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Gaza Officials: 92 People Killed Over Past 24 Hours; Ukraine's Zelenskyy Warns Of "Most Destructive Arms Race"; Source: DOJ Seeking To Indict Former FBI Director Comey; At Least One Detainee Killed In ICE Facility Shooting; Tony Blair, Arnold Schwarzenegger Talk about Political Division in U.S.; New A.I-Powered App Helps Parents Protect Children. Aired 12-12:45a ET

Aired September 25, 2025 - 00:00   ET

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


[00:00:06]

KIM BRUNHUBER, CNN ANCHOR: Warm welcome to all of you watching us around the world, I'm Kim Brunhuber. This is "CNN Newsroom."

Diplomacy for Peace in Gaza. The Trump administration proposes a 21- point peace plan to Arab leaders, as the Palestinian president is set to speak at the U.N.

Under oath, U.S. federal prosecutors have until Tuesday to indict former FBI director James Comey on perjury charges related to the 2016 election.

And the numbers are in. Jimmy Kimmel's show breaks viewership records after his suspension.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Live from Atlanta, this is "CNN Newsroom with Kim Brunhuber."

BRUNHUBER: In the coming hours, the Palestinian Authority president is expected to deliver a pre-recorded speech to the world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly. His remarks will come just days after a number of Western countries formally declared their recognition of a Palestinian state. It's part of an effort to revive a two-state solution and provide a pathway to peace.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will address the U.N. General Assembly on Friday and then head to the White House for a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday. The Trump administration is hopeful for a breakthrough after proposing a 21- point peace plan to Arab leaders.

U.S. plan calls for a permanent ceasefire and the release of all hostages and offers a framework for how Gaza can be governed without Hamas. It includes a proposal for Israel to gradually withdraw from the enclave. Regional leaders endorse large parts of the plan but made suggestions on provisions they want added to it.

Meanwhile, Israel's ground offensive is pushing deeper into Gaza City. Hospitals reported 92 people were killed throughout Gaza on Wednesday, including 55 people in Gaza City alone.

CNN's Oren Liebermann reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

OREN LIEBERMANN, CNN JERUSALEM BUREAU CHIEF: Even as a number of world leaders at the U.N. General Assembly talk about the importance of bringing a ceasefire to Gaza that would end the war after nearly two years, Israel is continuing to press its assault on Gaza City.

The Israeli military chief saying forces will push deeper into the city itself and carry out larger strikes targeting what it sees as one of Hamas' last remaining strongholds. But we see what's unfolding as a result of these strikes. Gaza hospitals say nearly 100 have been killed on Wednesday. More -- most of those in northern Gaza.

Shortly after one in the morning, Gaza's civil defense says an Israeli strike killed 22 people, including nine children in the Firas market in the old city of Gaza City. And we have seen the results of that strike.

Israel's military says they were targeting two Hamas terrorists in that strike, but they did not name who they were targeting or specify the two people that they were targeting in that strike.

They also say that they are aware of reports regarding casualties, but their numbers do not align with what we're seeing reported from Gaza's civil defense.

Meanwhile, a -- a drone launched from Yemen struck the Israeli city of a lot in southern Israel on Wednesday, resulting in at least 22 injuries, according to Israel's emergency responders, including two seriously injured as a result of shrapnel from that strike.

Israel has intercepted most of the drones and ballistic missiles launched from the Iran-backed Houthis, but we have seen several in recent weeks pierced Israel's aerial defense and carry out strikes in Israel.

So that continues to escalate between Israel and the Houthis.

Oren Liebermann, CNN, in Jerusalem.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BRUNHUBER: Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharra spoke at the General Assembly on Wednesday and called for the remaining international sanctions to be lifted from his country.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

AHMED AL-SHARAA, SYRIAN PRESIDENT (through translator): We restructured civil and military institutions, dissolving all previous formations.

