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Venice trialling a charge for day visitors in a bid to combat tourism pressures

Under the gaze of the world’s media, the fragile lagoon city of Venice launches a pilot programme today to charge day-trippers a €5 ($9) entry fee that...

Barcelona , Comunidad-autonoma-de-cataluna , Spain , Italy , Amsterdam , Noord-holland , Netherlands , Veneto , Italian , Tommaso-cacciari , Simone-venturini ,

Bangkok drops to 9th in most liveable cities for expats, Kuala Lumpur takes 8th spot

BANGKOK: Bangkok slipped from 6th to 9th place amongst the best cities for expatriates to live and work in in 2023, according to the latest poll from InterNations, which runs an online portal selling services to expats around the world.

Kuala-lumpur , Malaysia , Oman , Madrid , Spain , Thailand , Bangkok , Krung-thep-mahanakhon , Alicante , Valenciana , Valencia , Carabobo

Outnumbered

and detroit. it is people in your honor yoo underserved neighborhoods are victims of crime. they are frustrated. you see the woman in oakland and it breaks my heart. they feel they have to give up on the cities they were once great cities, they are the victims of bad policy. i look at liberal mayors and leftist daytime emmys and think you are doing it wrong. keep people safe and keep cities liveable. they are all in a death loop, are we going to let them die or are people going to stand up and vote differently? >> harris: everybody can get hit by crime, anybody can, it is particularly low income neighborhoods, they are the target in most cases, they suffer most when blue cities were defunding police, those are

People , Crime , Neighborhoods , Oakland , Woman , Heart , Honor , Victims , Detroit , Cities , Policy , Mayors

BBC News

unprecedented temperatures. the north atlantic and seas of the uk co—star up to five degrees hotter than average and there is another worrying abnormality. sea ice in the antarctic is extremely low for the time of year, 10% lower than usual. we know that the plant is warming because of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere by humans burning oil, coal and gas. the world will also be hotter because of el nino, powerful naturally occurring with pattern that started in june but scientists say these records being broken is not yet a sign that the climate is in collapse. they say there is time to use the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible. georgina rannard, bbc news. let's get some of the day's other news and the number of people known to have died in a landslide in india has risen to 22. rescue operations in the western state of maharashtra had to be suspended on friday due to the conditions. more than 100 people are suspected to have been trapped under

Temperatures , North-atlantic , Antarctic , Sea-ice , Uk , Abnormality , Seas , Co-star , Five , 10 , World , Greenhouse-gases

BBC News

then, injuly this year, it broke through 17 degrees for the first time. the record for the hottest day on earth fell notjust once, but three times in a week. and it�*s notjust the land that�*s hot. the oceans, which take up most of the world�*s heat, are seeing unprecedented temperatures. the north atlantic and seas off the uk coast are up to five degrees hotter than average. and there�*s another worrying abnormality. sea ice in the antarctic is extremely low for the time of year — 10% lower than usual. we know that the planet is warming because of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere by humans burning oil, coal and gas. the world will also be hotter because of el nino, a powerful, naturally occurring weather pattern that started in june. but scientists say these records constantly being broken are not yet a sign that the climate is in collapse. they say there is time to use the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible. georgina rannard, bbc news.

Time , Times , Record , Injuly , Earth , Three , 17 , It , Temperatures , World , Heat , Oceans

BBC News

the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible. georgina rannard, bbc news. in greece, the heatwave there is set to be longest in greece's history, according to the country's weather institute. it's currently facing its hottest july weekend in 50 years, with temperatures in some areas climbing to 45 celsius — that's 113 fahrenheit. well, let's go to greece now and speak to our reporter azadeh moshiri. she's in lagonisi, southeast of athens. it is extremely hot here in greece. you can tell by the heat around me, if you were here, you would feel it is scorching. it is making difficult to see right now, that is how bright the sunnis. what that might be great for the beach—goers behind me, for

Greece , Bbc-news , Country , Planet , History , Heatwave , Liveable , Solutions , Georgina-rannard , Weather-institute , Temperatures , Azadeh-moshiri

BBC News

hotter than average. and there's another worrying abnormality. sea ice in the antarctic is extremely low for the time of year — 10% lower than usual. we know that the planet is warming because of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere by humans burning oil, coal and gas. the world will also be hotter because of el nino, a powerful, naturally occurring weather pattern that started in june. but scientists say these records constantly being broken are not yet a sign that the climate is in collapse. they say there is time to use the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible. georgina rannard, bbc news. in the uk, how quickly to take action on climate — and who pays for it — is becoming a party political issue. the labour leader, sir keir starmer, has said his party must learn the lesson from the narrow defeat it suffered on thursday in a by—election. the conservatives won after a campaign focused on the decision by the labour mayor of london to introduce extra charges for the most polluting vehicles.

Planet , Greenhouse-gases , Antarctic , Sea-ice , Abnormality , Atmosphere , Humans , 10 , World , Climate , Scientists , Oil

BBC News

of year — 10% lower than usual. we know that the planet is warming because of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere by humans burning oil, coal and gas. the world will also be hotter because of el nino, a powerful, naturally occurring weather pattern that started in june. but scientists say these records constantly being broken are not yet a sign that the climate is in collapse. they say there is time to use the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible. the extreme heat gripping greece is expected to become the longest in the country's recorded history. the country's national weather institute said the heatwave — which is defined by the greek authorities, as temperatures above 39 degrees celsius — could last for up to 17 days. 0ur reporter azadeh moshiri is in lagonisi, southeast of athens and gave us this update. there is no respite from the heat here in greece.

World , Greenhouse-gases , Planet , Oil , Because , Coal , Gas , Humans , Atmosphere , Weather-pattern , Powerful , El-nino

BBC News

it broke through 17 degrees for the first time. the record for the hottest day on earth fell notjust once, but three times in a week. and it's notjust the land that's hot. the oceans, which take up most of the world's heat, are seeing unprecedented temperatures. the north atlantic and seas off the uk coast are up to five degrees hotter than average. and there's another worrying abnormality. sea ice in the antarctic is extremely low for the time of year — 10% lower than usual. we know that the planet is warming because of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere by humans burning oil, coal and gas. the world will also be hotter because of el nino, a powerful, naturally occurring weather pattern that started in june. but scientists say these records constantly being broken are not yet a sign that the climate is in collapse. they say there is time to use the solutions we have to keep the planet as liveable as possible.

World , Oceans , Time , Times , Record , Heat , Earth , Notjust-the-land , Three , 17 , Temperatures , British