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Expectations Low Ahead of Russian-Ukrainian Direct Talks; Trump's Final Day of Middle East Tour Begins Soon; Defense Attorneys Grill Cassie Ventura about 'Freak-Offs'; Controversial U.S.-Backed Group Plans to Deliver Aid to Gaza. Aired 12-12:45a ET
Aired May 16, 2025 - 00:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
JOHN VAUSE, CNN INTERNATIONAL ANCHOR: How shifting the goalposts on peace talks could mean Vladimir Putin gets his summit with the U.S. president, ahead on CNN NEWSROOM.
[00:00:40]
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DONALD TRUMP, U.S. PRESIDENT: Nothing's going to happen until Putin and I get together. OK?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: That comes after Putin ignored demands for an immediate ceasefire in Ukraine and was a no-show for talks with the Ukrainian president.
Call it the art of rebranding.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: You've got to be proud to have the United States have it, take it, make it a freedom zone.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: Call it the Riviera of the Middle East or Gaza Lago. The latest post-war plan for Gaza from the U.S. seems a nonstarter, as well.
Sexting, drug use, and jealousy.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Cassie Ventura was on the stand. It was the first full day of cross-examination.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: As defense lawyers for Sean "Diddy" Combs tries to undermine the credibility of his former girlfriend in his criminal trial in New York.
ANNOUNCER: Live from Atlanta, this is CNN NEWSROOM with John Vause.
VAUSE: Mid to low-level Russian government officials will meet in this day on Friday in Istanbul with the Ukrainian delegation led by the defense minister for the first direct peace talks in more than three years.
But not long after the Kremlin confirmed President Vladimir Putin was not part of the Russian delegation, the U.S. president confirmed he was a no show. And then came word Ukraine's president was pulling out after initially saying he would attend.
All that means any hopes for a breakthrough or meaningful progress have been dashed.
Ukrainian President Zelenskyy met with the Turkish president Thursday and for days had been pressing Vladimir Putin to show up in Istanbul and take part in the talks which Putin had suggested last weekend.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will be there as an observer and says any breakthrough will only come during a one-on-one meeting between the U.S. and Russian presidents. Donald Trump, though, has offered no details on when or where that will happen.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: Nothing's going to happen until Putin and I get together, OK? And obviously, he wasn't going to go. He was going to go, but he thought I was going to go. He wasn't going if I wasn't there. And I don't believe anything's going to happen, whether you like it or not, until he and I get together.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: As for timing, Rubio says the meeting will be arranged after President Trump returns from the Middle East.
CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports now from Kyiv.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
NICK PATON WALSH, CNN CHIEF INTERNATIONAL SECURITY CORRESPONDENT: An extraordinary turn of events. And I think it is the comments of U.S. President Donald Trump, saying that nothing's going to happen until he meets Putin --
WALSH (voice-over): -- when it comes to finding peace here in Ukraine that really set the tone for the weeks ahead.
In that statement alone, and echoed, indeed, by his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, hours later, Trump is essentially saying that the efforts now underway in Istanbul, the pressure put upon Russia by the Europeans, well, no one should expect progress from that until a bilateral meeting between the heads of the Kremlin and the White House occurs.
That is a remarkable move from a U.S. president who was pictured on the phone to four of his key European allies: France, United Kingdom, Germany and Poland. And they emerged from that phone call just as recently as Saturday, saying they were convinced they had the support of Donald Trump, not only for a demand for a ceasefire on Monday that was unconditional and lasted 30 days. But indeed, for sanctions that would follow if Russia didn't adhere to that.
Instead, we have now had this remarkable dictation of events, the scheduling done, really, by Moscow entirely. They are --suggested on Sunday this Istanbul meeting, the first direct talks since the early days of the war.
Then Zelenskyy said, let it be me and Putin. Trump entertained that idea, tried to cajole Putin into attending, said he'd be there himself, that Putin would like him to be there.
