towards a city. the rebels control yemen and including the capital. the u.n. says the fighting left nearly 16 million people in yechl e yem in yemen in need. reporter: while this plane has landeden a san of devastation fran like here, the areas around the run way intact, pockmarked, hangars destroyed. devastation in the last few days alone. this is badly needed urgent supplies for a country where food is scarce, walter is scarce, but there are many injured. aren t getting the medicine they want. over here as well, what seems to be one of the last if not the last according to an indian ambassador we spoke to, plane taking civilians out of here now. now the cargo planes continue to land. they have very tight windows. negotiated with the saudi and
back. the fact of the matter is houthi rebels control much of the country including the capital, sanaa. nick paton walsh went there. here is our exclusive report. reporter: well this plane landed in a san of devastation frankly here. the areas around the run way still intact. pockmarked. hangars destroyed. lot of devastation in the last few days alone. one ufrp the last planes taking civilians out of here now. cargo planes continue to land.
bravo for holding high standards even if it means no glarand ceremonies? what happened? for starters, presidents and prime ministers need to step down. africa s leaders are locked in a marathon to see who can reign longest. zimbabwe and cameroon have had the same men in charge for 33 and 30 years respectively. these and a number of other african states are nominal democracies, but they are essentially run by dictators. the elections, if they re held at all, tend to be a sham, pockmarked by intimidation, fraud, and violence. a number of indicators highlight the region s crisis of governance. on freedom house s global map of freedom, africa is the region with the highest number of countries listed not free. on transparency international s corruption index, most african
in fact, there s some very well known historic photos that show the trees on culp hill, and they re just all pockmarked and damaged by all the bullets and all the cannonballs that hit them. jenna: you ve given us a lot of reasons to come and visit this park. we have some of the images of what these battles looked like in artists rendering. we did show a little bit of a reenactment of the civil wartime. obviously, there wasn t video at that moment. right. but there was the beginnings of photography and great photos taken at gettysburg shortly after the battle that help us know a little bit about what to preserve and protect here. jenna: katie, incredible. thank you so much for sharing this really special story with us that gives us a lot to think about and, again, another place to visit, katie. thank you very much. thank you very much. come see us. jon: the history of 150 years ago happening now. jenna: can you imagine how old that tree is? jon: 250 years, wow. the u.s. postal se