Live Breaking News & Updates on Lagos state neighborhood safety corps

Transcripts For DW DW News 20191203 23:15:00


live with the latest on our website at www dot com or by following us on twitter at d w news for now i m anthony howell thanks for watching. welcome to the this league here for a decent. place to talk about a. country that s a little. more. to know that 77 percent. are younger than 16. that s me and me and you. and you know what it s time old boy says.
the 77 percent he told. you this is where you cut. the 77 percent this weekend on d w. this is africa coming up on the program the onsets this was shoved into slavery from africa to america now to 400 years they are intending to where it all began searching for traces of that history and they are not going back to the u.s. . felt like i ll never belong. to it is known as the world s biggest floating city. nigeria i m not too fond on any mobs at least not yet.
i. feel welcome to the program some history lesson in the 1619 issue of where 20 captives from africa set sail for what is now the u.s. state of virginia its arrival in the era of american slavery this week 400 years later members of the u.s. congressional black caucus reflect on the. nature it s cruel history and legacies they visited the united nations headquarters in new york on the un s ockelford 10. as a place to contemplate the slave trade and racism today they were joined by the academy award nominated actor moore who sue from been in a nation film with thousands of africans were taking into slavery. this year 20.
400 years and the 1st week of this for. all of return on. haitian american. history. it makes us reflect in finish their history to remember what was sticky from. given back. on the. african-american couple who are now given back to the land of the us this they both moved to god feeling like they didn t belong in the land of the u.s. building a new life i m learning about the history has given them a whole new sense of identity and belonging. elmina on the gun they in khost was called the mine by the portuguese because of
the abundance of gold found here but wealth was ultimately made with a different precious good humans. elmina consul was one of the atlantic slave trades depots holding people captive both men and women before the shipment to america. 400 years on some americans arriving here searching for traces of their history some come as visitors others come to stay like obvious. and marcus taylor. slips into the wind mill their wrists with. around $1000.00 men and women were held captive in the casals cramped dungeons at any given time until they were shipped off into a future of forced labor or death in transit visit is plays reeds of remembrance here out of sadness for the suffering enjoyed by previous generations.
i am a history that. i know my history. and . the interstate passion paid for this is frames. marcus is from detroit and resettling in guyana he met obvious shortly after his arrival they now live together in the capital accra. marcus s belongings have not yet arrived from america but at least obvious photos of her relatives are a comfort. family history is important to them even when it is a painful one marcus s case. when i was 12 years old my family was attacked by the police off by police officers i watch my family member every male in my family. everyone between my grandmother
a mother be beaten in front of me a toilet. and we were coming from my great grandmother s funeral. and to watch that back and ingest it from a very young age i kind of felt like i d never be. avia is preparing for one client she works as a massage therapist mixing traditional western massage techniques with god name spirituality. she was drawn to gonna after experiencing rejection and discrimination in america she says now 38 avia was much younger when she was suddenly called into a boss s office. and i m seeing that i got my a half moment of that i was directly told that being african was not acceptable and the person was looking at me like you know i like you you know your
hair is so cute you re so cute right here but we re going to have to take you out of your position unless you change your hair because the higher ups they think you re here is a little bit too ethnic and i was like too ethnic what does that mean. she has left that life behind now she wants to do good things for herself and others i use it to give people hope to inspire people. music is pretty much healing to for me is just as well as my they re in. a state where there. is obvious started rapping and it s keeping it off. with marcus is full support. all about being a woman black. about our density. that s
there. marcus had a bodybuilding career in the u.s. and canada he fell ill but is now training again he hopes to compete. the mr universe title. i.x. me which country that i wanted to represent why they wanted to represent the u.s. i don t want to represent canada or i m representing down at this year and i m here we patch orating. you know in pasadena my citizenship so i thought that it would be great for me to represent ghana. elmina a slave caso a place of terror for many african-americans and sisters. by coming here and seeing it with. their descendants hope to gain a clearer sense of the own history of. this gate of no return
once led across the atlantic to america. for marcus returning to america is unthinkable. nothing national. in for me i just feel that. we have to we have to make our own change we cannot allow basically expect somebody else to make a change when they have been saying way for a news. and the french have the same. thing change with the status saying. so for me i can i can live in that is assisting us. having crossed the ocean in this direction from america. and marcus announced set on making history in africa. as a prague on the end you are always welcome home now if you live in or have ever been
to lagos nigeria you probably know about the slums. known as the welds biggest floating city it is home to about 300000 people despite its size mccorkle has never had any city planning documents but that is about to change. welcome to my cocoa a floating slum in the nigerian mega city of lagos officially this part of the city does not exist you won t find these dingy canals and ramshackle house indicated on any city maps but john and his team are trying to change that on to their location tracking smartphones they crisscross the old ways with the aim of putting microcode and it s approximately 300000 inhabitants on the map where are you. made up of gals from. actually. collected went of interest within the neighborhood putting the houses will put these on the map so we can have more. points of interest on
this in my book on city streets and have is enough to get. all of these come up for free john works for south africa based ngo code for africa the organization behind this drive to map out the slums and improve the lives of those who live here. every point of interest is carefully entered into the system like what the floating barbershop. to be part of the point of enjoyable would he want to come up with whom are those who want someone who without property deeds or in many cases even illegal existence the inhabitants of macaco live with the permanent threat of the fiction for this local traditional leader appearing on a map for the 1st time is a step towards cementing his people s place here. nancy before in mark or core we were in the dark but now with the work you have done we traditional chiefs can see
that you have done a good job we are only fisherman we didn t know how to mark out the different neighborhoods as you know we are very happy. john believes that inhabitants of this part of the city should have access to the same knowledge of the neighborhood enjoyed by those who live elsewhere in lagos. all of these westy walking on the aisle when we had gone it would look like the rest parker to go see it because the street to see differently the public would now be able to see this neighborhood differently as the map is ready to go online. to kenya now where heavy rain and flooding have been taking a deadly toll but this is a story with a happy ending vincent is a fisherman who went to work last friday but only just made it back home 3 days later was trapped on a small patch of land. east africa in the past week local
residents could only watch helplessly while he waited for help which finally arrived in the form of a helicopter. just take a look at this footage. 6 i. after 72 very cool down when the i was on the island everyone s believed to have. 6 now i feel i m i m alone i. am now born again i. must be a good feeling to be back home that s it for now from did you news africa you can catch all our stories on our website and facebook page. with the beautiful i catch the 19 year old was named model of the yeah the twins in $1000.00 and i was
in london on monday. but i ll see you again soon. can carry information. can help feet be. still people can be happy without block. how much light do we really neat. we ve seen the light on made in germany in 60 minutes long d w. what secrets lie behind the walls.

Slavery , History , Traces , Us , Dw-this-is-africa , 400 , World , Mobs , Floating-city , Nigeria , Program , History-lesson

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom Live 20200120



world. we are getting a sense of u.s. president donald trump s defense strategy as his legal team prepares for his impeachment trial. the white house will file its legal brief by noon monday on the charges of abuse of power and obstruction of congress. now, we already know the president s team will argue he shouldn t be impeached because his conduct with ukraine was not a criminal offense. that s what they re saying. meantime, the democratic leader in the senate said i will push for more evidence to be admitted. the president is afraid of the truth. most americans, my guess is even republicans, know what the truth and know he s hiding it. we democrats aim to get the truth and make no mistake about it. we will force votes on witnesses and documents. and it will be up to four republicans to side with the constitution to side with rule of law and not side in blind obeisance. he probably thinks he s guilty. sarah westwood has more now on what s ahead. reporter: with the trial of president trump set to begin on tuesday, both the white house and house democrats fired opening shots this weekend in the first round in the trial. they filed the trial brief and that s essentially a paper version of what we will hear the house democrats layout on the floor of the senate when the trial gets underway. interestingly, house democrats mentioned they may want to draw from new evidence. those are documents provided by lev parnas, an associate of the president s personal attorney rudy giuliani. republicans have sought to limit the evidence democrats can cite at the trial, just rely on what was relied on in the house. also ahead of the senate trial, it was a response to the summons of president trump. it was a six-page document from the president s legal team that offered a taste of the aggressive tone that trump s lawyers are likely to strike in the trial. it laid out extensive arguments of both abuse of power and obstruction of congress. of course, there is still a bitter divide in the senate between republicans and democrats whether lawmakers will hear from witnesses in the course of the senate trial. democrats on sunday stress they will be called. if the senator prevails, it will be the first impeachment trial that goes to conclusion without witnesses. there is no question that working with a foreign power, trying to extort a foreign power to interfere in our election is about as bad as you can imagine. the main fear, the framers of the constitution had, why they put the impeachment clause in the constitution was they were afraid of foreign interference of our domestic affairs. reporter: now, monday is set to be a busy day in the trial of president trump. the white house s legal brief is due by noon. an hour earlier at 11:00 a.m., the democrats presenting the ca case. democrats are still expressing complaints about the fact that they have not seen the senate resolution outlining the rules of the trial, but some senate republicans have pushed for an aggressive schedule that would see it longer, but fewer days for presenting. that question of witnesses also left open-ended heading into the week of the trial. sarah westwood, cnn, capitol hill. at a farm bureau conference, president trump boasted about recent trade agreements, but he got a standing ovation when he attacked the impeachment process. we re achieving what no administration has ever achieved before. and what do i get out of it, tell me? i get impeached. that s what i get out of it. [ laughter ] by these radical left lunatics, i get impeached. but that s okay. the farmers are sticking with trump. [ cheers and applause ] they re sticking with trump. all right. for more on all of this, jacob joins us from lagos in nigeria. he is an associate at lse ideas. that is a foreign policy think tank at the london school of economics. good to see you. good morning. so, we got a sense of how the white house plans to respond to the charges against president trump over the weekend with the newest member of trump s legal team, alan dershowitz said there was not an impeachable offense. let s listen. without a crime there can be no impeachment. it certainly doesn t have to be a crime. if you have somebody that completely corrupts the office of president and who abuses trust and who poses great danger to our liberty, you don t need a technical crime. which is it and what does this do to dershowitz s credibility when you see this? well, i think a lot of people dershowitz is one of a number of people who were in the senate in 1998, 1999 taking opposite positions. i think that speaks to the extent to which rather than being a nonpartisan process, whether than being an attempt to look at the law and high crimes and misdemeanors are determined. it s not defined in the constitution, have been committed. impeachment is a political process. but that s not a new thing. impeachment was a political process in 1999. i think if you were going through the same process, if president trump had done these things in 2001 and the composition of the senate were roughly what it was in 1999, i don t think the partisanship would be all that different. which side can make the political case? it defends on the idea this is a fundamentally legitimate process. the democrats, rather than trying i think they understand they are unlikely to scrape off the necessary 20 republican votes to convict the president, is to force republican senators, particularly those facing reelection in november, votes that will be impossible to defend to their constituents they can benefit from going into the election. we know the house managers need four republicans to vote with them to allow new witnesses and new evidence to be included in the senate trial. the republicans don t want to see that happen. so how likely is it that they the democrats will get those four votes? i think it s not out of the realm of possibility, but i think one thing we ve seen over the last three years the degree to which trump has maintained an incredibly strong hold to the republican party, anyone who has dissented from trump has been forced out of the party. if republicans take a vote against him politics again, republicans are scared about the retribution from trump. they are worried about voting, so it s politics again. impeachment is slightly popular. the general view of the american people i mean, it s a heavy polarized electorate. the general view of the public is this is a legitimate process. so they are going to the general election with a general public, not by an overwhelming margin but robust margin. having voted, it puts them in a difficult position politically. you have to ask the question could there be a credible trial without witnesses. what trial is there that doesn t have witnesses? i think we ve lost our guest there. jacob joining us there via skype. having a robust conversation. many thanks. well, a mysterious virus is spreading across asia. we will tell you where it s reached and how many people are now affected. plus a heart felt message from prince harry on the way he and his wife meghan are splitting ties with the royal family. we re back with that in just a moment. how do we make a scented oil plug-in that doesn t smell fake? start with the essence of nature air wick scented oils are infused. .with essential oils that are 100% natural. to fill every corner with the fragrance of nature. air wick. 