Episode Transcript
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hello this is the global news podcast from
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the bbc world service with
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reports and analysis from across the world the
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latest news 7 days a bbc
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world service podcast advertising
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this is a global news
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podcast from the bbc world
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service keys
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says,
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un and the red cross must
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be allowed to investigate the deaths of more
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than ukrainian prisoners of war
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in a detention center in russian occupied
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ukraine ukraine new us
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envoy for the horn of africa has arrived
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in ethiopia in an effort to advance
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peace efforts between the government and to grind
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rebels flash floods
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in the us state of kentucky have killed
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at least sixteen people and
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the governor says the toll is likely
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toll be much higher
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also podcast
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more and more of instagram scan become video
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overtime if you did what he was shared instagram
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states shifting one word of it is over time
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the why have instagram note
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on a huge turn honest style
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pieces
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ukraine says united nations and
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the red cross must be allowed to investigate
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the deaths of more than sixty ukrainian prisoners
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of war is an explosion of
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fire in a detention center in the russian
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occupied part of the donetsk region
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the russian say cheese destroyed the center
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in a rocket strike that presence
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and and ski says the blame lies
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with the russians
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that will have your would you open your parole
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dot all kinds of not always does
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breeze today about the strike by the occupiers
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on on a nice com in the dentist region
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they should be a clear legal recognition
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of fresher as posturing state terrorism
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i'm especially turning to the united states
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a decision is needed and it is
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needed now russia
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has proven time and again that
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it is the largest source of terrorism in the
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world today
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ukraine's former head of national security
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audits on the daniel york said it was a
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deliberate attack on members of the
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as of italians who were the last
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defenders of the city of marry a poll
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before it fell in may
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this compelled, the prisoners defenders
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of mario kart play bravery
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for defending mario party became the
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symbol of heroism and bravery and
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self-sacrifice in
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ukraine, but also internationally,
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and russia was looking ways
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to destroy this image
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and them break this prisoners
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sir psychologically and demoralize
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ukrainian society and the army
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i say to a correspondent and keys
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pull adams who told us what exactly
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was known about the attack
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the aftermath is absolutely hellish
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this is a large warehouse that was
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being used to house possibly
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as many as two hundred that
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ukrainian prisoners and there
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are holes who the corrugated
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iron roof and what you
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see is a tangle
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of metal bunk beds and
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in and among and on them large
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number of charred bodies i mean
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literally one or two the bodies look like they
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died as they slapped others are just
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line on the ground they are absolutely
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disfigured and charred and
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mangled and outside there are more
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about is not an band that bloodied