Through intensive diplomatic activities, Syria restored its international relations and forged regional and global partnerships, and achieved the gradual lifting of most sanctions. And we call now for the complete lifting of sanctions so that they no longer shackle the Syrian people.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BRUNHUBER: Syrian leader, former Islamist, who once had a $10 million bounty on his head, also met President Donald Trump during a reception hosted by the U.S. President on the sidelines of the event.

Meanwhile, Israel announced for the first time on Wednesday that its talks with Syria are ongoing after repeated Israeli cross-border strikes. The U.S. is pushing for a de-escalation agreement between the two countries as the first step towards peace.

A day after the U.S. president said he thinks Ukraine can win back all of its territory from Russia, the Kremlin is calling that claim deeply mistaken.

The U.S. State Department says Marco Rubio called on Moscow to take meaningful steps to end the war during his talks with his Russian counterpart on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly. But Russia's foreign ministry says, Sergey Lavrov, told the U.S. Secretary of State that Ukraine and some of its European allies are determined to prolong the fighting.

[00:05:12]

When asked about the meeting, the Russian Foreign Minister replied with a gesture.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Mr. Lavrov, how is your meeting? Are you concerned about the shifting tone from Trump as he turned his back on Russia?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BRUNHUBER: Meanwhile, the Ukrainian president told the U.N. General Assembly that the world must stop Russian occupation now rather than risk escalation. Here it is.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY, UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT: You help peace or continue trading with Russia and helping Russia to fund this war. It depends on you, whether a prisoners of war will be freed, whether abducted children will come home, whether hostages will be free. It depends on you.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BRUNHUBER: Volodymyr Zelenskyy also told the U.N. that we're in the midst of the most destructive arms race in human history.

CNN's Nic Robertson has more on his message.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NIC ROBERTSON, CNN INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMATIC EDITOR: You know, I think Zelenskyy was speaking to a number of audiences. Obviously, his prime audience is President Trump. Another audience will have been the European allies. And as well, he was speaking to the whole room there.

Look, I think, you know, what Zelenskyy is saying here is even with, and this is what I think I heard, even with powerful friends, it's still not enough unless you have weapons.

So I think that was a very clear message to President Trump. I've heard your words but you've been inconsistent on what we need are your weapons. And from President Trump saying that he's going to continue to supply weapons to NATO. They'll buy them. And then they'll pass them onto Ukraine and good luck to them.

So in a way, President Trump is being a thoroughfare to enable the war to continue. That's what Zelenskyy wants, although he also spoke about the need for international institutions, the -- the writ of international law, which he said is failing. International institutions are not a sort of favorite of President Trump, if you will.

We -- we look at the way that he pulled apart various sort of elements and ideas at the U.N. yesterday. It's just one example of that.

So what Zelenskyy is getting at here is that all those in the room, you have to be tougher. We, as international countries, have to reform the way that we enforce or are able to enforce international laws. And that's through those strong international institutions.

But I do think it was a very clear message that even with strong friends, unless they let those weapons get to you, you cannot be effective. You don't have security.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BRUNHUBER: All right. For more on this, I want to bring in Benjamin Radd, who's a political scientist and senior fellow at the UCLA Burkle Center for International Relations. Good to see you again. Thanks so much for being here with us.

So I want to get to President Zelenskyy's address in a second. But first on President Trump's so-called shift on his position. I mean, how do you read what -- what Trump said about Ukraine recapturing all its territory and administration officials like the vice president, Secretary of State, basically walking it back?

BENJAMIN RADD, POLITICAL ANALYST, UCLA BURKLE CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: I think it reflects a shift in tone for President Trump. But unless there's policy to follow it, it doesn't necessarily reflect a shift in U.S. position in how it's approaching the Ukraine Russia war. We're not hearing anything about an increased or renewed commitment to arms, to intelligence cooperation. Anything other than either President Trump has exasperated with one side, which was Ukraine earlier this year, or now he's frustrated with Vladimir Putin, the Russian side.

