PEOPLE NOW
/n00:00:00:00 Rich Little holds presser as Reagan to promote new record First Family Rides Again; answers questions about woman on Supreme Court [he liked her briefs], ab poor people, foreign affairs, his age // [Billy Davis Jr and Marilyn McCoo] intv former members of 5th Dimension; shes now doing Solid Gold; he has new gospel album [apparently they live together and may be married] // [taped intv at Beverly Wilshire Hotel] he talks ab why he switched to using well-known actors for Shoot the Moon [as opposed to Fame, Midnight Express, Bugsy Malone; we see B&W stills from each]; B&W stills of Finney and Keaton from Shoot the Moon; more talk ab subject of the film; NAT clip with Finney, Keaton and some kids (1:12); more intv // intv star of Brazilian movie Pixote ab criminal activities of children in Brazil; talks ab conditions in Brazil; NAT clip with Pera as prostitute (1:10 with subtitles] // [backstage intvs at American Music Awards; voted for by record buyers] intv unidd actress presenter; Barbara Mandrell SOT (:28); Chubby Checker [presenter] (SOT :32); SOT LuLu (:47); SOT Quincy Jones (:50); SOT Lionel Richie ab the Commodores (:30); unid presenter (:00)/n
Iraq Cardinal 3 - Cardinal Delly celebrates Mass in Shiite neighbourhood
NAME: IRQ CARDINAL 3 20071225I TAPE: EF07/1528 IN_TIME: 11:18:56:18 DURATION: 00:02:29:08 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Baghdad, 25 Dec 2007 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: 1. Christians walking to church 2. Exterior of Chaldean Marilia Church 3. Sign reading: ''Chaldean Marilia Church'' 4. Wide of Congregation in mass 5. Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, leader of the ancient Chaldean Church and Iraq's first cardinal and other priests standing in front of congregation 6. Pan of church 7. Cardinal and other priests 8. Choir singing hymns 9. Cardinal addressing congregation 10. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, head of the ancient Chaldean Church: "I'd like to congratulate my brothers, the Muslims, on Eid al-Adha and congratulate my sons, the Christians on the Glorious Christmas. I wish them all a new happy and prosperous year.'' 11. Choir singing 12. Wide of mass 13. Cardinal at the mass 14. Priest distributing communion 15. Iraqi Muslims taking part in mass 16. Various of Iraq's cardinal shaking hands and hugging Iraqi Muslims, Shiite, Sunni and tribal key figures in area STORYLINE: Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, the leader of Iraq's ancient Chaldean Church, led Christmas Day Mass on Tuesday in eastern Baghdad, the day Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ. A large section of the predominantly Shiite neighbourhood in eastern Baghdad, al-Jidida, is inhabited by Iraqi Christians. Key Muslim figures took part in the Mass in the Marilia church and the cardinal congratulated both religious communities, the Muslims and Christians, on their respective festivals Eid al-Adha and Christmas, which took place close to each other. ''I'd like to congratulate my brothers, the Muslims, on Eid al-Adha and congratulate my sons, the Christians on the Glorious Christmas. I wish them all a new happy and prosperous year,'' the 80 year old Cardinal said. The violence continued on Christmas Day however; a suicide car bomb exploded outside a residential complex in the northern city of Beiji, killing 22 people and wounding 30, police and local hospital officials said. Several churches have been frequent targets of militants in the years following the US-led invasion of Iraq. Pope Benedict XVI recently appointed the Patriarch of the Chaldean Church for Babylon, an ancient denomination with roots in the age of Jesus Christ, a cardinal. Emmanuel III is the first Iraqi to be elevated to that status and received his ordination on November 24 in Rome. Since then the cardinal called on emigrants to return home. Christians, who make up about three percent of the Iraqi population, are fleeing Iraq in high numbers because of the increasing sectarian violence in the country. Many Christians have fled to neighbouring Syria, but some are seeking asylum as far a field as Australia and Canada. Although the Christian minority has remained on the sidelines of the Sunni-Shia struggle for power, it has been the target of attacks by radical Islamic groups. Most of Iraq's Christian population belongs to the Assyrian faith, but there is also a small minority of Orthodox Armenians. Although bombings and other attacks continue throughout Iraq, their number has fallen. The US military has said there has been a 60 percent decrease in violence since June.
Together it’s better: [broadcast of 09 December 2019]
Timelapse - Marilia downtown
Downtown of Marilia city, Sao Paulo.
FILE: BRAZIL"S FMR FINANCE MINISTER ARRESTED
--SUPERS--
File 
April 18, 2011 

 --VIDEO SHOWS--
FILE OF BRAZILIAN FINANCE MINISTER GUIDO MANTEGA SPEAKING ABOUT THE ECONOMY

 --CNN WIRE--
Brazil"s former finance minister, Guido Mantega, was arrested on Thursday by Brazilian Federal Police according to Brazilian state run news agency Agency Brasil. According to police, Mantega"s arrest is provisional and is part of the car wash corruption investigation into state run oil company Petrobras. 
In a statement, Brazilian federal police say there were a total of 8 temporary arrest warrants served as well as 8 warrants for questioning and 33 search warrants. The investigation is focused on contracts and kickbacks that were awarded to companies for the construction of oil platforms in 2012. Police say through a fraudulent bidding process "companies have joined in a consortium for the construction contracts of the two platforms even though they possessed no experience, structure or preparation to do so."
Police also say that in 2012, Mantega, worked "directly with the head of one of the companies to negotiate the transfer of funds for payment of a political party campaign debt situation." 
Today"s judicial orders cover "among other crimes, corruption, fraud in bidding, conspiracy and money laundering."
Mantega was Brazil"s minister of finance from 2006 through 2015 and served under both former president Lula da Silva and recently impeached president Dilma Rousseff. 
From CNN"s Marilia Brocchetto in Atlanta
 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
BRAZIL MANTEGA FINANCE MINISTER ARRESTED LAVA JATO 


