taylor. live from cnn world headquarters, welcome to all of you watching here in the united states, canada, and under the world. this is cnn newsroom . >> okay, let's start with some good news. at least one in five adults in the united states is vaccinated. but spring break travel could undo this progress. you're looking at the scene friday in miami beach florida. people are packed together, not a mask in site. more than 1.3 million people were screened at airports on friday. it could add up to a new case spike. they're begging americans to keep wearing masks no matter what local rules say. >> coronavirus restrictions are loosening up from coast to coast, but if there was ever a time to put on a mask, this is it. >> i would just appeal to all of the votes, all of the people that have people's lives in their hands. look at the data. take some risks with your political base if you need to, but do the right thing. >> they're also concerned that americans are betting their guard down getting on planes in record numbers and by clustering up on spring break. people could say the pandemic disappeared, the clubs are full and no one is wearing masks. >> they will ease restrictions. state to officials announced may met their goal to vaccinate $2 million people in the hardest hit areas. the list expands to californians with certain medical problems on monday. also on the golden state horizon, more california reopenings on a very limited basis. the reason for restaurant workers to expect more tips starting at midnight on sunday sdplp there was moments where we didn't have a lot of customers coming in so it was frustrating at timing. >> the cdc says more than 100 million people have received a covid-19 shot. and eligibility requirements were dropping in many states. >> the fda shows what happens. >> but in mississippi, this is a touching and heartbreaking e reminder of covid-19 and that it kills. a man that suffered from heart does rushed to marry his sweetheart of 17 years. >> it wasn't what we had in mind, but it was beautiful. it was so touching and it was so perfect. >> but she went from newlywed to widow in mere days because of the virus that has so far killed 500,000 people in the united states and counting. >> now from los angeles, dr. rodriguez is joining us, appreciate it. as we just heard there in that report the tsa reported the highest number of travelers in a year. spring break just around the corner. thousands of young non-vaccinated people will be congregating. it seems like the perfect storm. >> it certainly is, kim. i mean when texas lifted it's mask mandate, i thought wow, this is a perfect way to have young, drunk, spring break people going to south padre island. unfortunately people that are young sometimes think they're not going to suffer from the virus because they are healthy and they're probably not going to have long-term complications. but what they're doing is they're breeding variants that will spread to the greater community. so yeah, i do think it will be a perfect storm. usually when we talk about vaccine hesitancy and minority populations. georgia's governor referred to a different subset. here is what we're seeing. >> we're seeing vaccine hesitancy going south. and a lot of that is dealing with white republicans, quite honestly. >> so they acknowledged that the president and his officials may not be the best messengers to reach white republicans. so what kind of messaging and from whom would be most effective to reach them? >> unfortunately so much about this pandemic has been politicized and weaponized. in thinking about this there is no clear answer. i think that you need to first of all respect, believe, and identify with the person that is speaking to you. i used to think it was people that had celebrity. i now think it is name have walked the walk. perhaps name have been involved in the process of making a vaccine. maybe someone that lost a loved one. someone that you can identify. republican to republican. african-american to african-american or hispanic to hispanic. you have to identify, respect, and you have to believe what they're saying. >> that's all of the time that we have thank you dr. rodriguez, appreciate you joining us. thank you so much. six countries are calling on equal ax access to covid-19 vaccines. they say there is an uneven distribution of vaccines in the block, but the european commission says it's proposition gnat distribution process based on the populations of the nations has been transparent. and some nations are opting to distribute doses based on varying vaccination needs. s a astrazeneca says they're disappointed to announce a short fall in vaccine shipments to the eu. in terms of the vaccinations, the eu falling further behind the uk and the u.s. here. the shortfall and the conflict making things worse, what's the latest? yeah, kim, it's been a bad week for europe's vaccination effort. they're all trending and making availability slower or not as fast as it should have been and as it was scheduled and now you -- european countries are fighting. there is a number of european countries accusing the commission of not sharing the vaccines equally. i rush to say there is no causality. there is no indication that the vaccination