He vacillate between the two depending on whichever one seems to irk him at a given moment. But again, this is rhetoric. And I think all sides are seeing it that way. Though Zelenskyy certainly appreciates rhetoric that's in his favor rather than your hostile tone that he got earlier this year.

BRUNHUBER: Yes, I imagine. Our reporting is that it's sort of a -- a negotiating tactic by Trump. But if Putin responds to policy, not words, I mean, do you think he's -- he's seen or heard anything from Trump in -- in the last or so that -- that might worry him a little?

RADD: Well, I mean, if -- if I were Vladimir Putin, there's really nothing yet to be concerned about. Even the threat of sanctions, which is something that President Trump floated several times now in recent weeks and months, has not come to fruition. He's -- you know, comes with conditions for -- for NATO allies to impose sanctions. They also have to impose them on China, which is the one buying Russian oil and for the Europeans to reduce their consumption of Russian oil. So none of that's taking place.

And again, we're not seeing an increase in any U.S. supplies or any commitment to Ukraine's territorial integrity demonstrated by action beyond rhetoric. And that's what Putin responds to. It's not that he doesn't respond. He does when he sees the shift in policy, but none of that's evident yet.

BRUNHUBER: OK. So -- so if it all basically comes down to -- to action, as you say, I mean, our -- our reporter there said that -- that Zelenskyy's real message to Trump was, you know, even with powerful friends, you need weapons to be effective.

[00:10:07]

I mean, do you agree that's what Zelenskyy was really saying that Trump's words aren't enough without actual hardware?

RADD: I don't think it's -- he's just saying that with response to -- with respect to President Trump's words. I think Zelenskyy is telling the U.N. audience, you know, it's very notable he made that statement there that diplomacy and sanctions and working through the international legal process has gotten them nowhere.

It's brought the world no closer to peace and security and stability. And that the only thing that seems to matter with aggressors like Russia is the use of force and the willingness to stand up and resist their aggressive actions. And that's what he's looking for. That's what he's telling the international community that matters.

BRUNHUBER: Yes. I mean, he -- he gave a pretty harsh assessment of the U.N. I thought basically saying that international law has -- has collapsed and institutions are weak. I mean, it seems like a pretty bold thing to say while you're -- you're up there standing at the -- the U.N. podium. No?

RADD: Indeed. And it is notable, and President Trump basically echoed the failures of the U.N. during his very long address the night before. And I think it -- it demonstrates again that the -- that the -- the efficacy of the U.N. as a institution is not so much in the action, but it's the fact that it can convene all the people together in one space and give them a foreign to talk.

But at the end of the day, these discussions, these deliberations, these acts of diplomacy do not deliver justice, do not maintain peace. We've seen that now for decades.

I mean, you have to go back to really the time of the Nuremberg trials to see a moment where that really was delivered. And in that instance, you had the allied victors were the ones who administered justice.

Absent a situation like that, it's difficult to see how this incarnation of the U.N. serves that same spirit. And I think Zelenskyy is just calling it as he sees it. He says, what we really need are supplies that we can use, not words that we could just float about that don't really deliver any action.

BRUNHUBER: Yes. So I mean, it sounds from what you're saying after this week so far at the U.N. were -- were no closer to ending this war. This is all -- has this all just been diplomatic theater then?

RADD: It's -- it's been rhetoric. It's been a back and forth. And I think it's Vladimir Putin testing the international community and specifically the resolve of the Europeans given the incursions of Russian drones into NATO territory.

What -- what are the red lines for the Europeans? What is the red line for NATO, in particular, and for the United States to really join in and more aggressively hold Ukraine and Europe's territorial boundaries? That is what I think we're seeing being tested and pushed.

BRUNHUBER: We'll leave it there. Thanks so much for being with us. Benjamin Radd, really appreciate it.

RADD: Thank you.

BRUNHUBER: U.S. federal prosecutors are looking to indict former FBI director James Comey on perjury charges. That's according to people familiar with the Trump administration's investigation. Prosecutors have until Tuesday to bring that charge.

