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i should say there will be continuing coverage on the bbc news channel. huw edwards will be here with the ten o clock news. you are watching special coverage on bbc news of last night s terror attacks in central london. we are at the police cordon and borough high street, close to borough market and london bridge, where the attacks unfolded last night, leaving seven people dead and 48 injured. we are hearing from the various hospitals where those injured are being taken. have been taken. 21 of them are in what is described as critical care. the police have been giving more details about their operations last night to upper hand and shoot dead the three terror suspects who carried out the attack to apprehend. the metropolitan police say eight officers were involved in that operation, firing some 50 bullets. the three men were wearing what appeared to be suicide vests, which turned out to be hoax fests. but the police officers trying to wrap the hem them did not know that
PeoplePartAll-over-the-worldArtEthnicitiesCulturesPaCentral-londonOneAttacksTermsCities it was huge night for celtic as they needed a win against rosenborg to stay in the champions league. find out how their third round qualifier went in norway. good evening. there s new hope tonight for thousands of families who live with the prospect of passing on inherited diseases to future generations. for the first time, scientists have successfully repaired a faulty gene in human embryos. they used a process known as gene editing to correct dna that causes a deadly heart condition. but critics are warning that the technique could, ultimately, be used to create so called designer babies. our medical correspondent, fergus walsh reports. the goal could not be more ambitious. to eradicate inherited diseases. these scientists have taken an impressive first step on a long road, editing dna in human embryos. so how is it done? inside the nucleus of each of our cells is our genome, billions of pieces of dna. it is the instruction manual for life. the scientists were targeting a f
Terrorist-cellWest-midlandsPoliceGroupMy-lifePhilipMilitaryPlottingBuckingham-palaceEngagementAgeArmy-cadets it s 8am in singapore and 1am in london. there is new hope for thousands of families who live with the prospect of passing on inherited diseases to future generations. for the first time, scientists in the us, along with experts from china and south korea, have successfully repaired a faulty gene in human embryos. but critics are warning that the technique could, ultimately, be used to create so called designer babies. our medical correspondent fergus walsh reports. the goal could not be more ambitious: to eradicate inherited diseases. these scientists have taken an impressive first step on a long road, editing dna in human embryos. so how is it done? inside the nucleus of each of ourselves is our genome, billions of pieces of dna. it s the instruction manual for life. the scientists were targeting a faulty gene that causes a serious heart condition. they fertilised a healthy egg with sperm from a man carrying the faulty gene. they then injected the gene editing system known
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