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dislodged. they are now working on pulling the front of the vessel out while keeping the freed stern away from the bank. let's bring in cnn international correspondent, ben wedeman, and he joins us live from cairo. looking more promising now, isn't it? what's the latest on the efforts to remove the cargo ship that has been stuck for nearly a week. >> reporter: this is a massive improvement of the situation than 24 hours ago. we heard from the chairman of the suez canal authority that says the stern of the ship which was just 4 meters away from the west bank of the suez canal has now been shifted 102 meters away, so the canal is still not functioning properly but certainly this is a massive step forward. now, they are waiting for the high tide which is in about 2 1/2 hours at which point they are hoping to completely free the "ever given," and then they will float it north to the great bitter lake, and that's about 30 kilometers from its current location. that will allow the "ever given" to basically be put to the side. in theory, navigation through the suez canal will be able to resume, although they may have to check the area around where it was stranded to make sure it doesn't need to be dredged. at this point there are close to 400 ships either in the canal, in the red sea or the mediterranean waiting to proceed, but at this point it certainly -- it does represent the possibility that this crisis is now coming to an end. rosemary? >> that is certainly good news. cnn international correspondent, ben wedeman there bringing us the latest. petro, you have been looking closely at the weather and we heard ben talk about the high tide and how that will play into this. what are you seeing? >> great news here. within the next couple of hours some of the highest tides we have seen in the next month or so taking place, because of a full moon taking place and the gravitational pull from the full moon, and it's transitioning into the month of april, and you have seen what has played out in the last several days, they have been able to move 30,000 cubic meters of sand to give it breathing room and mother nature giving it a boost as well. 11:42 local time, in about 2 1/2 hours from now, they expect the highest tide to reach 6.82 feet, which gives us a window until we go back to around a one-foot tide. once again another opportunity comes in closer to midnight where we have water levels increase a little more, 6.96 feet and drop again six hours later, and this similar pattern plays out one more time as we go in towards wednesday. when you look at the weather pattern, things have been quiet. there's a disturbance dropping out of the black sea into the eastern mediterranean, rosemary. this system will increase the winds on wednesday right in time for the push of the high tides, and sounds like from what ben is telling us they are making great strides across the region so hopefully everything can be cleared up in the next 24 to 48 hours. >> sounds positive at this juncture, at least. the suez canal is one of the world's busiest and most important shipping routes in the world. for nearly a week it has been effectively closed and the economic fallout has been growing exponentially, and i want to join anna stewart and she joins us from london. let's talk about the business impact from manufacturers and consumers, and what might the long term impact of this be? >> reporter: yes, when you clog up one of the world's biggest art arteries of trade, you are looking at big implications. it's hard to imagine the goods stuck on the "ever given" and the goods stuck on the ships in the blockage, and there are producers of raw materials right through the final product because of all the ships being stuck, oil, gas, that's a big issue, and this is a really critical area for shipments of oil and gas, and you are looking at shortages there in the region, and also things like coffee, coffee in europe, that goes through this canal and there's a big delay here. while we are hearing about good news to move the ship, it's not moving yet. it will take a long time to get trade back up and running as it was before. particularly as lots of ships have rerouted, and that can take an additional 15 days. all of this costs money, costs businesses money, every day a shipment doesn't reach where it's meant to go, it has big implication of where ships are and those containers, and it was a huge problem due to the pandemic, everybody's online shopping, and huge pressure on the supply chains, and it's the straw that broke the camel's back, rosemary? >> yeah, they will be looking at what caused this and how to keep it from happening again. anna stewart, thank you for joining us live from london. and then health experts warning a new covid search may be on the way, and michigan officials say that state is already seeing a new surge. while many have pointed to the spreads of more contagious variants, dr. dr. anthony fauci said that's only part of the problem. >> what we are likely seeing is because of things like spring break and pulling back on the mitigat mitigation methods you have seen now, and several states have done that and i believe it's premature, margaret, and i have said many times to you that when you are coming down from a peak and reach a point and start to plateau, and once you stay at that plateau, you are in danger of a surge coming up and unfortunately, that's what we are starting to see. >> meantime the white house is working on a system for people to prove they are fully vaccinated. some have called the idea of vaccine passport. according to "the washington post," the department of health and human services is leading the effort and this comes as more americans are getting the vaccine. in the last week alone, the u.s. reported an average of nearly 3 million doses being given each day. more than 51 million people are now fully vaccinated. dr. larry brilliant is an epidemiologists and joins me now from mill valley in california. thank you, doctor, for