wildfire in the southwest. europe s heatwave leaves one of its major working rivers the rhine in germany too low for big trade ships. the riverbed of the mighty rina, look at it. we should be underwater here and yet the water levels have dropped so significantly that it is simply dried up. lawyers for donald trump. echoed with the referred the research of mr john s compound. as you can imagine, we are only getting this information right now and to reemphasise, this is a slightly unusual thing, the un ceiling of a warrant in the middle of an investigation. we are doing as we see the lines we will give them to you. when the lines we are seeing says that it involves alleged violations or potential violations of the espionage act and thatis violations of the espionage act and that is according to one reading of the warrant. the warrant also authorised the collection of a clemency document in search of the troubled florida home and there have been plenty, plenty of background
reports suggest a man opened fire during a family dispute. at 10pm, tina deheley will be here with a full round up of the day s news. but before that, a bracing dose of hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk, i m stephen sackur. a year on from the re imposition of taliban rule, afghanistan is facing a humanitarian calamity. half the population is facing serious food insecurity, more than 1 million children are at risk from acute malnutrition. as for the taliban, well, they seem focused on snuffing out opposition and imposing strict controls on women and girls. my guest is former first vice president of afghanistan, now a seniorfigure in the national resistance front, amrullah saleh. is internal resistance viable when afghans are starving? amrullah saleh, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. it is a year, mr saleh, since the taliban swept into kabul and toppled the government of which you were a part. would you acknowledge that this past year has been a year of failure from your point of vi