coy, nice to see you. have a great day. thanks for joining me. i m christine romans. new day starts right now. way in south korea, i m john berman with brianna keilar. it s one of the deadliest disasters to ever hit that country at least 154 people killed in a crush of halloween party goers in seoul. pictures shared on social media show the crowd crammed into an alley. 26 foreign nationals including two u.s. citizens are among the dead. witnesses saying the narrow streets were jammed with people trying to enjoy the first halloween weekend without covid restrictions. ivan watson is live for us on the scene in seoul. do investigators have any idea what triggered this surge? reporter: just sheer mass humanity in the alley ways just steps from where i m standing right now. this is an impromptu memorial that has cropped up in the 24, 48 hours since the disaster. as you can see, people paying their respects, flowers, handwritten notes, candles, photos of some of the victi
even during the 705, and i remember the 705 being very tumultuous and divided, but this kind of profiteering, which it is, i m sorry, it makes me sick! we ve got children in our country, all the countries, the poorer countries who can t eat, and these guys are raking it in, and you know what? they will go and support an museum, they will be very philanthropic, they will have the name everywhere, and it is totally unacceptable. the have the name everywhere, and it is totally unacceptable. totally unacceptable. the guardian . uotes totally unacceptable. the guardian uuotes the totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, the - totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, the author l totally unacceptable. the guardian | quotes the professor, the author of this analysis saying the wealth captured by states and fossil fuel companies since 1978 is 52 trillion provided the power to buy every politic
sea. it s expected to be signed on friday. food prices have been soaring since russia invaded ukraine in february. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are yasmin alibhai brown, the author and journalist, and sian griffiths, who s the education editor at the sunday times. hello there. once again, let s have a look through what some of the front page are saying. the mirror leads on the bbc s shameful 1995 princess diana interview which panorama journalist martin bashir secured by making false claims about the ex nanny to princes william and harry. the front pages says cops should charge the culprits . the mail reports on migrant channel crossings, claiming some of those who arrived here came with guns. the times leads with the tory leadership race, as the two remaining candidates trade blows over their differing plans to manage the economy. the guardian reports on the same story, and says mr sunak s opponent liz
crucially temperatures continuing to drop. a 2a, 20 5 degrees, a degree or two higher than we would expect forjuly. 2a, 20 5 degrees. the odd heavy, thundery showers towards the south on friday, temperatures build once again over the weekend, close to 30 across the south and south east. and that s bbc news at six on wednesday the 20th ofjuly, you can keep up with all the latest developments on bbc website. from the hello i m 0lly foster, here s what s coming up on sportsday this evening. can the england lionesses keep their winning run going, they face spain for a place in the semi finals of the women s european championship? i mjane i m jane dougal in i mjane dougal in brighton ahead of england quarterfinal match in spain where they ve been given a boost with their manager back in the dugout. we ll head live to oregon after an historic night for british athletics at the world championships. jake wightman storming to victory in the 1500 metres i kept expecting somebody to
the disproportionate impact is going to have the disproportionate impact is going to have on the disproportionate impact is going to have on many parts of the global south to have on many parts of the global south and the fact that development and pollution are at completely different stages in the global south different stages in the global south. that s well understood, but this report south. that s well understood, but this report also points out how it s impacted this report also points out how it s impacted the country like the uk, and in many ways it s not a surprise we have and in many ways it s not a surprise we have profound race inequalities when we have profound race inequalities when it we have profound race inequalities when it comes to things like health care, when it comes to things like health care, for when it comes to things like health care, for example, life expectancy, and sometimes the reasons for that are quite and sometimes the re