And then, it all fell apart, essentially sending a message very clearly the Kremlin was unafraid of sanctions, potentially, for spurning that peace initiative, and possibly, too, that Putin had successfully and correctly gambled that Trump would not be that angry if, indeed, some kind of meeting continued in Istanbul but he didn't accept anything like a ceasefire, or indeed to attend personally.
And so, we're into a very complex moment for this peace process, because Ukraine essentially is in a very bad spot where they have to continue to go along, to do everything they can to make it seem like they're pursuing an avenue for peace, to not incur the anger of Donald Trump.
But the one person who doesn't seem to be able to get Donald Trump angry right now is Vladimir Putin. He is simply rejecting the ceasefire that was originally an American proposal, and also, too, initiatives for a personal meeting.
[00:05:08]
There may be a bilateral between Trump and Putin soon, of course, but the stage is now set for talks about talks.
This is the second or third iteration of this peace process, and I think many in the Kremlin will be delighted at how they're getting to be the schedule in chief of this process and buying an awful lot of time that many Ukrainians are concerned is simply about making sure they have the window they need for advances on the front line.
Russian forces are massing in the East.
WALSH: An extraordinary week, and one that I think has ultimately exposed that Putin isn't interested in a swift settlement here. He simply wants a lengthy process.
And indeed, the Trump is reluctant, if not frankly reticent, to punish Russia for not going on with the peace initiative he originally began.
Extraordinary moments here in diplomacy, but no comfort at all for ordinary Ukrainians under nightly barrage here.
Nick Paton Walsh, CNN, Kyiv, Ukraine.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
VAUSE: U.S. President Donald Trump will soon wrap up his tour of the Middle East, heading back to Washington with billions of dollars in deals for investments in the U.S. economy and potentially reshaping American foreign policy in the region.
He arrived in Abu Dhabi on Thursday, the last stop on his four-day visit and yet another warm welcome with much fanfare. The U.S. and the Emirati government signed a deal to build a massive data center complex in Abu Dhabi to advance A.I. capabilities. And earlier, before leaving Qatar, President Trump expressed hopes for a nuclear deal with Iran.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: It's very simple. It's not like I have to give you 30 pages worth of details. There's only one sentence. They can't have a nuclear weapon. And I think -- I think we're getting close to maybe doing a deal.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: During this trip, Trump met with business leaders and secured what the White House calls transformative deals with both Saudi Arabia and Qatar. And he again talked about the prospect of the U.S. taking over Gaza once the war there is over.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: You know, I have concepts for Gaza that I think are very good. Make it a freedom zone. Let the United States get involved and make it just a freedom zone. Have a real freedom zone.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: More details now from CNN's Jeff Zeleny, reporting in from Abu Dhabi.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
JEFF ZELENY, CNN CHIEF U.S. NATIONAL AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT: The U.S. president, Donald Trump, has one more series of meetings on Friday morning before heading back to Washington --
ZELENY (voice-over): -- after a whirlwind week in the Middle East.
He will be meeting again at the presidential palace here in Abu Dhabi with business leaders. A constant theme of his trip --
ZELENY: -- as he's traveled from Riyadh, to Saudi Arabia, to Doha, on to Abu Dhabi. The president clearly has been flanked by business leaders as he's been announcing deal after deal.
ZELENY (voice-over): But also, along the way, the president has been making a bit of a -- diplomatic efforts. Of course, that meeting with the Syrian president. He's been talking endlessly about Iran.
But on Thursday, he did something he has never done, and that is visiting a mosque here in Abu Dhabi.
TRUMP: Isn't this beautiful? It is so beautiful. I'm very proud of my friends. This is an incredible culture. That I can say. This is the first time they've closed the mosque for the day. Is that true?
It's the first time they've closed it. That's in honor of the United States, I think.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Absolutely.
TRUMP: So, other than in honor of me. It's -- it's -- let's give it to the country. But it's -- it's a great tribute. Thank you.
