Bill hemmer, good morning. The Hazardous Bio Lab Operating with none of the legallyrequired Safety Controls filled with chemicals and medical waste and infectious pathogens including tuberculosis and hiv and mice carrying the covid19 virus. Thats a lot. Well bring you up to date on what we think we know. Good morning to you. This is all very disturbing. What we have is a lab run by a company tied to china no less storing infectious bacterial and viral agents including ecoli, tuberculosis and coronavirus conducting experiments on mice using those bacteria and viruses and now those who ran the operation are refusing to talk to the multiple federal and local agencies looking into what was going on here. As you take a live look at the warehouse. The lab was only discovered when an alert local Inspector Outside of fresno, california noticed a hose coming out of what was supposed to be a disuseed building. These pictures now show what investigators then found. Potentially dangerous bacterial
on russia to help bring an end to the ukraine war. a woman s suing a rape crisis charity because she felt she couldn t speak at a support group after a transgender woman began coming to the same meeting. coming up: i m at wimbledon for day two to as two of the greats of the game, serena williams and rafael nadal, return. and coming up on the bbc news channel, england s women are currently in action against south africa on day two of their one off test. we will bring you all the latest from taunton. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. an abandoned lorry has been discovered in the us state of texas close to the border with mexico with the bodies of 46 people, believed to be migrants, inside. the fire chief in the city of san antonio described finding stacks of bodies after someone heard a cry for help. 16 survivors among them four children are being treated for heat exhaustion. richard galpin reports. dozens of emergency vehicles try to get to the aban
now got what it wanted from talks at the summit in madrid. how much time have you spent scrolling on your phone so far today? the fact that so many of us spend so much time on our mobiles means some are swapping smartphones for so called dumb ones, which have fewer distractions. even the man who helped to invent the very first mobile believes his creation is now out of control. jayne mccubbin has been talking to him. this is what the very first mobile phone looked like. as you can see, it s huge. this is martin cooper, the man who helped to invent the very first mobile phone. do you know how many people have a mobile phone right now? and way back when, could you ever have imagined it would be that prolific? of course, jayne, we knew. but one thing we did not anticipate was this powerful computer in your phone because none of those things existed. good afternoon, sir. today, more than 6.5 billion people own a mobile, almost 84% of the world s population. but. let s stop and as
will be scrutinised. the government is providing support to british steel owned by the firm thought to be between three and £500 billion, they are taking a big chunk of that one and a quarter billion pounds. everyone is recognising that the steel industry needs to carbon eyes, unions say that they are doing it too fast with too much of a heavy toll on the workforce. just too fast with too much of a heavy toll on the workforce. toll on the workforce. just very cuickl , toll on the workforce. just very quickly. what toll on the workforce. just very quickly, what now toll on the workforce. just very quickly, what now happens - toll on the workforce. just very i quickly, what now happens next? toll on the workforce. just very - quickly, what now happens next? what the company quickly, what now happens next? what the company have quickly, what now happens next? wiagt the company have agreed to quickly, what now happens next? wiat the company have agreed to do is submit th