so get allstate, and be better protected from mayhem, like me. roar. (sfx: family screams in background) the july fourth holiday marred by mass shootings in two american cities. philadelphia authorities captured a suspect they say wore body armor and a ski mask as he shot and killed five people and injured two children. just a few hours later, in fort worth, texas, a gunman indiscriminately fired into a crowd, killing three. also tonight, the kremlin claims it foiled a ukrainian drone attack on moscow, calling the attempted strike a terrorist attack. this as russia s relentless shelling kills two in the southern ukrainian city of kherson. cnn is live on the ground in ukraine. plus today is not a holiday for republicans hoping to move into the white house in 2024. they re hitting the campaign trail and parade routes in the key early states of iowa and new hampshire. welcome to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. wolf blitzer is off. i m alex m
we re live in the cnn weather center. also ahead clasheses b between rival milit in libya leaving dozens dead and others injured. we ll have the latest report. a trump appointed federal judge indicated she s likely it grant a request from the former president s legal team to appoint a special master to review evidence taken from donald trump s sprawling mar-a-lago estate. the application for a special master is seen by many experts as having no legal benefit and is possibly a delaying tactic. meantime, the director of national intelligence will advise senior lawmakers on the potential risk to national security posed by top secret documents being kept at trump s florida home. cnn s white house reporter natasha bertrand has more. reporter: cnn has learned that director of national intelligence avril haines confirmed to lawmakers on friday that the intelligence community is working together with the justice department to review all relevant documents that have been retriev
convoy of ships out of ukraine after russia s blockade caused global shortages. warnings that millions of children in england could go hungry this summer because councils have reduced or scrapped free school meal vouchers over the school holidays. and 72 artefacts forcibly removed from benin city during a british military incursion in 1897 will be returned to nigeria by a london museum. good afternoon if you have just joined us. welcome to bbc news. israel has reportedly agreed to a truce in gaza to end the latest fighting with palestinian militants, which has killed at least 31 palestinians since friday. the islamichhad militant group is also reported to have agreed to the ceasefire which is due to start in the coming hours. this is the scene. there is some pictures of the funeral of khaled mansour, the islamichhad leader who pictures of the funeral of khaled mansour, the islamichhad leader who was pictures of the funeral of khaled mansour, the islamichhad leader who was k
call with his french counterpart in which he said the russians are preparing a dangerous provocation there. an adviser to the president said there s a 50/50 possibility of something happening there, and we got a statement from the army saying that they have observed foreign items similar to explosive devices being put on the roof of two of the plant s power units. now, we ve heard previous talk from the head of ukrainian intelligence that some of the cooling ponds at that plant are mined and that the russians have deployed explosive-laden trucks outside of four of the power plant s six reactors. so there s concern something could happen there soon, but the russians are saying that they re planning nothing, that it s the ukrainians who are going to do something soon at that power plant. these are some of the last
concerning to not just ukraine, but the international community at large. just in the last 24 hours, ukraine and russia trading accusations that each side is shelling around that nuclear power plant. you had, of course, as you mentioned, last week, the power plant being cut off from the grid, cut off from electricity. and for the first time in its history its emergency services needed to be powered on. those needed to come on to keep the nuclear reactors cool, to avert the possibility of nuclear disaster. you pointed to president zelenskyy who has time and time again accused russia of bringing the world one step closer to the possibility of a huge nuclear disaster. now, let s just go through the history of what has happened in the last few months with this. this power plant was seized by russian forces in the spring, they held control of it since that time, while ukrainian engineers, ukrainian workers on the ground kept it running. it has been reconnected to the power grid. so there is