caused their death. but it caused a third of countries to butt the vaccinations on pause in full or in part. meaning just the one batch those vaccines were taken from. so there is that question, and that crowd. and on top of that they announce that there will be shortfalls in deliveries of vaccines in the second quarter. that is spril through june. remember the context here. astrazeneca announced a significant short fall of vaccine deliveries in the first quarter. european countries were hoping and expecting for it to get better in the second quarter after they publicly addressed the ceo. they put in measuring banning exports. turns out that it is not changing anything. they're still going to get a big shortfall of vaccines in the second quarter and on top of that as you mentioned european unity fraying over the scarcity of the vaccine. many furious at the european union that the vaccines in their words are not being delivered equally. >> so many troubles happening at the same time. >> much of italy is preparing to lock down because of a new surge in coronavirus cases. restrictions will go into effect on monday. in red zones non-essential shops will be closed. let's go live to rome. tell us how bad this new wave is exactly. italy and france are close in their numbers, but they are more preventivety avoiding a deterioration. they are seeing their daily case numbers rise on thursday. it was a record number of 25,000 daily case infections. they seem particularly concerned about the variants. they say the farnt first identified in the u.s. is now showing small blusters in italy. so those two things combined with the fact that italy, like my other countries, got a slow start on their programs. so on friday he said he is aiming to triple the daily vaccinations currently happening in italy. they're currently vaccinating 170,000 people. they're going to bring that to 500,000 people the covid commissioner said yesterday. saying that will be helped by the fact that they now have approval for the johnson and johnson vaccine. requiring only one dose. so they're really hoping to help get the numbers down, but at the same time work on expanding and accelerating on the ground their vaccination program that is key, kim, and they're expecting by the end of the summer to have 80% of italians vaccinated. >> thank you so much, julia in roemt. rome. we'll have a live report from london just ahead, stay with us. now a good time for a flare-up? 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(doorbell) (giggle) oh, they're excellent. i had so many beignets i thought i was going to hurl. do ya think they bought it? oh yeah. the kidnapping and murder of sarah everard was tragic. thousands of people held a vigil for her where she was last seen on march 3rd. police moved in and forced the rally to end. nina dos santos is covering the story for us. you're where the unbelievable scenes took place. take us through what happened. >> yeah, 13 or 14 hours ago yesterday evening people congregated at this park in south london in the area where she took her last temperatures ten days ago for an unofficial vigil that police made clear should not go ahead because of covid restrictions. but people just came anyway to express their dpgrief. they stood in solidarity. once the understand went down effectively the police started to move in and we saw scuffles between female protestors being pinned down by male officers. this moves to toxic behaviors in this country and pitted the police against the people they're supposed to protect. they came to remember a young woman whose life was cruelly cut short to be wrenched from their vigil by officers from the v. force where her suspected killer served. the death of 33-year-old sarah everard while walking home has plunged britain into a reckoning of women's rights and safety. >> women have a curfew now. once it's dark you have to be with someone or you have to be home. >> we're fed up of having to worry all of the time and not feel safe. and this is just proving our fears to be true. >> sarah was walking home from one residential part of the capital to the other around 9:9:00 p.m. a police officer has been charged with her death. >> what shocked so many is the randomness and the circumstances. she was last seen walking along this busy street after having to visit a friend that living nearby. it wasn't particularly late and this is not a particularly dangerous area. >> the vigil had been organized by women in the neighborhood where she vanished and it was canceled due to regulations. thousands still came to reclaim wimt's rights to walk when and where they want without fear. while the abduction is not as common as said, being groped on a bus is, being yelled at is. being followed home is. and those are things that need to change. just because not all of the stories end in tragedy doesn't mean they're not worth telling. >> i can vividly remember being har h harassed by a man. >> a man followed me and my friends down an alley. >> in parliament one lawmaker shared the names of the women killed in the u.k. this year. six that parished the same week that sarah went missing. there is a lot that men in britain can do to better understand and aide women's plight. >> it's time for