protesters and the police for three months now more than nineteen hundred demonstrators have been injured some of them seriously protesters say the police have been using disproportionate force the government says officers are on protecting themselves to w. s lisa lewis has more from paris. this is about the only view that vitale gets of the outside world these days she s too weak to walk more than a few meters and has been suffering from almost constant headaches and heavy nose bleeding since the fifth of january that was the day that she was hit by a rubber bullet that fractured her cheek bone in three places. we were running down a side street as thirty riot police were chasing us banging their shields with their batons it was really scary suddenly another group of police blocked our way and started shooting rubber bullets at us. i was hit on the cheek and fell to the ground. then one of those grenades with rubber bullets and tear gas exploded next
a 21-year-old college student from nigeria died while in police custody in an isolation cell. that much is known but not much more. his family is demanding answers. reporter: in the beautiful old city of savannah a small group gathers to ask a potentially ugly question what happened to matthew? for his family the cause of matthew s death is a mystery but shouldn t be. reporter: friend describe him as hard working and easy to love. that s what the ajibade that police talked about. they said the woman s face was bruised and her nose bleeding and that he refused to let her
in the himalayans and the andes to look at the temperatures changes on the glaciers. i noticed my face smashing in the ice wall and bouncing between the two before stopping on the ledge and breaking my arm and ribs with my legs dangling over the void trying not to tip over and hold on long enough to get up on the to edge. then i started filming once i am on it. dock, we saw the first clip with your nose bleeding and you were in bad shape. and you could tell from your voiyou were scared. how did you crawl out of their alive? well, that was the key: alive. most people don t survive these
rode up on you and punched you in your nose you couldn t say you wouldn t, mr. wright. if you would you are lying. if this man came up here and punched you in your nose, you seen blood you re not going to sit there and say, well, let me call the police. you just stand right there. you re not going to do that. you re going to go to somebody s ass if they punch you in the nose and you see your nose bleeding. that s what i felt like i had to do. finally, as jennifer is escorted out of the building her hopes of seeing danica seem like they re about to come true. the grounds are now restricted. the grounds are now restricted. all unassigned inmates report to your zone. but with the yard shut down for the day, jennifer can only call out to danica s cell block in hopes she might be seen or heard. i love you. the future of any prison relationship is uncertain, and especially so for jennifer and danica. jennifer, serving time for drug offenses, was due to be released
her family lost six relatives. her grandmother had radiation sickness. her hair fell out and she had the nose bleeding and the diarrhea. reporter: at that time no one in hiroshima understood how dangerous radiation could be. little ritsuko grew up playing among the radioactive ruins. i was just too small to know how much radioactive material is staying on the ground. reporter: when she was 11, komaki lost a friend to leukemia, and she began to suspect that the bomb had long-lasting invisible effects on her city. she wanted to learn more about what killed her friend and how to stop it. eventually, she went to medical school, and that s when she learned about radiation. i volunteered during summertime to check all those people who are exposed to the atomic bomb. reporter: later in her medical training, dr. komaki learned that radiation could actually save lives, not just ruin them. when i saw this patient who