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Suicide Bomber in Somalia Killed 15 at Hotel; Four Dead After Terrorists Stormed Police Station in Northwestern India; Unrest in Turkey After Violent Attacks; Bobbi Kristina Brown Dead at 22; Donald Trump Leading in Polls in Presidential Race; Rally to Remove Confederate Flag; Obama in Ethiopia, End of Africa Tour. Aired 2-3a ET

Aired July 27, 2015 - 02:00   ET

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


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[02:00:10] ERROL BARNETT, CNN ANCHOR (voice-over): As U.S. President Barack Obama arrives in Ethiopia, the region receives a sovereign reminder about the security challenges it faces. Plus, the daughter of singing stars Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown has died. And despite all the controversy surrounding him, the U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump shows no signs of falling in the polls.

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BARNETT: Hey, there, everyone. A big welcome to our viewers here in the U.S. and those of you tuned in from all around the world. I'm Errol Barnett with you for the next two hours. This is CNN NEWSROOM.

Now we begin this hour in Somalia. That's where Al-Shabaab carried out a deadly attack in the capital city Mogadishu on Sunday.

Now, police say a suicide bomber killed at least 15 people at this upscale hotel by ramming a vehicle for explosives into the front gate. The terror group says it was trying to target Western diplomats. The hotel is home to the diplomatic missions of several nations, including that of China. Now the attacks have placed while U.S. President Barack Obama was visiting Somalia's western neighbor, Kenya, while there he gave a spirited speech that include a pledge of support from the U.S. in Kenya's fight against extremists like Al-Shabaab. Take a listen.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: We're going to spend shoulder-to-shoulder with you in this fight against terrorism for as long as it takes. But as I mentioned yesterday, it is important to remember that violent extremists want us to turn against one another.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BARNETT: Now at this moment, Mr. Obama is in Ethiopia for the final stop of his tour of the African continent. He is just - he's scheduled, in fact, in a few hours to deliver a statement with the Prime Minister there in Addis Ababa. The two men are expected to talk about efforts to combat extremism.

CNN's Robyn Kriel tells us why Ethiopia is a key figure in the fight against Al-Shabaab.

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ROBYN KRIEL, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Al-Shabaab militants wait to ambush an African Union convoy in Southern Somalia. The attack went largely unnoticed until this gruesome terror video appeared online. The Al-Qaeda-linked militant group claims they killed dozens of Ethiopian troops. Identity documents purport to show the dead. The Ethiopian military is regarded as the most disciplined, effective and battle-hardened among the 22,000 troops of the African Union's mission to Somalia. Their mandate is peace enforcement. Their contribution to fighting Al-Shabaab hasn't gone unnoticed. U.S. President Barack Obama thanked Ethiopia for its leadership and cooperation last year.

OBAMA: Our counterterrorism cooperation and the partnerships that we have formed with countries like Ethiopia are going to be critical to our overall efforts to defeat terrorism.

KRIEL (voice-over): Those efforts have ramped up just this month with the new ground offensive by African forces and U.S. airstrikes.

MATT BRYDEN, SOMALIA SECURITY EXPERT: Obama traveling to Ethiopia, I think, is an indication of continued U.S. engagement, possibly some increase, and also signaling U.S. - a U.S. awareness that more needs to be done that the last few years of combined regional and international efforts to contain Al-Shabaab haven't done enough, and it is time to step up both the campaign against Al-Shabaab and the support for the countries that are on the frontline.

KRIEL (voice-over): The Ethiopians believe they can teach the Americans a thing or two about achieving that.

GETACHEW REDA, ADVISER TO ETHIOPIAN GOVERNMENT: The United States has to do some learning as to how reality is on the ground and understanding the realities on the ground would better inform whatever decisions they make.

KRIEL (voice-over): Reda adds that the two countries have a long way in addressing what he calls their differences in approach. When pressed on that...

REDA: Let's leave it at that.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

KRIEL: It's said that the African Union's war against Al-Shabaab in Somalia is the cheapest, most effective war against militant Islam in the world. But the countries fighting that war, including Ethiopia, need more support in terms of financing, training and equipping. As one Western diplomat told us, it's our treasure, but it's their blood. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

KRIEL (voice-over): A high price to pay for the long desired goal of stability in the Horn of Africa.

REDA: Peace in Ethiopia, peace in Somalia will also have dividends for the rest of the region.

KRIEL (voice-over): And the rest of the world.

Ethiopia wants to be more than a military enforcer. It wants to be the regional power broker too and it wants the U.S. to listen, understand and support it.

Robyn Kriel, CNN, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

[02:05:05] BARNETT: Now we want to bring you a developing story we're watching. Four people are dead after a group of terrorists stormed a police station in Northwestern India. Now, police in Punjab State say at this moment they're still exchanging gunfire with the gunmen reportedly holed up inside the station. This is recent video that got into us. But there are no hostages, we're told. One official describes this as a terror attack although it's not clear which group the attackers belong to. We'll, of course, keep our eyes on this and keep you updated on any developments.