masogany to be against the law. >> the scenes of police arrested masked women holding a vigil despite covid rules sparking anger nationwide. the met said they had not wanted to act. >> we were placed in this position because of the overriding need to protect people's safety. >> sarah everard's family says she was beautiful and bright. many hope that her memory will guide the way for other women to have a safer path home in the future and away to avoid scenes like these. as you see, kim, this is something that is not dieing down. peep are continuing to arrive to pay their respects and lay down tributes. among those tributes is a nod to the fact that today here in the u.k. is mother's day. some of those signs that people were holding up yesterday evening were those saying she was just walking home, and it's time to educate your sons. >> the metropolitan police under fire from across the political divide. the government is getting plenty of criticism here because of proposed new laws that seem to farg target protestors. leading to the situations like we saw last night. what do you think the fallout of all of this will be. >> this will always be a difficult event for london's main police force to police itself. one of it's serving officers, one of the most sensitive parts of the police, the diplomatic protection unit is the main suspect that galvanized people across the whole of the country. so for that reason policing the event would always be a sensitive matter but over overwhelmingly politicians, the mayor of london, except for downing street have come down in condemnation for how police came in to try to silence these protestors an hour or so after this vigil had begun. it has prompted them to say they bh demanded urgent responses as to why the police decided to act in this way. the scenes at clapham common were irresponsible. it is clear that the response at times were not appropriate or proportionate. i'm contacting the commission tore get an explanation. also some leaders of oppositional political parties said the head of the metropolitan police, a woman, should, herself, resign. >> thank you for all of your reporting there. nina dos santos in london. >> thank you for being with us. what happened last night is hard to believe how did it get that far? >> we're very sad and actually quite angered by the way the police handled the vigil for women. we had to cancel the reasonable vigil because they failed to work with us despite what the high court ruling had guaranteed. they said that there would not be a blanket ban on vigils. so we were forced to cancel. so we saw what happened last night as completely their responsibility to protect not only public order and health, but also our human right to protest. the way we planned the vigil was to be very covid safe. we had a track and trace for covid. we were going to have covid martials, and we offered staggered times, but we were forced to cancel and we saw what happened, and you know, of this week of all weeks, they should have understood that women needed a safe place to mourn and show solidarity and they failed on all accounts last night. they could have spent that time they spent fighting with us to help us make a safe solution. >> policeman handling women at this specific event was not lost on anyone. there has been push back, do you think that spirit will translate on the issue of violence against women? what do you think will come of the concreteness. >> i think this is all a conversation that the police and the government need to listen and realize that us women feel that the criminal justice system is failing us, and last night is a clear example of that. our first priority is to understand what happened last night. why they ignored us, and why they don't want to listen to the fact that we could have conducted a safe gathering and vigil to, as i said, remember all women are against violence. >> abductions and murder of women are thankfully relatively rare, but a recent survey found that almost all british women have suffered from harassment. i'm surprised how universal these experiences are. i have friends all over africa tweeting about their own experiences. is it -- at least one good thing to come from this, how this issue has resonated across the world? >> we really hope so, and that was one of the reasons that we wanted to practice safe events for women. we wanted to make a statement that it doesn't matter what you wear, who you're will, no matter the day, time, or place. it is never okay to be harassed at home or in public spaces. that was the organizer of the reclaim the treatments movement that we spoke with awhile ago. just ahead, what we're learning about a new federal lawsuit in breonna taylor's death. why walgreens? with copays as low as $0.... walgreens makes affording your medicare prescriptions... ...no sweat. so you can get back to the thing you'd rather be doing. ♪ dry, distressed skin that struggles? new aveeno® restorative skin therapy. with our highest concentration of prebiotic oat intensely moisturizes over time to improve skin's resilience. aveeno® healthy. it's our nature™. the sun is incredible. it makes our lipton tea leaves better. which makes the 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