We have more now from CNN's Katelyn Polantz.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

KATELYN POLANTZ, CNN CRIME AND JUSTICE CORRESPONDENT: The clock is ticking for the Justice Department here. And there is an open investigation that could be put before a grand jury for a possible indictment of the former FBI director, Jim Comey, someone who has been a political foe of Donald Trump, the president, for many, many years since he served in that position.

What they are looking at is testimony that Jim Comey gave under oath to the Senate Judiciary Committee on September 30th of 2020. So that's next Tuesday will be five years to the day of that. That means that's essentially the last date that we understand through our sources that an indictment against Comey related to that congressional testimony could be brought.

And so what the Justice Department is doing right now, what federal investigators are doing is looking at whether they have the case and potentially taking it before a grand jury.

Our understanding is this would be in the Eastern District of Virginia. So that is Northern Virginia, Richmond, the tidewater area of Virginia in a federal court potentially.

Comey has not been charged yet, however, and what we do understand too is that he stands by his testimony both from 2017 after he was fired by Donald Trump as president. And also in 2020 when he told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he was standing by his earlier testimony and that he wasn't leaking to the media.

We do think that there's a possibility this could relate to a leak investigation. But at the end of the day, what our understanding is right now is that Jim Comey is potentially facing an indictment or a possible coming indictment related to perjury or making false statements to Congress in 2020.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BRUNHUBER: All right. Still to come here on "CNN Newsroom," Republican officials blamed the far left for a deadly shooting at an ICE facility in Texas. We'll bringing the latest on the investigation. Please stay with us.

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BRUNHUBER: Denmark says it can't point any fingers yet after mysterious drones forced its second airport closure this week. The drones appeared near the Alborg Airport on Wednesday, forcing a temporary halt to operations.

Police are still investigating reports of drone sightings near at least three other airfields on Wednesday and Thursday.

Now, it's all happening after similar sightings closed airports in Oslo and Copenhagen earlier this week. The Danish Prime Minister said the incidents fit the pattern of recent suspected Russian drone incursions and airspace violations in Europe. Moscow denies any involvement.

President Trump is blaming a deadly shooting in Texas on rhetoric from the radical left. At least one detainee at an immigration facility in Dallas was killed and two more are in critical condition. [00:20:04]

And while the president is quick to point fingers, some Texas lawmakers are calling for an end to divisive rhetoric.

And CNN's Ed Lavandera reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ED LAVANDERA, CNN SENIOR NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Federal law enforcement officials described the gunman as a sniper who shot three immigrant detainees in ICE custody. The attack happened just before 7:00 A.M. at an ICE field office in Dallas.

Denise Robleto was outside in a van waiting for her mother.

(GUNSHOT)

She says her mother, an immigrant from Nicaragua, was checking in for an early immigration appointment.

She showed us a video.

(GUNSHOT)

And we could hear slow, methodical gunfire.

(GUNSHOT)

As many as seven shots, Robleto said she could hear screams coming from the facility. Dallas police were called to the scene around 6:40 A.M. local time.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This is going to be a sniper on top of the roof.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The deputy was quickly was able to locate the shooter who was deceased.

LAVANDERA (voice-over): Law enforcement officials say the gunman died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The FBI says they are investigating the attack as an act of targeted violence.

JOE ROTHROCK, FBI SPECIAL AGENT IN CHARGE: Early evidence that we've seen from rounds that were found near the suspected shooter contain messages that are "Anti- ICE" in nature.

LAVANDERA (voice-over): FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo of an "Anti- ICE" message written on one of five unused bullets at the scene. Even though officials say this was an anti-immigration officer attack, no ICE officials or members of law enforcement were hurt.

But DHS officials say one immigrant detainee was killed and two other detainees were wounded. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security says the shooter fired, quote, indiscriminately at the ICE building and at a van. Investigators say the shots came from a higher position at an adjacent building. Investigators searched a car outside that building. The vehicle had a sign posted on the rear panel showing a United States map that read "Radioactive fallout from nuclear detonations have passed over these areas more than two times since 1951."

