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Check showtimes to see when Amanpour is on CNN where you are. Or watch online.

An ironclad celebration of freedom

March 31st, 2014
03:17 PM ET

Christiane Amanpour tells the story of the Eiffel Tower, which celebrates 125 years on Monday.

Click above to watch.http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/world/2014/03/31/amanpour-eiffel-tower-statue-of-liberty.cnn.html

Crimean minority Tatar leader warns of possible bloodshed

March 31st, 2014
03:04 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

The leader of Crimea’s Muslim minority, the Tatars, warned on Monday of possible bloodshed in Crimea and southern Ukraine.

“Our largest, biggest concern is about the possibility of clashes, of large scale bloodshed in Crimea,” Mustafa Dzhemilev, who is a member of Ukraine’s parliament, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour in an exclusive interview.

The Ukrainian military will fight, despite an imbalance in power, if the Russian military goes further into Ukraine, Dzhemilev said.

“No matter how weak we are in military in comparison to Russia…we’ll start fire.”

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Tatar leader warns of possible bloodshed

Ukrainian Member of Parliament Mustafa Dzhemilev warns of possible future bloodshed in Crimea and Ukraine.

“We’ll open fire if [the Russian] Army will move further. And it’s hardly within Russia’s interests or President Putin’s interests, but we can’t exclude anything.”

“But all this will result in bloodshed.”

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode • Russia • Ukraine

Angelina Jolie puts spotlight on Syrian refugees as U.N. Refugees chief warns Lebanon could collapse under burden

March 27th, 2014
03:02 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

Lebanon could collapse under the weight of the massive influx of Syrian refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres warned in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that aired Thursday.

Without economic and financial support, and an increased effort to share the burden of Syrian refugees, “Lebanon [does] not [have] the possibility to go on with the present situation,” Guterres said.

Angelina Jolie, a special envoy for the UNHCR, is highlighting the plight of Syrian refugees.

She recently visited with a family living in a Lebanese refugee camp, speaking with a young child, Hala, and her five siblings.

Hala saw her mother killed under their collapsed home, and their father is missing and presumed dead.

Watch Jolie speak with Hala and her siblings.

“Twenty-five percent of the Lebanese population today is Syrian,” Guterres said. “We have more Syrian students in Lebanese public schools than Lebanese students.”

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U.N. Refugee chief on looming crisis

CNN's Christiane Amanpour speaks with United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres.

“Lebanon has serious problems with electricity and water, and largely because of this huge increase in population; the health system is totally overburdened, and the security implications of the Syrian crisis to Lebanon are absolutely dramatic.”

“Nobody can afford the collapse of Lebanon in the present moment.”

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode • Syria

40 years later, Angela Lansbury returns to the London stage – at 88

March 27th, 2014
09:36 AM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

Performing in a play in London’s famed West End is achievement enough for most actors – doing it at 88 is something else altogether.

That’s exactly what Angela Lansbury – most famous for a 12-year run as a mystery writer and amateur detective in the TV series “Murder, She Wrote” – has done with her role in Noel Coward’s “Blithe Spirit.”

It’s her first time on a London stage in 40 years, and the play has opened to rave reviews.

“It is lovely, isn't it? It's lovely,” Lansbury told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour at the Gielgud Theatre. “I'm thrilled to death.”

How does she find the energy, at 88, for the grueling schedule live theater requires?

“That's the $24,000 question – truthfully, I don't know.”

Lansbury has had a storied career, starting in the Hollywood studio system of the mid-20th century.

At the time of her first big “break,” she told Amanpour, she had been working in a department store, making 18 dollars an hour.

“I was … making change as a cashier, and all kinds of little menial jobs of that sort,” she said. “I had been a drama student in Britain before I ever went to America. So I was prepared. I was ready to be an actress. And I wanted to get a part, either in a play or a movie or anything, just to exercise my talent.”

She was signed to the production company MGM; in the system of the time, the Hollywood studios exercised tremendous control over the actors under contract, especially women.

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode

Venezuela faces ‘rocky future’ without dialogue, warns OAS chief

March 26th, 2014
04:26 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

Venezuela faces a “rocky future” unless all parties can agree to dialogue, the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, José Miguel Insulza, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Wednesday.

“The only way in which the deep economic and political crisis that is happening can be solved is either they get along, and they try to settle things through a dialogue, or the possibility of having some foreign mediation,” Insulza said.

The stand-off between Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and the opposition is heading for a perfect storm, with worrying signs that the worst protests in a decade could eventually lead to total economic collapse.

In an interview with Amanpour in Caracas earlier this month, President Maduro said that Venezuela did not need outside mediation.

“I think what we need is cooperation,” Maduro said. “We are not in despair. Venezuelans have a long history, so we are able to listen to each other, to talk to each other.”

But the two sides aren't talking to each other, and now more than three dozen people are dead – most recently a 28-year-old woman shot in the head after her bus was stopped at an opposition barricade.

The OAS itself has come under criticism for its inability to intercede in the crisis.

