Go. Even though no pope has resigned his seat since the year 1415, and this resignation announcement today from Pope Benedict was totally unexpected, despite all of that, there is apparently an agreed upon protocol for what happens in an instance like this. Once Pope Benedict leaves the vatican on february 28th, the church says he will go live for a while in castel gandolfo, which is the popes summer house in a small town outside of rome. He will live at that castle while construction work is done on a cloistered monastery inside the vatican complex. Then when the construction is done, he will move back into the vatican. And living in that cloistered monastery, provided that papal cloistering is like other kinds of cloistering, i think that means he will have no contact with the outside world while he lives there. He will be closed off. In any case, the cardinals will then meet, they say before the end of march, to choose Pope Benedicts successor. And then we will have two living popes
Go. Even though no pope has resigned his seat since the year 1415, and this resignation announcement today from Pope Benedict was totally unexpected, despite all of that, there is apparently an agreed upon protocol for what happens in an instance like this. Once Pope Benedict leaves the vatican on february 28th, the church says he will go live for a while in castel gandolfo, which is the popes summer house in a small town outside of rome. He will live at that castle while construction work is done on a cloistered monastery inside the vatican complex. Then when the construction is done, he will move back into the vatican. And living in that cloistered monastery, provided that papal cloistering is like other kinds of cloistering, i think that means he will have no contact with the outside world while he lives there. He will be closed off. In any case, the cardinals will then meet, they say before the end of march, to choose Pope Benedicts successor. And then we will have two living popes
Turns it around backwards. The freak accident that has spectators freaked out. And a model hoofing it in heels. Shes on stilts basically. What happens when the rubber meets the runway. Oh, no. Oh. Guys, there is a cave in england known as roth johns cave. You can only imagine how it got that name. Probably some time there was a guy named john who didnt make it out of the cave. Fellow who was caving on this particular day with his buddies, he almost got lost himself. This is an area of lost johns cave. Heres where hes trying to go. He is trying to purposefully go in there. Keep watching. It is filling up with water. Thats not good. It begins to fill up. Hes sort of, like, the plug in the bathtub. It looks like runs through here. You see the erosion and how smooth the walls are. Now that hes stuck, hes causing it to fill up. When the camera switches angles, hes stuck, like, right here, around his chest. His choices are up or down. You can hear him starting to freak out. In the you tube d
Dozens of flood warnings are in place across the uk. Forecasters say a months worth of rain could fall in some places. The storm is scuppering travel plans for many. Hundreds of flights have been cancelled and trains services are disrupted. France has recorded the first death from coronavirus in europe, as beijing orders everyone returning to that city from holidays to go into quarantine for m days or risk punishment. From today, companies which provide phone, broadband and Pay Tv Services will have to alert customers when their contracts are coming to an end. And now on bbc news, Victoria Derbyshire takes a look at some of the highlights from her programme this week. Hello and welcome. For the next half an hour, we will show you some of the highlights of our Award Winning journalism over the last week. First, when simon oleary was growing up in ireland and his mum used to say goodnight to him, when he was a boy, he would tell her that he did not want to wake up in the morning. Because
Hello and welcome. For the next half an hour, we will show you some of the highlights of our Award Winning journalism over the last week. First, when simon oleary was growing up in ireland and his mum used to say goodnight to him, when he was a boy, he would tell her that he did not want to wake up in the morning. Because, for years, simon was terrified about his own sexuality. Simon is a producer on our programme. He has returned home to dublin to make this film for you. It does have discussion about suicidal thoughts and self harm. Which some people might find upsetting. So this is where i used to come when i wanted to clear my head. I was 12 and i used to come here and i feel like the only thing i should have been worrying about was getting my homework done, but in my head i was making a master plan to stop myself from being gay. From what i can remember, i started having suicidal thoughts when i was about ten. And i knew id never act on them, but it was the idea that i could put th