being with us and all you do. >> thank you. nice to be with you again, rosemary. >> you, too. we are seeing covid-19 cases surging again in some states but about a quarter of all americans have received at least the first covid vaccine shot and more than 3 million shots are getting into arms each day with president biden setting a new goal of 200 million shots in his first 100 days in office. how much hope does this give you that we can beat covid-19 despite the signs of a surge in infections? >> i am thrilled, of course, we have the vaccine so soon after we had a novel disease like covid. i am thrilled we are rolling out 2.5, 3 million doses a day, and still only 14% of americans are fully immunized and we have long way to go before we get herd immunity, and that's just in the united states, and what about the countries that don't have a president biden and a plan of a rollout, and don't have the money to buy the vaccine, and as happy as we are about the vaccinations, we need to get good at things like testing, tracing, using the new testing and being able to use electronic notification systems, just in time vaccinations, and we need to have a backup plan. i think we only hit a plateau right now in cases. i don't like it. i don't see it coming down to zero the way we are going. >> that is a concern. what about herd immunity, then? is that even achievable with more than 20% of americans saying they won't get the shot, and many poor nations, as you point out, still not getting access to the vaccines? >> i don't think it's mathematically achievable. if you think of herd immunity as 80% we'll all get vaccinated and have full immunity, that's going to be tough to do in the number of years that this disease is going to be around, and then the rest of the world it's going to be impossible. just one more vaccine, one more arm, one more vaccination going from 15% immunized to 20 to 25 to 50 is wonderful. it may not be enough when we have variants that are arising from all over the world, and a dozen animal species that now have covid. i worry that -- in addition to vaccinating everybody, we have to go back to the basics and get contact tracing and testing and isolation really in a good place. there's money in the stimulus package for it, but we can't forget about that. >> right. you have said that we can get covid-19 under control with the vaccinations, advanced testing and contact tracing, and you also said all of this will prepare us for the next pandemic. what do you think that will be? are you talking about flu or another type of coronavirus? >> every year three to five novel viruses jump from animals to humans. the majority of these are bird flu and in the influenza category, and many are respiratory diseases like covid-19. i am concerned that just as we have had for the past 20 years for the next 20 years we'll be constantly meeting novel viruses. not all of them will be as pernicious as covid-19, but we have to stay on our toes and that's why i am hoping we will continue to build up our ability to find outbreaks quickly and respond to them quickly and not only vaccinate. we have to do both. they are both really important. >> i wanted to ask you this, and i wanted to know what keeps you up at night with all of this? because it's one thing to know what needs to be done, and it's another to get all citizens across the united states and across the globe to understand and follow smart health advice, because in so many parts of the world they are not. >> what keeps me up at night is i lived in india for a decade and i love india, and i think about all the little monkeys that are all over india, and some of them now have covid and they are intertwined with the daily life and now this double variant in india, i worry about the white-tailed deer and the dozen other animals that have covid and while we don't have any continued animal reservoir constantly infecting us, so we don't have to worry about that, i worry that about happening and i am want to make sure we are good at outbreak response in addition to max vaccination. >> hopefully people around the globe will listen to you, doctor and other doctors and scientists and we can avoid nightmare scenarios. thank you for joining us. >> thanks for having me. the death of george floyd in police custody sparked a wave of protests last year and authorities are ready for a repeat as the trial of the former officer accused of killing him gets under way. a controversial election law in georgia has democrats up in arms. now they are pushing even harder for a national law to protect the rights of all voters. back with that in just a moment. when they're sick, they get comfortable anywhere and spread germs everywhere. nothing kills more viruses, including the covid-19 virus, on more surfaces than lysol disinfectant spray. lysol. what it takes to protect. my plaque psoriasis... ...the itching ...the burning. the stinging. my skin was no longer mine. my psoriatic arthritis, made my joints stiff, swollen... painful. emerge tremfyant™ with tremfya®, adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis... ...can uncover clearer skin and improve symptoms at 16 weeks. tremfya® is also approved for adults with active psoriatic arthritis. serious allergic reactions may occur. tremfya® may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tremfya®. emerge tremfyant™ janssen can help you explore cost support options. liz, you nerd, cough if you're in here! shh! i took mucinex dm for my phlegmy cough. what about rob's dry cough? works on that too, and lasts 12 hours. 