music. and flavour of the year indie rock band the last dinner party are named the bbc s sound of 202a. hello, i m ben thompson. welcome to the programme. hezbollah has repeated its warning of a fierce response to the killing of a hamas leader, saleh al arouri, in beirut on tuesday. they say that lebanon will be exposed to more israeli operations if they don t react. it comes as lebanon lodged a complaint with the un about the incident. the complaint says israel used six missiles in the attack that targeted him. tensions are still high in his hometown in the occupied west bank following the killing, as shaimaa khalil reports. the town of al arura in the west bank, saleh al arouri s hometown, is in a state of mourning. but there s also deep fury and rage at his killing. protesters have come out after the friday prayers protesting, chanting his name, chanting for continuation of resistance and condemning the war. saleh al arouri s killing may have taken a significant name off
hello, i m with your top business stories. should one of britain s most influential newspapers be owned by the abu dhabi royal family? that s a question the uk government has been grappling with since the 169 year old daily telegraph agreed to a major investment from a uae backed firm late last year. redbird imi is backed by shekih mansour bin zayed al nahyan who also owns manchester city football club. the deal has been put on hold until later this month while uk media regulators examine it. but the man leading the bid, the former boss of cnn jeff zucker, has dismissed concerns about editorial interference by the gulf government at the telegraph and its sister magazine the spectator. speaking exclusively to our business editor simonjack, he said the deal will provide much needed investment in uk journalism. we think it is a two terrific brands that have been under invested in for a long time and is a great opportunity to export these brands, to invest in these brands, br
bring you from reuters news agency related to those explosions earlier this week in iran. iranian security forces saying they have detained 11 people suspected of links to those attacks earlier this week. we reported here those bombings around 84 people. on wednesday s attacks in southern iran marking the anniversary of the death of a senior revolutionary guard commander, so that happened on wednesday, authorities telling us they have detained 11 people suspected of links to those attacks. that is coming in from reuters news agency and if we have any more detail we will bring you up to date. let s return to events in ukraine. russia s defence ministry said its forces have repelled a ukrainian attack over crimea, shooting down 36 drones over the peninsula annexed in 2014. russian occupation authorities called it the biggest attack on sevastopol since the beginning of the russian invasion of ukraine. the ukrainian army has confirmed the attack. 0lga malchevska has been follow
let s turn to another major conflict. russia has been using missiles supplied by north korea and its air strikes according to a spokesperson for ukraine s president volodymyr zelensky. spokesperson for ukraine s president volodymyrzelensky. it spokesperson for ukraine s president volodymyr zelensky. it is a claim also made by the white house that says north korean missiles were used twice in the last week including here near kharkiv. the us is russia is also trying to source missiles from iran to replenish its stock of missiles. what is the significance of these missiles been supplied by north korea and what does it tell us about their use in ukraine? first north korea and what does it tell us about their use in ukraine?- about their use in ukraine? first of all we have about their use in ukraine? first of all we have to about their use in ukraine? first of all we have to take about their use in ukraine? first of all we have to take into about their use in ukraine? fi
this is kutupalong in bangladesh, the largest refugee camp in the world. it s home to nearly a million rohingya a predominantly muslim minority who ve been persecuted in their home country of myanmarfor decades. life in the camps is hard. rations have been cut to $8 a month, employment is prohibited and crime is rife. five rohingya gangs now operate in the camps and they re killing hundreds of their fellow refugees. at 1:30am, we get reports of another murder. entry to the camps is forbidden at night, but our team is just outside and have made contact with the victim s family. his name was muhammad yusuf. nabi hossain is a rohingya drug gang that uses the camps to traffic methamphetamines from myanmar to bangladesh. as muhammad s family wait for the body to be released, they tell us the gruesome details of how he was killed. with the gangs stalking the camps, it s too dangerous for refugees to speak openly about the violence. but this man has agreed to meet at a secret loca