fatuma kadir the 11 year old girl who went missing from her home in bolton on thursday has been found safe and well. she has been found safe and well in london, and according to some reports, is safe in the hands of police. it is interesting, her parents earlier described her as quite a shy girl, the reports provided to police, described her as confidence, able to approach a stranger on london bridge, requesting a mobile phone, i ask is there anywhere to stay overnight. the couple who the police were seeking, they did actually come forward. that was the couple on the train. they thought it was coincidence. police said, they were not suggesting she was with them, but they were just perhaps asking after her, seeing if she was all right. and whether they could shed some light on it. they said she claimed
public health leaders say there is a bug there were balance between self isolation and economic damage. clearly, having over 600,000 people in england pinged in the last week is very disruptive, with the covid 19 app. so the business concerns are absolutely real, and i think there needs to be a solution, and if you look around the world at other countries that are doing well in their vaccine programmes singapore, for example they are also moving to a system of not requiring self isolation for people who have had both doses of the vaccine. this evening, some of those who are now exempt way to find out how it will work. as the smooth flow of business gets held up by stifte isolating, the government maintains the app is doing itsjob and is needed to stem the tide of coronavirus infections and protect the public. simon browning, bbc news. an 11 year old girl who went missing from her home in bolton on thursday evening, has been found safe and well in london. greater manchester police s
tv show of the apprentice so it is hard for our national security both with allies and sending messages to our adversaries about the dysfunctionality in the white house. i m no fan of john bolton. he s bellicose in some views but you need a national security adviser who is willing to give you alternative views an other realities and not just yes-men in a critical position. i want to ask you about bolton specifically because a republican senator who declined to be named told cnn that republican senators clung to people like bolton on capitol hill, relying on him to know what is really going on at white house. seeing him i suppose as a nonsicko fant, a grown-up or a guardrail. what do you think? clearly, although i don t agree with many of the ambassador bolton s views and he has a bellicose way about him in terms of foreign policy and
firing of the national security adviser. our national security reporter kylie atwood is joining us and our correspondent jamie gangel is with us. and the white house suspected boltan was responsible for leaks particularly when he strongly disagreed with the president, what are you learning? we are learning today that the straw that broke the camel s back here was national security adviser john bolton disagreeing with the president s decision to invite the taliban here to the u.s., to u.s. soil to camp david to have meetings. national security adviser john bolton didn t think it was a good idea and voiced his disagreement. reporters then found out about that disagreement and we have reported on it. but that s not the only policy issue that president trump disagreed with bolton on. there also north korea. bolton thought the trump administration should be more muscular in approach and not sit down with the north korean officials. iran, similar thing. bolton thought a strike against
north korea can be brought to toe by their chinese cousins. shannon: what do you make of the president s statement that if the conditions were right he would actually sit down and meet with kim jong-un? we had ambassador bolton on earlier and in some ways it ups the ante. i offered, he didn t do it. i tried to give him off ramps. others say it is insane you would think about sitting down to meet with him. what is your take? it s the president s prerogative. if he wants to offer to do that with any world leader he has the ability to do that and the foreign relations power vests him with great discretion in order to interact with his counterparts in other countries. i defer to his judgment when it comes to that. that s what the constitution does. shannon: on the other side of the hill they re very busy with healthcare. counting the votes trying to see if they can get to vote on the measure that would essentially in some ways repeal and replace obamacare. a lot of folks on your side