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NEWS STREAM

Aung San Suu Kyi's Opposition Party Celebrates Gains in Parliament; Russian Investigators Visit Airport in Sharm el-Sheikh; The Healing Waters of Bali; Bedouins Face Down ISIS Affiliate Without Firing a Shot. Aired 8:00a-9:00a ET

Aired November 09, 2015 - 8:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[08:00:18] KRISTIE LU STOUT, HOST: I'm Kristie Lu Stout in Hong Kong. And welcome to News Stream.

Now initial election results from Myanmar indicate a strong showing by the opposition and we are live in Yangon.

Plus, airport security under scrutiny. Russian investigators turn their attention to Sharm el-Sheikh and continuing suspicion a bomb brought

down Metrojet flight 9268.

And dangerous smog in northeastern China. We'll explore what is making the air so unhealthy.

And we begin with the historic election in Myanmar. Millions of voters are waiting for the outcome, but initial results are beginning to

trickle in. Election officials say early results show a handful of wins by Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party.

Now Sunday's vote was the country's first open election in 25 years. Our senior international correspondent Ivan Watson joins us now live from

Yangon.

And Ivan, are supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi and her party already convinced that they won this election?

IVAN WATSON, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: They sure are. And some of the statements that have come from top officials in her party have

suggested there have been claims of a large scale victory. But of course only a handful, exactly a dozen, of the seats out of more than 500 that

have been up for grabs in Sunday's historical vote, only 12 have been declared in favor of her party, the National League for Democracy.

But that hasn't dampened enthusiasm here in front of the headquarters of

the National League for Democracy, the NLD here in Yangon. You've got thousands of people here out in the streets, waving their flags, clearly

celebrating.

There are some suggestions, certainly, that the ruling party, the USDP, had a bad day in the polls on Sunday. The chairman of the party says

he lost his bid for a seat in parliament and he also went on record saying that the party in power

lost more seats than they won in this election. But we are still waiting to get

official results from the electoral commission.

Some of the challenges for getting concrete answers, well, they're due to the fact that the election has been held in far flung villages, in

mountainous areas, in jungles that don't have working cell phone network, that don't even have electricity and that's making some of the work of

trying to get an answer, the final results, much more difficult here.

LU STOUT: We are still waiting for the results, the opposition party very

confident right now. If Aung San Suu Kyi and her party sweep to victory, how willing is the military-baked party to work with them?

WATSON: Well, that's going to be a big question. And we can't rule the

military out by any means, because they automatically will control 25 percent of the seats in parliament in the next parliament due to flaws in

the constitution that the generals who ruled this country with such an iron fist for so many decades, by constitution they wrote in the first place,

the same constitution, Kristie, that basically prevents Aung San Suu Kyi from becoming president, because it says she has children who have foreign

passports and nobody can run for the post of president if they have relatives who hold foreign passports.

In addition to that, even if the ruling party wins, say, 15 percent of the

seats, 20 percent of seats, they will still have a sizable chunk in parliament in alliance with the 25 percent that the army will automatically

get.

There's a lot of math here. Because it comes down to the fact that if Aung San Suu Kyi's party wants to win a majority of seats in parliament,

they have to win more than two-thirds of seats. So, those are big obstacles.

Even if they did get that, Kristie, the military would still be automatically given control of very powerful ministries and government --

the ministry of defense, of interior, of foreign affairs. So, there would still have to be some very serious power sharing.

But again, that's all speculative. Right now, the big question is who really won this election?

[08:05:11] LU STOUT: From electoral math to, Ivan, what's happening around you there on the street. There seems to be a celebratory mood

there. Are you among opposition supporters? Describe the scene.

WATSON: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we are in front of the headquarters of Aung San Suu Kyi's political party, the National League for

Democracy, NLD. So, you can see there's a screen here, there's constant music, people waving the flags of that party. Many of these people fervent

supporters of Aung San Suu Kyi. They refer to her as Mother Sue. And that gives you a sense of some of the depth, of the admiration and support in

this country and at the polls on Sunday.

