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tv   Review 2023  BBC News  January 1, 2024 12:30pm-1:01pm GMT

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there's a huge barrage going on overhead just at the moment. yevgeny prigozhin seemed determined to march his men to the top of the hill. then, he marched them down again.
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political persecution like something straight out of a fascist or communist nation. this is southern israel and that is gaza, and the war here has dominated the news agenda since early october. tragic and polarising, it's one of the biggest stories of 2023 and one that i have followed here and reported on throughout, speaking to people in israel and in gaza about how they're living through it. the year has seen many important and profound stories, from the war in ukraine to donald trump's legal affairs in the us and for india, a successful moon landing. i'm going to bring you just some of those moments. we begin in turkey and syria and the devastating
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earthquake that struck early on the sixth of february. these images show the moment the first quake hit. with a magnitude of 7.8, it destroyed hundreds of buildings and killed thousands of people. a second powerful tremor hours later increased the death toll even further. i was one of the firstjournalists to reach the epicentre, travelling through the devastation towards the city of kahramanmaras and broadcasting from my phone. this was one of my first live reports. what we're talking about here in maras, right at the epicentre of the quake, is notjust single individual collapsed buildings, we're talking about whole city blocks. when i arrived here, we drove down a street and the whole of one side — nine, ten, 11 buildings — had just completely collapsed.
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the red cross estimates that more than 55,000 people were killed in turkey and syria, with double that injured. the high number of buildings that collapsed was blamed on poor building safety standards. president erdogan defended his government's response to the disaster and as survivors prepared to spend their third night out in the cold, they told me how desperately they needed tents and help. and just to warn you, this report, like others you'll see during the programme, contains images that you may find distressing. the devastating power of the earth seen from the air. swathes of this city lie in ruins. buildings, homes, lives have been destroyed. when the rubble shows a sign, the digger stops. behind this blanket, an arm reveals a body. slowly, carefully, it's uncovered. and then, the moment of realisation.
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screams. near the syrian city of aleppo, this boy, ahmed, was pulled to safety by the local voluntary civil defence group, the white helmets. millions of people in north—west syria had already fled their homes during the civil war and were living in makeshift tents when the earthquake struck. in ukraine, there was real hope that 2023 might be the year its country's forces took back swathes of territory snatched by russia. do you want british fighterjets next, sir? but progress proved slow as president zelensky continued his appeals for stronger world support. in the early hours of the sixth ofjune, the kakhovka dam was breached.
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as waterfrom the dnipro river started spilling across the land, putting thousands of lives at risk, our ukraine correspondentjames waterhouse rushed to the scene. a breach of a barrier designed to protect. this is the major kakhovka dam, failing to contain a reservoir resembling a sea. the waters of ukraine's dnipro river surged downstream, towards dozens of towns and villages. this is effectively a front line which separates territory ukraine controls and russia occupies. close to the dnipro�*s mouth is the city of kherson. officials are worried this flooding could become catastrophic. what we're seeing is a humanitarian relief effort taking place in an active war zone. half an hour ago, a shell landed close by. and there is a military dimension to this, too, because the nearby dnipro river, which has come a whole lot closer, is a front line. it separates ukrainian controlled
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and russian occupied territory. ukraine is in the early stages of a counteroffensive. it was thought that it could mount such attacks from here. that task has just got a whole lot more difficult. then came a shocking moment that looked like it might change the whole course of the war. yevgeny prigozhin, a powerful russian and head of the wagner group, appeared to be launching a military coup. 0ur russia editor steve rosenberg explained the extraordinary twist. this is how the day began in the russian city of rostov — armed men and armour on the streets and tanks outside key buildings. in control here, the mercenary group wagner. closely linked to the state, they'd fought for russia in ukraine, but this looked like mutiny. their leader, yevgeny prigozhin, seemed to have gone rogue. at a military h0, he told russian
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generals, "we've come for the defence minister and the chief of the general staff. if we don't get them, i'll blockade the city and head to moscow." translation: our actions to defend the fatherland from this _ threat will be harsh. tension rose as reports came in of wagner convoys moving north to moscow. was this heading towards confrontation in the capital? then, out of the blue, a message from mr prigozhin. to avoid bloodshed, he said, wagner would turn around and return to base. this is one of those moments where you just have to put up your hands and say, "what on earth was that about?" i mean, just a few hours ago, yevgeny prigozhin seemed determined to march his men to the top of the hill. then, he marched them down again. we may never know what agreements were or weren't reached
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between the key players of this bizarre drama. it appeared to throw president putin's leadership into doubt. could he be losing control? eight weeks later came this breaking news. this coming in from the russian federal agency for air transport. they say that wagner mercenary group boss yevgeny prigozhin was on board an aircraft that crashed in russia in the tver region. first a friend, then a challenger. now, yevgeny prigozhin was dead. in august, we saw some of the most dramatic pictures of the year — eight people, including six children on their way to school, dangled precariously inside a broken cable car high above a steep ravine in northern pakistan. a careful rescue effort involving helicopters and makeshift zip lines took 14 hours.