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode • Venezuela

The Great Escape that still inspires

March 26th, 2014
08:26 AM ET

By Lucky Gold

Russia's land grab in Crimea has heightened tensions throughout Eastern Europe, rekindling memories of World War II, when Stalin's Red Army carved up countries like Poland, and devoured them with its Axis partner, Nazi Germany.

Now imagine a world where one bright memory from that same dark time still quickens the blood in the cause of freedom.

Survivors gathered and flowers were laid to remember 70 years ago, when some 76 allied prisoners slipped out of their prisoner of war camp with forged documents and improvised civilian clothing – hoping to make it to freedom.

It was called the great escape, and it was famously depicted in the Hollywood blockbuster of 1963, starring Steve McQueen.

It showed how hundreds of prisoners of war planned and executed the daring breakout.

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West should have put boots on the ground in Libya, says former prime minister

March 25th, 2014
05:15 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

Western countries exercised “bad judgement” in failing to put troops on the ground during the Libyan revolution, Former Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour in an interview that aired Tuesday.

“There was bad judgement on [the] part of the West for not putting too many troops on the ground,” Zeidan said through an interpreter.

Amanpour clarified whether he believed that, in retrospect, he wished that the West had “put boots on the ground, forces to maintain security.”

“Any means to have security will be accepted in Libya,” he said. If Libya wants stability, “we should have forces that are part of the United Nations, regional or Middle Eastern troops, or countries that have relations or connections in Libya – and if this takes place under the international community, under the United Nations, it will be accepted.”

Three years after Moammar Gadhafi was forced from office and killed, control of Libya is largely in the grip of militias.

Zeidan himself was forced from office by a parliamentary vote earlier this month and fled the country.

He insists that he is still the prime minister.

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode • Libya

Egyptian official urges mass death sentence be put ‘in perspective’

March 25th, 2014
05:02 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

An Egyptian official urged on Tuesday that a death sentence for 528 supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood be put “in perspective.”

The people in question were “implicated in acts of sabotage and violent offenses,” Salah Abdel Sadek, chairman of Egypt's State Information Service, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.

“There is the right to challenge the verdict.”

An Egyptian court on Monday sentenced the defendants on charges related to violent riots in the southern Egyptian city of Minya last August, including the murder of a police officer, the country's official news agency said.

The riots took place after a deadly crackdown by security forces on two large sit-ins in Cairo, where demonstrators were supporting ousted President Mohammed Morsy.

Sadek insisted that the Egyptian judiciary is independent, free from interference of “executive authority.”

“Egypt does not have an independent judiciary”, Shadi Hamid of the Brookings Institution, and author of “Temptations of Power,” told Amanpour. “It’s a very politicized judiciary.”

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'Unprecedented' oppression in Egypt

Shadi Hamid of the Brookings Institution tells Christiane Amanpour there is "bloodlust" in Egypt.

“And let’s recall [the judiciary] played a very active role in supporting the military coup on July 3rd [2013]. So we can’t treat Egypt as a normal democratic state, where there’s a separation of powers.”

Hamid called the decision the “largest mass death sentence in modern Egyptian history.”

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Egypt • Latest Episode

‘Embarrassingly old math’ used to pinpoint plane route

March 24th, 2014
04:30 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

The implementation may have been new, but the technique a British satellite company used to say that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 crashed in the Southern Indian Ocean is “embarrassingly old math,” Inmarsat Senior Vice President Chris McLaughlin told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Monday.

“It’s a technique for the first time, but the technology is ancient,” he said. “It’s a method of trigonometry.”

“It’s not a new technology. It’s an old technology. It’s called science.”

Why then, Amanpour asked, had it taken so long to report this information?

“We reported on the Tuesday the 11th our suggestion of the north/south route,” he said.

“It is an immensely complicated thing to have to go into the network and look at other flights and build a picture, and that has taken the last six or seven days, which our engineers have been working very hard on to create a model. It hasn’t been done before.”

Click above to watch the whole interview, and hear how McLaughlin says issues like this could be solved “tomorrow.”


Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode

Russian standoff in ‘11th hour,’ says first post-Soviet Russian foreign minister

March 24th, 2014
04:19 PM ET

By Mick Krever, CNN

The standoff between Russia, Ukraine, and the West has reached the “eleventh hour,” Andrei Kozyrev, the first post-Soviet Russian foreign minister, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Monday.

“The [stakes are] still very, very high,” he said. “Let me just remind whoever concerned that Russia is still [a] nuclear superpower. So the [stakes] might be life and death. And maybe sooner than somebody is thinking.”

“It’s [the] eleventh hour for Russians, and for anybody else, to reconsider.”

A week after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine, there is still considerable concern and uncertainty about what Russian President Vladimir Putin’s next move might be.

Russian military forces are massed along Ukraine’s eastern border. NATO’s top military official called them “very, very sizable and very, very ready.”

Ready for what exactly is not clear.

“We can only guess what actually happens next,” Kozyrev said. “It’s very much an impromptu kind of show.”

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Filed under:  Christiane Amanpour • Latest Episode • Russia • Ukraine
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