing the unspeakable. it is a murder mystery that stretches from france to britain. a family was found dead in a car in the french alps. the body 6 a cyclist was also discovered meesh. all the victims were shot in the head. twice. but two little girls survived. one was beaten and shot. the other one hid under her dead mother's legs for hours. we are joined from england outside the family's home, and antika, this has a lot of people talking. i mean, it's unbelievable when you think about what took place, what happened with this family. do investigators have any idea of a motive? >> not at this point, and that's the big question. what was the motive? why did this happen? this is why british police are now inside the family home behind me there looking for any clues, anything unusual, anything that might indicate why the family was targeted in this way. now, earlier in the day there was a bomb disposal unit that was brought in. there were some items that police were concerned might be hazardous. that has turned out not to be the case, and they've brought the cord in close to the home. they also have a lot of equipment to really thoroughly comb through the home trying to find anything that might indicate, but so far no clue yet as to what the motive might have been, suzanne. >> we know that one of these sur vooifg girls, she was beaten, she was shot, and she came out of a medically induced coma yesterday. are investigators trying to talk to her? >> reporter: they are trying to. however, even though she's been brought out of that coma, she's still under sedation, so it may still be a few days yet before she's really able to speak with investigators. they did have a chance to speak with her younger sister, the 4-year-old that survived by hiding underneath her mother's legs for hours after the attack, and, unfortunately, they say she was not able to provide any clues as to what happened. that she didn't see anything. she only heard the attack as it happened. they are really hoping that perhaps the 7-year-old daughter will be able to provide some clues, but so far no leads yet. >> how are those two little girls doing? i mean, when you talk about that one who hid under her mother's legs, do they have any sense of how she is mentally? >> reporter: well, i mean, as you can imagine, it is an extremely traumatic event. we do know that the 4-year-old girl has been brought here back to the u.k., that had he is with her closest relatives now, and that is good. the 7-year-old, as you know, has been brought out of her coma, but it will be very difficult to, of course, break the news to the 7-year-old girl about the -- what happened to her parents and then to have to question her afterwards will be very difficult. >> wow. just tragic. difficult, indeed. thank you very much. appreciate it. on to afghanistan now. ♪ you're listening to a saer money. the u.s. military handed over control of a controversial prison to the afghan government. the brief ceremony, of course, making it official today. it is mere kabul, and anna corrine, she's in kabul, and she joins us here. the u.s., of course, explained to us they are not necessarily giving up all of the prisoners. they're closing the detention center, handing it over to the afghans. what about those detaines that are still in u.s. custody? >> yes. suzanne, on the surface everything might seem okay, but underneath it was a completely different story. there is real tension here between afghanistan and the united states, so u.s. holding on to something like 34 highly valued detainees. these being senior members of the taliban, of the network that just a couple of days ago was listed as a terrorist organization and of al qaeda. these are the detainees that the u.s. does not want to hand over to the afghans just yet. the reason being is they're concerned they'll end up in the criminal justice system and possibly be free, whether it's through political interference or corruption. that is the major concern, suzanne. >> and where do those prisoners go? where do they physically take them? where are they being held by the american officials? >> reporter: well, the americans actually have a part of baghram prison. they have their own section. the prisoners are still being held will. now, it's worth noting, suzanne, that an agreement was signed back in march between president karzai and the united states about handing over control, but as of march the u.s. has arrested something, like, 1,600 prisoners. they have been detained, and they are still under the control of the united states as well. so it's actually a few more than just the 34 that we have mentioned, but, yes, they will still be staying at baghram prison. >> tell the significance of this particular prison because i understand it is the same place where you had hundreds of korans that were actually burned earlier in the year by u.s. troops, and that really set off a lot of violent protests against the u.s. military inside of afghanistan. >> reporter: yeah, definitely. this is a prison that has a long history. there were allegations of torture many years ago at the start of the occupation of afghanistan, but certainly it has -- it has cleaned up its act. after abu grab, they've cleaned up their act wrush there haven't