welcome to the programme. before we go any further, let s take you to the polish capital warsaw, where it sjust gone midday and a ceremony is taking place to commemorate the memory ofjewish people killed in the warsaw ghetto uprising, which started 80 years ago, on april 19th 1943. more than 10,000 inhabitants were killed when they defied we can heara we can hear a siren in the background marking this key moment as crowds gather. siren blares more than 10,000 inhabitants were killed when they defied we can hear a siren in the background marking this key moment poland s nazi occupiers, while 50 thousand who survived were sent to concentration camps. today s commemorations are being hosted by the polish president, andrzej duda. the presidents of israel and germany are also there. we arejoined by we are joined by our correspondent adam easton. tell us more about what s happening. figs adam easton. tell us more about what s happening. adam easton. tell us more about what s happ
and a hollywood comeback the golden globes return to television screens after being dropped due to a lack of diversity. and twilight of the tigris. why climate change is having a devastating impact on one of the world s most famous rivers. the globe. western leaders are warning president putin not to attempt areas of the country said they would hold referendums on becoming part of russia. there are plans for votes to take place in donetsk, luhansk, kherson and zaporizhzhia regions here in red but a chorus of leaders at the un general assembly in new york said such ballots would be a sham. more on the implications of such a move in a moment, but it does come as russia has suffered a series of setbacks on the battlefield in ukraine recently. and in areas newly liberated by ukrainian forces, disturbing accounts of torture by russian soldiers are continuing to emerge. our senior international correspondent orla guerin reports now from the city of izyum a warning, orla s r
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straight after hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. today, i vejourneyed to the south coast of england to meet one of the great women pioneers of photo journalism, marilyn stafford. she was born in the united states, but she moved to paris where she became the protege of the brilliant cartier bresson. and like him, she loved to capture intimate portraits of ordinary people. she s worked in war zones and on fashion catwalks. and now, at 93, her work is being admired by a new generation. so, what gives her pictures their power? marilyn stafford, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. let s start way back. you trained as an actress, you spent a while as a nightclub singer, and yet you really found your creative voice in photography. what was it about photography that really reached into your soul? i have been called an accidental photographer, because i really did not set out to do the photography at all. the photography was something that was just there. when i was a chi