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to the delight of the large crowds, everyone was saved. when a migrant boat capsized off the coast of greece, 82 bodies were recovered but it's feared around 500 more may have lost their lives in the tragedy, and doubts were cast on the greek coast guard's account of what happened that night. nick beake investigated for bbc verify. new footage of the fatal journey. the packed migrant boat leaning precariously. bbc verify has confirmed this video is genuine. here's why. look at the much bigger vessel in the background. we've identified it as the faithful warrior, which we know came to provide food and water. its shape matches and its tracking data also places it in the area at the time. we believe this video was filmed by the greek coast guard, which continues to claim at this point, the migrant boat was not in danger.
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in the uk, the issue of small boats carrying migrants across the english channel became a political challenge. for the conservative government, the answer was to send some asylum seekers to rwanda for processing, but not everyone agreed and the supreme court was asked to decide, as our deputy political editor vicky young explains. prime minister rishi sunak has made stopping the boats one of his priorities. his government believes that sending some asylum seekers to rwanda will deter others from making the dangerous journey across the channel and help break up the criminal gangs who help them. this year, almost 30,000 migrants have arrived in england by boat. the first flight to rwanda was ready to take off back in the summer of 2022 but was cancelled at the last minute after legal challenges. while courts can't directly overrule parliament, they can decide whether a policy conflicts with other existing laws and international treaties.
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this is the supreme court — the highest court in the united kingdom — and in november, it ruled that the rwanda policy was unlawful. the main reason it gave was that asylum seekers sent there could then be returned to their home countries, where they might face harm. in response, the government signed a new treaty with rwanda and proposed new uk laws, declaring that it's a safe country and ordering britishjudges to ignore some sections of the uk human rights act. but many of rishi sunak�*s mps are unhappy. some of them want him to go even further and pull out of the european convention on human rights. but dozens of conservative mps, the opposition parties and the house of lords would try to block such a move, so it could all lead to some close votes here in parliament in the new year. so far, the plan has cost £240 million, even though no asylum seekers have actually reached rwanda.
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2024 will bring the next us presidential election and the campaigning has already started. us presidentjoe biden says part of his motivation to run for a second term is to prevent the return of donald trump. mr trump is the frontrunner to become the republican candidate, even as he faces both civil and criminal cases against him, as our north america correspondent nada tawfik explains. donald trump might be riding high in the polls but he's already faced a number of legal defeats and setbacks. in april, amid a massive security and press presence here, he became the first president in history to be arrested and to appear in court on criminal charges. the new york state case stems from hush money payments made before the 2016 election to the former porn actor stormy daniels. many see it as the weakest of all the cases. things only got worse from there over the summer with the announcement
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of long—anticipated indictments. trump pleaded not guilty in court in two federal cases in florida and washington, dc, both stemming from the special counseljack smith's investigations. the first was tied to the fbi's raid of his mar—a—lago resort, where agents recovered more than 100 classified documents. it's a political persecution like something straight out of a fascist or communist nation. the second case was tied to the january sixth capitol riot, which occurred when congress was meeting to certinyoe biden�*s presidential election. special counseljack smith called it an "unprecedented assault on democracy" and accused president trump of working to overturn the results of the 2020 election. we'll have to wait and see if the trial takes place when it's due in a few months�* time. and then, there was georgia, which led to the first ever mugshot of a former us president. there, he's also criminally charged with scheming to illegally
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overturn his 2020 presidential election loss, including with the infamous phone call to the secretary of state, where he urges him to find the 11,000 votes trump needs to beat joe biden in the state. donald trump claims this is all a witch—hunt and election interference. these are incredibly serious charges. and while the public may have already made up their mind about his guilt or innocence, now donald trump needs to convince at least one juror in each case of his innocence to avoid punishment or jail time. mission control: soft landing on the moon. i india is on the moon. celebrations as india made space history. its moon mission in august became the first ever to land in the tricky lunar south pole region. prime minister narendra modi exclaimed, "india is now on the moon." this success belongs to all of humanity.
