Avsnitt
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Survivors of the Auschwitz extermination camp gathered there again to mark 80 years since it was liberated by Allied forces towards the end of WWII. World leaders and European royalty were present, but it was the 56 survivors of Hitler's genocide of European Jews that took centre-stage. We report from the camp and speak to survivors and guides about its horrors and the dwindling memories of them.
The bishop who urged newly-inaugurated President Trump to show mercy to illegal migrants and LGBT minorities told us his policies are "not in the best interests of... our survival as a species."
And could Britain's loneliest bat be about to find love?
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Thousands of people are counting the costs after Storm Éowyn unleashed 100-mile-an-hour winds across the UK and Ireland. A million people are without power this evening - we have the latest.
Also tonight:
As Donald Trump travels to North Carolina and California on his first trip as president - we'll reflect on what his first whirlwind week back in office tells us about the next four years ahead.
And the Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg on retracing the final steps of family members who persished in Auschwitz.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Southport killer Axel Rudakubana has been sentenced to a minimum of 52 years for the "sadistic" murders of three young girls in an attack described as "shocking" and "pure evil". Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, died while eight other children and two adults were seriously wounded. We explore the background of the man who went from a seemingly ordinary child to a mass murderer.
Also tonight, as the Gaza ceasefire holds we spoke to a Palestinian detainee who has just been released.
And should songs be released after an artist's death?
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After sending a Royal Navy submarine to intercept a Russian spy ship in UK waters, the defence secretary has delivered a stark message to the Kremlin. How should the UK respond to the threat from Russia, in the new Trump era?
The publisher of The Sun has apologised to Prince Harry for intruding into his private life, and has agreed to pay him substantial damages. We ask who the winners are from the phone hacking scandal - after more than a decade in and out of court.
And why clichés about elite footballers not being smart are wide of the goalpost.
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Trump has pardoned some 1,500 people involved in the January 6th riot in the US Capitol four years ago, including those convicted of violent acts. We speak to one man who has received a pardon and a police officer who was at the Capitol that day. We also hear from a former director of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency about Trump's deportation plans.
Here in the UK, there have been calls for the far-right group “Patriotic Alternative” to be banned after an undercover BBC investigation exposed extreme racist views among some of its supporters and members.
And a trip down an emotionally dark memory lane, as we visit a new exhibition casting a nostalgic eye over emo music and culture.