ZELENY (voice-over): The images are extraordinary from an American president who infamously, back in 2017, his first term in office, signed a Muslim travel ban as one of his first official acts.
ZELENY: He also at one point says, "I think Islam hates us."
So certainly, this is one example of a bit of a shift, not necessarily in thinking or policy of the U.S. president, but perhaps in transaction. He has come to the Middle East to make business deals. There's no doubt about that. And to strengthen relationships.
ZELENY (voice-over): But at the end of the day here, all of the deals that the president was hoping would -- would add up to the trillions of dollars, we'll have to carefully check those. Many of them have already been announced. Some of them are pledges of things to come.
ZELENY: But there is no question this -- the first overseas trip of the second term of the Trump administration has actually gone fairly smoothly, as far as these things go.
But at the end of the day, as he flies back to Washington with these new relations, all the geopolitical challenges that face the U.S. and the world going into this trip are still right there waiting for President Trump.
Jeff Zeleny, CNN, Abu Dhabi.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
VAUSE: Gregg Carlstrom is the Middle East correspondent for "The Economist." He's also author of "How Long Will Israel Survive? The Threat from Within." He joins us this hour from the Saudi capital, Riyadh.
Thank you for being with us.
GREGG CARLSTROM, MIDDLE EAST CORRESPONDENT, "THE ECONOMIST": Thanks for having me.
VAUSE: So, it seems the U.S. president, who killed the first nuclear deal with Iran, might now be very close to striking a new nuclear deal with Iran. Here's more now from Donald Trump. Listen to this.
[00:10:05]
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: You probably read today the story about Iran has sort of agreed to the terms. They're not going to make -- I call it, in a friendly way, nuclear dust. We're not going to be making any nuclear dust in Iran.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: So, from what we know at this point about this new deal, is it better, is it a stronger agreement than the first one? Or is this just another example of the U.S. president creating a problem, then reversing course and declaring success?
CARLSTROM: I think if we try to parse the headlines from yesterday, Trump saying a deal is close, that we don't need some 30-page agreement, and then also reports yesterday that Steve Witkoff, his Middle East envoy, last Sunday, presented the Iranians with a written proposal, the first time he's given them a written proposal. It's very hard to see how they're close to a comprehensive deal. It's going to take a lot more than a week of negotiations to get there.
So, I suspect that what we're heading for is an interim deal, a framework agreement, not unlike what happened back in 2013 with what was called the joint plan of action. That was an interim agreement that then, two years later, led to the JCPOA, the final nuclear deal.
And so, I think we might be doing something similar here. That fits with Trump's desire for a quick win. He can say that he got something done with the Iranians.
And for the Iranians, it buys time, which is something they've been trying to do for months.
So, we might have an interim agreement. Iran might temporarily agree to slow down uranium enrichment in exchange for some sanctions relief. But then I think there will still be more work to be done negotiating a comprehensive deal, which by all accounts so far, is shaping up to look quite similar to the one that Trump abandoned in 2015 -- in 2018.
VAUSE: If nothing else, the timing here for negotiations seems quite fortunate. Iran is at a very weak point, especially compared to what we're seeing in the strength from Saudi Arabia.
CARLSTROM: And I think one other striking element right now is the support in the Gulf for these negotiations. When Trump came to the region in his first term in 2017, when he visited Saudi Arabia, Saudi officials pushed him to abandon the nuclear deal. They thought it was a bad deal. They wanted America to leave.
They have come to, in some sense, regret that policy position, because now we're in a situation today where, yes, Iran is weak. It's proxies around the region have been badly battered by Israel over the previous 18 months.
But its nuclear program has advanced to unprecedented levels. It has enough enriched uranium at this point to produce six bombs worth of weapons grade uranium if it chose to do that.
So, all three of the Gulf states that Trump visited this week urged him to push ahead with this diplomacy. They're not opposing it the way they did eight years ago. Really, the only foreign government right now urging Trump not to make this deal is the Israeli government.
