condemns his health officials as a huge wave of covid cases sweeps through the country. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s 7am in singapore, and 7pm in new york state where president biden has travelled to buffalo, to meet the families of ten people killed in a racially motivated mass shooting at the weekend. mr biden called white supremacy a poison which is running through the us. the bbc s nada tawfik was there as the president spoke and she sent us this report. america has a long and troubled history with racism and guns. the city of buffalo is the latest deadly chapter. joe biden, the latest president to console a community in mourning. in an all too familiar ritual, mr biden and the first lady paid their respects to the victims who were massacred here as they were shopping for groceries. after meeting with family members of the victims, he gave a forceful speech, calling the attack domestic terrorism and urging americans to reje
milestone. putin s war back fires. with fin land moving closer to joining nalto, could russia retaliate as the kremlin cuts off gas to europe. we re following a number of severe weather stories. dangerous storms in parts of the country. raging wildfires damage dozens of million dollar homes out west. and how a two decade drought is eroding one of america s most iconic reservoirs. news on the triple crown, the announcement from the underdog winner of the kentucky derby. and finally tonight, you have to see this video. the good sam tar samaritans who bring a woman suffering a medical emergency behind the wheel to safety. sth is the this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening, and thank you so much for joining us on this thursday night. we want to begin with a crisis many say shouldn t be happening here in the united states of america. a struggle for parents to get baby formula. we learn today that th
that would raise global prices even higher- even higher. indeed, understandably, - even higher. indeed, understandably, that even higher. indeed, i understandably, that is even higher. indeed, - understandably, that is to protect their own consumers, but they do not have long term benefits. what they actually recommend is to focus on some smart spending, and that is to support consumers in their own countries in another way, through gas transfers and social protection measures which help the most vulnerable to get the food that they need at the lowest prices possible, and this was a success story during cold dead, so this can definitely contribute. the other important thing to keep prices stable is to keep trade open for food, fuel prices stable is to keep trade open forfood, fuel and prices stable is to keep trade open for food, fuel and for fertiliser. any ad hoc policy actions on export restrictions. 0ne actions on export restrictions. one other way to do this is to decrease and mi
ukraine and a maidgesser development today. far from the battle fields, finland says it is applying to join nato and sweden is expected to quickly follow, possibly expanding the western military alliance to 32 nations. one of the reasons vladimir putin attacked ukraine was to block it from joining nato. and tonight russia is lashing out. we get more from charlie d agata urnerey nlansto aims,ierce batta has pulled the trigger on another weapon in on its arsenal effectively cutting off gas supplies to europe a day after the ukrainian government halted gas transfers through its territories. you you cranian forces have launched a blistering counter attack outside kharkiv recapturing villages surrounding ukraine s second largest city. running gun battles, street fights, pushing soldiers back, ad cutting off critical supply