Thanks for Contributing! You just created a new WN page. Learn more »
http://twitter.com/keithcutey The international television news channel from the BBC featuring live on air generic bulletins which broadcasts at frequent tim...
Due to a Euro 2012 match running till 22:10, the News Channel took BBC World News for 10 minutes. Here is what we got in the UK.
Recorded December 2003.
Ever since KCET picked up distribution of BBC World, they now run the countdown sequence, but they stick a Union Bank commercial in between the countdown and...
Martes 15.11 21:00 ARG / 0000 GMT.
With Mike Embley (c)bbc.
This video includes opening and closing sequences.Recorded on August 30 2011.
Mike Embley and Tanya Beckett opening BBC World News.Recorded on May 5 2011.
BBC World News with Katty Kay in Washington and Mike Embley in London.
Iraq's ex-leader Saddam Hussein has made a defiant first appearance before an Iraqi judge, branding President George W Bush as the "real criminal". He defended Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, said he was still president and rejected the court's jurisdiction. He arrived in handcuffs and chains at the court near Baghdad airport to hear charges of war crimes and genocide. TV pictures of the hearing were released to international broadcasters shortly after the hearing finished. The images - cleared for broadcast by the US military - were the first of Saddam Hussein since his capture in December. They showed Iraq's former president looking thin, haggard and with a trimmed, grey beard. Saddam Hussein, described by reporters at the hearing as both defiant and downcast, denounced the proceedings as "theatre" and questioned the validity of the law he was to be tried under. "I am Saddam Hussein, President of Iraq," he replied when asked to confirm his identity at the hearing, which took place inside one of his former palaces, now a sprawling US base. The BBC's Arab affairs analyst, Magdi Abdelhadi, says this is the first time an Arab ruler has appeared before a judge to face charges related to abuse of power and the brutal oppression of his own people. He says it is an historic moment not only for Iraq but for the entire region. Ousted Arab rulers were usually either summarily executed or forced to flee the country, he adds. Saddam rebuked Seven preliminary charges were read out to Saddam Hussein, including accusations over the campaign against the Kurds in the 1980s, which included the use of chemical weapons in Halabja, and the suppression of Kurdish and Shia uprisings after the 1991 Gulf War. Hearing the charge relating to Halabja, where about 5,000 Kurdish civilians died in a single day, Saddam Hussein said, "Yes, I heard about that." He became most agitated when he was accused of invading Kuwait in 1990. "How can you, as an Iraqi, say the 'invasion of Kuwait' when Kuwait is part of Iraq?" he asked the judge, whose face was not shown on the film and whose identity is being kept secret for security reasons. He said he invaded Kuwait "for the Iraqi people" and referred to Kuwaitis as "dogs", for which he was rebuked by the judge. Saddam Hussein refused at the end to sign legal papers confirming that he had been read his rights and understood the case against him, saying he wanted his lawyer in court. He was then taken back to jail, while the charges were read out one-by-one against the 11 other accused. These include former Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz and Ali Hasan al-Majid, known as "Chemical Ali" for his alleged role in poison gas attacks, who were formally transferred from US to Iraqi custody on Wednesday. Defence concerns Saddam Hussein's lawyers have already challenged the court's legitimacy. One member of his 20-strong defence team, Mohammed Rashdan, told the BBC's Today programme that they had been denied access to their client. He also alleged that they had received death threats from the Iraqi government. Iraq's new national security adviser, Mowaffaq al-Rubaie, has insisted the process will not be a show trial. "As an Iraqi interim government, we promise our people and the Arab world and the outside world, we promise that Saddam will stand a fair trial," he said in a BBC interview. The interim Iraqi government has restored the death penalty, which was suspended by the US-led coalition. Mr Rubaie said Saddam Hussein could face execution if convicted. The full trials may not get under way until next year as many issues still need to be resolved and could take months or even years. Witness protection The BBC's Christian Frasier in Baghdad says there are concerns in Iraq that crucial evidence has still to be gathered. The Coalition Provisional Authority has identified more than 250 mass graves, but as yet there have been no full forensic exhumations and investigations are being hampered by the lack of security on the ground. Our correspondent says without a system in place to gather statements and protect those who come forward there are fears that many valuable witnesses will be lost. But the interim Iraqi government has dismissed such concerns, insisting that the evidence is already overwhelming, as Saddam Hussein's regime was meticulous in recording the most minute details of abuses carried out. BBC World News is the BBC's international news and current affairs television channel. It has the largest audience of any BBC channel in the world. Mike Embley (born 1955 in Surrey, England) is a broadcast journalist, best known as a presenter for BBC World News, an international news and current affairs television channel operated by the BBC. Before joining the BBC, Embley began his career training as a newspaper journalist with Thomson daily papers in Wales, on the South Wales Echo and the Western Mail.
