it s time now for a sea 360. good evening. we begin with breaking news. florida governor ron desantis announcing on twitter eventually he is running for president. but the live stream events with elon musk do not go according to plan. it was plagued with technical problems and delayed for nearly 30 minutes. if you tuned in when it was supposed to start you would ve heard silence, and then after about 12 minutes of that, you would have heard this. so, let s see. keeps crashing, ha? i think we ve got a massive number of people online. so services are straining. that was elon musk saying that the servers are straining somewhat. then there was silence again. the former president is already mocking the governor s debut. still a statesman thing i m comparable silences, glitches, a complete failure to launch, and that s just the candidate. jessica dean joins us now from miami. last night of the program we talked about how a live event on twitter with elon musk could either
our property if necessary. reporter: the u.n. s refugee agency says close to 90% of new arrivals in chad from sudan are women and children. many so traumatized that they will need a lot of support to heal. we had expected to meet refugees as they arrived in a border town right across from sudan. but just before we arrived, it was hit by rocket. that is why refugees are being moved away from border towns to places like in gaga. cnn travelled with samantha power to eastern chad. the u.s. is giving more than $100 million to support the over one million people displaced by the war across sudan and in neighboring countries. we met one woman whose eye had been gouged basically with somebody just attacking her. and she is seeking medical care here in chad. horrific violence, which triggers for so many of these people also memories of previous horrific violence. reporter: it s a full circle moment.
reporter: these are the innocent victims of a deadly power struggle in sudan. the poor and most vulnerable who have nowhere to go, just another chapter in a life of hardship. and this sudan conflict has quickly spilled over into a regional refugee crisis. these latest statistics from the u.n. are significant. once people are displaced, mostly in sudan, but over 200,000 have crossed into neighboring countries like egypt and chad. the refugees are met in eastern chad don t live in comfortable conditions. the heat alone is more than 110 degrees fahrenheit. they live in these makeshift structures in the desert, but they still prefer that. it s safer for them than in darfur where they have come from. so many of them have been displaced, sometimes up to five times. and they don t care which of the two warring generals in sudan wins this. they just want peace. they want the same things you
they had to run or risk getting killed. she left so suddenly that her son got lost in the chaos. my brother is still back there. i heard he was injured. i was forced to come to chad to seek safety. reporter: would you go back to sudan? no, no. the only reason i will go back is to bring my child and my brother here. there has been too much insecurity for too long. reporter: because of decades of conflict in sudan, many of these refugees had already been internally displaced several times. she is 22 but hasn t known a permanent home for most of her life. . translator: i m worried about all the people we left behind, especially my mother, who could not cross the border. i keep asking myself how i can get her to chad. i notice that mostly women and children here. where are the men from sudan? translator: the men told us to take the children and cross the border so they can stay behind and defend themselves and