12 hours?! who studies that long? mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs. opening statements get under way in minnesota today in what could be the united states' biggest trial of the year. former minneapolis police officer derek chauvin faces murder and manslaughter charges in the death of floyd last may. chauvin has plead not guilty. floyd's family will join protesters and will kneel for the amount of time chauvin pressed his knee into floyd's neck. there are major security measures ahead of the trial. it's now imperative to pass the john lewis voting rights act. home depot and delta airlines and coca-cola weighed in on the republican-backed bill but some democrats are calling on them to do more. >> this is the same bill that president president biden called sick and un-american. this is a bill that would require voter identification for those handing in their absentee ballots and limits access to the drop boxes and it would make it a crime to hand out food and water to voters waiting in line. all this ramps up pressure on the president as well as senate democrats to do something to make sure that a bill that passed the u.s. house of representatives would address some of the election issues and make it harder to make these changes to ensure that passes the senate. >> we have to pass voting rights no matter what. the reason why i have insisted that we talk to our republican sisters and brothers on the other side of the aisle is because if we don't do anything else in the senate, we have to stand up for the democracy. the filibuster at the end of the day is about minority rights in the senate. how are you going to insist on protecting minority rights in the senate while refusing to protect minority rights in the society. >> you can bet it's a major item as well as the president will get in the coming weeks, and in the meantime there are already civil rights groups challenging it in court. cnn, washington. cnn senior political analyst robin brownstein joins me, and he has a new book out "rock me on the water," the year los angeles transformed movies, music, television and politics. well done. good to have you with us. >> thank you, rosemary. >> okay. let's start, then. democrats are vowing to fight a sweeping georgia law that restricts voting access and imposing new id requirements and limiting ballot drop boxes and among other things, 45 other states have bills also aiming to roll back voter access. is this all voter suppression in action? >> well, look, i mean, i think the answer is clearly yes. you didn't even mention what could be the most explosive element of the georgia law, which i think is a time bomb under the 2024 election which gives the state more capacity to go in and basically replace county election boards, and you can just imagine a republican-controlled state legislative board in georgia going in and replacing democratic county election boards in fulton or cobb with the presidency hanging on the balance. it's hard to imagine a more explosive scenario for the country. when you look at what has already happened in iowa, and what is happening in montana and iowa, arizona, texas and florida not far behind, we are seeing a sustained effort to make it harder to vote, and democrats are talking about challenging this in court, and it's going to be hard with the 6-3 majority in the supreme court, and if democrats are going to prevent this from happening or reverse what already has been done, they only have one option and that's to end the filibuster and pass a nationwide floor of voting rights like what is contained in hr-1. >> this is happening before everybody's eyes. why isn't there more outrage, do you think? >> it's slowly building and it's surprising, and process issues rarely engage the american public, and we have to remember we are still dealing with the final stages of a pandemic that upended life for literally everybody in the country, caused the greatest public health crisis we have seen in a century, and also, i think, democrats have -- you know, the biden white house for some understandable reasons have been primarily focused on that, the pandemic, and there yet has not been a march on washington or a march on georgia, and there has not been sustained pressure on corporations in these states about whether or not they are going to acquiesce in the voting rights. there are many in the civil rights voting industry, it's coming to a head. >> last thursday president biden laid out his plans in his first news conference. what did you make of his agenda, more vaccine supply to tackle the pandemic, and stimulus checks and voter rights, and his vulnerability all the way through is immigration. >> yes. >> how is all this looking so far? >> i am really struck, and there seems to be a clear hierarchy in his personal time and what he wants to be identified with, because while he made very strong statements about gun control and voting rights and condemning what is happening in the states as a new jim crow and while they are moving to expand the capacity to deal with the surge of unaccompanied minors at the border, it's clear to me he wants his presidency, his stamp to be on the bread and butter kitchen table economic issues. first shots in the arms, checks in the pockets and coming soon, shovels in the ground. infrastructure, a giant infrastructure package he's proposing this week as the next piece of his agenda, and following that in april with another massive package which is the human capitol as to the physical capital of universal child care, and expanded preschool and college, and also making the child allowance in the stimulus bill permanent tphupbt, which would be social security for kids and possibly the most significant expansion since the affordable care act and arguably since medicare, so while the other issues are getting their moment in the sun, i think it's clear to me that biden wants to be defined as a bread and butter kitchen table president and that's where his personal time and focus is going to be directed. >> ron brownstein, also great to get your analysis. >> thank you for having me. joe biden is weighing in on the situation in myanmar. here's what he told reporters on sunday. >> it's terrible. it's absolutely outrageous, and based on the reporting i have gotten a awful lot of people have been killed totally unnecessarily. >> more than 100 civilians were reportedly killed saturday, drawing protests against last month's military coup. unicef says 35 children have been killed since