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and rather emaciated i had to
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say so that's the seen as
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for what happens well the russians
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say that this is the aftermath
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of a ukrainian missile attack they
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say they have evidence in the form of fragments
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of a western supplied rockets
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are we haven't seen that the ukrainians
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for their part seriously deny
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that they had anything to do with this they say they were
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conducting no military operations in
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the area and that this is a
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war crime carried out deliberately by
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the russians possibly to cover up their
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treatment of the detainees being
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held inside and in fact they've
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released and intercepted phone conversation
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which they say has the voices
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of pro russian rebels discussing
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how this happened and revealing
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that it was kind of engineered
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by the rebels themselves there
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are post
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some of the dead may have been from
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the as off the totti and
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which fought so hard to descend
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marry a poll before it fell
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though outside observers will say what
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possible know
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with ukrainians have the hitting a
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prison holding ukrainian prisoners of war
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it is pretty the inconceivable
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that ukrainians were deliberately kill their
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own prisoners of war particular ones
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prize for that long siege
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at the as of style still works in matter you
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paul it beggars belief frankly that this
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would have been and a thing deliberate on the ukrainian
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side could it have been a mistake where we cannot rule
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that out at this point but as for
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the the kind of the identity of the prisoners
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it is a big reported by the ukrainians that in
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the last few days as
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off battalion prisoners were
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concentrated in the very buildings
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that was struck again we do not have confirmation
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of that habit he does certainly
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seem as though people from
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marry a poll whether they were civilians or fighters
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are all too familiar with a place in
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which even before today some
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pretty grim thing seems had been happening
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the items well the war in ukraine
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has revealed have tens of millions
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of people many of them in africa us
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depend on the vast amounts of grain the country
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produces to keep salvation at
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bay since february ukraine
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has been unable to export twenty
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million tons of grain because
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of the russian blockade of his ports now
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after after struck a week ago bucks
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by the united nations and turkey there
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are hopes that finally some of that
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grain will the be exported soon before
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it spoils crane in officials
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say ten sits loaded with grain are
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ready to leave it's black sea ports as
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soon as the un and turkey concern
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a safe boot out before
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you could this podcast i asked our correspondent
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james waterhouse who that one of the ports
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is there was any sign of this much yet
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i knew you'd ask me that science is still
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a very difficult question to answer
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there , nevertheless preparation
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taking place along the coastline we
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seen the cost of grain being loaded
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on on , one
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large vessel has been moved has cranes
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across the pool not significant because
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this is an industry and mr the country
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which has been frozen in time since
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the twenty fourth since said free and
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then you have president zealand ski that
