the senate has taken up measures before. there is a wider concern about saudi arabia that will be reflected, anything from sanctions to a scensure. this may be a rare case where senate republicans don t listen to the majority leader. thanks very much. also, un secretary general says a pair of yemen rivaling have have agreed to a cease fire. even as talks progress, though, this war rages on in yemen, leaving entire families, communities injured or dead. we have been covering this from the beginning. and it is hard to imagine how horrific it is unless you see
as war rages on in yemen, the suffering of civilians caught between the waring fractions is growing. our senior international correspondent is now in london, but has an exclusive report on a visit you just returned. tell our viewers what you saw. well, wolf, i should start out by saying that it took our team more than six months to get into yemen. that s because there has been a de facto ban by the saudi arabia-led coalition on all western journalists getting into the country and when you get there, you can see why. it is a country that has been torn in two with a health care system and a state that is on the brink of collapse. take a look. yemen is unraveling. in the north, air strikes pound iran-backed rebel stronghold. among their recent targets, the presidential palace in the