this is bbc news. we ll have the headlines and all the main news stories for you at the top of the hour, straight after this programme. this is bbc news. we ll have the headlines and all the main news stories for you at the top of the hour, straight after this programme. this week on the show. the city that never sleeps. we are in brooklyn, new york, and this area in particular has gone through quite a renaissance. and why it s taken ages to wake up. we re going. let s go. could it be the end for seeing mummies in some of the world s most famous museums? in scotland, a chinese take on a traditional burns night supper. that s so tasty. i can actually taste the haggis. hi, and welcome to the great court here in the british museum in london. now, this apparently is the biggest covered public square in the whole of europe. and what a greeting for the six million visitors who come here every year to see collections gathered from all around the globe. well, a bit later, i ll be fin
what they teach. in the meantime what has to figure out whether can even teach students about the civil rights era. that doesn t for us tonight. i will see you next week. now it s time for the last word with lawrence o donnell. good evening, we have a statement from new york city mayor, eric adams on the death threats of the district attorney brag received today. the mayor says, while we cannot comment on the specifics of any ongoing investigation, no public officials should ever be subject to threats for doing his or her drop. i am confident that every elected official in the city including manhattan da brag will continue to do their work undeterred. and anyone found to be engaging in illegal conduct will be brought to justice. and so that is the mayor of new york s latest statement about this threat to the district attorney today. it s an important letter and could not commit more of a critical time considering the threats, the stakes, the rhetoric. president trump ha
in the meantime this college what has to figure out whether can even teach students about the civil rights era. that does it for us tonight. i will see you next week. now it s time for the last good evening, we have a statement from new york city word with lawrence o donnell. word with lawrence o donnell. mayor, eric adams on the death threats of the district attorney brag received today. the mayor says, while we cannot comment on the specifics of any ongoing investigation, no public officials should ever be subject to threats for doing his or her job. i am confident that every elected official in the city including manhattan da brag will continue to do their work undeterred. and anyone found to be engaging in illegal conduct will be brought to justice. and so that is the mayor of new york s latest statement about this threat to the district attorney today. it s an important letter and could not commit more of a critical time considering the threats, the stakes, the rheto
were killed and many others injured. an investigation is under way into how a suicide bomber breached tight security. now on bbc news: the travel show. this week on the show. the city that never sleeps. we are in brooklyn, new york, and this area in particular has gone through quite a renaissance. and why it s taken ages to wake up. we re going. let s go. could it be the end for seeing mummies in some of the world s most famous museums? in scotland, a chinese take on a traditional burns night supper. that s so tasty. i can actually taste the haggis. hi, and welcome to the great court here in the british museum in london. now, this apparently is the biggest covered public square in the whole of europe. and what a greeting for the six million visitors who come here every year to see collections gathered from all around the globe. well, a bit later, i ll be finding out why a growing number of museums are now rethinking their relationships with egyptian mummies. indeed, some are
two cases, if they like the person it is self-defense, if they don t it is homicide, if they like the people gathering it is a protest, if they don t it is a riot. different rules, based on political preference, this week we learned classified documents were found in their, so far, locations used by joe biden after he was the vice president. classified documents found by his personal lawyers, not the fbi, who put them there? were the documents together originally then separated, if so by whom? did the former vice president use the documents while he was a priva a. citizen. don t worry the media tells us that the garage was locked. i m sure is not a legal defense. it wasn t when classified documents were found at mar-a-lago, media begins to tell you how very different those two cases are. new york magazine telling us there are significant differences. new york times telling us, the circumstances of the two case appear to be strikingly different. and new york times telling