Two Saudi-led airstrikes hit Yemen less than two hours into a five-day humanitarian cease-fire. Yemen's Defense Ministry says one of the strikes hit a medical center in Hajjah, used as a shelter by Houthis. At least one person was killed and seven injured. No casualties were reported in the airstrike that hit Saada. Now, meanwhile, the death toll from a Saudi-led airstrike in Taiz on Saturday, it has risen to 80. That's according to Reuters. The Saudi-led coalition has been bombing Houthi rebel forces in Yemen since late-March. At least 3,000 people have died in this conflict so far.

Now let's get you to Turkey where unrest has just been gripping the country as it struggles to deal with a spate of violent attacks that's killed dozens of people. Most recently, this car bombing killed two security officers responding to an emergency call. Meanwhile, Turkey has asked for an emergency NATO meeting to discuss the strong steps it's taken to fight terror that include airstrikes on ISIS positions in Syria and bombing Kurdish militants in Iraq.

CNN's Arwa Damon has more on that.

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ARWA DAMON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Turkey is now fighting on two fronts, bombing ISIS for the first time in Syria, making the nation a target for ISIS revenge, and going after the PKK, the Kurdistan Workers' Party, in Northern Iraq, which Turkey has long labeled a terrorist organization, which already proved it can and will retaliate, laying an ambush for Turkish security forces in the country's Kurdish heartland, killing two. The shaky cease-fire with the PKK officially dead.

Turkey also launched a countrywide anti-terrorism operation, rounding up some 850 individuals the government says have ties to terrorism. Among them, around three dozen foreigners. Turkey is on the offensive.

AHMET DAVUTOGLU, TURKISH PRIME MINISTER (Interpreted): Whoever presents a threat to our borders, the order is very clear. We have authorized the Turkish Armed Forces with the directive from the Prime Ministry, no matter which terror group, whoever approaches the borders in a way that threatens our borders, without needing a second order, the necessary precautions will be taken and punished.

DAMON (voice-over): But the aggressive stance may also be a byproduct of Turkish politics. President Erdogan has yet to form a coalition government, been blamed for allowing the threat posed by ISIS to thrive and flip-flopped on his position vis-a-vis the Kurds, now turning against them since they came into political power as a party in the country's most recent elections, all of which puts Turkey, a key NATO ally, in a contentious position at a precarious time.

Turkey has finally agreed to open its bases and airspace to coalition aircraft, going after ISIS in Syria, something Washington has been pressuring it to do. And Turkey is calling on NATO to convene regarding terror threats to its security.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

DAMON: Engagement, whether with the PKK or ISIS, will come at a cost. Airstrikes and crackdowns rarely eliminate threats, especially not in a region this volatile where tensions run deep and alliances are murky.

Arwa Damon, CNN, Istanbul.

BARNETT: Now, to a surprising admission from Syria's President four years into a civil war, he says his forces are in fact stretched thin. In a televised speech, Bashar al-Assad conceded the government is struggling against ISIS and other Islamic militants. He announced an amnesty for draft dodgers and deserters to boost the military's numbers. The President said the Army is conceding territory because there simply aren't enough people in the fight.

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BASHAR AL-ASSAD, SYRIAN PRESIDENT (Interpreted): We must define the important regions that the armed forces hold on to. So it doesn't allow the collapse of the rest of the areas.

Everything is available, but there is a shortfall in human capacity.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BARNETT: Now, even with a shortage of manpower, al-Assad insists his army is capable of defeating rebel fighters, more than 200,000 people have been killed since the Syrian war began back in 2011. And one of the world's holiest places became the site of clashes between Palestinians and Israeli police on Sunday.

[02:10:09] The violence broke out at the al-Aqsa Mosque. It's also known in Judaism as the Temple Mount. Israeli police say young Palestinians barricaded themselves in the mosque and started throwing rocks when officers tried to remove them. The clashes also spread down into the narrow alleyways of Jerusalem's Old City. It all began when ultra-nationalist Jews marking Israel's day of mourning went to the al-Aqsa complex escorted by police.

Bobbi Kristina Brown, the daughter of late singer and star Whitney Houston, has died. On January 31st, you may remember, the only child of Houston and R&B singer Bobby Brown was found unresponsive in the bathtub of her home. Doctors placed her in a medically induced coma. Her condition continued to deteriorate and she was moved to hospice care last month. In a statement, a family representative said, quote, "Bobbi Kristina Brown passed away Sunday, July 26, 2015, surrounded by her family. She is finally at peace and in the arms of God."

Now, Bobbi Kristina Brown was only 22. And as CNN's Alina Machado reports, her short life became caught in both the light and dark sides of her parents' world.