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(vo) save over 40 hours a month with intuit quickbooks. the easy way to a happier business. we were paying an arm and a leg for postage. i remember setting up shipstation. one or two clicks and everything was up and running. i was printing out labels and saving money. shipstation saves us so much time. it makes it really easy and seamless. pick an order, print everything you need, slap the label onto the box, and it s ready to go. our costs for shipping were cut in half. just like that. shipstation. the #1 choice of online sellers. go to shipstation.com/tv and get 2 months free. hundreds of people were injured this weekend as lebanon saw a violent wave of protests. for months demonstrators have expressed their frustrations over the country s crumbling economy and the country s inability to choose new leaders. earlier this week protests turned violent, sparking what s being called the week of rage. police responded with tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets. the military has been deployed in an effort to restore calm. in iraq, demonstrators are back out on the streets of the capital baghdad. they are demanding political reform and a new prime minister. several activists tell cnn that today is the deadline for baghdad to choose a new caretaker prime minister. he resigned last year over iraq s struggling economy. controversial shi a cleric is asking for respect for protesters wishes. ainu mo pneumonia out break coronavirus is spreading across south korea. they confirmed the first case after it was identified in wuhan, china. meanwhile, chinese officials have confirmed 139 new cases of a pneumonia linked to the virus and say a third person has died from it. now there is concern the virus could spread this week as millions prepare to travel for the lunar new year. cnn s david culver joins us now live from beijing with more on this. and, david, of course, it is a big concern. what all are you learning about the new cases of pneumonia linked to the virus and how is the chinese government responding to this outbreak and efforts to contain it? reporter: i can tell you on that latter question there, rosemary, just in the past hour we heard from the foreign ministry here in china, and they say that they are in close contact with south korea, japan as well as thailand and health officials there in trying to learn as much about the spread of this coronavirus as possible. they also say that they are adamant, that they will try to protect the region s hiygienic security and one they are working to control. the reality is there is a lack of information, if you will. there is a lot of uncertainty. people, quite frankly, do not know what guidelines, if any, they should take with them as they are preparing to go forward with the holiday travel. as you mention, millions, hundreds of millions of people use this stretch of time, this 40 days that will go from january 10th into february to go visit loved ones and they re taking railway as one of the options. 440 million trips expected by train this year alone. so with that much close contact, there is concern that if this virus is one that can spread human to human, then this would be the prime place that it could happen. places like airports, places like railways. so that is what they re trying to at least now start with screening of the airports and railways for folks who are going into wuhan which is where this is centered and folks going to other countries from china, rosemary. this is the concern because south korea has now confirmed one case there, and we mentioned the lunar celebrations and the travel that is required there. so how do you stop that? reporter: right. and the reality is this is not just a chinese-specific travel holiday. this is a regional holiday. so you re going to have folks from other countries, neighboring countries, in fact, who are also going to be traveling. and that s the biggest question, can they really stop this spread. they are certainly putting measures in place as of now. they have put these airport screening devices, not only here in china and going into wuhan, but in places like jfk in the states, l.a.x., san francisco, and in japan, south korea and thailand now. so they re trying to take these precautions as best as possible. david culver in beijing, many thanks to you for bringing us that live report. anthony fouchi is at the institute of technology. thank you for joining us. good to be with you. china is reporting a jump in the number of cases for this new strain of coronavirus linked to the central city of wuhan. how bad could this get, do you think and how concerned should everyone be about it? it really is an evolving situation, and we have to be prepared for the worst. i mean, i don t think there is cause for panic on anyone s part. we certainly need to be following it and watching this very carefully. as you know, just a couple of days ago it was report that had there were 41, then 45 cases. now we re up to 198. so this is a situation where, although it does not look like there is very efficient human to human sustained transmissibility, there likely could be some degree of human to human that started off as a situation that seemed to have arose out of a seafood market in wuhan. we re really not quite sure at this point what the point source of the infection is. but right now we re following it very carefully, and there does seem to be the possibility of some limited human to human transmission, which is obviously of some concern. right. and that s why we are learning that china is screening people at train stations and airports. we know that various u.s. and international airports are doing the same. so what are the symptoms that they would be looking for at this point and what symptoms should anyone who has traveled to wuhan be looking for? well, it s a combination of fever and respiratory symptoms. cough, difficulty breathing. it appears to be attacking the pulmonary function. so the people who are getting ill are getting pneumonia-type symptoms. so when you screen someone like here in the united states, we ve started screening at three major airports. jfk in new york city. l.a.x. in los angeles. and san francisco international airport. and when you screen someone, you find out, do they have fever? do they have respiratory symptoms? and is there any contact in the sense of coming from the area, in this case wuhan where there is obviously cases that have now been evolving. what happens in the situation where they haven t necessarily their bodies haven t established those sorts of symptoms by the time they reach the airport? not until later do they start seeing those symptoms. well, that s an important point. that s the reason why although airport screening is helpful, it isn t perfect. and there certainly are situations historically with similar things such as with sars that we saw in 2002 and what we saw, people can get through airport screening who don t have any symptoms or don t have any fever. and by the time they arrive in their destination, the symptoms evolve. right. and that s the big concern, then, because that s presumably when there is the possibility of increased possibility, at least, of human to human contagion. so what more does need to be done to contain this new strain of coronavirus? well, obviously the simple types of things that you avoid, the kinds of contacts that could spread respiratory infection. for example, there are situations where you wash your hands, stay away from crowded places where people are coughing and sneezing and having respiratory symptoms. but the important part is to try and find out what the source of this is and to get a better feel for where it s evolving because we re still very much in the early stages of this. this is really first reported in the end of december, december 31st. and only in the past couple of days have we seen the evolution of a few, and now a lot more cases. so it really is a moving target. and we just need to do prudent public health measures such as what you ve mentioned, like screening at airports. right. and clearly there is no vaccination that would deal with this particular strain at this point in time, but scientists no doubt will be working on that. how long does it take to come up with a vaccination specifically for this particular strain? well, i mean, one can get we at the national institutes of health here in washington are already getting the sequence from the chinese of the virus and are starting to be able to put it into the kind of form where you can start developing a vaccine. but in any situation, if you re talking about a vaccine that s practically able to be usable, you re talking really about a considerable period of time measured in several months for years. there is not going to be a vaccine for this. we re going to have to rely on classic good public health measures. we will keep an eye on this, of course. dr. anthony fouchi, thank you for being with us. appreciate it. pleasure to be with you. we want to turn to london now where prince harry said he and his wife meghan had no other option but to step back from the royal family. this comes after buckingham palace made the stunning announcement on saturday that the couple would no longer represent the queen. with great sadness, the duke of sussex spoke at a charity event on sunday about what led to this decision. it brings me great sadness that it has come to this, the decision that i have made for my wife and i to step back is not one i made lightly. it was so many months of talks after so many years of challenges. and i know i haven t always gotten it right, but as far as this goes, there really was no other option. what i want to make clear is we re not walking away, and we certainly aren t walking away from you. our hope was to continue serving the queen, the commonwealth and my military associations, but without public funding. unfortunately, that wasn t possible. it has been our privilege to serve you and we will continue to lead a life of service. so in that respect, nothing changes. it has also been a privilege to meet so many of you and to feel your excitement for our son archie who saw snow for the first time the other day and thought it was bloody brilliant. [ laughter ] i will always have the utmost respect for my grandmother, my commander in chief, and i am incredibly grateful to her and the rest of my family for the support they have shown meghan and i over the last few months. i will continue to be the same man who holds his country dear and dedicates his life to supporting causes and military community so important to me. together you have given me an education about living, and this role has taught me more about what is right and just than i could ever have imagined. we are taking a leap of faith, so thank you for giving me the courage to take this next step. prince harry is speaking very openly there. and if you are watching internationally, thank you so much for being with us. the global energy challenge is next. if you re joining us from here in the united states, do stay with us. we ll have more news for you after the break. good morning! oh no, here comes the neighbor probably to brag about how amazing his xfinity customer service is. i m mike, i m so busy. good thing xfinity has two-hour appointment windows. they have night and weekend appointments too. he s here. bill? karolyn? nope! no, just a couple of rocks. download the my account app to manage your appointments making today s xfinity customer service simple, easy, awesome. i ll pass. welcome back to our viewers here in the united states. you re watching cnn newsroom, and i m rosemary church. let s check the headlines for you. world leaders are calling for sanctions on anyone who violates any cease-fire in war-torn libya. they just wrapped up a libya peace summit in berlin where they pledge to respect an arms embargo and promise not to interfere in the country s ongoing civil war. the new york times editorial board has endorsed not one, but two candidates who it says should be the u.s. democratic presidential nominee. it has chosen senators elizabeth warren and amy klobuchar. the paper made the announcement in a televised special shedding light on the process that had been kept private for 160 years. u.s. president donald trump has until noon to file a trial brief with the senate. in a pretrial filing, his defense team argued he cannot be impeached because his actions in ukraine were not criminal offenses. the reply from the house is due 24 hours later. the impeachment trial begins tuesday. well, right now the global later gathering in a swiss re sort to discuss the very sources that are going to shape our lives in the months ahead, and i m talking, of course, about the world economic forum, the annual summit that brings together political, business and finance leaders from all around the world. but this year, unlike last year, one among them is likely to steal more than his fair share of the limelight. nina dos santos explains. reporter: u.s. presidents are rare sightings in davos even among the elite crowd the event draws. but when donald trump turns up as he did two years a go, he s impossible to miss. we have a tremendous crowd and a crowd like they ve never had before. reporter: the world economic forum with the globalist agenda is thousands away from the president s populist base. we are going to drain the swam. reporter: both geographically and politically. but davos is first and foremost a business gathering and donald trump is keane to attract outside investment. i m going to be going to davos. i ll be meeting the biggest business leaders in the world getting them to come here. reporter: with the ink now dry on the truce with china, a victory lap is also the alpine air. what better place to talk about global trade and global economics than davos. reporter: this year s summit folk he is us on how to create a sustainable and cohesive world. among the attendees, greta thunberg who has clashed with president trump on climate change. and angela merkel, berated by him for spending too little on defense and too much on russian gas. after the u.s. killed teheran s top general, iran s delegation has decided to pull out. if everybody else wants to talk about climate change or iran, that s where he can get into some spats. i think we have to anticipate there could be some cringe worthy moments. we hope the president gets all of his tweets done before the doors of air force one open on the tarmac. reporter: the trip will be the president s first foreign event. it will be a politically charged year on the home front. it coincides with his impeachment trial in the senate and comes two weeks before the iowa caucuses. kilking off the primary season to determine his likely democratic opponent. as such, it s little wonder that a survey commissioned to head davos with u.s. politics is one of the global business community s biggest concerns. only the second sitting president to attend after bill clinton. thank you very much. reporter: he may not have scored a standing ovation, but this president s actions continue to keep davos s decision makers on the edge of their seats. nina dos santos, cnn, davos. and we are joined now by john depterius live from switzerland. how is president trump to be received when he takes the world stage and what is expected to be achieved at this year s world economic forum? reporter: well, it s part of the rub here against donald trump, rosemary, that it s his agenda that dominates the global narrative. at least at the start of 2020. you can see his game plan taking shape here. he ll drive home his point that he got the first stage of the u.s./china. the nafta agreement, the u.s. remains growing here. and the bold move for his entry into iran and the killing of the iranian general qassem soleimani. it was bold, it was audacious. there will be middle east players here asking is the region safer as a result? i would imagine the gulf allies of the united states, saudi arabia, u.a.e., for example, kuwait wouldn t agree so. u.s. troops in iraq, we ll hear from the iraqi president later in the week here at davos. also this is a critical window for europe, if you will because of the issue of the environment change. the president of france will stand up against donald trump. last time they basically let him have the center stage and he controlled the overall debate going forward. nobody challenged him on climate change. will they have a stronger backbone at 2020? this is something we need to see because of the global outcry against the warming of the climate and perhaps they re well behind the curve to do anything about it. it will be interesting to see how world leaders respond to president trump this year, of course. and the other concern, he has been denying the existence of climate change for sometime. this despite the scientific evidence that s out there for all to see. how is he likely to deal a lot of criticism thunberg will be there likely on the stage with him. are they likely to somehow cross paths, do you think? reporter: they ll cross paths. the world economic forum on its 50th anniversary didn t decide to have this juxtaposition. 