VAUSE: Well, in a week where more than 100 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli strikes on Gaza, the U.S. president again offered up his postwar solution. Here he is.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
TRUMP: People are living under the rubble of buildings that collapsed, which is not -- not acceptable. It's -- it's -- tremendous death.
And I want to see that be a freedom zone. And if it's necessary, I think I'd be proud to have the United States have it, take it, make it a freedom zone. Let some good things happen.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: Back in February, the U.S. president suggested sort of a similar plan: turning Gaza into a riviera of the Middle East. He reposted these images, which were created by A.I.
Originally, they were made as a satirical comment on the plans. Despite that, President Trump reposted them anyway.
Now, whether it's a freedom zone or whether you call it Gaza Lago or whatever, this seems to be the same plan, but with new branding, which will be greeted as pretty much the same way the first plan was greeted. Right?
CARLSTROM: Right. No one in the region, needless to say, was optimistic or enthusiastic about Trump's Gaza Riviera plan.
Everyone wants a viable postwar plan for Gaza that actually allows Palestinians to remain in Gaza. And Trump's initial plan, as he outlined it in February, envisioned removing the population, depopulating Gaza.
But before we even talk about a postwar plan, we have to get to the end of the war. And there aren't any signs yet that Trump is willing to apply the sort of pressure on the Israeli prime minister that he would have to apply to convince Netanyahu to accept the permanent ceasefire.
There had been a lot of hope in the region, maybe misguided hope, before Trump's visit to the Gulf this week that he would use one of his speeches, one of his appearances, to announce a more detailed plan for -- for what he sees happening after the war in Gaza and to publicly call on Netanyahu to end the war, to abandon plans for an expanded ground offensive, which are not only unpopular in Arab countries, but also with most Israelis, who want to see this war end and want a deal that will free all of the remaining hostages.
[00:15:10]
Trump hasn't do [SIC] that -- hasn't done that. There have been some reports in the Israeli media that Steve Witkoff told the families of hostages in Israel that the Trump administration isn't going to apply that pressure to the Israeli government.
But unless Trump does it, this war, which many Israelis believe is continuing solely for Netanyahu's own political interests, this war is going to continue indefinitely.
VAUSE: Gregg, thank you so much for being with us. Your insights and your experience, very much valued and appreciated. Thank you.
CARLSTROM: Thank you.
VAUSE: In a moment here on CNN, defense attorneys grilled Diddy's ex- girlfriend, trying to undermine her credibility and prove she was a willing participant in the so-called freak-off sex parties. Details after the break.
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[00:20:19]
VAUSE: Defense lawyers for Sean "Diddy" Combs will continue their cross-examination of his former girlfriend on Friday, trying to prove she was a willing participant in his now infamous sex parties.
Cassie Ventura faced a tough interrogation Thursday. CNN's Elizabeth Wagmeister has more details now on day four of Diddy's racketeering and sex trafficking trial in New York.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
CASSIE VENTURA, EX-GIRLFRIEND OF SEAN "DIDDY" COMBS: Each character and each actor that came into the project brought their own thing to the table.
ELIZABETH WAGMEISTER, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): A 21-year-old Cassie Ventura in 2008, promoting the film "Step Up 2."
VENTURA: Oh, my gosh. It was an overwhelming experience, but exciting all at the same time.
WAGMEISTER (voice-over): During day one of cross-examination, she was asked about her budding relationship and emails with Sean Combs from that same year.
When Combs said, "I love you, I miss you. Can't wait to hold you," Ventura responded, "I'm a very lucky woman. I miss you so much. I'd fly wherever you needed me." The defense building its case that Ventura was a willing participant
and enjoyed the so-called freak-offs, or long, drug-fueled sex sessions involving male escorts she says were orchestrated by Combs.
In 2009, when Combs messaged, asking if she wanted to "freak-off," Ventura replied, "I'm always ready to Freak Off, lol. I just want "it to be uncontrollable," Ventura said, referring to sex with the escort. "I can't wait, that's why I want to see," Combs responded.
