time for a look at the weather. here s louise lear. look at this weather watcher picture from glastonbury. thank you very much. bright skies but clouding over a little and there could be showery rain later. highland scotland, glorious here at the moment. doesn t that beach look very inviting chris make the best of the sunshine has been to eastern scotland, eastern england as well. thicker cloud, rain starting to push into cornwall and into south wales, eventually towards glastonbury as well. ahead of that, some heat and humidity. to the east of the pennines, we could see sharp, thundery downpours being triggered this afternoon. if you get those, they could be torrential at times. that s worth bearing in mind. that is where the highest temperatures are likely to be, 2526 celsius. cooler and fresher out of the west. it is that fresher air that will spread steadily north, bringing showers through the night tonight, but clearer skies, so temperatures will hold up into double figu
they re fully immunised against polio because the virus has been found in multiple sewage samples in london. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sebastian payne, who s the whitehall editor at the financial times, and martin lipton, the chief sports reporter at the sun. welcome to you both, gentleman. lets her show you a few glimpses of the front pages. industrial action makes the lead in several papers. for the guardian, it s the news that tomorrow s train strike action by the rmt union is going ahead. he times main story is the 7% pay deal for merseyrail workers. it says bosses will face pressure from unions wanting similar settlements. the daily mirror takes a different tack saying that if borisjohnson wants to reduce inflationary pay rises, he should start with that of some industry bosses. the daily express chooses to lead on the chancellor s comments that increasing the state pension won t fuel inflation. th
People killed in the strike. Matthew harding says the men were all valued team members, to whom we were very close. It was a tragic loss. He and the men were working as security and safety advisers to the convoy and they were returning to the compound after delivering food aid. He said their roles were to ensure that the convoy followed its Safety Procedures and stays on the correct route and to be on hand should anything untoward occurred. He adds that the man would also have worked to remove people from immediate danger should the convoy had come underfire. Here in cornwall, the flag and the Rugby Football Club where James Henderson played, is flying at half mast today in his memory. Internationally, there has been widespread condemnation of the strike and World Leaders are calling for an explanation. The Foreign Secretary lord cameron has spoken to the media about the deaths of the aid workers. Heres what he had to say. The dreadful events at the last two day is our moment when we s
Hours of disruption, 60 million damage of the statement they have given yesterday. Given the fact ive seen these machines are highly sensitive and to be checked carefully in order to make sure that which is produced that are coming out in high quality. So when you think about the share of advanced Process Notes for the country business, this is more than 65 for the worlds production, this is basically on this island. Ai servers 100 produced in taiwan. So in this regard taiwan has learned from devastating earthquake in 1999 which was 25 years ago, where there was a power outage for almost a week before they could jump almost a week before they could jump back. This is not happened yesterday. So taiwan was better prepared to cope with the situation. Prepared to cope with the situation. , h, situation. Given there is so much chip situation. Given there is so much chip that situation. Given there is so much chip that happens i situation. Given there is so much chip that happens in | much c
Rishi sunak pays tribute to the three british aid workers killed in the attack describing the deaths as an awful, awful tragedy as politicians in the uk call for an arms embargo. Dozens remain trapped in road tunnels in taiwan after the biggest earthquake there in 25 years. At least nine people have died, with more than 800 injured. And the president of botswana threatens to send 20,000 elephants to germany in a dispute over conservation. Time for a look at the Business News now. Good afternoon, a quick look at our top stories. Energy leaders are faced with multiple diverse challenges on the path to net zero. Amongst them are ensuring energy security, affordability and delivering wider economic goals right around the world. In particular, Global Energy systems are showing signs of deficiencies and strains everywhere. These are the findings of the 2024 World Energy Issues monitor, a Major International survey by the world energy council. Dr Angela Wilkinson is secretary general and c