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and at that moment, a delighted nation applauded their huge achievement. september saw morocco experience its worst earthquake in over half a century. more than 3,000 lives were lost and many more were injured or left homeless. but there was more. in 2023, natural disasters across the globe focused the world's attention on climate change. extremes of weather and temperature had a devastating impact. wildfires in the north and west of canada forced thousands from their homes, and the smoke they produced made the air quality plummet in major us and canadian cities. nearly 100 people died in hawaii when an inferno destroyed the town of lahaina, making it the deadliest wildfire in modern us history. in greece, they hit at the height of the country's tourist season. the blaze in rhodes forced
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19,000 people to be evacuated off the island. and in 2023, our oceans hit their hottest ever recorded average surface temperature of 20.96 celsius, breaking a previous record high from 2016. it is so decided. in december, days of negotiating at the un climate summit in dubai led for the first time to a call for all countries to move away from using fossilfuels. it didn't go as far as to actually phase them out, though, which was something many governments had wanted. a huge swathe of the eastern libyan city of derna was washed away in the aftermath of storm daniel in september. dams that should have held the water back collapsed and there were accusations of poor maintenance. thousands of lives were lost
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and whole neighbourhoods destroyed. what i saw when i arrived there was a wasteland. this is what it looks like here in derna at the moment. and you can see some of the destruction already. but if ijust turn this way and look down the valley, you can see how everything has just been completely ripped away. june, and the world watched and waited for news of five people aboard the titan submersible, which vanished on a trip to the titanic. after a huge search operation, parts of the vessel were eventually discovered thousands of metres underwater on the seabed. an rov, a remote operated vehicle, from the vessel horizon arctic, discovered the tail cone of the titan submersible approximately 1,600 feet from the bow of the titanic on the seafloor.
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none of the passengers survived the implosion. let's look at some more stories that made news in the last 12 months. taylor swift was named time magazine's 2023 person of the year. she became a billionaire in october, and herfans packed out stadia across the world for her eras tour. in cinemas, two very different films were released on the same weekend back injuly, sparking the cultural phenomenon that was barbenheimer. you are the man who gave them the power to destroy themselves. barbie and 0ppenheimer broke box office records and boosted cinema revenues that had been dented by the pandemic. hollywood came to a halt as both writers and actors went on strike, costing the us economy billions of dollars. alongside pay and conditions, one key concern of union members has been the industry's use
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of artificial intelligence, which began to hit the mainstream in 2023. ai bots like chatgpt and google's bard gained millions of users. in northern india, marathon efforts finally freed 41 miners who'd been trapped in a collapsed himalayan tunnel for 17 days. after various setbacks, rescuers eventually drilled the final section by hand to free the workers. samira hussain was at the scene. these are the ambulances with the first workers that have come out from inside the tunnel. 17 days they have spent inside that tunnel and now they are finally out and in those ambulances. translation: i am very happy. i am 55 and i have seen life. but my son is very young. he has a long life.
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as 2023 started to draw to a close, one of the year's biggest stories happened here in the middle east. yolande, you woke up that morning and it was you who was trying to make sense of this for, for all of us. we didn't have much detail at first, but we knew very quickly that it was huge, that it was unprecedented, and that it was going to change everything. and what is the latest that you're hearing not only about those killed, but the numbers of people injured? really extraordinary numbers. at least a0 israelis have been killed and 740 injured. that's the latest report that i have seen quoting the israeli sort of medical services. and on top of that, you know, it's still not clear exactly what's happening in southern israel. that morning, as it turned out, thousands of hamas fighters broke across the border. it was a brutal attack. more than 1,200 people in israel were murdered and there were some
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240 hostages who were taken back to gaza. we heard the screaming. we heard the...obviously all the fire that was going on. we saw the smoke and we smelled the smoke. kfar aza was taken by surprise, like everywhere else hamas attacked. the kibbutz guard — armed civilian volunteers — died fighting back. siren wails. gunfire. there's a huge barrage going on overhead just at the moment. we have taken cover. this is...it�*s actually a memorial building. you can see we're all here. jeremy bowen: late this i afternoon at kibbutz be'eri, regular units and some of more than 300,000 mobilised reservists were preparing for the order to move in, that most israelis believe will come.
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over a million gazans were forced to leave their homes in the north of the strip, and thousands were killed in israeli strikes. the attack on jabalia camp looks to be one of the biggest single palestinian losses of life so far in this war. jabalia is in the far north of gaza, where israel has been pushing forward. as electricity was cut off, premature babies in the hospital had to be taken from their incubators. our colleague rushdi, who's from gaza, was bravely reporting at the same time as he was trying to keep his own family safe. the humanitarian situation is also getting worse and worse, with israel not allowing food and medicine. i have seen people struggling to find water. here in the hospital, people are struggling to find fuel to run the generator and work in the...in the hospital.
