checks on the island of ireland and we will look at the front pages at 10:a0pm and 11:30pm. that is all i had on bbc news. it is now time for sports day. hello and welcome to sportsday. i mjohn watson. 0ur headlines. 1 2 3 for kjt with two events down, just one more stands between her and world championship gold. and has all been sinking and for dina asher smith as she receives her gold. i went to sleep at 6am after lying in bed and being like wow, i did that really happen? ireland s fate is back in tehir hands after a bonus point win at the world cup. also coming up in the programme. from london spirit to the transient rocket we will tell you which cricketers have been snapped up and today s draft for a new look 100. katarina johnson thompson could win great britain s second gold medal of the world championships tonight. she was leading the olympic champion nafi thiam heading into the final three events today. extending her lead after one of her preferred events, one of he
will rule this morning on whether millions of women following president trump s were discriminated against over their state pension. we ll speak to a former heated press conference with finnish president, sauli niinisto, the hashtags trumpmeltdown and impeachment pensions minister at 9.15. are now trending and gathering pace this tweet by democratic congressman eric swalwell, apologising and in sport, dina does it. asher smith becomes the first to mr niinisto, for donald trump s british woman to win a major global sprint title, as she takes gold in the 200 conduct, has been metres at the athletics shared over a000 times. trump also clashed with the reuters journalistjeff mason during the press conference. world championships. mr mason asked what he wanted ukrainian president zelensky to do about the former vice presidentjoe biden and his son. this is how the president responded. i hear talking to me? it wasjust a good morning, and welcome to the bbc news at 9. of what ijust g
join that club, what does it mean? you re going to make me emotional. stop saying it. we ll be celebrating her win. belfast‘s high court is about to decide whether northern ireland s abortion laws are in breach of the uk s human rights commitments. the case was brought by sarah ewart who travelled to england to have a termination after she was told her unborn child wouldn t survive outside the womb. ifi if i have had this procedure at home, i would if i have had this procedure at home, iwould have if i have had this procedure at home, i would have had a grave to visit, or ashes. that breaks my heart. i ll be speaking to sarah ewart live on the programme once that decision comes in. brexit it s over to you, eu. as borisjohnson gets ready to answer questions from mps on his new look brexit plan this morning, the big question is what does brussels make of it? what i can say from the leaks we have seen, that what is being put forward is not promising, and does not appear to f
why thousands of women are dying because their heart attack symptoms are missed. i ll be talking to an expert at quarter past nine. and there s a silver medal and a new british record for dina asher smith at the world athletics championship in doha. good morning and welcome to the bbc news at 9. ministers will attempt to focus attention on spending pledges on the second day of the conservative party conference in manchester. it comes after the opening day saw the prime ministerfacing questions about his private life. chancellor sajid javid is promising what he calls an infrastructure revolution with a 25 billion pounds upgrade of england s roads, a national bus strategy and five billion pounds for ultrafast broadband internet in the uk. but it s been a stormy week for boris johnson culminating in number ten denying newspaper accusations that the prime minister squeezed a journalist s thigh under the table at a private lunch 20 years ago. away from manchester, oppo
and, the most detailed sd model of the female anatomy, to help make better medical diagnoses, for women. hello, thank you forjoining us stop mariupol is really a shell of what it was before the russian invasion began, but throughout the bombardment, many civilians have been stuck there, despite repeated efforts to get them to safety. the red cross and united nations are now helping and operations to move them, and a convoy of vehicles made it to mariupol on saturday to than it takes some of the hundreds of people trapped in the city s vast azovstal steel plant. we have some pictures to show evacuees arriving earlier on sunday at their first stop in donetsk on the russian border, accompanied by red cross and un staff. around 1000 more are still sheltering inside the complex, along with around 2000 ukrainian fighters, as they make a last stand in the city which has almost been completely destroyed by russian forces. 0ur correspondent is in zaporizhzhia where civilians have be