been allegations of torture, suzanne. >> and how important is this to the karzai government, to hamid karzai who essentially is trying to get some assurances, some comfort, even some confidence to folks that once u.s. and international forces leave that, he is going to be able to rule his own country. >> yeah. well, that is a huge problem, suzanne, trying to convince the afghan population that he will be able to do just that. you mentioned the exit in 2014. we're already seeing a drawdown of coalition troops by the end of this month. there will only be 68,000 u.s. forces that are left in afghanistan, so, you know, this is a coalition force that is reducing in numbers, and they will be gone by 2014. all foreign combat troops. you know, suzanne, this was, of course, the safe haven for the taliban before 2001, before those september 11th attacks. tomorrow is the 11th anniversary, so i think the united states is really concerned that once those foreign combat troops leave, that this doesn't once again become a safe haven for al qaeda. >> all right. anna corrine, thank you very much. appreciate it. here's what wear working on for "newsroom international." iraq unraveling. a wave of bombings just ripping through the country. now the vice president, he is on the run from his own government. you've been busy for a dead man. after you jumped ship in bangkok, i thought i'd lost you. surfing is my life now. but who's going to .... tell the world that priceline has even faster, easier ways to save you money. . . on hotels, flights & cars? 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[ male announcer ] red lobster's endless shrimp is back... but only for a limited time! try as much as you like, any way you like! like parmesan crusted shrimp just $14.99. i'm ryan isabell and i sea food differently. just $14.99. a thing that helps you wbuy other things.hing. but plenty of companies do that. so we make something else. we help make life a little easier, more convenient, more rewarding, more entertaining. year after year. it's the reason why we don't have customers. we have members. american express. welcome in. after a day of dozens of attacks iraq's vice president is appealing to people to stay calm. a wave of bombings across iraq left 94 people dead, more than 300 wounded on sunday. this came on the same day a court in baghdad found vice president tariq guilty of ordering attacks on officials and security forces. he says that living in self-imposed -- he has now been living in self-imposed exi'm in turkey, and he says that the death sentence is now politically motivated. >> in return of my absolute dedication, in serving my country, iraq, and my people, the iraqis. >> let's bring in michael holmes to talk about this. you have covered in extentively. hashmi, one of the most prominent sunni in the country became the vice president back in 2006. now he is run out of the country. what is going on in iraq some. >> this all goes back to something. we've talked about him before on the program, and that is this concern by sunnis in iraq that they have been sidelined and disenfranchised. nuri al-maliki is a shiite, of course, and part of the deal when the americans started to draw down is there would be a power-sharing government involving suna, shia, and kurds, including others. this has not happened, and you've had sunnis claiming that al-maliki is become aing dictator. he has been described as saddam-like, and the sunnis are not being named to position that is they were meant to be named in and are being pushed to the sidelines out of key posts. this is where this comes from, and al hashmi, who was widely supported within the sunni community, now gets wind that he is going to be charged with capital crimes. he gets up north to kurdistan and across into turkey. >> is he powerful? does he have any sway whatsoever now that he is out of the country? can he do something? >> he doesn't have any sway, but he has a lot of support among sunnis, and this is where you are seeing violence wrap up. it's the local al qaeda affiliate, the islamic state of iraq. it's kind of an umbrella group. you have al qaeda certainly involved, but you also have sunni islamist groups and remnants of the old saddam ba'ath party who are behind all this violence, and it's just getting bigger and bigger and bigger. you know, every month there's been a major coordinated attack. >> why is this happening? >> 350 people were killed. >> why is this happening now, michael, the timing of all this? obviously, people are looking at the situation. a lot of people see that you went into iraq thinking that eventually there would be home building, nation building, and this hasn't happened. there is no peace there. >> it was a pretty naive notion to go into iraq and think that would happen, to be honest, and i think a lot of people look back at it now and see it that way. there was never going to be built a democracy in the western style in iraq. there's too many disparate groups, and now between the central government xt kurds in new york, they're having their own issues too. largely about oil revenues, but about other things as well. it's a country that has a lot of tribal and religious differences. it always has been. this goes back to the