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hello and a warm welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. bianca has the fortnight off. ahead, israel agrees to daily pauses in fighting so civilians can flee northern gaza but insists there won't be a ceasefire until hostages held are freed. plus a maid, plumber and even a woodworker at mar-a-lago could be called to testify against their boss. what the special counsel wants to know from donald trump's employees. and west virginia senator joe manchin says he won't run for re-election. why some think the democrat is getting ready for a possible presidential bid.
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live from london, this is cnn newsroom with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is friday november 10, and in gaza a hospital is reporting israeli strikes have hit near two hospitals in the past couple hours. correspond to one of the hospital, ten employees were injured and many vehicles and parts of buildings damaged. the idf says much of the fighting in gaza has been focused on locating and destroying the maze of tunnels that hamas mass built beneath gaza. and many are connected to hospitals and schools. meanwhile we're waiting to hear if israel offers another opportunity today for people to flee northern gaza. ic idf began to open safe passages last weekend and says that it will do so for four ours each day, but the prime minister stood firm on the most basic
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demand. >> one thing we haven't agreed to is a ceasefire. a ceasefire with hamas means surrender to terror and the victory of the iran's axis of terror. so there won't be a cease fire without the release of the israeli hostages. >> elliott is here. so another hospital hit. >> well, what this hospital is saying is that there were two strikes in the vicinity of the hospital, ten staff members were injured, a number of vehicles including ambulances also damaged. the idf did not get back to us specifically on this incident, but they do say is that when they are attacked, that they simply respond to where that attack is coming from while at the same time trying to minimize civilian causalities. idf as you said say they found plenty of tunnels, another infrastructure from hamas close to kindergartens under hospitals and the like. and so we haven't got specific comment on this particular
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incident, but we will obviously try to get more on that from the idf if they have more on that specific incident. >> and no progress on a ceasefire, but we're getting these daily pausing. how long, how often? >> so when is a ceasefire not a ceasefire and the answer is that there are tactical localized pauses as it is described. israel is kind of formalizing what it is doing on an ad hoc basis, creating these humanitarian corridors to enable civilians in the northern part of the gaza strip where its operations against hamas are focused, enable them to move to the southern part of the strip to relative safety. and they say that they will be opening up a second evacuation corridor and certain neighborhoods will be designated free from fighting during that four hour window to enable the citizens to get out for water or medicine if there is any to be
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had. so calls for humanitarian pause, for two to three days from the u.s. and the broader calls from arab leaders such as those in the emirates and qatar calling for an immediate cease fire, those are not being heeded. so falling short from those even if it is as the u.s. calls it a step in the right direction. >> can we seem r. asassume paus linked to the hostage goefrn y negotiations? >> i think israel is trying to balance their military objectives which is to destroy hamas, prevent it from holding sway in the gaza strip and from threatening israeli civilians again and at the same time trying to, you know, talk separately to try to get the hostages released. but israel is adamant that there is no cease fire until the 240 or so hostages are released. and they are kind of reflecting what the public is saying. according to a poll published this morning by the institute for the israeli democracy
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institute, 38% of jewish israelis believe fighting should not stop but that negotiations to secure the release of the hostages should continue. and of course we saw that video of two hostages, an elderly wheelchair bound israeli woman and 13-year-old boy put out by islamic jihad in the strip, they say that they were being treated well, they said that they missed their family and friends and they said that if any harm came to them, it would be on prime minister netanyahu's ahead. we can only assume that they were direct directed to say what they were saying and maybe talk that they would be released on humanitarian grounds but for now this is the latest. >> elliott, thank you. cnn had an opportunity to get a firsthand look at the situation on the ground in northern gaza. oren lieberman was embedded with a military unit and he reported
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under israeli defense force escorts at all times. and as a condition media must submit footage for review. and cnn didn't submit its script to the idf and had editorial control over the final report. as you are about to see, the area is far cry from what is it used to be before the war. >> reporter: through the bleach, we enter northern gaza at the border crossing. the land here once fertile is barren and the trees that might have provided enemy cover destroyed. in the distance smoke from an israeli airstrike a stark reminder that this is day 34 of a war that may stretch much longer. on thursday, the idf chief of staff and head of the country's internal security service entered gaza and promised strength through cooperation. everyone is doing everything this general says, just so you can be as strong as possible.
