now they face the massive task of another reconstruction. well, anywhere else in the world and these men would be builders, but here the work is clearing bomb sites. and from this point, you get such a sense of the power, the force that was involved in bringing this building down. meanwhile, people walk past, and these days they re barely batting an eyelid. it s just another toppled building in gaza. power here is held by groups israel and the west see as terrorists. israel demands complete calm. the groups need to keep control. politics and militancy merge in gaza, so a fragile truce is also a negotiation. one of the armed groups tries to show us it still poses a threat.
goals in the major tournament. so he s up there with some esteemed company in that one. but i think what harry kane gives the side is that leadership there. so maybe not necessarily scoring the goals that he wants to score but he s putting himself in a position and is working for the team and a lot of the things we don t seem as if the players who when they work off the ball and what they do off the ball because we see they do off the ball because we see the pictures and see someone who has the pictures and see someone who has the ball in hand we don t necessarily see what they do when they don t have the ball. so harry kane for me is certainly the best number nine striker the england have and they have to have them upfront and they have to have them upfront and he proved that would not go he got at the end there tonight. i think that you are right as a to get out the back of raheem sterling because he s been fantastic these last four games. brilliant, thank you very much look forward
across the world. you re watching bbc world news america. still to come on tonight s programme: as the ceasefire between israel and hamas is a month old, we report on how restrictions at sea make it hard for gaza s fishermen to earn a living. doubts have emerged that a planned travel corridor between the uk, europe and the us will go ahead before the end ofjuly. a report by the financial times says that officials will be unlikely to reach a conclusion by the end of next month. the same report also says that only those with us approved vaccines could be allowed in. here s the bbc s michelle fleury. here s the thing. if you look at the cdc here in america, or if you look at the fda, i should say, the regulator, they have approved pfizer, moderna, johnson & johnson. not given the green light yet is astrazeneca. so if you set up a system where, for example, vaccinated travellers can come to the united states,
children s futures. now they faced a massive task of another reconstruction. anywhere else in the world and these men will be builders, but here the work is clearing bomb sites. and from this point, you get such a sense of the power, the force that was involved in bringing this building down. meanwhile people walk past and these days they are barely batting an eyelid. it sjust days they are barely batting an eyelid. it s just another toppled building in gaza. power here is held by groups israel and the west see as terrorists. israel demands complete calm. the groups need to keep control. politics and militancy emerge in gaza. so a fragile truce
our middle east correspondent tom bateman reports. everyone in gaza is a survivor. rejab wears old wounds. twice shot for reaching israel s red lines. any further than this and he faces its military. his bow is forced to close to shore to catch the best sorties but he keeps opening. israel says its blockade also backed by israel says its blockade also backed tjy egypt israel says its blockade also backed by egypt stops weapons getting in but it is advocating for people here. it got even tighter during the latest war. as the conflict erupted