And remember, this is the first time in 25 years that this country has had an openly contested national election. In the past, just ten years

ago, less, if people came into the streets criticizing the government, they could have been quickly thrown in prison or worse.

So, that gives you a sense of how historic it was for people to be able to cast their ballots, people telling me they waited five hours in

line, Kristie, to cast their ballots in the heat, in the humidity, and then telling me it was absolutely worth it.

Some of these people had never voted before.

So, again, this was a very emotional moment. A lot of people feeling that they were part of history. The sitting president, who is a former

general, has said he has stated in public that the government will respect the results of the election, no matter what they are. And that's going to

be a critical test here.

Because in the last election in 1990 when this party won big time, the generals crushed the results of the election and threw most of the

opposition leaders, including Aung San Suu Kyi, under arrest. And that's part of why this is such a big deal, and why so many people are out here in

the streets on a steamy night in Yangon -- Kristie.

LU STOUT: A very, very emotional moment, history in the making in Myanmar tonight. We have Ivan Watson reporting live for us in Yangon.

Thank you, Ivan.

Now we are following breaking news out of Jordan. Now Jordan's news agency reports a Jordanian police officer shot and killed two Americans at

a police training facility. A South African trainer was also killed before the attacker turned the gun on himself.

It reportedly happened at a base outside the capital Amman. Phil Black is following developments from London and joins me now.

And Phil, what more have you learned about the aftermath of the shooting?

PHIL BLACK, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Well, Kristie, this all took place at Jordan's international police training center, east of the

Jordanian capital Amman. And just to run through quickly four killed in total, two of them U.S. citizens, one a South African. They are -- we are

told private contractors, all of them, they are not serving police officers or members of relevant security or military services.

And in addition to that, the shooter himself, a Jordanian policeman was shot and killed by Jordanian security services who responded to that.

Now, in terms of the motive for this, that's unclear. But an obvious theory is obviously Islamist terrorism. And today is an important

anniversary in Jordan's modern history, it was ten years ago today that there was a devastating coordinated terror strike against three hotels in

Jordan, killing more than 60 people. That attack carried out by al Qaeda in Iraq, the precursor to what is known as ISIS, that organization which

has recently conquered large areas of territory across Syria and Iraq.

So, on this day and over the last 24 hours, Jordan has been commemorating

that event, one which has often been credited with unifying Jordanians against

terrorism, strengthening their resolve. Now, ten years later, it is possible that

that resolve is being tested again, Kristie.

LU STOUT: All right, Phil Black reporting for us. Many thanks indeed for that update.

Now, more than a week after Russian passenger plane broke apart over Egypt's Sinai peninsula, Russian media report that tests are underway there

to determine whether there are traces of explosives on the wreckage.

Now, the state news agency, it says preliminary results could be available in just days. U.S. officials are increasingly certain that

terrorists sabotaged the plane.

In fact, sources tell CNN that part of the assessment is based on intercepts of ISIS chatter.

Now, Russia says it has identified the remains of more than 100 victims from that crash. And on Sunday, a memorial service was held in St.

Petersburg.

Let's bring in Matthew Chance now live from Moscow. And Matthew, as they remember the victims, many, many people there in Russia. They are

overwhelmed with grief. How are they coping with the loss and also how are they dealing with still the lack of answers?

[08:10:14] MATTHEW CHANCE, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Well, I think that's a big concern for many Russian. I mean, you were certainly

right in the sense that this air crash has struck a cord with many Russians, perhaps it's because there were so many ordinary tourists on

board to try and to grab a bit of winter sun. It's why the people on board that Metrojet plane were taking that package tour, of course.

And there's been certainly heart breaking stories, and there was that national memorial at the cathedral, St. Isaac's Cathedral, in St.

Petersburg as well where 224 bell tolls were made on the bell of the cathedral, one for each of the victims. So, it has been an emotional

period, sad, and grief for the nation, not just friends and families of those killed on board that flight from

Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg.

