the worst of ways. and it will live long in memory here in afghanistan, in america and far beyond. rescue operations continue in louisiana as hurricane ida brings life threatening floods millions of people remain without power. and run out of russia. our moscow correspondent sarah rainsford files her final report from the country, after being labelled a threat to national security. at a time where russia is increasingly seeing enemies around, it seems i have been added to the list. welcome to bbc news broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. president biden has praised the airlift of american citizens from afghanistan as an extraordinary success. mr biden insisted the us had achieved everything it set out to do in afghanistan, and no other country would have been able to fly out so many people. we have succeeded in what we set out to do in afghanistan over a decade ago. then we stayed another decade. it was time to end this war. this is a new world. the
been the subject of quite a lot of fascination. there was a book about this cold bad blood that was written essentially this particular woman was behind a company that said that amazing test could be done with a single drop of blood. and it turned out to be several concerns about the testing. an meteoric rise and fall for the company and it turned her into a young billionaire very, very quickly. the interesting thing is that as the jury selection started, because the cases been so famous because the cases been so famous because the cases been so famous because the story of the company has been so famous they are having to work out how influence the jury are. apparently onejuror work out how influence the jury are. apparently one juror already said that they d read the book. actually it s quite a difficult child to have when it s been such a high profile. i suppose you can also say what is also on trial here is this culture, particularly among the tech sector is that you fake
journalist from the uk. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejo tanner, political strategist and joe mayes, uk politics reporterfor bloomberg. a very good evening to you both. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. the metro, which has a picture of the taliban parading coffins draped in western flags through the city of khost. that image of the final us servicemen leaving afghanistan is on the guardian, which says the country faces a future of buried hopes. the telegraph goes on president biden s comments earlier with an image of a taliban fighter in the cockpit of an abandoned afghan army aircraft. a newjab to reduce cholesterol is going to be rolled out to people at risk of heart attacks and strokes according to the mirror. and the ft reports on decade high inflation in the eurozone. so let s begin. lovely to see you both. and we are going to start off with the front of the metro. joe t, if you could kick th
about the technology that made her a billionaire. and peter snakebite wright wins half a million pounds after winning the pdc world darts championship for a second time. lawyers for prince andrew will today try to convince a new yorkjudge to throw out a civil case brought by a woman who accuses him of sexually assaulting her when she was 17. the duke has consistently denied the claims. it follows the release of a document that shows the woman, virginia giuffre, was paid half a million dollars in exchange for agreeing not to sue any potential defendant connected to the disgraced sex offenderjeffrey epstein. here s our legal correspondent dominic casciani. a woman making the gravest of allegations. the unprecedented defendant, a prince of the realm. and now, a day of critical court hearings for both virginia giuffre and the duke of york. she says she was sexually exploited by the man on the right, jeffrey epstein. ms giuffre, then known as roberts, said epstein coerced the