Good morning. A lot of fine weather on the way across the uk this weekend. But a little bit of a change in the way things feel. Some fresh air blowing in from the north. More on the way things are looking inafew more on the way things are looking in a few moments. Its saturday the 6th ofjuly. Our top story murderers who refuse to reveal the location of a victims body could be forced to spend longer in prison under a new law. The legal change, known as helens law, follows campaigning by the mother of Helen Mccourt, who was killed in 1988 but whose body was never found. Ben ando reports. For 31 years, Marie Mccourt has been fighting for helens law, named after her daughter who was just 22 when she was abducted and murdered in 1988. Her killer, pub landlord ian sims. He has never reveal the whereabouts of helens body. Marie led a campaign demanding that murderers who refused to disclose the whereabouts of a victims remains bent longer behind bars. In 2016 mp5 remains bent longer behind ba
For contempt of court after filming defendants in a criminal trial and broadcasting the footage on social media. Now on bbc news a look ahead to sportsday at 6. 30pm tonight. We will be like at wimbledon on day five of the championships with defending championship djokovic backend action. We will see coco gauff after two hugely impressive victories and we will have the latest from andy murray teaming up. Thats coming up. Now though it is time for the film review. Hello and welcome to the film review on bbc news. To take us through this weeks cinema releases is mark kermode. 50 mark, what do we have this week . We have midsommar which angle to tell you in advance is not a horror film. It has horror elements but not a horrorfilm. We have spider man four from a horrorfilm. We have spider man fourfrom home. Spider man far from home. And ibiza the silent movie. Last week was my first week back 50 you are really nice and now. Midsommar is the new movie by ari aster who made hereditary. I tho
0llie, thank you so much forjoining us, especially under these circumstances. Now, i understand youve been able to flee these fires. Just bring us up to date in terms of what took place, what happened and how youre coping where are you now . Yeah, so i am now in a small village called fort simpson, which is about 630 kilometres west of yellowknife. It probably sounds like a huge distance it really isnt in Northwest Territories terms. This place is twice the size of france, its got 16,000 people in it, so vast scales that were talking about. This is essentially three communities to the left of yellowknife. And you can just hear a float plane into the distance, by the way. This is the Mackenzie River behind me. Yellowknife under a full Evacuation Order, as you probably heard, yesterday. We came out here a day before because, to be frank, the writing has been on the wall for days that that wildfire was going to pose a grave threat. What were you seeing that led you to think, hey, i better
And pose a real threat. Yellowknife is now blanketed in smoke and fires are burning close to the one major road into and out of the city. Rebecca alty is the mayor of yellowknife. She told us what things were like there. Right now, its residents are evacuating by road. As many people as possible are doing that. Theres also, for folks who dont have vehicles, we are starting the air evacuations, so flights. We still have commercial flights, so some people have booked onto a commercial flight, but we have the Evacuation Flights also starting at 1pm. So getting folks registered for that just began an hour ago. So folks have been good, theres long line ups i think there was kilometres worth of a line up, so a bit of a snail s place out of town, its just one road in, one road out. That highway is where the fire is, so the highway can close. But right now, it is open. If the conditions change, if the smoke gets too heavy, if the fire were to approach the highway, the highway would be closed a