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after being brought ashore. the three men and a woman had initially been rescued by a cargo ship. according to a recent report from the international organization for migration at least 4m refugees lost their lives due to drowning between january and march, marking the deadliest three month period since 2017. the report also reveals over the past decade, the mediterranean sea has claimed around 25,000 lives. these grim numbers do not fully capture the extent of the tragedy as the actual death toll might be even higher. in recent days there have been a number of rescues from the island and these pictures from the weekend show rescue workers helping migrants in trouble on the lampedusa coast. live now to sofia bettiza who's in rome. another tragedy in the med, what details do we have from this particular incident?— details do we have from this particular incident? that's right, this is not the _ particular incident? that's right, this is not the first _ particular incident? that's right, this is not the first tragedy - particular incident? that's right, this is not the first tragedy in i particular incident? that's right, | this is not the first tragedy in the mediterranean sea this year. as you mentioned, we do know that 41 migrants died, and they were killed in a shipwreck off the coast of italy's island of lampedusa which is in the south of the country in sicily. this is all being reported by italian media and the news agency ansa and they have spoken to the only four people who survived the shipwreck. as you said, three men and one woman from the ivory coast and one woman from the ivory coast and from guinea. so what they said is that they were on a boat that had set off from tunisia on thursday, trying to reach italy. they described it as a very small metal boat, about seven metres long. they said that 45 people were on board and that included three children. they said that they were at sea for about six hours, which is not very long. they were sailing in the sicilian channel, and that's when the boat capsized and sank. apparently the boat capsized because of a very big wave that through everybody on board into the water. the survivors said out of the 45 people on the boat, only 15 of them were wearing life vests. they were left in the water at sea for several hours before they were rescued by a cargo ship, and brought to the island of lampedusa today. thank you for those details. _ joining me now is lukas kaldenhoff from sos humanity, a search and rescue organization operation in the mediterranean. i know your teams were not in the med this weekend but you are on your way there now, what details are you hearing? i hope you just heard sofia, but about this particular incident? ., ., �* ., , incident? hello from berlin. it was not only this _ incident? hello from berlin. it was not only this one _ incident? hello from berlin. it was not only this one shipwreck- incident? hello from berlin. it was not only this one shipwreck that i not only this one shipwreck that occurred in the past days, so from what we know, there have been several shipwrecks, and a total of approximately 130 people who died or went missing in the last days. this is absolutely devastating numbers, but at the same time, it shows once again that there is huge necessity for states to take responsibility to send vessels capable of rescue and people to coordinate such cases. there are a new italian laws which are restricting rescues at sea. how are restricting rescues at sea. how are those laws impacting on your organisation and the work that you do? ., , ., , ., do? the main problem we have with the current — do? the main problem we have with the current law _ do? the main problem we have with the current law is _ do? the main problem we have with the current law is the _ do? the main problem we have with the current law is the fact _ do? the main problem we have with the current law is the fact that - the current law is the fact that after one rescue which is performed by civil vessels like our rescue vessel, humanity one, we are sent to a place of safety to disembark these people which is actually a good thing, but it keeps us from rescuing more people in distress. and the problem is that these places of safety are often far away in northern italy, so it takes is up to five days to go there, disembark the people and then another five or six dayjourney people and then another five or six day journey down south. people and then another five or six dayjourney down south. that means that rescue vessels cannot be coordinated to distress cases, cannot rescue people in distress, even though they would have the capacity to do so and this is absolutely irresponsible and putting the lives of people at sea at huge risk. ~ ., the lives of people at sea at huge risk. a, , , ., the lives of people at sea at huge risk. , , ., _, the lives of people at sea at huge risk. a, , , g, _, ., risk. more broadly, do you think euroean risk. more broadly, do you think european authorities _ risk. more broadly, do you think european authorities are - risk. more broadly, do you thinkj european authorities are making enough of an effort to try and provide safe, genuine attempts to let people cross safely, so that these sorts of things don't continue to happen almost on a daily basis at the moment?