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ALINA MACHADO, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): As the adorable daughter of pop icon, Whitney Houston, Bobbi Kristina Brown was thrust into the spotlight at a tender age.

Born in Livingston, New Jersey, in 1993, she was the only child of Houston and R&B singer, Bobby Brown. At just 12 years old, her family's drama was turned into reality TV fodder on Being Bobby Brown.

WHITNEY HOUSTON, SINGER: I'm watching you, young lady.

MACHADO (voice-over): Then in 2012, tragedy. Whitney died suddenly. Her mother's shocking death sending Bobbi to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

BOBBI KRISTINA BROWN, DAUGHTER OF WHITNEY HOUSTON & BOBBY BROWN: I'm going to make now. It's going to be good.

MACHADO (voice-over): As Bobbi tried to recover from the loss, cameras went along for Lifetime's The Houstons: On Our Own.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Did you see how happy you are?

BROWN: I really was.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You got to find this girl again.

BROWN: That girl has just been there a lot. I miss her so much.

MACHADO (voice-over): Estranged from her father for nearly 2.5 years after Whitney's death, she shared this photo of them reuniting in June of 2014. Her parents struggled with addiction, and Bobbi, too, faced allegations of drug use. CISSY HOUSTON, MOTHER OF WHITNEY HOUSTON: I wanted to do the right

thing. And all I'm trying to do is guide her to the right place in her life.

MACHADO (voice-over): But Bobbi tried to move forward, explaining on Oprah's Next Chapter how she was coping with her mother's death.

BROWN: I can hear her voice and it talking to me saying, "Keep moving, baby, I'm right here, I got you."

MACHADO (voice-over): As Bobbi Kristina dealt with the loss of her mother, she sparked a romance with Nick Gordon. The relationship raised eyebrows. Days before she was found unresponsive in a bathtub at the home she shared with Gordon, she posted these photos on Instagram and tweeted, "Miss you, Mommy, so much. Loving you more every second."

Now, more than three years after her mother's death, the 22-year-old's life also cut short by pain and tragedy.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BARNETT: And Bobbi Kristina Brown's family is asking for privacy at this difficult time. If you're interested to know more about her life, just head to CNN.com.

Now, in Florida, Coast Guard crews are searching through the night for Perry Cohen and Austin Stephanos. The 14-year-olds went missing while on a fishing trip Friday off the Florida coastline. On Sunday, Coast Guard teams found the boys' boat capsized. They're now combing a huge area surrounding that location.

Joe Namath, former NFL quarterback, is a neighbor of the teens and is helping in the search.

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JOE NAMATH, FORMER NFL QUARTERBACK: You know, the love is there. We're all praying. And Nick actually wants the folks know, that are trying to help out, that are out there searching, be very careful. We've got a lot of people out on the water and in the air looking. Both families have been hard at work at this and praying. So let's just stay safe and we'll keep on looking till we find them.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BARNETT: The community there held a vigil for the boys this past weekend. Their families are offering $100,000 for their rescue.

Now, a U.S. automaker gets hit with a record fine. Coming up next, we'll show you how botched recalls are costing Chrysler big money.

And U.S. presidential hopeful, Donald Trump, never seems at a loss for words, especially after learning he's leading in a new poll. Like it or not, you'll hear from him after this short break. Stay with us.

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[02:16:22] DEREK VAN DAM, CNN METEOROLOGIST: Hey, there. I'm CNN meteorologist Derek Van Dam with a quick look at your Weather Watch. We are coming off an extremely active weekend of weather across northern half of Europe. Severe thunderstorm causing wind damage, sweeping across Germany, Poland, as well as the Netherlands. Look at these wind gust reported at Amsterdam, 100 kilometers per hour, and nearly the same reported across the northwestern sections of Germany.

This is all thanks to a large area of low pressure system that continues to move through. But believe it or not, behind this low, we're going to see temperatures drop significantly. We're talking cooler and wet weather settling in. Still remains hot though across the southeastern portions of Europe as well as Spain. Madrid will be very, very warm this Monday to start off the work. We're talking about nearly a 20-degree temperature difference from Madrid to London. So, pack accordingly if you are traveling to either of these destinations.

You can see Rome and Athens in the lower and middle 30s as well. Temperatures near London should be about 23 degrees, but as you can clearly see that into the rest of the work week, we will stay well below that. And the Middle East stays hot. Temperatures near Riyadh about 45 degrees under sunny skies. A little further to the east, Abu Dhabi, also top in the middle 40s. Temperate weather across the northern half of Africa. Showers and thunderstorms from Ethiopia to Dakar, Senegal.

