hello and welcome to bbc world news. we are staying with those events in afghanistan. there s been a suicide bombing at kabul airport in afghanistan, where crowds were gathered in the hope of getting on a flight to escape taliban rule. taliban officials said at least 13 people were killed. it comes after days of warnings from western intelligence agencies that an attack could be imminent. let me bring you up to date with what we know so far. the press secretary for the us secretary of defence has called it a complex attack that resulted in a number of us and civilian casualties. the emergency hospital says 60 injured people have been taking their so far. the pentagon has also confirmed at least two explosions, which happened near to one another outside the perimeter of the airport. 0ne blast happened close to the airport s abbey gate on the other close to the nearby baron hotel. the hotel had been used by some western nations as a staging point for evacuation since the airl
haitian presidentjovenel moise has taken place amid heavy security near cap haitien, the main city of his native northern region. outside the moise family compound, police fired shots and tear gas at protesters voicing anger at the president s murder. a high courtjudge in northern ireland has ruled there should be a new investigation into whether the security services could have prevented the omagh bombing in 1998. 29 people were killed in the attack, including nine children and three generations of the same family. in 2013, the government said it would not hold a public inquiry. our ireland correspondent emma vardy reports. ona on a busy summer s day, the bomb which exploded in the centre of omagh was the single worst atrocity of the northern ireland troubles. no one ever convicted. today, relatives of the is welcome to the ruling of a high courtjudge who said there was a very real prospect that it could have been prevented by the security services, and called for new inves
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are jason beattie, who s assistant editor at the daily mirror, and martin bentham, the home affairs editor for the evening standard. let me bring you up to date what jason and martin have had a sneak preview of. 0h, burger! thats the sun s headline. it says the growing nhs app pingdemic is putting summer heatwave barbecues at threat. the i says the world is watching johnson s gamble , the planned ending of legal restrictions on monday, as cases spike across the uk. there s a similar theme in the ft s main story. it says global health experts say the lifting of restrictions in england is a threat to the world . the mail s splash is french holiday chaos . it says thousands of summer holidays have been ruined after a last minute change to the quarantine rules for those crossing the channel. that story also makes the front of the times. it says the decision was made owing to concerns o