marking the official launch of the nottingham. the last few days of summer with a dry story. if you shower cropping up here you can see parts of bingen, rural parts, temperatures dropping 26-27 c. rural parts, temperatures dropping 26 27 c. double figures to start your tuesday morning. the best of the morning sunshine in england and wales. parts of east anglia southeast and a few showers in recent days. the odd isolated shower through scotland towards the isle of man but cloud breaking up through. even with the breeze, we will see temperatures around 23 24 c. hello, this is bbc news. the headlines. nasa postpones the launch of the artemis space rocket on its mission to the moon, due to last minute technical issues. the next opportunity for the launch is on friday. the head of the institute for fiscal studies labels some of liz truss s tax cutting policies as worrying and inadequade for dealing with rising energy costs. the ukrainian military has begun its long awaited offen
nasa postpones the launch of the artemis space rocket on its mission to the moon, due to last minute technical issues. the next opportunity for the launch is on friday. liz truss pulls out of a planned bbc interview tomorrow. it comes as the foreign secretary s team hit back at criticism of her economic plans from the institute for fiscal studies. pakistan makes a global appealfor help after a flooding catastrophe that s killed more than a thousand people and affected 33 million. the ukrainian military has begun its long awaited offensive on the southern front. it claims to have broken through the first line of russian defence around the main city of kherson. now on bbc news, our reporter lora jones investigates if workers are being exploited and if hustle culture has gone too far in the dark side of direct sales. the world of door to door sales and selling on the street has been rebooted for the social media age. young people are being promised big money, glam work trips
carnival in west london is coming to an end this evening. and, coming up a five thirty, we investigate if workers are being exploited and if hustle culture has gone too far in the dark side of direct sales. in the last few minutes, its been announced that the conservative leadership candidate liz truss has pulled out of a bbc one television interview with nick robinson tomorrow evening. it comes after ms truss team hit back at criticism of her economic plans, after the institute for fiscal studies think tank said they were simplistic and warned that proposals to cut some taxes could crash the economy. our political correspondent damian grammaticus is here what more do we know about this interview miss truss will no longer be taking part in? with the bbc office of said is that she pulled out because she could no longer spare the time is what we have been told. this was agreed about two and a half weeks ago or so and so, liz truss of the time was scheduled to happe
now it s time for a look at the weather with matt taylor. hello. a fine end to the day with much of the daytime cloud melting away, but glad that it s in place tonight across parts of scotland, particularly, one or two showers continuing higher, and we will see areas of cloud pushing in through east anglia and the south east, maybe also lincolnshire, bringing a greater chance of some rain showers into tuesday morning. temperatures for many in double figures but in rural parts of northern western england and wales, we could get down to five or 6 degrees, but here, it s the sunniest conditions to start tuesday. elsewhere, well, sunshine will come and go. a fair bit of cloud in scotland to begin with, one or two showers, maybe also into the isle of man. that cloud will thin and dissipate a bit through the day. more cloud in east anglia and the south east and lincolnshire, with a future showers may be into south east and midlands and the home counties but the further west you are
time in three years. and, coming up at 8.30pm we meet the members of one of ukraine s top rock bands, who ve become army medics in kharkiv, helping the military to fight invading russian forces. good evening and welcome to bbc news. the devastation caused in pakistan by extensive flooding has been called a crisis of unimaginable proportions by its climate change minister. she says that a third of the country is now underwater. the disaster has killed over 1,100 people and affected 33 million. international help has begun to arrive but water is still surging down the indus river and will flood low lying sindh even more over the next few days. the province has received eight times its average rainfall for august. the bbc has been filming across the country, including our correspondent pumza filhani who has sent this report from sukkur, a city in sindh. a moment of quiet in the middle of chaos. inside a crowded hall, families that have been displaced by the floods in northern