to send in the leopards. well, my guest is ukraine s foreign minister, dmytro kuleba. are ukraine s strategic options being narrowed by wavering amongst western allies? foreign minister dmytro kuleba in kyiv, welcome to hardtalk. it s my pleasure to be with you. it s great to have you back on the show. i m sure you watched very closely what happened in ramstein, germany, when ukraine s allies met at defence minister level to discuss new weapons supplies to ukraine. what appears to have emerged is yet more uncertainty, particularly about whether you re going to get tanks. how damaging is that uncertainty? the meeting in ramstein itself was the quintessential moment of weeks of different talks and negotiations and also public appeals, so everything that was not decided in ramstein, including main battle tanks, will be decided within a short term perspective. i m absolutely confident about that because we continue our work. we hear more and more important messages coming from di
steve, there is nothing better than seeing you on election night. give us an update. yes. a lot still going on. and let s start in mississippi. and the governor s race in mississippi. 2 now two-thirds of the vote in. republican incumbent tate reeves leading brandon presley by 11 points. two key points i think as you look at these numbers. number one is we ve been waiting all night for the largest county in the state that s hines county where the state capitol of jackson is, it s a core overwhelming democratic county. they just started reporting the polls. we re open later there because there were issues of ballot viability. it s 86 to basically 13 for presley. this is a big vote producing county. that s certainly an opportunity for presley to gain and for reeves to fall. in the rest of the state we ve been looking to see if there s a pattern because reeves won this race in 2019 by 5 points. we ve kind of been using that as a bench mark as results come in. is presley running
take part in the annual cheesey contest in gloucestershire. good evening. the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, has said an airstrike which killed dozens of people in gaza was a tragic mishap . the hamas run health ministry said at least 45 people, including children, were killed when a strike hit a camp for displaced people in the tal al sultan area of rafah. the united states said the killing of innocent palestinians was heartbreaking , and warned that israel must take every precaution possible to protect civilians. the israeli army said it had been targeting two senior hamas leaders. our middle east correspondent lucy williamson is injerusalem tonight. well, the scenes we have seen from the camp and hospitals around rafah in the last 2a hours have piled more pressure on israel but leaders, days after the un highest court ordered israel to immediately halt its military operation in rafah, but the israeli prime minister made the point forcefully to the israeli pa
where bbc explicitly labels a party political claim misleading and on the flagship evening news bulletin, outstanding reporting. but cliff mann had a different view. it is abundantly clear that the £2,000 claim by sunak was fabricated and has been debunked, yet you continue to report on it as a balanced argument. andy freeman pointed out that, the truth is the truth and a lie is a lie. no need to shy away from it. and seb berry also used the l word, wondering, why is bbc news leading with the tories doubling down on their tax lie, which just reinforces the lie? tory head office must be absolutely delighted. wednesday and thursday provided some respite from the electoral trail for politicians and for viewers. a welcome development for some, but not all the audience. much of the news agenda moved to northern france and to portsmouth, where ceremonies were taking place to mark the 80th anniversary of d day. the news channel carried many of the commemorative ev
for me, i tend to not go inside into this dark place, it s, erm. i try and find ways to do whatever i can that s in my control. and so during that time, ifound a teacher that would work with me doing floor bar movement and exercises. so i wasn t standing, but i was still continuing to keep my muscles strong and in form. ijust kept working on things that i had control over and i never have followed this path that anyone else has. so i always thought there s still hope, even at 29 years old, when i got injured, that i could be a principal dancer. and ijust kind of kept that in my mind. cos here you were a soloist. i was still a soloist. another way you ve been influential.by the way. ok. this is good. this must have felt good. that was unbelievably surreal. i remember being.