now, let s welcome tonight sec guests. he secretly hates beingre the second guy at fox. co-host of fox and friends, we get pete hegseth herself. defense against the left is common sense communications director ed never backed out back erin perrine she s like. cottage cheese white low in fat and popular at rest homes.omes fox news contributor kat gibb had air traffic over. jfk is constantly telling to duck. my massive sidekick in the nwa world, heavyweight champion. kyra s all right. yeah, we have started. buomt beforee news get to some w stories it s friday so let s do this. greg s leftovers. mm. i don t know, man. i k and it surtlenec almost the summer. maybe. maybe i m hiding somethingm tur maybe that s when you wear turtlenecks. maybe you re a poet. there i e you go.. i m not saying the second part. all right. leftover saying ths. where i read the jokes we didn t use this week. it as always. use it s my first time reading them. so if they , we ll tar and feather a wr
Country, ive been horrified by the stories of Sexual Violence and incest involving young girls in Northern Uganda. It was very tough because some of these things i had not experienced. A father having Sexual Intercourse with a daughter. Granddaughter. Theres nobody who can really support the person who has been raped. To me, i look at thisjustice, its a weakjustice. This region suffered a 20 year hideous insurgency, about 55 dead bodies myself. I describe it as the war was fought in the body of the woman and the woman became the battlefield. The war ended about 15 years ago. But is the post conflict legacyjust as horrific as the war itself . I was born in uganda and most of the early part of my life was spent in uganda. After the recent lockdown due to the covid pandemic. There were these horrific tales that came. Out of this country about an increase in teenage pregnancy. But there seemed to be even more tales that were coming from Northern Uganda, particularly about abuse of young gi
well, this, imported fossil fuels, to being able to export clean energy to europe as we tackle climate change? it s an ambitious plan, so i m going to be discussing all of that with these three experts. there they are. the big boss of one of africa s largest renewable energy companies, an energy expert from the world bank and a leading moroccan environmental campaigner. also on the show, i m going to sit down with the moroccan government minister tasked with the mighty challenge of making sure everything is in place for this country to enjoy the abundant wind and sunshine whilst transforming its economy. wherever you rejoining me from around the world, once again, a big hello and a warm welcome to the show. and i tell you what, it s certainly warm here in morocco s capital of rabat. in fact, this is a country that s trying to make the most of its natural resources, including the sunshine, to solve one of the biggest problems on the planet energy. that s because everyone wan
country, i ve been horrified by the stories of sexual violence and incest involving young girls in northern uganda. it was very tough because some of these things i had not experienced. a father having sexual intercourse with a daughter. granddaughter. there s nobody who can really support the person who has been raped. to me, i look at thisjustice, it s a weakjustice. this region suffered a 20 year hideous insurgency, about 55 dead bodies myself. i describe it as the war was fought in the body of the woman and the woman became the battlefield. the war ended about 15 years ago. but is the post conflict legacyjust as horrific as the war itself? i was born in uganda and most of the early part of my life was spent in uganda. after the recent lockdown due to the covid pandemic. there were these horrific tales that came. out of this country about an increase in teenage pregnancy. but there seemed to be even more tales that were coming from northern uganda, particularly about abuse
people since tuesday. it comes as sudan s former prime minister, abdalla hamdok, warned that the conflict would be a mayor conflict for the world if it continues and could become worse than those in syria and libya. this is khartoum earlier. the ceasefire between warring generals in sudan has been repeatedly violated and the army now says it is launching a large scale attack on the capital. our diplomatic correspondent paul adams reports. hello, everyone, we have just landed at stansted london airport. for dr abdulrahman babiker, a welcome return to british soil a return that almost didn t happen. thank you to the government for helping this and facilitating for us getting the guidance for the nhs doctors. by sea and air, others are following. thousands of foreign nationals fleeing anyway they can. port sudan on the red sea fast becoming a major hub. in the capital khartoum, the ceasefire seems precarious with the army warning people to stay indoors while it deploys tanks.