— to happen almost on a daily basis at the moment? yes, absolutely, there is no chance — the moment? yes, absolutely, there is no chance for— the moment? yes, absolutely, there is no chance for people _ the moment? yes, absolutely, there is no chance for people fleeing - the moment? yes, absolutely, there is no chance for people fleeing from | is no chance for people fleeing from libya or tunisia, these are countries where most of the people crossing the central med depart from. there are no legal ways to seek asylum, to safe passage to come anywhere come to europe, so the only chance to leave these countries where they face torture and is on the small boats. the eu is not making any effort to stop this mass death at sea. it would need a wide eu wide search and rescue programme to rescue people. this task is mainly taking over by itself will act like ngos like us, but for sure it is not the responsibility of society to rescue people in distress, this is the responsibility of governments.— of governments. thank you for “oininu of governments. thank you for joining us. _ of governments. thank you for joining us, lukas _ of governments. thank you for joining us, lukas kaldenhoff. l of governments. thank you for l joining us, lukas kaldenhoff. we will keep across what is happening in lampedusa throughout the day. hundreds of firefighters in portugal have been battling a large wildfire, which is threatening to spread towards the popular tourist destination of the algarve. more than 20,000 acres of land have been ravaged by the fire over the last four days, because of high temperatures and strong winds. 0ur correspondentjenny hill reports from 0deceixe. you can see the devastation caused by this fire, they reckon some a0 square miles were consumed in the five days now that it has been burning. if you come around with me you can see that actually the earth here is still smouldering in places. smoke drifting across the valley. we saw a lot of that smouldering going on at the side of the road and even some flames at one point as we drove up here. down the valley there, is the town of 0deceixe and the residents there i think this morning will be feeling extremely relieved. the fire reached almost to the very edge of that town. we passed on its outskirts and there were very small burned—out buildings but the town itself has escaped the fire. so a lot of relief there. but not far from here, firefighters, hundreds of them we are told, have spent the night trying to bring the flames under control. as you saw in my colleague's report, they have said it is very hot across the iberian peninsula. not too farfrom there, in spain, temperatures are reaching a peak on wednesday, with another heatwave under way. several regions in the mainland are registering more than a0 celsius degrees. weather officials have issued a dozen of red alerts in nine regions, with the recommendations of not carrying out any activity that implies staying on the streets between 1pm and 9pm local time. live now to our weather presenter helen willets. incredibly hot with those temperatures over a0 degrees in much of the iberian peninsula, what can you tell us about these heatwaves and also the wildfires in southern europe? and also the wildfires in southern euro e? , and also the wildfires in southern euroe? , ., ., and also the wildfires in southern euroe? , . . ., and also the wildfires in southern euro e? , . . ., ., europe? yes, again, we have got another wave _ europe? yes, again, we have got another wave of _ europe? yes, again, we have got another wave of heat _ europe? yes, again, we have got another wave of heat emanating | europe? yes, again, we have got- another wave of heat emanating from the south across siberia. so this time as well it is further north towards madrid where the record temperature stands at around a0 .7 degrees, and it could be threatened today. that is how intense the heat is. it's notjust across spain, it into portugal as well. the heat may ease a little across parts of portugal in the next day or so but it could be building towards the weekend. it is hot, even if temperatures still drop a couple of degrees. tricky with the wildfires, but it looks as if the wind might shift to more of a north—westerly and into friday, not particularly strong. that can move a wildfire smoke and these wildfires themselves can generate their own weather systems, their own wind, they are so ferocious. look at that for madrid, temperatures ease back a little bit, but generally the heat could spread across southern areas in the next few days. some parts of portugal, we could have temperatures lifting back into the a0s late week. in contrast, this is what we have had across scandinavia, a months worth of rain for 0slo, nearly 200 millimetres in some parts of south—west norway, this is storm hans, thankfully that will start to deteriorate in the next few days. we should see the weather improving. but it has been mild in norway. some places not falling below 2a degrees. find mild in norway. some places not falling below 24 degrees. and we have seen some _ falling below 24 degrees. and we have seen some bad _ falling below 24 degrees. and we have seen some bad flooding - falling below 24 degrees. and we have seen some bad flooding and concerns across asia about the weather, the wind and rain, what's happening there? in weather, the wind and rain, what's happening there?