although he disagreed with some of mr sunak s decisions, he believed he was a strong and capable leader. the move comes on the same day suella braverman was sacked as home secretary, following days of speculation about her future. mrs braverman had angered many in government after writing a newspaper article criticising the policing of pro palestinian marches in london. so what s behind the move to bring david cameron back into government? is it a good move for the conservative party or is it, as labour claims, a sign of desperation? here s our deputy political editor vicki young. thank you very much. thought you d seen the back of david cameron? this was him walking away after he lost the brexit referendum in 2016. he hums. right! since then, he has occasionally criticised his successors over cuts to foreign aid and the scrapping of parts of h52. of course, i have disagreed with some individual decisions, but politics is a team enterprise. i have decided to join this team
from london. reporter: of course these volcanic ash clouds can mess up plans. so the president and mrs. obama had to leave ireland early. they bolted this afternoon taking no chances because they have an important state visit in london the next few days. this ash cloud is really nasty. it s larger it s got larger particles, it s much denser than the one we dealt with last year. it brought european air travel to a halt for the better part of a week. this is called the green volcano. it s raining down ash on buildings and livestock. now it s headed towards scotland. they are expecting a large area of highly concentrated ash which
the u.s. treasury, another $1.1 billion to the canadian government. the company says this repayment is a sign that they are on the rebound. earlier this month gm announced it lost $3.4 billion during the second half of 09 but the automaker says it will turn a profit this year. again, they got about $52 billion total from the u.s. government. so still a lot ahead in terms of repayment but they say this is a good sign for gm. right now major airports across europe have planes taking off and landing as airlines race to get people moving again. air travel in europe you know was virtually paralyzed for six days because of multiple volcanic ash clouds. we ve got here we go. there you can see happy passengers finally making it home, making it to their destination after being delayed all that time. nbc news correspondent tom aspell is in london where airspace, it appears, is clearing up a bit. good to see some happy passengers there, tom, finally. reporter: you re right about that, moni
road again and shuffle fresh goods. johnny mcmillan tells me he s ready for the worst case scenario. what s going to happen to all this fresh produce? well, we ve only got two choices. we either can give away to farmers for cattle feed so at least we make some use of it. the second thing we ll do is we ll take it back to our farms and compost it so they can use it in the future. reporter: also a victim, top quality kenyan roses. fresh cut flowers from farms like these are flown to europe every day. the long wait is killing them. for us as a company alone, we currently are looking at a backlog of around 2 million stems across our four farms and here in nairobi. reporter: industry insiders at nairobi s main airport say kenya is losing more than 3 million export dollars a day because of this crisis. while lucy waits, she prays for iceland s volcanic ash clouds to creep away and the skies to open to save her and the more than 1.5 million kenyans that depend on this industry.