that is lighter winds in place and a chilly night to come for wales and parts of england. there could be a touch of frost, temperatures down to 2 degrees. the breeze picks up in the west and that is ahead of cloud and rain spilling its way in. temperatures in stornoway, glasgow, 10 degrees. a dry enough to start for early risers but rain spilling in. we may have heavy rain in cumbria and north wales late in the day. dry and sunny again for the south and east. hello this is bbc news. the headlines. a massive fire has severely damaged the strategically important road and rail bridge connecting occupied crimea to russia. ukrainian officials say they ve found two mass burial sites in the recently liberated town of lyman one with around 200 graves. funerals are being held in thailand for the children and teachers killed in a massacre at a nursery school. police say seven people have been killed in an explosion at a petrol station in county donegal, in the republic of ireland. no
legend pele is undoubtedly sad and certainly very newsworthy, to have six days of continual updates and news reports on the demise of a brazilian footballer seem to me to be just a little bit excessive, perhaps. others put it more strongly, such asjenny fenwick. now to a loss of another kind. after the ending over the past few months of dateline london and the film review both reported on this programme a third news channel staple had its final edition on monday, signed off by david eades, who himself left the bbc this week. just to say that tonight has been the final edition of the papers, here on bbc news channel. all i can say now is thanks for watching. the papers theme plays but many people had plenty to say about the dropping of the papers a nightly review of the next day s newspapers featuring two guests, normally journalists. one of its original presenters, clive myrie, described it as the end of an era, tweeting. and we ve heard from a number of fans, includi
floods the country had seen in a decade. now on bbc news dateline london with shaun ley. sombre but. hello and welcome to the programme which, for the last 25 years, has been the place where the uk s leading political commentators debate the big themes of the week. alongside them, the foreign correspondents who blog, pod, broadcast, and yes even these days write for audiences back home from the dateline: london. it may be our final edition but we re still looking forward not back leaders and their future. after liz truss told herfinance minister, the chancellor kwasi kwarteng, to go, how long before british conservatives force her to do the same? biden or trump? who will win a second term in the white house, or might someone else get the chance of a first? and can china survive a third term for president xi? in the studio arejeff mcallister, time magazine s white house correspondent during the clinton years, and then chief of the magazine s london bureau. he and his wife no
overturn the islamic republic, as anti government protests enter a fifth week. crowds have again filled the streets of zahedan, the city where dozens of people were reportedly killed by the security forces. it s 3:30, good morning. coming up shortly we will bring you news watch. now on bbc news click. today we are literally stepping into history. we are at alexandra palace. that s the studio and there. 2022 months 100 years of the bbc. what began with a single radio transmission has transformed into a global broadcaster. it has been working to inform, educate and entertain the nation. and throughout those hundred years the bbc has been pushing the boundaries of broadcasting, embracing and sometimes even creating the latest technology. 100 years of broadcasting. it is amazing when you think of it. you don t look a day over 30. and the studio and alexandra palace has a very special place in bbc history. in 1936, the bbc television service was launched right here on this spot. t
necessarily the mini budget. it could just as easily be the fact that the day before, the bank of england did not raise interest rates as much as the federal reserve did, and i thinkjumping to conclusions about causality is not meeting the bbc s requirement for impartiality. jacob rees mogg there on wednesday. on friday, we heard of kwasi kwarteng s sacking. well, it is been a busy week for what used to be the business and economics unit and now the money, technology and data department, but its editor has spared the time to talk to us. and thank you for coming on newswatch. and being ex chancellor and already some viewers said that they feel the need that the media has contributed to his departure. when you have a story which started with the pound being at a record low against the dollar, that spike in government borrowing at the bank of england and intervention up to £65 billion in government u turns, think this is a story that is very dramatic in its own right. but that