11:30 a.m. tomorrow he ll take the stage. greta will do the same. she s going to try to avoid an environmental apocalypse. she hasn t been shy. whether it s united nations or other venues around the world, nor has the president in attacking her. this will actually move forward the environmental debate. and coming into this meeting we ve seen the you re mean union announce a $1 trillion fund to move to net zero carbon emissions by 2050. you would think the president would wake up to the call here and do something about it. germany naacping away from coal. i remember my first one was right after the fall of the berlin wall. the world economic forum had a way of keeping them together at the debate. professor schwab took some criticism because he didn t challenge donald trump last year. just called him a strong leader. will that change this year? i would think so, rosemary. we ll be watching very closely, as will you john depterius joining us from davos. many thanks. still to come, puerto rico launches an investigation demanding why a warehouse full of emergency food and water never made it to the victims of hurricane maria. we ll take a closer look. that s next. beds get sick too protection. lysol laundry sanitizer kills 99.9% of illness- causing bacteria detergent leaves behind. lysol. what it takes to protect. he s a systems quarterback. where s the truck? what? parked it right there. male voice: what did i tell you, boys? tonight we eat like kings! 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[coughs] kim is now demonstrating her congestion. save it, slimeball. i ve upgraded to mucinex. we still have 12 hours to australia. mucinex lasts 12 hours, so i m good. now move- kim nooooo!! mucinex has a patented tablet that lasts 3x longer, for 12 hours. the governor of hawaii says the entire state is in mourning after two police officers were killed in a shooting. authorities say a suspect opened fire on them sunday as they responded to a residence. at some point the house caught fire and flames engulfed other homes around it, destroying seven of them. three people, including the suspect are unaccounted for. at a news conference, honolulu s police chief offered condolences to the victims loved ones. on behalf of the men and women of the honolulu police department, our deepest condolences go out to the families of officer tiffini enriques and kaliqui. the hpd grieves with you and shares your loss. you are looking at pictures of the two slain officers. the police chief went on to say she knew them personally. she said they were like her own children. well, the fbi is working with local law enforcement in virginia as the state braces for a contentious gun rights rally. authorities are working on public safety after threats of violence from hate groups. cnn s nick valencia has more about the controversial gathering. reporter: today is the day, and it goes without saying that there s big concern here that this could turn into a similar situation that we saw in charlottesville, virginia, in 2017. the governor, of course, worries that this could be a magnet for extremist groups and a similar situation could happen. of course, police officers are worried as well. i was talking to some earlier patrolling the ire i can t, there were individuals doing counter surveillance on them. that s their characterization, not ours. i did speak to a source in the virginia state police department who tells me over the course of the weekend there was an increase in threats on law enforcement specifically on the social media pages in the virginia state police department and state police. they fear something bad to happen. tim anderson is one of them. what worries me is a bad actor. not a virginia gun owner, not somebody lawfully owning and possessing a firearm. there s going to be a bad actor and there is going to be something that happens in here. i just hope people truly understand that virginia gun owners are peaceful people. we peacefully demonstrate. this didn t start today. this started back in november. we peacefully demonstrated throughout the commonwealth. if anything bad comes out of tomorrow, i hope that the world understands it s not virginia gun owners causing this. it is the same kind of terrorist organizations that have caused unrest in other places. we want to be clear, what s happening today happens every year. it s supported as a lobby day. it will be less of a lobby day and more of a protest. nick valencia with that report. well, three government officials in puerto rico are now out of a job, accused of mishandling the distribution of disaster supplies meant for victims of hurricane maria more than two years ago. the weekend firings came shortly after hundreds of boxes of food and water were found sitting in a warehouse. that aid was not only needed after maria. it is needed now. over the past few weeks, earthquakes and aftershocks have destroyed hundreds of homes and structures in southern puerto rico. raphael r raphael rano is there now and has this report. reporter: the airport has been shut down several hours. we saw members of puerto rico s national guard and the state police who were guarding the site because they were trying to prevent any more people from coming in. we also noticed many restrictions for the general public to circulate in this area near the port of ponce. what happened was that a rumor spread like wildfire on social media on saturday that there was emergency aid at this warehouse that was meant for victims of hurricane maria two years ago, and that it was never distributed. and so about 200 people all of a sudden came to this location, opened the metal gate and enters the warehouse where they found pallets of water, baby food, formula, diapers and other items. now, the man who up until saturday had been in charge of puerto rico s emergency management office, carlos acevedo, said there was no mishandling, and this was an active warehouse, in fact, they had been helping people during some other disasters, hurricane karen and dorian. there were 80 pallets remaining. when the governor decided to fire him the very same afternoon, the governor said there are thousands of people who made sacrifices to bring aid to the south, and it s unforgivable, she says, that resources have been kept in a warehouse she also ordered an investigation to be completed in 48 hours. meanwhile there are as many as 7100 people on the southern coast of puerto rico that have been telling us they are not receiving the basic necessities they need after the earthquake that rattled this region for more than three weeks. now back to you. thanks so much for that report. still to come, in the shadow of an inferno, the world s top tennis players are holding court at the first grand slam event of the decade. we will take you live to melbourne where the air quality is a big concern at the australian open. back in a moment. did you really need the caps lock? mucinex cold and flu all-in-one. they have businesses to grow customers to care for lives to get home to they use stamps.com print discounted postage for any letter any package any time right from your computer all the amazing services of the post office only cheaper get our special tv offer a 4-week trial plus postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again! my sister moving differently, i didn t know what was happening. she said it was like someone else was controlling her mouth. her doctor said she has tardive dyskinesia, which may be related to important medication she takes for her depression. her ankles would also roll and her toes would stretch out. i noticed she was avoiding her friends and family. td can affect different parts of the body. it may also affect people who take medications for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. she knows she shouldn t stop or change her medication, so we were relieved to learn there are treatment options for td. - if this sounds like you or someone you know, visit talkabouttd.com to sign up to receive a personalized doctor discussion guide to help start a conversation with your doctor about td. you ll also be able to access videos and a free brochure that show the different movements of td. visit talkabouttd.com or call to learn more. - we were so relieved to learn there are treatments for td. - learn more at talkabouttd.com. introducing a razor that works differently. the gillette skinguard has a guard between the blades that helps protect skin. the gillette skinguard. we want to go to australia now where the first grand slam tennis event of the decade is underway. some players at the australian open have been voicing concern about the level of air pollution as the country battles its bushfire crisis, not to mention extreme weather. melbourne was hit by hail storms a few moments ago and there is relief from the fires. it is a poignant picture, of course, watching a survivng koala here in new south wales trying to drink water from the road. it has been the images of the koalas more than anything in actual fact that have pulled at people s heart strings. we want to get more on this. our will ripley is standing by live in melbourne. it s been difficult. i know it s been difficult for you covering this story seeing all the things you have already seen. now you re in melbourne. talk to us about this extreme weather, how it s impacting melbourne as well as the rest of fire-ravaged australia. reporter: rosemary, i want to talk about that koala photo for a moment. koalas don t drink water. they get their moisture from eucalyptus trees that have been decimated by drought and by fire. so the fact that young koala was so desperate to try to lap up moisture in the streets, it actually stopped traffic. it just it speaks to how unnatural this situation is, how unprecedented, how long this is for australia, millions of animals died, seeing their habitat destroyed, people who have been left homeless and dozens of people who have been killed. what we are experiencing now is the weather australians are used to this time of year. we are in the middle of summer. australians are used to hail. we ve seen golf size hail knocking birds out of the sky, ripping the leaves off of trees, identifying car woods and smashing car windows. this isn t welcome, but what is welcome is the rain and the cooler temperatures that come with it. while you re seeing things like flash flooding, especially in some of these fire-stricken areas that have the ground pretty much stripped, and that can be very dangerous, you re also seeing now temperatures cut in half here in melbourne from what they were last week. the air has been washed away from much of the smoke creating hazardous air quality when we riechld in the city late last week that was cancelling flights. it created its own weather system at one point and all the smoke was blowing into the city. i remember that tennis player who chanced. there was the british player who at&ted he was asked to play outside in his qualifying match in conditions deemed unsafe even for animals here. the smokey skies feel like a distabt memory and they ve been replaced by the heavy rain, the hail. and the tennis center behind me, it s continuing inside even though outdoors. players can t play in conditions like this. they ll take what we ve been seeing for months, which is an unprecedented bushfire crisis. fires raging out of control, rosemary. i guess the uncertainty now is how long can this last, and what does happen when the rain inevitably stops and temperatures rise back up again. and winds inevitably shift. remember, there s two weeks of tennis play here. the smoke could blow right back in as quickly as it blew out. you know how the weather changes quickly. we talked about that. melbourne is known for having four seasons in one day. always carry an umbrella. it is as if australia is reeling from one challenge to the next. as an australian living in the united states looking on, it just breaks my heart to see what the country is going through. will ripley bringing us that live update, that live report from melbourne, australia. many thanks. well, history was made at the 26th screen actors guild awards as hollywood honored the best achievements in television and film. on sunday the south korean film parasite bamt the first foreign language movie to win the best prize. joaquin phoenix took home best actor for his position in joker. brad pitt won a supporting role. it was his first sag award win. speaking of brad pitt, what real ill has social media buzzing is his reunion with his ex-wife jennifer aniston. the pair celebrated each other s wins with a cozy embrace back stage after she won best female actor in a drama series. but, no, there are no reports the couple is back together. i know that s what you want to see. earlier this month pitt said the two were just good friends. and thanks so much for joining us. i m rosemary church. early start is coming up next. have a great day. hi! we re glad you came in, what s on your mind? can you help keep these guys protected online? easy, connect to the xfi gateway. what about internet speeds that keep up with my gaming? let s hook you up with the fastest internet from xfinity. what about wireless data options for the family? of course, you can customize and save. can you save me from this conversation? that we can t do, but come in and see what we can do. we re here to make life simple. easy. awesome. ask. shop. discover. at your local xfinity store today. the much coveted the new york times democratic endorsement is out and more than one candidate has a reason to celebrate. two officers dead, two people unaccounted for after a deadly rampage in hawaii. and super bowl 54 is ret and 49ers square off for the lombardy hy

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Norah ODonnell 20200123



