under way on bbc two, the news continues here on bbc one , as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are, but from the ten team it s goodnight. across france, protests, riots and looting run into a fourth night. president macron closes transport networks, blames social media but what can he do to end the unrest? one further fatality reported tonight after violence sparked by a police killing of teenager of north african origin in the french suburbs on tuesday. we ll hear from someone who knows her way round the activist movement. also tonight. rwanda is being condemned by the un, the us and the eu for supporting the m23 rebels in the democratic republic of congo. the last time this happened, the uk pulled aid to rwanda. the conservative aid secretary responsible for that 2012 decision tells newsnight the uk approach to human rights atrocities risks being downgraded. we speak to the former un assistant secretary general for
it wasjustine greening who made that decision then as aid secretary, telling kagame s government herself. after this new un report, she told newsnight. it s important that uk foreign policy and this country s leadership on important matters of human rights atrocities, including violence against women, is not downgraded as a result of our domestic policy approaches. this un report also underlines the practical complexity and sustainability issues of intertwining the delivery of britain s asylum policy with any third country, particularly one facing such demonstrable wider regional stability challenges. now, british criticism has been thin, with the foreign secretary last year declining to criticise rwanda, and the only response to the recent un expert s report a statement from a uk envoy that condemned external support given to armed groups, but did not mention rwanda by name. the us and eu have told rwanda