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BARNETT: Take a look at this. Six people were seriously injured in this bizarre bus accident in northern France. The bus, which was full of Spanish passengers, by the way, attempted to drive under a low bridge that prohibits vehicles taller than 2.5 meters. Well, as you see here, the top of the bus chopped right off. The driver, who had a clean record up until this point said he was simply following instructions provided by his GPS. But you still have to keep an eye on the road.

Now, in Australia, a 39-year-old man accused of aiding ISIS will stay in custody. Adam Brookman appeared in court just a few hours ago but didn't apply for bail, so he will remain in custody until November. The nurse says he traveled to Syria on a humanitarian mission and was forced to join the terror group after being injured. Brookman surrendered to Turkish officials before being returned to Australia. He now faces up to 10 years in prison.

Former FIFA Vice President, Jack Warner, is expected to appear in a Port of Spain courtroom in the coming hours. He is resisting extradition to the U.S. to face charges linked to the FIFA corruption scandal. U.S. prosecutors say South Africa funneled $10 million to Warner and two other FIFA executives. They say it was bribe money to buy support for South Africa's successful bid to host the 2010 World Cup.

Now, U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump is once again leading a national poll among Republican nominees. Now, despite making controversial statements about Mexicans and U.S. Senator John McCain, Republican respondents picked Trump as their frontrunner for 2016, for now any way.

Jeremy Roth has more.

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[02:20:30] JEREMY ROTH, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Donald Trump is leading the pack. In a new CNN/ORC poll, 18 percent of Republicans surveyed say they want Trump to be their party's nominee for president. Jeb Bush came in second at 15 percent. The other 14 GOP candidates polled at or below 10 percent.

Trump called into CNN's State of the Union Sunday morning.

DONALD TRUMP, (R), U.S. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE & CEO, TRUMP GROUP (voice- over): They view me as an outsider, I guess, and now they're starting to view me not as an outsider because I'm leading in all the polls, not just yours.

RICK PERRY, (R), U.S. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE & FORMER TEXAS GOVERNOR: We don't need a Republican divider-in-chief.

ROTH (voice-over): Trump's rising popularity and controversial statements on undocumented immigrants and Senator John McCain have pushed more traditional Republican candidates to fight back.

PERRY: As he has come forward, as we've got to see the real Donald Trump, I've got some real problems with that. I think that what he is saying and what he is doing is not necessarily moving the cause of conservatism forward.

SEAN SPICER, COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR, REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE: Our number-one goal is to win the White House back.

ROTH (voice-over): This very public rift among fellow GOP-ers is worrying party officials.

SPICER: The name-calling, however, needs to stop. We've got to remember what Ronald Reagan taught as his eleventh commandment that thou shall not speak ill of another Republican.

ROTH (voice-over): Even though some have called for the celebrity candidate to drop out of the race, that new poll shows 52 percent of Republicans want Trump to stay in.

I'm Jeremy Roth, reporting.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BARNETT: Now, Trump says he's yet to turn his attention to Hillary Clinton. But when he does, he says he will easily beat her. He's also said Clinton's use of a personal e-mail server is criminal. Out on the campaign trail this weekend, Clinton had to answer new questions about sending and receiving classified e-mails while she was Secretary of State.

Mary Moloney has more.

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MARY MOLONEY, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): It's a constant theme on the Clinton campaign trail, Hillary Clinton's e-mails on a private server while she served as Secretary of State. The rhetoric for the Clinton camp hasn't changed.

HILLARY CLINTON, (D), U.S. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE & FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE: I did not e-mail any classified material to anyone on my e- mail. There is no classified material.

MOLONEY (voice-over): The intelligence community investigated, taking a small chunk of the 30,000 e-mails Clinton released. Out of 40 messages reviewed, investigators found four with classified information. At least one e-mail had been released to the public. The Inspector General's office says the messages were classified when they were sent and are classified now. The problem? The State Department never marked the e-mails classified, and Clinton may not have known she had information that should have remained on a secure system. Now the Inspector General for the intelligence community wants the Justice Department to investigate if classified information was compromised.

JEFFREY TOOBIN, CNN LEGAL ANALYST: It's a situation ripe with political peril, probably not legal peril. But for someone running for president, political peril is a big deal.

MOLONEY (voice-over): Republicans use the revelation to renew attacks and question the candidate's judgment.

Clinton says, if asked, she will testify before Congress.

CLINTON: We are all accountable to the American people to get the facts right. And I will do my part.

MOLONEY (voice-over): I'm Mary Moloney, reporting.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BARNETT: Now, officials in the U.S. are set to hit Fiat-Chrysler automobiles with a record fine. Some $105 million, all for mishandling recalls involving 11 million vehicles. That includes a recall of 1.5 million Jeeps with gas tanks that can leak after a severe rear impact. Federal safety officials have been pressing the automaker over its handling of recalls for years.