But you're right, there are lots of questions still being asked. We still haven't got a categorical statement from the Russian government that

this was terrorism, that this was a bomb that caused this, although there's obviously a de facto acknowledgment that that was the case by the fact that

the Russian government has now banned or suspended all flights, not just to Sharm el-Sheikh, but to all airports in Egypt, of Russian aircraft while

they investigate further the security threat. That follows an exchange of intelligence from the United Kingdom to the United States as well, which

was confirmed to us last week by the Kremlin.

And so clearly, you know, the Russians are very concerned to make sure this doesn't happen again. The problem now, though, is the logistics,

getting all those tens of thousands of Russians in the Sinai peninsula, at those Red Sea resorts, back home to Russia.

LU STOUT: All right, Matthew Chance there reporting on the mourning in Russia and also Russian investigators now on the ground in Egypt. Thank

you very much indeed for that update, Matthew.

Now you're watching News Stream. Still to come on the program, they fought off ISIS without firing a single shot. Now CNN speaks exclusively

to Bedouin on the front line of the fight in Sinai.

Also ahead, air pollution is off the charts in northeast China. A look at just how bad it is in our world weather update.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

LU STOUT: Welcome back.

Now, an alarming new report on climate change, on the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, hit a record high last year, that's

according to research just released by the United Nations. Now scientists say gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide have a warming

effect on the Earth's climate. And the pictures you're looking at right now, these from northeastern China where smog is spiking to extreme levels.

Now, Chinese state media says the density of toxic particles in the air soared in one city over the weekend.

Now Jennifer Gray joins me now live with more on the conditions in northeastern China, especially in the city of Shenyang. And Jennifer, just

how bad is it out there?

[08:15:00] JENNIFER GRAY, CNN METEOROLOGIST: Well, it is so bad, it is more than 50 times what is considered healthy. So, most of these areas

we are talking about fall right under this very unhealthy or hazardous category. So it doesn't get much worse than this.

Look at these numbers, 429 in Shenyang, and that is considered hazardous. And then also other cities surrounding it, 249, considered very

unhealthy. And it doesn't look like it is going to improve much over the next couple days.

Now, the World Health Organization recommends maximum 24 average, 25 as far as particulate matter is concerned and a lot of these cities, look

at that, are over 1,000. So, that's how we get that number. More than 50 times what is considered healthy.

Look at some of these pictures. It almost looks like fog.

We have reports of people's throats burning, their eyes burning. They're walking around with masks on trying to protect themselves as much

as they can.

But, look, you see the snow on the ground right there if you can see in the picture, this is due to them turning on their coal powered heating

supplies and so it is creating just this very, very hazardous environment.

Look at these temperatures in the single digits right there, Wednesday, 8 degrees, Thursday 12 degrees. And so because of this coal

powered heating that they turned on for the city, that's what's creating all of this smog and the hazardous air pollution.

So, 50 million people live in this area shaded in orange right here. This is from the National Academy of Science. And in the 1950s, they

started to providing free coal and so that's why they're using this to heat the public facilities in

the city. It makes pollution level 55 percent higher in the north and it also can

cut life expectancy by five and a half years.

So, Kristie, this is definitely a problem, but it doesn't look like they get much relief in the form of rain for the next couple of days.

LU STOUT: Yeah, so not a good forecast. Jennifer Gray there reporting on the terrible haze that's gripping northern China right now.

Many thanks indeed for that update.

Now 15 years from now, 100 million more of the world's population could be forced into poverty as a result of climate change. Now that is

according to a new report from the World Bank, which points to increased threat from flooding,

drought and disease.

Now, the report says eradicating poverty will be impossible if the effects of global warming are not taken into account. Now, World Bank

executive says ending poverty and tackling climate change are the defining issues of this generation.

You're watching News Stream. And still to come, a riot at a detention center has shaken tiny Christmas Island. We have got the details right

after the break.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[08:20:29] LU STOUT: Looking pretty clear tonight here in Hong Kong. Coming to you live from the territory. You're back watching News Stream.

Now Malaysia and Singapore have also seen clearer skies lately. And that's thanks in part to recent rain.

Now remember, this is how it looked for several weeks as that thick haze from Indonesia just choked the region. But the source of the problem,

clearing land by burning it, that remains.