whole thing of, you know, what is iraq but lines drawn on a map after world war i where the west basically said that's iraq, everyone get along, as they did with most of the middle east, and it was -- you see these old fractions, divisions that just keep coming to the surface. a lot of people now in iraq -- talking to a friend of mine in baghdad this morning -- who say that even now you are hearing iraqis talking about maybe dividing the country again, which either into autonomous regions usual three separate states. >> there was a controversial proposal. it was one that joe biden was pushing. it was rejected. >> everyone poo-pooed it, and now iraqis are even talking about that. there is the regional problems too. the syrian conflict. the shiite government of al-maliki is worried if the rebels win there and they upped with a sunni-dominate government, they may sponsor more of the sunni insurgent in iraq. everything is linked in that part of the world. >> thank you. it's sad to see that it's deteriorating and it's headed in that direction now. appreciate it. nails, gasoline, tnt. those are the ingredients of barrel bombs that the syrian government is now reportedly dropping on its own people. ♪ wow... [ female announcer ] sometimes, all you need is the smooth, creamy taste of werther's original caramel to remind you that you're someone very special. ♪ now discover new caramel apple filled werther's original. mass killings. torture has become the morm in syria. that's according to the united nations. its human rights chief is calling for an end to supplying ammunition to both sides. now, she says government and opposition forces are now deploying snipers who target civilians. [ gunshots ] >> what you're watching here, this video was posted on-line from allepo today. a syrian opposition group says that the day's death toll has already passed 100, including many people killed there in allepo. our nick payton walsh is in that city. he will take to us a hospital on the frontlines of the fighting. we have to warn thaw some of the stuff is pretty disturbing. >> it's where many in aleppo run when they're caught by the constant shelling. even though the hospital and the area around it have also been -- >> the shells hit this part of the hospital, but still this day we see many civilians flooding here for treatment. some of them very young. doctors telling us that the children's hospital has been closed by the government. >> some starving. >> mohammed was hit by shrapnel fired from syrian regime mortars. he is quiet, brave, but this hostile isn't equipped for the surgery he immediate. his thigh bone is shattered. the doctors have no choice but to exacerbate her ordeal and send him across the frontlines to the government hospital. hoping perversely that those who hurt him can also heal him. president al assad is history in the minds of locals, but his regime still has the best hospitals where one doctor works during the day before sneaking here to help this rebel hospital in the evening. he tells me in the regime hospitals 50 soldiers have brought in every day, that sometimes doctors mercy kill by injection those they can't treat effectively and if they found he was working in the rebel hospital, they would kill him. >> are you here many. >> akhmed's head has been hit by shrapnel from shelling. his ear almost blown off. they struggle to clean the wound and to find muff anesthetic. at any point the power could cut. still, the doctors carry on. it hurts, he cries. but he has yet to learn the worst about what the shelling did. it killed his father whose mourned just outside the hospital. the dead here so many that doctors must leave them on the street. his brother arrives. there's no room for privacy or dignity here. they remove the body before akhmed can learn what happened. the blood remains on the street unmode by some. the people of aleppo numb looking to the skies, checking what next may befall them. nick payton walsh, cnn, aleppo. he is talking about people looking to the sky for the next attack. that is because the syrian government has been increasing the number of air strikes it is now launching against the rebels, ask it means that more civilians are also being killed and wounded. i want to bring in mohammed, a neighboring lebanon, and mohammed, talk a little bit about what we have heard, and it sounds absolutely horrific this idea, this creation of barrel bombs that are being used. >> well, suzanne, opposition activists are increasingly worried and telling us about a new form of crude weaponry that they say is being utilized by the syrian regime to bomb different parts of syria. they're calling these barrel bombs. they say that they are crudely constructed improvised explosive devices that the syrian regime effectively are taking barrels and loading them up with everything from nails to tnt, to other types of explosives, to fuel. we've seen more and more amateur videos posted on-line reporting to show the aftermath of these types of attacks. yesterday in the hannamu district of aleppo we saw amateur video reporting to show a residential building that had been completely flattened. you saw men scrambling around that building searching frantically for any survivors or others buried in the