in water borne diseases in pakistan, as the country struggles to cope with the aftermath of devastating monsoon floods. hello and welcome if you re watching in the uk or around the world. the american space agency has had to postpone the launch of its new artemis moon rocket for the second time in a week. lift off for the most powerful rocket ever built was cancelled after a fuel leak was detected and technicians were unable to fix it. the artemis programme aims to return humans to the moon in 2025. our space correspondent jonathan amos has the latest from the kennedy space center. well, it has been another day, another disappointment. we arrived here at the kennedy space center very early, just before dawn, and they had to build a rocket first of all with almost 3 million litres of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. and the oxygen went in the rocket very nicely indeed. it was the hydrogen that was the problem. they started to pump it and almost immediately they got an alarm,
40 sea codes where it could touch 35, a0 miles an hour. still some heavy rain through sunday evening across south west england and into wales and that rain will start to nudge into the northern isles as well. we keep this area of low pressure as we go into the new working week, notice the squeeze on the isobars, still gusty winds for many coasts, heavy rain through monday across northern england into scotland, it will start to pull away through the day, sunshine developing behind but some sharp showers and more frequent showers beginning to move into parts of south west england and wales towards the end of the day. in the sunshine it will feel warm, temperatures in the low to mid 20 celsius, and unsettled week ahead, showers or longer spells of rain for many of us, welcome where we need it most, and temperature starting to ease down towards the end of the week.
disaster off the coast of south korea. earlier the country s coast guard brought these bodies to port to be identified. some parents have already given dna samples to help with the process. the ferry was carrying 475 people, most of them students and teachers, when it sank wednesday. they were on a class trip to a resort island when the ship rolled over. the ship s captain was one of at least 174 people rescued, but he also faces charges as well as some very tough questions, including, why he allegedly broke a law that requires him to stay onboard until all appearance are safe. i spoke with a maritime lawyer about that. the duty of a captain in this circumstance goes way back past moby dick back to the medieval sea codes, back to 1,000 years ago. this is a particularly sad case. you have to look after the passengers, its your obligation. you can t abandon a ship. to see this happening in this