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translation: i spend four or five hours every day in the queue - and at the end i only get one portion of bread. _ we have been living on one meal a day. i sometimes we sleep hungry. around the globe, people took to the streets... ada, 75 years old... ..and world leaders came to stand with israel while at the same time warning of the consequences of an escalation. we will continue to have israel's back as you work to defend your people. we'll continue to work with you and partners across the region to prevent more tragedy to innocent civilians. the evidence of our own eyes tells us that the death toll, and particularly the death toll among women and children, isjust overwhelming. we have seen so much that it is hard to dispute the fact that many, many, many thousands of people have been killed.
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intensive diplomacy led to an agreement to pause the fighting and release hostages and prisoners. there's a bit of a shaky start. we did hear some continuing fire, some continuing small arms fire and mortar fire for about the first ten or 15 minutes. but things are now a lot quieter there, quieter than they've been really for weeks here in southern israel. and i think we can say at this point that the ceasefire is firmly holding, from what we're seeing and hearing in southern israel. more aid started to pass from egypt into gaza, but it still wasn't enough. for the first time, a large group of hostages were released from captivity in gaza. we now have that confirmation. it was getting closer and closer. it's clearly an emotional moment for you. i can't believe it, it'sjust, it's so, it's so happy to know that they're here in israeli territory. i feel as if part of
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my family came back. and some 240 palestinian prisoners were released from israeli jails. this is a small victory for palestinians in a war that has already exacted a very heavy price. to israel, the prisoners being released tonight are a security threat. to those gathered here to receive them, they're victims of israel's occupation, and their release is a symbol. the deal lasted for seven days, but then it fell apart. then israel's military campaign moved further south. the fighting started all over again with renewed intensity. the last 12 months has seen change notjust here in the middle east, but right around the world, from wars and natural disasters to points of light in the darkness.
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the impact of this year will be felt into 2024 and beyond. hello. i think most of us are ready for a bit of a change in weather type. december was pretty dull — for some in england and wales, the dullest on record. also rather wet, too, across the uk, with above—average rainfall quite widely, but wettest of all, eastern parts of scotland, where we saw as much as three times our normal december rainfall. now there's more wind and rain
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to come over the next few days. but that change i mentioned — it could be turning drier. also colder, and an increased chance of wintry weather as we go from late week onwards. now, out there at the moment there's a bit of sunshine around for new year's day walks, but the morning sunshine gives way to cloud and rain across parts of southern england, wales and northern ireland during the rest of this afternoon. winds also picking up here, lightest winds towards the north—east of scotland, where it's still on the chilly side. temperatures around 3 to 6 degrees for many, but most parts of the uk will see temperatures, again, above average for the start of the new year. if you're on the move, though, this evening, more rain arrives, some heavy and persistent rain, lots of surface water and spray on the roads across much of england, wales and northern ireland as we head in towards the evening. that wetter weather spreads into scotland and after a brief frost here we will see temperatures low enough for some snow on the hills. temperatures will lift, though, for many, through the night, and by the end the night into tomorrow morning, a pretty mild start across the south, 9 to 11 degrees. warmer by night, again, than it should be by day. but a wet and windy day to come across some southern areas,
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particularly during the morning. that rain spilling its way northwards earlier than we saw through today, and with stronger winds, maybe a little bit of brightness later. morning rain and mountain snow across scotland edges its way northwards towards orkney and eventually shetland. it does mean many parts of scotland brighten up. further rain at times in northern ireland. again, a mild one. but a windy end to the day, particularly across the south and the far north. rain at times across much of northern england into the midlands, which will eventually push out in towards the continent to give some pretty stormy weather here, as we head through into wednesday. a quieter area of low pressure moves in and it won't be quite as windy. still breezy though, through shetland and through some english channel coasts. but there'll be varying amounts of cloud, some sunshine, a scattering of showers, mainly to the north and west. most persistent rain will be there across parts of orkney. temperatures still on the high side but things will there change afterwards. area of low pressure starts to push its way southwards. a ridge of high pressure moves in. it turns colder, temperatures closer to average, but also drier.
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today at one... live from london. this is bbc news. japan downgrades its major tsunami warning, saying the threat has "largely passed" after a powerful 7.6 magnitude earthquake hit the country, bringing down buildings. the new year brings more hamas rocket attacks and more deadly strikes on gaza, as israel says it expects the war to continue throughout 2024. the bangladeshi nobel peace prize winner, muhammad yunus, is given a six month jail term for violating labour laws, in a case he says was politically motivated. hello, i'm nicky schiller. we begin injapan, where a powerful earthquake and several strong aftershocks have hit the north coast

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