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along our path in northern gaza, the signs of civilian life have given way to the constant hum of drones and distant echos of artillery. our time with the idf began at the coordination base for the border crossing. first international media to visit the site. the terror attack on october 7 hit heart here, scars of machine gunfire and rpgs still visible. the base mostly empty on the holiday, but not entirely. nine soldiers killed here and three kidnapped. it took 12 hours for israel to regain control of the base and now one of the main gates to gaza. a month into the war, more than 10,0,000 palestininians have be kikilled in israeli attacks on gaza according to the palestinian health ministry there. idf says 35 israeli soldiers have been killed in the strip since the start of the
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incursion. october 7 attack by hamas killed more than 1400 people, mostly civilians. we stop at an overlook near the town of jabalya. one of the things uncovered here is a meeting point of three different tunnels. and you can see if you take a look, that is one, two, three. they came together here and it let hamas move underground quickly below feet and out of sight. this colonel says there were many explosives here, many trenches. a lot of weapons an ammunition. we found here a storage site with many explosives, tanks, rpgs. even from a distance the scale of the destruction is stunning. apartment buildings, homes, neighborhoods decimated. the colonel says the area is almost completely evacuated. we don't see civilians, we see
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sometimes terrorists. but civilians have all gone south. as we talk we hear rocket fire and see the trails of the launches triggering red alerts. after about 90 minutes inside northern gaza, we make our way out hugging the border wall for safety. even here we stop briefly to make sure the way ahead is safe. in the distance once again the smoke from another strike. israel has said that they have effectively encircled gaza city in northern gaza and the idf says that they will deepen their ground operations there. a big focus has shifted to the tunnels as the idf tries to get at those and destroy hamas infrastructure. oren lieberman, cnn. and now joining us former special adviser to the israel defense minister and is joining me from israel. thank you so much for joining us. in terms of the progress oren was reporting on there, how
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would you describe the control that israel versus hamas now has of gaza city and that northern part of gaza? >> i think first of all we have to remind ourselves how we began. because i'm experienced the last 35 years and never, never occurred such a campaign, such a hostage taking like happened in israel on chabot october 7. it was a kidnapping of old people about the age of 85, of mothers and kids, kids without their mothers, and youngsters who came to the desert to dance. and they would be taken as hostages. some of the girls there within raped in public. so we don't have to forget it. i think that the responsibility of solving this ugly hostage
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project is on the government of israel, on the prime minister. and they should not stop the war for any humanitarian issues if it is not useful. i have to remind you the last fortnight, every day 100 or 120 trucks are entering gaza with humanitarian equipment. and we could not even send medicines even for an hour. so we're talking about something which is -- i believe that the government of israel shouldn't have a ceasefire until the last hostage is coming to israel. and all these pauses i hope won't be used by hamas for doing, you know, the bad things they are doing. >> in terms of the hostages,
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horrific situation obviously for them and their families. we spoke to somebody who had a relative held hostage yesterday. and i asked will her what she thought about the bombing of the tunnels because the assumption is, isn't it, that the hostages are held in the dtunnels. she said she supports the idf, but there is a huge risk being created for the hostages by bombing the tunnels. >> i think that the whole project of the tunnels in gaza, it is for that purpose. and even if the hostages are there, and i believe some of them are there, the hamas should bring them out. they are the owners of these ugly tunnels, they should bring them out and send them to israel and then a ceasefire, not a
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minute before. because i can tell you that we're living in a democratic country which has parliament, government, rules. and this is a terrorist organization, no rules, nothing to compare. so you can imagine your countries with the terror organization on your borders and doing such inhumane -- a crime against humanity, it is not a war. >> interesting polling coming out of israel. obviously the prime minister doesn't have majority support, but there does seem to be a lot of support for the idf and the way they are carrying out this campaign. but more people now are wanting some sort of negotiation on the same time as the military operation. and when we're talking about negotiation, we're talking about swapping hostages for palestinian prisoners, aren't