Timelapse - Marilia downtown
Downtown of Marilia city, Sao Paulo.
CONCOURS des METIERS d'ART de Nontron: un COUTELIER récompensé
Iraq Funerals 2 - WRAP Mourning for victims of funeral bombing ADDS mass for victims
NAME: IRQ FUNERALS2 20080102I TAPE: EF08/0014 IN_TIME: 11:02:16:19 DURATION: 00:02:34:19 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Baghdad - 2 Jan 2008 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST Nahda neighbourhood 1. Man crying outside al-Kindi Teaching Hospital morgue 2. Bodies in morgue with men looking on 3. Close-up of young boy crying 4. Man securing coffin on roof of minibus with mourners standing nearby 5. Men covering coffin of a Christian victim with Iraqi flag and another man nailing it down 6. Man hugging young boy crying 7. Men carrying coffin of Christian victim to vehicle then placing it in rear 8. Wide of minibus with coffin on top driving towards cemetery Al-Jadida ''New Baghdad'' neighbourhood 9. Wide of Chaldean Marilia Church with mourners standing outside 10. Wide of grieving Christian women in black clothes standing outside 11. Mourners carrying coffin, draped with Iraqi flag, into church 12. Close of boy with hand on coffin 13. Wide of mourners standing next to coffin in church 14. Wide of priest and other clergymen performing funeral service 15. Mid of coffin, priest in the background 16. Pan from front row of male mourners to women 17. Mourners carrying coffin out of church 18. Mourners placing the coffin on ground at front of church 19. Mid of priest carrying out rites with men picking up coffin 20. Mourners carrying coffin to hearse 21. Hearse leaving church and group of mourners following STORYLINE Bereaved relatives of those killed in a funeral blast in eastern Baghdad on Tuesday arrived early on Wednesday morning at the al-Kindi hospital morgue to collect the remains of their loved ones. AP Television News footage showed men collecting the remains of their relatives who were killed in the funeral suicide bombing on Tuesday. Amongst them was a Christian victim, Naed Touma who had come to mourn the death of Nabil Hussein Jassim, a retired lieutenant colonel killed in a car bombing last Friday in downtown Baghdad's Tayaran Square. Police and ambulance officials said a suicide bomber detonated a vest loaded with explosives at a Shiite funeral in eastern Baghdad on Tuesday. Officials on Wednesday increased the toll from the bombing to 36 killed and 37 wounded. The explosion took place at 4:45 pm (1345 GMT) in Baghdad's eastern Zayouna neighbourhood, a mixed Shiite and Sunni district, the officials said on condition of anonymity. The injured were taken to the al-Kindi Teaching Hospital in Nahda for treatment. Outside the hospital, on Wednesday, relatives wept as the remains of the victims were carried out and placed into coffins before being taken away for their last rites. Later on Wednesday, AP Television filmed Iraqi Christian mourners as they gathered at the Chaldean Marilia Church in eastern Baghdad to mourn the death of the Naed Touma. A mass was held for Touma after which the coffin was placed into a hearse before being taken away to the local cemetery. The suicide attack was a reminder of the dangers that persist despite the recent decline in violence in Iraq and of the peril for mass gathering in a country where the bereaved often find themselves as targets. Despite continuing attacks, there has been a noticeable decrease in violence across the country compared to late 2006 and early 2007, when many feared Iraq was heading toward civil war. The US military says violence has fallen by 60 percent since June.
FILE: PUTIN CRITIC BLAMES POISONING FOR HOSPITALIZATION
--SUPERS--
File
2015

Vladimir Kara-Murza

 --VIDEO SHOWS--
-Vladimir Kara-Murza is interviewed by Matthew Chance

 --VO SCRIPT--
A PROMINENT PUTIN CRITIC IS IN THE HOSPITAL -- AND HIS LAWYER SUSPECTS THE MAN WAS POISONED.
VLADIMIR KARA-MURZA IS IN CRITICAL CONDITION, AFTER MULTIPLE ORGAN FAILURES.
HE CLAIMS HE WAS POISONED IN 2015 AS WELL, NEARLY DYING WITH SIMILAR SYMPTOMS.
BUT THE KREMLIN DENIED ANY INVOLVEMENT.