wee the powers of his office to cheat an election. in a series of dramatic taesentations stretching into the night, house managers laid out their case to remove mr. trump from office, at times using his own words against him. today was the first of what will be three eight-hour-long presentations by the democrats before the president s lawyers are even allowed to speak. democrats are focusing on what they call a crucial three-day span last july, painting a picture of a president who was intent on leveraging military aid to try to get ukraine to dig up dirt on joe biden, saying if his conduct isn t impeachable, then nothing is. well, we ve got team coverage on this historic day from both end of pennsylvania avenue. ben tracy is at the white house. we begin tonight with nancy cordes on capitol hill. nancy. reporter: norah, the impeachment managers are walking the senate through all the evidence step by step every phone call, every email as they lay out why they believe this senate should be the first in u.s. history to remove a u.s. president from office. president trump has acted in a manner grossly incompatible with self-governance. reporter: lead impeachment manager adam schiff launched his opening arguments by honing in in a three-day period from last summer. that alone is grounds for removal from office of the 45th president. reporter: it started, he said, on july 24, the day special counsel robert mueller testified about his two-year investigation into russian election interference. did you aually totally exonerate the president? no. reporter: one day later, president trump asked the ukrainian president to do him a favor and investigate his campaign rival, joe biden. the very next day, he s on the phone, president trump is on the phone with a different foreign power this time ukraine trying to get ukraine o interfere in the next election. reporter: the next day, president trump brought it up again in an overheard call with his e.u. ambassador. president trump asked sondland, so he s going to do the investigation? reporter: those three days, schiff argued, showed the president himself was behind the scheme, using millions in military aid as bait. ly it was not only immoral. it was also illegal. reporter: the president s edgal team looked on from a table nearby. we will challenge aggressively the case that they re putting forward. > reporter: in a series of late-night votes, senate republicans blocked the minority s attempts to secure new witness testimony. i move to table the amendment. table the amendment. table the amendment. reporter: some republicans say they re open to witnesses if biden testifies, too. democrat chuck schumer: that trade is not on the table. do o donnell: nancy cordes joins us now and, nancy, on this idea of a witness swap idea, i know democrats are saying this isn t like some fantasy football trade. and i understand joe biden himself has weighed in? reporter: that s right. ca campaigning in iowa, where he says that he himself is not going to be party to any kind of witness swap because he wasn t involved in this scheme and did othing wrong. but at the end of the day, norah, it s up to the senators. if 51 vote to hear from joe biden or john bolton or anyone anyone else, then those arbpoenas are going to go out. o donnell: all right, nancy, thank you. tonight, president trump is back in washington after a quick trip to the world economic forum in ecitzerland. but even while he was on the eorld stage, the president was focused on what was happening on the senate floor. ben tracy reports tonight from the white house. we have a great case. reporter: before leaving the world economic forum in switzerland, president trump deid there s somewhere else he d like to be. will you please be seated? reporter: front and center at his impeachment trial. te i d love to go. wouldn t that be great? wouldn t that be beautiful? std love to sit in the front row and stare at their corrupt aces. reporter: the president gave his own attorneys rave reviews and then unloaded on house managers: democrat adam schiff e d jerry nadler. these two guys, these are major sleaze bags. they re very dishonest people. e> reporter: despite republican efforts to block witnesses, president trump claims he d love to see testify from current and former members of his administration, including former adviser, john bolton. but mr. trump said national security concerns, particularly in bolton s case, make that unlikely. he knows some of my thoughts. he knows what i think about leaders. what happens if he reveals what i think about a certain leader, and it s not very positive? i don t know if we left on the best of terms. i would say probably not. reporter: back in the u.s., the president s campaign manager, brad parscale, told ,cbs this morning impeachment is helping mr. trump s re- election bid. there are millions now are engaged to show up. and the president has a larger base now significantly from 2016. reporter: as for the forsident actually showing up at ows own impeachment trial, republican senator john cornyn said the president should focus on other businesses. but republican senator rand paul said he may send a ticket over here to the white house just in ase the president wants to use it. norah. o donnell: that would be dramatic. ben, thank you. had there s breaking news tonight from california. investigators are on the scene of a fiery plane crash. the plane apparently went down just as it was taking off. cis van cleave has the latest. reporter: just after noon local time, the small plane went down just off the runway of the corona california municipal airport. pilot dorothe voll says the plane was trying to take off. he didn t pull back, and he was too fast to end the runway. and then he flipped, and then everybody was running, and it started on fire, and then it had two explosions. reporter: corona fire says pur people on board died. the crash sent plumes of black smoke billowing into the air. inews could see the smoke as the call for help went out. the smoke was just too ntense, and the fire it was just horrible. reporter: the national transportation safety board will vevestigate the crash. kris van cleave, cbs news, washington. o donnell: tonight, we are learning shocking new details about an alleged saudi plot aimed at silencing jeff bezos, the founder of amazon and the owner of the washington post. bezos phone was hacked, possibly by the saudi crown prince. jeff pegues on a motive and what s in a new forensic investigation commissioned by bezos. reporter: according to the report, amazon billionaire, jeff bezos, and saudi crown prince mohammad bin salman exchanged messages on whatsapp before, but the message sent in 2018 set in motion a chain of events. the u.n. says an mp4 video file sent from an whatsapp account used by the crowned prince infected bezos phone and caused a massive and unprecedented r siltration of data. the flow of information out of the washington post owner s phone jumped by 29,000%, and he would soon get messages from the account signaling he was being spied on. the saudis weren t happy with the washington post coverage of the kingdom and their columnist, jamal khashoggi, a critic of the regime. five months after bezos phone was hacked, jamal khashoggi was killed inside the saudi udnsulate in istanbul, for which the saudis ultimately took responsibility on 60 minutes. o donnell: did you order the murder of jamal khashoggi? ( translated ): absolutely not. this was a heinous crime. but i take full responsibility as a leader in saudi arabia, especially since it was committed by individuals working for the saudi government. reporter: one month after killing, another message from the account of bin salman included the photo of a woman resembling lauren sanchez, whom bezos was secretly having an affair with. soon after, the national enquirer broke the story of bezos affair, and bezos blamed the saudis. today the saudi foreign minister denied his government s involvement in hacking bezos phone. i think absurd is exactly the right word. the idea that the crown prince would hack bezos phone is silly. o donnell: what do we know about how someone would gain access to bezos phone. reporter: this was spyware, and we re told bezos didn t have to click to to sweep up his information. it can get your passwords, text messages, even have access to our phone. now the u.n. is calling for the u.s. to investigate. the f.b.i., though, is not comment. o donnell: and raises questions about how one can protect themselves. reporter: exactly. em o donnell: thank you, jeff. five major american airports are ramping up screenings of passengers coming in from wuhan, china, a city now on lockdown because of the spreading coronavirus. the world health organization is having emergency meetings as they decide whether to label this a global emergency. the death toll has spiked to 17. ramy inocencio is in china cinight reporting on a city quarantined. reporter: just one day before china s massive lunar new year holiday, as hundreds of millions crisscross the country to celebrate with families, an unprecedented act: in just a few hours, the entire city of wuhan, population 11 million and ground zero for the coronavirus epidemic, will go on lock down. every mode of transport out of the city will grind to a halt planes, trains, buses, ferries, and subways. n> we are at the wuhan airport. reporter: our cbs news team left wuhan just hours before the shocking announcement. in the airport, nearly every single person wore a mask, skminiscent of the sars crisis of 2003. when we landed in beijing, .irline workers scanned us for fevers. you just saw that. go got our temperatures checked. reporter: with similar scenes playing out in airports in and out of the region, even as far as moscow and lagos, nigeria. in wuhan, behind-the-scene footage shows extreme measures being taken to contain the virus. but reports of confirmed cases continue to rise, now reaching six countries, including the united states, where a man in his 30s remains in isolation at this hospital north of seattle. and as more people get sick the world health organization has added an extra day of talks to decide on whether this epidemic constitutes a global emergency. as for here in china, it s already taken decisive and some would say very startling action that begins, really, in the next alw hours. norah. o donnell: all right, ramy, thank you. today, president trump appeared to downplay want injuries sffered by u.s. service members in iran s recent missile attack on a base in iraq. 11 americans had been treated for concussion-like symptoms. our weijia jiang asked the president about it today in switzerland. i heard that they had headaches, and a couple of other things. but i would say and i can report, it is not very serious. o donnell: well, today, u.s. central command said more american troops were flown out of iraq to germany for medical evaluations. an exact number was not released. fedex is warning customers about a nationwide scam involving text messages. it s disguised as a tracking code for a package that s going to be delivered and users are asked to enter their delivery preferences and provide their personal and credit card information. again, this is a scam. beware. fedex says it never sends unsolicited texts or emails to customers. there are chilling new details tonight about three suspects members of a violent neo-nazi group who were arrested last week ahead of monday s pro-gun rally in virginia. nideral prosecutors said today that the suspects were caught on camera talking about killing people, poisoning water supplies, derailing trains, and starting a civil war. motherine herridge has more. reporter: on canadian patrick mathews computer, agents found a profanity-laced video he taped declaring, if you want the white race to survive derail some f-ing trains, kill some people and poison some water supplies. matthews and two associates were drrested last week in an f.b.i. sweep of the neo-nazi group the base. they discussed traveling to monday s gun rights rally in richmond to start a full-blown civil war. u.s. attorney robert hearse said the men were doing more than just talking about violence, having built an assault rifle and purchasing more than 3,000 rcunds of ammunition. they packed food and supplies, including a gas mask, intending to load their truck for the war in virginia. reporter: three other alleged members of the base were catherine herridge, cbs news,st washington. o donnell: and there is still much more news ahead on tonight s cbs evening news. as harvey weinstein goes on trial, his defense team is going on the attack against his accusers. coming up, what lawyers revealed today in court. plus, the college game that became a basket-brawl. well, tonight the heavy punishment s that s just been handed down. and later, the senior center that s full of bull. why the people who live there are loving every minute of it. fthe prilosec otc two-weekymore. challenge is helping people love what they love again. just one pill a day. 24 hours. zero heartburn. because life starts when heartburn stops. take the challenge at prilosecotc dot com. with td ameritrade tools, and help from pros. it s almost like you re training me to become an even smarter, stronger investor. exactly. 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today he was suspended 12 games by the big 12 conference. three other players from both teams received shorter suspensions. up next, who knew a 2,000-pound bull look at this thing who knew it could be so much fun? fun? needles. essential for the sea urchin, but maybe not for people with rheumatoid arthritis. because there are options. like an unjection™ . xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don t start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. as have tears in the stomach or intestines, serious allergic reactions, and changes in lab results. tell your doctor if you ve been somewhere fungal infections are common, or if you ve had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. fine for some. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an unjection™ . wityour money almostes offered seems like it s frozen. but not here. with capital one, you can open a new savings accountbout s and earn five times the national average. open one from here. or here - in a capital one café. plus, there are no fees cause s howt should be. this is banking reimagined. what s in your wallet? > o donnell: we have a saying in texas, you mess with the eull, you get the horns. well, in this case, seniors love this bull. mare s omar villafranca in pella, iowa. reporter: it takes a special combination of courage and craziness to ride a bucking bull. set one loose in a senior ornter. that s crazy. why would you think that? why would you do that? reporter: for rodeo clown jason dent, laughs are his livelihood, but it s his t dekick, this one-ton bull named ole who steals the show. hello, everyone! reporter: when ole lumbered into the wesley life senior y,mmunity, not a grandma or grandpa scattered. you got it! reporter: instead, the bull inched closer for the ride of a lifetime. he you did it! reporter: wilma hoekstra, who is 96, is old enough to know better, but too young to care. have you ever been on the back of a bull before? never. never. reporter: why did you wait 96 years? i don t know. ( laughter ) i think it s because i got wiser. i want to go down! d reporter: saddling up can be difficult. you made it! reporter: but the laughs and smiles are contagious. she had a great time. itspite his crooked horns and mean looks, 14-year-old ole is a gentle giant. we re buddies, aren t we? that s right! reporter: a big reason senior centers keep inviting him back. i m trying to celebrate him because i think he s awesome. and i feel like these people are keesome. wooo-hoo! reporter: and fearless enough to take the bully the horns at any age. omar villafranca, cbs news, pella, iowa. nnel donnell: i like that never too late to take the bull by the horns. we ll be right back. wherever we want to go, we just have to start. autosave your way there with chase. chase. make more of what s yours. skip to the good part with alka-seltzer plus. now with 25% more concentrated power. nothing works faster for powerful cold relief. oh, what a relief it is! so fast! when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. try pepto liquicaps for fast relief and ultra-coating. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. get powerful relief with pepto bismol liquicaps. but one blows them all out of the water. hydro boost with hyaluronic acid to plump skin cells so it bounces back. neutrogena® and for body. hydro boost body gel cream. so it bounces back. cdc guidance recommends topical pain relievers first. like salonpas patch large. it s powerful, fda-approved to relieve moderate pain for up to 12 hours, yet non-addictive and gentle on the body. salonpas. it s good medicine. hisamitsu. o donnell: on tomorrow s cbs evening news, the story of a young boy who asked his dad what they could do to help the homeless. you ll be amazed by what they came up with. and that is tonight s cbs evening news. i m norah o donnell right here in washington. we ll see you right back here tomorrow. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org announcer: this is the cbs overnight news. i ming ing mmeg oliver. we have a lot more to tell you about this morning, starting with the grammys. the brightest stars in the music industry will be shining on sunday night with awards and performances you can see here on cbs. but while the stage is being set and rehearsal is under way, there is trouble backstage. the recording academy and its suspended ceo deborah duggan are trading lautss. hi, everyone, i m deborah dugan. reporter: two months after deborah helped unveil, she is pulling back the curtain. she is rolling stone s senior music editor. it says a lot basically that says the academy misrepresented itself to the public, to its voting members and also to her when she came in. reporter: some of dugan s most damning claims involve near portnal, who is criticized for comments he made in 2018 saying women who want a bigger role in the music industry need to do one thing. to step up. reporter: he later apologized. in the complaint, dugan says she learned a foreign recording artist had accused mr. portnal of raping her following a performance she gave at carnegie hall. this is the first time that anyone in the media has read or seen any allegations about this particular incident. you can bet that s going to cast a pretty big shadow over the recording academy for days, if not weeks or months to come. reporter: the complaint also includes an email dugan sent to human resources in which she alleges she was sexually harassed by joel katz. in a statement his attorney says mr. katz categorically and emphatically denies her version of that evening. the academy also put out a statement saying duggan s claims only after a female alleged ms. dugan had created a toxic and intolerable work environment and engaged in bullying conduct. it says it immediately launched investigations into both her allegations and her alleged misconduct, and that she was placed on administrative leave only after offering to step down and demanding $22 million. dugan s lawyers refuted that claim tuesday, saying it was the academy that offered dugan millions of dollars to drop her allegations and leave. it seems pretty clear that the relationship between deborah dugan and the recording academy is fraying right now, and there is no putting it back together in an easy way. reporter: dugan further alleges the

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Norah ODonnell 20200123



expose his affair? quarantined, an entire city shut down, as that mysterious virus from china spreads, the death toll now rising. why the world health organization may soon call it an international emergency. deadly plot disrupted: was a neo-nazi group planning for a civil war? the new allegations they wanted to poison the water supply and derail trains. how investigators say they infiltrated the group. consumer alert: the phony text message you may have gotten that says it was from fedex. what the company says you should not do tonight. and the story that s no bull. how a 2,000-pound animal has seniors riding high. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening to our viewers in the west. the democrats prosecuting the president say it comes down to this: president trump tried to use the powers of his office to cheat an election. in a series of dramatic presentations stretching into the night, house managers laid out their case to remove mr. trump from office, at times using his own words against him. this was the first of what will be three eight-hour-long presentations by the democrats before the president s lawyers are even allowed to speak. democrats are focusing on what they call a crucial three-day span last july, painting a picture of a president who was intent on leveraging military aid to try to get ukraine to dig up dirt on joe biden, saying if his conduct isn t impeachable, then nothing is. well, we ve got team coverage on this historic day from both ends of pennsylvania avenue. ben tracy is at the white house. we begin tonight with nancy cordes on capitol hill. nancy. reporter: norah, the impeachment managers are walking the senate through all the evidence step by step every phone call, every email as they lay out why they believe this senate should be the first in u.s. history to remove a u.s. president from office. president trump has acted in a manner grossly incompatible with self-governance. reporter: lead impeachment manager adam schiff launched his opening arguments by honing in on a three-day period from last summer. that alone is grounds for removal from office of the 45th president. reporter: it started, he said, on july 24, the day special counsel robert mueller testified about his two-year investigation into russian election interference. did you actually totally exonerate the president? no. reporter: one day later, president trump asked the ukrainian president to do him a favor and investigate his campaign rival, joe biden. the very next day, he s on the phone, president trump is on the phone with a different foreign power this time ukraine trying to get ukraine to interfere in the next election. reporter: the next day, president trump brought it up again in an overheard call with his e.u. ambassador. president trump asked sondland, so he s going to do the investigation? reporter: those three days, schiff argued, showed the president himself was behind the scheme, using millions in military aid as bait. it was not only immoral. it was also illegal. reporter: the president s legal team looked on from a table nearby. we will challenge aggressively the case that they re putting forward. reporter: in a series of late-night votes, senate republicans blocked the minority s attempts to secure new witness testimony. i move to table the amendment. table the amendment. table the amendment. reporter: some republicans say they re open to witnesses if biden testifies, too. democrat chuck schumer: that trade is not on the table. o donnell: nancy cordes joins us now and, nancy, on this idea of a witness swap idea, i know democrats are saying this isn t like some fantasy football trade. and i understand joe biden himself has weighed in? reporter: that s right. he campaigning in iowa, where he says that he himself is not going to be party to any kind of witness swap because he wasn t involved in this scheme and did nothing wrong. but at the end of the day, norah, it s up to the senators. if 51 of them vote to hear from joe biden or john bolton or anyone else, then those subpoenas are going to go out. o donnell: all thank you. tonight, president trump is back in washington after a quick trip to the world economic forum in switzerland. but even while he was on the world stage, the president was focused on what was happening on the senate floor. ben tracy reports tonight from the white house. we have a great case. reporter: before leaving the world economic forum in switzerland, president trump said there s somewhere else he d like to be. will you please be seated? reporter: front and center at his impeachment trial. i d love to go. wouldn t that be great? wouldn t that be beautiful? i d love to sit in the front row and stare in their corrupt faces. reporter: the president gave his own attorneys rave reviews and then unloaded on house managers: democrats adam schiff and jerry nadler. these two guys, these are major sleazebags. they re very dishonest people. reporter: despite republican efforts to block witnesses, president trump claims he d love to see testify from current and former members of his administration, including former adviser, john bolton. but mr. trump said national security concerns, particularly in bolton s case, make that unlikely. he knows some of my thoughts. he knows what i think about leaders. what happens if he reveals what i think about a certain leader, and it s not very positive? i don t know if we left on the best of terms. i would say probably not. reporter: back in the u.s., the president s campaign manager, brad parscale, told cbs this morning impeachment is helping mr. trump s re- election bid. there are millions now that are egaged to show up. and the president has a larger base now significantly from 2016. reporter: as for the president actually showing up at his own impeachment trial, republican senator john cornyn said the president should focus on other businesses. but republican senator rand paul said he may send a ticket over here to the white house just in case the president wants to use it. norah. o donnell: that would be dramatic. ben, thank you. and there s breaking news tonight from california. investigators are on the scene of a fiery plane crash. the plane apparently went down just as it was taking off. kris van cleave has the latest. reporter: just after noon local time, the small plane went down just off the runway of the corona california municipal airport. pilot dorothe voll says the plane was trying to take off. he didn t pull back, and he was too fast to end the runway. and then he flipped, and then everybody was running, and it started on fire, and then it had two explosions. reporter: corona fire says four people on board died. the crash sent plumes of black smoke billowing into the air. crews could see the smoke as the call for help went out. the smoke was just too intense, and the fire it was just horrible. reporter: the national transportation safety board will investigate the crash. kris van cleave, cbs news, washington. o donnell: tonight, we are learning shocking new details about an alleged saudi plot aimed at silencing jeff bezos, the founder of amazon and the owner of the washington post. bezos phone was hacked, possibly by the saudi crown prince. jeff pegues on a motive and what s in a new forensic investigation commissioned by bezos. reporter: according to the report, amazon billionaire, jeff bezos, and saudi crown prince mohammad bin salman exchanged messages on whatsapp before, but the message sent in 2018 set in motion a chain of events. the u.n. says an mp4 video file sent from an whatsapp account used by the crowned prince infected bezos phone and caused a massive and unprecedented exfiltration of data. the flow of information out of the washington post owner s phone jumped by 29,000%, and he would soon get messages from the account signaling that he was being spied on. the saudis weren t happy with the washington post coverage of the kingdom and their columnist, jamal khashoggi, a critic of the regime. five months after bezos phone was hacked, jamal khashoggi was killed inside the saudi consulate in istanbul, for which the saudis ultimately took responsibility on 60 minutes. o donnell: did you order the murder of jamal khashoggi? ( translated ): absolutely not. this was a heinous crime. but i take full responsibility as a leader in saudi arabia, especially since it was committed by individuals working for the saudi government. reporter: one month after the killing, another message from the account of bin salman included the photo of a woman resembling lauren sanchez, whom bezos was secretly having an affair with. soon after, the national enquirer broke the story of bezos affair, and bezos blamed the saudis. today the saudi foreign minister denied his government s involvement in hacking bezos phone. i think absurd is exactly the right word. the idea that the crown prince would hack jeff bezos phone is absolutely silly. o donnell: what do we know about how someone would gain access to bezos phone? reporter: this was spyware, and we re told bezos didn t have to click on it to sweep up his information. it can get your passwords, text messages, even have access to your phone. now the u.n. is calling for the u.s. to investigate. the f.b.i., though, is not commenting. o donnell: and raises questions about how one can protect themselves. reporter: exactly. o donnell: thank you, jeff. tonight, five major american airports are ramping up screenings of passengers coming in from wuhan, china, a city now on lockdown because of the spreading coronavirus. the world health organization is having emergency meetings as they decide whether to label this a global emergency. the death toll has spiked to 17. ramy inocencio is in china tonight reporting on a city quarantined. reporter: just one day before china s massive lunar new year holiday, as hundreds of millions crisscross the country to celebrate with families, an unprecedented act: in just a few todayed entire city of wuhan, population 11 million, and ground zero for the coronavirus epidemic is on lockdown down. every mode of transport out of the city will grind to a halt planes, trains, buses, ferries, and subways. we are at the wuhan airport. reporter: our cbs news team left wuhan just hours before the shocking announcement. in the airport, nearly every single person wore a mask, reminiscent of the sars crisis of 2003. when we landed in beijing, airline workers scanned us for fevers. you just saw that. we just got our temperature checked. reporter: with similar scenes playing out in airports in and out of the region, even as far as moscow and lagos, nigeria. in wuhan, behind-the-scenes footage shows extreme measures being taken to contain the virus. but reports of confirmed cases continue to rise, now reaching six countries, including the united states, where a man in his 30s remains in isolation at this hospital north of seattle. and as more people get sick the world health organization has added an extra day of talks to decide on whether this epidemic constitutes a global emergency. as for here in china, it s already taken decisive and some would say very startling action that begins, really, in the next few hours. norah. o donnell: all right, ramy, thank you. today, president trump appeared to downplay the injuries suffered by u.s. service members in iran s recent missile attack on a base in iraq. 11 americans had been treated for concussion-like symptoms. our weijia jiang asked the president about it today in switzerland. i heard that they had headaches, and a couple of other things. but i would say and i can report, it is not very serious. o donnell: well, today, u.s. central command said more american troops were flown out of iraq to germany for medical evaluations. an exact number was not released. fedex and amazon are warning customers about a nationwide scam involving text messages. it s disguised as a tracking code for a package that s going to be delivered and users are asked to enter their delivery preferences and provide their personal and credit card information. again, this is all a scam. fedex says it never sends unsolicited texts or emails to customers. there are chilling new details tonight about three suspected members of a violent neo-nazi group who were arrested last week ahead of monday s pro-gun rally in virginia. federal prosecutors said today that the suspects were caught on camera talking about killing people, poisoning water supplies, derailing trains, and starting a civil war. catherine herridge has more. reporter: on canadian patrick mathews computer, agents found a profanity-laced video he taped