Later that year, when Combs emailed, "I want to be nasty for you," Ventura replied, "In order for me to be more open with the things we do in bed, I need to feel safe, like home. This is my husband, and this is the only man that will ever have this aggressive/sexual side of me."
When asked by the defense if this showed open communication between the two, Ventura said, "I would say."
But the prosecution says this video from 2016 showing Combs assaulting Ventura as she says she tried to flee a freak-off proves the relationship devolved into abuse and control.
Still, a year after that assault, the defense noted Ventura sent this to Combs in 2017: "I love our freak-offs when we both want it." Ventura saying on the stand that the text was just words at that point, echoing her previous testimony of feeling trapped and afraid of Combs's rages.
The defense also argued that jealousy played a role in the volatile relationship, with Ventura writing, "I'm nervous that I'm just becoming the girlfriend that you get your fantasies off of, and that's it."
SEAN "DIDDY" COMBS, ON TRIAL FOR SEX TRAFFICKING AND RACKETEERING: I just miss Kim, y'all. You know what I'm saying?
WAGMEISTER (voice-over): Combs's time with the late Kim Porter, the mother of four of his children, and other women also came up, Ventura testifying she has some jealousy of Ms. Porter, because Combs would spend holidays with her, even though they had split up.
Their fights over infidelity were "a little scary," she said.
In 2011, she dated rapper Kid Cudi while on a break from Combs. "I thought it would be way too dangerous to tell him about that," she said.
But Combs lunged at her, she says, after finding Kid Cudi's name in her phone during a freak-off, which still went on during breaks in their relationship, because it was a job, Ventura said.
WAGMEISTER: Now, there was actually a heated moment in court when the judge reprimanded the defense, essentially for taking too long with their cross-examination.
The judge said that there was a pre-arrangement of sorts, that Cassie Ventura would be done with her testimony by the end of this week. The reason? Well, she's pregnant, and she's very pregnant. Cassie Ventura can literally go into labor any day now.
So, the judge said that, by end of day Friday, cross-examination and redirect from the prosecution has to be wrapped up.
Now, Combs's defense said she is the most critical witness, and this is a very important case. The client, of course, is facing life in prison if convicted.
Back to you.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
VAUSE: Well, with Gaza on the verge of famine, private contractors may soon be delivering aid to parts of the territory, and they'll be doing so over the objections of the U.N. And we'll explain why after the break.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[00:29:21]
VAUSE: Welcome back, everyone. I'm John Vause. Let's check today's top stories.
Not much is expected from the first direct talks between Russia and Ukraine in more than three years. Negotiating teams are set to meet in Istanbul without Presidents Putin Zelenskyy, and Trump.
The U.S. president says there will be no progress on peace until he meets one-on-one with Vladimir Putin.
Donald Trump will soon wrap up his tour of the Middle East. He'll be heading back to Washington with billions of dollars in deals for investments in the U.S. economy and potentially reshaping American foreign policy.
The U.S. and the UAE signed a partnership to build a massive data center complex in Abu Dhabi to advance A.I. capabilities.
Friday expected to be the final day of testimony for the former girlfriend of Sean "Diddy" Combs. Cassie Ventura faces more tough cross-examination from her [SIC] defense attorneys.
Combs has pleaded not guilty to charges of racketeering and sex trafficking.
Private contractors could be delivering aid to parts of Gaza within two weeks. Even though the territory is on the verge of famine, the plan has come under fire, mostly from the United Nations, which says the operation will be limited in scope and essentially controlled by the Israeli military.
And beyond that sets a dangerous precedent for aid distribution globally. CNN's Jeremy Diamond reports. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
JEREMY DIAMOND, CNN JERUSALEM CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Amid the crush of bodies clamoring for food, children are being put to an unthinkable test. Who will manage to fill their family pot? And who will have to wait another day to eat?
This is how Gaza's children are being forced to live as Israel continues to block the entry of food. A total siege that is now in its 11th week.
