days after a major dam in ukraine was destroyed, seismologists have found evidence of a huge explosion in the area, close to the time of the breach. donald trump is charged over his handling of classified documents after he left the white house. on the 75th anniversary of the windrush arriva we re live at the royal albert hall in london where a special concert will be held tonight. sport and for a full round up, from the bbc sport centre, here s gavin. hello from the bbc sport centre. hello there let s start with the build up to the champions league final in istanbul between manchester city and inter milan. fans arriving in the turkish city ahead of the big game. much of the talk is whether city and pep guardiola can go on to complete a famous treble. olly foster is in istanbulfor us. you just know that pep guardiola will not overthink this final as he did against chelsea two years ago. he has got his set strongest 11 and he is very unlikely to waver from that unless of
good evening, welcome to the programme. we are at buckingham palace tonight, ahead of the big event on saturday the coronation of king charles iii and queen camilla. we have a packed programme for you tonight, we will be looking ahead to this most ancient of ceremonies at westminster abbey, in the company of two people who were there in 1953, in fact one of our guests, even sang at the christening of the king in 1948. we have tv royalty on hand, as well, where katty kay is standing by for us. leaving nothing to chance on an occasion like this. we will talk about what the coronation is, what is isn t, the role the king has played in the preparations, and how the people, the commonwealth, and the different faiths will be included. and at 9pm, the royal watchers will be here robert hardman and christine ross joining us. both of them are taking part in the bbc s coverage. but let us begin with what the royals have been doing today. the king is in residence here at buckingham
of the bank of england, andrew bailey, to discuss the collapse of silicon valley bank, which mostly financed tech start ups. hello to you in the uk and around the world the director general of the bbc, tim davie, has apologised for the widespread disruption to bbc sports output today but says he won t resign. a number of tv and radio programmes have been pulled from the schedules after presenters and pundits walked out in support of gary lineker. the former footballer was taken off this evening s match of the day , which he presents, for breaching the corporation s social media guidelines. tim davie spoke to our north america correspondent nomia iqbal. well, i m very sorry for the disruption today. it s been a difficult day, and i am sorry that audiences have been affected and they haven t got the programming. as a keen sports fan, i know, like everyone, that to miss programming is a real blow, and i am sorry about that. we are working very hard to resolve the situation and
the violence in sudan. thousands of british nationals are still trapped and demanding help. as more people are flown to safety by some eu states, british citizens describe the terror they face in a conflict between the military factions. eve fairbanks was one of a number of viewers concerned about the emphasis put on getting british nationals out of the country, calling bbc news. and grace dalton left us a phone message on monday with her thoughts. i ve been really frustrated throughout today, but was on the verge of tears watching the evening news at 10:00pm. as there was coverage regarding the situation in sudan and how awful it was for the british people who are stuck there. and yet there was no regard given for the sudanese civilians who are stuck there. obviously, i m really hoping that those who are british can be evacuated as soon as possible. but why was nothing said about the sudanese people who are caught up in this horrific situation? we put that point to bbc news