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we. did you support that, and if so, how many -- i mean, are you up for the idea that all palestinian prisoners should be released in return for the hostages? >> let me tell you very precisely. i want the last hostage, the last hostage to come back to israel and then we can negotiate everything. and i don't care if our government will release prisoners, but i'm not the negotiator this time and i leave it to the government. but i believe that first everyone, every nine month baby and every 85 years old man or wo woman, one living with a balloon of oxygen, we need to get them. so first send all the hostages
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back and then we'll talk about everything. >> and what happens to gaza after all of this? i know the prime minister talked about being responsible for security of gaza, but not of governance. so that suggests that it is not an occupation but a lot of people would say that it is an occupation without taking responsibility for governance in gaza. what would you like to see afterwards and how do you see a future for people living in gaza when israel is in control effectively? >> i can tell you what i think about the future of gaza. there is i believe one main issue. gaza shouldn't be governed by terror organization. they should be governed by anyone who is not a terrorist. and i don't care -- i don't want the people of gaza who most of them are innocent, they are not part of this organization --
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they should be able to live there in peace and we won't fight them. our fight is with the terror organization. you all have to imagine if it happened on your borders, you would do the same. >>i ithank you so much for joing us. appreciate your time. international organizations and aid groups called for an immediate cease fire thursday warning the situation could quickly spiral out of control. the plea came at an international humanitarian conference with gaza in france intended to coordinate aid and determine how to help those impacted by the ground and arrow again receive. president macron opened the conference saying the work needed to be done to bring a halt to the fighting. thursday marked the anniversary of the jewish crystal nakt which many see as
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pre-curser of the holocaust. in november 1938, nazi mobs attacked and burned more than 1,000 synagogues in germany and austria, thousands of jewish were murdered and a arrested. with anti-semitism again the on the rise, hundreds also turned out to mark the grim anniversary. have a listen. >> we come here to -- so we do not forget what happened 85 years ago. it was the start of holocaust. and of course also the light of what happened 7th of october where 1400 israelis were slaughtered in the middle east. >> earlier in the day the german chancellor said he was outraged by the anti-semitism in germany. a shocking day for democrats
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as west virginia senator joe manchin announces he won't be running for re-election. what it could mean for his party and what he might be doing instead. next on cnn, we'll tell you what cnn has learned about who could testify at donald trump's trial for allegedly mishandling classified documents. and the vatican is out with new rules on baptizing catholics in the lgbtq community. those details when we return.
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u.s. senator joe manchin says he won't run for re-election next year. a major blow for democrats hoping to keep the seat, but manchin is not just quitting to spend time with his family. take a listen. >> what i will be doing is traveling the country and speaking out to see if there is an interest in creating a movement to mobilize the middle middle and bring americans together. we need to take back america and not receipt this tdivisive hatrd further full it apart. >> mmanu raju has more.
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>> reporter: this decision will shake up the senate and have huge ramifications in the battle for control of the chamber by announcing that he will not run for re-election in west virginia. he would have had a difficult time winning against jim justice who is the sitting governor, he is the frontrunner for the party's nomination. polls had shown manchin was struggling against jim justice, but by manchin stepping aside, it will be much harder if not impossible for democrats to win that seat. to keep it in their hands. that means that if the seat flips red, democrats will have a much tougher time keeping the majority. right now 51-49. if one seat goes to the republican side, it is 50/50. and pan chin a central player for so many years in the senate given his conservative politics and the fact that he is a swing vote on so many key issues. just in biden's first few years in office, being a central
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player in some of the president's key legislative achievements, whether it is the "inflation reduction act" or infrastructure law, playing a ski role in the bipartisan gun safety legislation. it doesn't mean that he is beloved by democrats. in financiaact he has been on t for some time, many angry at him for not agreeing to pass filibuster rules. and also whole range of issues that he has pushed back on them on. which has made him a pariah on the led. and that fed to calls for joe manchin running as a third party candidate in the presidential race. he suggesting in his announcement video that he will try to galvanize this movement of people on both sides of the aisle where they can figure out a way to work together. what does that mean? will he run for president in a third party ticket? he does not address that. and that speculation will only continue. but he says it is time for a new chapter in life.
