be captain. ibig play in it again and won t be able be captain- be captain. big decision. a lot of mone . be captain. big decision. a lot of money- it be captain. big decision. a lot of money- it is be captain. big decision. a lot of money. it is 19 be captain. big decision. a lot of money. it is 19 minutes- be captain. big decision. a lot of money. it is 19 minutes past - be captain. big decision. a lot ofj money. it is 19 minutes past six. you are watching breakfast. if you ve ever wondered what it would be like to visit bob marley s recording studio or step into the jamaican rainforest well now is your chance, and you can do it without even leaving the country. an immersive exhibition celebrating the life of reggae legend opens in london later this week, and our music correspondent, mark savage went along for a sneak peek. my feeling about this music is that this music will get bigger and biggerand biggerand bigger and find its right people as it gets bigger. bob marley s p
the same uniforms and driving the same vehicles as the afghan government forces they ousted. a new order takes shape. and on a plane out, a new life starts. this 26 year old gave birth to a girl as she flew to britain. a baby named hava, or eve, who may now have a better future. lyse doucet, bbc news, kabul. a better future but a a betterfuture but a hugely challenging one for so many people, even if they are being evacuated from the country. earlier i spoke to abbas nazari, whose family fled afghanistan when he was seven. in 2001, he was one of the more than 400 asylum seekers picked up from a sinking boat by the norwegian ship, mv tampa. he told me more of his experience. 20 years ago when my family and i were forced to flee our village in ghazni province and found ourselves
america packs up, too. in a fleeting twilight, afghans hold fast to documents, to hope. my life is in danger injalalabad. but the flights are almost over. what are you going to do now? so, what about us? we are work with them. we support them. i m cia agent. you? i have documents. this man tells us he worked for us intelligence. some people, like this man, received an e mail saying, going to the gate. other people say they don t have access to e mails. they hear the news that the military flights are all but over. but even in these last few hours, they still keep trying on the basis of what they ve heard. the new face of security in this city. many taliban fighters wearing
rugby, learning to accustom yourself to the way of life here in new zealand but now 20 years on and looking at that journey we have been on i wouldn t trade it for anything else. let me ask you then, given that the evacuation from kabul airport at least is an opportunity about to disappear, we got to be realistic about it, what would you expect or what would you want from western governments in particular who have been so involved in afghanistan over the last two decades? there are so many things that we could say about how incredibly botched this evacuation procedure was, to see that so many allies, people who fought on the front lines in any capacity with international allies, including australian and new zealand defence forces who have been left behind, it is tragic, it is heartbreaking and to see those images. they gave their life and their service and they should be commended for it. in terms of what the international community can do, here in new zealand and australia and of cour
trying to escape the nightmare behind them. britain lost a princess today. described by all to whom she reached out as irreplaceable , an early morning car crash in a paris underpass ended a life with more than its share of pain and courage, warmth and compassion. this is bbc news, the latest headlines: more than 700,000 people are without power including the whole of new orleans as hurricane ida made landfall in louisiana.