they are usable in a variety of different applications. for example, our footwear components here contains the fishing nets. so these are in people s shoes? these are in people s shoes, yes, so people walking around with some of our customers shoes on, they will have some fishing net in them. incredible, so it has gone from being a net to footwear. yeah, absolutely, yes. it is a small step forward in what will be a long journey cleaning up our polluted oceans. jonah fisher, bbc news, in brixham harbour. 0k, time fora 0k, time for a look at the weather. after incredibly dry summer, we need some rain and we had some across the hills in the north west of the uk but there wasn t very much rainfall across the southeast last week. looking at the weather picture this week, the rain initially will be falling mostly across the north west of the uk until thursday. that is when we will see heavier rain working across england and wales bringing useful falls of rain. working across eng
scotland s first minister nicola sturgeon has blamed westminster for the cost of living crisis and renewed her pledge to achieve scottish independence scotla nd scotland has got what it takes to be a successful, independent country. it has it in abundance. never let anyone tell us otherwise. a nurse pleads not guilty to murdering 7 babies and attempting to murder ten others as her trial begins in manchester. a new ticketmaster pricing system, which alters the price of tickets based on demand, is being criticised by both fans and industry experts. russia has carried out a series of missile strikes on cities across ukraine, in the most widespread bombardment since the early weeks of the war. the capital city of kyiv has been targeted for the first time in months. and there have been explosions in other cities including lviv, dnipro, kharkiv and zaporizhzhia. ukraine says at least 11 people were killed and 64 injured in the attacks. vladimir putin says the strikes are moscow s
with unproven results. there is some sense setting in this though. i read somewhere else that liz truss is bringing in a very experienced civil servant bank into the fold. and kwarteng. but you know, at the microlevel the impacts on ordinary people, young people first time buyers, all of us less than the people on very low wages is huge. it is impossible to calculate now. the mention that. is impossible to calculate now. the mention that, the name that you mentioned is actually the last columnist james is actually a veteran treasury official and i suppose that what they were hoping is a man who has decades of experience in the treasury would kind of overcome some of the negative reaction to the previous person being sacked. the effect though doesn t seem to have had much impact. let us move on to the front of the imac. truss faces a showdown with rebels. so parliament reurou -s showdown with rebels. so parliament regroum today showdown with rebels. so parliament regroups
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are two authors and journalists they are yasmin alibhai brown, and emma woolf. tomorrow s front pages starting with. and daily mail focusses on russia carrying out missile strikes across ukraine, hitting civilian areas in the capital, kyiv, and many other cities the day death rained from the sky is it s frontpage. he describes the scene the day death reigned from the sky and it is a situation report byjournalist on the ground. the guardian quotes president zelensky pleading for more help to moscow s terrorists attacks. elsewhere, the i newspaper predicts a make or break week for the pm and her tory mps after a difficult party conference truss faces showdown with rebels is it s headline. the ft says kwasi kwarteng and the bank of england have failed to calm financial markets as borrowing costs soar once more. senior tories tell the paper, the chancellor will struggle to come up