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the 76-year-old democrat who has had a huge impact on west virginia and the politics here in the senate. manu raju, cnn, capitol hill. also on thursday, former house speaker kevin mccarthy unloaded on fellow republicans who ousted him from his leadership position. in an exclusive interview, he criticized matt gaetz and congresswoman mace who voted mccarthy out as speaker. here is more of what he said. >> people have to earn the right to be here. and i just think -- i mean, he will admit to you personally he doesn't have a conservative bend in his philosophy. and just the nature of what he focuses on. and if you've watched, just her philosophy and the flip-flopping, yeah, i don't believe that she wins re-election. i don't think that she will probably have earned the right to get relaepgte reelected. >> and this as his replacement
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still hasn't shown how he would avoid a government shutdown which is next week potentially. johnson facing questions about his personal finances from journalists wondering why a u.s. congressman doesn't have a savings account and may not even have a retirement account. >> reporter: freshly minted speaker of the house mike johnson facing questions over how he keeps his own financial house in order. >> i'm a man of modest means. >> reporter: cnn's review of johnson's personal financial disclosures and campaign financial documents since coming to congress in 2017 reveal that the new speaker appears to be living pay check to paycheck. financial records show johnson like many americans does not appear to have much of a safety net. for the past two year, he has not reported any assets. and has never even reported a checking account on financial
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disclosure forms. the speaker's office says he has a personal bank account which is exempt from house reporting rules because it is noninterest bearing. meaning he does not have to disclose this type of account under house rules. while it is unknown how much is in that account, a source with knowledge of his financial situation tells cnn that account is not big enough to be leaving large sums of money in interest on the table. all this as johnson's liabilities are plenty. a mortgage for his family home valued between $250,000 and 50 5 $00,000, a personal loan from 2016 between $15,000 and $50,000. and a home equity line of credit taken in 2019 for less than $50,000. as a congressman, johnson was making $174,000 a year. his salary will now jump to $223,500 as speaker. he's made over $100,000 teaching online courses at liberty
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university since 2018. last year alone johnson collected nearly $30,000 from the college. on capitol hill, to save money on rent, johnson is one of the many members of congress that sleep in their offices. a source with knowledge says the speaker will continue sleeping in his office for now but did not know if that will always be the plan going forward. >> there are a lot of things on the minds of the american people. >> reporter: johnson's financial standing in stark contrast to many of his colleagues on capitol hill. with the media net worth of his colleagues in 2018 at just over $1 million. some former speakers have done well. nancy pelosi is worth more than 1$110 million. before coming to congress in 2017, johnson was a lawyer. in 2016, he reported making over $200,000. >> i was a lawyer, but i did constitutional law and most of my career i spent in the
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nonprofit sector. >> reporter: and said much of his money goes to taking care of his large family. >> we have four kids, five now that are very active and i have kids in graduate school, law school, undergraduate. we have a lot of expenses. >> reporter: that financial reality not unlike most american families. >> i didn't grow up with great means, but i think that helps us be a better leader because we can relate to every hard working american family. that is who we are. and i think it helps govern my decisions in how i lead. >> reporter: we don't know much about speaker johnson's wife and her full financial picture, but we know she is earning some income and it is coming from a few places. christian counseling company, her work with a louisiana right to life educational committee, as well as a general listing on the disclosure forms for various clients. lawmakers are not required to reveal the amount of money their spouses are earning, but johnson actually does in some of the earliest disclosure forms he reveals that she's made about that 45$,000 to $50,000 a year.
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but he has not declared her salary since 2021. again, all of this a very limited snapshot into her side of the earnings for the family. sunlen serfaty, cnn, capitol hill. ahead, palestinians have dealt with violence and restrictions in the west bank for years but now it is getting even worse. details coming up.
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welcome back. i'm max foster and this is "cnn newsroom." in the west bank raids have become a daily occurrence as part of israel's counterterrorism offensive. for palestinians living there, violence something they have been dealing with for years but now it is getting worse. nada bashir has a report and a warning it does contain graphic images. >> reporter: yet another israeli incursion into the occupied west bank. yet more violence. palestinians here in this refugee camp taking cover from incoming tear gas fired by israeli forces. idf raids have become a daily occurrence here.