 --CNN INFORMATION--
 Highlights
-- Vladimir Kara-Murza blames poison for illness that appeared suddenly in 2015
-- Kremlin has denied involvement in the past illness; lawyer says he has no evidence of poisoning
 Lawyer for Putin critic believes his client has been poisoned again
 By Matthew Chance and Emma Burrows
 CNN
 MOSCOW (CNN) -- A critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin who was in a coma in 2015 after a suspected poisoning has been hospitalized in Russia after falling ill in the early hours of Thursday, his attorney said. 
 Vladimir Kara-Murza has suffered "multiple organ failure," is on dialysis and is being artificially ventilated, his lawyer, Vadim Prokhorov, wrote on Facebook.
 Kara-Murza, 35, is "currently in a stable but critical condition" in a hospital, Prokhorov said by phone. "It is a very, very difficult situation," he added.
 Prokhorov said he doesn"t believe this illness is related to Kara-Murza"s previous health problems, but said he suspects it is another case of poisoning.
 "None of the medical staff can explain the reason for his current condition. Both last time and once again now," he said. 
 He said he has no direct proof his client was poisoned. 
 US Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, said Putin should be held accountable if there is evidence the government poisoned Kara-Murza.
 "Vladimir Putin does not deserve any benefit of the doubt here, given how commonplace political assassinations and poisonings have become under his regime," said Rubio, a frequent Putin critic. "I am praying that Kara-Murza"s condition improves."
 He urged the White House and the State Department to question Russian authorities about the case.
 Kara-Murza is part of the Open Russia foundation, an organization of anti-Putin activists who call for open elections, a free press and civil rights reforms. 

 Moscow denies involvement in 2015 health scare

 CNN spoke to Kara-Murza in 2015, months after a mysterious illness nearly killed him.
 "I fell into a coma, all of my major organs began failing, one after another. It was the kidneys first, then the lungs, the heart, the liver," he said at the time. 
 He said he believed his 2015 suspected poisoning was a politically motivated attack.
 "Frankly there is no other possible reason," he said. "I don"t have any money dealings. I don"t have any personal enemies. I didn"t steal anybody"s wife."
 The case had parallels with the killing of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko in London.
 A British public inquiry into that 2006 poisoning found two former Russian agents responsible for carrying out the poisoning with the radioactive isotope Polonium-210. Its final report concluded that Putin was "probably" aware of the operation.
 The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed the UK inquiry as politically motivated and the Kremlin said Russia wasn"t involved.
 In February 2015, a leading Russian opposition figure and friend of Kara-Murza, Boris Nemtsov, was shot to death on a bridge near the Kremlin as he walked home from a restaurant. Kara-Murza became ill four months later. 

 CNN"s Steve Almasy and Marilia Brocchetto contributed to this report. 


 ™ & © 2017 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.



 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
VLADIMIR KARA-MURZA PUTIN CRITIC POISON RUSSIA 


Timelapse - Marilia downtown
Downtown of Marilia city, Sao Paulo.
Entertainment Daily: Spanish Nominees - Alejandro Sanz and Miguel Bose turn up for the Latin Grammy nominations
TAPE: EF01/0568 IN_TIME: 13:34:04 DURATION: 3:48 SOURCES: APTN RESTRICTIONS: music video/performance rights must be cleared DATELINE: Madrid, 2nd August SHOTLIST 1.Exterior of Spanish Association of Authors and Editors 2. Pull out from sign 3. Alejandro Sanz entering, (nominated for 5 awards including Best Album, Best Song, Best Pop Male Vocalist and Best Music Video) A.Question:"How do you feel about being nominated for 5 Grammys?" Answer:"I feel fantastic. The categories are the most important. I am very proud and emotional." 4. Miguel Bose entering (nominated for Best Album by a duo or group) 5. Marilia of "Ella Baila Sola" entering (nominated for Best Album by a duo or group) 6. Ana Torroja formerly of Mecano entering (nominated for Best Album by a duo or group) 7. Fernando Gonzalez entering (nominated for Best Jazz Album for Calle 54) 8. Pull out from Alejandro Sanz to reveal whole line-up in photo call 9. Clip video - Alejandro Sanz - Aquello Que Me Diste 10. Alejandro Sanz Sot in (Spanish) - "The most important thing is to preserve the importance of these awards and support them. I think that the U.S. Grammys have been so successful because they really value the awards, the artists and their culture. We have always been very critical of ourselves which on the one hand helps us to grow but we also need to care about these awards." 11. Ws Nominees 12. CU Ana Torroja 13. Cu Miguel Bose 14. SOT Ana Torroja - "I've had a long career but I have never had a nomination for a Latin Grammy because there was no Latin Grammy's before. For me it is very satisfying because it's been wonderful. I didn't expect it to be that great for me. Not only because of the audience that was there but for Miguel because I learnt a lot from him, it only gave me happiness. So to be nominated for something that gives you happiness is the nicest thing that can happen to you." 15. Pan from cameras to Alejandro Sanz 16. Sot Fernando Gonzalez - "I didn't think I would be sitting here with Alejandro Sanz and people that are very popular in latin America and here I am. So I 'm here to give me equal opportunity you know." 17. WS Nominees on podium SPANISH ARTISTS TURN OUT IN SUPPRT OF LATIN GRAMMYS The Spanish Association of Authors and Editors presented the nominees for Spain's version of the Latin Grammys at a starry press conference in Madrid, Thursday. Those attending included singer Alejandro Sanz, who was nominated in five categories, Best Album, Best Song, Best Pop Male Vocalist and Best Music Video. Sanz recently completed a sell out tour which took him around the Americas and Spain. Earlier this year he received the award for best pop composer from Miguel Bose at the Spanish Music Awards. Actor and singer, Miguel Bose also turned up at the press conferecne with Ana Torroja. They received a nomination for Best Album by a Duo or Group. Son of the actress Lucia Bose and bull fighter, Luis Miguel Dominguin and godson of Luciano Visconti, Miguel Bose grew up surrounded by artists and performers. He made his debut in films when he was just 15 in 1971. Six years later he recorded his first album. He is now generally regarded as one of Spain's top singers. Others particiapting in the Awards launch included the group Jarabe de Palo (Best Rock Song and Vocal Interpretation), Vicente Amigo (Best Album of the Year and Best Flamenco Album) and Fernando Gonzalez (Best Jazz Album for Calle 54.) Jarabe de Palo is made up of Alex Tenas, Jordi Mena, Maria Roch, Daniel Forcada, Toni Saigi and singer/songwriter, Pau Dones. The band is best known for the hit La Flaca. Vicente Amigo is a guitarist of the new generation of Flamenco. He was born in Guadalcanal in 1967, a small town in the province of Sevilla, though he grew up in Cordoba. It was there where he had his first guitar lessons. Amigo joined Manolo Sanlucar's band in which he played guitar for five years. In 1989, Amigo began a solo career and earned first prize in guitar at the prestigious Festival Nacional del Cante de las Minas de la Unisn. Shortly thereafter, he won the Contest of Extremadura. He became part of the Flamenco Guitar elite when he won the award "Ramon Montoya" in May 1989 as well as the first prize in guitar at the XII National Concert of Flamenco Art in Cordoba. His most recent recording is titled Ciudad de las Ideas (City of the Ideas). MUSIC CLEARANCE DETAILS TITLE: Aquello Que Me Diste ARTIST: Alejandro Sanz WRITER: Sanchez PUBLISHER: EMI
MEXICAN INMATES ESCAPE THRU TUNNEL UNDER PRISON
***SPANISH INFORMATION AVAILABLE BELOW*****