Now, that's because palm oil is a huge industry for Indonesia. And as David Molko reports, this illegal burning to make way for crops has created

serious environmental problems.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DAVID MOLKO, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: The flames, the smoke, the suffering, and the outrage.

But the story behind it starts on this rutted road at the edge of a forest in central Kalimantan.

So, someone deliberately set a fire here in the last few weeks in order to clear the land and planted it with palm trees. It looks like the

police have already been here, too.

We follow our guide, a local activist. He doesn't want to use his name or show his face, fearful his time with us might make him a target.

Wow. Just look at that. You can tell it happened pretty recently. They didn't even bother to clear the charred debris before they planted the

field.

The sign says police are investigating a suspected criminal act, but those responsible achieved what they came for, oil palms now rooted in the

blackened landscape, ready to bear fruit and profits in a few years time, if the culprits

aren't arrested. It happens every year says Arie Rompas with the NGO Walhi.

ARIE ROMPAS, INDONESIAN FORUM FOR THE ENVIRONMENT (through translator): This has angered so many people including me, because my

family has to breathe unhealthy air. The law has only been enforced minimally. This will not deter people

from burning.

MOLKO: The story here multiplied tens of thousands of times across the country. Illegal fires set to forests and carbon rich peat lands, a

cheap way to make room for pulp and paper, and in particular palm oil. At least 7 companies have been declared suspects this year.

To get a better understanding of this complicated landscape, Arie sends us south.

This is pretty typical for a palm oil plantation: the gate out front, but

no sign. It's tough to know who actually owns the land, and runs the business here, and the authorities aren't always sure either since there's

no uniform system of mapping land ownership.

It's a problem the president pledged to fix with a one map policy, which could help hold those who burned accountable.

But consider this: according to Global Forest Watch, more than 60 percent of fire recorded between July and October were outside concession

borders. And that makes finding the culprits even harder.

It is not just about finding and punishing them, campaigners say, authorities

should provide incentives not to burn, especially for farmers and small land holders.

BUSLAR MAILOR, INDONESIA FOREST CAMPAIGN, GREENPEACE: There's room to improving the yield, for example, if we're talking about employment in

Indonesia, then it -- palm oil industry or the natural industry should think more how to process the raw product here in Indonesia, raw material

here in Indonesia.

MOLKO: With the Indonesian economy growing at its slowest in six years, palm oil is a sure thing.

Indonesia produces more than any other country, an 30 million tons every year.

So, this gives you an idea of where it all ends up: shampoo, soap, cookies, crackers, peanut butter, even ice cream, all because palm oil has

a long shelf life, it is versatile, and here's the key thing, cheap.

There's been progress. Some companies have gone palm oil free. And others pledged to use oil only from suppliers that don't burn. But no one

doubts that global demand will only continue to grow.

So, with the smoke stretching across the region and more than half a million people sickened, will this year finally be the year Indonesia turns

the corner when it comes to balancing its economy and the environment?

David Molko, CNN, Polankoriat (ph), Indonesia.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

LU STOUT: Australia's treatment of refugees is under scrutiny after riots broke out at a migrant detention center on Christmas Island. An

Australian-based rights group tells CNN that the detainees got angry after learning that an escaped refugee was found dead outside the facility.

A spokesman says detainees suspect that security guards were involved in his death. He says the guards then abandoned the facility.

Now some Australian politicians are calling for a probe.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

[08:25:11] SARAH HANSON-YOUNG, AUSTRALIAN SENATOR: The situation inside the Christmas Island Detention Center now is very tense. There are

no guards inside the facilities from what those inside have been reporting to my office and others. It is time for the government to start being up

front with the Australian people about what is going on and to ensure proper, independent investigation and review of the conditions and of the

management of the facilities.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

LU STOUT: Australian authorities say a medical inquiry is being done to find out how the escaped detainee died.

Now, Christmas Island is one of a number of offshore locations where Australia houses asylum seekers. Now, the arrangement has come under

repeated criticism. In March, a UN report accused Australia of violating the rights

of refugees by, quote, failing to provide adequate detention conditions.

