as a way of communication. and now, it is like many people just want to play just to enjoy it is like many people just want to playjust to enjoy it. i have to say, chess or something i m still trying to learn but i hope i m still trying to learn but i hope i have a chance to enjoy it in the i have a chance to en oy it in the future. ., , ., ., ., future. lovely to have you on the programme. thanks future. lovely to have you on the programme. thanks for - future. lovely to have you on the programme. thanks forjoining . future. lovely to have you on the i programme. thanks forjoining us. well china s economic recovery appears to be gaining momentum after three years of covid controls. the country has seen a boost in local tourism, during what it calls the golden week , to mark labour day. sunday saw a surge of local tourism, with more than 111,000 people visiting the mutianyu section of china s great wall, north of beijing. tickets to popular sites have almost sold out during the holi
kenji nagai pays the highest price for trying to shed light on myanmar s struggle for a democratic future. thousands more have now paid with their own lives after that future was snatched away from them. jonathan head, bbc news, bangkok. the world health organisation says there s been a big drop in the number of reported deaths from covid 19 since the beginning of the year but the disease is here to stay. our reporter nicky schiller is in the newsroom with more on what the who has said. the world health organization says it is very encouraged by the sustained decline in the number of reported covid 19 deaths around the world. the organisation says since the start of the year there s been a 95% fall in covid 19 deaths. however, some countries are still seeing rises. the organisation says in the past four weeks, 111,000 people have lost their lives to covid.
absolutely no idea. animal rising, which organised the protest, believes there s a far broader point to address. the horse was running the race because their previous owner wanted them to. the real reason horses run in a race is so that people can bet on the horse, sojockeys can make money and people can have a fun day out. that doesn t seem like a good enough reason for putting an animal in harm s way, to me at least. the grand national has always been britain s most famous horse race and its most extreme. over the years, fences have been altered structurally and fatality rates have fallen, but still exceed the average in the sport. a0 horses normally start the race. reformers have long argued that that s too many. those who believe that racing should be abolished would then have to address the question of what happens to the horses. the british horseracing authority says there are 111,000 of them currently in training. joe wilson, bbc news. fighting is raging for a third day in the s
absolutely i started this nonprofit and 2017 with some friends and family. uh i lost my fiance to an overdose. i had personal experience with overdose myself, and i became a los angeles city fireman and, uh , you know, it s something we see all the time. my station alone goes on about 20 overdoses a day. and they re all preventable and they re all preventable with naloxone. and for me, what i really wanted to see was that people had access to this resource and could save lives on their own. so in addition to doing like life events and overdose does trainings in public and overdose has an online training, which you can access it and overdose dot net. take this training anywhere and we give out in the locks in for free. last year, we trained 111,000 people. identify and respond overdose, and this year we really wanted to bring that up to a quarter million. was great work that you do, and it s so important and my goodness i let s just all hope. that this fda approval is going to make a bi
absolutely. obviously we needed to keep digging. the professor admits they dated, briefly. not sure what dated means. but is he some kind of sugar daddy? that s what it appears to be. that he s giving her money and in maybe hopes that at some point maybe she would gain some interest in him. when they borrowed deeper into anna s finances, investigators found about $111,000 in her bank accounts. money cops thought her university job couldn t have provided. and the professor generosity accounted for less than half of that. so, all of that money begged a lot of questions. let somebody else giving her money? i have no idea about that. this is new to me. if she had asked me, i would give her money. if she was in need, i would have given her money.