the occupied crimean peninsula. mr putin also ordered a full investigation into the incident. ukrainian officials have welcomed the explosion. there have been reports of at least three more deaths on another day of mass protests against iranian authorities. female students shouted go back when the president visited a women s university. five teenagers in hong kong have been found guilty of advocating a violent revolution against the chinese state. they were sentenced up to three years in detention. now on bbc news, click takes to the catwalk. the team look at how ai is helping fashion retailers give customers a more personalised shopping experience. this week, the race to preserve ukraine s heritage and culture by sd scanning its buildings. phone too big? display too small? spencer has been looking at the latest flexi screens that are coming around the bend. you couldn t do this with a solid glass tablet. we will try on some smart fabrics and a solar powered shirt. and sticki
Officials in oklahoma dig up 1a bodies for a second time, in the hope of using dna to identify more victims in 1921 the tulsa race massacre. Now on bbc news, its time for click. This week, shiona has been to sweden to see how new organs could be printed in a lab. Meanwhile, lara has been creating body parts of a different kind. Whats happened to my ear . Nick talks to a man in a box. And the man hunting the missing cryptoqueen explains how to find someone from a single selfie. Even if i posted a picture of me in my back garden, there is a possibility someone could work out my home address, because ive done it to them. Nearly 7,000 people in the uk right now need organ transplants. Sometimes the wait for these lifelines can be long and agonising. And not everyone survives them. We clearly need more donors. But 3 d printing might be able to offer a solution. Yeah, scientists are developing a method to create organs from living tissue, which can then be transplanted into patients who need
the king of thailand has visited survivors of a knife and gun attack in which 36 people were killed on thursday. in a rare interaction with the public the king met the victims being treated at a hospital in the north eastern town of nong bua lamphu. now on bbc news it s time for click. this week, the race to preserve ukraine s heritage and culture by sd scanning it s buildings. phone too big? display too small? spencer has been looking at the latest plexi screens that are coming around the bend. ., . ., that are coming around the bend. ., ., , bend. you couldn t do this with a solid glass bend. you couldn t do this with a solid glass tablet. bend. you couldn t do this with a solid glass tablet. we - bend. you couldn t do this with a solid glass tablet. we will. a solid glass tablet. we will t on a solid glass tablet. we will try on some a solid glass tablet. we will try on some smart - a solid glass tablet. we will try on some smart fabrics i a solid glass tablet.
that don t even exist. that s very cool. good job, i take my hat off to you. my virtual hat. lives lost, people displaced. the horrors of war are unimaginable. and the battle for ukraine goes on. russia no longer has full control of the southern and eastern regions it illegally annexed in the last week, and as the ukrainian army fights back and regains some of it stolen territory the huge damages to donetsk and kherson are being revealed. many ukranians have been saddened by the destruction of buildings and the loss of culture and history that comes with that. since the start of the war, unesco says almost 200 historic sites have been damaged. but what can t be saved physically can be saved virtually. over the years, we have looked at different ways of preserving buildings digitally, and now that technology is being used for a very urgent task. across ukraine, hundreds of buildings have stood for years as important cultural sites. but through the war, many have gone from this