She is still on a charm offensive, wanting to reach out to them, explaining her florence speech, and i think she is expected to say, i listened to you back in the summer, i listened when you said the negotiations were in trouble, and i reached out to you and did two big things. I talked about how the uk would be willing to have a transitional phase at it leaves, the Prime Minister calls and an implementation phase, and the other thing she is expected to say is i will make a big commitment on finance, to meet the eu budget going up until the end of 2020, for 18 months after the uk leaves the eu. Essentially, what the Prime Minister is saying is not that she has been disappointed with the response, because she has been very charming tonight, but she is going to say, i understand you cannot formally declared today that sufficient progress has been made in the divorce areas, but i do say to you, please can we move on so that we have that declaration inside when the eu leaders meet here aga
Camp, with little food or protection from the cold. Even worse, you could be held hostage by traffickers and beaten until you pay them for passage. Every day, stories like this emerge from migrants trying to cross north through macedonia, a key country on the main route into the eu. Critics fear that plans to strengthen continental borders could make a humanitarian disaster even worse. The route seems even longer if your legs are short. Braving freezing temperatures, these refugees have reached macedonia, the first stage of the western balkan route. Theyre driven on by the fear that borders along the route could close down ahead of them, and theyre more than glad to leave greece behind. In the camp it was really bad. There is no good food, no warm place. They just told us there are some houses like this, but there is no heat. 48 hours we spend there and they gave us some paper to let us go into europe. But only those who are from iraq, syria or afghanistan are allowed into the country.
Camp, with little food or protection from the cold. Even worse, you could be held hostage by traffickers and beaten until you pay them for passage. Every day, stories like this emerge from migrants trying to cross north through macedonia, a key country on the main route into the eu. Critics fear that plans to strengthen continental borders could make a humanitarian disaster even worse. The route seems even longer if your legs are short. Braving freezing temperatures, these refugees have reached macedonia, the first stage of the western balkan route. Theyre driven on by the fear that borders along the route could close down ahead of them, and theyre more than glad to leave greece behind. In the camp it was really bad. There is no good food, no warm place. They just told us there are some houses like this, but there is no heat. 48 hours we spend there and they gave us some paper to let us go into europe. But only those who are from iraq, syria or afghanistan are allowed into the country.
Bank transactions and more privacy tools keep all of that data secure. But Hari Sreenivasan dissects new revelations saying the n. S. A. Can crack those codes. Woodruff and we return to syria, starting with two looks at its impact on the middle east. Ray suarez reports on the flood of refugees in neighboring jordan. Brown and Margaret Warner is on the ground in egypt. Woodruff plus, mark shields and david brooks analyze the debate over military action. Brown and gwen ifill gets Historical Perspective on how past president s flexed their war powers. If we go through american history, president s, even to this day, have an amazing ability to change americas minds on Foreign Policy when they have to. Woodruff thats all ahead on tonights newshour. Major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by support also comes from Carnegie Corporation of new york, a foundation created to do what Andrew Carnegie called real and permanent good. Celebrating 100 years of philanthropy at carnegie. O
Bank transactions and more privacy tools keep all of that data secure. But Hari Sreenivasan dissects new revelations saying the n. S. A. Can crack those codes. Woodruff and we return to syria, starting with two looks at its impact on the middle east. Ray suarez reports on the flood of refugees in neighboring jordan. Brown and Margaret Warner is on the ground in egypt. Woodruff plus, mark shields and david brooks analyze the debate over military action. Brown and gwen ifill gets Historical Perspective on how past president s flexed their war powers. If we go through american history, president s, even to this day, have an amazing ability to change americas minds on Foreign Policy when they have to. Woodruff thatall ahead on tonights newshour. Major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by support also comes from Carnegie Corporation of new york, a foundation created to do what Andrew Carnegie called real and permanent good. Celebrating 100 years of philanthropy at carnegie. Org