a former italian prime minister and leader of the centre left democratic party. is his effort to keep the far right out of power doomed to fail? enrico letta, welcome to hardtalk. thank you so much for the invitation. we appreciate your time, particularly because you are in the middle of a fiercely fought election campaign. would you accept that right now, you in the centre left look as though you are going to lose? no, i think we will win. how can you think that, when the raw mathematics of this election look so bad for you? and i say that because the right has coordinated, it has organised, there is a very clear coalition of interests between all the right wing parties. they are fighting as a team. you, on the left, are not. there are two reasons. first reason is the fact that there s 40% of the people saying that they will abstain, or they are not decided. they have not decided what they want to do. second, because the unity of the right is a fake. they are united today, b
liz truss, has promised immediate action on surging energy prices, as she faced her first series hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are annabel denham, director of communications at free market think tank, the institute of economic affairs, and anand menon, director of the think tank the uk in a changing europe, which describes itself as providing independent research on brexit and its impact. we will say hello and just a moment after we take a look at the actual front pages. the i previews tomorrow s announcement on energy bills, saying liz truss will unveil emergency support, but leaves questions over how it will be funded. the times reports that the £150 billion package will rely on government borrowing to hold bills steady for two years. about time, says the mirror. but the paper criticises the decision not to expand the windfall tax on oil and gas firms to pay for it. the new pm will revolutionise energy suppli
live from our studio in singapore, live from our studio in singapore, this - live from our studio in singapore, this is - live from our studio in singapore, this is bbc| live from our studio in- singapore, this is bbc news. it s newsdav welcome to bbc news, broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. we start with breaking news from canada where police say they have arrested myles sanderson four days after ten people were killed in a stabbing attack in saskatchewan. sanderson was one of two people wanted in connection with the attack. the othger, his brother, was found dead on monday. a motive for the attacks still isn t clear. we can speak now to our north america correspondent, nomia iqbal, who s in melfort, saskatchewan. nomia, saskatchewan. it is great to get you on nomia, it is great to get you on the programme. i want to start by asking you, i appreciate that there is a lot we don t know and the fact that we don t know and the fact that we don t know why
who s lying in state at the ground of his former club, santos. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are kevin schofield, who s political editor of huffpost uk and eleanor langford, political reporter at politicshome. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. the ft leads with its annual survey of uk economists finding a majority believe the recession here will be worse than in other countries. the i reports comments by a leading health boss that extreme pressure on hospitals will continue for at least another three months. the mirror s take is that the future of the nhs is on a knife edge. the times quotes a government source as saying the current wave of rail strikes will turn a generation away from train travel. the telegraph leads with prince harry s latest round of interviews and his claim that he wants reconciliation with his father and brother. the mail has the same story about prince harry and also includes
as you are saying, pele died last thursday under december the 29th at the age of 82, of colon cancer. he had been ill for a while and for the past few days, brazilians were able to remember the key moments of his career, his most beautiful goals. he scored 1283 of them, so it was a time for brazilians to remember stories of the past. and pele was a key figure in the making of brazil s image abroad. at 17, he won brazil s first world cup in 1958. to give a bit of context, 1958 was also the year in which brazil s great composer launched the song that inaugurated the bossa nova movement, so it was a big year for brazil. in 1962, he won his second world cup and in 1970, the third world cup. that one has been talked about amongst brazilians because brazil was going through a ruthless military dictatorship at that time and the regime used that to try to divert the international community s attention from what was going on in brazil. but politics aside, pele was one of the greatest