will: but, frazier, wait until you seattle today. then seattle to be fair after frasier paid for grunge and the city did get more exciting so, no relationship, i m sure to grunge but after that somewhere after that things really started to take a turn. and the city of frazier s paradise turned to the barbarians and became a paradise for addicts. drug users c congregate under umbrellas bus stops or vestibules or get high out in the open in front of shocked parents or children. you know if anything teaching children not to do drugs. i never will. good for you. look at this man overdosing near the ross store. is he doing blues? i don t know what he is doing. police raced in to save his life with several hits of narcan as people watched in horror. insane. the city has decayed into an american crisis. you walk on the streets of seattle and you see little tent cities, dirty needles and people being left for dead in the street. and just last year, almost 600
the united nations secretary general, antonio guterres, has asked the security council to urgently consider haiti s request for deployment now on bbc news, it s hardtalk with zeinab badawi. welcome to hardtalk with me zeinab badawi from south africa where my guest has been described as one of the world s greatest living artists. william kentridge is versatile, hard hitting and his talents span many different genres. he is william kentridge and this is a major exhibition of his work in cape town. in 2020 i travelled to his studio and asked how south african politics influenced his art. william kentridge in johannesburg, welcome to hardtalk. zeinab, thank you very much and welcome to the studio injohannesburg. you were born in johannesburg in 1955, the son of two prominent anti apartheid lawyers, wow did growing up under apartheid affect you? i think because my parents were both very much aware of and involved in legal questions around the anti apartheid struggle, from a young
well, would you look at that, that s an attack on democracy with echos, of course, of january 6th. good morning, everyone. what you ve been looking at are protesters in brazil storming three seats of power, the presidential palace, congress and the supreme court, over election conspiracies. familiar, right? yes. and those questions about not just familiarity but the connection between the two. so what sparked these riots we ll tell you all about it in a little bit here. and president biden visited the southern border for the first time since taking office but did not meet with any migrants there on the ground. how the white house is explaining that. also this. do you speak to william now? do you text? currently, no. yeah. a really, revealing interview, prince harry opening up about his brother, his late mother, all of the royal leaks to the media. why he accuses the queen consort of being, in his words, quote, dangerous. we ll begin with what s called brazil s
very good monday morning to you, i m jim sciutto. and i m erica hill. overnight president joe biden arriving in mexico this ahead of his one-on-one meeting with mexican president obrador this afternoon. the president also making a brief visit, it is his first since taking office to the u.s. southern border on sunday where he spoke with border enforcement in el paso, talking about the rising surge of migrants and the growing fentanyl crisis. plus in brazil a spectacle all too, sadly, familiar here in the u.s. after false stolen election claims, supporters of brazil s former president bolsonaro laid siege to the capital. they smashed windows, clashed with police, they broke into congress, the presidential palace and the supreme court. officials say at least 400 people have been arrested. sadly familiar images there. in washington kevin mccarthy now face has critical test after finally being elected speaker of the house, a major vote expected today on the rules package tha
jury looking into whether president trump and his allies broke the law when they tried to overturn the 2020 election has finished its investigation. there s no word yet on the panel s findings. fulton county s district attorney will decide whether to pursue indictments. fanny willis started her investigation after then-president trump called the georgia secretary of state to pressure him to find the votes needed for trump to overturn his loss there. the investigation later expanded to include a look into the false claims of election fraud and a plan to use fake electors and a threat against election workers. let s bring in cnn s political correspondent, sara murray, who s been following all this, and legal analyst jennifer rogers. so sara, she was also sara, what happens now that this report is done? what can we expect? reporter: look, the report is finished. the judge said the grand jury has been dissolved after a year of investigating, and look, this is really somethi