is now more than 30,000. but remarkably, survivors are still being pulled from the rubble. both the un and syria s voluntary group of rescuers known as the white helmets say the international community has failed people in the country s northwest, 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. politicians in the us say the military has shot down an undentified object above lake huron the third such shoot down in as many days. officials haven t disclosed details about the object. the police have arrested two teenagers on suspicion of murder, after the fatal stabbing of 16 year old brianna ghey in warrington park. the bbc chairman richard sharp is accused of making significant errors ofjudgment by mps for not declaring his involvement in helping britain s former prime minister, borisjohnson secure a loan. and on this super bowl
the king s visit to germany later in the week will still go ahead. coming up here on bbc news, it s newswatch. first, though, atjust after 3:30, it s time for click. have you ever wondered what happens when a satellite goes wrong? how would you know what was up? 30 seconds. that s what i have come to texas to find out. we are at this 200 acre site to film a hot fire test of a rocket engine. when it first starts up, it s going to be relatively gamey, you re going to see some shock waves. oh, wow. and we are going to do it in a way that even the rocket makers themselves have not done before. mission control: four, three, two, one. in 2022, firefly aerospace became one ofjust a few us companies that have successfully put things into orbit. cheering look at that view! the company has also won contracts from nasa to build a lunar lander that will deliver payloads to the moon in 2024 and 2026, and put a satellite into lunar orbit. but it s the bit between launching from the earth a
of violent disorder after police in merseyside, north west england, clashed with demonstrators outside a hotel housing asylum seekers. police say a protest and counter protest were initially peaceful, but trouble flared when a van was set alight. in a moment on bbc news, it s newswatch. but first, it s click. 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 and even 3d printed body parts. and some of the latest trials involve printing bones for people who ve had cancer. researchers at king s college london and clinicians at guy s and st thomas nhs foundation trust are collaborating on a project to help cancer patients like colin. i d got a few appointments, first of all. i had several tests and a biopsy, which then diagnosed me with cancer. you ve got to look at what
coverage, one of whose findings was that many viewers find the output incomprehensible , and some of the terminology used mystifying . simpler language and more explanation appear to be the answer, and notjust in the area of economics but some members of the audience think that can be taken too far. take these lines seen on the bbc news website on tuesday: clive couzens read that, and this was his reaction. i m wondering what the bbc thinks of its audience, whether they think we have any intelligence at all. in recent days, reporters on the website, on the news website, have felt it necessary to explain that the cabinet is rishi sunak s group of senior ministers and that inflation is the rate at which prices are rising . given that inflation has been in the news daily for several months now, is it really necessary? where will this end? will they soon be telling us that apples are a crispy green fruit, for example? please, give us some credit for some modicum of intelli
to leave prison and move into house arrest. him, his brother and two romanian women are being investigated on allegations of rape, people trafficking and forming an organised crime group. they all deny wrongdoing. coming up on bbc news, the latest edition of newswatch. first, though, here s click. this is the uk s national centre for data science and artificial intelligence, the alan turing institute, named after the mathematician considered to be the father of computer science. artificial intelligence is the idea of notjust us programming computers, but them being able to learn for themselves and alter their own code. yeah. and, in fact, it was the big guy himself who came up with the idea of the turing test, suggesting a computer could be regarded as truly intelligent if it could chat to a human and fool that human into thinking they were talking to another human. now, you and i have both tried chatgpt and all the latest ai chatbots. do you think that test has been passed n