declaring, if you want the white race to survive derail some f-ing trains, kill some people and poison some water supplies. matthews and two associates were arrested last week in an f.b.i. sweep of members of the neo-nazi group the base. they discussed traveling to monday s gun rights rally in richmond to start a full-blown civil war. u.s. attorney robert hur said the men were doing more than just talking about violence, having built an assault rifle and purchasing more than 3,000 rounds of ammunition. they packed food and supplies, including a gas mask, intending to load their truck for the war in virginia. reporter: three other alleged members of the base were arrested last week in northwest georgia at the group s training camp. catherine herridge, cbs news, washington. o donnell: and there is still much more news ahead on tonight s cbs evening news. as harvey weinstein goes on trial, his defense team is going on the attack against his accusers. coming up, what lawyers revealed today in court. plus, the college game that became a basket-brawl. well, tonight the heavy punishment that s just been handed down. and later, the senior center that s full of bull. why the people who live there are loving every minute of it. it. fthe prilosec otc two-weekymore. challenge is helping people love what they love again. just one pill a day. 24 hours. zero heartburn. because life starts when heartburn stops. take the challenge at prilosecotc dot com. with td ameritrade tools, and help from pros. it s almost like you re training me to become an even smarter, stronger investor. exactly. (rocky theme music) fifty-six straight, come on! that s it, left trade right trade. come on another trade, i want to see it! more! 80s-style training montage? yeah. happens all the time. with moderate to severe treplaque psoriasists uncover clearer skin that can last. in fact, tremfya® was proven superior to humira® in providing significantly clearer skin. tremfya® may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. tremfya®. uncover clearer skin that can last. janssen can help you explore cost support options. skip to the good part with alka-seltzer plus. inrkfast for mwerful colre. , what a relief it is!wer. so fast! about finding good food ind have school.y so, when my wife kat and i learned california public school children couldn t get fresh produce in the cafeteria, we took action. we partnered with local farmers, school kitchens, a non-profit. that program now serves over 300 million healthy meals every year. the difference between words and actions matters. that s a lesson washington dc could use, right now. i m tom steyer and i approve this message. o donnell: today was a milestone moment for the me too movement as the first witness took the stand in the new york trial of harvey weinstein. in a surprise move, weinstein s lawyers revealed they would use the accusers own words against them. jericka duncan was in the courtroom. reporter: disgraced media mogul harvey weinstein, recovering from a recent back surgery, stumbled as he entered the courthouse today. do you think you feel like you have a fair trial, harvey? of course. reporter: at the heart of this case, two allegations: that weinstein raped an aspiring actress in a manhattan hotel room in 2013, and an allegation he sexually assaulted a different woman in his manhattan apartment in 2006. prosecutor meghan hast didn t mince words, telling seven male and five female jurors he, referring to weinstein, was not just a titan in hollywood. he was a rapist. defense attorney damon cheronis countered with his own plan of attack, citing the hundreds of emails, texts, and notes sent from the alleged rape victim that he says demonstrates a loving relationship, phone notes that describe weinstein as a casual boyfriend, and emails to weinstein, one that read, i love you. i always do. but i hate feeling like a booty call. it s signed with a smiley face. annabella sciorra is expected to testify tomorrow. now, the sopranos actress alleges weinstein raped her in the 90s and she did not report it to authorities. overall, this trial is scheduled to last at least another four weeks. norah. o donnell: jericka, thank you. breaking news: quick punishment after an ugly brawl at last night s kansas versus kansas state basketball game. both benches emptied late in the game. players punched and shoved each other. kansas forward silvio de sousa picked up a stool. well, guess what? today he was suspended 12 games by the big 12 conference. three other players from both teams received shorter suspensions. up next, who knew a 2,000-pound bull look at this thing who knew it could be so much fun? thing who knew it could be so much fun? needles. essential for the sea urchin, but maybe not for people with rheumatoid arthritis. because there are options. like an unjection™ . xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don t start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. as have tears in the stomach or intestines, serious allergic reactions, and changes in lab results. tell your doctor if you ve been somewhere fungal infections are common, or if you ve had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. fine for some. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an unjection™ . wityour money almostes offered seems like it s frozen. but not here. with capital one, you can open a new savings account in about 5 minutes and earn five times the national average. open one from here. or here - in a capital one café. plus, there are no fees or minimums on savings or checking accounts because that s how it should be. this is banking reimagined. what s in your wallet? o donnell: we have a saying in texas, you mess with the bull, you get the horns. well, in this case, seniors love this bull. here s omar villafranca in pella, iowa. reporter: it takes a special combination of courage and craziness to ride a bucking bull. and a total lack of sanity to set one loose in a senior center. that s crazy. why would you think that? why would you do that? reporter: for rodeo clown jason dent, laughs are his livelihood, but it s his sidekick, this one-ton bull named ole who steals the show. hello, everyone! reporter: when ole lumbered into the wesley life senior community, not a grandma or grandpa scattered. you got it! reporter: instead, the bull inched closer for the ride of a lifetime. you did it! reporter: wilma hoekstra, who is 96, is old enough to know better, but too young to care. have you ever been on the back of a bull before? never. never. reporter: why did you wait 96 years? i don t know. ( laughter ) i think it s because i got wiser. i want to go down! reporter: saddling up can be difficult. you made it! reporter: but the laughs and smiles are contagious. she had a great time. despite his crooked horns and mean looks, 14-year-old ole is a gentle giant. we re buddies, aren t we? that s right! reporter: a big reason senior centers keep inviting him back. i m trying to celebrate him because i think he s awesome. and i feel like these people are awesome. wooo-hoo! reporter: and fearless enough to take a bull by the horns at any age. omar villafranca, cbs news, pella, iowa. o donnell: i like that never too late to take the bull by the horns. we ll be right back. ht back. wherever we want to go, we just have to start. autosave your way there with chase. chase. make more of what s yours. skip to the good part with alka-seltzer plus. now with 25% more concentrated power. nothing works faster for powerful cold relief. oh, what a relief it is! so fast! when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. try pepto liquicaps for fast relief and ultra-coating. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. get powerful relief with pepto bismol liquicaps. but one blows them all out of the water. hydro boost with hyaluronic acid to plump skin cells so it bounces back. neutrogena® and for body. hydro boost body gel cream. so it bounces back. cdc guidance recommends topical pain relievers first. like salonpas patch large. it s powerful, fda-approved to relieve moderate pain for up to 12 hours, yet non-addictive and gentle on the body. salonpas. it s good medicine. hisamitsu. o donnell: on tomorrow s cbs evening news, the story of a young boy who asked his dad what they could do to help the homeless. you ll be amazed by what they came up with. and that is tonight s cbs evening news. i m norah o donnell right here in washington. we ll see you right back here tomorrow. good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org right now at 7:00, multiple people shot in busy downtown seattle. the gunman is on the run. the coronavirus death toll is up to 17. more than 500 infected cases worldwide. just one day after san francisco police touted a drop in homicides, the city is facing a sharp rise from a different killer. the governor is reaching out to the feds for help with california s homeless crisis. right now, and streaming on cbsn bay area, breaking news out of seattle. the search is on for the gunman who shot at least eight people

Lagos , Nigeria , Moscow , Moskva , Russia , Istanbul , Turkey , United-states , Texas , Iran , China , Beijing

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom Live 20200203



live from studio 7 at cnn world headquarters in atlanta, welcome to viewers from the united states and around the world. i m george howell. and i m rosemary church. this is cnn newsroom. ahead this hour, coronavirus contagion. china s financial markets plunge as investors get their first chance to react to the wuhan outbreak. in london, police say the man suspected of two terror related stabbings, he was released from prison just days ago after serving time for disturbing extremist material. and hail to the chiefs, kansas city comes from behind for a thrilling superbowl win. good to have you with us. so, we start with the wuhan coronavirus spreading across china, and this word just coming in from china s foreign ministry which is slamming the u.s. for its response to the outbreak. it says the u.s. is overreacting with its temporary travel ban and has not provided any substantial assistance to china. this comes as the virus sends shock waves throughout the chinese markets. mainland china just wrapped up its first day of trading after the lunar new year break and stocks plummeted there. the shanghai composite down almost 8% and the zen schenn did even worse. china now confirms more than 17,000 cases, 361 people dead. that means this outbreak has killed more people in mainland china than sars back in 2003. and cnn covering every angle of this major story across east asia. yes, cnn s steven jung is tracking the spread of the virus and carolyn is watching the markets from tokyo. so, let s go to steven first in beijing. and, steven, more than 17,000 people infected as we said. how is china planning to contain and fight this virus? reporter: well, rosemary, they are, of course, trying to focus on their containment effort in the epicenter, which is hubei province. interestingly, you mentioned some of the numbers. 17,000 cases here in china from this virus. but the foreign ministry that you mentioned, their statement slamming the u.s., they actually mentioned some numbers about the u.s. as well. a spokeswoman said, look, in this season alone, the flu has infected 19 million americans and killing some 10,000, according to the u.s. cdc. so it s very interesting the chinese have really decided to come out and lash out at the washington administration s response to this outbreak with the spokeswoman using some very harsh language accusing the u.s. of going directly against the w.h.o. advice not to impose travel or trade ban and saying the u.s. is doing nothing but creating and feeding mass hysteria and the fear around the country. the spokeswoman said the u.s. has not only provided any assistance to china, but was the first to evacuate its consular staffer in wuhan, the first to start a partial withdrawal of its embassy staff, and also the first to impose this travel ban. i think this is really showing the chinese government s growing concern that they are being increasingly isolated globally as the u.s. started this decision and followed, of course, by a growing number of countries. this, of course, is not only making it challenging for chinese to go anywhere outside of its borders, but also having major economic consequence on a lot of chinese companies. still, of congressional black caucus still now, of course, it is making more testing kits available to make the confirmation results quicker for a lot of patients there. also having more medical supplies and resources pour in from all over the country to hubei, for example, by building two brand-new hospitals on the outskirts of wuhan with the first one opening on sunday with more than 10,000 hospital beds and now ready to receive patients. rosemary? that has to be the number one focus here. steven jung joining us from beijing. many thanks. now the view from tokyo following what s happening across asia with this and the markets. and certainly the markets are plummeting. reporter: yeah, vicious knee jerk reaction, george, as the chinese equity markets play catch up. this is the first time trading is happening in shanghai and shenzhen since january 24th. the shanghai market closed an hour ago. it is down 7.8%. that is a huge sell off. it opened down more than 9% with hundreds of shares going limit down. but it s not just the equity markets in china. we are seeing commodity prices, like oil, iron ore, steel, all of these things, excuse me, plummet as trade resumed after the lunar new year holiday. you re seeing ten year government bonds in china also move sharply lower. in response to this, the central bank of china pumped in a lot of liquidity into the short-term money markets to try and prevent a spike in interest rates. this is customary for all central banks in a time of crisis like this. the litmus test, excuse me, will be to see how wall street opens. it already had a really bad week last week. worst week in six weeks. so that reopen will be closely scrutinized. diplomacy aside, if the factories don t reopen on the 10th in some parts of these areas and the 14th in areas like wuhan, these are the two dates we have now, this is going to be a huge challenge, not just for the world s second largest economy, china, but all the companies around the world who rely on components that are manufactured in wuhan. this is an industrial core for china. and let me just take one example. we recently heard from the fourth largest south korean automobile company. they say they are going to close their factories for seven days because they could not get a wiring harness part. that may seem like one component, but that gives you a big picture. if you don t have that one particular part, that maybe only manufactured in wuhan where you can t get an alternative for a while, this is going to cause a major supply chain shortage. and when you consider that chinese exports are just so much larger now than when the sars epidemic broke out in 2003, the economy as a whole is a large pie as well, this has months of implications on the global economy and i think that is what people are worried about. and, of course, the mental impact as well with consumers. are they really going to open their purse strings after an incident like this? guys. all right. we re seeing the impact certainly across asia. and the question now to your point, how much further does that spread along with the virus that they re trying to contain. thank you both for the report. we turn to britain now where what should have been a routine day of sunday shopping turned into a violent terror attack in south london. that s right. police say a 20-year-old man stabbed two people in london. a third person injured by glass, shattered glass. that s when police opened fire. they are already saying they had been watching that suspect when the violence started. cnn s nic robertson joins us now from london with