— happening there? in all different arts of happening there? in all different parts of asia. — happening there? in all different parts of asia, we _ happening there? in all different parts of asia, we have _ happening there? in all different parts of asia, we have a - happening there? in all different parts of asia, we have a quite i parts of asia, we have a quite exceptional weather. we have had some flash flooding in beijing which has killed several people as a result of nearly a metres worth of rain across some eastern parts of china, courtesy of a typhoon earlier this month. just a few days ago. at the moment we have a severe tropical storm. this is the second storm we are watching, this is the one that is already bringing record—breaking rainfall to yakka shimmer injapan, and its affecting tissue as well. it will pummel parts of korea, a00 millimetres of rain, some parts of japan have had nearly half a metre from the system. it will also be dangerous storm surges around the coast and strong winds gusting. this second storm towards the end of the weekend is pushing towards honshu in japan, and it follows the seasonal rains in this part of the world which was very active and brought a lot of flash flooding back in july two parts of korea. thank you. the president of the european commission, ursula von der leyen, is visiting slovenia to express support amidst the worst ever—floods the country has registered. forthe for the recovery and the reconstruction. slovenia can request and will receive financial support from the european union. and we have discussed a package of three components. first of all, from the solidarity fund, a00 million euros are accessible. time is of the essence, therefore the european commission can pay in advance of up to 100 million euros before the end of the year, and then based on slovenia's request and with the first damage assessment, and additional solidarity payment up to 300 million can follow next year. the second element, slovenia could request an additional 2.7 billion euros under next—generation eu. this is fresh money. here, too, time is of the essence. as you will have to make the request by the end of august, already, this has something to do with the procedures of next—generation eu. so i discussed with the prime minister... this next-generation eu. so i discussed with the prime minister. . .- with the prime minister... this is ursula von _ with the prime minister. .. this is ursula von der— with the prime minister... this is ursula von der leyen _ with the prime minister... this is ursula von der leyen offering - with the prime minister... this isj ursula von der leyen offering the hand of support from the european commission to slovenia. they have been going through the worst ever floods that they have had in the country as well. and slovenia turned to the block asking to help and they particularly needed things like heavy lifting equipment and machinery to deal with the aftermath of the flooding. so ursula von der leyen meeting with the prime minister in slovenia. we can look at the devastation, six people have died, and one of the estimates coming in is that $500 million worth of damage has been done to the country. the prime minister calling it the worst natural disaster that the country has ever recorded. and ursula von der leyen saying there is a00 million euros that can be accessed by slovenia from the eu so she is just outlining some of the money that is available and what can be done to try and help deal with the aftermath of what have been absolutely devastating floods in slovenia. the names and work locations of thousands of police officers in northern ireland were published online by mistake. though no private addresses were released, the data is particularly sensitive because of northern ireland's troubled past and security threats facing police officers. in his first one to one interview since the data breach, the force's assistant chief constable chris todd spoke the bbc�*s stephen nolan. well, i can give everybody assurance that i understand that sentiment, i understand the concerns. we are operating in an environment at the moment where there is a severe threat to all of our people from northern ireland—related terrorism. so this is absolutely what people desperately don't want to hear, is that any of their data has been compromised. so i owe it to all of my colleagues to investigate this as thoroughly as i possibly can, to identify any risks that are presented to any individual and to mitigate those, and to do everything i possibly can to make sure that such breaches don't happen again. i feel for all of my colleagues, this is an unacceptable situation. live now to sam mcbride, northern ireland editor, belfast telegraph and sunday independent. good to see you, we just listened to chris todd saying he had a huge amount of sympathy and he is putting every measure in place to make sure this doesn't happen again, but we actually know how much of this data is out there and who has retained it? ~ ., is out there and who has retained it? . ., ~ ., is out there and who has retained it? ~ ., ~ ., ., . ., , is out there and who has retained it? we do know how much of this data is out there. — it? we do know how much of this data is out there. we _ it? we do know how much of this data is out there, we don't _ it? we do know how much of this data is out there, we don't know _ it? we do know how much of this