into monday morning. the death toll inevitably keeps rising and is now into many, many thousands. and it s quite hard even saying that. but one of the people who s been bringing us so much of the hope and the tragedy and the drama and the temperature and the bad weather is our colleague anna foster, middle east correspondent, who sjoining us on newscast now. anna, hello there. thank you for making time for us in what s been a very, very busy, tricky time for you. just give us a sense of where you are right now andjust, i mean, what it really feels like to be there. do you know what s really hard? and one of the things that i ve found difficult but really important isjust trying to give an idea of the scale of this, because you can only see so much here that the camera shows you and you can see everything that s going on behind me. you can see this destroyed building. you can see the rescue workers and you can see the diggers. but, beyond the camera s view, it goes all the way
hello. it s adam in the studio. and chris in the studio. and we ll be joined by various guests throughout this episode of newscast, which has got a bit of a sad start because we re going to focus on the devastation caused by the massive series of earthquakes in southern turkey and northern syria, which happened on sunday night into monday morning. the death toll inevitably keeps rising and is now into many, many thousands. and it s quite hard even saying that. but one of the people who s been bringing us so much of the hope and the tragedy and the drama and the temperature and the bad weather is our colleague anna foster, middle east correspondent, who sjoining us on newscast now. anna, hello there. thank you for making time for us in what s been a very, very busy, tricky time for you. just give us a sense of where you are right now and just, i mean, what it really feels like to be there. do you know what s really hard? and one of the things that i ve found difficult but real
game was up, i think. so she could have appointed somebody else and maybe survived? i think that, although there were undoubtedly extremely difficult periods, i think in somewhat different circumstances, the government could still have battled through that. but certain things happened that made it impossible. do you fear that, fairly or otherwise, because of what happened to liz truss, her government and her ideas so spectacularly, will make it very difficult for any future advocate of a similar kind of political world view to win the argument? because people will forever say, or at least say fora while, cor, blimey, look what happened the last time it was tried? i did worry that immediately after it all happened. i m not so worried about it now, because i can see the growth, free market
future advocate of a similar kind of political world view to win the argument? because people will forever say, or at least say for a while, cor blimey, look what happened the last time it was tried? i did worry that immediately after it all happened. i m not so worried about it now because i can see the growth free market ideas bubbling up again through the conservative party. they re part of the dna of the party and they don t go away. and, you know, we ve got this conservative growth group thing. we ve got the arguments out there in the public domain. and, you know, to me, what was interesting was. is that a whatsapp group? are you pinging round messages between yourselves on this? if there is, i m not on it! any group administrators listening to this.! but i do think that it was an interesting reaction to her article because there obviously there were a lot of people saying it just shows how disastrous the whole period was and how many