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in his visits i think his comments
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represents the political
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will behind wanting to for ya this
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major supply route will
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it equates to equates whole convoy
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of ships coming to a out from this
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weekend know i think this
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is more testing of the waters
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and were because there are a number
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even by mr the united nations are a number
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of crucial questions and details
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which me to be ironed out
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the
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can you ensure whole convoy of
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ships to make their way out of this
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port through these
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movies mine infested waters
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to travel along travel land corridor which will take
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to towards to towards
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naval russian a prison
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switches to be suffocated ukraine's
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onto suffocated school presence which has
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and not miss on attacks to every
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on inside ukraine there
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are a whole host of unknown now the forties
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from see a global forties and shares isa
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global risk will be costed and
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he will take time and
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they will confidence we to be built say
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it'll take a few sips to make it through a
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full when me six leave we just don't know
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russian media is expecting free subs to
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make their way through but as a lot
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that you can mitigate for their
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can lot of unnamed it is mitigate leap of faith
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and i gotta say to say
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trust is rock bottom between russia
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and ukraine is an understatement it has never
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really been any trust for the four separate
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and the seventies now
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james was a house in ukraine's
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the new us envoy for the horn of africa
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might hammer has arrived in ethiopia
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in an effort to advance peace efforts between
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the government and to grind rebels and
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a sicilian addis ababa has said the government
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is ready to negotiate without
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preconditions lou ross reports
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there are still hurdles in the way but
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there are also signs that peace talks
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in ethiopia or a possibility
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the leader of the ticker i people's liberation
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from this week said he wanted basic
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services restored first the
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brits young deborah michael once the government to
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switch the electricity and telecommunication
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links back on integrates and
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to allow the banks to work once again
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they're also territorial disputes to results
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but at least the two sides are talking about
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peace rather them war
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we'll ross palestinian health
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officials say a teenager has been
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shot dead during clashes in the
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occupied west bank the palestinian
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teenagers died in an area close to the
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city of ramallah a middle east
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correspondent on bateman reports from
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jerusalem
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sixteen year old amjad abu ali i was
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shot dead during a protest against israeli
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settlement growth in a village near ramallah
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say palestinian officials palestinians
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had tried to confront israeli settlers in
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an open field according to witnesses on
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of the settlers was armed but it's not clear
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whether clear whether bullet came from them or israeli
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troops who are also firing live
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ammunition video also showed palestinians
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throwing stones at a road on hitting
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a car windscreen the land around
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the village has long been the target of secular groups
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and is a frequent flashpoint
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damon in pakistan
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relief operations are continuing a slush
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floods across the country have killed more
