city at a busy time of day. civilian casualties were almost inevitable. another air raid siren, but the rescue work goes on regardless. andrew harding, bbc news, kramatorsk. canada is experiencing its worst wildfire season in modern history surpassing its record for the largest area burned in a single year. there are currently 483 wildfires burning across the country, with more than 250 considered to be out of control. the blazes have burned more than 20 million acres or 8.1 hectares 21 times above the average over the last decade. the wildfires are also bringing record breaking air pollution to the us. with air quality alerts in effect in parts of 17 states, covering nearly a third of the population. to the uk, where the british government s own watchdog says it is no longer a world leader on climate change. the climate change committee says it s markedly less confident than it was a year
child and her mother. that is a sad irony on this international children s day, which was founded as an initiative for children s well-being. nbc s molly hunter is on the ground in kyiv for us. i know there was a speech today ahead of children s day. president zelenskyy highlighting the devastating toll this war has had on kids and the numbers he put out there, 483 ukrainian children killed since the russian invasion. the u.n. estimate is even higher. what s been the reaction there to this latest deadly attack? reporter: yeah, chris, that s exactly and i just want to zero in on exactly what happened today. overnight, as you said, another massive wave. ten ballistic and cruise missiles were fired, and even though the ukrainian air force is now so good, protecting the capital so well, especially with the u.s. made patriot air defense missiles, fragments of those missiles fall down. what happened last night, and we went to the site first thing this morning, according to the kyiv mayor,
world. how often do you see them? rarely. reporter: their numbers peaked at 483 in 2010. today there are fewer than 340. what s the goal of all this? the goal? well, the goal is to conserve the species, not let them go extinct, not let us make them go extinct. reporter: these right whales are huge, up to 65 feet long, the size of a school bus, but they swim very slowly, just six miles an hour. that slow speeds puts them on a potentially deadly collision course with boats carrying all the stuff we order. they migrate 2,000 miles up and down the east coast traveling the same route as cargo ships now bigger and heavier. the whales must also navigate a maze of vertical fishing lines that can entangle them then there s climate change, warming waters impacting their food supply. researcher christy hudak. the right whales
The tragic death by suicide of Terry Badger III, a student at Covington Middle School, after reportedly being bullied has renewed support from community members for an Indiana house bill
&háhp &hc% trouble grows, so does his strategy to fight the investigators. his lawyers have submitted 483 pages to try to squash the release of the special report fulá)q special grand jury, just one of the investigations into the attempts to overturn 4ie 20rt(urjjip r(t&h procollude the usee1 of any evidence derived from theñi gra jury investigation claiming it )uuáional statute and through an illegal and unconstitutional process that violated trump s due proces%gñ rights. trump s attorneys are also pushing toe1 recuse the office from the case and to preventñi prosecutors from pursuing any other matter, i object includin1 constitutional rights in part by publicly commenting on the case. joining usxd now is constitutio1 reporter greg bluestien.e1ok