the military seized power. and advising all citizens to leave the country immediately citing the increase in violence. england is easing more covid restrictions as the outbreak there appears to stabilize. we will have a live report from london. that's coming up. you are looking at video of celebrations on the suez canal not long ago after the crews shifted the massive container ship that has been stuck for nearly a week. egyptian officials say the ship is almost free, and they will keep the freed stern away from the bank while they work to pull the bow out. let's go to alexi, an associate professor of national security in australia and joins us now live from perth. thank you for talking with us. >> thank you. >> it's looking pretty promising, but just talk to us about what would be happening right now on the bridge of the ship as they try to get the bow free on the suez canal. how do you think this happened? was it weather related or do you think human error played a big role? >> in terms of what is happening on the bridge obviously the crew as well as the rescue party is trying to make the ship floatable again, because while they managed to release the bow it doesn't mean you can maneuver the ship out of the current point where she's stuck. secondly you need to also assess possible damage to the hull of the ship. i don't think the traffic will be reopened before the authorities and special technical services will be able to determine that the ship is floatable because the theory is the ship could have sustained some degree of damage, and when you try to push the ship through the channel you don't want to risk it from taking on water let alone sinking or causing another traffic jam, because we need to remember that this incident alone had costs about $400 million an hour, which accumulates to about $10 billion in estimated losses a day, so i don't think the authorities let alone the onus of the ship can afford any more glitches. and only after they determine that the ship is safe, the ship is safe to move and push aside, maritime traffic will resume. >> how concerned are you when you see something like this happen? what do you think the consequences are from business to shipping? >> look, i think that incident has highlighted how -- first of all, how dependent we are on the maritime traffic, and how vulnerable we are to incidents that could happen across the points, and there are certain canals in which the bulk of trade is taken through, and it only takes one ship or something whether it's driven by human error or driven by weather conditions because the onus of the ship blamed the weather with the wind, and it paralyzed the traffic, not necessarily at the global supply chain, but the shock has been felt across europe because european clients and consumers already fearing there may be a short of supply of tea, coffee. we're talking about a peace time situation. imagine if that would be a result of the deliberate attack whether by terrorists, insurgents and the way the world economy as well as different countries would respond to an incident like that given the fact it's already taken place in that region would be hard to forget. >> they need to figure out what caused it and how they could prevent it from happening again. thank you so much for your perspective on this. appreciate it. >> thanks very much for having me. covid-19 in mexico may be far deadlier than originally thought. a new report by mexico's health ministry shows 120,000 people killed by covid may not have been counted. that could raise the death toll by nearly 60%, putting it higher than brazil's. it would also give mexico the second highest number of covid deaths after the united states. the report looked at so-called excess deaths over the past year. it's believed a lot of these victims weren't counted due to a lack of testing. england is waking up to relaxed covid rules as the country finally lifts its stay-at-home orders. we are joined live by selma. what more are you learning about the lifting of england's stay-at-home order offering new hope, of course, while cases rise across europe? >> reporter: rosemary, this is a big deal. england has been under lockdown for months now. here in london we have been under a stay-at-home order before christmas when the threat of a new variant was first announced, so yes, these are baby steps toward freedom, and what will happen today, up to two household, six people can meet outside and socialize and meet in private gardens and outdoor team sports can resume, and i know it sounds minor but everybody locked at home and worried about the variant for months, this is the first time to be allowed to see loved ones and the ministry warning we must remain caution, and we see the number of cases in europe rising, and we have about 30 million people in this country who have received the first dose of the vaccine, and of course the country wants to protect these gains, so this is a minor step in a long road map to ease restrictions to bring england out of lockdown on april 12th. we will see shops open and retail resume, but for today that means you can see your friends in the garden, have a party, and i for one, rosemary, i get to see my friends for the first time in months and i am over the moon. >> i bet you are. that's great news. appreciate for bringing the latest there. when britain began to emerge from its first lockdown in summer, knife crimes surged. now authorities are worried teens may never return to full-time school or after school activities and that could leave them vulnerable to grooming by violent gangs. nina dell santos has more. >> it has been an agonizing lockdown spent worrying about the vulnerable children, but for more than seven years she has poured her life into this boxing gym since her 27-year-old son lost his. >> it was one stab wound and it went later through his heart, and a message came to me that the man was actually remorseful for what he had done. >> senseless, isn't it? >> very senseless. >> she has made it her mission to keep kids