There's no confirmation yet if this is the suspect's car.

The gunman's elevated location is similar to the shooting of Charlie Kirk just two weeks ago. And the political nature of the engravings also draw comparisons to similar evidence found at the Kirk shooting scene.

This shooting took place at an immigration facility where detainees are processed before they are transferred to a detention center.

JOSHUA JOHNSON, ACTING DIRECTOR, ICE DALLAS FIELD OFFICE: This is the second time I've had to stand in front of you and talk about a shooter at one of my facilities. And I think that the takeaway from all of this is that the rhetoric has to stop.

LAVANDERA (voice-over): Law enforcement and Republican officials blame the shootings on increasingly volatile political speech they say is coming from the far left.

In a statement, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said, "This shooting must serve as a wake-up call to the far-left that their rhetoric about ICE has consequences. Comparing ICE day-in and day-out to the Nazi Gestapo, the secret police and slave patrols has consequences."

SEN. TED CRUZ (R-TX): Look, in America, we disagree that's fine. That's the democratic process. But your political opponents are not Nazis.

LAVANDERA: An immigration attorney tells CNN that the immigrant detainees that were already at this police facility in Dallas have been moved to another detention facility and that other immigrants who have appointments here Thursday through Sunday can come in on Monday while investigators continue to work the crime scene here.

Ed Lavandera, CNN, Dallas.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BRUNHUBER: A French court is expected to announce the verdict in the coming hours in the trial of former President Nicolas Sarkozy. He's accused of receiving millions of dollars in illegal campaign financing in 2007 from the late Libyan strongman, Muammar Gaddafi.

Sarkozy's attorney calls the charges a fabrication. If the former president is convicted, he could face up to 10 years in prison.

Jimmy Kimmel pulled in record viewership in his first show back after being suspended by ABC. I'll tell you just how many people watched this return despite some stations refusing to air the show. Please stay with us. (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

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BRUNHUBER: Welcome back. I'm Kim Brunhuber.

Let's take a look at today's top stories.

Regional Arab leaders endorsed parts of a 21-point U.S. peace plan to end the war in Gaza. The Trump administration says it's hopeful for a breakthrough in the coming days. U.S. peace plan calls for a ceasefire to release hostages, IDF withdrawal and offers a framework for Gaza's governance without Hamas.

Federal prosecutors have until Tuesday to indict former FBI Director James Comey. According to sources familiar with the investigation, prosecutors are preparing to charge Comey with perjury in connection with his testimony about Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

The U.S. National Park Service has removed a statue of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein from the National Mall. A group called the Secret Handshake placed the statue there on Tuesday calling attention to the bond between the president and the convicted sex trafficker. And the Interior Department official said the statue didn't comply with the permit issued.

[00:30:08]

Jimmy Kimmel's return to late-night television has set a new record for the show. ABC says about 6.3 million viewers turned in to watch his first show back after the network pulled him off the air last week. That's more than three times Kimmel's typical viewership. And that's just on traditional television.

Across social media and streaming sites, the episode continues to rack up impressive numbers.

His opening monologue calling attention to government threats to free speech, has been viewed more than 15 million times on YouTube, making it the most viewed monologue of all time on the platform.

Well, Donald Trump wasted no time issuing a new threat as Kimmel returned to air. The president suggested his administration might investigate ABC for making what he called illegal campaign contributions to the Democratic Party by allowing Kimmel on air.

CNN's Elex Michaelson sat down with former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair to talk about the growing political division in the U.S. Here it is.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ELEX MICHAELSON, CNN CORRESPONDENT: We had the situation with Jimmy Kimmel, the sort of lack of trust, this fighting back and forth between both sides.

We saw President Trump say that he hates his enemies, which is the total opposite of everything that you've always been about. How do you process this moment and this concept of hating one's enemies?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, FORMER CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR: Look, I think the way I do, and I find it very, very comforting that I'm a human being and created this way, by the influence that other people had on me, to be very inclusive.

