it s seven in the morning in singapore, and 4:30am in odisha in india, where the country s worst train disaster in decades happened. there s a growing sense of shock as the scale of the crash becomes more apparent. the rescue operation has been called off, with more than 275 people known to have been killed. a major investigation is under way. officials have confirmed that signal failure may have been a factor, but there are broader concerns, too. our correspondent archana shukla has been at the scene, we ll hear from there shortly, but first, let s show you this report. a painful search. sifting through photos. from hospital to hospital, and now morgue to morgue. inconsolable and traumatised. 22 year old himanshu can barely speak. his brother was on the train that crashed. can i see my brother, just once? he keeps repeating. at this makeshift morgue, he is just one of the many families in the desperate search to find those missing. but not everyone has answers yet. ten mem
the economic fabric of a whole belt of america. can we believe anything we re told about the war in ukraine? in this fog of war, where you basically can t trust anyone or anything that you see, it s so important to bring people the truth, whatever that truth is. and are the weird creatures who we re only now discovering in the depths of the oceans threatened with destruction by deep sea mining? the scientists would say until we actually know what s there and we study the ecosystem better, then we just cannot understand the risks. it took russia s invasion of ukraine for germany and other european countries to realise it might not be an altogether good idea to be quite so dependent on russian oil and gas. but as the ukraine war drags on, western countries, especially the us, are starting to think that it might be better to lessen their dependence on china as well, which has made everything for us, from beach balls to nuclear power stations. almost unnoticed by the outside worl
was gina. the story of iran s internal discontent is incomplete without an understanding of iran s kurdish population. my guest is abdullah mohtadi, leader of the komala party of iranian kurdistan. is this a fight for rights or independence? abdullah mohtadi, welcome to hardtalk. ., ~ , c, abdullah mohtadi, welcome to hardtalk. ., ~ c, c, hardtalk. thank you for having me. it is hardtalk. thank you for having me- it is a hardtalk. thank you for having me. it is a great hardtalk. thank you for having me. it is a great pleasure - hardtalk. thank you for having me. it is a great pleasure to - me. it is a great pleasure to have you me. it is a great pleasure to have you on me. it is a great pleasure to have you on the me. it is a great pleasure to have you on the show. - me. it is a great pleasure to have you on the show. i - me. it is a great pleasure to i have you on the show. i began by referring there to the tragic death of musah harmony. would you say that her deat
is expected in august. stay with us here on bbc news. hello there. very little change with the weather for this upcoming week. it s going to remain mostly dry and settled with plenty of sunshine as our area of high pressure continues to dominate. so always warmest and sunniest as it has been for the last couple of weeks across central and western areas. a bit cooler, cloudier, breezier or further eat. but there s a chance of a few showers starting to push up into southern areas by the end of the week into next weekend, courtesy of this area of low pressure moving up from biscay and iberia. but in the short term, plenty of dry weather to start the new working week. a bit of low cloud, which will burn back to the coast from the midlands into eastern england. and it could stay quite cool along north sea coast, more of a breeze in the southeast. slim chance of a shower in scotland and northern ireland.