data is out there, we don't know who - it? we do know how much of this data is out there, we don't know who has l is out there, we don't know who has access to it and that right now is the really important thing. in this spreadsheet, there are 3a5,000 fields of data in relation to 10,799 psni employees who are both serving officers and other support staff who are acting in a back—up civilian role within the police service. that is among some of the most sensitive data which the psni holds. some of these people are identified as working in intelligence, in surveillance, in close protection teams to guard senior politicians in northern ireland and garda senior judges from terrorist attack, people who are working in armed response units, in pilots, in the air unit, and almost a0 psni officers who are revealed in this document to be stationed at m15's headquarters in northern ireland in county down. that's just astonishing information, to even be released internally, within the psni, let alone just to be dumped into the public like this. so the information, the data, sam, is classified from what you are saying, but what kind of numbers are we talking about, how many officers are affected here?— are affected here? 6500 psni officers, are affected here? 6500 psni officers. the _ are affected here? 6500 psni officers, the remainder - are affected here? 6500 psni officers, the remainder of - are affected here? 6500 psni officers, the remainder of the | officers, the remainder of the 10,000 number is made up of people who are not police officers, but who are working for the police, some of the in very sensitive roles but some who are typists or working at a level which is not significant at a security sense but anybody who works at the police know to be discreet about that in northern ireland. there are people in northern ireland who are serving police officers, one contacted me last night, who in his case has not told his family what he does for a living. there are people who have not told some of their closest friends, they have moved away from their areas, they have given very elaborate stories to their friends as to what they do, where they work and how they operate and suddenly in an instance this has been blown open, not by some foreign hostile force, not by terrorist organisations hacking into the psni, but by an astonishing self act of the psni almost attacking itself in terms of undermining what it has told its officers to do.— told its officers to do. thank you very much- _ around the world and across the uk. this is bbc news. let's look at some other stories making news. some senior conservatives up to cabinet level believe the party should campaign to leave the european convention on human rights at the next general election if rwanda flights continue to be blocked by a european court. a government spokesperson said it believed it could stop illegal crossings while remaining party to the convention. the financial conduct authority is warning about the dangers of fake loan offers, as more people turn to credit. loan fee fraud, where someone pays a fee for a loan they never receive, typically results in a £260 loss. the fca says last year there was a 26% increase in complaints from consumers about these scams. scotland's first minister has ordered a review of the scottish government bank card spending by civil servants. nearly 60,000 transactions, worth £1a.2 million were made on the procurement cards over a three year period. these included spending on vip airport services and team building events. humza yousaf has asked his officials to review the procedures. you're live with bbc news. yemen, the poorest country in the arab world, has been brought to the brink of collapse by almost a decade of civil war. back in 201a, houthi forces — who are backed by iran — seized the capital. a saudi—led coalition, supported by britain and america, intervened. but the houthis have not been dislodged and still control sanaa and the north, where most of the population live. there's been less violence since a temporary truce last year between the saudis and the houthis. but there's no sign of a comprehensive peace deal. and people are still injured. few places have suffered more than taiz, a city which for more than 3000 days has been virtually besieged by houthi forces. 0ur senior international correspondent 0rla guerin spent several days in the city's main hospital. every second counts. and war has taught them to be quick. it has honed their skills. at al—zour hospital, doctors patch up some of the latest broken bodies. this time, it's government troops hit by a houthi drone. 