Now British cyclist, Chris Froome, got the yellow jersey at the Tour de France on Sunday and secured his place in the record books. You see, he is the first British cyclist to win the Tour twice. Froome faced accusations of doping due to his dominant performance during parts of the race, even and during being spat on by spectators along the route. Froome faced the accusations head-on promising to always honor the race and the yellow jersey. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CHRIS FROOME, 2015 TOUR DE FRANCE WINNER: This one is special, very special. I understand its history, good and bad. I will always respect it, never dishonor it, and I will always be proud to have won it.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BARNETT: The 30-year-old rode into Paris to finish the race's 21st and final stage, linking arms with his Team Sky teammates.

Now, praying under heavy military guard.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

[02:25:02] BARNETT (voice-over): That is exactly what Christians are doing at one Kenyan church. We will take you there after this.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

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BARNETT: You're watching CNN NEWSROOM. I'm Errol Barnett. Thanks so much for staying with me. Here are our top headlines right now.

15 people are dead after an Al-Shabaab attack in Somalia's capital. Police say a suicide bomber drove a vehicle full of explosives into the front gate of an upscale hotel. The diplomatic missions of several countries are housed there. The terror group says it was targeting Western diplomats.

Attackers dressed in army fatigues stormed the police station in northwestern India on Monday, killing five people. Now, the gunmen are still holed up inside the station. We are told there are no hostages. One official describes it as a terror attack, although it's not clear which group the attackers belong to. We will keep watching this for you.

NATO is set to hold talks Tuesday after Turkey called an emergency meeting to discuss the terror threats it's facing. Turkey began bombing both the Kurdistan Workers' Party in Iraq and ISIS in Syria over the weekend. The country has been dealing with violence along its southern border.

Now the U.S. President is in Ethiopia today, the last stop on his Africa tour. Barack Obama is scheduled to attend a welcome ceremony in the national palace in about one hour from now. This follows his trip to Kenya where he gave a moving speech covering a range of topics, including women's rights and terrorism.

Jim Acosta is there.

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JIM ACOSTA, CNN SENIOR WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): President Obama capped an emotional return to the land of his father with an impassioned speech steeped in Kenyan pride.

[02:30:04] OBAMA: Of course, I'm the first Kenyan-American to be President of the United States.

(APPLAUSE)

That goes without saying.

ACOSTA (voice-over): But even as he tried to weave his own family story into a larger narrative of hope for the African people -

OBAMA: I believe there is no limit to what you can achieve.

ACOSTA (voice-over): - the president issued a challenge to the continent of his ancestors to change by rejecting the oppression of women.

OBAMA: Treating women as second-class citizens is a bad tradition. It holds you back.

(APPLAUSE)

There's no excuse for sexual assault or domestic violence. There's no reason that young girls should suffer genital mutilation.

ACOSTA (voice-over): Mr. Obama likened the problem to Americans who cling to the Confederate flag as a symbol of white power.

OBAMA: Just because something is a tradition doesn't make it right.

ACOSTA (voice-over): The President also vowed to back Kenyans in their fight against the Al-Qaeda-linked terror group, Al-Shabaab.

OBAMA: We're going to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you in this fight against terrorism for as long as it takes.

(APPLAUSE)

ACOSTA (voice-over): But standing in front of Kenya's President, Mr. Obama risked offending his hosts by calling on the country's leaders to crack down on corruption.

OBAMA: Here in Kenya, it's time to change habits.

ACOSTA (voice-over): Still, the President pointed to his family's humble beginning, insisting Kenya, like the Obama's, can overcome obstacles.

OBAMA: In the end, we're all part of one tribe, the human tribe.

ACOSTA (voice-over): The President described his trip to Kenya as something of a family reunion.

He sang and danced with relatives like half-sister, Alma, who introduced Mr. Obama as a man who first visited Kenya in an old Volkswagen and returned in a motorcade. DR. ALMA OBAMA, HALF-SISTER OF U.S. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: He gets

it. He's one of us.

ACOSTA (voice-over): Kenyans swarmed the President as he departed, knowing the next time he returns to this land, it will be when he's out of office. Though one woman told us, he left a message that will last.

NANCY NGANGA, KENYAN RESIDENT: I think it's going to change my life, actually, by preventing a woman from harassment.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ACOSTA: Just as the President departed Kenya for Ethiopia, there were reports of casualties from large terror attacks in both Nigeria and Somalia, so expect the President to intensify his discussions with African leaders about the fight against terrorist groups like Al- Shabaab and Boko Haram.

Jim Acosta, CNN, Nairobi, Kenya.

BARNETT: Now, some Christians in Garissa, Kenya, are standing up to terrorists, coming together to worship despite facing death threats. Residents are still coping with the recent massacre at a university there where Al-Shabaab targeted and killed dozens of non-Muslims.

Nima Elbagir reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NIMA ELBAGIR, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Sunrise over the Tana River. Traffic starts to flow over the bridge and into Garissa town.

