of 46 weeks after the british band announced a comeback tour. coming up, we speak to a pioneering sri lankan author who has written a memoir tracing herfamily history, beginning with her great grandmother being allowed to go to school. we start with reports on russian state media that an american journalist has been formally charged with spying. evan gershkovich, who works for the newspaper the wall streetjournal, was arrested last week, taken to court and detained. the kremlin said at the time he d been caught red handed . gershkovich has denied he s done anything wrong. with me is sergei goryashko from bbc russian. mac this is deeply worrying bring us up to date on the situation. the? up-to-date on the situation. they have been up-to-date on the situation. they have been formally up to date on the situation. tie: have been formally charged up to date on the situation. ttez1. have been formally charged today up to date on the situation. tt3:1 have been formally charge
putin regime and putting himself hates him and they tried to poison them into thousand 15 and he nearly died, they try to poison them again in 2017 again, he nearly died. and he returned after the war started as a russian opposition politician to protest the war in the arrested him and he s now sitting and preach detention and he faces a 25 year sentence. the longest sentence ever for a political prisoner. pretrial. it s amazing how thin skinned and obscure the art of opposition and reporting of the truth. scared they are. let s turn our attention to northern ireland now because police there say they ve received intelligence that dissident republicans could try to orchestrate street violence, and stage attacks on officers, over the easter weekend. the province is marking the 25th anniversary of the good friday agreement. the deal ended 30 years of violent
like. we told the bbc what the threat looks like. ~ ., w ., told the bbc what the threat looks like. ., ., ,, like. we do face a consistent global stru: ale to like. we do face a consistent global struggle to defeat like. we do face a consistent global struggle to defeat extremism - like. we do face a consistent global struggle to defeat extremism and l like. we do face a consistent global| struggle to defeat extremism and to guard against terrorism. this is a real problem, and in the last four years, working with the police has disrupted 31 late stage attacks in great britain. even during the pandemic period, we ve had to disrupt six late stage attack plots. the taliban takeover has changed the landscape. the chief warned this would embolden those wanting to carry out attacks and said there was a risk that the country could once again become a safe haven for groups planning more sophisticated attacks. evenif planning more sophisticated attacks. even if the taliban is absolutely in g
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helped run. experts say covering up their own crimes is sometimes a powerful motive for people who stage attacks on themselves. i think when somebody is guilty of a crime, they stop thinking in rational ways. guilty, shame, these are powerful emotions. emotion and rational thought oppose each other. reporter: a psychiatrist says coverups are among several motives why people stage attacks on themselves or make false claims of attacks. when we re confronted with a victim of attack, we reach out to them. we want to help them. that s a wonderful thing. i think that people appreciate that and sometimes they will stage an attack in order to get that when they can t get attention or sympathy in other ways. reporter: he says that dynamic may have been at play in 2014 when a woman identified only as jackie claimed she had been raped and beated ebeaten.