sepulveda, 69 days underground, and enthusiasm of a man who just finished a six-mile run. remarkable. no other way to say that, yeah. one of the things we see across these kinds of events that s important to keep in mind is there are always a wide variety of reactions. different reactions for different people. some people will react to these events with remarkable strength. remarkable courage and come out looking unstoppable. most people will, i think, be able to endure the stress pretty well and then unfortunately some people will also suffer perhaps longer lasting consequences. what can be done to make sure that everybody has the best possible outcome after enduring this? well, a lot of it s rare to be able to influence the unfolding of potentially traumatic event. this is really a remarkable situation in that the government
they re going to be super stars. maybe it s sepulveda or heredia, and others who sort of right. that can be difficult for, a, the miner who is the superstar, and the others who shared the experience, who the media will, i m sorry to say it, will ignore and move on. right. how did you handle that situation, for both the superstar and the person whose story isn t the headline grabbing story for the media zblo we are emotional beings. a lot of people want to eliminate emotion from the human equation, and we can t. sometimes the people who are mild in temperament might act like they don t want the attention even though inside they re happens thirsting for it. those thrust in the limelight act like they want it but they don t. some people want to go home and be left alone. yes. you have to look at each person individually, and you need somebody to be watching out
and now 14 hours later, 16 miners, 16 have been successfully brought to the surface in a cylinder called the fenix. cnn s karl penhaul has been in chile for the entire ordeal. he joins us now, live. and karl, a moment ago, we were talking about super mario sepulveda as being the face on a newspaper there locally, but you have gotten to know the stories and the backgrounds on all of these miners through their families. set the scene for us as it is right now with this moment as we wait the extraction of the latest miner. reporter: yeah, absolutely. i mean, we re here in camp hope, and this is where 33 families came more than two months ago, when they heard that the san jose golden copper mine had collapsed. this is where 33 individual families pitched their tents and refused to leave until they got home their brothers or their
problems. some of them, sepulveda, didn t look like he wanted to go anywhere. with the seventh one we are waiting for, he does have hypertension and diabetes. the first ones were the healthier ones. now, i think it could get a little more complicated. there was a pleasant surprise at how everything went well and, in kt fa, it is almost like they are forcing them to go to the hospital where they are only going to be allowed to be with three family members that they chose to try to, as they said, in chilean decompression, not only physically but mentally from all the stresses that they had. when we talk about the capsule, the phoenix, as it were, they recently changed the wheels off of the vehicle, correct? that s typical of what they are supposed to be doing during the entire operation. the mining minister made sure. he was talking to families when that was occurring. he made sure to tell them that was total routine. they expected they would have to do that. they are very small whee
measures that european countries are adopting coming to the united states? joining me with analysis are the president of the world muslim congress. welcome back. thank you good to be back. brigitte, do you support this? i support the ban on the burqa. i believe it is a symbol of oppressing women. a lot of women are forced into wearing the burqa. europeans are experiencing an alarming rate of honor killing, linked to the fathers or brothers forcing sisters or females to water burr chasm the situation is sepulveda in europe the police met at an international conference and dusted how to deal with the issue throughout europe. britain reopened over 110 murder cases all linked to honor killing. they believe it started with the forcing of the women to wear the burqa.