rubble, and increasingly, these activists are saying that the syrian regime using these on more neighborhoods and just wreaking so much deconstruction by doing so. >> and mohammed, tell us why is this happening now? why have they decided start using this? >> well, suzanne, it's very hard to verify since the syrian regime is not saying anything about this at this point, but the opposition activists and the rebel free syrian army members we've heard from say. they say, first of all, these very crudely constructed weapons, they are very cheap to make. that they don't cost much. some in the opposition are speculating that perhaps the funding of the syrian military is being depleated. they don't have as much money to buy new weaponry, and maybe that's why they're using hem. but most of all people are saying this is just maximizing the type of devastation that when this type of bomb impacts the ground, that it creates a lot more devastation than other bombs that were used prior. >> mohammed, finally, with the government increasing all he's air strikes and seeing these barrel bombs being used essentially, is the international community any more likely to consider imposing a no fly zone. we haven't even seen that. >> we haven't, suzanne. you know, last month it was indicated by the u.s. and turkey that they were studying various options of what to do, that among those options might be a no fly zone, but it doesn't seem like there's anything close to imminent as far as trying to impose a no fly zone. there are more and more calls from members of the international community to impose a no fly zone, but where is the willingness of the countries to do so. how are they going to do so, especially when the u.n. security council is still deadlocked because syria -- because russia and because china are backing the syrian regime. it's just very difficult, and even though there are more calls, even from the syrians as well to impose this, it's just not looking like it will happen any time soon. suzanne. >> all right. mohammed, appreciate it. about a million people turn out in london for a final salute to the summer olympics. worry going to take you there live. 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[ male announcer ] glucerna hunger smart. a smart way to help manage hunger and diabetes. welcome back to "newsroom." we'll take you around the world in 60 minutes. we'll take a look at what is number one on bulgarian radios top of the charts. ♪ >> it's kind of funky, actually. it was angel moses singing their summer hit "come to the sea." and heroes of olympics and paralympics are -- reggidge -- richard, how was the ceremony? who showed up? >> well, first of all, i think the important thing is this was not just -- i mean, obviously its reason was to honor the medal winners. 700 of them who came through on buses tloo central london. was britain sort of putting the finishing touches to what has been a summer of sport from the olympics and the paraolympic games and wrapping it up in one big thought that says the country done good. the athletes done good. all -- and crucially, all those nasty little prognosis of problems with rail and problems with transport, problems with infrastructure, problems with this and problem -- >> all right. >> it didn't happen. >> all right. you're a little proud of yourself there, and london should be proud too, gut give us a sense of the flavor. who was there? the closing ceremony at the paraolympics last night, i understand you had a lot of major hit? >> rihanna. loads of people were. jayzee also there. that was unlike the olympics. the pair olympics was a celebration in terms of fire. that was the theme of it. it was absolutely dramatic. the fireworks at the end were spectacular, and in many ways those who were there said that the paraolympic closing games was more meaningful and had a much stronger content that those -- than the actual olympics themselves. yes, the olympics themselves had the spice girls reforming, but the paraolympic games actually had the athletes many chairs in the stadium for the whole performance, so they were much more part of it than they were for the olympic games themselves. >> all right. richard, when does london get back to normal? when do they all start leaving? >> what you really mean is when does the chew break down, when do things start going wrong? that's what are you really getting at. i can hear you niggling me. it ain't going to happen. listen, one other story to bring to your attention. you will have seen prince harry, who is now in afghanistan. you're familiar with what i'm talking about. >> yes. >> i believe suzanne. and threats that the taliban saying that they will do whatever they can to kidnap or kill prince harry now that he is on active service duty in afghanistan. when harry was first deployed to afghanistan as a ground -- member of the ground troops, he was pulled out when knowledge of him being there came out, so the difference this time and why the ministry of defense say he won't be pulled out and much more relaxed as they can be about this is because he is a helicopter pilot, and to quote the ministry of defense, it's a lot more difficult to kill or kidnap a helicopter pilot. let's ignore the fact you have to get