hello and welcome. the former chief executive of scottish national party peter murrell has been released without charge by the police, pending further investigation into party finances. mr murrell, the husband of former first minister nicola sturgeon, was arrested on wednesday morning. a police search resumed on thursday morning at the couple s glasgow home. our scotland correspondent james shaw has more details on the investigations that is being conducted at the glasgow house of peter murrell. as you can see, the scene behind me is a big police evidence tent obscuring the front of peter murrell and nicola sturgeon s house. inside the tent is a police van, and over the course of yesterday and it appears also this morning, police officers have been coming and going, bringing material out of the house and putting it into the van. so clearly, this is a live investigation at the moment. it is continuing, even though peter murrell himself was released by the police without charge
to discuss, not least the ongoing disputes over trade, technology, taiwan, and fentanyl. the bbc s james clayton is in san francisco and he s filed this report. apec has started here and it is a huge moment for the city of san francisco, the biggest summit to be held here since the united nations charter was signed here in 1916. this is a huge economic summit. you are talking about more than 50% of all of the world s trade belongs to the 21 nations who will be attending here this week. and we are talking about 40% of the world s population. so it is a big economic conference, but by far the biggest ticket item here is the meeting between president biden and his counterpart in china, president xijinping. relations between those two nations have not been good as late. they last met last year in indonesia and since then you have had that moment where the american government shot down the chinese spy balloon and flaming tensions in the south china sea and also joe biden ramping u
they weren t called out, the fact people were often reporting problems but were not listened to, and obviously there were a number of awful cases highlighted within that, officers who were saying they had experienced racism and misogyny themselves. and that is how that all came about, and today, the met commissioner has been saying, he has been saying for a while that he wanted to update londoners on how progress is being made to actually root out corruption and to turn things around. that is what we are expecting to hear today, what progress is being made. there has been a poll progress is being made. there has been a poll commissioned, - progress is being made. there has been a poll commissioned, hasn tl been a poll commissioned, hasn t there, by the bbc, and carried out by you gals, which has looked at the level of trust among carried out by yougov, about the level of trust in sir mark rowley and his ability to root out corruption. what were the findings of that? that to root o
answer with sensible answers other than the ones that i gave that gave closure then add love it. but i m afraid i can t. because i m just as much in the dark as anybody. he’s much in the dark as anybody. he s duties, much in the dark as anybody. he s duties. he much in the dark as anybody. he s duties, he still much in the dark as anybody. he s duties, he still colonel much in the dark as anybody. he s duties, he still colonel the grenadier years. duties, he still colonel the grenadieryears. do duties, he still colonel the grenadier years. do you think that they will put him somewhere while they will put him somewhere while thejubilee year is underway. will he retire from public service? he temporarily has, effectively, hasn t he? while temporarily has, effectively, hasn t he? while the temporarily has, effectively, hasn t he? while the clean temporarily has, effectively, hasn tl he? while the clean understandably will have he? while the clean understandably will have a