people. a lot of us accompanied us on boats and planes. that was fundamental. a lot of them. this fundamental. a lot of them. this crime has fundamental. a lot of them. this crime has horrified fundamental. a lot of them. this crime has horrified people here in brazil and globally. it has brought into sharp focus the dangers faced by those wanting to save the forest. the criminal activity that takes place in the vast, beautiful, yet are threatened amazon. dom s wife says the tragic outcome puts on enterthe the anguish of not knowing dom and bruno s whereabouts. this brings the search to an end enclosure for the families who pushed so hard in trying to find the men. but of course it also reveals the brutal criminality in the amazon, and the lack of ability by the steak to control it. state. the family now say they will fight for justice. katy the family now say they will fight forjustice. katy watson, the family now say they will fight for justice. katy watson, nous. th
contemplated resignation? there are few instruments available to an independent adviser, and. i am going to take that answer as, at least it was on the agenda. we ve mentioned before in evidence that it s always on the agenda as an available remedy to a particular problem, and one that my predecessor indeed exercised. a government spokesperson said last night. the person who should have left downing street tonight is the prime minister himself, and the whole country will be wondering just how long do they have to wait for those tory mps to do the right thing? lord geidt is the second standards adviser to quit in less than two years, leaving the key role of scrutinising standards in government, vacant once again. jonathan blake, bbc news, westminster.
lord geidt used to be the queen s private secretary. in his more recentjob, he oversaw ethics and behaviour in government, amid rows about the prime minister s own conduct, and at times a strained relationship with number 10. there ve been lots of reports, lots of rumours that he was unhappy. there was that suggestion that he was 60 a0 in favour of resignation a few weeks ago. so clearly it s been put about that he wasn t happy. i think you could also tell from some of the tortured language in some of his reports, his letters to the prime minister, and the statements that were put out around the revisions to the ministerial code recently, that he was dancing around these sorts of ethical issues with a lot of difficulty and some pangs to his conscience. there was a legitimate question, lord geidt said last month, over whether borisjohnson broke the ministerial code by breaking covid laws. but the prime minister insisted he hadn t. ..whether you ve
some morning. we will try to find out some answers. but at the moment, exactly some answers. but at the moment, exactly what led to lord geidt taking exactly what led to lord geidt taking that decision is in the public taking that decision is in the ublic. ~ , , ., public. we will definitely try to find some public. we will definitely try to find some answers. public. we will definitely try to find some answers. thank- public. we will definitely try to | find some answers. thank you, public. we will definitely try to - find some answers. thank you, nick. we would bejoined byjustice secretary and deputy minister dominic raab at half past seven. the sister of one of the three men sentenced to death by a russian proxy court in eastern ukraine, has told the bbc that she feels his story is being ignored. moroccan born brahim saadoune was captured along with two british men, aiden aslin and shaun pinner while fighting in the ukrainian army. our correspondentjoe inwood joins us
is what they hope. panda; should cool down the economy, that is what they hope. is what they hope. andy verity at the bank is what they hope. andy verity at the lsank of is what they hope. andy verity at the bank of england, is what they hope. andy verity at the bank of england, thank- is what they hope. andy verity at the bank of england, thank you. | new figures show the health service in england is still under intense pressure as the country recovers from the pandemic. the number of people waiting for a routine operation climbed to nearly 6.5 million in may that s one in every nine people in england and the highest since records began in 2007. but the nhs says there are signs of progress, with a fall in the number of people waiting more than two years. in a&e, 73% of people were seen within four hours. that is up slightly on last month but below the 95% target. ambulances in england took an average of a0 minutes last month to respond to emergency calls such as strokes or hear