and cnn this morning continues right now. good morning, everyone. we are following breaking news this hour out of greece. a train full of passengers colliding head on with a freight train. so far at least 36 people have been confirmed dead. we are hearing harrowing stories from survivors who say that the train cars quickly filled with smoke and with flames. worried that the death toll could go up. one of america s prominent mayors, lori lightfoot, defeated. and the price of insulin, that is just moments away. we begin with that devastating train crash that we were talking about in greece. it has killed more than 36 people and injured dozens of others. you can see the images here of the aftermath. it s a passenger train. it was carrying about 350 people at least. it collided head on with a freight train. multiple cars derailed and several caught fire north of athens where this happened. it it left carriages and heaps of debris in the wake. both were traveling on th
of cnn s reports that are targeted and false. reporter: that s not true. we report the facts and we report the truth and that s why you are sitting with me here, mr. foreign minister. reporter: and it carries on, as i press him on more of those allegations and what we have seen of abuses of human rights against the women and protesters, but also of course i asked him about helping russia, the allegations that they are helping russia target ukrainians during this war and of course about the iranian nuclear deal. and the u.s. is now saying that iran may be some 12 days away from so-called breakout if it wants to create enough enriched fissile material for a nuclear weapon. iran says it wants to go back into the jcpoa and is calling on the united states to do so. we cannot wait to see the full interview. we will have that online at cnn.com and also on your pbs show later today.
soldiers had been staying in their house. she says they ransacked the place. translator: alcohol is everywhere, she says. empty bottles in the hallway under things. they smoked a lot, put out cigarettes on the table. they also showed us the corpse of a man they found in the backyard, his hands and feet died, a shell casing nearby. russia claims its forces don t target ukrainians, but these body collectors have to remove the carnage that russia leaves in its wake. they found a person gunned down by riding his bicycle and a man stuck in his car with
that includes a father who, like many ukrainians, already fought the russians when they first invaded in 2014. our brianna keilar joins us now from lviv in western ukraine. you spoke to his pregnant wife who said she has to be strong for their children. understandably so. how does she do it and what has the experience been like for them? one of the ways she does it, jim, is she s had to do it before. i spoke with luba, who does have two kids ask and another one on way, and she was quick to remind me she s not a military spouse at this point in time as so many might be. her husband was drafted and that s the case for many here in ukraine. he signed up back in 2014 with the ukranian army then, and she thought that was going to be it, but here he is fighting again. she said sometimes she s angry with him for joining the armed forces again, even though she
trials. today we are assisting international efforts to identify and hold accountable those responsible for atrocities in ukraine, and we will continue to do so. i m now going to turn over the program to deputy attorney general monaco, who will share more information about the indictment that was unsealed today. thank you, mr. attorney general, and good morning, everyone. thank you all for joining us today. as the attorney general said, we are here today because of actions the department of justice has taken today and in recent weeks. actions that make clear that the same russian government struggling to defend its unprovoked and unjustified war in the ukraine is also corrupt at its core. the world has watched with outrage as innocent ukrainians continue to suffer at the hands