we ll be looking at how the path america has taken compares to other countries around the world. the uk prime minister borisjohnson says he intends to take the country forward as backbench conservative mps consider fresh attempts to force him from power. i have to listen to all sorts of criticism that part of myjob as leader. police in norway say they re treating a shooting at a gay nightclub as a terrorist attack. a third day of strike action on the uk s rail network begins, with only a fifth of train services expected to run. and it is the fourth day of glastonbury. sir paul mccartney will headline tonight two years after his original performance date was cancelled because the covid pandemic. that is where he is playing. the pyramid stage. last night it was the youngest performer ever to play. for mccartney will be the oldest. paul mccartney. hello and welcome if you re watching in the uk or around the world. abortion clinics are closing this weekend in more than a d
it s saying try me! drink me! you love me! and we drop in on what claims to be the world s oldest university as it welcomes back students for the first time in around 800 years. we start this week in italy, in the canals, squares and passageways of one of the world s most popular destinations. venice has, over the years, developed a relationship with tourists that can best be described as complicated. and this is what it s like at midday on a monday. it s pretty packed. crowds like this are still the norm in venice and on the busiest days, visitors can outnumber the locals by 2:1. the city s braced this summerfor a return to the over tourism that plagued europe s hotspots before the pandemic. but venice has plans to fight back. last year, it banned cruise ships from docking in the city centre, with their dense crowds of foot passengers and now, they plan to make the rest of us pay. overnight visitors already pay a city tax at the hotel but from next year, day trippers loo
mps consider fresh attempts to force him from power. a third day of strike action on the uk s rail network only a fifth of train services are expected to run. now it s time for dateline with kasia madera. hello and a very warm welcome to dateline london. i m kasia madera. it s very good of you to be with us today. this week, we re discussing the us supreme court overturning a 50 year old ruling that legalised abortion nationwide and look at its implication for millions of american women. we ll also be discussing the aftermath of the recent by elections here in the uk and will be asking what the losses for the conservative party mean for the future of boris johnson and his government, and we re also going to investigate allegations that russia is deporting captured ukrainians, including children. today for dateline london, we re joined by the uk s veteran political commentator, steve richards, also joining us, ned temko from the christian science monitor and we welcome vera
answer was yes. to and only 211 people agreed that the answer was yes. and only 211 people agreed that the answer was yes. to inform you we are awaiting for answer was yes. to inform you we are awaiting for a answer was yes. to inform you we are awaiting for a clip answer was yes. to inform you we are awaiting for a clip from answer was yes. to inform you we are awaiting for a clip from boris - awaiting for a clip from boris johnson who has given his reaction of dentistry and it will bring you that of course as soon as it lands. the reporting in the telegraph today was it was memo doing the rounds on a conservative what set republican with some of those numbers that you have just been pointing with some of those numbers that you havejust been pointing out with some of those numbers that you have just been pointing out and clearly there is concern among some of those with a majority of less than 10,000. the mitt question is to the public take note of events like this