are warning this winter could be extra hard. not just for covid, but for flu, and now a childhood respiratory virus that s going around. it is an important message and we re going to go to the white house when he begins speaking. speaking of the president and midterms, biden is going to syracuse this week. yes, syracuse, yes, new york. yes, new york, in the last two weeks before the midterms. he s coming here because as blue as new york is, some of the congressional races are looking a little more purple. after a haywire redistricting process, new york has more congressional battlegrounds than nearly any other state in the country. even the democratic campaign chairman is locked in a dead heat, forcing the house campaign arm to spend a lot of money to defend its own chief from republican michael lawler. it s not just malone in westchester. nine of new york s seats from the tip of long up to pew kip see are in play and now the governor s race is tightening. kathy hochul, once
a sharp escalation in military tension between north and south korea, with both sides firing missiles into the sea near each other s coasts. he shouldn t be doing that. and the drivers who think cyclists shouldn t be on the road and deliberately drive too close to them. coming up on the bbc news channel, india hang on to win a rain affected nailbiter in the t20 world cup against bangladesh and put themselves top of group b. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. the prime minister rishi sunak said the migrant crisis is a serious and escalating problem and admitted that not enough asylum claims are being processed. the prime minister insisted the government is getting a grip of the situation and backed home secretary suella braverman s handling of the issue. at prime minister s questions in the commons, the labour leader sir keir starmer said just 4% of people arriving in small boats last year had their asylum claim processed. it comes as the prime minist
after being set up in 1982 to shake up television , today the broadcaster is celebrating four decades of being on air. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. the prime minister rishi sunak said the migrant crisis is a serious and escalating problem and admitted that not enough asylum claims are being processed. the prime minister insisted the government is getting a grip of the situation and backed the home secretary suella braverman s handling of the issue. at prime ministers questions in the commons the labour leader sir keir starmer said just 4% of people arriving in small boats last year had their asylum claim processed. it comes as the prime minister reversed his decision not to attend next week s cop 27 climate summit in egypt, following widespread criticism. our correspondent ben wright has this report. are you failing on immigration, prime minister? a week in charge and the government s under question. rishi sunak headed to the commons for his second
atjosef stalin, soviet citizens who fell foul of the authorities were often labelled enemies of the people. after invading ukraine, vladimir putin vowed to cleanse russia of what he called traitors, some and the fifth column. some love. welcome to world news america on pbs and around the globe. we begin tonight with a peace deal in ethiopia s civil war, which has been raging for two years, leaving thousands dead and millions without enough to eat. a surprise ceasefire has been reached at the peace talks in south africa, and the agreement should allow aid to reach people trapped by the fighting. ethiopian government troops have been fighting forces from the tigray people s liberation front in northern ethiopia. easy to say that a disarmament plan has been agreed on and before case to be made without any. here is a clip from a report we brought you two weeks ago, from hussein mohamed at the bbc s africa eye, at a hospital in tigray struggling to treat its patients. and a w
the clerk will report the vote. mr. chairman on this vote there are nine ayes and zero noes. the resolution is agreed to. he is not coming, but that could change. i m going to punch him out. waiting for this, for trespassing on the capital grounds. i m going to punch him out, i m going to go to jail, and i m going to be happy. a subpoena against a former president and never before seen footage, including that of lawmakers scrambling to save the capital. i m brianna keilar, john berman is off this morning. alex marquardt is here with us. great to be here. the january 6th committee, having their final hearing before the midterms to show all roads lead back to donald trump. the committee voting unanimously to subpoena him. he wanted to stay in power, and now we wanted to hear from him. president biden said he believes the work of the january 6th committee, will lead to real change. in the meantime, former president trump fired back saying he will have his ans