 ***This package contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package and within ten days of its initial delivery or such shorter time as designated by CNN.***

 --SUPERS--

0-9
Leyla Santiago
Correspondent 

Mexico City

10 - 13
Vocería Seguridad Tamaulipas/ Facebook

25 - 43;
TV AZTECA

43 - 53
Twitter/VoceriaSegTAM

53 - 01:06
TV AZTECA

 --LEAD IN--
14 MEXICAN INMATES ARE ON THE RUN AFTER A PRISON BREAK.
AUTHORITIES SAY THEY SNUCK OUT THROUGH A MASSIVE TUNNEL UNDER A PRISON WALL.
C-N-N"S LEYLA SANTIAGO HAS THE DETAILS.

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--
IC: "That tunnel has since been sealed...
OC: ...Leyla Santiago, CNN, Mexico City."

 --CNN WIRES--
 Mexico: 14 inmates at large after tunnel prison break
 (CNN) -- Fourteen of 29 inmates are still on the run after they escaped by tunneling underneath a Mexican prison wall, authorities said Sunday.
 The inmates escaped Wednesday from a prison in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas state secretariat of security said Saturday 
 According to Mexican authorities, the inmates used a tunnel that was 5 meters (16.4 feet) deep and 40 meters (131 feet) long.
 During the escape, one of the inmates shot a man during a carjacking. 
 The Tamaulipas" state secretariat of security said 20 of the prisoners were incarcerated for "common" crimes such as robbery, assault, homicide and kidnapping. Nine were incarcerated for federal crimes such as drug trafficking and carrying weapons. Of those nine, four were members of organized crime organizations.
 The prison was built in the 1940s and Mexican authorities say it is outdated and lacks appropriate security measures. 
 The government of Tamaulipas has been looking at the possibility of building a new jail so it can close Cedes Victoria, the prison where the inmates escaped. 
 After the escape, security officials destroyed unauthorized shelters constructed by inmates on prison grounds and searched cells. 
 In reaction to those efforts, a riot broke out in the prison Friday night. Three inmates were stabbed to death and one was injured, officials said. The injured inmate has been transferred to a different jail in the state. 
 The inmates set debris on fire during the riot, but the flames were put out within an hour. 
 The tunnel was sealed with concrete on Saturday.

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
MEXICO PRISON BREAK INMATE SN- SN


 *******SPANISH INFORMATION*******

 --CNN WIRES--

 México: 14 reos siguen en fuga tras escapar de la prisión a través de un túnel
 -- (CNN) - Catorce de 29 presos que escaparon de una prisión en México a través de un túnel siguen en fuga, dijeron las autoridades.
 Los reos escaparon el jueves de una prisión en Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, dijo la Vocería de Seguridad de Tamaulipas el sábado. Desde entonces, 15 de ellos han sido aprehendidos.
 Otra recaptura más de reo fugado. Fue asegurado por elementos de la Policía Estatal. Restan 14.
 - VoceriaSeguridadTam (@VoceriaSegTAM) March 26, 2017
 Después de la fuga, agentes del orden destruyeron refugios no autorizados construidos por los presos en los terrenos de la cárcel y revisaron las celdas.
 En reacción a estas medidas empezó un motín en la prisión el viernes por la noche. Tres reos murieron apuñalados y uno más resultó herido, dijeron las autoridades.
 Los reos causaron un incendio durante el motín, pero las llamas fueron controladas en menos de una hora.
 El túnel por el que escaparon los reos fue sellado con concreto el sábado.
 Se lleva a cabo el sellado del túnel pic.twitter.com/zV7H36f0Hf
 - VoceriaSeguridadTam (@VoceriaSegTAM) March 25, 2017
 Marilia Brochetto de CNN contribuyó con este reporte