A boy burnt by the small prize of lentil soup he has managed to win. A girl scooping what remains with her bare hands.
But before it all, a search for food, for them and their families, with no guarantee of success.
"I wake up every day. Then we go find a kitchen. If we don't find food, then we go to another kitchen and another kitchen," Mohammed (ph) explains. "If we don't find anything, we go all day without food."
Nearly all of Gaza's population, now experiencing crisis levels of food insecurity or worse, with 56 percent at the emergency or catastrophic level, meaning very high rates of acute malnutrition and large gaps in food consumption.
Unless aid gets in, more than three-quarters of the population are projected to fall to those emergency levels.
TOM FLETCHER, U.N. UNDER-SECRETARY GENERAL FOR HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS: Every single one of the 2.1 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip face the risk of famine. One in 5 face starvation.
DIAMOND (voice-over): As this manmade crisis worsens, Israel and the United States approving a new, tightly controlled mechanism to get aid into some parts of Gaza.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation says it plans to launch its operations within two weeks. Until then, it called on Israel to allow aid in through existing mechanisms. Israel has yet to publicly agree.
A person involved in the planning said Israel has agreed to allow some aid into Gaza in the coming days, but Israel has yet to say so publicly.
The U.N. says it won't participate, saying the new plan will make things worse, facilitating forced displacement, and putting civilians at risk.
In Gaza, people are running out of time as charity kitchens like this one run out of food.
"Fourteen pots were not enough," the manager of this kitchen says. "Those who didn't get food will not eat anything today, and will come back tomorrow and might not get anything again." Cases of acute malnutrition are spiking, and people are being pushed
to the brink. Like Reda Ahmed (ph), who fainted yesterday from a lack of food.
"I swear I can't walk anymore. There is nothing to eat," she says.
As for the children who stand waiting for a chance to be fed, too many are now learning what it means to go hungry.
Jeremy Diamond, CNN, Jerusalem.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
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VAUSE: In a time -- in a time long since passed, the world's biggest retailer built a marketing campaign on falling prices.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE (singing): I fall to pieces each time I see you again.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: Yes, that was 1994. Three decades on, and Walmart is now warning prices will soon rise because of Donald Trump's tariffs.
The company says razor-thin retail margins mean absorbing all the increased costs from the new tariffs is just not possible, and prices on electronics, toys and food will have to go up. Here's CEO Doug McMillon on Thursday's earnings call.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DOUG MCMILLON, CEO, WALMART (via phone): We will do our best to keep our prices as low as possible. But given the magnitude of the tariffs, even at the reduced levels announced this week, we aren't able to absorb all the pressure, given the reality of narrow retail margins.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: Even though the United States and China have agreed to lower tariffs, most Chinese goods are still facing a 30 percent levy, and this is only on pause.
Walmart is expected to hike prices by the end of the month.
The Magna Carta is one of the most important documents in history, regarded as the earliest declaration of human rights, dating back to the 1300s, which is why recent discovery made by a British historian is such a surprise.
Kings College professor David Carpenter was searching for a copy of the document in the archives of Harvard University's law school when he realized he'd stumbled upon one of seven known originals under King Edward I.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DAVID CARPENTER, KINGS COLLEGE PROFESSOR: I worked through the Harvard text, word for word, backbreaking, eye-breaking work, comparing it to the authorized version. A jolly, nerve-wracking, actually, because I kept thinking, Oh, God, it's going to fail the test.
But actually, no, it didn't. It was -- flying colors. And its text is virtually identical to that found in the six other originals.
[00:40:25]
And that persuaded me, more than anything else, that this was -- was absolutely genuine and authentic.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
VAUSE: The great charter enshrined the principle the king was not above the law. That was the main principle.
Harvard bought the document for just $27, 80 years ago. "Antique Roadshow," here we come.
I'm John Vause, back at the top of the hour with more CNN NEWSROOM, but please stay with us. WORLD SPORT starts after a short break. I'll see you back here in less than 20 minutes.
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