the current political mood. welcome to our viewers on pbs in america and around the globe. we start with a special report from ukraine as russia has again targeted ukraine s energy infrastructure in a wave of missile strikes across the country including the capital kyiv where the mayor says four out of five people have been without running water. ukraine says russia fired at least 50 missiles but it was able to shoot most of them down. our international editor jeremy bowen has spent the last week travelling through ukraine from the front line battlefields of the donbas, to the villages in kherson, where some of russia s best troops are concentrated to try to stop the ukrainian offensive. his report contains some deeply distressing details. for ukrainians, this is a fight for national survival. the hardest test any nation can face. it upends every life. it has ended the lives of thousands. this is bakhmut, under heavy shelling. at the moment, the centre of the artillery wa
secretary for it and i resigned. the home secretary has for it and i resigned. the home secretary has been for it and i resigned. the home secretary has been mounting i for it and i resigned. the home secretary has been mounting a | secretary has been mounting a spirited defence on both counts to mps in the house of commons. also tonight. a special report from the front line of the fighting in ukraine and the devastation it leaves behind. look at it. desolation. this is what months of attritional warfare does to a town. could there be a shortage of turkeys this christmas as new restrictions come in to fight the uk s largest ever bird flu outbreak? and how our unseasonably warm autumn may look beautiful but is jeopardising ecosystems, confusing plants and animals. and coming up on the bbc news channel. on the eve of the women s rugby league world cup, host england prepare to take on south america s first ever qualifiers, brazil. we start the night with a special report
from her private account. with the home secretary under huge political pressure we ll be asking whether she s done enough to ward off her critics. also tonight. a special report from the frontline of the fighting in ukraine and the devastation it leaves behind. look at it. desolation. this is what months of attritional warfare does to a town. a political comeback in brazil for the left wing former president who s won power by a narrow margin. and how our unseasonably warm autumn may look beautiful but is jeopardising ecosystems and confusing plants and animals. coming up in sport on the bbc news channel, wales rugby league world cup comes to an end after they are beaten by papua new guinea who will now play england in the quarterfinals. good evening. the home secretary suella braverman has spoken of an invasion of migrants into england and says that the immigration system in the uk is broken and illegal migration is out of control that s despite the conservatives b
in connection with the collapse of a bridge in gujarat, in which at least a hundred and forty people died. i m laura trevelyan in president biden s hometown of scranton, in the battleground state of pennsylvania, where i ve been talking to voters one week before the crucial us midterm election. live from our studio in singapore, this is bbc news. it s news day. it s news day. it s seven in the morning in singapore, and one in the morning in ukraine where the government there says power and water supplies across the country have been badly hit after russia launched a wave of missile attacks across the country. in the capital kyiv, the mayor says 4 out of 5 people have been without running water. ukraine says russia fired at least 50 missiles but it was able to shoot most of them down. our international editor jeremy bowen has spent the last week travelling through ukraine from the frontline battlefields of the donbas to the villages in kherson, where some of russia s bes