forced to stop operating and tell people they could no longer help. it is like having to turn winning away. women away. it is like having to turn winning away. women away- women away. it sucks. it s difficult to women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see the women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see the end - women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see the end of- women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see the end of the| women away. it sucks. it s i difficult to see the end of the we hope difficult to see the end of the we hope the difficult to see the end of the we hope the end is not permanent. do not hope the end is not permanent. dir: not kill hope the end is not permanent. not kill your hope the end is not permanent. do not kill your baby. god gave you that baby, not kill your baby. god gave you that baby, do not kill your baby. god gave you that baby, do not not kill your baby. god gave
in the final days before they were forced to stop operating and tell people they could no longer help. it is like having to turn women away. it sucks. it s difficult to see the end, although we hope the end is not permanent. do not kill your baby. god gave you that. baby, do not kill it. we are the change, we are the change. what now for them in terms of reproductive rights in the united states? arkansas is one of the 13 states with anti abortion laws designed to be triggered by the court ruling, and where its impact was felt almost immediately. you know the rules? this is little rock family planning service. it is the last independent abortion clinic in arkansas. most of the people who work here have done so for many years, here have done so for many years. they are, they say, a family. since may, when the court draft opinion was leaked, they have known their days providing the care they do were numbered and the ruling could come at any day. not today. we have done whatever
hi, peter . actually , good morning. and you hit the nail on the head there. the big focus of today s meetings is going to be on iran right now. the big concern for leaders in the gulf that the president is going to be meeting with separately and then together today is iran s nuclear program. what exactly are they going to do? they re the top two foes in the region for iran. are saudi arabia, where we are today with the president and israel where we were for the last couple of days with the president and things are apparently of great enough concern now that israel and saudi arabia have this first in a lifetime dialog going on . they are the first line kind of relations came yesterday when saudi arabia announced that they are finally going to start allowing flights to take off in israel to land here in saudi arabia and israel is not a part of today s meetings, but it is a great concern in the region what exactly iran is going to do. president biden said he prefers diplomacy,
hour. the announcement comes after five hearings this month that were chock full of really juicy, previously unknown details and lots and lots of brand new evidence on the lengths that trump and trump officials and trump advisors and trump allies went to try and secure a second trump term illegally. the committee s chairman, bennie thompson had said more hearings were set for next month as the committee absorbs a mountain of new information from documents from the trump white house and tips from the public as well as new witnesses coming forward. politico reported this about the work of the committee in recent day, quote, the select panel has maintained its investigative work even as it ramped up its pace of hearings. documentary filmmaker alex holder who had extensive access to the trump family met with investigators last thursday morning after getting subpoenaed for his select panel for his recordings and his testimony. the panel also sent a letter to virginia tom a thomas,
russian forces are now said to be fully occupying the ukrainian city of severodonetsk, a key location in the war, in the east of the country. weeks of heavy shelling have reduced the city to ruins and ukraine s army has now pulled its troops out. saturday also saw an upsurge in russian missile strikes across ukraine. in his nightly address, president zelensky said the war had entered an emotionally difficult stage and that air defence systems held in storage in allied nations were needed more than ever. shelley phelps has the latest. as severodonetsk falls, civilians have been fleeing the area, including elena, now boarding a train for the west of the country. translation: it was a horror the last week. yesterday we could not take it any more. thank you to the soldiers who evacuated us from there, otherwise this would have been it. i already told my husband if i die, please bury me behind the house. you need to understand, there is much shelling, so many ruined houses. it is