but we haven t really heard the solution yet or to trying to get all of that grain out of the crate. and as a ticking clock here, because once the next harvest it starts to come on, getting that grain out of the ukraine will be essential or otherwise. there won t be any way to put that harvest in the old. the old great harvest from last winter will of course, start going bad. so a potential major problem looming, but we haven t heard really the solution to crack it yet. later today, the foreign ministers will make with their nato counterparts, finland, and sweden, who s nato membership is on the table, are also set to join the meeting. has there been any pushback yet? well, the g 7 member states who are also members of nato, all heading down to berlin for those talks later today. and certainly finland and sweden. this is going to be one of the main focus is these 2 countries that as a result of proteins ward now say that they want to join nato. there s seen wide support acros
in tuesday s hearing in front of a senate subcommittee, mr calhoun plans to speak directly to the families of the 346 people killed aboard two boeing flights more than five years ago. according to his prepared remarks, mr calhoun expects to speak directly to the family of the people killed. he will also express regret about a january incident that led to a door panel blowout mid flight aboard a 7a7 max 9 aircraft, as well as gratitude there were no fatalities. mr calhoun had served as president and ceo of boeing since january 2020. he plans to tell senators he understands the gravity of boeing s responsibility to uphold aerospace safety and that the company will take action to ensure its safety standards are met and will hold itself accountable. but he will be asked to answer for the company s failures, including criticism that the company put profit over safety. a recent meeting between boeing executives and the united states chief aviation watchdog ended in a plan for syste
mines are closing down. man: coal, for the last hundred years or so, has really powered the economy. it was critical to the industrialization of this country. now, with the declining world markets for coal, the price of the export coal has collapsed, so the economics of the thing has changed. i m a public interest lawyer concerned particularly about mining and mine communities. presently we re putting together a series of legal actions against the coal-mining industry. it s a bit of a race against time. there is massive restructuring and reorganization taking place. essentially, the big majors, the big players who were all involved in the south african coal-mining industry are getting out as fast as they can, selling off their assets, splitting them up into tiny parcels, and a corresponding upsurge in small, fly-by-night little companies with very little accountability doing what they will. there s no management, so the richest seams are being mined out, and everything else i
don t care what going on with the communities. man 2: any activity by human beings will somehow, you know, like, chan the ecosystem that we operate in. zulu: where the guys work, it s way, way, way too far. i think we can about 1.5 kilometer. man, voice-over: yes, south africa does have mountains of coal, but we also have mountains of asbestos, and we decide to leave asbestos in the ground where it belongs. man 2, voice-over: where the coal mines and the power stations are located is amongst one of the most polluted areas on earth. man 3, voice-over: a very, very large cost to coal-mining. you re basically signing death warrants for people who live there. zulu: the people here are working just to put food on the table. there, they just have to survive. [camera lens clicking] announcer: earth focus is made possible in part by a grant from anne ray foundation a margaret a. cargill philanthropy the orange county community foundation, and the farvue foundation. [distant rumbli
Power in the early hours of wednesday president Robert Mugabe has been confined to his home but the army says its not a coup or im a tosser reports from harare. Parts of harare are now on lockdown and soldiers and Army Vehicles have blocked roads to government offices parliament and the courts people say they are cautiously waiting to see what happens next many are relief so far there has been little violence i can see every movement as usual no more business. Moving around freely. With. The countrys war veterans say they have had enough of president Robert Mugabe many helped keep him in power for nearly forty. God. Should have been recalled from is a role as the president insisting. The bobbies army said on wednesday the president Robert Mugabe and his wife are safe in their private residence south africas president jacob zuma said he was concerned about the situation in a phone call with mugabe confirmed he was fine we would like to call for calm in the strain. Particularly to the De