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CNN10 2022-09-14

CNN 10

Pakistan devastated by Flooding; Just Released Images of Newborn Stars; A CNN Hero Who is Turning Discarded Tech into Life-Changing Opportunity. Aired 4-4:10a ET

Aired September 14, 2022 - 04:00 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

COY WIRE, CNN 10 ANCHOR: What's up, everyone? I'm Coy and I am so grateful that I get to hang out with you this week right here on CNN 10.

We have a rocking show for you this wonderful Wednesday, but we do have to start with the latest out of Pakistan where people are hurting as their nation's been devastated by flooding. Severe floods have swept away roads, homes schools and hospitals, leaving nearly one-third of the South Asian country under water. Millions of people have been forced from their homes and are struggling through waist-deep water to reach safety.

The current crisis began when severe monsoon rains hit the country last week piling water on top of more than two months worth of record flooding that has already killed hundreds of people and displaced millions more. Nearly all of the country's crops and significant amounts of livestock and fertilizer have been damaged by the floods, harming the food supply.

Pakistan was already reeling from the economic inflation which makes the price of food unattainable for many of its citizens. Experts are now concerned about another round of food shortages and disease which could be transmitted through contaminated water in the coming weeks. Authorities say that the flooding could take up to six months to recede which could even impact the country's planting season in October.

As the flooding threatens to set the country's progress back and potentially worsen existing political tensions, the United Nations is currently urging support for Pakistan.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CLARISSA WARD, CNN CHIEF INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Trying to get to higher ground, this is one of the few roads that has not been completely submerged underwater and there's just a steady flow of people coming here and you can see they're crammed into buses, they're on rickshaws, they're on motorcycles, and they've just tried to grab whatever they possibly can salvage from their homes and move it to higher ground. But the fear is this isn't going to be higher ground for that much longer because even though there's no rain forecast here for the next five days, the water levels here are still rising.

And that's because this is essentially a catchment area. This is right between the Indus river and the marcher lake and the end result of that is that there is nowhere for this water to run off to and all the rain that's coming from other parts of the country in the north is kind of running down here and swelling into this area.

And what is so pronounced here is you don't see any aid workers here. You don't see any aid being distributed. These are hard to reach areas the Pakistani government is doing its level best to get people what they need, but the demand is so huge, one U.N. official calling it a logistical nightmare.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WIRE: All right. Let's go 10-second trivia time.

Which constellation is known as the Hunter?

Is it Andromeda, Orion, Gemini or Taurus?

One of the most recognizable in the night sky is the belt-wearing Orion constellation that's known as the Hunter.

Next up, we're traveling to the Orion constellation with a photo that is five years in the making. On Monday, new images were released showing thousands of never seen before stars and this image of a newborn star from the Orion nebula. The images were taken by the James Webb telescope and hopes are that the data from it can help us understand how stars and planetary systems are formed.

According to scientists, these images reveal an environment similar to our own solar system when it formed more than 4.5 billion years ago. The technology works by detecting infrared light in the cosmos which allows observers to see through layers of dust, illustrating what's happening inside the Milky Way.

The images are said to be the sharpest ever taken and part of the goal for the Webb telescope is detecting distant and faint galaxies.

The telescope itself was launched in 2021. According to NASA, the telescope will cost the American taxpayer $10 billion.

Next up, some inspiration and motivation in the form of a story of a young girl from rural Kenya. Growing up, she'd never even heard of a compute.

Now, she's enhancing the lives of young people in her community through repurposing discarded technology she's aiming to create positive change in this world one computer at a time.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

NELLY CHEBOI, 2022 CNN HERO: I never forget what it was like growing poor. I never forget what it was like my stomach churning because of hunger at night. I would have to go and scavenge for food at trash bits. We grew up in a tin roof house. It was full of potholes.

I used to look at the different light bouncing from the holes from the roof, and then just imagine what we look like to sustainably fix poverty.

I was a very hardworking student even though I wasn't in school often, and even though I was the most hardworking person I knew, I still did not know what a computer was.

I am from Mogotio which is a small village in rural Kenya. And there isn't much of an economic activity here. I got a full-ride four-year scholarship in America at Augustana College in 2012.

I got a job as a janitor cleaning bathrooms. I discovered computer science in my junior year of college just out of accident. I needed to take an introduction to java for my math major and I just fell in love with it. I just knew this was what I wanted to do and also bring it to my community.

Every three years, companies are upgrading their IT. Most of these computers are ending up in landfills. Well, we have kids here, myself included back in the day, who don't even know what a computer is.

And so, what we're doing is that we're working with institutions, colleges, companies, even individuals and then we bring it to the schools. We refurbish them. We install our own custom operating system that is geared towards teaching our kids self-efficacy troubleshooting and Internet skills. All of you are going to be graphic designers today.

Right now, we're working with 4,000 kids. My hope is that when the first TechLit kids graduate high school, their families and themselves will not need aid because they can make money online.

That money will support their families. Their money will support themselves.

I can't even describe just how dehumanizing poverty is. Just getting crushed over and over again my mom was working really hard and I was still going to bed hungry. I was still living in a house that was flooding, but the world is your oyster when you are educated.

The thing that was really fascinating me growing up, not seeing change, not seeing hope, not even seeing progress. I feel like with this kid, I can see a path like, I can see a way where they can make a living online. And that is really like why we're doing this work.

My life is bigger than myself. If I have the power to change anything, I have to do it. I have to give it my all. I can keep doing it.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WIRE: All right. How's this for a 10 out of 10?

Four people broke a Guinness world record by playing putt-putt for 24 hours straight. They walked miles during their mission. Two thousand ninety-seven holes, that's the most holes of mini golf ever completed by a foursome in a 24-hour span. It happened at a putt-putt course in northern Kentucky and they blasted past the previous record set in Germany back in 2005 by 657 holes.

And it gets better. They did it to help raise money for a humanitarian and disaster relief organization. Putting for a purpose. But 24 hours straight, way to go team.

All right. Got to give some special shout-outs. First, the two middle schools that I attended in good old Pennsylvania, Lemoyne and New Cumberland. I miss pizza day in the cafeteria. I miss my hair too. Oh, the good old days. What's up, little brother?

Also, we see you Crusaders of the Saint Joseph School in Martinsburg, West Virginia. We hope you and everyone watching around the world have a wonderful one.

I'm Coy. Thanks for watching CNN 10.

END