hello and welcome to the programme. we begin injenin in the occupied west bank, where thousands of people have attended a funeral procession for 12 palestinians who were killed during israel s two day military operation. these are images taken by the bbc from inside a refugee camp injenin, where, as you can see, palestinians have been returning to widespread destruction in their homes. the city ofjenin lies in the west bank, which israeli forces captured and occupied back in 1967. previously, it was ruled byjordan. thousands of palestinians live in thejenin refugee camp which was set up after the first israeli palestinian conflict in 1948. our international editor jeremy bowen reports from inside the camp. and a warning you may find some images in his report distressing. with the israelis gone, the palestinians ofjenin were able to bury their dead. they processed out of the refugee camp and, on a finaljourney, passed the homes of the dead men and around their town. israel say
donald trump and those around him have seen the fbi as a threat. they have taken a blow torch to try to tear down that threat. it s really unfortunate, the motion that the fbi is some sort of leftist cabal. it s crazy. martha: devin nunes that now works for trump media is here. first to the justice correspondent david spunt. good afternoon. trace, good afternoon. we re talking about what is called an fd 1023 form that is a standard form that fbi agents use to write down allegations during an interview. congressman comer, chair of the house oversight committee and senator chuck grassley want a specific 1023 form they say contains an allegation that then vice president biden accepted a bribe for a policy change. they have asked for it multiple times in a subpoena. they actually asked for the physical document. both held a phone call with fbi director christopher wray at 1:30 this afternoon. we re told that fbi director christopher wray offered to allow both men and perhaps
and explore whether there is any potential for cooperation or collaboration on issues of global concern. surprisingly or maybe not, just ahead of her visitjust ahead of her visit on monday, beijing announces export controls on minerals used in the manufacturing of semiconductors and china also introduced a couple of new laws on foreign relations and counterespionage and so on. is beijing playing hardball or could their moves backfire? again, the relationship has got to the point where both sides continue to announce measures against the other. coming on the eve of her trip, this is not a welcome development. i think it means that more time will have to be spent going through our grievances with china versus exploring what we can do together in a collaborative manner. despite the cooling relations, trade between the two actually grew last year for the third straight year. china s economy is recovering more slowly than expected, in your view, how much does china actually need the us? i t
appointed a special counsel there. it is a possibility and something that we need to watch, trace. trace: sure appears there be a good for the goose argument. if he jumps in and you have two special counsels, you would likely somebody would demand a third. potentially. trace: good point. back to you as the news breaks. thank you, sir. a chinese jet flying past the note of a spy plain in the latest sign of cooling relations with beijing. why is elon musk and other top american business leaders working to build relations in china. victor davis hanson is standing by next. we know our two economies are interconnected and linked. and we have to figure out how best to manage that so that that interconnectedness doesn t put our own national security at risk. m around any vet that i can. absolutely. at newday usa, that s what we re doing. we put our arm around the veterans. i think the veteran out