0ur correspondent dan johnson is there. it still has the capacity to attract and enthrall, but after a month it s become an overbearing backdrop to much of life here. an incredible spectacle with its own mundane chores. ryan does this once a week. maybe it doesn t affect you directly, he says, but a family member or someone you know. translation: i want it to end. it s not too worrying for me but it is for my family and in the meanwhile, we just have to live with it. this kind of strong mentality that they say, it doesn t matter what comes, we go through it, and go forward. lucas isn t going forward. this is what happened to the house he lived in for 60 years. his wife cannot bear to watch.
7000 people out of dan, over to you. yes, more than 7000 people out of their- dan, over to you. yes, more than i 7000 people out of their homes with a huge exclusion zone in place here to keep people safe. the miracle so far is that no one has been injured or killed, but the volcano keeps erupting, there is more and more seismic activity, stronger earth tremors, ash up into the sky and across all the streets and buildings here and the lava continues to pour, causing havoc. the question everyone is asking, and ifeel i am repeating myself and they feel they are too, they want to know how much longer will this go on for? it still has the capacity to attract and enthrall, but after a month it s become an overbearing backdrop to much of life here. an incredible spectacle with its own mundane chores. ryan does this once a week. maybe it doesn t affect you directly, he says, but a family member or someone you know. translation: i want it to end. it s not too worrying for me but it is fo
ahead of a key summit on tackling climate change the uk government unveils its plan to be carbon neutral by 2050. la palma in the spanish canary islands has marked one month since it s volcano first erupted. 7,000 people have been displaced and nearly 2,000 buildings have been destroyed. the volcano on the spanish isle is continuing to spew lava with no end in sight. 0ur correspondent dan johnson is there. it still has the capacity to attract and enthrall, but after a month it s become an overbearing backdrop to much of life here. an incredible spectacle with its own mundane chores. ryan does this once a week. maybe it doesn t affect you directly, he says, but a family member or someone you know. translation: i want it to end. it s not too worrying for me
comes with it. he s no longer a free agent to go out and spew what he wants to, on twitter, and i was hoping that when he was elected, that he would take that to heart. reporter: as a businessman, as a presidential candidate, donald trump s twitter feed served to inform, enthrall, entertain, and infuriate. and as president-elect, it continues to do so. speaking his mind has served him well, say so many here. i agree with what he s saying now. i think that the vice president and the president-elect should get better respect than they re getting. gary joins us now from atlanta. gary, did any of the people you spoke to think it was notable that the man this was directed at, mike pence, didn t really complain about it? most of the voters do think it s notable and think it s admirable. they like the fact that mike pence is diplomatic, that he is the ying to donald trump s yang. i asked if they think it s strange that mike pence s not upset, but donald trump is? they said, no, that s