By a court in germany. And in the uk, conservative mps prepare to eliminate another candidate from the party Leadership Contest. Hello, im annita mcveigh, and welcome to Bbc News now, three hours of fast moving news, interviews and reaction. We start in the Middle East where israel says it has killed the commander of hezbollah S Headquarters in an Air Strike on the lebanese capital, beirut. It comes after Benjamin Netanyahu described his Countrys Year long Military Campaign as a sacred mission which he said will continue so long as israel S Existence is threatened. In a moment, we ll go to southern israel for the latest from our chief international Correspondent Lyse Doucet. But first, let S Briefly Recap the latest events including, as we ve been reporting in the last few hours, that claim from israel that it has killed the leader of the proscribed terrorist organisation, hezbollah. It follows a Televised address by israel s Prime Minister who said the operations in gaza, lebanon an
Tried to investigate. Hes been talking to the bbc s amol rajan. Phillip, come on in. Good to see you. Thank you. Phillip schofield granted this interview because he wanted to say sorry, he wanted to show contrition and he wanted to correct some of what he sees as the false narratives in the Public Domain over the past week. Are you feeling 0k to do this . Are you feeling Strong Enough to do this interview . Yeah, i have to. Schofield described the enormous toll recent days have taken on him. It is relentless. It is day after day after day after day. If you do that. If you dont think that is going to have the most catastrophic effect on someone s mind. Do you want me to die . Because thats where i am. I have lost everything. Schofield says he is extremely concerned for the welfare of the young man with whom he had an extramarital affair. There is an innocent person here who didnt do anything wrong. When did you first meet this young man in question . What were the circumstances . I was
tried to investigate. he s been talking to the bbc s amol rajan. phillip, come on in. good to see you. thank you. phillip schofield granted this interview because he wanted to say sorry, he wanted to show contrition and he wanted to correct some of what he sees as the false narratives in the public domain over the past week. are you feeling 0k to do this? are you feeling strong enough to do this interview? yeah, i have to. schofield described the enormous toll recent days have taken on him. it is relentless. it is day after day after day after day. if you do that. if you don t think that is going to have the most catastrophic effect on someone s mind. do you want me to die? because that s where i am. i have lost everything. schofield says he is extremely concerned for the welfare of the young man with whom he had an extramarital affair. there is an innocent person here who didn t do anything wrong. when did you first meet this young man in question? what were the circumstance
after bloomberg reported they are among the banks under scrutiny in a us department ofjustice probe into whether financial professionals helped russian oligarchs evade sanctions. shares of ubs and credit suisse fell more than 6%. and secondly deutsche bank slumped more than 13%, after a sharpjump in the cost of insuring against the risk of default after concerns about what happened to credit suisse. so what is happening to an already beseiged banking sector? hopefully, russ mould, an investment director at aj bell, can help us make sense of it. ross, what is happening? i think ubs and credit suisse under in a regulatory investigation is clearly unfortunate. equally, both forums have been under regulatory scrutiny before, so perhaps you shouldn t be quite so shocked there. i think the rise in deutsche bank is indicative of wider loss of confidence in the banking sector. i think there is a gathering fear that central banks may have overdone it with great interest rate increases
a classroom door at the uvalde school was not locked while police waited for a key, as a gunman shot children dead inside the room. images have emerged showing armed police inside the school much hello and a warm welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are natasha clark, who s a political and environment correspondent at the sun, and joe twyman, director of the polling organisation deltapoll. just to remind you of the front pages. the rail strikes dominate tomorrow s front pages for the second day running. the financial times says the dispute now boils down to an offer of a 3% pay rise in exchange for 2000 job cuts. the i questions government plans to break the rail strikes, claiming ideas like allowing agency workers to fill in for striking staff won t work. the times reports that borisjohnson is preparing to dig in for a strike that could last months. the sun says teachers may be next to strike, calling it a class war . the daily