Hostage negotiations. There has been a great deal in the press over the weekend. He asks whether i am optimistic. The answer is that i am neither optimistic nor pessimistic but i can tell them that the British Government is doing everything it can to ensure that those negotiations are successful. I am sure the Minister Negotiations are successful. I am sure the minister agrees negotiations are successful. I n sure the minister agrees that it is profoundly in the british interest that there should be a properly functioning system of International Rules and laws and that the International Court ofjustice is central to that system. So what concrete steps as the government taking to enforce its ruling with regard to this can affect conflict, enforcing the ruling and in relation to the assault on rafah, is at the ministers view that the assault and the impact it will have on the civilians, and as he points out, 600,000 children, that that would be in role with the lining in line with the ro
what you need is to relax. you stupid boy. laughter. you stupid boy. but even decades later, fans would still call out. you stupid boy. ..the old catchphrase. walmington on sea. just a moment. # whistle while you work. # hilter is a twerp. # he s half barmy, so s his army. # whistle while you. your name will also go on the list. laughter. what is it? don t tell him, pike. pike! ian lavender, the last member of the famous platoon. let s go back now to our top story, and the announcement that the king has been diagnosed with cancer. we can speak to our royal correspondent daniela ralph, who s outside buckingham palace. this is both a very personal issue for the royal family but also a public one in the sense that they will need to fulfil the king s public role in the coming weeks or months. that s right. there is no getting away from the fact this will be a hugely challenging time, as you say, both privately for the royal family but in terms of how they manage the public side o
about what type of cancer it is. certainly so far as the public is concerned, a degree of shock matching that s coming from political and other leaders around the world tonight. l’m political and other leaders around the world tonight. the world tonight. i m always struck, sometimes the world tonight. i m always struck, sometimes they - the world tonight. i m always struck, sometimes they go . the world tonight. i m always| struck, sometimes they go to windsor, what a centralfocal struck, sometimes they go to windsor, what a central focal point the palace is. there is a very distinct connection between the community in windsor and the royal family. so of any town around the country that s really feeling this tonight, it will be windsor. the castle, tonight, it will be windsor. the castle. the tonight, it will be windsor. the castle, the royal tonight, it will be windsor. tue castle, the royal family tonight, it will be windsor. tte castle, the royal family is tonight
in the british armed forces during the second world war, just as their fathers and grandfathers had in the first world war. once in britain, they worked hard, offering their skills to rebuild a country during peacetime, and seeking opportunities to forge a better future for themselves and their families. when they arrived on our shores with little more than what they were able to carry with them, few could hardly have imagined then how they and those that followed them would make such a profound and permanent contribution to british life. obviously wearing gloves to protect my.my fancy nails from the paint. i had a degree of ambition that drove me. i felt also that i could achieve more here. i m linda beatrice haye. and i was born in.on 26th ofjanuary, 1933, which meant that the 26th of january this year, i m 90 years of age. i ll start off by sectioning off the different parts of the canvas. i m using acrylics, acrylic paints, spray bottle. i use these large brushes. i belie