Accused of persuading women not to have abortions. Crisis pregnancy centres are not upfront about who they are and what theyre there to do. No one else should be made to feel how i felt that day. So how many women like me has there been . Im on my way to meet a woman who contacted me about her experience with a Crisis Pregnancy advice service. She was 25 when she became pregnant last year. It was absolutely unplanned, unexpected. And i think i was unprepared for having to deal with that. I googled Pregnancy Crisis Line or pregnancy helpline, just to talk to somebody for impartial advice. And ifound Pregnancy Crisis Helpline. The Pregnancy Crisis Helpline says its supported more than 2,000 women in the last year. But melanie was unhappy with the advice she got. There were things that were with an aim to make me question why i wanted to have an abortion, whether i should. She definitely did some Fear Mongering around the process of a medical abortion, you can heavily bleed for months o
it just came up. 20 seconds later, it was gone. tornadoes and golf-ball sized hail pummelled the southern u.s. there s another rournd of severe weather on the way. plus to conviction, the prison sentence for alex murdaugh and what he had to say during his sentencing. and a man accused of plotting to murder, we ll look at the rise in semitism across the u.s. we start this hour with the extreme weather hitting huge parts of the country. at least ten people have died as the powerful storm system marches across the south and into the northeast. the next western storm will be you shalling inland saturday bringing another round of snow to the pacific northwest, northern and central california. in some places, new snow will be measured in feet. the system that brought tornadoes, damaging winds and flooding to the season central and eastern u.s. will be offshore by later this morning, but the cold part of the storm is going strong. winter weather alerts are in places across p
and how the great pyramid of giza continues to reveal extraordinary secrets. scientists discover a mysterious hidden corridor welcome to newsday. we begin in india, where a meeting of 620 foreign ministers has ended without a finaljoint statement, due to bitter divisions over russia s war against ukraine. it s the first time the us and russian foreign ministers met in public since the invasion, but their exchange has been tense. the us secretary of state, antony blinken, said the talks were marred by moscow s unprovoked and unjustified war. were china to engage in material, lethal, support for russia s aggression, or to engage in a systematic evasion of sanctions to have russia, that would be a serious problem for our countries. i made clear that there would be consequences for engaging in those actions. so, i m not going to detail what they would be but, of course, we have sanctions authorities of various kinds and that would be one of the things we and others would lo
the inquiry into the manchester arena bombing finds mi5 missed a significant opportunity to take action that might have stopped the attack. we ll look ahead to china s national people s congress the first since xi jinping extended his grip on power. and how the great pyramid of giza continues to reveal extraordinary secrets: scientists discover a mysterious hidden corridor. voice-over: live from | our studio in singapore, this is bbc news. it s newsday. hello, and welcome to the programme. in the us, thejury in the double murder trial of alex murdaugh has found him guilty of murdering his wife and son. prosecutors had said the lawyer, from a well known and wealthy family, carried out the killings in an effort to distract from the fact he had been stealing from the family firm. here s the moment the verdicts were read out in court. guilty verdict. signed by the fall lady, 3 2 23. we guilty verdict. signed by the fall lady, 3-2- 23. fall lady, 3-2- 23. we will “ust fall l
that the suicide attack that killed 22 people might have been avoided. now on bbc news, talking movies: berlin film festival special. hello from berlin! i m tom brook, and welcome to talking movies. in today s program, highlights from the berlin international film festival. over 11 days, some 280 films are shown with big names from the world of cinema gathering here in the german capital. we sat down with sean penn, whose documentary superpower on president zelensky was one of the festival s big attractions. british acting royalty was in town with dame helen mirren portraying israeli prime minister golda meir. cate blanchett, oscar nominated for her performance in tar, walked the red carpet, as did steven spielberg, at the festival for a lifetime achievement award. and we look at queer cinema in berlin, which was making quite an impact. berlin has a long history of embracing political cinema in fact, it is an avowedly political film festival and this year, because the fir