non binary artists were excluded. welcome to our viewers on pbs in america and around welcome to our viewers on pbs the globe. 10,000 people in wisconsin have gathered for a vigilfor 10,000 people in wisconsin have gathered for a vigil for the five people killed and a0 injured after a man drove his vehicle into a christmas parade in the city. police say they have charged a suspect with intentional homicide that they do not believe it was terrorism related. our correspondent is in the city. this little girl narrowly escaped with her life. she had no idea what was hurtling towards her. and here the moment when thejoy and festivity of the christmas parade turned to horror and tragedy. a vehicle travelling at full speed struck members of a marching band. the driver continued forward, hitting and running over others in his path. these young dancers perfectly in step one moment, the next brutally disrupted. people, families and children ran for their lives. chelsea! others tried t
and hundreds line the streets in southend to pay tribute to the conservative mp sir david amess, who was stabbed to death last month. coming up in sportsday later in the hour on the bbc news channel. back in the frame. is mauricio pochettino the long term answer for manchester united and will he leave psg mid season? good evening and welcome to the bbc news at six. the prime minister has defended his plans for reforming social care in england, as mps prepare to vote on his proposals tonight. borisjohnson called his plan incredibly generous and said it would help tackle what he calls a long standing social injustice over cost. the government unveiled its proposals in september, which include an £86,000 cap on personal care costs. but an amendment to the plan said support payments from councils will not count towards the cap. charities have warned it will mean some of the less well off will be unfairly hit. it s thought some backbench tory mps could rebel when they vote la
hello and welcome. we start with europe s response to a surge in covid cases. tough new restrictions are being imposed in some countries, together with stern political warnings. the protests, though, are also spreading. austria has reintroduced a nationwide lockdown today. germany s health minister said that by the end of the winter, most germans would be vaccinated, cured or dead, while the dutch prime minister condemned a third night of unrest as pure violence by idiots opposed to covid restrictions. let s take a look in more detail. in austria, people are only allowed to leave their homes for essentials such as work, exercise and food shopping. the daily average is nearly m00 new cases. 14,000. germany s chancellor, angela merkel, has said the measures in place are not sufficient. almost a8,000 new infections have been reported there. in belgium s capital, brussels, demonstrators clashed with police after tens of thousands of people marched through the city centre. over 1
he can put up a smaller bond albeit $175 million. he said the deadline isn t today and he had an extra ten days to do it. they did not explain their decision but that is what it today the republican party presumptive nomy also learned the first of his four impending trials startsr april 15th. this is the case he faces dozens of charges related to falsifying records of his business to cover up illegal contributions to his presidential campaign. that was today as well. also today the u.n. security council passed a resolution calling for a cease-fire in gaza. which resulted in israel calling off planned meetings with planned officials. today the ceo of boeing announced he s resigning and everyone pronounced him lucky he was just stepping down and not falling from a fuse lodge door someone forgot to screw closed. today the rapper sean combs had his homes searched for officials. he s been accused of sexual assault and sex trafficking in public forums. but today federal officials s