tv Newsday BBC News February 11, 2025 3:00am-3:30am GMT
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all remaining captives. saturday at 12:00, summit in paris. and after that, i would say... hello and welcome to newsday. he's told reporters that were not returned by saturday at 12:00. he made the comments after a spokesperson for the armed wing of hamas said they're postponing the next scheduled release of israeli hostages, blaming what he said
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that the us president is i think perhaps acknowledging almost that he is going out on a limb in making this suggestion, at the weekend on saturday, in the release of those hostages as being in a very emaciated state, which he said was a disgraceful situation. not he said, in drips and drabs, he wanted to see all of them released.
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21 hostages have been released from gaza. more than 500 palestinian prisoners and while each has accused the other of violations, the agreement has held so far. but hamas now claims israel has delayed the return of displaced people, and failed to let in as much aid as was agreed to areas destroyed by war. israel has responded furiously, accusing hamas
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if the hostage deal breaks down and war resumes. should take displaced palestinians in from gaza. in theirfirst meeting since his inauguration. from the jordanian capital, amman, it presents the country with a critical challenge. jordan is a superpower of stability now facing a conflict of its own with its us ally. that gaza's population relocate to jordan.
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that's not how things are done. between its political ties to israel and the us, high unemployment here has left nativejordanians queuing at food banks, adamant they can't take in any more refugees. all these employees without jobs. if gazans come tojordan? we will die. butjordan is also under pressure donald trump has suspended us aid a formerjordanian foreign minister, now in washington,
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said that won't work. the choice is clear. jordan cannot take any number of palestinian refugees, so if the price is economic sanctions, that is a very small price to pay that is posed tojordan. but risks for amman mean risks for its allies too. jordan is host to us military forces if stability is jordan's superpower, the threat of unrest is its biggest weapon and its best defence. jean—loup samaan is a senior research fellow of the national university of singapore. he says the gaza ceasefire deal has always been in a precarious position.
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and that is not the first time, on the other one. i think there are issues at the tactical level with regards to the distribution of that the idf, so the israeli forces are still operating. this combination of, let's say, details on the ceasefire it is a cocktail for derailing the ceasefire for sure.
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he said has said that all hell is going to break the crisis since taking office, talks from donald trump, the latest statement on all hell breaking loose in gaza, if this is an official statement house, from the special envoy to the middle east. looking at this ceasefire, the gaza issue as a real estate deal.
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he is having very tough position, considering that he is in the best position again, we can see that as derailing and probably undermining the ceasefire the israeli hostages, as well as palestinian civilians at risk. yes, and part of trump's plan that he's been talking about relies on neighbours jordan in the piece just then. what you think you will say and what do you think he wants
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president trump to do? i think it is a delicate mission for — or trip for the king ofjordan. and putting them injordan or egypt is not in the us interest. that donald trump will care aboutjordanian or egyptian or palestinian interest. the case to make is that this is going because this will jeopardise the stability ofjordan. a jordanian neighbour, this is not good for israel's security and, ultimately, for us interest in the region.
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king even more difficult. around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. signed off by a high courtjudge. to do so. using a panel of experts. against new tax rules. their horns as part of the campaign against plans for a 20% inheritance tax on farms worth more than a million pounds. the government says most farms wouldn't be affected. in a rare joint engagement,
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however, the united states of america, there is no tariff, zero, so if it's made in the united states, there is no tariff. from 10—15% on products from the us, that includes a 15% tax on coal and liquefied gas imports, which powers chat—gpt. musk, the world's richest man, has been suing openai for months, trying to stop it from transitioning to a for—profit firm. he co—founded the company in 2015 with its current ceo, as the leading chatbot in the ai boom. mr altman promptly responded to mr musk�*s offer
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it's their first get—together since the chinese ai—assistant deepseek went viral and rocked the ai industry. top figures from the us, the uk, from europe, from india, china might be trying to collaborate the potential for criminal misuse. a year ago, there was a lot of support but a year is a long time in al,