Now, the harsh Sinai desert is the latest front line in the fight against ISIS. But some nomadic tribes there tell us they found a way to

confront the terror group without bloodshed.

And U.S. Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson is hitting back at the media over what he calls unfair treatment. We have got the details

next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

LU STOUT: I am Kristie Lu Stout in Hong Kong. You're watching News Stream and these are your world headlines.

Now, initial results are trickling in for Myanmar's landmark parliamentary election. Ballots are still being counted, but election

officials say the first batch of results show Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party has won 12 seats of the hundreds up for grabs.

Now Jordan's news agency reports a Jordanian police officer shot and killed two Americans at a police training facility. A South African

trainer was also killed. Now, Jordan's prime minister says Jordanian security forces shot and killed the attacker. The U.S. embassy in Jordan

says it is investigating.

Now smog is spiking to extreme levels in northeast China. China's CCTV reports the density of toxic particles in the air soared to a reading

of 1400 in Shenyang. Now the World Health Organization says a reading of 25 is the maximum it considers safe over a 24 hour period.

Russia says the remains of more than 100 victims of the Metrojet crash have been identified through DNA testing. Now meanwhile, U.S. officials

say that they are increasingly sure that a bomb took down that plane, but Egypt says it is too soon to say for sure.

The ISIS affiliate in Egypt has claimed responsibility for downing the plane, but so far it hasn't explained how it was done. Now that has raised

doubts over its credibility amongst some observers, considering the militants group's

tendency to publicize acts for propaganda purposes.

Now whether or not ISIS was responsible for taking down the plane, the threat posed by it's affiliate in the Sinai cannot be underestimated.

Now, local tribes there have been pushing back against the insurgents. And in this exclusive report, Ian Lee explain how they've managed to do it.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

[08:31:41] IAN LEE, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: This harsh landscape is the new battle against ISIS. And the men defending it are not

soldiers or police, they are Bedouin, nomads, who have ruled the Sinai for centuries.

We travel dusty, bumpy roads to find them. We meet three sheikhs from three different tribes who tell us they directly confronted ISIS, drawing a

line in the sand.

"We stopped ISIS more than 20 times. We went out with more than 50 cars, and kicked them back. We didn't shoot one bullet, because if one

bullet was shot, there would be a war."

The Bedouin accomplished something that billions of dollars in weapons couldn't, they stopped ISIS expanding from the northern part of Sinai to

here in the south without shedding any blood.

ISIS's Egyptian offshoot is already one of the most dangerous. It has killed hundreds of soldiers and police officers in northern Sinai and it's

trying to expand.

Sinai is a desert, the north is flat, the south covered in mountains. And that's why ISIS wants to push south so that they can use this rocky,

mountainous terrain for cover while fighting their guerrilla war.

The Sheikhs tell me their cousins in the north face a dilemma. They want to fight ISIS, but if they are caught with weapons, the Egyptian army

might see them as militants. If they help the army, terrible retribution.

Here ISIS beheads alleged army collaborators. But these men are ready to take that risk, even though their communities in Sinai long been

marginalized by the government in far off Cairo.

The Bedouins reject ISIS's twisted version of Islam and its invasion of their

lands.

"The tribes could defeat ISIS, if the government came and gave us arms and said fight ISIS, they would fight ISIS," says this Tarabin (ph) tribal

leader. "They would finish them completely."

And they're ready for battle to save their families, their honor, and their age old way of life.

Ian Lee, CNN, in Egypt's Sinai peninsula.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

LU STOUT: Now, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with U.S. President Barack Obama in just a few hours from now. He will be

looking to ease tensions with Mr. Obama and to try to boost U.S. financial support for

Israel's defenses.

The Israeli prime minister's controversial address to congress lobbying against the nuclear deal, that soured ties between the two allies

earlier this year. Now expectations for talks are not very high. U.S. officials say no

final agreement is likely on new U.S. defense aid to Israel.

Now, U.S. Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson is lashing out at the

media, calling the coverage of his campaign, quote, sick and stupid.

Now this comes in response to questions about how accurate he has been in writing about incidents in his past.