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----



Mature woman talking and doing heartshape with hands during video call at home - camera point of view
Mature woman talking and doing heartshape with hands during video call at home - camera point of view
[Meet the pink dolphins of the Amazon]
MEXICAN INMATES ESCAPE THRU TUNNEL UNDER PRISON (IN-03MO)
***SPANISH INFORMATION AVAILABLE BELOW*****
 ***This package contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package and within ten days of its initial delivery or such shorter time as designated by CNN.***

 3rd Party Non-Licensed Content:
Vocería Seguridad Tamaulipas/ Facebook
Twitter/@VoceriaSegTAM

 PUBLISH DATE: 03/27/2017
 LOCATOR: MEXICO CITY, MEXICO/ CIUDAD VICTORIA, MEXICO
 SOURCE: CNN; Vocería Seguridad Tamaulipas/ Facebook; TV AZTECA; Twitter/VoceriaSegTAM

 --SUPERS--
:00 - :09 - STANDUP LEYLA SANTIAGO, CNN CORRESPONDENT (CNN; MEXICO CITY; 03/26/2017)
:10 - :14 - STILL PHOTO OF WANTED POSTER (VOCERIA SEGURIDAD TAMAULIPAS/ FACEBOOK; MEXICO CITY; NON-LICENSED)
:14 - :25 - STILL PHOTOS OF TUNNEL (Vocería Seguridad Tamaulipas/ Facebook; CIUDAD VICTORIA; NON-LICENSED )
:25 - :43 - VO OF VARIOUS VIEWS OF TUNNEL AND ABOVE GROUND (TV AZTECA; CIUDAD VICTORIA; 03/26/2017)
:43 - :53 - STILL OF TWITTER POST (TWITTER/ VoceriaSegTAM; CIUDAD VICTORIA; NON-LICENSED)
:53 - 1:06 - VO VARIOUS SHOTS OF SCENE IN CIUDAD VICTORIA, MEXICO (TV AZTECA; CIUDAD VICTORIA; 03/26/2017)
1:06 - 1:40 - STANDUP LEYLA SANTIAGO, CNN CORRESPONDENT (CNN; MEXICO CITY; 03/26/2017)

 --LEAD IN--
14 MEXICAN INMATES ARE ON THE RUN AFTER A PRISON BREAK.
AUTHORITIES SAY THEY SNUCK OUT THROUGH A MASSIVE TUNNEL UNDER A PRISON WALL.
C-N-N"S LEYLA SANTIAGO HAS THE DETAILS.

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--
IC: "That tunnel has since been sealed...
OC: ...Leyla Santiago, CNN, Mexico City."

 --CNN WIRES--
 Mexico: 14 inmates at large after tunnel prison break
 (CNN) -- Fourteen of 29 inmates are still on the run after they escaped by tunneling underneath a Mexican prison wall, authorities said Sunday.
 The inmates escaped Wednesday from a prison in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas state secretariat of security said Saturday 
 According to Mexican authorities, the inmates used a tunnel that was 5 meters (16.4 feet) deep and 40 meters (131 feet) long.
 During the escape, one of the inmates shot a man during a carjacking. 
 The Tamaulipas" state secretariat of security said 20 of the prisoners were incarcerated for "common" crimes such as robbery, assault, homicide and kidnapping. Nine were incarcerated for federal crimes such as drug trafficking and carrying weapons. Of those nine, four were members of organized crime organizations.
 The prison was built in the 1940s and Mexican authorities say it is outdated and lacks appropriate security measures. 
 The government of Tamaulipas has been looking at the possibility of building a new jail so it can close Cedes Victoria, the prison where the inmates escaped. 
 After the escape, security officials destroyed unauthorized shelters constructed by inmates on prison grounds and searched cells. 
 In reaction to those efforts, a riot broke out in the prison Friday night. Three inmates were stabbed to death and one was injured, officials said. The injured inmate has been transferred to a different jail in the state. 
 The inmates set debris on fire during the riot, but the flames were put out within an hour. 
 The tunnel was sealed with concrete on Saturday.

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
MEXICO PRISON BREAK INMATE SN- SN


 *******SPANISH INFORMATION*******

 --CNN WIRES--

 México: 14 reos siguen en fuga tras escapar de la prisión a través de un túnel
 -- (CNN) - Catorce de 29 presos que escaparon de una prisión en México a través de un túnel siguen en fuga, dijeron las autoridades.
 Los reos escaparon el jueves de una prisión en Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, dijo la Vocería de Seguridad de Tamaulipas el sábado. Desde entonces, 15 de ellos han sido aprehendidos.
 Otra recaptura más de reo fugado. Fue asegurado por elementos de la Policía Estatal. Restan 14.
 - VoceriaSeguridadTam (@VoceriaSegTAM) March 26, 2017
 Después de la fuga, agentes del orden destruyeron refugios no autorizados construidos por los presos en los terrenos de la cárcel y revisaron las celdas.
 En reacción a estas medidas empezó un motín en la prisión el viernes por la noche. Tres reos murieron apuñalados y uno más resultó herido, dijeron las autoridades.
 Los reos causaron un incendio durante el motín, pero las llamas fueron controladas en menos de una hora.
 El túnel por el que escaparon los reos fue sellado con concreto el sábado.
 Se lleva a cabo el sellado del túnel pic.twitter.com/zV7H36f0Hf
 - VoceriaSeguridadTam (@VoceriaSegTAM) March 25, 2017
 Marilia Brochetto de CNN contribuyó con este reporte