off the local south london streets, and in the wake of a knife crime wave. knife crime has also left parents desperately anxious as their children are now finally given more freedom. >> there's a say in that idle hands get up to no good, and left to do nothing, what will happen to them? sadly knife crime has gone up. >> lee turner has four sons. she's signing up her 5-year-old early but is on edge each time his older siblings venture out. >> i am always worried. my son that is 21, i am constantly worrying every time he leaves the house because i just don't know where he's going and what he's doing, or if he's actually going to return home. it's gotten to a point where i want to take them away and leave. but where do i leave? >> as part of the uk entered their first lockdown last summer, hospital admissions for stab wounds also soared. with so much disruption to education and after school activities, the fear is as life gets back to normal that trend will soon return. former children's commissioner says knife crime is just a symptom of a broader problem, a powerful gang culture, often getting minors into their clutches often to deliver drugs. >> you are looking for young people as a commodity of choice, and you have quite young children that will be targeted, and started on the edge of some of the activity and then brought in over time and the more they see the more they are involved in the more the gang leaders have over them. the risk, of course, is for those kids that have been out of school for a good part of the year now. >> london has proposed stationing extra police around schools to protect children, and more money for programs like lorraine's where one officer is already a coach. >> i have seen a 12, 13-year-old carrying knives. the pandemic has definitely changed the way things are. people have become lost, and people normally that would be in the gym are not here, so where are those people now? >> covid brought the last year to a standstill, but it has not cured london of the knife epidemic. the futures of many children hang in the balance. >> they were supposed to be starting a new life with their families in turkey. instead, uighur children have not had contact with their parents back in china in years. their stories, next. uriva has cy proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try our new gummies for 30 days and see the difference. it's okay that you don't want to be first: you aren't. second covid vaccine. it's okay to have questions: everyone deserves answers. i'm wary that there isn't enough information. it's okay to be excited, or worried, or both. it's alright for it to take whatever it takes for you to be ready. hi mom, ready for your shot? yes, i've been waiting for this day. we just got what? vaccinated. we just got vaccinated! let's get you there. let's get to immunity. we are getting a better sense of the carnage of the days' long terror attack in mozambique. a military spokesman said dozens of people are dead and are missing after militants attacked the city of parma. the fatalities include locals and foreigners working in the region. the mozambique military said they are still trying to secure the city. the terror group which is believed to be affiliated with isis attacked palma on wednesday. witnesses say many people died trying to evacuate. hopes of starting a new life turn to sorrow. boys at a uighur school outside of istanbul find themselves alone after the promise they could return to turkey with the rest of their families, and their sons are now left stranded and their whereabouts unknown. cnn visited the school and heard the harrowing tales of these boys, and up to 2 million uighurs and other muslim minorities have been arbitrary detained. beijing denied allegations of human rights violations calling the camp's vocational training centers designed to stamp out religious extremism. arwa damon has the uighur story from istanbul. >> there's a sorrow. it hovers over those who are here on their own in a foreign land, whose parents are missing in china. muhammad is 11 years old, brought to turkey by his father when he was just five. with his older brother, who was seven at the time. their father left them with a uighur woman promising he would be back with their mother and younger siblings in a month and he never returned. >> translator: my mother spoke to us and said they took daddy's passport, he tells us. he won't be able to come, but we will see each other again soon. muhammad adds, my mother also told us that daddy was in the camps. that was the last time they heard from her, six years ago. we cannot verify the fate of their parents. they have not heard either of their parents' voices or received news of them since then. this school also doubles as a home for the children who are missing both parents. around 20 out of the 140 or so students here. they share similar stories. those who have passports are brought over by their fathers, who leaves to return to china to get the rest of the family, who is barred from travel or believed to be thrown into china's so-called re-education camps. in response to cnn, china disputed the saying. the chinese government never restricted the freedom of movement of any citizens including the uighurs. all citizens regardless of their ethnicity and religion can enter and leave the country freely as long as they are not suspected of crimes, but many in the uighur community say that just practicing their religion, islam, is suspicion enough. hassan, now 15, has been on his own since he was 11. he vaguely remembers his parents being afraid to send him to school and how the pressure was mounting on uighur families. when my father went back the situation had become even worse, he remembers. travel outside of china was banned for uighurs. i tried to call but there was no way. communication was entirely cut off. he struggles to speak of the past of his parents, his siblings. it feels like the words are stuck in his chest, too painful to articulate. >> that's the only photo he has of his family. he