the city s palace in the process. the bronzes were then sold to institutions around the world. now there s no law in the uk which forces museums or other places to return stolen artefacts, but some institutions are doing it independently, likejesus college, cambridge. they were the first institution in the world to return a benin bronze in 2021. more recently, germany handed back 22 bronzes and agreed to release over 1,000 items from their collections. the horniman in london has also sent pieces back to nigeria, and soon cambridge university s museum of archaeology and anthropology will follow suit.
players to go on and lift the world cup for the first time since 1966. it is about performance, but with national pride and so many emotions swirling around here, hopes and expectations will only be building towards kick off tonight. they will hope they can produce are performance but with those emotions at play and all the support from the fans inside the stadium later and watching back home, who knows what will play out later? who watching back home, who knows what will play out later? will play out later? who knows? we will play out later? who knows? we will oin in will play out later? who knows? we will join in with will play out later? who knows? we willjoin in with all will play out later? who knows? we willjoin in with all that willjoin in with all that excitement and build up throughout the programme here this morning. thank you. john will be helping, as well stop sign trying to get my head around the maths, it is complicated. we will explain that for everybody. controve
is intended to become law in the uk next summer. our correspondent, angus crawford has the details. the online safety bill does complete. a bill tabled. we will be proceeding with the online safety. delayed. well, can i thank my honourable. and amended~ it s taken years, but will be back before parliament next week. it was the case of molly russell, perhaps more than any other, that influenced the bill. speaking last week, ian russell said it s been hard waiting and the subjects that surround it have led me to not believe
brought by an iraqi man who arrived in the uk a month ago. in the uk a month ago. doctors say he may have in the uk a month ago. doctors say he may have been in the uk a month ago. doctors say he may have been the in the uk a month ago. doctors say he may have been the victim - in the uk a month ago. doctors say he may have been the victim of- he may have been the victim of torture. he was told his asylum claim was inadmissible. his lawyers say it is open to the government to argue before the court in strasbourg if it wants to overturn the decision, or it can change the law in the uk. decision, or it can change the law in the uk- decision, or it can change the law in the uk. alternatively you could do what you in the uk. alternatively you could do what you could in the uk. alternatively you could do what you could do in the uk. alternatively you could do what you could do in in the uk. alternatively you could do what you could do in a - in the uk. alternatively you coul
or it can change the law in the uk. alternatively, you could do what you could do in a democracy, what you are expected to do and put through a law, put the matter to parliament, and have statute that would approve and embody its policy, which would be fully debated in parliament and the courts could not then touch it. is it time for the uk to withdraw from the european court of human rights, prime minister? that idea, withdrawing from the convention and courts that enshrine and uphold fundamental rights, and which the uk helped create during and after the second world war, is what some tory mps are now advocating but far from all would support such a move. i don t think it is right for us as a party to abandon our historic commitment to european connections. it was british conservative lawyers who wrote it after the war. i believe in human rights, and i think all my colleagues do.