ten first and you have to get past the british troops, so it's the taliban making a lot of moiz and hot air about it, but i can tell you the british troops are not concerned. >> good. we certainly hope that he is safe. we appreciate that. richard quest, good to see you. >> i am going -- i am going to take your journey next time you come to this city. >> i would like that. >> public transport. >> yes. i have been on the tube before, actually, but, yes, we can do that at post-olympics and see what that experience is like. good to see you, richard. i got to leave it there. >> thank you. in havana more than two million people spept the night without power. becoming a fulltime indoor cat wasn't easy for atti. but he had purina cat chow indoor. he absolutely loved it. and i knew he was getting everything he needed to stay healthy indoors. and after a couple of weeks, i knew we were finally home! [ female announcer ] purina cat chow indoor. and for a delicious way to help maintain a healthy weight, try new purina cat chow healthy weight. in communities across the country. whether it's supporting a delaware nonprofit that's providing training and employment opportunities, investing in the revitalization of a neighborhood in the bronx, or providing the financing to help a beloved san diego bakery expand, what's important to communities across the country is important to us. and we're proud to work with all of those who are creating a stronger future for everyone. zeerchlgt the arrest of a political cartoonist in india leads to complaints of sensorship in the world's largest democracy. authorities arrested asham over health insurance cartoons mocking political corruption in india. at a hearing today he refused to apply for bail. his lawyer is demanding that authorities drop charges against him. now, in india it's defined as an act of hatred against the government or attempting to stir up government dissatisfaction. electricity beginning to return to parts of cuba now after major power outage left parts of the country in the dark. now, a government spokesman says that more than two million people in havana lost electricity. power outage affected western and central cuba. cubans are used to these brief outages because the country's old electrical grid, but this one is a a lot larger. >> yemeni forces have killed a key al qaeda leader. this is big news on twitter. here's a tweet that caught our eye. yemen has killed as a aid al shehri, a man second in command in the arabian peninsula. in argentina it is a real life resurrection story. a premature baby, the doctors had given up for dead is now going home alive today. and uterine cancers.ovari i even wrote a play about that. my symptoms were a pain in my abdomen and periods that were heavier and longer than usual for me. if you have symptoms that last two weeks or longer, be brave, go to the doctor. ovarian and uterine cancers are gynecologic cancers. symptoms are not the same for everyone. i got sick...and then i got better. humans -- sometimes life trips us up. and sometimes, we trip ourselves up, but that's okay. at liberty mutual insurance we can "untrip" you as you go through your life with personalized policies and discounts when you need them most. just call... and speak with a licensed representative about saving on your policy when you get married, move into a new house... [crash!] or add a car to your policy. don't forget to ask about saving up to 10% when you combine your auto and home insurance with liberty mutual. security, coverage, and savings. all the things humans need to make our beautifully imperfect world a little less imperfect. call... and lock in your rate for 12 months. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? had he get to take their baby daughter home from the hospital. this is not an ordinary homecoming. no ordinary baby. her parents call it a miracle, and they call her a miracle. when you hear the story, you're probably going to agree. here's rafael romo. >> reporter: she weighs only 800 grams. she was born premature after only six months of gestation. her parents are calling her a miracle baby. when she was born at the randall hospital in northeastern argentina, she had no vital signs. neonatal doctors checked her for a second time and, again, found no vital signs of life. according to hospital director, she was observed for a while and declared dead. the baby's father says her mother insistsed on seeing the baby one last time after she was already inside a coffin. >> translator: they put the coffin on toch of the stretcher, and looked for a crowbar to open it because it was nailed shut. i put the crowbar in there and started prying. a took a breath and took the lid off. at that moment i saw a white cover over the baby. reply wife saw the little body first and touched her hand. had he then uncovered her face, and that's when we heard the first cry. >> wow. that is unbelievable. rafael romo joins us. it's a beautiful, beautiful story. she is now 5 months old, and she's spent, what, ten hours inside this this refrigeration morgue. her parents, you've talked to her parents. what do they think? >> it's an incredible story, and for the family it has been an emotional roller coaster. first they get the news that the