of early exposure to peanut butter. why a spoonful for babies may help prevent an allergic reaction. welcome to bbc news. the international criminal court has issued an arrest warrant for russia s leader, vladimir putin for war crimes. the court says there are grounds to believe that president putin is personally responsible for the deportation of hundreds of children, from children s homes and orphanages in ukraine for adoption in russia since last year s invasion. it s the first time the court has ordered the arrest of a prominent, serving political leader. ukraine s president zelensky, has hailed the decision as historic but moscow dismissed the announcement as outrageous, saying it doesn t recognise the jurisdiction of the court. our diplomatic correspondent, james landale, reports from kyiv. it is a war that he ordered. a war that brought death and devastation. a war that sent millions fleeing for their lives. but it is one that has now left president putin accus
hello and welcome to bbc news. dmytro kuleba, ukraine s foreign minister, has warned that countries which mistreated ukraine during the darkest moment of its history will be held to account after the war ends. in an interview with the bbc, he also warned western allies that delaying the delivery of weapons will cost the lives of ukrainian soldiers. he has spoken to our diplomatic correspondent, james landale. the battle for bakhmut is now the longest of the war. more than half a year of bloody fighting for control of what is little more than rubble. but ukraine s foreign minister told me holding the city was vital, and notjust for the damage it s causing to russia s army. defending bakhmut is emotionally very challenging, because people find it hard emotionally to take, carry the burden of this death, loss of human life and destruction. it s a struggle to save those who are behind bakhmut from that same destiny as bakhmut is now suffering from. he said what ukraine needs
the couch has been to a have you been to a renaissance fair? pete: many times. will: rachel and i have never been. pete: my mom loves the festival but we never wanted to go. because of it i like to say unguard. rachel: this segment kind of talk as lit the bit about biological dinses so before we even started, they were hitting each other with swords. i didn t grab my sword until, you know, the camera came up. now i m going to do what you guys were doing but i think it s interesting that swords were brought and immediately you guys start fighting. pete: absolutely. that s what they re for. rachel: that s what boys do. pete: look at those moves. can t take me. will: renaissance, fair, huh? pete: it s celebrating an era that doesn t get much love. like the vikings. rachel: it s not the vikings. rachel: beer. will: whatever they drink. will: what is mead? rachel: i don t know. it s some sort of drink. we ll see what they drink at the renaissance fair. will: attorneys for hunter
that number is only expected to grow and so it should soon surpass last year s record. matt finn has that story for us, matt. john, the got a ways are they migrant to intentionally invade authorities for there often times involved in those high speed pursuit we see on it daily or weekly basis. we work to his most recent example human smuggler from dallas, texas led dps troopers on a high bead chase u.s. route 77 in rural kinney county. that smuggler lost control and crashed into a ranch. the driver and passenger belt, five illegal cuban immigrants including a 4-year-old child were turned over too u.s. border patrol the driver and passenger were charged with human smuggling. in the rio grande valley texas dps and u.s. border patrol agents pursued human smuggler they are for the driver in illegal migrants bailed out of the car, run and hide underneath the house. agents had to chase them through thick and dangerous brush in the dark than it ultimately rest of the driver and fo
Leader of the soviet union. And we talk to the child refugee from ghana whos now at the summit of britains fashion journalism. Hello and welcome to the programme. Russia has been accused of Shelling A Town near the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear power plant in ukraine, where a team from the Un Nuclear Watchdog is expected on thursday. The plant, which was taken by Russia In March sits on the banks of the dnieper river, 200 kilometres from crimea, which it annexed in 2014. Our correspondent James Waterhouse has the latest from kyiv. The chances of International Inspectors making it to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear power plant were once remote. They are now looking a lot more promising or probable. At the moment, they are in the city of zaporizhzhia, a good hour and a half from the plant itself, but there are still bends in the road. Moscow installed Officials Say they dont yet have the right permissions to make it through their own military checkpoints. In their words, they will have to get in the que