Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - BBCNEWS - 20201021:19:56:00 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
they are saying to you in this league u need to be ready, and the across league u need to be ready, and the a cross easy rules league u need to be ready, and the across easy rules and cheques. yes, just to explain to the viewers. 0bviously just to explain to the viewers. obviously we have been trading in a seamless, friction free way for the last a0 years or so, and deal or no deal on brexit we will have an entirely difficult different and cop criticism of what is a red tie. get ready for that, we have been saying this to government for a couple of years now, we need to get your act together so we have clarity for traders and businesses that we all depend on to get the things we needin all depend on to get the things we need in britain, otherwise there will be chaos. now the government are playing that message back to us and implying it is ourfault for not being ready. actually there are a couple of key things that the government, are up to the government, are up to the government,
reporter: if you have pesos, euros, yen, or ruples and want to change them for clean dollars, panama is just about as close to paradise as you can get. a favored laundromat for drug cartels, it s also the destination for international property developers. nobody actually lives in the skrie scrapers in downtown panama city. they re empty, bought and sold merely as a way to park and flip money. panama was a favorite place for
Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - BBCNEWS - 20200819:13:53:00 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
which ran aground last month, sparking an environmental emergency, are worsening. efforts to remove the about 900 tonnes of oil on board the stricken vessel are continuing. bbc africa s catherine byaru hanga reports. a toxic trail of oil seeping into the ocean and invading reefs, mangroves and lagoons. the wreckage lay on the mauritus horizon, as crews battled for days to empty it of all of the oil. then things got much worse. cracks on the ship s hull deepened. locals have been wondering why exactly, why was nothing done. why did it take so long? why did the government give so many contradictory messages? mauritius is in crisis. volunteers are using their bare hands to clean up the oil, threatening their most valuable assets water and wildlife are vital sources for his lucrative