And when I see someone that disagrees with me, not to go and look at them suspiciously or look at them like the enemy, but try to figure out and learn something from that person. Why do they feel that way?

I think that we are not enough listening to one another. We are just shouting at one another. God gave us two ears and only one mouth, so we should listen twice as much than we talk. That's the bottom line.

We are wasting our time if we talk about and analyze Donald Trump here.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BRUNHUBER: Picking up the pieces after a deadly storm, recovery efforts are underway in Taiwan after the most powerful storm on the planet this year swept through the island.

We'll show you the impact of typhoon Ragasa. That's coming up next. Please do stay with us.

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[00:37:19]

BRUNHUBER: Taiwan is cleaning up after a huge storm killed at least 14 people.

Cars were tossed aside as Typhoon Ragasa sent floodwaters ripping through this town on Tuesday. Thirty-one people are missing after a natural dam collapsed, unleashing 68 million tons of water.

Now, at its peak, the typhoon was the most powerful storm in the world so far this year. Two million people were forced to flee their homes before a Typhoon Ragasa reached Southern China on Wednesday.

Now downgraded to a tropical storm, Ragasa toppled trees and smashed shop windows in China's tech hub of Shenzhen. The area is among the most densely populated coastlines in the world.

Now in Hong Kong, hurricane-force winds ripped through the city on Wednesday, injuring at least 90 people. The fierce winds whipped up waves that inundated waterfront areas, damaging buildings and restaurants.

The developers of a new app powered by artificial intelligence say their technology is providing a safer online experience for kids on social media.

CNN's Christina Macfarlane reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CHRISTINA MACFARLANE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): A new A.I.- powered app aims to help parents protect their kids online, called Sway.ly.

The app is designed to alert both kids and their parents when harmful content appears on platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube.

DANIELA FERNANDEZ, CO-FOUNDER AND CHIEF STRATEGY OFFICER FOR SWAY.LY: Sway.ly is -- what I love to say is a very different app out there in the market. It's an -- it's A.I.-powered.

And what it does is it helps families take control of social media and make it healthier and safer for them. So, it helps both the parent and the child and any (ph) out there.

MACFARLANE (voice-over): Instead of banning or restricting access to social platforms, the app retrains content algorithms and gives parents insight into their child's online activity.

FERNANDEZ: We have 36 different filters that we identify, and then we alert, and we do tips and tricks in terms of how to deal with this type of content and how to try and remove it from your own feed, so you can start to choose what is it that you're being exposed to? What is the quality of the information that you're receiving?

MACFARLANE (voice-over): A recent survey commissioned by Sway.ly questioned more than 2,000 U.S. And U.K. families. Seventy-seven percent of kids surveyed said social media harms their health, but it found most feel powerless to stop it.

While parents worry about explicit content, kids say it's the constant stream of toxic narratives that does the real damage.

PETER WHITMELL, DEPUTY HEAD AND SAFEGUARDING LEAD AT NOTTING HILL PREP: I think the benefit of Sway.ly is that it makes it very clear for the parents what's going on online. And it has the capability through its A.I. to understand the latest trends in a way that, frankly, even I, as an educator who works with children every day, we can't stay on top of it. And that's where Sway.ly comes in in a really helpful way.

MACFARLANE (voice-over): Sway.ly is currently available to download on Apple and Android devices.

[00:40:04]

Christina Macfarlane, CNN, London.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BRUNHUBER: Italy is celebrating the late Giorgio Armani during Milan Fashion Week. The 91-year-old fashion legend died earlier this month in Milan.

The Brera Art Museum is displaying a retrospective of the Italian designer's fashions. That coincides with his label's 50th anniversary.

And it features striking red and silver garments set among masterpieces of Italian art from the middle ages to the 19th Century. The tribute runs through January.

All right. Thanks so much for watching CNN NEWSROOM. I'm Kim Brunhuber. I'll be back with more news at the top of the hour. WORLD SPORT is next.

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