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designed to govern its use, but slammed for stifling innovation. we could probably make it better, but it's been signed. view on how to regulate and how to allow innovation. the one thing everyone here does seem to be in agreement on is that al is going to become the tools already exist. zoe kleinman, bbc news. thank you forjoining me to talk about today. want get,: ’ f; ’::’ ' getyour. 1.7. ..,:i f—:. get your thoughts. a challenge to the big us and chinese ai players? european union it is a widely
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world iii . follow really hope that the wider world iii 5, follow some world can actually follow some these innovations coming of these innovations coming from the european union while still of course embracing the technical breakthroughs which are all built upon our personal mind you. that being data, mind you, that are being trail blazed the united iféil biz-233i; iii; the. miss.“ and tféil 333333 31; £53 ufii§33 and chinese options. 3535 533333 51; 353 315i333' and chinese options. it states and chinese options. it is nice to see all three meeting and i really hope they come up with some standards they can actually enforce. that they can actually enforce. it comes to the battle it comes down to the battle between regulation and innovation. a balancing act. inn3v33i3n5 a. 3533535355 53335 inn3v33i3n. .a. 33335355 333. —— has been inn3333i3n. .a. 33335355 333. to —— has been inn3333i3n. .a. 33335355 333. to push has been inn3333i3n. .a. 33335355 333. to push on has been inn3333i3n. .a. 33335355 333. to push on with ias been inn3333i3n. .a. 33335355 333. to push on with the jeen keen to push on with the regulation side of things, more wthan w wthan other w so than other territories perhaps. that held them n3'n3n3. 33.3.3. 3n33 533.4 3433-3. ———— . .3. 3. . .3 .. a n3'n3n3. “35 �*n3�* n335! “n3"- wwww w www wwww w ww ww a more freedom approach, back, a more freedom approach, has that been the way to go? that has led the us to be in 33333} l�*33 333 3333 335. 33. l33- =n. of tn33 “33'3'! 3n3 335. 3�* n3 =n of this tn33 “33'3'5 3n3 335 3�* n3 =n of this race, tn33 n33'3'f 3n3 3331 3�* n3 =n of this race, hasn't frgnt fif this r3c3. hasn�*t it? running frgnt fif this r3cr3, hasn�*t it? running these frgnt sf this rests, hasn�*t it? running these tech those running these tech companies and most insestars ( insestarsg i don’t haw how much ireedam there is know how much freedom there is for the rest of us who are anxious and about anxious and concerned about where these technologies are and what they mean for going. and what they mean for us in a nation where our
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inequality is a and directly responsible some level for president recent i trump's recent election. i would argue innovation is being resourceful and 5a 77 approach. having a balanced approach. however, that said, i don't however. th3t s3id. ldenlt to however. th3t s3i1'3. ldenlt to let the ,,,3,, 33 5h; 33 3333 33 77 arise” " 3562112317 completely off the hook. i it is important europe think it is important europe invest in these areas but recognise all the costs and all recogniselet—he 3333s 3nd 333 benefits recognise33333th3 3333s 3nd 333 benefits involved. irecognis333333t3h3 33333 3n3 333 benefits involved. the the benefits involved. the energy labour costs, costs as é: costs as well. w ""’éo;’t;'a; qeilfiui” of these models, these large models are trained our personal 7 ovur personal data. 77 ovur personal data. we using our personal data. we little to no transparency european union except in the european union about is being collected about what is being collected about what is being collected about we opt into data collection .e ithe’default’ ,,,,,,, wthedefarultwinww w' iii; defaultwinthwewwww ' iii; defarultwinthweunitedw ' is the default in the united states and in china. the is the default in the united states and in (think the a we can all from model and we can all learn from that, but actually support economic futures from all of us these actual
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much to the disappointment of the watching crowd. thank you for your goodbye for now. hello. monday was a pretty grim day, really, with temperatures well below average — justi in braemar. adding to the bitter feel. now, at the moment, ourjet stream is running well to the north of its typical position to the north of the uk. we find ourselves on the southern flank of this area of high pressure, it's going to be like that pretty much all week. with rain and drizzle extensive too. a bit of snow up over some of the highest hills in the northern pennines
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and scotland — above around 300—400m elevation. that really is quite high. extensive cloud, rain and drizzle around, quite a lot of mist too. for most of us through the rest of the day. sticking out into a bit of sunshine, temperatures again 4—6 degrees quite widely. that only see temperatures of around 2 or 3 celsius. with some drizzle and mist, perhaps a few more breaks coming into western areas of scotland, so you might well see a bit of sunshine temperatures 4—6 degrees celsius for most. on into thursday, perhaps a few more breaks just developing western scotland, but otherwise,
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and we might see some rain arrive towards cornwall for our temperatures. by the end of the week, we do have a weather front that's trying to push its way in, so it's going to barely move and it will weaken as we go through friday. nevertheless, it could bring a bit of rain the weekend, the breeze picks up, that's the latest. bye—bye.
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president trump announces 25% tariffs for chat gpt maker — openai. hello and welcome to business today. we start in the united states to impose tariffs on steel and aluminium imports. he said the 25% levy was "without exemptions" — president trump described the new tariffs as, on what the president has announced.
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