attack near our sheaffer and the palestinian red crescent says israeli snipers have fired at a local hospital. those inside say it is now surrounded and in indonesian hospital said it is now tonight has no electricity, internet or water. this report was sent and it does contain expressing images. gaza s hospitals are seen by locusts as places of shelter. by locusts as places of shelter. by israel as hiding places for hamas. at our sheaffer hospital the displaced live side by side with the wounded. the line between them sometimes very thin. why? she is screaming. israel says this is where hamas has its underground headquarters. it is now surrounded by israeli troops. translation: we were staying on the fifth floor and then we found bombs falling on our. my niece was killed. she was already wounded from before but now she is dead. tanks filled inside this children s hospital a sign that the battle between israel and hamas is closing in. the streets around these places of refuge
of europe and asia, and its food scene is as diverse as its rich history. turkish culture has evolved through the rule of successive empires, each leaving its mark on what s eaten here now. i m on its western coast. izmir is a port city and turkey s third largest metropolis, a cultural capital in its own right. in its history, this peninsula has been home to greeks and romans and, under the ottomans, became a vibrant mix of religions and cultures. and i m told that, even till this day, you can really see how this has had a huge influence on the area s cuisine. to guide me around, i m meeting local fellow foodie gokcen coskun, a globetrotting influencer who s on a mission to find the world s best eats. marhaba. hi, i m nick. welcome to izmir. 0h, thanks for having me. gokcen says, despite her extensive gastronomic travels, izmir is still her undeniable foodie paradise. have you always lived here? i born here, actually. oh, yeah? lots of people, lots of geographically different
the sensors every 100 meters in more remote areas and 15 meters near well walked paths. so it looks like quite a lot of smoke coming off there. would that be enough already for your sensors to to be able to detect? that is enough for our sensors. so this smoke needs to reach the sensors, that means if the sensor is close to the smoke, for example, on this tree, then you have it within seconds. but it s notjust the eye and the sensors that are innovative. there s another problem that needed solving. we re here in a forest, in a rural area where i imagine there isn t much mobile signal. how do you get the data from the sensors out to where it needs to go to? because mainly there is no internal telecommunication infrastructure in the forest, we bring our own telecommunication infrastructure to the forest. so this is the mesh gate. oh, wow. okay. yeah. these mesh gateways needs to hear over the air. if one of these sensors in the forest has an alarm or a signal and so on, and the
told the bbc that the company did not give clear and definitive confirmation that the lines were de energised. the result was police treating fallen lines as live, and blocking roads. one witness, travis miller, showed the bbc his footage. he filmed the main road going north out of the town, blocked for hours by the police. i knew like once i saw the road block, this is insane. like, those people are on the road, not because of a trafficjam but one that is created by, you know, our authorities. the mayor of maui, richards bisson, told the bbc the town should have been better prepared. you know better preparation, right, i mean, that s what everybody is pointing to. who should take responsibility for that? we all should take responsibility. all of us, for sure. at least 99 people lost their lives that day, and authorities are still trying to identify remains using dna technology. u i and the people she took with her were able to escape the fire, but several of her neighbours w