they will. and new this morning, the wall street journal says the condo board president sent a letter to residents back in april warning their building was in desperate need of repairs, saying $50 million was needed to fix structural problems. saying the concrete damage would multiple ply exponentially over the coming years and observable damage like in the garage had gotten significantly worse over the years. let s get the latest from morgan chesky, and martin desolo, miami herald reporter that s not just a member of this community but of course covering this story. morgan, we are hearing more signs that there were structural issues leading up to the collapse and all sorts of warnings. what are you learning? reporter: stephanie, in fact, just finished talking with a resident that would have been at home during the night of the collapse, but chose to watch a soccer game at a friend s house. i said did you see signs there were issues. they said for months now he had cr
the cabinet office inquiry into lockdown parties at downing street could be published as early as this afternoon, with several mps saying they will then decide whether to submit votes of no confidence in the prime minister s leadership. foreign office emails leaked by a whistle blower appear to show the prime minister did approve the evacuation of animals from afghanistan in august. mrjohnson denied this at the time. i ll be bringing you all the latest developments as they happen. and i m martine croxall with the rest of the day s stories. one of the uk s biggest covid studies reveals two thirds of people recently infected with omicron say they have had the virus before. pcr tests of about 100,000 volunteers in the react study also showed that one in 23 people had covid in the first three weeks of january. as russia maintains its huge military presence on its borders with ukraine, talks take place in paris to try to defuse tensions. i m ben brown live in downing street. the p
up their babies for adoption in the 19505, 60s and 70s are among those due to give evidence to a parliamentary inquiry, which got under way today. the hearing follows a series of bbc reports and will examine why thousands of pregnant, unmarried women were pressured into giving up their babies. 0ur correspondent duncan kennedy has the full story. these are some of the women who lost their babies through forced adoption, simply because they broke the taboo of getting pregnant out of wedlock. today, they welcomed the news that a parliamentary committee has begun to examine their traumatic experience. a great relief, as much as anything, and gratitude that it s going ahead despite being long overdue. newsreel: it s a wrench to part from your baby, but this mother has decided it would be better. hundreds of thousands of babies were taken from unmarried mothers for adoption in the 30 years after world war ii. today, following the bbc s reports, parliament s human rights committee
the numbers that we see on data over the next few days will be quite staggering. we ll have the very latest. also tonight. the cost of living is rising, with latest inflation figures at their highest rate, for a decade. a life sentence for the murderer of 16 month old star hobson. the toddler suffered catastrophic injuries at the hands of her killer. and, arise sir lewis hamilton, as the formula one star is knighted for services to motorsport. and coming up in sport on the bbc news channel: without victory in their last five premier league games, can southampton return to winning ways at crystal palace? good evening. the uk has recorded its highest number of daily covid infections since the start of the coronavirus pandemic almost two years ago. there were more than 78,500 new cases in the past 2a hours that s 10,000 more than the previous daily record set back injanuary. but england s chief medical officer, professor chris whitty, has warned that more covid records will
subpoenas to people close to former president trump. today their committee chairman telling cnn they re prepared to issue even more this week and they re also attempting to get mark meadows, the former chief of staff to comply with the subpoena request. the chairman saying he is signing a letter with the list of demands they have for meadows. tonight the january 6th slikt committee is weighing its options trying to find a way to compel former white house chief of staff mark meadows to come forward and share what he knows about the events leading up to the capitol insurrection. the committee has been frustrated with his lack of cooperation. last friday meadows blew off a scheduled deposition, leading the committee chair bennie thompson and vice chair liz chain nay warning that the next steps may be referring him to the justice department department for criminal contempt. it may force the select committee to pursue contempt. while the committee has made their threats and discus