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israel's military says it is targeting armed palestinian groups as part of its counterterrorism operation. the number of casualties amongst palestinians is growing with each passing day with more than 170 killed in the last four weeks alone according to the palestinian ministry of health. in downtown, daily life continues, but impact of israel's often violent security tactics are felt by all. the occupation has always been an issue, it affects us economically and it affects our daily lives too, each and everyone day every da day palestinians are killed and there are daily raids and people still being forcibly evicted from their homes. sign posts of the decades long occupation are evident. from the concrete separation walls to checkpoints and watch towers. and geo legal and political
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system which according to u.n. rights experts, illegal settlements over more than 3 million strong palestinian population. in other words, ub and a other human rights sxerltth experts say a system of apartheid. this palestinian journalist and analyst living in the occupied west bank tells me that israel's repressive tactics were intensifying long before the beginning of the war in gaza. >> i think it is wrong to try to see as restrictions getting worse. they have reached the climax of repression and violence. it is not just getting worse. we're reaching points of no return and palestinians have warned against this in 2021 and these warnings were not taken seriously. in the west bank there is no capability to fight back. israel has access and control over movement and entry of resources and the narrative. >> reporter: but just as violence in the occupied west bank intensifies, so do israel's
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airstrikes on gaza. the israeli government has made clear its intention to rid gaza of hamas in its entirety. signaling that israel will seek to establish overall security responsibility over gaza for an indefinite period of time. with indications that assistance similar to that in the west bank could be on the table. but such proposals have been characterized by the biden administration as a mistake. >> we must work on the affirmative elements to get to a sustained peace. these must include the palestinian people's voices and aspirations at the center of post crisis governance in gaza. it must include palestinian led governance and gaza unified with the west bank under the palestinian authority. but even under the palestinian authority's leadership in the occupied territories, israel's security presence is pervasive. palestinian homes frequently raided, torched and bulldozed.
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palestinian families in a constant cycle of mourning. and hopes for a viable palestinian state slowly eroded. nada bashir, cnn. the u.n. says the war could set the palestinian economy back decades in gaza and the west bank. organization says the number of palestinians living in poverty has risen by 300,000 since the start of the conflict and poverty risen by 20% in the west bank and gaza. employment down more than 60% in gaza alone and the palestinian gdp has fallen more than 4%. >> not just gaza. for the palestinian economy, to lose 4% of gdp in one month, that is not comparable to any conflict we have seen before. the syrian economy used to lose 1% of gdp per month. >> ub .n. predicts 11 to 16 yea set back in health, education,
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growth and business. donald trump speaking out about the israel-hamas war in an interview with a spanish language news, former u.s. president said he was surprised israel was caught off guard by the attack. and asking how the u.s. could help, he suggested a hands off approach. >> you have a war going on and you will probably have to let it play out. you probably will have to let it play out. a lot of people are dying. it should have never started. there is no hatred like the palestinian hatred of israel. and jewish people. and probably the other way around also. you know, it is not as obvious, but probably that is it too. so sometimes you have to let things play out. >> cnn is learning more about the witnesses who could be called in trump's upcoming criminal trial in florida. the former u.s. president faces 37 charges represented to the
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alleged mis -- related to the mishandling of documents. new details help paint a picture of how federal prosecutors may be instructing their case. katelyn polantz has the story. >> reporter: we're now getting a picture of just how many witnesses or the types of witnesses who may be called to testify against donald trump at his upcoming trial on the handling of documents in florida. so this is exclusive new reporting from paula reid and i here at cnn, and what we've learned is that there are notable figures around donald trump, people from his white house, people who may be former intelligence officials, secret service agents, political advisers and others who are very likely possible witnesses against trump at that trial that prosecutors would call, but there are also lower level workers, staff members at mar-a-lago, even contract employees that were coming in and a out of his no florida resort property who could be
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witnesses in this case and could build this picture that prosecutors want to tell a jury about on how unsecured the documents were that donald trump had after the presidency, those people include a plumber, a maid, a chauffeur, a woodworker even and we have heard what some of these people were seeing. the maid was cleaning donald trump's bedroom suite and when trump found out that she was a person of interest to investigators and would be speaking with investigators for this possible case, he went ballistic, that is what one source told us. the woodworker for instance, that person was putting crown moulding into donald trump's bedroom and when he was putting it into the bedroom, when he was installing it, he noticed stacks of papers lying around or a pap could be top secret or classified material. he didn't know what he was seeing. but this is the sort of story that prosecutors may want to put
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on the witness stand and have that person tell just to show how suspicious it was, how things were lying around the resort and how the national security material that was ultimately found there was being handled by donald trump and others. very important aspect of their case going forward. that is just a glimpse into what may be seen at this trial. right now the trial is set for may of next year. but it is unclear if that date will hold. the federal judge overseeing the case in florida is looking at potentially moving that day and other dates in the case. there are a bunch of deadlines on hold right now and we're waiting for that judge to say when the trial actually will take place. there is a possibility that these witnesses may not be telling their story to the public or to a jury until after the presidential election. katelyn polantz, cnn, washington. more than a dozen suspicious letters have been sent to public officials around the u.s., most election officials. offices in the states of
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washington, oregon, nevada, georgia have received the letters some of which contained a powdery situation. georgia secretary of state call it domestic terrorism. >> if they don't condemn it, they are not worthy of the office they are running for. this is domestic terrorism and it needs to be condemned by anyone that holds elected office or anyone that wants to hold elected office. >> officials in washington say the letter they received contained fentanyl. georgia authorities suspect the drug was also in their parcel. some 150 election workers in washington state evacuated the workplace wednesday after the letter was received. disturbing new videos are raising concern over the possibility of ethnic cleansing in west darfur. details and reaction from the u.s. ahead.
