on its hit. it s only starting to get back on its feet, hit. it s only starting to get back on its feet, and it sjust reeling. you on its feet, and it sjust reeling. you carr on its feet, and it sjust reeling. you caniust on its feet, and it sjust reeling. you canjust imagine many warlords just throwing the keys landlords. you ve just throwing the keys landlords. you ve got just throwing the keys landlords. you ve got shortages and electricity bills, you ve got shortages and electricity bills, and you ve got shortages and electricity bills, and customers are it s turning bills, and customers are it s turning out in the way they did pre pandemic. it just shows the scale itjust shows the scale of it as well. before we even talk about schools this winter. well. before we even talk about schools this winter. they have said that there is schools this winter. they have said that there is a schools this winter. they have said that there is a danger,
to the 19805 which was made famous by a true crime podcast. win charlie blackwell has called a scrub for today. mission aborted for now. nasa postpones its flight to the moon after engine problems on its huge artemis rocket stop the launch. they came so close. the countdown stopping at 0 40 minutes. there were just too many technical problems to contend my from our studio in singapore, this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s six in the morning in singapore and 3am in pakistan, where the government says a third of the country is now under water. millions of homes are now damaged or destroyed and much of its richest farmland is now flooded. the disaster has killed over 1,100 people and affected 33 million. and the catastrophe isn t over water is still surging down the indus river and will flood the the low lying sind province even further over the next few days. latest reports say 45% of the country s cotton crop has been washed away. pumza fihlani reports. a moment of quiet
of its test flight to the moon. officials say a problem with the engine meant they had to scrub the un manned mission, just minutes before it could have blasted off. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are are sam lister, the political editor at the daily express, and the author and journalist, yasmin alibhai brown. thank you both for being with us tonight. the yorkshire post carries a warning from brewery bosses, who say thousands of pubs could shut down forever unless the government steps in to help as energy prices continue to rise. the metro issues the same warning last orders for pubs, is its headline. the guardian holds a message from senior conservatives, who say schools face closure chaos, with headteachers struggling to pay soaring energy bills. the front page also pictures the devastating floods in pakistan. as the country awaits the winner of the tory leadership contest, the i says the front runner liz tr
at d ao minutes. there were just too many technical problems to contend with. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s 7am in singapore, and 4am in pakistan where the government says a third of the country is now under water. millions of homes are now destroyed and much of its richest farmland is now flooded. the disaster has killed over 1,100 people and affected 33 million. and the catastrophe isn t over water is still surging down the indus river, and will flood the low lying sind province even further over the next few days. latest reports say 45% of the country s cotton crop has been washed away. pumza fihlani reports. a moment of quiet in the middle of chaos. inside a crowded hall, families that have been displaced by the floods in northern pakistan have found temporary refuge. for many, it was a narrow escape. translation: our. houses have collapsed because of the floods. we had a home and it was enough for us. now all our belongings a
however, it s as we head into the weekend that we see a big change in our weather as this area of low pressure moves in. now, it is forecast to become quite slow moving, and so will probably be around about to the west or southwest of the uk for the first week of september or so, throwing up bands of rain. the heaviest rain is likely to be across probably southern and western areas, but they are some of the places that we ve got those water and hosepipe restrictions and problems at the moment. so, of course, we do need this rain to fall, and it s on the way for the weekend.