appears to be official uniform walking past a fire at a locked cell at a migrant centre in mexico where 38 people subsequently died. benjamin netanyahu, the israeli prime minister, has reacted angrily to comments by us presidentjoe biden, who urged him to walk away from his controversialjudicial reform plans, which are so farjust on hold. and amsterdam tells a rowdy british sex and drug tourists, don t come to our capital in a digital discouragement campaign targeting men between 18 and 35. if you have just joined if you havejustjoined us, welcome to bbc news king charles is to arrive in germany shortly. his first state visit since succeeding his mother as a british monarch in autumn last year and comes ahead of his coronation injust autumn last year and comes ahead of his coronation in just over a autumn last year and comes ahead of his coronation injust over a month. the start of a three day trip, part of a curtailed royal visit that was due to begin in paris at the weekend
medical facilities, very little access to health care, medicalfacilities, any kind of real support. let s remember who these people are, they have gone from places like afghanistan, where they have had to flee persecution and violence meted out by the taliban, from places like syria and north africa, where there is violence and civil war, africa, where there is violence and civilwar, bombs africa, where there is violence and civil war, bombs and bullets is what they are fleeing from. and then from iran, and we know the beatings that are taking place in iran. so they are taking place in iran. so they are fleeing because of the situation they are in and seeking safety in this country and the government is failing to run a system effectively and fairly. we want timely decisions if people should be given a safety here they need to have that decision made quickly. and if they don t reach the threshold then of course they should be removed too but the system isn t working. it they should be
entire professional career covering her as an olympian. that s an amazing story to cover. good morning to you. thank you for being with us. hi, everybody, nice to have you with us. we re bring you the news from a to z, it s 5:00 eastern. let s get right to it, shall we? this is unbelievable, unrelenting, unforgiving, it is a heat wave, and it is devastating from k.c. to d.c. and it s going to continue today too, tomorrow, as well. all the way through the july 4th holiday. in some places, it s going to feel like 115 degrees, particularly in parts of the midwest today. and for millions of people without power, sorry to report this, there is not a whole lot of relief coming your way. at least 19 people now have died in the last week after deadly storms swept through the nation. about 1.7 million people still haven t gotten any power. this is days after the storms went through. many expect possibly it s going to take until friday to get their power restored. take a look at th
the long-term care program to be implemented in a way that would make it financially stable. congressional republicans say good riddens. they wanted to repeal that program any way. shifting to major new developments in the occupy wall street protest and rage in cities across the country today. protesters vented anger and frustration and police responded in riot gear. 24 people arrested in denver. in new york city, police detained 14 people for blocking traffic overturning trash bins and throwing bottles. a major clash between protesters and police barely averted in manhattan today. the company that owns the park where hundreds have been camped out for the past month decided not to kick the protesters out today. occupy wall street protesters say it proves their point is getting across. it s really catching on and the more the city pushes back or the owners of the park push back, the more the people will come. the new york mayor michael bloomberg had a very different take