ELBAGIR: The morning commute into Garissa as day laborers, as people going into their offices, but it's also so many Christians who are too scared to sleep inside Garissa town. They've decided to move themselves and their families across the other side of the river to safety.

ELBAGIR (voice-over): Al-Shabaab militants brutally attacked Garissa University back in April, killing 147 people, mostly students. Today, the school still stands empty and desolate.

We've been invited to Sunday service at Our Lady of Perpetual Consolation, the Garissa cathedral. This Sunday, like nearly every other, brought with it threats from Al-Shabaab. If you worship here, they're told, you'll die.

They're praying under armed guard, but they're praying, nonetheless.

PATRICK GITAU, GARISSA RESIDENT: Every Sunday I'm here. It's my cathedral. Yeah, I'm here. I was baptized in this church.

ELBAGIR (voice-over): This is one risk they're still willing to take.

The Bishop of Garissa, Bishop Joseph Alessandro, is giving the benediction. He, along with his fellow bishops and nuns, have been a constant in this community.

JOSEPH ALESSANDRO, BISHOP, OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL CONSOLATION: It's not a matter of choice. It's our duty to remain here, no? Even the Pope, yes, he had words of encouragement to us. He asked us to convey his condolences to the families who suffered and lost their dear ones, to people who are injured, and also he promised that he will continue to pray for Kenya, for peace in Kenya, for unity in Kenya.

[02:35:04] ELBAGIR (voice-over): At the invitation of the diocese, Bishop Alessandro tells us the Pope added Kenya to his Africa trip in November. He says members of the congregation will be chosen to travel to Nairobi to meet him, a trip of a lifetime.

For now, though, he and his bishops are focusing on the daily task of keeping their flock safe as best they can.

ALESSANDRO: We are people of God. We are people of faith. God never abandons us. And maybe in moments when we feel that we are left on our own, there are those moments that God might be very close to us inwardly, even if we don't feel him.

ELBAGIR (voice-over): Nima Elbagir, CNN, Garissa, Kenya.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BARNETT: All right. More stories still to come. A mural in the U.S. State of Florida is sparking a debate over its images, with many calling the artwork racist.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

(OYL MCINARNAY), BAKER COUNTY RESIDENT: It's the history right there. That's what people are standing for, is to keep this history alive.

JOHN PHILLIPS, ATTORNEY WITH FLORIDA JUSTICE: The Ku Klux Klan is not heritage. That is a hate group.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BARNETT: Take a look at your television. This is in northern India where heavy rains caused land slides and flooding. The slides have forced officials to close a national highway in the area, and that has cut some districts off from other parts of the state, which could lead to its own issues. But this is the time of the year landslides like this are more frequent, more common in India. Our meteorologist, Derek Van Dam, joins me now to kind of talk about why that is.

VAN DAM: Yeah.

BARNETT: Because when you watch the video that's playing behind us, these are deadly.

[02:39:53] VAN DAM: They are. You do not want to be in the way of a landslide that can travel 35 miles per hour. And their composition is rock, trees, any kind of debris from the side of land - this topography. Basically what's causing this, Errol, is gravity finally winning after rain soaks the area, the side of this mountainside, and eventually the side just gives way. The soil actually eventually just starts to erode and the slope actually washes away, and you do not want to be at the bottom of that. Unfortunately, most countries across the world are susceptible to some form of landslides or mudslides. And even here in the United States, on average, we have $3.5 billion of damage per year in the U.S. just from landslides alone.

And the reason for the - well, the landslide possibility across India is because we've had extremely heavy rainfall. One, from an area of low pressure that we're watching on for tropical activity near Bangladesh in the eastern half of India, but near the Gujarat coasts, we have been drawing in moisture from the Arabian Sea, and that is responsible for extremely heavy rainfall over the western portions of India. In fact, the India meteorological department has its highest extreme alert level for that area for heavy monsoonal rains going forward. We've already picked up over 100 millimeters over the past 24 hours; in excess of 250, even upwards of 350 millimeters of rainfall going forward over the next 24 to 48 hours.

Hey, skipping across to Europe now, we have had a rough go of the weather for Poland, Germany, as well as Netherlands. We've had wind gusts staying over 100 kilometers per hour. Very difficult landing conditions at Schiphol Airport this weekend. If you've flown into that area, you know it's a windy place, but when you have wind gusts in excess of 100 kilometers per hour, very, very tricky.

But look what happened in Germany. This is insane. You got to see this, Errol. This boat capsized, thanks to the strong winds of the thunderstorms that pushed through even the Netherlands and into Germany. Look at that. That is seriously scary. I sail myself, and you do not want to be in that instance. They were jibing and they were going downwind towards the last marker, and their boat capsized. Fortunately, everyone was OK.

BARNETT: Thank goodness.

VAN DAM: The boat's now upright and they're assessing the damage.

