north west, where thousands of people have died. the head of russia s wagner mercenary army claims his fighters have captured a village on the outskirts of bakhmut, a city they ve been assaulting for months. you re watching bbc news. now it s time for click. this week lara looks at how to 3d print replacement bones for cancer patients. shiona mounts up for the latest in horse tech. horse tech? yep horse tech. righto. well, there s no time to stop for dinner, so us having it on the go. this is the strangest experience i ve had for quite some time. and finally, time for bed. butjust how chill can paul get? that s the eeg, which is my brain signal. that s pretty flat at the moment which is, you know, pretty on brand. when 3d printers first went mainstream, many imagined a world where some households would be creating missing pieces of board games or spare parts to fix their cars. the reality is actually probably been more impressive because we re getting 3d printed houses an
troops are trying to salvage the wreckage. in washington, president lula of brazil is seeking joe biden s backing for a new global forum, to fight climate change. residents in australia and new zealand are urged to take shelter as cyclone gabrielle hurtles towards the islands threatening to bring destructive winds and heavy rain. you re watching bbc news. now, it s time for click. this week lara looks at how to 3d print replacement bones for cancer patients. shiona mounts up for the latest in horse tech. horse tech? yep horse tech. righto. well, there s no time to stop for dinner, so us having it on the go. this is the strangest experience i ve had for quite some time. and finally, time for bed. butjust how chill can paul get? that s the eeg, which is my brain signal. that s pretty flat at the moment which is, you know, pretty on brand. when 3d printers first went mainstream, many imagined a world where some households would be creating missing pieces of board games or sp
act, which is another vote imminent as, the 11th hour gets underway on this monday night win. good evening once again, i m stephanie ruhle, and while this is the eve of yet another crucial set of primaries which has 99 days to go until the midterm elections we begin this evening s broadcast with major news in the still ongoing war on terror president biden made it official in just a few hours ago. on saturday, and my direction, the united states successfully concluded an airstrike in kabul, afghanistan, that killed the emir of al-qaeda. we ayman al-zawahiri, after carefully clinton s interim clear evidence of his location, i authorize a precision strike that would remove him from the battlefield once for all. this mission was carefully, planned vigorously minimize the risk of harm to other civilians. we make it clear again tonight, that no matter how long it takes no matter where you hide if you are a threat to our people united states will find you and take you out.
zawhahiri is stomach churning.ch he was the ideological master behind behind the turn of al qaeda andnd groups like that toward indiscriminate mass murder of civilians anywhere, including muslims, all in the name of islamic piety and how he got there, we now, looking back at it, it seems like a straight shot, but if he dropped in at any time of his biography, you wouldn t have known, trained as a doctor, as a surgeon, a respected family in egypt, born and raised in cairo. by the time he was 15 years old he was a committed radical who wantedic to impose islamic theecacy by force all of 15 yearsfo old. when islamic militant disassassinate egypt s president anwar sadat at a military parade in 1981, he was one of hundreds ofe islamic radicals who was tried and imprisoned and tortured for years in egyptian prisons. while there he became an informant, supplying information on hisin comrades, and released fromra prison in egypt in 1948 d even more radical than when he had gone in an