lubaina himid, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. it s a great pleasure to be here at this exhibition, which you have curated. ijust wonder if it continues a theme that i see in so much of your work over a very long time that is, trying to make visible people, communities, things which are so often invisible to most of us. would that apply to what you ve done here? yes, i think i m trying to do two things, probably more than two things, but i m certainly trying to do two things. i m trying to make a set of artists who are making really interesting work more visible. and i m trying to show some of the things that those artists and i have seen, observed, discovered in manchester. rooted here in this place, so what do you think this exhibition tells us about manchester, its past and its present, that might not be familiar to even people who live here? well, i think they might be things that are familiar to people who live here. i see audiences as people who bring their stories to
humanitarian agency medicine sans medecins sans frontieres say people remain in gaza, and others without health care. jeremy bowen with more on the opening of the rafah crossing, a warning his report contains distressing images. at last the gates of the rafah crossing were opened. some foreign citizens were allowed to leave gaza for egypt. for the first time, since israel imposed its siege. convoys of aid trucks are moving into gaza, though not nearly as many as the un and aid agencies say are necessary. ambulances went in for the seriously wounded. injabalia, at the opposite end of the gaza strip, more israeli raids. this time they said the target was a command centre. the un said gaza s civilian were being starved, the un said gaza s civilians were being starved, traumatised and bombed to death. 0n the other side of the border wire, israelis are still in shock over the october 7 attacks. this is kibbutz nirim directly facing gaza. for the first time, adele was back to
lubaina himid, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. it s a great pleasure to be here at this exhibition, which you have curated. ijust wonder if it continues a theme that i see in so much of your work over a very long time that is, trying to make visible people, communities, things which are so often invisible to most of us. would that apply to what you ve done here? yes, i think i m trying to do two things, probably more than two things, but i m certainly trying to do two things. i m trying to make a set of artists who are making really interesting work more visible. and i m trying to show some of the things that those artists and i have seen, observed, discovered in manchester. rooted here in this place, so what do you think this exhibition tells us about manchester, its past and its present, that might not be familiar to even people who live here? well, i think they might be things that are familiar to people who live here. i see audiences as people who bring their stories to
that happened when silken s responsible partner was, you guessed it, luther denis. when you look at the official documents stored here at companies house in cardiff, it looks like luther denis must be some sort of shipping magnate or serial entrepreneur. and he signs documents which give away the ultimate control to the real owners. that leaves a gaping loophole where companies house won t tell us who really owns these companies. to me, it s a shock that the government hasn t used the opportunity of the economic crime bill to close down every loophole of which it is aware. and it certainly is aware of this one and, frankly, really can t even be called a loophole. i mean, it s so wide you can drive an oil tanker through it. the government has the chance to close it down with this legislation. it s choosing not to. we asked luther denis to comment, but he declined to say anything publicly. alpha consulting told us. alpha consulting s involvement in uk based limited partnerships
Too far. Hello, good evening and welcome to bbc news. The bomber who attacked the Manchester Arena in may this year, killing 22 people, had been a subject of interest to the Security Service and opportunities to stop him were missed. Thats the conclusion of an official review by david anderson, a former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation. He says its conceivable that the attack by salman abedi could have been avoided had the cards fallen differently. After the manchester bombing, and three terror attacks in london this year, Counter Terror police and mi5 conducted their own reviews, as our security correspondent, gordon corera, reports. Four terror attacks in three months, with some of those responsible known to the authorities, raising questions as to whether they could have been prevented. Today, a review said that the bombing at Manchester Arena, which killed 22 in may, was the only one that might have been stopped. The bomber, salman abedi, had been known to the authorit