and right now we are striking from the air every single day when we do not know where my cousin is, when we do not know where over 200 hostages are and we don t know if any of our bombs have killed them. here in london thousandsjoin pro palestinian demonstrations. similar protests take place around the world calling for a ceasefire. fresh aid enters gaza and the un tells the bbc they ve managed to re establish some contact with their teams on the ground. hello and welcome. i m lewis vaughan jones. israel says the war has shifted into a new phase. this is what happened last night. an intensification of air strikes and bold moments bombardments over gaza. 150 underground targets were hit and several senior hamas commanders were killed. there was a ground incursion as well in the latest information we haveis as well in the latest information we have is that troops are still on the ground in north gaza now. these are pictures from earlier today as the assault on gaza con
we begin with some football news. england have beaten serbia in their first game at the european championship in germany. jude bellingham scored the only goal in the first half. the real madrid player picked out a pass from bukayo saka. thesejubilant scenes at an england fan zone in london as the goal went in. gareth southgate s side are one of the favourites to win the tournament, having reached the final in the last tournament. our sports editor dan roan was pitchside after the game. they ground out a crucial win. that was the kind of game before southgate that england may have drawn or even lost. it s a fourth time in the four major tournaments thing when i won the crucial opening game. first half, england were really good. bellingham majestic as we heard. sachar as well. after the restart, serbia was much more energetic. there were debates around whether the start. now, let s go to a couple of guys. we actually watched the game with these two guys here. shaq, kai, we re l
does the green party now accept that thatis does the green party now accept that that is a totally retrograde step that is a totally retrograde step that puts ideology before a women and their babies health? this that puts ideology before a women and their babies health? and their babies health? this is a sensitive subject and their babies health? this is a sensitive subject and and their babies health? this is a sensitive subject and a and their babies health? this is a sensitive subject and a woman . and their babies health? this is a - sensitive subject and a woman always has the right to choose what happens to her body. policy needs to be decided by health experts. in the green party are education policies overlooked by teachers and health policy overlooked by gps. this was never going to be in the manifesto and certainly isn t in the manifesto. if you will bear with me for 20 seconds, policy is decided on the green party, one member one vote so any member c
overall, it is hoped this census will provide a clearer view. so, for the first time, sexuality and gender identity will be a matter of national record. what difference will that make? well, some organisations say the data could be very useful. both in terms of funding and, for this youth homelessness charity, how best to focus support. as we expand our services, we would like to know where young people are that identify as lgbtq plus, so that we can target those areas and make our services go further. landmark buildings lit up in census purple ahead of this sunday, the day to base your answers on. in scotland, the census has been pushed back a year. in northern ireland, there s no question on gender identity. nevertheless, a hope it might all shine some sort of light on the society we live in. jessica parker, bbc news. and that s it. now on bbc one, time for the news where you are. have a very good night. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bri
welcome to our viewers on pbs in america and around the globe. it s exactly one year since the world health organization officially declared the coronavirus outbreak as a pandemic that s the point the disease was confirmed as a truly global problem. covid 19 has so far claimed 2.6 million lives but there s hope on the horizon as vaccines reach some of the furthest corners of the world. our global health correspondent naomi grimley has been looking at the pandemic one year in. it s been a year that most of us will remember for the rest of our lives. one of grief and loneliness on a scale none of us could ve imagined. it s exactly 12 months since the world health organization officially sounded the alarm about the seriousness of covid 19. we have therefore made the assessment that covid 19 can be characterised as a pandemic. and yet, after a whirlwind of scientific discoveries, we re now seeing vaccines being distributed to some of the most remote communities on earth. in bra