trump doesn t ever want you to read or crack open or really even know about. authoritarian vision and plans on paper, it s the heritage foundation s project 2025 and it is now bursting into public view in spite of or because of trump s repeated denials. even in spaces where project 2025 is not explicitly mentioned or quoted, the vision it outlines is every maga true believeer. semafor is reporting this, quote, trump comes back in january. i ll be on his heels coming back, and i will run the biggest deportation force this country has ever seen. that was former i.c.e. director at a panel on immigration policy. quote, they ain t seen bleep yet. wait until 2025. trump s allies are not even trying to hide the radical plans for the country should donald trump prevail in november and serve another term. as for donald trump himself, he s claiming he knows nothing about it saying in a post on truth social, quote, i have not seen it, i have no idea who is in charge of it, end quote. th
resistance movement? ilya ponomarev in washington, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for having me, stephen. it is a pleasure to have you on hardtalk. you re in washington, dc. you are normally based in ukraine. i am very well aware that nato leaders are about to meet in washington at the nato summit. why are you there? do you believe you have some role to play? we are communicating the position of the shadow russian parliament, the congress of people s deputies, which is actually calling for nato to stop putting restrictions on ukraine, how we can resist the aggression, because right now our hands are very much tied in terms of retaliatory attacks, in terms of attacks inside russian territory, in terms of targeting the leaders of this regime, the war criminals that are shooting children s hospitals and destroying civilians in ukraine. yeah. you re responding there to what we have learned from kyiv in the last few hours about the latest missile strike on kyiv, which the ukrainians
ilya ponomarev in washington, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for having me, stephen. it is a pleasure to have you on hardtalk. you re in washington, dc. you are normally based in ukraine. i am very well aware that nato leaders are about to meet in washington at the nato summit. why are you there? do you believe you have some role to play? we are communicating the position of the shadow russian parliament, the congress of people s deputies, which is actually calling for nato to stop putting restrictions on ukraine, how we can resist the aggression, because right now our hands are very much tied in terms of retaliatory attacks, in terms of attacks inside russian territory, in terms of targeting the leaders of this regime, the war criminals that are shooting children s hospitals and destroying civilians in ukraine. yeah. you re responding there to what we have learned from kyiv in the last few hours about the latest missile strike on kyiv, which the ukrainians say hit a children s
hello and welcome to the programme. we start injerusalem. there have been more clashes between palestinians and israeli police, a day after more than 200 people were injured in some of the worst violence in years at the al aqsa mosque. fighting broke outjust as tens of thousands of muslim worshippers prayed at the compound to mark the most holy night of ramadan. more than 50 people were injured. gareth barlow reports. stun grenades against stones. palestinian protesters and israeli security forces clashing outside the al aqsa mosque complex injerusalem s old city, one of the most revered sites in islam. it s also the location of the temple mount, the holiest site injudaism. the source of the anger weeks of rising tensions over the potential eviction of palestinian families from their homes in occupied eastjerusalem, which israeli settlers claim as their land. earlier on saturday, roads into the city became gridlocked as israel ramped up security, fearing a repeat of friday
officials in afghanistan say at least 30 people have been killed and more than 150 others injured in a blast near a school in the capital, kabul. some reports have put the death toll as high as 55. many of those who died were schoolgirls who had just finished class and were streaming out of the gates at the time of the attack. most of the people living in the district in western kabul are part of the shia hazara community, who have been targeted repeatedly in recent years by the islamic state group. the taliban have condemned the attack. our correspondent secunder kermani has more details. panic, fear and bloodshed outside the school gates. the explosions took place just as students were making their way home many of those killed girls and young women. inside a hospital, relatives search body by body for their loved ones, whilst outside, a desperate wait for news. two of my daughters were studying there. one of them is injured, the other is missing. the islamic state grou