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than three hundred people particularly
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hard hit has been the south western province
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of polluter son were well over hundred
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people have died so far my
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colleague james rent state to be
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to saying from bbc the and
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asked him about the flooding there
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unfortunately this has been going in different
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areas of the province and due to the
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remoteness and the last as of the province the
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government is finding it extremely difficult to reach
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those people even though the ice axes
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they have been sharing their videos or messages
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from my in on social media making
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appeals for someone to come and help but
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unfortunately the infrastructure is so weak
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and baluchistan as i mentioned earlier is
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even the largest province it is the poverty
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stricken the forest province in pakistan's
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infrastructure is not their dog facilities
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are nor there but that's why the delay
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is is she was right now for for people
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to be like it and belief i know we've
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seen some talk on social media
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i'm sure you've seen the same conversations
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suggesting that the government has
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neglected it's treatment of people because
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they are in balochistan itself at
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what's your assessment of this in some ways
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either not outright say it's wrong as a passer
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to to that but the fact of the matter of but of japan
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has been neglected by
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a know a historically in bucks county government
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throughout the time the of the remote area australia
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people the often are not part of
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the in a mainstream coverage unfortunately
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and that's why it's what you're seeing on social media is
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coming from that secondly there's also political
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elements there's a massive nationalist movement
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going on with the i saw a sometimes
11:23
because sympathizers or with it a try to
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portray in this way that the deal
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of people to go minute not supporting them because
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the government does not necessarily support the idea
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of up his those represents over there is
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a want them to suffer as an agenda civic tradition
11:36
from them on the other hand is or pakistan's
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national politics going on be or the opposition
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party will almost always take on
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the goldman and blame them for decent right
11:46
now you have former prime minister in non
11:48
on spotty the bucks anthony consult they are
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flooding the internet and social media
11:52
blaming the incumbents are being in a showing
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them that look look they are so inefficient and
11:57
so incompetent in doing their job for
11:59
it's a mix of
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things got the group of the matter is
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you have like in a massive flood which has been going
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on now for almost like a week and hundred
12:06
people have died and still despite
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that bit of the mix sloppiest of recovery
12:11
for eight four four you know providing support
12:13
with the people that process
12:15
the hussein in the united
12:17
arab emirates officials now say least
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seven people are known to have died as a result
12:21
of the heavy rain and flooding this
12:23
that hit parts of the country on wednesday
12:26
the interior ministry said that all seven
12:28
what asian migrants flooding
12:30
has also been causing severe problems
12:33
in the us state of kentucky is
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experiencing what officials have described as the
12:37
most deadly and devastating says
12:39
said hit the area for decades many
12:41
homes have been swept away officials
12:44
say at least sixteen people
12:46
have died gov id the sheer
12:48
has said the number of fatalities is expected
12:51
to rise even so as rescue
12:53
efforts continue
12:54
we've got at least six dead children
12:57
and
12:59
the car
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the even harder for those families and those community
13:03
so keeper
13:04
still lot of people out there still lot of
13:06
people on account of for for going to do our best to
13:08
find him off ray johnson is a local
13:10
reporter has been covering the floods and eastern
13:13
kentucky
13:14
i have seen athlete devastation
13:17
people's houses have been
13:19
swept away cars and creaks
13:21
everyone i've i've talked to
13:24
seems to be in disbelief
13:26
that the water levels were so
13:29
high one woman i talked to
13:31
was rescued from the second floor of
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a building and a boat was high enough
13:35
for her to just step in to from that building
13:37
so the water in some places has
13:39
been
13:40
me too stories high rate johnson
13:42
the use of social media site instagram
13:45
you've probably noticed some recent changes
13:47
the photo sharing platform has been
13:49
filling uses home pages with videos
13:52
from accounts they don't follow it's a few