the very latest. so, nic, what more are you learning about this terror attack and, of course, the suspect at the center of it? reporter: well, the suspect had been convicted in 2018, sentenced to more than three years in jail, but the authorities released him just days ago on terrorism from the terrorism charges. he was convicted of possession and distribution of terrorist-related material, including about stabbings. so he was released because there was no legal authority to hold him. he was still considered a danger, and that s why there was an active police operation surveilling him at the time. it s not yet clear precisely why the events that transpired on this busy high street at 2:00 in the afternoon on sunday took place there, why the police hadn t intervened with him at another location. why the events unfolded then, not clear. the police shot him because he was wearing what appeared to be a suicide vest. police later said that turned out to be a hoax. but the picture that is emerging here for the authorities, at least, is very worryingly similar to the london bridge attack in november last year. and that is that a terror convict recently released from jail is still a threat to society and perpetrates an attack before he is shot dead by police. and we are expecting the british prime minister today, boris johnson, to make a statement about how he is going to handle this sensitive political issue, this very sensitive security issue of terror convicts being released from jail. and in some cases released much earlier than their original sentences would dictate. the police also today searching three premises in and around london. all right. many thanks to our nic robertson bringing us the very latest from london. appreciate it. a thrilling finish at superbowl liv. the kansas city chiefs rallied from behind and accomplished something they haven t done in half a century. vicks vaporsg for her, for you, for the whole family. new vicks vapopatch. breathe easy. with air wick essential mist. nature it transforms natural essential oils into mist. experience the latest in air care by air wick. super emma just about sleeps in her cape. but when we realized she was battling sensitive skin, we switched to tide pods free & gentle. it s gentle on her skin, and dermatologist recommended. tide free & gentle. safe for skin with psoriasis and eczema. welcome back, everyone. well, in just a few hours, closing arguments will begin in donald trump s impeachment trial in washington. this will be followed by a vote on the two articles of impeachment wednesday. it s looking more than likely the u.s. president will be acquitted after the senate voted 51-49 to block testimony from new witnesses. in the meantime, democrat adam schiff won t say whether the house will subpoena former national security advisor john bolton to testify. but he did say that he will hold senators accountable. i m not letting the senators off the hook. we are still going to go into the senate this week and make the case why this president needs to be removed. it will be up to the senators to make that final judgment, and the senators will be held accountable for it. well, many republican senators are shying away from directly criticizing president trump s actions on ukraine. take a listen to what senator joni ernst had to say. assuming president trump is acquitted on wednesday and assuming you re going to vote to acquit him right. are you confident he won t do this again, try to get another foreign country to look into a political opponent, whether it s elizabeth warren or pete buttiegieg or someone else? i think he knows now that if he is trying to do certain things, whether it s ferreting out corruption there in afghanistan, whatever it is, he needs to go through the proper channels. so, again, using the d.o.j. and other international organizations to get to that corruption. in the coming hours, the first major contest of the u.s. presidential race gets underway in the state of iowa. yeah, caucus goers will gather monday night and choose between a crowded field of white house hopefuls. cnn s jeff zeleny reports many of the democratic candidates have been campaigning across the state making their case to voters. reporter: the democratic presidential candidates taking one final lap around iowa on sunday as they head into the iowa caucuses on monday night. the first stop on what they hope will be the road to the white house. the iowa caucuses are ending a year long campaign without a consensus for who the nominee should be to take on president trump. these candidates are in two distinctive lanes. bernie sanders is ending his campaign there in a position of strength. arguing that it s time for major structural change and, in his words, a revolution. ee liz weather warren is touting herself as a candidate of unity. saying she can bridge the gap between progressives and moderates. of course, joe biden, pete buttiegieg and amy klobuchar making the case a more middle of the road candidate would be a stronger candidate to take on president trump. now, the iowa campaign will not finish the discussion. it will simply begin the discussion. 0 not to new hampshire next week, nevada and south carolina. will mike bloomberg jump into the race on super tuesday? he s already spending hundreds of millions. jeff zeleny, cnn, des moines. jeff with the reporting, and now let s bring in jacob with context. jacob, an associate at lse ideas, the foreign policy think tank at the london school of economics live this hour from lagos, nigeria. good to have you with us. good morning. looks as though it s going to be a busy week stateside when it comes to u.s. politics. the state of the union, then the president s likely acquittal to follow. republicans are calling this a win, but the way things stack up, mr. trump will not be able to claim that he is free and clear of impeachment when he delivers that state of the union. that s right. and i think the what you re likely to see will be a repeat of what happened after the mueller report. the mueller report did not exonerate the president. we simply weren t able to within the confines that we had demonstrate conclusive basis of a prosecution. i think what s likely to happen after the very, very likely acquittal vote will be that the democrats will make the case reasonably enough that the trial in which there were no witnesses, in which witnesses were prevented by the white house from speaking either in the house or in the senate, doesn t represent a fair hearing of justice. and the republicans in congress will try to move on as quickly as possible, whereas trump will broadcast that he has been exonerated by his likes. with all due respect to senator ernst who was quoted earlier, i think the likelihood he ll take this as a chaseening is unlikely given the behavior that we ve seen him in the past. i think he will see this as a victory and he will engage in more behavior of a similar kind. but you can already hear democrats saying, what about those emails, right, the emails that came to light that showed the president s direct involvement in withholding ukraine aid despite the fact that it won t be considered evidence given what we know about them. what s the overall impact there on public perception? well, the public polling has shown a fairly clear story that a significant majority of the american people wanted to hear from witnesses. this was depending on the pollster anywhere from high 60s to high 70s percentage of residents wanted to hear from ambassador bolton, they want told hear as much of the story as possible to tell in public. that hasn t happened. so i think there is a good chance that this will rebound on trump and the republicans in the short term, but, of course, the short term these days is very short. and whether anyone will still be talking about this, whether it will still have any impact ten months from now when people actually go to the polls in november, i think is a very open question. all right. let s get out of washington and get out in the states on the campaign trail. the state of iowa, it is going to be a big week there. talk to us about how important that primary is for these democratic candidates. um, it s both very important and not that important. let s start with the not that important side because the number of delegates that will be assigned from iowa is a tiny fraction of the total number of delegates that are required to actually gain the nomination. and what s more, given the democrats rely on proportional representation and the fact you have a fairly tight cluster of forefront runners, the number of delegates between the winner and second and third place is probably not going to be that much there is probably not going to be a significant numerical difference. but there will be a huge boost in terms of visibility, in terms of the impact on media commentators, the public, party elites, donors. to be able to say i won iowa is a major feather in the cap even if numerically it doesn t make that much difference. it s all about that momentum, right? look, this will certainly be a defining moment between candidates that are more centrist and candidates that lean more to the left. who do you see as a front runner in either there? well, the polls are telling the story the polls are telling have either joe biden or bernie sanders on top, and elizabeth warren and pete buttiegieg not too far behind. but the critical thing here is that, a, they re all clustered quite closely together. and, b, the caucus isn t a primary election. so supporters of candidates who don t make the 15% viability threshold can then move over in the second round and support another candidate. so both buttigieg and warren have relatively high favorability ratings amongst democrats generally. to be clear, both biden and sanders do, too, but they re more likely given the polling to cross that 15% threshold in the first instance. but you could see a late surge in the second round towards buttigieg or warren from people supporting other candidates who haven t made the 15% cut off. i think it s anyone s game or anyone s game in the top four. someone could break into the lead or second place position, but i think it s very hard to tell at this stage what the likely outcome or the narrative coming out of iowa will be. 9:22 a.m. there in lagos, nigeria. again, thanks for being with us this morning and giving the context around what s happening this week here stateside. all right. superbowl liv is now in the books, and what a game it was if you re a fan of the kansas city chiefs. oh, a lot of people were watching this game. they scored 20 straight points in the second quarter to beat the niners. patrick mahomes won the first superbowl victory in 50 years. unbelievable. let s get more from cnn s andy scholes. he s live in miami where the game was played, of course. andy, after 50 years, a great win for the chiefs. what are the fans saying about all of this? reporter: rosemary, i was actually sitting right behind some chiefs fans when it was pretty certain they were going to win this game. and i saw a grown man start breaking into tears. he started crying. i saw other chiefs fans embracing each other because they ve been waiting their whole lives for this moment. 50 years, most of them have never seen the cheefrz win a superbowl. the emotions involved in this game is one of the reasons why it was such a joyous moment for chiefs fans. they were down 20-10 with just seven minutes left in this game. like the chiefs have done all playoffs long, they found a way to rally. patrick mahomes wasn t his best in this game. but when it mattered most he was able to come up with the plays, third and 15. he hits travis kelsey for a touchdown. and damian williams on another touchdown to give the chiefs the lead for good. mahomes, your mvp. he s now the only quarterback in nfl history to have an mvp award and superbowl trophy before turning 25 years old. and our own coy wire was on the field and caught up with the superbowl mvp. hey, when we re coming home, it s going to be amazing everybody out there for the parade, bring the lombardi home. i got a bunch of guys. they re phenomenal. i could coach another 20 years with this group. come back here how? heart, it s heart. so i m proud of them. reporter: you re just the third african-american quarterback to ever win a superbowl. what does your story what does that message send to kids across america? i think it means no matter where you come from, how you were raised or what race you are, you can go out and follow your dreams. that s what i ve always believed. no one thought i was going to be a football player. everyone thought i was going to be a baseball player. i followed my dreams and now i m here winning the superbowl with all my teammates. reporter: now, the chiefs were the sentimental favorite in this game. the main reason was their coach andy reid. he coached in the nfl for 21 years but had never won a superbowl. he was always thought of as the best coach to never win the big game. but he s a superbowl champion now and his players could not have been happier to make that happen for him, guys. and so much energy there in the stadium. of course, a lot of excitement for all of us watching from the newsroom. andy scholes, thank you so very much bringing us up to date on the situation there. appreciate it. all right. and thank you for watching around the world. super charged is next. and if you re watching here in the united states, of course, do stay tuned. we ll have more news for you after this short break. when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. try pepto liquicaps for fast relief and ultra-coating. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. get powerful relief with pepto bismol liquicaps. sleep this amazing? that s a zzzquil pure zzzs sleep. our liquid has a unique botanical blend, while an optimal melatonin level means no next-day grogginess. zzzquil pure zzzs. naturally superior sleep. a lot of folks ask me why their 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states. you are watching cnn newsroom. i m rosemary church. and i m george howell with the headlines we re following for you this morning. closing arguments are set monday in the u.s. president s impeachment trial. this followed by a vote on those two articles of impeachment on wednesday. that means president trump will be delivering his state of the union speech tuesday before his likely acquittal by the senate. in the coming hours, caucus goers in iowa will make their picks for u.s. president in the first major contest of the 2020 race. democrats vying for their party s nomination held rallies this weekend, hoping to gain more support. the contest winner usually enjoys a lot of momentum heading into the primaries. the coronavirus, china s foreign ministry is angry, slamming the u.s. for its response to what s happening there. the outbreak. the move comes as a temporary u.s. travel ban takes effect. it denies entry to all foreigners who have been in china for up to 14 days before traveling to the united states. one city, that is the vegas of china, macao, it is certainly on the radar with this, but with the coronavirus threat, officials say gambling revenue is down. tourism for the lunar new year also dropped around 80%. cnn s ivan watson now has more on what that city is trying to do to turn things around. reporter: this is what the coronavirus crisis looks like. an ambulance delivers a patient to the emergency room in the tiny former portuguese colony of macao. health workers fully protected against the new disease. the authorities in macao aren t taking any chances. they are informing the public that if you suspect you have symptoms of coronavirus and that you ve been in touch with somebody that you fear may also be sick somewhere in mainland china, call for an ambulance which will deliver you here to the emergency entrance of the city s main public hospital. images from inside the isolation ward, at least seven patients are being treated here. the health emergency has had a startling impact on this semi-autonomous corner of china. macao with its small population of around 600,000 people is normally a major tourism hot spot, welcoming nearly 40 million visitors last year alone. the main draw, macao s towering casinos. this is the gambling capital of the world, with the casino industry that dwarves las vegas. but since the coronavirus outbreak, tourism to macao dropped 87% in january compared to the previous year. you ve never seen it this empty before? yeah, never. i never saw something like this. reporter: martinez is a portuguese economist long based in macao. you go to the streets. i never saw streets empty. you go to the main square, totally empty. i never saw this in my life, and i am here from 1981, so too long. never. i think people are scared, maybe scared because of the speed of these infections. reporter: the macao authorities say they have been rounding up every visitor from the chinese promise of hubei, the origin of the coronavirus. those people get a choice. either leave the territory or go into quarantine. but they re drawing a line when it comes to the critical engine of the city s economy. could one of your melt measures be to close the casinos? reporter: we do not rule out the possibility, the economy secretary tells me. at this point casinos in macao are totally safe. for now macao s glittering gambling houses are still open. but like the rest of china, the city is struggling with the new virus, and everyone here agrees this is just the beginning of the crisis. now, this morning i went into one of the bigger casinos here, the galaxy casino. it was pretty surreal because everybody is wearing a mask there. except when you actually enter the premises when the security guards ask you to drop your mask and then they film you with a thermal camera to see whether or not you have a fever. and then inside, everybody, the dealers, the people at the roulette tables, the bartenders, the waitresses, everybody is wearing a mask, including a very small number of customers that i saw gambling there. now, the president of a casino workers union estimates that the casinos right now in macao have less than 10% of their normal customers and she is publicly calling on macao to close all of these casinos and hotels to protect the workers and employees from the deadly coronavirus. as you just heard, the macao authorities insist these establishments are still safe. however, two people from the neighboring mainland city of zhuhai that work in and around the casino industry have been diagnosed with coronavirus, and that adds another risk factor for this former portuguese colony. not only are there many chinese tourists that typically come here that could bring the disease. there are also many non-resident workers from across the internal boundary that cross every day. and that could be another avenue for bringing this deadly disease to this small city. back to you. understanding what it means there for macao gives viewers around the world a sense offer how concerning this is for people. ivan watson, thank you for the report. and with nearly a dozen cases of the virus in the united states, officials here are not taking any chances. that s right. americans are traveling back to the united states on evacuation flights. well, they face two weeks of quarantine when they return. cnn s lucie kafanov has this. reporter: well, the focus now might be on that second evacuation flight taking americans out of the chinese city of wuhan, the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak. but at least one u.s. officials who s been briefed on the matter told cnn this is not likely to be the last flight out. we could see more planes taking americans out of china due to the high demand. most of the americans in wuhan at the moment are ordinary citizens. the diplomatic staff and their families were able to get on that first flight which landed right here at the march air base. they are housed here under quarantine now for 14 days they are expected to be here just to make sure that nobody is contagious, that nobody has the illness, that folks are safe. now, the pentagon is preparing four additional bases to house americans who need potential quarantine. two of them are right here in california. fort carson and colorado and the air base in texas. the pentagon is preparing for up to 1,000 people to be housed at those locations if need be. now, officials had bumped up the number of days folks need to spend under quarantine from three days to 14 days. that is because we are now learning that someone infected with the virus could be contagious long before symptoms appear. i did manage to speak to one american who is housed right here at the march air base. he said that folks are keeping their spirits high, that the base actually organized a superbowl football watch party for the 200 or so americans who were under quarantine here. it s a barbecue party. it was intended to help people feel a little better about the fact they are away from their families, away from home for so long. while he said most of them do want to get back to their families, they want to get out of here, most of the folks understand the importance of remaining under quarantine in order to keep this disease from spreading. reporting from the march air base in california, i m lucie kafanov. joining me now is catherine wisnov, she is an assistant professor in the school of public policy at the university of maryland. thank you so much for being with us. i m glad to be here. now, i do want to point out your background is political science, not public health. so with that, let s start with the likely impact of the various travel bans that have been put in place. of course, with china confirming more than 17,000 cases of the coronavirus and 361 deaths so far, a travel ban seems to make perfect sense. but you and the world health organization disagree. why? that s right. so, yes, it does seem like a common sense public health measure, but on the one hand, public health folks will say that it has actual actually limited evidence that these measures stop disease spread or limit disease spread. on top of that, these measures can also cause a range of harms that can undermine outbreak preparedness and response to this current outbreak and to future outbreaks. how do you convince countries that travel bans are not the best way to deal with this situation when most politicians want to show their citizens they are making every effort to prevent infected individuals from arriving in their country. it s counter intuitive to let people keep coming in. sure. how do you explain that to people? so, it is a real communication challenge. it turns out that normally viruss move too quickly for these bans to have an effect on the overall number of cases. but in addition to that, they can actually really encourage countries to conceal or downplay the extent of outbreaks. this is a real concern for global cooperation during these events. and for actually all of our security from this outbreak and future outbreaks, we need countries to want to be open and transparent. it it s going to be a difficult sell to individuals to say, hey, let s not do the travel bans because it s not fair to that country of origin because of trade and various other issues. right. how do you sell that? that s a very good point and it s tough. a few things would have to change. so, first, all of the messaging around these measures needs to be very carefully calibrated. it can t just be we re not doing these bans in order to protect the target country. it actually needs to be reframed in terms of these bans undermining all of our security from these events specifically because they encourage a lack of transparency. also in this specific case, others have reported that these travel bans could actually disrupt supply chains which actually could be really problematic. so how do you change behavior? first this messaging needs to change in the way that i just described. second, you could actually kind of publicly name and shame countries that do not comply with their commitments to the international health regulations. who could do that? well, the world health organization first, and then other states. it s a tough sell. we re out of time unfortunately. catherine, thank you so much for explaining this to us. we shall watch and see what these various countries that have put travel bans in place, what they do next. many thanks. thank you. still ahead, in northern syria four turkish soldiers were killed in fighting. and we will find out who zuckerberg i says is responsible when we come back. this, is why we no longer have to worry flushing too much toilet paper, will back up our system. but dad, rid-x contains billions of enzymes proven to break down even paper to keep your whole septic system healthy. for paper, grease or waste breakdown. use rid-x. we were paying an arm and a leg for postage. 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all this that i ve already-? yeah. what are we gonna do with these? keep it at your desk, and save it for next time. geico. over 75 years of savings and service. welcome back. we now know that in syria four turkish soldiers have been killed and nine more wounded in heavy shelling by syrian regime forces in the country s idlib province. yeah, turkey retaliated by destroying targets in the region. the turkish defense ministry added that syria carried out the shelling despite being notified about turkish positions beforehand. well, president trump s middle east peace plan is being met with criticism in the region. the organization of islamic cooperation is meeting in jeda to discuss the proposal monday. it comes after the arab league already rejected it at their meeting over the weekend. in the meantime, objections are also coming from within israel. many among the country s arab population, they are protesting the plan for its proposed borders. our sam kiley explains more. reporter: israelis demonstrating against donald trump s peace plan which he believes could lead to a palestinian state alongside israel. but they re not jewish, they re ethnic arabs and make up about 21% of israel s population. they re saying no to a plan which, among other things, proposes redrawing the boundaries of a future palestinian state. among the proposals coming from the trump administration is to incorporate israelis who identify as palestinians into a future palestinian state. that means moving the boundaries between the two from there, maybe to here. now, that s a journey of only about a mile, but it incorporates a population of about 50,000 people. that s in this town of taibai alone. the total number of people who could end up moved into a new palestinian could be over 250,000, human rights groups say. the doctor and family have lived on this boundary between israel and the west bank for decades. so if there was going to be a movement of palestinian ownership, if this town was going to be moved into a future palestinian state, that fence effectively would have to be moved from there to somewhere over there. yes, yes, certainly. reporter: how many people in your town? we have about 50,000 people, palestinian people living in taibai. reporter: who would get fenced into a new palestinian state? yes, along with the other neighboring, you know, towns. reporter: these youngsters are israelis. removing their citizenship could violate the geneva conventions. he leads the arab joint list, the third largest block in israel s parliament. it s racist because their sending a signal and a message for the arab citizens of the state of israel. because you are saying that you are palestinians, you can be moved or transferred. so ridiculous and so unjewish. has authorized only prime minister benjamin netanyahu to comment on the trump plan. it includes a u.s. green light for unilateral annexation of jewish settlements on the west bank and of the jordan valley. netanyahu stood next to trump when he said the plan will double the amount of land under palestinian control. mr. president, israel wants the palestinians to have a better life. we want them to have a future of national dignity, prosperity, and hope. your peace plan offers the palestinians such a future. your peace plan offers the palestinians a pathway to a future state. reporter: but these israeli citizens are insisting that they don t want to be forced into being part of it. sam kiley, cnn, in taibai. welcome back. want to get back to that story we re following in syria in idlib province there. four turkish soldiers have been killed and nine more wounded in heavy shelling by the syrian regime forces. and for more on this, we want to turn to our daman who is joining us from istanbul. what more are you learning about this deadly attack on these turkish soldiers? reporter: well, rosemary, this is the first time that we have seen this kind of casualty being caused by a confrontation between the turks and the syrian regime. now, in response to this and we just heard from turkish president erdogan. he said their country has identified 40 targets, and that they already neutralized, as they say, 30 to 35 people on the other side. they re saying this is an ongoing operation, that it is well within turkey s right to respond in kind, and that turkey would continue to potentially use artillery and even f-16s. this really, rosemary, is an indication of just how frustrated and angered turkey angered turkey has become because for months, even more so in the last few weeks, we ve really been seeing an intensification of rhetoric from the turkish side, warning the syrian regime to stop pushing forward because in the last few weeks, there s really been a very rapid push forward with the regime and the russians using air-strikes to literally obliterate entire areas, to then allow ground forces to push forward. all of this, of course, has caused a swell of internally displaced people within idlib province itself. the province is already home to well upwards of 3, 3 1/2 million people, many of them internally displaced from parts of syria. as the regime and the russians have been advancing, this flow of human it has been crushed up against the border with turkey. turkey has been warning of this growing humanitarian crisis. those who are arriving there don t have adequate shelter. the temperatures are freezing. illnesses are on the rise. and turkey is also very worried about another potential refugee influx into turkey itself, saying that it cannot handle this. turkey, again, has been warning and it seems as if with the turkish with the syrian regime, that launching this artillery strike that ended up causing deaths among turkish forces, that is what prompted this retaliation by turkey. of course, the big question right now is going to be is this the beginning of another potential strategy by turkey? is turkey actually now going to take a more active role to protect the civilian population and stop sharing government troops from advancing? bringing us the latest on the deadly attack from her vantage point in istanbul, many thanks. and thank you for joining us. i m rosemary church. i m george howell. early start is next. hi guys. this is the chevy silv and it s not the trailer right next to us? this guy? you don t believe me? hop in. good lookin pickup, i will say that. oh wow. silverado offers an optional technology package with up to 15 different views - including one enhanced view that makes your trailer appear invisible. wow. - that s pretty sweet. - that s cool. oooohh! that s awesome. where d the trailer go? i love it. it s magic. beds get sick too protection. lysol laundry sanitizer kills 99.9% of illness- causing bacteria detergent leaves behind. lysol. what it takes to protect. whether you were borne for more dance-offs. more travels. or more touchdowns. get the immune support that gives you more. airborne s crafted blend has vitamins, minerals and 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