Now, when he spoke with NBC, Carson said no other politician has been subjected to this type of scrutiny.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Vetting is a normal part of the process. Did you not expect this?

[08:35:05] BEN CARSON, 2016 REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: I have always said that I expect to be vetted. But being vetted and what is going

on with me -- you said this 30 years ago, you said this 20 years ago, this didn't exist, you know, I just -- I have not seen that with anyone else.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

LU STOUT: Now, the top Republican candidates are set to hold another debate

on Tuesday night.

Now, the German airline Lufthansa has a canceled more than 900 flights as part of an ongoing strike by the cabin crew union. Lufthansa says the

cancellations will effect 113,000 passengers at Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Munich.

The strike started last Friday after the airline and cabin crew failed to reach an agreement on retirement benefits and wages.

The trial of five men accused of orchestrating a massacre at a Kenyan university is under way in Nairobi.

Now, gunmen killed nearly 150 people at Garissa University College in April. They were targeting anyone who was not Muslim.

Now, the terror group al Shabaab claimed responsibility. The hearings for the five men accused are to last for two days.

You're watching News Stream. And coming up, water often symbolizes tranquillity and peace. We will take you to healing waters of a Bali water

temple, and show you why many worship this element.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

LU STOUT: All this week, CNN is on the road in Indonesia.

The country includes more than 15,000 islands, nearly unmatched, animal and plant diversity, and ancient springs of purifying water.

Now Paula Newton takes us there to explore the healing powers of those waters.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

PAULA NEWTON, CNN INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Bali's Hindu inheritance honors the goddess of water beyond all others. These farming

families are as devout as their ancestors, but me, I need an education. And the peace of many temples here provide. I am a tough case though.

So men, women, everybody has to wear a sarong?

So, what I have come to Pura Tirta Empul for a water purification ritual.

My very patient guide is Dewa Putu Liwasa.

This is the thousand-year-old sanctum of the god Indra. The legend: that his forces were poisoned, so he pierced the earth to create a fountain

of immortality to bring them back to life.

To this day, Balinese believe bathing in these spiritual waters bestows healing and conveys devotion.

DEWA PUTU LIWASA, GUIDE: In the last one, the biggest water that means we get more wisdom.

NEWTON: More wisdom?

LIWASA: Wisdom.

NEWTON: Bring it on, I say.

But before I take the plunge, we indulge in an act of faith. Giro Putu Saya (ph) is the kind of Bali healer made famous in movies and novels,

sought out by Indonesians, foreigners even celebrities. Some believe he has inherited

the ancient art of spiritual healing.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I don't understand what bless mean (ph). Many people come, I know, what happened, I know.

[08:40:07] NEWTON: But you don't know why? You know this. You just know this.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I don't understand. Just only God blessed me.

NEWTON: Drawn by his humble demeanor, Susan Fedelia is here seeking peace of mind. She's worried about a lump on her breast, but admits it's

taking coaxing to get her here. But now.

SUSAN FIDELIA: I'm so amazed. Wow, you know everything with me, even we don't admit it before.

NEWTON: What changed your mind? I mean, I'm sure you have people who say, yeah, this is crazy, Susan.

FIDELIA: I can feel it. I trust it.

NEWTON: Healing Balinese style comes from within they tell me.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: But if everybody maybe didn't believe, that sorry. The spirit of Bali (inaudible).

NEWTON: You have to believe.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yeah, for everything you do, you have to reach for it.

NEWTON: The offering is central to that respect.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Pray to the god first, continue, try to (inaudible) up water. And try to the mother and father. (inaudible) by

heart and then make wish.

NEWTON: Thank you.

Well, you've got to believe, right?

Paula Newton, CNN, Pura Tirta Empul, Bali.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

LU STOUT: The healing waters of Bali are indeed beautiful.

Now on Tuesday, Paula Newton continues here journey across parts of Bali that most visitors never see. She shows us a unique system of

irrigation known as Subak (ph).

And that is News Stream. I'm Kristie Lu Stout, but don't go anywhere. World Sport with Alex Thomas is next.

END