although he did condemn the frank hester comments. we know today that there was an extra 5 million that he d given the conservatives party, so the public did not know so it was £15 million he needed returning, not £10 million which is the new clarity today s disclosure has brought to the situation. ~ . ., disclosure has brought to the situation. ~ . . ., ., situation. what have lancaster and the conservative situation. what have lancaster and the conservative party situation. what have lancaster and the conservative party said - situation. what have lancaster and the conservative party said in - the conservative party said in response? we the conservative party said in resnonse? the conservative party said in resonse? ~ . ., ., response? we haven t heard from frank hester response? we haven t heard from frank hester himself response? we haven t heard from frank hester himself yet - response? we haven t heard from frank hester himself yet that - response? we haven
were close to david duke, who s one of the most notorious ku klux klan leaders. the anti defamation league has called him perhaps america s best known racist and anti semite. describe for us first the home and the environment in which you grew up, in florida in the 1990s. right, thanks for having me. i grew up in a place that i think often doesn t look like what most people expect. it was relatively urban. it was in south florida, it was very racially diverse. i lived in a neighbourhood with people from lots of different countries, and although i grew up in an anti semitic movement, there was a very largejewish population in the area. and that was ok for my family, because their world view is what separated them from the rest of the country. it was that they saw themselves as a part of a movement that they had been building since decades before i was born, and they wanted to continue it into the future. and they married other people in the movement. they went to conferences w
there have also been tanks moving into another urban refugee camp. and the al aqsa martyrs hospital says it s been simply overwhelmed by casualties. it s treating hundreds of people as a result of these operations and, you know, in very difficult circumstances. and it said one of its electricity generators has now actually gone down, making it even more challenging. world leaders and veterans have gathered in normandy in france to mark the 80th anniversary of the d day landings on the 6th ofjune 1944. 0n on that day, on the beach in normandy, more than hundred and 50,000 allied troops launched an attack on german forces that would change the course of the second world war. it was just before half past six in the morning when british,
they landed at 16 minutes after midnight on the 6th ofjune. commanding 25 platoon, lieutenant brotheridge led his men as they stormed pegasus bridge. he was just the same as one of the others. he led his group over the bridge, he did a job, and that s how i feel he was doing hisjob. they captured the bridge from the germans, but den brotheridge was hit by machine gunfire and died, becoming the first allied soldier to be killed in action on d day. this is what makes me very proud of him. they often say, but he was one of us. he might have been an officer, but he was one of us. now that, ifind, i am so proud about. 80 years on from her father s death, margaret has made the trip to where he was killed, as part of the d day commemorations. i think he was one of thousands who were doing a job,
long delayed starliner capsule towards the international space station with two nasa astronauts on board. hello, i m sally bundock. very one welcome to the programme. let s go live to normandy and see the pictures we are receiving from the beaches where world leaders and veterans will gather later today to mark the 80th anniversary of the d day landings on the 6th ofjune 1944, when more than 150,000 allied soldiers invaded france in a major turning point of world war ii. us presidentjoe biden, who s on a state visit to france, will be among the 11,500 guests expected.