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----


Platino Awards 2025 - Red Carpet
MADRID, SPAIN - APRIL 27: Marilia Andrés attends Platino Awards 2025 red carpet at Palacio Municipal IFEMA Madrid on April 27, 2025 in Madrid, Spain. (Footage by David Benito/Getty Images)
The 130th anniversary of the Alliance Française in Nice
SYRIA CEASEFIRE IS INK ON PAPER: DOCTORS, ACTIVISTS
This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment. Usage must cease on all platforms (including digital) within ten days of its initial delivery or such shorter time as designated by CNN.\n\n --SUPERS--\n0- :21 \nWhite Helmets/ Youtube\n\n:21- 1:40 \nGMC/DMC/Basma\n\n:33- :40 \nFatmeh, \nEastern Ghouta Resident\n\n\n --LEAD IN--\nIN SYRIA'S REBEL-HELD ENCLAVE OF GHOUTA -- ANOTHER DAY OF INTENSE BOMBARDMENT DESPITE PASSAGE OF A UNITED NATIONS RESOLUTION CALLING FOR A 30-DAY CEASEFIRE.\nACTIVISTS SAY SYRIAN GOVERNMENT FORCES LAUNCHED BLISTERING AIR AND GROUND ATTACKS AGAINST REBEL FORCES SUNDAY.\nTHE SYRIAN REGIME SAYS IT IS TARGETING "TERRORISTS."\nC-N-N'S JOMANA KARADSHEH IS FOLLOWING THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS FROM AMMAN, JORDAN.\n\n --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--\nIMAGES THAT THE WORLD WOULD SEE TIME AND TIME AGAIN, ANOTHER STRIKE, ANOTHER RESCUE OF A BLOODY CHILD WHOSE NAME WE MAY NEVER KNOW - EASTERN GHOUTA HAS BECOME A KILL BOX. PEOPLE HERE SAY THEY'VE NEVER SEEN A WEEK LIKE THIS BEFORE. ACTIVISTS HAVE BEEN TRYING TO DOCUMENT, WHAT LIFE, IF ONE CAN CALL IT THAT, IS LIKE FOR CIVILIANS HERE. IN UNDERGROUND SHELTERS THEY HOPE THEY WILL SURVIVE, IT'S A MISERABLE EXISTENCE. \nFatmeh, Eastern Ghouta Resident: "There is no drinking water, we try our best to give children, a little bit to drink. We eat once a day or we don't eat at all."\nWHEN THE AIR STRIKES STOP, THE BRAVE AND DESPERATE VENTURE OUT. \n"We've been waiting here for the food delivery, we have no food left" this little boy says. "We're waiting, if a round hits us it's ok, we will die." \nAID GROUPS SAY HUNDREDS HAVE LOST THEIR LIVES THIS PAST WEEK, THOUSANDS MORE WOUNDED, THE U-N RESOLUTION CALLING FOR A 30-DAY CEASEFIRE, IS NOTHING MORE THAN INK ON PAPER, ACTIVISTS SAY. PEOPLE FEAR THE WORST IS YET TO COME, WITH REPORTS OF THE REGIME AND IS ALLIES LAUNCHING A GROUND OFFENSIVE \nFatmeh, Eastern Ghouta Resident: "We want a ceasefire so that people can get out and breath so that people can treat their children, no matter what we say, no one can imagine what it's like being in this situation."\nAND NO ONE IT SEEMS, SO FAR, CAN STOP THE HORROR FOR THIS POPULATION, TRAPPED IN A LIVING NIGHTMARE. JOMANA KARADSHEH, CNN AMMAN.\n\n --WIRE--\n Airstrikes are still pounding Eastern Ghouta despite a ceasefire, doctor says \n CNN\n (CNN) -- A United Nations resolution calling for a 30-day ceasefire in Syria appears "to be ink on paper," according to doctors working inside the besieged Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta, which suffered intense bombardment again Sunday.\n "Nothing has changed," Dr. Hamza Hassan said Sunday morning from Arbeen Hospital in Eastern Ghouta, hours after the UN unanimously adopted the resolution. \n\n\n "The airstrikes are continuing. A maternity hospital has just been hit in Saqba (a town in Eastern Ghouta) and is out of service," he said of the offensive from the Russian-backed Syrian regime on the rebel-held enclave.\n At least seven people are believed to have been killed since the resolution was passed, UN Humanitarian coordinator Panos Moumtzis told CNN on Sunday.\n The airstrikes and artillery fire have concentrated on the outskirts of Eastern Ghouta, according to activists inside the city. Sunday's hostilities also included ground attacks for the first time in this offensive, they said.\n More than 520 people have been killed and 2,500 wounded since the relentless bombardment of Eastern Ghouta began last Sunday.\n\n\n The Syrian regime says it is targeting terrorists inside the enclave.