baby has no vital signs, that she's dead and that she's going to be sent to the morgue, and that's why she was put in a freezer at the morgue and spent ten hours to 12 hours there, and then they go there and they all of a sudden realize that she's alive. she's been to the hospital for all this time. she turned -- the parents are just elated. many challenges, but let's hear what they have to say about finally being able to bring the baby home. >> translator: after suffering from pneumonia, bleeding, and everything else, she's finally with us. >> translator: we waited for her for a long time. when she was in the hospital, we couldn't see her, but finally she's here. we're all now very happy because we can now be together as a family. >> and she's not necessarily out of the woods. she's still in a very fragile state of health. she needs a respirator. she's going to be fed through a feeding tube, and, again, she was premature, so she's still very, very small. >> yeah. it's step by step as they go. her name, her original name, they had one picked out for her, and then they changed it. tell us about that story. >> that's right. the name that the parents was lucia. when all of this happened, they decided to change it to the spanish word for light and miracles, and it is very appropriate. she has become a household name in argentina. people just praying for her that she gets better. >> are there any doctors or officials or anybody who can explain what happened here, why it was that they pronounced this little girl dead and that she was not? >> nobody has been really able to explain this. when you think about the human body spending more than an hour many this kind of frigid conditions, you start thinking about hypothermia. the only possible explanation that i've heard out there is that maybe that kind of temperature, her being a baby and a premature baby slowed down the metabolism, but in any case, it's just something that is very difficult to explain and that's why the family says that it is a miracle that she's getting a second chance at life. the sad thing about it is that doctors say that she might have suffered permanent brain damage they don't really know to what extent because she's very fragile. she's not wide awake yet. it's only going to take time to know exactly how bad it is. >> keep us wrupted, rafael. it's a beautiful story. thank you. tomorrow a lot of people will go to the national september 11th memorial in lower manhattan, but they're not going to find the name of one of the muslim-americans in the first responders. he says his mother's faith is the reason why. >> when 9/11 terrorists attacked the world trade center, firefighters and police were quick to respond. so was mohammed hamdani, a 23-year-old certified emt who had worked as a police cadet. he skipped his job at a university research lab and rushed to the site. >> he was a prime example of what it is to be a human being, and he went there to save humanity. >> and sacrificed his own life in the process. his family posted his photo among thousands of others on a wall of the missing. a pakistani-american who grew up in new york and dreamed of becoming a doctor. the following march hamdani's remains were found in 34 parts. >> they gave us his jeans and his belt. my husband identified that they were his clothes. >> reporter: a police funeral followed with full honors from fellow cadets, the mayor, and police commissioner. >> i want to speak to all the new york members of the new york city police department that responded that day. he was indeed a hero. >> it was a very healing moment, and that was given in honor to me on the first anniversary honoring hem as an nypd cadet. >> an nypd badge that reads cadet, but with all the accolades, all the honors, pour them the most important one is missing. when the 9/11 memorial was unveiled, the family of mohammed abdani wanted to see his name grouped here among first responders who, like him, lost their lives trying to save others. instead hamdani's name is positioned over here in a section among those considered loosely connected to the world trade center. hamdani's mother is convinced his muslim religion has set him apart. >> here discriminating because of his faith, and that is not right. >> reporter: she points to this flyer that circulated days after 9/11 sent to ambulance dispatchers, among others. it has hamdani's police cadet photo and reads "has id, wanted." the nypd disavois any knowledge of it and says hamdani is a here wroe. the 9/11 memorial foundation and police deny discrimination saying hamdani was no longer an active cadet and had not received a presidential medal for valor. therefore, he did not meet the memorial's criteria of first responders. >> this is about my son. he is it not here to speak for himself. i have to speak for him, and i will to the day i die. >> she doesn't understand why no one will help. >> i want to see it in my lifetime. it's a very -- so intense pain that is undescribable. >> reporter: too painful to revisit the memorial where her son's name remains apart from others who tried to save lives. susan candiotti, cnn, new york. after a shooting that left dozens dead. ♪ >> miners in south africa were supposed to go back to work today, but right