now on bbc news, it s hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk with me, zeinab badawi. the world of fashion, with its often scantily clad women in seductive poses, is not where you would expect to find a somali born fashion editor who wears a hijab. well, rawdah mohamed has taken up a senior role at the soon to be launched vogue scandinavia. after moving to norway as a child, she became a model, and in april created a social media storm with a post called hands off my hijab. how far can she use fashion to overturn negative stereotypes of muslim women? rawdah mohamed, welcome to hardtalk. so, there you were at the age of eight, your family fled the conflict in somalia and moved to norway as refugees. that must have been a bit of a culture shock, no? yes. thank you for having me, by the way. yes, it was culture shock because i was only used to the refugee camp, my family and the people around. so, when i came, it was. everything was different. not only the culture, but also the climate wa
protesters were killed. now on bbc news it s hardtalk with zeinab badawi. welcome to hardtalk with me, zeinab badawi. the world of fashion, with its often scantily clad women in seductive poses, is not where you would expect to find a somali born fashion editor who wears a hijab. well, rawdah mohamed has taken up a senior role at the soon to be launched vogue scandinavia. after moving to norway as a child, she became a model, and in april created a social media storm with a post called hands off my hijab. how far can she use fashion to overturn negative stereotypes of muslim women? rawdah mohamed, welcome to hardtalk. so there you were at the age of eight, your family fled the conflict in somalia and moved to norway as refugees. that must have been a bit of a culture shock, no? yes. thank you for having me, by the way. yes, it was culture shock because i was only used to the refugee camp, my family and the people around. so when i came, it was. everything was different. not o
now on bbc news, it s hardtalk with zeinab badawi. welcome to hardtalk with me, zeinab badawi. the world of fashion, with its often scantily clad women in seductive poses, is not where you would expect to find a somali born fashion editor who wears a hijab. well, rawdah mohamed has taken up a senior role at the soon to be launched vogue scandinavia. after moving to norway as a child, she became a model, and in april created a social media storm with a post called hands off my hijab. how far can she use fashion to overturn negative stereotypes of muslim women? rawdah mohamed, welcome to hardtalk. so there you were at the age of eight, your family fled the conflict in somalia and moved to norway as refugees. that must have been a bit of a culture shock, no? yes. thank you for having me, by the way. yes, it was culture shock because i was only used to the refugee camp, my family and the people around. so when i came, it was. everything was different. not only the culture, but al
u.s. since the pandemic began. crowds packing beaches, and airports today, we ll have more on that. just ahead, but first we begin in texas, where the war on voting is taking a surprising turn. democrats staging a walk-out during a legislative session last night. that stopped a controversial gop voting bill from becoming law, for now at least, known as senate bill 7, it would ban some mail-in applications, it would reduce voting hours, it would stop drive-through voting all together, among other things that it does. republicans are still going to press forward, they say, they can now have a special session that governor greg abbott says will happen. i asked a democratic state senator, a lawmaker there last hour, why her party did this. we delayed a bullet train to suppression, to voter suppression, and it was important to delay it so that we can we can shine some light on what this leadership is doing. so, yes, inevitably we are going into a special suppression session. b
7 million job openings and 250,000 people took a job. april was a disaster. biden created a labor shortage because he gave workers too much money. $500 a week unemployment plus a bonus just to stay home. that s $80,000 a year for a husband and wife not to work. but the president doesn t get. i know there has been a lot of discussion since friday s report that people are being paid to stay home wrather than go to work. we don t see much evidence of that. jesse: biden who has never run a business his whole life tells small business owners just pay your workers more. we need to recognize people will come back to work if they are paid a decent wage. my expectation is as our economy comes back, these companies will provide fair wages and safe work environments, and if think do that, they will find plenty of workers. jesse: so let me get this straight. a restaurant owner who got shut down all last year. barely survived. should start handing out $20,000 raises to bus boys? small