jesus christ on the cross for al the sins of all humanity. but remember, it all begana with a mob tied to lecci. the unreasonable mob rushedhn in, arrested and killed for the things he said , whichai upset rankled them. trutd.truth h was snuffed out b, at least for a few days. that wall street journal poll recently revealed that the importance of religion has p among americans has dropped from 62%. pe 62% 25 years ago t twenty five years ago to thirty nine percent today. i t i m not sure that s really true. you see, religion seems alive justwell to just look at the fervor of these religiously minded people. look at them communication. o i know the experience of humanity during these times of catastrophic climate change is needed now that s religious activism. liturgies repeated again and again, rooted not in god , but in this case, the green gospel.. they mus t commit these acts of artistic vandalism to furthert d the cause of environment i justice. never mind that
capital, sofia. police say they were in hidden compartments, and had suffocated. thirty four others, including five children, were rescued. now on bbc news our world brits in battle: ukraine. on the battlefields of ukraine, you will notjust find local soldiers but volunteers from all over the world. ukrainian officials say 20,000 international volunteers have travelled to help right back against the russian invasion. many of them came from brayton. they needed help so that is why i got out and help. i they needed help so that is why i got out and help. i got out and help. i have a purpose i got out and help. i have a purpose to i got out and help. i have a purpose to life. i got out and help. i have a purpose to life. from - i got out and help. i have a| purpose to life. from those i got out and help. i have a - purpose to life. from those who never held purpose to life. from those who never held a purpose to life. from those who never held a weapon purpose to li
particularly spring outlook, quite a lot of rain on the way, often windy but generally it will stay mild with double digit temperatures for just about all of us. jane. thanks, ben. you can keep up with all the latest developments on the bbc website. from the six team, it s goodbye. the news continues here on bbc one, as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are, goodnight. hello and welcome to sportsday i m hugh ferris. our headlines this evening. an irish winner on st patrick s day. cheltenham s gold cup goes to galopin des champs and willie mullins. again. could that be just the first reason for ireland to celebrate this weekend? with a grand slam on home soil the prize for a win over england and who won the draw? the champions league lays out its fascinating final eight with manchester city and chelsea picked out in plum ties hello again. he was the favourite and perhaps not just with the bookies. on st patrick s day,
the republican frontrunner for poesident arrested by a democratic prosecutor on political grounds. nothing like that has evercal happened. and we wanted to hear fromanence the man who experienced it. the conversationd and a lot of different directions, heavily on foreign policy. an amazing, really an amazing conversation. here s how it began. you mr. president , thank you for having us . thank you. having n thanklast week you re n new york for this arraignment. the world watched it.raig you ve notnment, given an intert since you were there, i think. fifty seven minutes. tell from your perspective what that was like. well, it was a horrible thing i? because i did nothing wrong.e tn absolutely nothing like you look at evene the pundits, the legal analysis, greg jarrett, all os f theslegae reay talented people, they re saying he didn t do anything wrong. soo anythiwrong. that s number i number two , they werenc incredible when i went to theon courthouse, which is also a prison i
and winds of change. cloud computing, augmented reality, and 100km/h yachts! how sailgp hopes to get the video game generation on board. this we start with the cost of borrowing because it is on the rise again. in the next few hours the bank of england and the european central bank are both expected to increase their main interest rates by half a percentage point to their highest in m years as they battle to bring inflation under control. good news for savers of course, but piling more pressure on businesses and many people with loans and mortgages. for the bank of england, it would be the tenth rise in a row and would take the cost of borrowing to 4% its highest since 2008. on wednesday the us federal reserve announced a quarter percent increase a much smaller rise than in recent months. but its chair, jerome powell, warned that it would not be the last. as samira hussain in new york reports after in new york reports a year of aggressive rate increases after a year o