Moving closer to russia, which happened after coups in neighbouring burkina faso and mali. Later, leaders from the 15 countries that make up the Economic Community of west african states, and the eight leaders from the west African Economic and monetary union, will meet to discuss their response. Brandon kendhammer is politics professor at Ohio University and expert on politics in west africa. Hejoins us now. Thank you and welcome to the programme. What is your take on what we are witnessing in niger right now . Right now . Good morning. I think what right now . Good morning. I think what we right now . Good morning. I think what we are right now . Good morning. I l think what we are witnessing right now . Good morning. I. Think what we are witnessing is likely the consolidation of any Military Regime. Enough time has passed now that we have a general sense of who was in charge or who would like to be in charge and while we have seen a fair bit of International Response at this point,
the start of next week, a greater chance we will see some of those showers and thunderstorms develop. some could be nasty but they will be very much hit and miss. some gardens will remain dry. some gardens will remain dry. thanks, matt. and that is tonight s bbc news at ten. there s more analysis of the day s main stories on newsnight with mark urban, which isjust getting under way on bbc two, where they ll be looking at how secure our electricity supply is going to be this winter. and the news continues here on bbc one, as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are. but from the ten team, it s goodnight. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are are rosa prince, who s the editor of the house magazine, which covers the workings of parliament, and the broadcaster, david davies. tomorrow s front pages starting with pm turns up for meeting is the headline in the metro an
and it s not just and it s notjust the uk temperature record that is likely to topple today and tomorrow. we are also looking at individual records for scotland, england and wales all being broken, and if anything tomorrow looks like it will be a bit hotter than today. i will have all the details throughout the programme. good morning. farms across the country, like this one in suffolk, are already dealing with a very dry first half of the year, as you can see from the reservoir levels behind me. now comes the heatwave. i will be looking at the effect it is having on the food they produce that we all rely on. also on breakfast this morning, one of the conservative mps vying to be party leader will be knocked out of the running today, when the latest round of voting takes place. in sport, how rory mcilroy let it slip away on the final day at st andrews, as cameron smith pockets a cool £2 million winner s cheque for winning the open. good morning. welcome to cambridge where th
so, really thinking about going forward into the future, you know, how we re building in the future and when we are redeveloping somewhere, you know, what standards we re building to to making sure that railways don t buckle or people are not living on the floodplain. above all of that, of course, there is the great concern about what a0 celsius means about our changing climate. decades ago, it s thought that number wasn t even possible in the uk and now, here we are and the future suggest it s going to happen more often with the widespread disruption, with the impacts on people s health. and that, of course is down to climate change. that, of course is down to greenhouse gas emissions and how we ve changed the world around us. so, the cause of this extreme heatwave is twofold. it s a combination of the chaotic natural variability of the weather and human induced climate change. so, we are having the weather conditions that lead to heatwaves, bringing hot airfrom spain and po