13:54
days ago the instagram both out of missouri
13:57
does his own video explaining the changes
13:59
i continue to support for or
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heritage you i love photos i know a lot
14:04
of us live photos to that said i
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need to be honest i do believe it
14:08
more and more of instagram is going to become video
14:10
overtime if you go up people sharing instagram
14:13
that shifting warm water videos overtime
14:15
if you look at what people like and consume and view
14:17
on instagram but also shifting more and more
14:19
to video of the time even when we start changing anything
14:21
so we're going to have to lean into that shift
14:24
well that was then but instagram has since
14:26
announces pausing these new features
14:29
so why the u turn santo
14:31
hostile has been taking
14:34
than a billion regular users
14:36
burkett struggling to keep up with
14:38
it main rival pick tuck which
14:41
the downloaded more than three billion
14:43
times in the past few weeks
14:45
instagram has come in for a lot of criticism
14:48
for straying away from what it was originally
14:50
set up to do some users
14:52
have accused of trying to copy tic
14:54
toc where people post of watch videos
14:57
instead of photos over
14:59
two hundred thousand people had signed
15:01
an online petition cool to make instagram
15:04
instagram again including the
15:06
reality tv star kim kardashians
15:09
and when celebrities with millions
15:11
of silhouettes speaker the social
15:14
media joins pinned to suffer and
15:16
other fighters sharing app snap
15:18
chat lost chat billion dollars in says
15:21
after kylie jenner criticized the
15:23
platform instagram parent
15:25
company missile which also own
15:27
facebook said it wanted to take
15:29
the time to get the changes right it's
15:32
understood the test version of the revamped
15:34
app will be phased out within weeks
15:37
how hot
15:41
she'll become we went to the
15:43
farmer on he lets on the land to
15:46
have a look where the material come from which is
15:48
where we find the not your with the three
15:50
d fish paleontologists
15:52
in england's i'll celebrate
15:53
the new discovery of a remarkable
15:56
new to rustic fossil site
16:02
last month the us supreme court struck
16:04
down the landmark
16:05
roe versus wade ruling row
16:07
bring back nationwide abortion rights
16:10
which had stood for nearly fifty
16:12
years the , further
16:14
polarized and already divided nation
16:16
andrew condemnation from around
16:18
the world video has no
16:20
him suing the justice who wrote that
16:22
decision striking back as his
16:25
critics speaking in rome
16:27
at a conference and religious freedom samuel
16:29
alito quipped that one foreign dita
16:31
had lost his job for opposing
16:34
the us supreme court
16:35
i had the honor this term of
16:38
rating i think the only supreme court
16:40
decisions in the history of that
16:43
institution that has been
16:45
lambasted by the whole
16:47
string of for losers
16:57
one of his wife of former
16:59
prime minister boris johnson he
17:02
paid the
17:08
i think for correspondent in washington
17:10
anthony zurcher and i asked him if it's
17:12
rare to hear the supreme court
17:14
justice speak in this way
17:16
you do here supreme court justices especially
17:19
during the summer recess make public
17:21
appearances and and talk about
17:24
the , in general but to be so specific
17:26
about a case like this antelope
17:29
quite honestly be so glib cracking jokes
17:31
about it when this has been a very controversial
17:34
opinion of people feel very strongly about
17:36
that is are unusual for
17:38
justice although not the fairly unusual for
17:40
alito he's been fairly political
17:43
in public comments over the past couple years
17:45
talking about gay marriage talking about
17:47
their criticisms of him by journalists
17:50
and other things out a it does however
17:53
thrust once again alito back into the spotlight
17:56
the most response been to the speech
17:58
well a from this
18:00
is on the left in particular you've heard condemnations
18:03
alexandria coffee or cortez courses
18:05
or left wing democratic
18:07
socialist in congress has
18:09
said that these put size remarks
18:11
i should be alarming to anyone either
18:13
been critics who said this is going to further politicized
18:16
the court and shows the right wing
18:18
conservative politics behind the
18:21
high profile supreme court decisions recently
18:23
particularly the one on abortion
18:25
the supreme court was established by the
18:27
us constitution has been highly respected
18:29
for centuries but now is it fair
18:31
to say it's authority is being questioned
18:33
and away has never been seen before
18:36
off to these controversies and the way that
18:38
to justices were appointed by donald trump
18:40
i'm certainly not in in the modern era has
18:42
there been this kind of a distrust suspicion
18:45
lack of support for the supreme court
18:47
and that bears out in public opinion polls that
18:49
show public faith in the supreme
18:51
court in the impartiality of
18:53
the supreme court has dropped precipitously
18:56
in the past i would say twenty years
18:58
but particularly accelerated because
19:00
of these high profile cases
19:02
that they decided because of the a controversial
19:05
supreme court nomination pipes that have happened
19:07
during donald trump's years so there
19:09
is a lack of faith in the supreme court now
19:11
and i think more and more americans are viewing
19:13
it as just another politicized branch
19:16
of us government and dot above and beyond it
19:18
indonesia in washington the
19:20
chairman of chairman british inquiry into an infected
19:23
blood scandal dating back decades
19:25
has recommended that each victim
19:27
oh bereaved partner should receive a provisional
19:30
compensation payments of more than a hundred
19:32
and twenty thousand dollars it's
19:34
brian lifestyle said there was there compelling to
19:36
make the payments quickly the
19:39
two and a half thousand people
19:41
died after contracting hiv
19:43
or hepatitis c well being treated
19:45
on the national health service in the nineteen
19:47
seventies and eighties he is
19:49
our health respondent dominic he's
19:52
survivors of the contaminated blood scandal
19:54
and the dependence of so far not had
19:56
any compensation for loss of earnings care
19:58
costs or other
19:59
the time losses until now service
20:02
is a significant statement by the judge
20:04
chairing the public inquiry into how
20:06
tens of thousands of nhs patients
20:09
were infected with blood borne diseases such
20:11
as hepatitis and hiv sir
20:13
brian lang staff told the inquiry that
20:15
he concluded survivors and buried partners
20:17
should receive one hundred thousand pounds now
20:20
as an interim payment robin i'm waiting
20:22
for the inquiry to finish his work this
20:24
is only a recommendation it's up to the government
20:26
whether to accept it or not romney
20:29
he's saying in the uk and
20:31
of than sporting than array of cameras
20:33
designed to catch drivers who are using their
20:35
mobile phones or not wearing seatbelts
20:38
is being tested being white sit
20:40
in central england the aim
20:42
is to try to reduce the number of people seriously
20:45
injured or killed on the roads son
20:47
engines ripple
20:49
the van which is being parts alongside busy