now tens of thousands of them are standing up in defiance. [ male announcer ] if you stash tissues like a squirrel stashes nuts, you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec® liquid gels. nothing starts working faster than zyrtec® at relieving your allergy symptoms for 24 hours. zyrtec®. love the air. in south africa another 15 240us miners are on strike. they walked off the job at the gold mine that is west of johannesburg last night. >> police were racing to the possibility of more violence at this mine. >> many of them are between 500 and 600 u.s. dollars. some were armed with machetes and crowds are also making, again, the call that they will kill those who dare return to work. at the same time they are in discussions with mine unions about the possibility of these wage increases, but the mine -- the chamber of mines here has said that that demand that the miners are making is totally unreasonable, and they are telling at least cnn that these miners, if they do get more money, some of them will have to be retrenched. >> it's widely expected that an apple mini-event that will happen on wednesday. our laurie seagul gives us an announcement. >> we got this inviltation this week. you can see what it says. it says we're almost here. september 12th. what we're really interested is the shadow right here that has a five. got a lot of us speculating that maybe we'll finally get the iphone 5 and finally hear about it, but what's it going to look like? what's it going to feel like? so many questions. let's go through some of those rumors. now, first of all, this is your traditional iphone you're looking at. lots of rumors about a bigger screen. the iphone has had a 3.5 inch screen since 2007. now, there's speculation that this screen may expand about four inches, so this could be the first time we actually see a taller iphone since 2007. people are also talking about the headphone jack. you take a look at this. usually at the top of your phone. now that could also move to the bottom of your phone. here's a rumor people are really talking about. a smaller dot connector. you stee right here. it's how you plug in your phone. it could get smaller, which might mean you might have to get a new plug for other devices, so, you know, the iphone 5 is also expected to support 4g, and that means it will be faster than previous versions of the device. another thing, we're all waiting to hear about nfc capabilities. lots of android devoices kr them already. it's a technology that turns your smartphone into your wallet. it's not all about the iphone. we're also hearing a lot of talk about an ipad mini. we've heard rumors that apple is going to release a smaller version of its traditional ipad, put it head-to-head with smaller tablets like kindle fire and google's nexus 7. price speculation between about $250, $300, but could it happen? you might actually have to wait a bit. i have a source who says expect a smaller ipad, but don't expect it next week. you never know. also, coming up the day before the announcement, facebook ceo mark zuckerberg is going to publicly speak for the first time since the debut into the market. it's going to be a jam packed week of tech news. back to you. >> all right. >> thank you very much. >> how an old taxi goes from trash to treasure. 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[ male announcer ] ocuvite. on every one of our carda reminder...ate. that before this date, we have to exceed expectations. we have to find new ways to help make life easier, more convenient and more rewarding. it's the reason why we don't have costumers. we have members. american express. welcome in. he spends his days scouring alleys for -- she speaks to the guys that is turning those parts into handbags. >> causeway bay, hong kong. big crowds and brand names dominate. >> it is a part of hong kong, but it's certainly not representative of all of hong kong. the mained, the city takes on a decidedly different feel. it's here where billy potts found his inspiration. >> is it hard to find beauty in something that is discarded and thrown away? >> no, actually. i find -- i find many of these things really beautiful. a lot of people find this kind of environment not very appealing, but i find it incredibly beautiful. >> in an alleyway of discarded taxi cab parts, the lawyer turned designer saw an opportunity. >> actually what we take is the bench seat. you see two big bench seats here. basically that provides you with, like, a back, and you have the seat, so that provides you with two really huge sort of sheets of vinyl. >> vinyl that he and his staff collect, redesign, and transform into handbags and accessories. >> how do you turn garbage like this into something beautiful that design aspect? how do you put that on top of your products and designs? >> well, it's all about story telling, really. you have to -- there's no point hiding what it is. that's the beautiful thing about it. if you think about it, all of it has been designed by somebody. like, it's really beautiful, ingenius industrial design. >> while his products, now sold throughout hong kong, are no doubt eco-friendly, potts shiz away from the term. >> so it's not abo

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