around the world. max foster is on world assignment today. just ahead on cnn newsroom what happened on sunday shows that brazil is clearly a deeply divided and polarized country. this was a crowd whipped into a frenzy by a leader that refused to accept an election result. the president spechbding the day with border patrol agents and elected officials. this is the reality on the ground right now. we re anticipating some very intense weather coming in. trees down, degree in the roadways, flooding, and we ve seen people lose their lives. it is monday, january 9th, 9:00 a.m. here in london, 6:00 a.m. in the brazilian capital where hundreds of supporters of the president have been arrested after storming key government buildings including congress. the protest drawing comparisons to the january 6th riots at the u.s. capitol. hours ago the president surveyed the damage from sunday s unrest which also took place from the supreme court and the presidential palace
only up to 60,000 travelers are allowed to travel from hong kong to mainland china and mainland china to hong kong with several check points like this one. as of sunday evening, over 440,000 people in hong kong registered online for a chance to make the journey. even today we ve been speaking to some of them. translator: i m really very happening about the reopening. i m going to shenzhen first and then fly elsewhere. i ll be much happier and life will turn out for the better. translator: we are going home. we ll see grandpa and grandma. very happy. reporter: and with the resumption across border travel between hong kong and the mainland, hopes are high for a reboot for the hong kong economy, which has been battered so hard after three years of isolation. but according to the chairman of
BEIJING, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) At around 6:30 a.m. on Sunday, flight NZ289 from New Zealand landed at the Pudong International Airport. It was the first internatio
created further border travel, so when the channel tunnel was built and no requirements for passport controls, no requirements fair customs controls on goods moving backwards and forwards between the uk and france, and that is different now. so the introduction of controls has at some effect on the speed with which people will travel through the tunnel. what is being done at the moment which, if you like, is the future is the digitalisation of all of that, so the move away from manual controls and the move towards the use of more biometric technologies, the use of smartphones that identity and the use of advanced passenger information. once we get to those stages, then things will improve, but as long as there are a significant border controls it like that are going into the eu at the moment, then inevitably it will take longer to get through. thank