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russian troops could not capture it. kyiv held strong. the government survived. and ukrainians bounced back, determined to enjoy the city that they have denied russia. kyiv feels like a city that dodged a bullet. despite overwhelming odds, russian troops could not capture it. kyiv held strong. the government survived. and ukrainians bounced back, determined to enjoy the city that they have denied russia. this is the ukrainian capital just months after russia invaded. going out in kyiv became an act of defiance, a middle finger to vladimir putin. russia did not kill kyiv. it showed the city how to live again. they are thankful here because they know what could have happened russia failed to take kyiv. when it did occupy the city s suburbs. and horrible things happened here. no. you ve got past me once and twice ten-year-old andriy lived just outside kyiv. one, two, three. four and then five. i met him weeks after his mother and father were married in murder ....
be banned from the roads altogether. changing life in russia how tighter and more repressive controls are bringing back memories from the past. we have a special report from st petersburg. duggee is waiting for some new friends to arrive. and how the bbc s hey duggee is helping young ukrainian refugees feel more at home. also on bbc london this hour. how households can save on energy bills as prices continue to soar. and the science museum aiming to attract more people to a career as science technicians. good evening and welcome to the bbc news at six. investigations into the deaths of three teenagers with mental health issues have found they died after a catalogue of failures by the nhs trust treating them. christie hartnett, nadia sharif and emily moore were 17 and 18 years old. they were in the care of the tees, esk and weir valley trust and all three, who were friends, died within eight months of each other. they were treated at west lane hospital, which provided ....
pressure. lots of isobars on the charts, hence the strong winds, and outbreaks of rain. it is pushing its way eastwards and some heavy showers follow on behind it. you see flashes of lightning there and this rain band becomes confined to england and wales and the south east towards the end of the night. the wins are a real feature, end of the night. the wins are a realfeature, gusting 50 or 60 miles an hour on the irish coast, after 70 on the coast of western scotland. that becomes confined to the south and it stays very wet in scotland. but the ones eased down for part two of the night. a cooler feel two things across the north and the west. double figure values in the south east where it will remain wet into tomorrow morning. as we head through thursday that whether frank clears away and the next feature runs into the southern half of the country in the afternoon. a wet start for east anglia and the south and the rain is slow to clear, but eventually it will. elsewher ....
if we lose more time we may lose the ability to leave. if we leave we are going to do it now. the jury takes the steve bannon case after a wild, wild day of final court arguments and the white house physician said the president is doing better one day into fighting off coronavirus. we begin the hour with donald trump and new details in the second by second reconstruction of his insurrection day negligence. the panel wrapped up their first round of public hearings with a promise to reappear in september after spending the past month laying out the factual record. the republican chair says the committee is completing pieces from the insurrection puzzle. last night they had more than enough to establish this. then president trump did not try to move any arm of his government to stop the capitol attack, no calls to the military or homeland security or fbi or d.c. officials or to check in on his vice president. he called rudy giuliani and senators. former white house aid ....
to canada, the 85 year old pontiff said his age and frailty had led to his decision. now on bbc news, locked away: ukraine s stolen lives. a warning this programme contains scenes some viewers may find upsetting. i ve been to hundreds of institutions, and i get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach whenever i come. this is the search to uncover ukraine s most shameful secret. oh, my god, this is his ribs. this is his ribs hanging out. it s a nightmare. it s a living hell on earth. we re with human rights investigators eric and halyna, exposing the abuse and neglect of disabled people. translation: there is nothing we can do to help this child. - unfortunately, naturei has decided their fate. they re in pain. and you re not doing anything to help. teeth grinding this is a sound of the war you haven t heard. anna s teeth grinding anxiety hints at the hidden trauma of ukraine s disabled children. they are nervous, disorientated, and distressed. and they ve been dumped ....