BARNETT: We saw some of the crew there falling and almost knocking into that other hull.

VAN DAM: Yeah, that's right, and -

BARNETT: That's how dangerous that can be.

VAN DAM: Absolutely. Scary stuff.

BARNETT: All right, Derek. We'll see you later. Thanks very much.

VAN DAM: Thanks.

BARNETT: Now, People in several U.S. states are rallying to remove the Confederate flag, a symbol many see as racist but others view as a piece of history. Well, now, a mural in a Florida courthouse is sparking a similar controversy over its depiction of the Ku Klux Klan, a white supremacist group with a long and violent history against African-Americans.

CNN's Victor Blackwell reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

VICTOR BLACKWELL, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): In a quiet, rural county, about 35 miles west of Jacksonville, Florida, hangs a mural. It depicts, in the artist's words, Baker County, Florida's thousands of years of history and prehistory. And thousands of people from across the country have stopped to admire it, some leaving notes of appreciation in its very own guest book. "Beautiful with the accuracy of the history of Baker County," that's from Marion. Andre thinks it's an "extraordinary piece of art." Then there's this anonymous message, "Should make the KKK bigger and brighter." Yes, that KKK.

PHILLIPS: The Ku Klux Klan is not heritage. That is a hate group.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): The simple inclusion of these hooded clansmen on horseback is not what's riled John Phillips and other attorneys with the group Florida Justice. It's that this mural is hanging inside the Baker County courthouse.

Marquita Smith is Phillips's paralegal.

MARQUITA SMITH, PARALEGAL, FLORIDA JUSTICE: If I were to walk into this courthouse for any legal matter, am I going to be getting justice? Am I going to be treated fairly?

BLACKWELL (voice-over): Their group has now launched a petition on change.org to remove the mural.

SMITH: It's a pretty mural. But it should be in a place of historic value, as of a museum.

BLACKWELL: Not in the courthouse?

SMITH: Not in the courthouse.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): The artist, local historian, Gene Barber, died several years ago. But in a guide, he explained why many of the elements were included in the mural, the palmettos, the panther, the Confederate soldiers. He described the KKK as an organization that sometimes took vigilante justice to extremes but was sometimes the only control the county knew over those outside the law.

(MCINARNAY): It's a bad thing that happened, but it's part of what did happen.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): (Oyl McInarnay) has lived in Baker County all his life. He started a counter petition to, quote, "leave the mural alone at the courthouse." He's collected as many signatures as the petitioners who want it to come down.

BLACKWELL: They're offended by the hooded clansmen and some of the other images. You tell them what?

(MCINARNAY): Well, if that's the case, then are we going to stop talking about the Holocaust in schools? You have to know your history to be able to stop it from happening again.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): But the petition alleges that the mural does more than depict history. He suggests that it features white supremacist symbols hidden in plain sight.

[02:45:02] PHILLIPS: There's symbolism to turpentine, which was used in tar and feathering. There's a copious use of trees and low-hanging limbs. There's just stuff that raises questions of whether he was - whether there was a deeper meaning.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): Including this woodpecker just to the left of the clansmen. Now widely considered extinct, the bird was once a southeastern U.S. native, and according to the petition and the Anti- Defamation League, a symbol embraced by skinheads.

PHILLIPS: Justice doesn't discriminate, yet, they're going into a courthouse that says it might.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): Baker County seemingly settled this controversy in 2002 when the mural was dedicated. The chief judge at that time ordered that it be removed from its originally intended home near courtrooms on the second floor. So it was hung on the first floor. And with its tiny Confederate flag, there it's greeted every visitor for the last 13 years.

So why the controversy now? Well, because this happened.

After the removal of the Confederate flag at the South Carolina State House, Baker County and cities and states across America are being challenged to strike a balance and to consider finding new homes for history.

(MCINARNAY): It's the history of the county, that's what people are standing for, is to keep this history alive.

PHILLIPS: We feel like we have to look at history and heritage as, you know, as a common nation, white, black, red, brown, yellow, green, and that's the issue.

BLACKWELL (voice-over): Victor Blackwell, CNN, Macclenny, Florida.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BARNETT: Still to come here on CNN NEWSROOM, Caitlin Jenner's new TV show debuts and she opens up about her fears after going public with her gender transition. Stay with us.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[02:50:43] BARNETT: Welcome back, everyone. The first episode of Caitlin Jenner's "I am Cait" docu-series premiered on Sunday night. It follows Caitlyn, formerly Bruce Jenner, as she goes public with her gender transition, also chronicles her journey as a transgender advocate.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CAITLYN JENNER, FORMER OLYMPIAN BRUCE JENNER: Hey, we're officially off the property. We're out into the world.

(LAUGHTER)

It's so great out there. Look at that. Isn't it great that maybe someday you'll be normal?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You are normal.

