welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i m anna coren live from hong kong. ahead on cnn newsroom rescuers are rushing to save two children believed to be trapped in the rubble left by a missile strike in ukraine. sporadic fighting threatens the latest cease-fire in sudan as those unable to flee face food and water shortages. and never before seen photos show the intensity and the drama inside the situation room during the raid that killed osama bin laden. we begin with a race against time after russian missile strikes in ukraine. rescuers are scrambling to reach two children believed to be trapped under a building partly obliterated by a russian missile. it happened in the city of uman where a boy and girl are believed to be somewhere in the lower floors of this high rise. officials say at least 17 other victims have been rescued. friday s strike left at least 23 people dead, including at least 4 children. two more people died in
mismanagement in the supervision led to the collapse of two banks. what could fall in the days ahead. live from cnn, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. we begin this hour with extreme weather ahead for most of the country. more than 20 million people are under threat for severe storms across the southeast. two rounds of strong thunderstorms are expected to cross florida and southern georgia today. when this afternoon, the second overnight. the main threats will be damaging wind, hail. in texas, dozens of reports friday, reporting golf-ball- sized trailed 39 hail . it went for several minutes, but likely never will measure, also a possible tornado in palm beach county. nudges wind and hail, the mississippi river continues to rise, flooding many communities around the banks. the water has already crested in some. here is the latest. as the river level rises, anxiety is also going up for business owners here in iowa. you can see where the partridges are the embankm
whoa, whoa 28 points. i would like to do the same. reporter: that would make her a copy cat. she said the same thing when she first laid eyes on patches. whoa. reporter: jeanne moos, cnn, new york. good morning, everyone. welcome to cnn this morning. it is saturday, april 29th. i m amara walker. i m victor blackwell. thank you for joining us. i think the sound we heard at the end of the patches story was the grunt that patches makes getting up i can tup. she can t meow. can you take a cat for a walk? i don t know. here s what we re looking at. more than 0 million are facing severe storms yet again today after residents were faced with baseball-sized hail. what led to the recent collapse of two banks. the concerns now over a third and why the white house says it will not step in to rescue it. we will stand up again and again, and our language will get tougher and we will get madder. antiabortion bills face an uphill battle. they fail in republic
the report, thoreau. more than 100 pages. its findings, damaging. a textbook case of mismanagement. the federal reserve releasing its highly anticipated self- assessment. on the collapse of the silicon valley bank on march 10th. the fed s vice chair of supervision writing in a letter that bank senior leadership failed to manage basic interest rate and liquidity risks. board of directors failed to oversee and hold them accountable. federal reserve supervisors failed to take forceful enough action. in other words, this was a failure at every level. we already knew that the fed was aware of some of the problems. according to recent testimony, more than a year before the bank fell, supervisors begin raising red flags. so why couldn t they prevent the demise? the report says that they
thorough. more than 100 pages. its findings damning. i textbook case of bank mismanagement, it reads. the federal reserve releasing its highly anticipated self-assessment, a postmortem, if you will, on the collapse of silicon valley bank on march 10th. michael barr, the fed s vice chair of supervision writing in a letter, bank s senior leadership failed to manage basic interest rate and liquidity risk. its board of directors failed to oversee senior leadership and hold them accountable. and federal reserve soup swriezors failed to take forceful enough action. in other words, this was a failure at every level. but we already knew that the fed was aware of some of svb s problems. according to recent testimony from barr, more than a year before the bank fell, supervisors began raising red flags. so why couldn t they prevent svb s demise? well, the report says that supervisors delayed action to gather more evidence even as weaknesses were clear and