they told the international court ofjustice in the hague, that the three months of bombardment violated the genocide convention of 191i8. south africa also alleges, that israel had a genocidal intent against palestinians in gaza, nurtured at the highest level of state. israel has dismissed the case as atrocious and baseless. its lawyers will begin their response on friday. south africa is calling for an immediate halt to the israeli military operation. in court, lawyers outlined the case against israel. the material confirms the rights and issues and their violation. that israel has committed and is committing acts capable of being characterised as genocidal. you have heard from ms hassim about direct extermination of thousands of people and children of the palestinian population in gaza since the 7th of october last year. and south africa and the world together stand witness to the forced evacuation of over 85% of the population of gaza from their homes. and the herding of t
the temperature up here in the alps is rising by about twice the global average. it s already increased by 2 degrees celsius. and 20 years since the us led coalition invaded iraq to topple dictator saddam hussein, we look at the legacy. hello and welcome to bbc news. the world s financial markets have reacted with unease following last night s emergency takeover of the troubled swiss bank credit suisse. shares in credit suisse fell by more than 60% this morning after european markets opened and the value of banking shares across europe have dropped sharply. credit suisse was bought by rival swiss bank ubs in a deal brokered by the swiss government over the weekend. here s the chief executive of ubs explaining the rationale behind the deal. translation: it means we bring back stability and security for credit suisse clients, but also that we keep the reputation of the swiss financial centre high. and finally it means we are stemming the turmoil in the international financial
we re in. the pain at the pump could be playing a big role in how they feel. the white house still shifting blame for gas prices but americans are not buying it. half, 50% are saying the president and his policies are to blame. the top white house economic advisor is playing some dodge ball. haven t played that since fourth grade. this guy is good at it. brian dietz refusing to say what the white house plan on inflation might show results. when do you expect us to see a meaningful change in inflation or in growth? give us a rough idea, how many months, how many years? let me finish the point i was making. manufacturing is come back at a record rate. i want to ask you again when do you expect to see inflation at 2%? will it take three months, a year, will it take two years? we re focused on the policies that will actually accelerate that process. give me a ballpark? there is a lot of people out there in the predicting business. we re in the building business. i t
levels. we re going to talk about that today. david asman and lauren simonetti will join us and then i m going to speak with brian deese, the top economic adviser to the president. he s meeting with the president right now post this decision from the fed. i will ask him what the president has to say, what the approach will be. all along, the president says things like this. the bottom line is this. i truly believe we made extraordinary progress but laying a new foundation for our economy. and texas politics is in the focus with dana perino co-anchor of america s newsroom and the five and kellyanne conway, author of the new have book here is the deal. it s great to have you on set here in new york. first of all, kellyanne, what is your reaction to the fed move? the president and the people representing him haven t been forthcoming with the american people. and american people have been forthcoming with him. we re hearding, they say. the shelves are bear from infant