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in west darfur. videos show members of ethnic groups who appeared to have been rounded up by the paramilitary rapid support forces. more details from david mckenzie and warning the report contains sgra graphic images. >> reporter: alleges keep piling up. wednesday we brought you these videos geolocated to the outskirts of western darfur that shows rapid support forces and other aligned militia we believe rounding up people from largely african ethnicities in that city, in some cases abusing them physically, in other cases racially abusing them verbally. we don't know what exactly happened to thindividuals who lk terrified in the video. this is taking place in western darfur and the region close to
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an army base where the rsf attacked in recent days. i want to show you this disturbing image which shows at least 12 bodies, we've blurred some of the bodies, but you get a sense of the and you tros it is that have been happening in that region. we've managed to geo locate this image to the same area but we don't know it is the same individuals nor when the image was taken. u.s. embassy in khartoum has said they are deeply disturbed by the eyewitness accounts of ethnic targeting in west darfur, thousands have been streaming into chad in recent days according to doctors without borders, but there is no sign of the violence that they are saying and the rsf who denies any involvement in the targeting or killings say that they will
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be pushing on to another major center in that region. david mckenzie, cnn, johannesburg. breaking news just into cnn, new social media details from gaza city, wounded people seen what is described at an outpatient clinic. not clear exactly what happened. but witnesses saying that there were israeli strikes in that area. cnn has reached out to the idf for comment. the hospital has become a crowded refugee for thousands and idf says hamas is hiding in tunnels. new rule by the vatican will allow some transgender people and children of same sex couples to be baptized in the catholic church. new rules say person who identifies as transgender did be baptized like any other adult as long as there no risk of causing scandal or disorientation to
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other catholics. baptisms are allowed for children of same sex couples as long as they will be likely to be taught the catholic faith. the pope says it is the house of the father where there is a place for everyone with all of their problems. and high sighs of relief after a guerrilla group released a football star's father who had been kidnapped. details on that next.
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queen camilla attending the 95th field of remembrance at westminster abbey in london on thursday. it commemorates those who lost their lives serving in britain's armed forces. she placed a small wooden cross on their graves. during the entire month of november, the royal family wears crimson pins to honor the fallen troops. saturday uk will be on serve two minutes of silence at 11:00 a.m. father of will we luis diaz
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after a columbian group released him. he was kidnapped last month at a gas station in northern colombia by armed men from the eln national labor race army. >> i want to thank god for this second chance to return home and thank all the people of colombia for all the support they have shown to my family. thank you all. i love you very much. >> younger diaz had been completing for his father's release. he played and scored on sunday and under his kit was the message freedom for papa. before we go, take a look at this, that is jared leto scaling the empire state building. he is not only oscar winner but also lead singer of the band 30 seconds to mars and first person to legally climb the famous skyscraper. he used it to announce the band's next world tour starting in march.
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thanks for joining me. i'm max foster. "early start" with kasie is up next.
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you're probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? have we piqued your interest? you can get two unlimited lines for just $30 each a month. there are no term contracts or line activation fees.
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and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible.

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