just has a photograph of his father, that's it, nothing from his mother or siblings or past. the memory of his mother's face faded over time, nearly gone. >> translator: i'm afraid to not recognize one's family, to not remember one's family, it's horrible, he says. the brothers dream of a day they know might not come of being reunited with their family. if he could speak to his parents, he would say, we want one of you to be with us. muhammad would tell them, i love you very much. >> for more on this we want to bring in cnn's arwa damon that joins us from turkey. heartbreaking stories. what is going to happen to these children stranded in turkey? >> well, rosemary, nothing changes they are going to end up remaining at that school until they graduate from that school when they are 18 years old and either go out into the world and try to find employment or they go to a university. you have to realize no matter how great the efforts are of the school's administrators, it's not the same to have one's parents there to support you especially when you are so young. you do feel in talking to these children that not having that parental support, not having that mother or father's comforting embrace really deeply, deeply almost inexspeckbly impacts the children, and in some ways they are too young to even think about the future b. what is going to happen if they are not actually able to somehow reunite with their parents. but you hear it when they are talking and when that one brother says i wish one of you was here with us, almost as if it is too much to ask for both parents to be there with them, and when it comes to the hassan, the older boy we spoke to for that report, he did tell us that once he manages to finish high school he has an aspiration to go and somehow track down his parents and somehow try to get reunited with them, but that could potentially be risky for them if his parents are still stuck in china and china has not changed its stance towards the uighur community, and they are very much stuck in limbo, stuck in a foreign land with a foreign language. the school is trying to keep the uighur language and culture alive in all of its teachings but at the end of the day these children are and will continue to be very much on their own, rosemary, unless something significant changes. >> it's so distressing. arwa damon, thank you for shining a spotlight on this and joining us live from turkey. nashville is looking to recover from a weekend of deadly flooding. with derm recommended peptides. hydrates better than the $400 cream. for visibly firmer skin. olay. face anything. air wick our essential mist transforms fragrance infused with natural essential oils into a mist. to awaken your home with an experience you can see, smell, and feel. it's air care, redefined. air wick essential mist. connect to nature. rely on the experts at 1800petmeds for the same medications as the vet, but for less with fast free shipping. visit petmeds.com today. there's a state of emergency in nashville, tennessee, after flash flooding killed at least four people over the weekend. a number of rivers and streams in the region overflowed leaving many roads in passable. rescuers saved at least 130 people from homes and vehicles, some were clinging to trees or sheltering in their attics as the water rose. cnn's martin savidge spoke to one resident that says her neighbor was one of those stuck inside their home. >> we heard somebody screaming repeatedly, my husband and i and a couple friends of ours were, you know, trying to tell them we called 911 and we are trying to get you out and she was just hysterical. the husband of one of the ladies trapped downstairs and he had to bust the windows to get her out and it was already up to her chest level in her apartment. >> terrifying. many living in the area say they have lost everything in those floods. a big shake-up is coming to american football as the nfl looks to expand its regular season. team owners are set to extend the season to 17 games over the current 16 this week. the nfl says a three-game pre-season will also be voted on at virtual meetings. a new collective bargaining deal with players pave the way for a longer season and many players oppose the move over health and safety concerns. thank you for joining us. i will be back with more news in just a moment. do stay with us. you're not using too much are you, hon? charmin ultra soft is so soft you'll have to remind your family they can use less. charmin ultra soft is twice as absorbent so you can use less. enjoy the go with charmin. my plaque psoriasis... ...the itching ...the burning. the stinging. my skin was no longer mine. my psoriatic arthritis, made my joints stiff, swollen... painful. emerge tremfyant™ with tremfya®, adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis... ...can uncover clearer skin and improve symptoms at 16 weeks. tremfya® is also approved for adults with active psoriatic arthritis. serious allergic reactions may occur. tremfya® may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tremfya®. emerge tremfyant™ janssen can help you explore cost support options. i've always focused on my career. but when we found out our son had autism, his future became my focus. lavender baths always calmed him. so we turned bath time into a business. and building it with my son has been my dream job. at northwestern mutual, our version of financial planning helps you live your dreams today. find a northwestern mutual advisor at nm.com hello and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the united states and around the world. you are watching cnn "newsroom." i'm rosemary church. we're tracking developments in egypt where a high tide in the suez canal may help free the massive cargo ship. it has been blocking the water way for nearly a week now. not long ago came confirmation from canal officials that the ship is mostly free. video shows the back of the ship being dislodged by crews. now they're workinto

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