welcome along to sportsday. we ll start in manchester, where thousands lined the streets to bid a final farewell to one of england s greatest ever footballers, sir bobby charlton. the funeral of the 1966 world cup winner and manchester united legend took place at manchester cathedral. the bbc s sports editor dan roan has more. applause a final farewell for, arguably, english football s greatest ever figure. here at the stadium where he is immortalised, thousands paying tribute to sir bobby charlton earlier as his funeral cortege passed old trafford, home of the club where he made more than 750 appearances. members of united s youth teams forming a guard of honour as the hearse drove past, the ground adorned with images depicting a glittering career. he s a gentleman and a legend. do you know what i mean? he had time for everybody. now, we ve been to different countries, and they said, manchester, bobby charlton. everybody knew him. at manchester cathedral, meanwhile, 1,000
power outages at the al shifa hospital in northern gaza mean that dozens of premature babies and 45 kidney patients needed dialysis cannot be treated. the idf now says it is working to transfer incubators. ongoing fighting in the area has continued as israel says hamas has built command centres underneath hospitals and insist it is not targeting the medical facilities themselves. expressing his concern on monday, president biden said hospitals must be protected. meanwhile, the un says it will run out of fuel in gaza as soon as tutor, making it impossible to distribute aid to the more than 2 million people in the street. the hamas run health ministry says more than 11,000 people have been killed in gaza since israel begun its strike on october seven when 1200 people were killed and more than 200 taken hostage. our senior international correspondent orla guerin has more and this report contains scenes that you may find it distressing. war is closing in, and they are running out