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BBC News

of money. there was drama earlier in the day in the elite race. a new record set by the kenyan olympic champion peresjepchirchir. she crossed the line and took about a minute off the reigning record which was set 2017 on this very course. also there were some brilliant races in the wheelchair races, especially by marcel hague who won his fourth title four. then his countrywomen, dominated the race. this year while taking over the same prize—money as their able—bodied athletes after organisers said this would be the most inclusive london marathon ever. £44,000 for the winner. it is not just about the elite but about these guys who are raising money for charity, many have been training for “p charity, many have been training for up to 20 weeks and amongst the masses you occasionally spot a famous face as well. i caught up

Money , Line , Lots , Record , Race , Peresjepchirchir , Record-set , Drama , Kenyan-olympic , Races , Marcel-hague , Title

BBC News

cateo _ . ., ., ~' ., had a world record in the women's cateuo .~ . ., ~'., ., category. we have, and i think a lot of --eole category. we have, and i think a lot of people predicted _ category. we have, and i think a lot of people predicted this _ category. we have, and i think a lot of people predicted this because i category. we have, and i think a lot of people predicted this because we had three of the four fastest women in history. many of them had run under 2.70 and we had the world record holder as well. and it was a phenomenal race, all four women came past buckingham palace together and then really the sprint was on and that was won by the reigning 0lympic that was won by the reigning olympic champion peresjepchirchirfrom champion peres jepchirchir from kenya and champion peresjepchirchirfrom kenya and she took about a minute from the reigning record set in london 2017 by mary keitany. and having had it completely authorised what exactly that time was we think it was around two hours 16 minutes in 60 seconds. so that was the biggest news of the day. but there have been three other fantastic elite races. a great day for switzerland because in a wheelchair races, we saw the silver bullet when fourin races, we saw the silver bullet when four in four here in london for switzerland. and this is the female country lady who came through. catherine to brunner, she really dominated the women's field. this year, organisers are calling it the

People , Lot , Eole-category , Women , World-record , Race , Many , Women-s-cateuo , Sprint , World-record-holder , Buckingham-palace , Three

Nomura traders burst into applause as Nikkei hits record high

Applause rang out across a Tokyo trading room floor on Thursday as Japanese stocks hit their highest level ever, topping a record set during the 1980s bubble economy and long seen as unbreakable.Some 20 traders at brokerage Nomura's Tokyo trading floor were on their feet moments after the midday break, and as the Nikkei share index broke through its all-time record high of 38,957.44, set in December 1989.The board in front of them flashed the new record of 39,029 that the index touched at 12:32 p.m. (0332 GMT). Some clapped while others let out muted cheers alongside a lone "bravo."More animated cheers and prolonged applause had broken out in the morning session when the Nikkei broke above its previous all-time closing high of 38,915.

Japan , Tokyo , Japanese , David-dolan , Anton-bridge , Chang-ran-kim , Record-set , Ubble-economy , Okyo-trading-floor ,

Newsday

and hearings, are they actually affecting his popularity, though, ahead of the elections? so far, they have not. as a matter of fact, they have become fundraising opportunities. before today's hearing, he touted on social media and in mailings that he would be in court. he did not have to appear in court, but he was there to drum home that message that your viewers heard just a moment ago — that this is just politics, this is a way to take his campaign down, in his view, byjudicial means. and that's the message that he tries to hammer every time that he speaks about the criminal and even civil cases. last year was the hottest year ever recorded for the world. the average global temperature was almost 15 degrees celsius — that's dramatically higher than the last record set in 2016. our climate editorjustin rowlatt reports on the numbers and the solutions. wildfires raged across southern europe this summer. vegetation, parched

Social-media , Hearing , Matter , Fact , Hearings , Popularity , Elections , Fundraising-opportunities , Mailings , High-court , Home , Way

BBC News

than the last record set in 2016. bbc analysis shows that almost every day sincejuly has seen a new global air temperature high for the time of year. here's our climate editorjustin rowlatt. now, the grey lines on this chart show temperatures for each year since 1940. the red line, you can see it coming on there shows last year's temperatures, and you can see it started off pretty unexceptional, in terms of global temperatures, but from around july onwards, the world began a remarkable, and look at that, almost unbroken streak of daily air temperature records. bbc analysis of the copernicus climate change service data shows that more than 200 days saw a new daily global temperature record in 2023. scientists say the change has been driven by man—made climate change, along with the natural el nino weather phenomenon. you're live with bbc news. us secretary of defense lloyd austin is battling prostate cancer. his prognosis is good,

Bbc-monitoring , Analysis , Air-temperature , Climate , Lines , Record-set , Editorjustin-rowlatt , 2016 , Global-temperatures , Red-line , Show-temperatures , Chart

Newsday

postwar vision for gaza. what might that look like? there are onl bad might that look like? there are only bad options _ might that look like? there are only bad options at _ might that look like? there are only bad options at this - only bad options at this moment. the only realistic options are either that israel preoccupies the gaza strip or that you have ethnic cleansing in gaza. the reason for that is that as blink, said in tel aviv, arab states are willing to help in terms of securing gaza and endorsing a palestinian government but only if that is linked to a credible peace process, and that is at the moment with the current israeli government are likely. it has been confirmed that last year was the hottest year ever recorded for the world. the average global temperature was almost 15 degrees celsius — that's dramatically higher than the last record set in 2016. our climate editorjustin rowlatt reports on the numbers and the solutions.

Gaza , Options , Vision , Israel , Ethnic-cleansing , Might , Government , Blink , Terms , Reason , Arab-states , Tel-aviv