with the price of allotments shooting up even faster than these spring greens, thousands of plot holders across the country think they might have to give up their plots. i will find out why costs are going up so much on what people feel about it. de bruyne s brilliance at the bernabeu. this stunning strike keeps city s european dream alive ahead of the champions league semifinal second leg with real in manchester next week. the first eurovision semifinal hits the stage in liverpool. favourites sweden go through, but ireland are out. good morning. yesterday, ireland and the uk had over 8000 lightning strikes. today we are looking at a similar day, showery, some sunshine, but also thunder and lightning and some hail. all of the details later in the programme. it s wednesday the 10th of may. a jury in new york has found former president donald trump sexually abused a magazine columnist in the 19905 and then defamed her by calling her a liar. the civil trial rejected ejean carrol
after a year of coronavirus, senior government figures tell say we should have locked down earlier in the autumn. i love you. no, you don t. know, i don t-u and a red carpet of british talent and diversity is among this year s oscar nominations. good evening. germany, italy, and france are among several european countries that have now suspended the use of the oxford astrazeneca covid vaccine. it follows cases of blood clotting reported in some people after having the jab. so, is the astrazeneca vaccine safe? experts here say it is, and the number of blood clots reported after the vaccine are no more than those typically reported within the general population. and the world health organization says there is no evidence of a link between the vaccine and reported blood clots. our medical editor fergus walsh has more. a public display of confidence in the oxford/astrazeneca vaccine from northern ireland chief medical officer today. by contrast, you cannot have the jab in the i
Is about to come in to circulation but at what cost to businesses . Good morning. Its monday, 27th march, im joanna gosling. Welcome to bbc Newsroom Live. Theresa may will meet scotlands first minister Nicola Sturgeon later today for the First Time Since she rejected calls for a second referendum on Scottish Independence. The visit is part of a tour of all four nations of the uk before the process of leaving the European Union formally begins on wednesday. Its an important time for brexit negotiations with a number of key discussions across the week. Later today, the Prime Minister is expected to give a speech on unity, saying uks union will become even more important as britain leaves the eu. Tomorrow, msps in the Scottish Parliament are to vote on a whether scotland should have a second independence referendum following the brexit negotiations. On wednesday, the Prime Minister will officially begin britains two year exit from the European Union in which shell write a letter to the Eu
happening time and time again. i think alice would like the charity in her name. finding a cure. i think she would really like that. to the lords for its second reading today. the bill aims to deter migrants from coming to the uk by preventing those who do, and ensuring they re removed from the country. peers will now debate the principles of the bill before clause by clause scrutiny at the end of the month. a teenager from kent has spoken of his pride at being a banner bearer during the coronation of king charles iii at the weekend. 18 year old josh siggers was chosen out of 37,000 army cadets to carry their banner on saturday. his duty saw him lead the royal british legion over westminster bridge. supporting the king and his coronation, it felt like i was able to represent my organisation, it was
me now. malcolm, first i wanted to play some eyewitness accounts, two women who were on the westminster bridge and saw it all go down. we heard what we thought was gunshots, turned around, saw a car plowed into a lady, there was bodied literally about ten bodies. 10 or 12 bodies. lying in different places along the bridge. it was horrendous. absolutely horrendous. malcolm nance, the brits, as you know, have decades of experience with counterterror operations. we have the extraordinary situation back in the 80s, where at a labor conference, the prime minister, margaret thatcher, was almost assassinated with an i.r.a. bomb so they went through years and years of dealing with this on a daily basis, and we were talking to a daily mail correspondent who is on lockdown inside and said the brits have a stiff upper lip still. this is the heart, the soul, the