the scottish government requires to military help for its ambulance service amid warnings of the most challenging winter ahead in a lifetime. back to the office for some, but a bbc poll suggests most workers and bosses don t expect to give up working from home altogether post pandemic. and emma raducanu is back in london at last after the new york high life, a low key welcome home for britain s new tennis sensation. coming up in sport later in the hour on the bbc news channel, another big night of european football with plenty of british interest leicester have a tough europa league match against napoli. good evening and welcome to the bbc news at six. the roll out of covid boosterjabs across the uk got under way today, with the government setting out to give more than 30 million people an extra layer of protection this winter. jabs will be offered to the over 50s, as well as care home staff and residents, front line nhs workers and younger adults with certain health cond
united states behind enemy lines, hostage to the wims of terrorists, would you want your president and your country to move on and pull up stakes and say you re on your own because that s what the state department has up on their web site. on this show we re not moving on. we will cover every stories but we re not moving on until every american is hope safely. every day that goes by the risk gets higher and higher. the terrorists and the taliban, they have not been keeping their word. well, that is, ever since joe biden became president. and they re, in fact, now going door to door, as we speak, executing anyone and everyone that they know that worked with the united states in the last 20 years. congressman michael waltz said that afghanistan is about to make 1979 in tehran, 52 hostages, 444 days, look leak a sleep-over. it s that bad. sadly, i agree with the congressman. and i pray to god we re both wrong. but joe biden, he can t seem to be bothered. the withdraw was a cir
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are broadcasters penny smith and david davies. lovely penny smith and david davies. to see you both. the i leads on the news this evening that many workers in the food supply industry will be able to subsitute isolation for daily testing the so called pingdemic is causing staff shortages up and down the country ping in the army the headline for the metro which leads on calls by a conservative mp to get military help in order to keep supermarket shelves stocked and petrol pumps full. the mail leads on calls from business leaders to extend the end of isolation to staff in a wider set of industries, including hospitality, manufacturing and transport. the telegraph leads on an oxford university study which suggests testing schoolchildren on a daily basis and keeping them in the classroom is just as effective as forcing them to quarantine at home. the nhs 3% pay rise is the