20:51
motorways and a rose is equipped
20:54
with several cameras which capture footage
20:56
of passing drivers images
20:58
of process using artificial intelligence
21:00
to identify motorists who are breaking the law
21:03
they would then be sent letters warning them they could
21:05
face a fine and points on their license
21:07
and future
21:08
the head of roads policy the are a scene
21:10
nicholas least said the motoring organization
21:13
had been urging the government to use such technology
21:15
for several years it's something that
21:18
should have been done quite some time at
21:20
i know that there are fewer
21:22
rights traffic police officers that are enforcing
21:25
laws on the road say it is right
21:27
that we look at different types of technology
21:29
that can actually improve road safety and
21:32
this is the writing still national highway
21:34
says the data collected during the three month
21:36
trial will help us understand the scale
21:38
of the problem
21:39
camera installed on the m four in boxer
21:41
last year spotted almost seven thousand
21:43
people failing to wear their seatbelts and
21:46
twenty five thousand drivers using their
21:48
phones at the wheel in the space of just six
21:50
months
21:51
simon jones paleontologists
21:53
are celebrating the discovery of the remarkable
21:56
new to rustic fossil site in england
21:59
it's you did
21:59
recently preserved fish some
22:02
with his scales and eyeballs
22:04
still intact there's
22:06
, wonderful photo one ferocious
22:08
specimen in full three dimensional
22:10
released on the science pages of the
22:12
bbc news website ticket out the
22:15
find was discovered by a local fossil
22:17
hunters sally and level hollingsworth
22:20
ten francs but the couple and sunny
22:22
told him how they chanced upon the size
22:24
of a farm in the cotswolds recent in
22:26
central south west england cheering and
22:28
listening for
22:30
the farm is actually back onto the cotswold way
22:32
which is a very famous will walk in the cotswolds
22:34
never knows the geology of yeah
22:36
it extremely well and
22:38
we rightly friends at the time
22:39
he saw a spoil heat which
22:41
was material that was set up from
22:43
the footings of a bomb that was going in at some
22:46
this material had been moved to the courts would way
22:48
so we went to the farmer and
22:51
had a chat with him and i instantly caped without
22:53
him he's a wonderful man on
22:55
he less on the land to have land look where the material
22:57
come from which is where we signed the not your with the
23:00
three de ces yeah in
23:02
it and then we took that home to paris
23:04
which we have about forty hours with
23:07
revealing the fish that so seems to popeye
23:09
at that know july it has always been
23:11
his video made like shots he said
23:13
yeah it was amazing
23:14
every and the farmers been so freely
23:16
the same off christmas
23:19
modern contact against all so
23:21
you know where you fight or says i've just
23:23
got planning permission joy can see that might
23:25
bite specific set
23:27
of us so we went to the khyber got
23:30
a group of people together and second
23:32
one i don't understand
23:35
is that you soar up there with
23:37
these nodules these sort of lumps
23:39
of wrong i mean office he didn't know that there was
23:41
going to be this person's preserve three
23:43
d c said leaping out
23:45
from one of them and but how
23:47
on earth did you sort of put two and two together
23:50
and come up with forty seven
23:51
the actual school heat from
23:53
the barn that been dug up had them
23:56
evidence of fossils ammonites in them
23:58
so never knowing
23:59
geology and the age of the material
24:02
is why the citizens and sediments investigation
24:05
and level to was a challenge on radio
24:07
bit with the these extraordinary
24:10
the level of detail that has been
24:12
preserved in in some of these fossils
24:15
i know your experience but we use
24:17
taken aback by the quality isn't completely
24:20
blown away by actually because sally
24:22
mentioned that initial spoilt it had tantalizing
24:25
glimpses will bits of fossil fists
24:28
in some of these nodules that we've located
24:30
behind this can shed and
24:32
the quality of the preservation is just
24:34
truly stunning and the fact
24:37
that we sounds the further material
24:39
to the sweetie skill such
24:41
as fish with their eyeballs
24:43
preserved in the stomach contents
24:46
and skin is truly remarkable
24:48
and it's all down to the type of environments
24:51
that was around one hundred and eighty three
24:53
million years ago during the lower
24:55
jurassic period of geological time and
24:58
that these unfortunate creatures when
25:00
they died got buried quickly by mud
25:02
and into deniers the all time
25:04
capsules these these concretions that
25:07
brassy weathering out of the bank when we when
25:09
we had our first look we think we found hundreds
25:11
of nodules and started literally splitting
25:14
them open to reveal their treasures this
25:16
is a working farm this is happening on
25:18
just wonder identity these quite a big site
25:20
is made a meme it is the farmers sort of okay
25:23
about the fact that some he's giving
25:25
up half is for you to be excavated in the swiss
25:28
are , have an amazing actually actually
25:30
exam the other the farmers been
25:33
really really helpful i mean
25:35
not only that he's in ensues yes they can
25:37
and really interested in the i'm
25:39
what we were going to find full of the cows
25:42
in the sailed were very curious about
25:44
what we what specify
25:46
, was spent on how to
25:48
labour was going on a missoula granting
25:50
mix to watch months and be missing presumably
25:54
yes , routed they will it was
25:56
watching us as we were excavated
25:58
fossil hunters never and sally
26:00
hollingsworth air no
26:03
, at the ready is a final goodbye
26:05
the characters such as scots and charlene
26:07
as a last episode of the australian
26:09
television soap neighbors was broadcast
26:12
in the uk on friday evening the
26:14
show has launched the careers not just of
26:16
actors but of world famous singer
26:19
this is connie minnows holly balance
26:21
and natalie imbruglia and number
26:23
of it's former stars contributed to the final
26:26
episode davis litter reports
26:31
after thirty seven years it's almost
26:34
has even been a special screening of the
26:36
final episode for fans on renzi
26:38
streets every
26:39
they got me i visited by the end the
26:42
data in a really nice way but i'd still like
26:44
i was actually kind of the i
26:45
oh man i'm so tired i just did
26:47
a complete the dentist or as i just got
26:49
guy pearce margot robbie kylie minogue
26:52
jason donovan are amongst the many famous
26:54
for the stars to have taken part
26:56
in this farewell to show that
26:58
at it's peak had twenty million
27:01
viewers in the uk ireland et
27:07
al davis al davis
27:07
the opposing on the final edition
27:10
of the australian so
27:15
my for now but they will be a new edition
27:18
of the global news podcast later if
27:20
you want to comment on this podcast to the topics
27:22
covered his send us an email address
27:24
is global podcast at
27:26
bbc dot com
27:28
hey you , also find us on
27:30
twitter at global news pod this
27:33
edition was mixed by hannah montgomery
27:35
the producer was named mcsheffrey the editor
27:37
is karen
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