0ne soldier, called 0mar, could not be saved. another is rushed away for treatment elsewhere. anyone can be a target here, notjust men in uniform. nearby, we meet hanadi. every painful step reminds her of the war. her father struggles to pay for her treatment. she was shot in the back by a sniper, he tells us. that was in 2016 and the bullet is still lodged inside her. are you very worried about the future for hanadi? "yes," he says. "i am worried for her because she's a girl. "i wish it happened to me and not her. "i wish the sniper had shot me and not her." this is the biggest hospital in a city that has been a battleground for years. these days in taizz and in yemen, it's not all out war, but it's not peace either. the guns are quieter, but this hospital is still receiving plenty of patients wounded by the conflict. like mohammed, who is seven... ..and crying for his mother. his dressing needs to be changed. it's hard for his father to watch. mohammed lost three fingers when he picked up an explosive device. he was playing on the roof of his home. translation: he's scared because his hand is gone. l he's very scared. he can't do anything. he can't even hold a pen. in the hospital's busy prosthetics clinic. they try to replace what war has taken away. but these artificial limbs are basic, and it's traumatic, even for the doctors. it must be very, very hard for you to see the children like this. it's so bad. translation: it's very upsetting. our hearts ache when we see young children who are still looking forward to living and enjoying life needing amputations. next door, a regular physiotherapy session for shaima al ahmed, who has been walking this path for years. a landmine took her leg and killed herfriend. shaima is determined to be a lawyer, and at 12 years old, she is the voice of a generation in yemen. translation: children here suffer. they've lost their arms and legs. they don't go out and play like other children around the world. they play in comfort, but we play in fear. we just stand by the doors of our homes. when we hear shelling or gunfire, we run back inside. shaima, what would you like to say to the international community, to the world, about what is happening here in yemen? translation: why don't you see the children of taiz? _ why all this neglect? are we not humans in your eyes? across town, an honour guard for omar, the soldier killed in the houthi drone strike. one more death in a long war, and few here see a chance for peace. 0rla guerin, bbc news, taizz. at least 11 people have been hurt after an explosion at a factory in russia. it's reported that the explosion was caused by a violation of safety rules. stay with us here on bbc news. hello again. a bit of a change in the weather is dry and warm our way. there's a bit of a change in the weather today and tomorrow as drier and warmer conditions come our way. it's also going to turn a bit more humid but this doesn't mean wall to wall blue skies. there will be areas of cloud and for some of us foggy starts to the day. we had that combination already this morning. high pressure building in, this weatherfront across northern ireland drifting eastwards and in doing so, as it bumps into high pressure, it's weakening. today in essence we are looking at a mostly dry day with sunny spells and variable amounts of cloud. still quite murky around the coasts of wales and south—west england with low cloud, some coastal mist and fog and also some drizzle. you might get the odd spot of drizzle across the lake district and western scotland, the pennines as well, but temperatures higher than yesterday. tonight you will find we have areas of cloud that will break. some mist and fog patches forming. the winds that have been prevalent in the last few days across north—east scotland easing and it will be warmer than last night and a more humid one. pulling in the wind from a southerly direction across our shores so thursday looks like it will be the peak this week of the higher temperatures. thursday itself, again like today, will have areas of cloud, a lot of dry weather, some sunshine, but the clouds building in northern ireland through the afternoon and we will start to see showers coming into the south—west. top temperatures tomorrow of 26 or 27 in the south, 21 in the outer hebrides. here is the change, in the south—west we see rain coming in initially then other western areas and moving eastwards through the course of the day. some of the rain will be heavy especially across northern england and scotland. it will be slower to clear east anglia and the south—east through the day. behind it a return to sunny spells and some showers and breezy. temperatures down on thursday so it will feel fresher, especially in northern and western areas. as we head into the weekend, low pressure takes over with various weather fronts crossing us. you can see at times it will bring some rain particularly in areas close to the centre of the low pressure in the north—west. not only does it turn more unsettled, especially in northern areas, but the temperatures are also falling. this is bbc news, the headlines. the latest effort to protect the amazon. eight countries form an alliance to limit amazon deforestation, but fall short of some demands from campaigners and indigenous groups. abortion rights groups claim victory in an ohio special election, that became a proxy battle for a separate vote in november. the rapper tory lanez has been sentenced to ten years in prison for shooting and wounding the us hip—hop star megan thee stallion. the eight countries that share the amazon basin have fallen short of an agreed goal to end deforestation. delegates from the countries are meeting in the brazilian city of belem for a two—day summit on the issue, the first such gathering in 1a years. the lengthy roadmap outlined in the city of belem promotes sustainable development, an end to deforestation, and fighting the organized crime that fuels it. live now to belem where the summit�*s being held and our south america correspondent katy watson. virgin forest still exists here in the amazon, but every day

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