of the next couple of weeks and maybe more, cos there s no question omicron continues to surge through the country. scotland records more than 20,000 new covid cases, its highest daily number since the start of the pandemic. france toughens its rules around facemasks all children over six now have to wear them in shops and on public transport. india begins vaccinating 15 18 year olds as the country records its sharpest ever weekly rise in infections. hello, and welcome. a legal document which prince andrew s lawyer believes could stop a civil case against him in the us has been made public. the duke of york has consistenly denied sexually assaulting virginia giuffre when she was 17. the document, which has been unsealed, is a settlement agreement betweenjeffrey epstein and virginia giuffre, now known as virginia roberts. it dismisses the case for damages brought by ms giufrre, in return for the sum of $500,000. the question is what impact this is the question is what impact
hello there, i m 0lly foster. here s what s coming up on sportsday this evening: getting to the root of the problem. the ashes are gone, but there s still fighting talk from the england captain. there s a huge amount to play for for this group of players. we ve got to stay tight, we ve got to stick together and we ve got to put on a performance in one of the great test venues in world cricket. they re into the second half at old trafford. we ll have the latest from the game between manchester united and wolves. and we ll look ahead to the world darts championship final at the ally pally. will it be bully boy or snakebite for the title? hello there. welcome along. all the football coming up injust a moment, but we re going to start with cricket. it was just six days ago that england were skittled for 68 runs in the third test, another innings defeat in the series, and australia had retained the ashes. six days to regroup, you d have thought, but the head coach chris silverwo
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sonia sodha, chief leader writer at the observer and david bond, deputy political editor of the evening standard. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. a bit of a cop out is the metro s verdict on boris johnson for what the paper calls his refual to apologise for his handling of sleaze , as video suggests that tory mp, sir geoffrey cox, was doing private work from his house of commons desk. the former tory attorney general earned more than £5.5 million for 10,700 hours of work on his second job, according to the daily mail, which dubbs him the mp with no shame . the i reports that the conservative chief whip mark spencer authorised sir geoffrey cox working away from parliament. the guardian says sir geoffrey skipped 12 recent votes on days when he was doing paid legal work. the paper also headlines tonight s major development at cop26 in glasgow a pledge from america a
see where the cold air is sitting through scotland and northern ireland and further south we have a weak weather front, a ireland and further south we have a weak weatherfront, a real ireland and further south we have a weak weather front, a real nuisance, producing light, drizzly rain as well. so if we take a look at what to expect across england and wales, light drizzle drifting south and east and further north we have a breezy day with a few scattered showers here and there but we keep the clear skies and some sunshine as well and underneath the cloud, the light, drizzly rain, the temperatures will hold up into double digits quite widely and in terms of the feel of things, we are looking at between ten and 14 on the temperatures are recovering a touch in scotland, but as we go through the evening and overnight we keep a lot of cloud across england and wales and some wet and windy weather develops in the far north and west and sandwiched between the two, some clear skies an