\n Meanwhile, rebel groups in the area fired mortars into Damascus last week, causing dozens of deaths and injuries, Syrian state-run media SANA reported.\n Pope Francis also weighed in on Sunday, calling for an immediate cessation to the violence. He told a crowd of 15,000 gathered in St Peter's Square in Rome that the situation in Syria had "re-exploded" recently.\n\n Who has agreed to the ceasefire?\n\n A ceasefire in Eastern Ghouta would allow for the delivery of much-needed medical supplies and evacuation of the wounded.\n But after the ceasefire vote, Syrian UN Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari said the regime would continue to go after what it deemed terrorist groups.\n "We practice a sovereign right of self-defense, and we will continue to fight terrorism wherever it is found on Syrian soil," he said, according to SANA.\n\n\n Russia, a key ally of Syria, was accused by the United States of using its position on the UN Security Council to stall ceasefire talks, before eventually agreeing to the resolution Saturday.\n Moscow has sought to lay the blame for the crisis on the rebel groups, saying they have derailed talks to resolve the conflict and are preventing civilians from leaving the enclave.\n Likewise, Iran, also an ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, sees the area as under "terrorist" control and therefore not subject to the ceasefire.\n "Parts of the Syrian outskirts that are under the control of terrorists are not under the ceasefire, and clearing operations will continue there," said Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, speaking at a defense gathering in Tehran Sunday, according to the semi-official Tasnim news agency. \n\n Is this the next Aleppo?\n\n As the death toll soars, analysts have raised fears the rebel-held enclave could face a similar fate to eastern Aleppo, which was all but destroyed in a government offensive in December 2016. \n "It is highly frustrating that the resolution was adopted but we haven't seen a cessation in hostilities," said Moumtzis, the UN official, on Sunday.\n "We hope it will not be another Aleppo, with entire parts of the city destroyed."\n\n Many in Eastern Ghouta, where close to 400,000 people are living under siege, have taken refuge in makeshift underground shelters. \n And Dr. Hassan expressed concern the ceasefire agreement would fail to translate to real action on the ground. \n\n "The people are waiting for translating the ceasefire and its content to actual implementation on the ground that will stop the killing and bring in humanitarian goods to Eastern Ghouta," he said.\n "Enough bloodshed. There is not one person in a Syria who hasn't lost a family member, or dear person, or a friend. Everyone has been affected by this civil war in the past seven years."\n The main rebel units holding territory in Eastern Ghouta are Islamist groups Jaish Al Islam and Faylaq Al Rahman, who have taken part in negotiations in the past, along with small pockets of Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, a former al Qaeda affiliate, according to activists.\n\n From CNN's Kareem Khadder in Amman, Jennifer Hauser in Atlanta, Gul Tuysuz and Alireza Hajihosseini in Abu Dhabi, Eyad Kourdi in Gaziantep, Ghazi Balkiz in Beirut, Julia Jones and Marilia Brocchetto in Atlanta, Chandrika Narayan and Nicola Ruotolo in Rome.\n\n ™ & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.\n -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nSYRIA GHOUTA UNITED NATIONS\n\n
Petition of the merchants of Cayenne facing the violent SDF
Woman doing a video call or filming talking at home - mobile camera point of view
Woman doing a video call or filming talking at home - mobile camera point of view
Mature woman talking during video call at home - camera point of view
Mature woman talking during video call at home - camera point of view
VENEZUELA PROTESTERS DEFY BAN, TAKE TO THE STREETS
--SUPERS--
Paula Newton
Caracas, Venezuela
Saturday