JENNER: Just blend into society.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You are normal.

JENNER: Put it this way, I'm the new normal.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BARNETT: Just a clip from the series there. It opened with Jenner on the morning of her Vanity Fair cover debut, confessing her fears of living up to her responsibilities.

Now, more than 40 women have come forward and accused Comedian Bill Cosby of sexual assault, and now 35 of those women have come together on the cover of New York magazine. They're shown, as you see here, seated in rows with the date of their alleged assault beneath them. In a 13-page essay inside, the women talk about their accusations and the backlash they've faced since speaking out. In a 2005 deposition, Bill Cosby admitted to drug use and sexual relationships with at least five women but says they were all consensual. Cosby has never been criminally charged and denies any wrongdoing.

As we mentioned earlier, the 22-year-old daughter of late singing star, Whitney Houston, has died. In late January, Bobbi Kristina was found unresponsive in the bathtub of her home. Doctors placed her in a medically-induced coma. Her condition continued to deteriorate and she was moved to hospice care last month.

Kim Serafin, the Senior Editor of InTouch Weekly, joins us from Los Angeles to talk about Bobbi Kristina and other major headlines out of the entertainment industry.

So, Kim, Bobbi Kristina no longer with us. What exactly do we know about what happened?

KIM SERAFIN, SENIOR EDITOR, INTOUCH WEEKLY: Yeah. It's really sad. I mean, I think everything pointed obviously to this happening, but you're right, this happened January 31st. We knew she was put into a medically-induced coma and just really never came out of it. And there had been various rumors. Bobby Brown had made some comments about her being alive. Then, of course, they had to put out statements talking about irreversible brain damage. We know that back in June she was transferred to a hospice. So, clearly, time was running out. And it's really sad, and it's just - it's sad. I mean, there's nothing more to say about this. She clearly never really dealt with losing her mother. There had been tweets that she had sent out just a few days before this happened, before she was found in the bathtub, where she was working on projects, but then other information emerged about police being called to her apartment. It's just - it's just all really sad.

BARNETT: Yeah. And - I mean, there is an investigation looking into some of the issues and why this happened. The family is asking for privacy, and we certainly understand that.

SERAFIN: Yes.

BARNETT: So let's go ahead and discuss some feel-good news in the entertainment world. Ant-Man apparently holding on to the number-one top spot this past weekend, beating Adam Sandler and Jake Gyllenhaal's movies. What's the latest there?

SERAFIN: Yeah, weekend box office Ant-Man, a Marvel movie, continues to dominate just by a little. It just beat Adam Sandler's film, Pixels, by - it was $24.8 million versus $24 million. So this could change potentially when the official numbers come out on Monday. But right now, Ant-Man seems to hold the number-one spot. Adam Sandler was used to be, you'd never want to go up against Adam Sandler in box office. His box office results have been a little bit lower, but he still does well, even movies that get terrible reviews, Pixels did not get the best reviews about 1980s, video games, masquerading as aliens that come to attack earth. But $24 million is still not bad. And Jake Gyllenhaal's boxing movie, Southpaw, made about $16 million, which is not great but better than expected. So this is more of an adult film.

BARNETT: OK. OK. Now, apparently, Tom Cruise, according to what he said this past weekend, is open to a Top Gun sequel. This is the original kind of huge movie that came out back in 1986. But he has said this with conditions. What do we know about that?

SERAFIN: Yes. The rumors have always been flying about whether there would be another Top Gun. There have been some reports that producers have said there was a script in development. But now Tom Cruise at the Mission Impossible premiere said it would be fun. That's basically what he said. And of course, this is just at the (Internet of Flame). He didn't say, as you mentioned, there would be conditions. He wants to do it not with CGI jets. He wants to do real stunts like they did the first one. So this makes sense. This is Tom Cruise. If you've seen any of those previews or trailers of the newer Mission Impossible, he's hanging off the side of a plane -

BARNETT: Right.

SERAFIN: - and he did that stunt himself. And there is a lot of things that went into doing that, but he did that stunt. And we know he does his own stunts. So - I think if Tom Cruise says it would be fun and he wants to get back in those jets, I think it's going to happen. BARNETT: And I think it's no surprise that he says that too. He

always wants to make a point that he does his own stunts. I mean, he is a top action movie star. So, Tom, we get it. We know you can jump out of planes.

SERAFIN: Yeah -

BARNETT: All right, Kim Serafin, great to -

SERAFIN: Yeah, exactly.

BARNETT: - great to chat with you. Thanks for your time. The Senior Editor of In Touch Weekly chatting with us this week from L.A.

SERAFIN: Great. Thanks so much.

BARNETT: And you are watching CNN NEWSROOM. I'm Errol Barnett.

Please do stay with us. I'm lonely no more. Zain Asher joins me for a look at the day's bigger stories next.

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