Good afternoon i am Jon Scott this is special early edition of the Fox Report. Less than three months after bullet grazed him and butler, Pennsylvania Trump returned to the very same podium. Safety is a top concern in Todays Rally with 60000 people expected in the crowd. Secret service and promising they have enhanced protections for the former president. Trump says coming back to butler shows a message of strength and he is committed to the country. Alexis mcadams is live and butler for us right now. Cooks hi jon, this is exactly what we are standing weeks ago. Without us and the Trump Rally and butler, pennsylvania but it ended the former president being nearly assassinated on stage. Its going back out here again today. Coming back to butler because he said his work is far from over. But jon, this time hell be standing behind bulletproof glass. Talk to management every single Trump Rally within the front of the crowd that day when trump was a shot but he said hes happy to be here but
this is bbc news. the headlines: the ceasefire is over and fighting resumes, the gaza health ministry says more than 100 people have been killed in the hours since the temporary truce ended. each side blames the otherfor temporary truce ended. each side blames the other for breaching the ceasefire terms, aid and fuel trucks are now being stopped from entering gaza. world leaders officially recognise the role of food and farming in globalwarming. king charles pleads with cop28 to be a turning point for the planet. and former uk health secretary matt hancock tells the covid inquiry schools could have stayed open if the government had acted more swiftly. let s return to the israel gaza war, where the temporary ceasefire ended at around 7am local time. since then, the hamas run health ministry in gaza says more than a hundred people have been killed in fighting. israel says it has had more than 200 targets today. the sides have blamed each other for the violence restarting after
refugee communities and refugee areas in ukraine and poland, who are asking the tederal government to let those family members come to the united states. and to that point, you have many groups saying they have the infrastructure ready, the support needed to house these refugees and feed them. and they re asking for the federal government expedite the process. specifically for those that have already been approved. we know the united states has been accepting ukrainians for several years at this point, especially after putin s invasion of crimea and annexation of crimea. they re asking the federal government to act quickly to expedite their cases. that s something you ll hear at the summit. i have conversations with one of the groups that we ll hear from at the summit. listen to what she said. we have a family a arrive two days before the invasion and we had three more cases that were scheduled the following week. those three cases weren t able to fly.
are now more terrified of those, sort of, crazy islamist radicals across the border in syria than they ever have been of each other. anthony: what would you call this neighborhood? what is it? nick: i mean, it s now one of the kind of very mixed refugee areas that beirut has. anthony: close to two million people from syria alone. nick: yeah. anthony: that s a hell of a lot to be absorbed by a tiny little nation of, what, four point five million? nick: it s just loads of people, far too many people, with nowhere to go. you see it in how the cell phones don t sometimes work the way they should, how people have to ship water into their own homes. that s part bad infrastructure, but it s also just the sheer demand on resources. anthony: we ll follow you? najem: okay. for the first time in history a palestinian leads an american. that s nice. nick: don t let the neighbors know about that. najem: yes. anthony: in syria mr. najem