July 29, 2017

 --LEAD IN--
OPPONENTS OF VENEZUELA"S PRESIDENT BLOCKED MORE THAN A DOZEN INTERSECTIONS IN THE CAPITAL BUT APPEARED TO REFRAIN FROM MASSIVE DEMONSTRATIONS FRIDAY, THE FIRST DAY OF THE GOVERNMENT"S BAN ON PROTESTS AHEAD OF A CONTROVERSIAL WEEKEND ELECTION.
MEMBERS OF THE OPPOSITION, ARE LARGELY NOT RUNNING FOR SEATS ON THE ASSEMBLY.
BUT, FEARS THAT THE BODY COULD GIVE MADURO SWEEPING NEW POWERS HAVE MOTIVATED THEM TO TRY AND STOP SUNDAY"S ELECTION, AND THEY HAVE VOWED TO PUSH ON WITH SOME RESISTANCE.
CNN"S PAULA NEWTON IS IN CARACAS WITH MORE ON THE STORY.

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--
IN CUE: "More of the same..."
OUT CUE: "...They are threatening mass arrests."

 --CNN SCRIPT--
 Venezuela: Protesters, troops clash ahead of Sunday vote
 By Jason Hanna
 CNN
 (CNN) -- Opponents of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro are calling for continued protests ahead of Sunday"s controversial election, a day after demonstrators clashed with national guard troops in the capital in defiance of a protest ban.
 Opposition leaders have vowed unrest before the election of a "constituent national assembly" that would rewrite the constitution at Maduro"s request -- a move that the leftist leader"s critics say could consolidate his power and lead to a dictatorship.
 Protesters threw Molotov cocktails and troops fired rubber bullets in the air Friday afternoon in one part of the capital, Caracas, video distributed by Reuters showed. Dozens of people were arrested, Reuters reported.
 Maduro"s regime has forbidden protests through Tuesday, saying violators will face prison terms of five to 10 years. It says it has dispatched more than 370,000 troops across the country to secure Sunday"s vote.
 The opposition wants to stop the election, which likely would favor Maduro as his opponents largely are not running. 
 Opposition leaders have called for protesters to gather Sunday at a freeway in Caracas and main streets throughout the country.
 "What are they going to do? Arrest millions of people who protest?" opposition leader Henrique Capriles told reporters Friday.
 Protesters blocked more than a dozen intersections Friday in Caracas. In one instance, about 120 people gathered at and near an intersection in the Altamira neighborhood.
 People wearing masks blocked the intersection, in part with bricks, wire, tires and other debris on the street. Some held signs critical of Maduro.
 At one protest site, paramedic Johann Paredes, 27, helped both injured protesters and national guard troops Friday. He says he tries to be apolitical.
 "But if I take my helmet off, I would say I"m totally against" the vote, he said. "Honestly, I"m terrified that (it) is going" forward. "It"s a disaster."
 The election comes after months of sometimes deadly protests as an economic crisis has led many to flee the country in search of easier access to food and medicine.
 Maduro, who has said that rewriting the constitution is needed to restore order, told a rally earlier this week in Caracas that he has proposed talks with the opposition.
 Opposition leaders have said they are willing to talk only if Sunday"s vote is postponed.

 Sunday"s election: What"s at stake

 Voters Sunday will elect a 545-seat assembly that could do whatever it wants in rewriting the constitution -- including abolishing the current National Assembly and even removing Maduro, said Luis Vicente Leon, a Venezuelan political analyst and college professor.
 But Maduro called for the constitutional revisions, and with pro-Maduro candidates running for many of the seats, including former ministers in his government, the body is likely to favor him. The assembly could give Maduro new powers and dissolve state institutions.
 Though the opposition won control of the National Assembly in 2015 elections, it is essentially void because pro-Maduro legislators stopped attending sessions. 
 More than 350 members of the new assembly are to be elected in open municipal votes. The remaining members will be elected by people from certain social and industry groups (like students, pensioners or workers).
 Voters are being told they can go to any polling station in their municipalities in case protesters block access. 
 Cilia Flores, Maduro"s wife and a candidate for the new assembly, has said the new pro-Maduro members will install a separate justice commission "to determine those responsible for these terrible damages," including politicians who she says has promoted violence.
 In a nonbinding July 16 referendum organized by opposition parties, an overwhelming majority of voters came out against Maduro"s plan. 
 The referendum asked voters three yes-no questions. More than 98% of voters chose to reject the proposed constitutional assembly, request the military defend the existing constitution and support fresh elections before Maduro"s term ends in 2019.
 The turnout represented about 37% of Venezuela"s total electorate.

 Colombia: New assembly won"t be recognized

 International pressure against Venezuela"s election has been increasing. In the past few days, the United States, Mexico and Colombia said they"re freezing assets and imposing other restrictions on certain current and former Venezuelan government officials. 
 The United States would follow up with further "strong and swift economic action" if the vote happens, senior US officials have said.
 Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said Friday his government will not recognize Venezuela"s constituent assembly.
 The assembly has a "fake origin and therefore, the results will not be recognized," Santos said in Barranquilla. 
 Colombia is pushing for a "peaceful solution, hopefully a fast and democratic one, so that the nation that we love -- and I want to once again express my solidarity with the people of Venezuela -- will soon come out from the darkness," Santos said. 
 The relationship between the neighbors has been strained for years. 

 Deadly protests

 For months, violence has spiraled out of control as the struggle for food and medicine grows. 
 Political upheaval intensified in late March when the Venezuelan Supreme Court dissolved Parliament and transferred all legislative powers to itself. The court reversed that decision after three days, but the initial move triggered intermittent, deadly protests for months.
 As of Friday, at least 113 people have died in protests and other incidents linked to the unrest, the attorney general"s office has said, often without elaborating on who was responsible for their deaths.
 At least seven of those deaths happened Wednesday and Thursday during a two-day opposition-led general strike.

 Maduro and Chavez

 Maduro is aligned with the political movement of Hugo Chavez, the President from 1999 until his death in 2013. Under constitutional changes Chavez ushered in, presidents can run for an unlimited number of six-year terms.
 Chavez trumpeted a brand of socialism -- dubbed Chavismo -- in which he increased subsidies to the poor and fixed prices for goods, but alienated Venezuela from foreign investors who were spooked by his anti-American rhetoric. Maduro, elected as Chavez"s successor in 2013, kept up his predecessor"s practices.
 Venezuela became dependent on selling its oil abroad, and income suffered when the price of oil per barrel dropped from $100 in 2014 to $26 in 2016. Inflation has soared, and unemployment could reach 25% this year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
 Maduro has long verbally clashed with opposition leaders. The opposition wanted to impeach Maduro after it won a National Assembly majority, but he stacked the Supreme Court with his supporters, blocking any impeachment attempts. 

 CNN"s Khushbu Shah, Marilia Brocchetto, Leyla Santiago, Steve Almasy, Paula Newton, Natalie Gallón, Julia Jones and Gisela Crespo, and CNNMoney"s Patrick Gillespie contributed to this report. 

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
VENEZUELA PROTESTS NICOLAS MADURO LATIN AMERICA HUGO CHAVEZ DEMOCRACY VIOLENCE


The nursery school: [broadcast of 13 March 2013]