in the second and i think he knew the match had then got away from him and djokovic then took that set on a tie break so it s a straight sets victory for djokovic. jannik sinner will learn a lot from this, it s his first grand slam semifinal but he will be frustrated that he didn t land a punch on djokovic who was playing his 46th semifinal. he is so experienced. on that court in particular, on centre court, where he hasn t lost three decades. not since andy murray beats him back in 2013. he looks comfortable, at ease, at times there was a bit of needle and frustration, there seemed to be someone in the crowd winding up a little bit. he was putting his ears to them at one point when that fan was frustrated at jannik sinner hadn t broken the djokovic serve but when you make novak djokovic angry, hejust gets when you make novak djokovic angry, he just gets better. when you make novak djokovic angry, hejust gets better. i think when you make novak djokovic angry, he just gets be
said mr somerset how was held in slavery, kept in bed, deprived of adequate food and water, kept from his family with curtains drawn, frequently in his own you re in and detriment, unkempt and unwashed and access the content from other humans. expert said he has suffered serious psychological harm and requested a toilet were scorned. he was treated as a call to be milked. there were comments that the level of care that was given to them was only just of care that was given to them was onlyjust enough so that he didn t die. so, those some of the distressing details coming to route to us without breaking news from court as we get a fuller picture and further details will bring those to you. world health experts have classified the artificial sweeter, aspartame, as being possibly carcinogenic, or cancer causing. but they say the current advice on how much to have in a day does not need to be changed. aspartame is found in diet and sugar free versions of foods. our medica
hello, i m lukwesa burak. sudan s army has claimed it s in control of the airport and presidential palace in khartoum after a day of fighting with paramilitary forces. at least 3 people are reported to have died in the clashes. the two sides are in dispute over who governs the country. sudan has been run by the military since a coup in october 2021. international leaders have urged a return to talks which are meant to restore civilian rule. the us secretary of state antony blinken has described the situation as fragile. we want to just play you what happened on sudanese state tv. the newsreader briefly appeared talking about clashes, but listen carefully and you can hear gunshots in the background. gunshots as you see, the picture then froze and a short while the broadcast suddenly cut off. so what s causing the tensions in sudan? at the centre of the dispute are the rapid support forces, a paramilitary group, headed by general mohamed hamdan dagalo, effectively the country
a very warm welcome to the programme. we begin here in the uk. it is the morning after that budget. the chancellor has insisted his first budget is transformational and will get people back into work. jeremy hunt set out major changes to pensions and benefits, as well as an expansion of free childcare in england, all designed to boost economic growth. the new pension tax rules will allow higher earners to save more into their pensions, tax free. the opposition labour party has said it s the wrong priority for the wrong people. emma simpson reports. at this nursery in south east london working parents like charlie love the idea of 30 hours of free childcare for those nine months and over in england. her daughter, dorothy, will hopefully qualify. will hopefully qualify. other to - line, will hopefully qualify. other topline, ecstatic, will hopefully qualify. other topline, ecstatic, i ve - will hopefully qualify. other topline, ecstatic, i vejust i topline, ecstatic, i v
hello and welcome to bbc news. banks and governments around the world are nervously watching the european markets to see if the crisis surrounding credit suisse will develop into a global banking crisis. so far the markets seem reasonably calm with shares in credit suisse rising almost 30% after the swiss national bank gave it a lifeline. and other stocks are up too. but there are concerns that a potential interest rate rise later on thursday by the european central bank could add further volatility to the situation. earlier our business presenter sally bundock explained why the situation at credit suisse was notjust important to the financial community but to all of us: a real worry about credit suisse. if that bank, which is 160 odd years old in switzerland, were to fail, it could have the same effect that the lehman brothers collapse had in 2008, which is it brings a huge amount of fear within markets about the stability of other banks. so people therefore act very quickly