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wind has been picking up those embers and those embers have been skipping from house to house. and the other problem we re hearing about, water pressure, firefighters telling me that they had to let some homes burn because they didn t have enough water pressure in some of those hydrants perhaps because of the power outage. just moments ago, we got the view from above the fire from our affiliate kabc. real concern because of zero containment on these fires so far. from our station in los angeles he s joining us as he s flying over the creek fire, an incredibly busy day, thank you for being with us tonight. you re over a very active scene right now, the creek fire. how large is this and what are you re seeing? well, this fire s 11,000 acres right now, david. we ll take you outside and show you picture of the creek fire. 11,000 acres. and we re using our technology to show you where the fire is burning. and as you can see, there s a lot of smoke obscuring the fire and this is becaus
FirefightersHomesWindWater-pressureEmbersProblemHouse-toCreek-fireSomeConcernPower-outageHydrantsShe has never travelled outside ladakh. a few weeks later the village got tap water but will the supply last in the freezing winters? and, finally, to india s west, the thar desert. barren landscape, dotted with women in bright colours. it s like the scenery changes, the walk the water remains. the walk to water remains. in scorching heat, often barefoot. baby cries. many times in a day. day, after day, after day. translation: married i women here are expected to keep their face covered. this woman tells me she and her
Tap-waterSupplyVillageLadakhWomenIndiaWestColoursThar-desertBarren-landscapeWalkWater-remainsAnd a four year old daughter. it really bothers me that the world that they re experiencing now is a lot different to my childhood. you also got a water bottle! i ve experienced days of 45 and 47 degrees celsius, and that was appalling, it was atrocious. you couldn t do anything. the only way we could stay cool in western sydney was to have the air con running all day, and that was a really hard thing for me to do. during my first pregnancy, it was so hot that i actually struggled to go and put the washing on the line and, you know, while i was literally about to bring this child into the world, i was thinking, what will the summers be like for her in the future? what happened.? baby cries. it was the hottest day ever recorded in the sydney basin. incredibly, the mercury rising to almost 49 degrees. -
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Baby-criesFrenchTranscripts for BBCNEWS Our World 20240604 02:45:15
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Baby-criesFrenchNow, let s move on now to a report from afghanistan, that i want to warn you is difficult to watch. more than 1,000 children under the age of five are dying there every week from diseases that are preventable that s according to the charity unicef. the country s public health infrastructure was already weak before the taliban took over in 2021. but now, it is virtually broken. foreign funding has been frozen and the little help still available from aid agencies is also under threat because the taliban has banned women from working for them. the bbc s correspondent yogita limaye has been to a hospital on the brink of collapse. what we re about to show you is deeply distressing and shows young children in theirfinal moments. but their families wanted us to film them so that the world can see the true scale of the humanitarian disaster that s unfolded. here s her report. baby cries. every child in this room is in need of critical care. pneumonia is ravaging
ForweCountryChildrenDiseasesUnicefHealthFiveAgeInfrastructureAfghanistan1000BbcAnd you can see more of mr lukashenko s comments with our russia editor steve rosenberg on tonight s bbc news at ten and afterwards on the iplayer. accident and emergency departments are failing to meet the needs of disabled people. that s according to the head of the royal college of emergency medicine. he said too often a&e is a safety net for those who should be able to get treatment in the community, but the services are no longer there. the government says it is reducing long waits by increasing bed capacity, investing in new ambulances and community services. our disability news correspondent, nikki fox, reports. a warning her report contains images some viewers may find distressing. baby cries. this is what a crisis in emergency care means for this young boy. hours spent waiting in pain. we are in hospital probably every couple of weeks. we have some longer stretches, don t we? but we ve been in there a lot.
PeopleRussiaDepartmentsAlexander-lukashenkoHeadEmergencyWon-tonightAccidentBbc-news-at-tenCommentsIplayerNeedsAnd expanding community services. a warning this report by our disability news correspondent nikki fox contains upsetting images from the beginning. baby cries. this is what a crisis in emergency care means for this young boy. hours spent waiting in pain. we are in hospital probably every couple of weeks. we have some longer stretches, don t we? but we ve been in there a lot. the only place ivan can get seen is in a&e, and lately he s been waiting up to 12 hours. he has complex disabilities, but the reason why he s going in so much is for constipation. it shouldn t be being managed in accident and emergency. thatjust blows my mind completely that that s what we ve been told to do to manage it. for over a year now, elissa s been fighting for her son
Nikki-foxReportCommunity-servicesWarningBeginningImagesBaby-criesSpainHospitalEmergency-careBoyStretches