the conduct of former deputy chief whip chris pincher shows the continuing hangover for the government of the era of borisjohnson. is rishi sunak holding back from being more critical of his predecessor? he s not suited to this kind of confrontation, so i think his idea is, if i don t engage with the provocations of borisjohnson s supporters, maybe the story will burn out that little bit quicker. how do we clean up the culture in parliament? the conservative chair of the commons equalities committee, caroline nokes, is here. and on the tunisian border, the migrant crisis turns violent amidst beatings and abuse. what happens now? we ll ask the tunisian human rights league. good evening. we open tonight with a story which some believe could be the next big miscarriage ofjustice in this country one for which there is evidence of a state led cover up. this is 43 year old tom hayes. he didn t see his young sonjoshua grow up because mr hayes was jailed in 2015 when joshua was j
We dont know how many people have left britain to fight with so called Islamic State over the last few years. There is talk of 850 of whom half may have already come back, that would leave hundreds still out there. But if we dont really know how many, we cant know all their names. And with isis now pushed out of its own self declared capital city, raqqa, we dont know where the remaining ones are, or what they are currently planning to do. The only thing we do know is that we need some approach to dealing with them if they return. One idea would be to ease them back into mainstream society. But one government minister, rory stewart, said yesterday that in most cases, theyll need to be killed. Hes clarified that he meant that they would fight to the death, not that we should illegally assassinate them. But mr stewart has prompted quite a debate. Our diplomatic editor mark urban has been looking at it. In the rubble of the self proclaimed caliphate live the corpses of many british jihadis
in the village, there s stunned incomprehension. hugh schofield, bbc news, saint herbot. campaigners and mps, including the chair of the commons equalities committee, have called for the uk s abortion laws to be reformed after a woman was jailed for terminating her pregnancy beyond the legal time limit. carla foster was at least 32 weeks pregnant when she obtained the abortion pills by post during lockdown. abortion is legal up to 2a weeks, and the procedure must be carried out in a clinic after ten weeks. caroline nokes mp told the bbc the law used in the prosecution, which dates back to 1861, was out of date. the former us president donald trump will appear in court in miami later charged with mishandling national security files. it comes after boxes of secret documents were found in his home in florida. 0ur north america correspondent nomia iqbaljoins us now from miami.