Mike Embley and Jamie Robertson opening BBC World News.Recorded on August 16 2011.
http://twitter.com/keithcutey The international television news channel from the BBC featuring live on air generic bulletins which broadcasts at frequent tim...
Some people like to spend their whole lives in one comfortable place, but Mike Embley is not one of them.
http://twitter.com/keithcutey The international television news channel from the BBC featuring live on air generic bulletins which broadcasts at frequent tim...
Mike Embley presents this edition of BBC World News, recorded at 1200hrs SGT on 6 Feb 2015. Jordanian air strikes on Islamic State (IS) targets are "the beginning of our retaliation" for the killing of a captured Jordanian pilot, Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh has said. He told CNN that Jordan was going after IS "with everything that we have". Jordan had previously only bombed militant bases in Syria, but Mr Judeh said the raids now expanded into Iraq. This comes after IS released a video showing Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive in a cage. After Thursday's strikes, the Jordanian war planes flew over Lt Kasasbeh's home village. The following news article is reproduced from the BBC News online website @ http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-31158919 Their flight coincided with a visit to the village by Jordanian King Abdullah II, who was meeting the pilot's family. The king has vowed to the step up the fight against IS. Jordan is part of a US-led coalition bombing the militants. 'Ongoing effort' In a separate interview with Fox News, Mr Judeh said: "We said we are going to take this all the way, we are going to go after them wherever they are and we're doing that." The minister confirmed that some of the strikes targeted militant training camps and ammunition depots both in Syria and Iraq. "Today more Syria than Iraq, but... it's an ongoing effort." Lt Kasasbeh, 26, was captured by the militants in December after his F-16 fighter jet crashed in Syria. IS this week released its video showing the pilot's execution. Jordan has officially confirmed the death, but said it believed the pilot was killed on 3 January. 'Enemies of Islam' On Thursday, Jordan's state TV showed King Abdullah sitting sombre-faced with Saif al-Kasasbeh, the pilot's father, at a gathering in Aya village, near the city of Karak, south of the capital Amman. The king gestured to the skies as the warplanes flew overhead, media reports said. The army said in a statement that "dozens of jet fighters" had struck IS targets, including training camps and weapons warehouses. State television showed people writing messages on what appeared to be missiles for the air strikes, with one calling IS "the enemies of Islam". Also on Thursday, Jordan released an imprisoned jihadi cleric, Abu Mohammad al-Maqdisi, whose writings had inspired members of al-Qaeda in Iraq. Maqdisi, who has previously condemned IS as a "deviant organisation", was detained in late 2014 for promoting jihadist views online. The reason for his release was unclear, but security sources told Reuters that Maqdisi was expected to condemn the burning of the pilot. On Wednesday, Jordan responded to the killing of the pilot by executing two convicts, including Sajida al-Rishawi, a failed female suicide bomber, and an al-Qaeda operative. Last week, IS had demanded the release of Rishawi in return for sparing the pilot's life. Meanwhile, the US military said that the US-led coalition had conducted a total of nine air strikes on IS-targets in Iraq, and three on targets in Syria, between Wednesday and Thursday morning. Those strikes hit IS units near the Syrian town of Kobane, and in seven Iraqi cities including Fallujah, Kirkuk and Mosul, the Combined Joint Task Force said in a statement. Jordan is one of four Arab states to have taken part in the anti-IS air strikes in Syria.
Journalist & Arab World commentator Nabila Ramdani tells BBC journalist Mike Embley that delay of presidential results will add to tensions in Egypt.
a focus on the blue side of jazz guitar , a trio jam on the 13th of august 2013 .
Yazan Abdallah with Mike Embley BBC World News يزن عبدالله.
BBC World TOTH summary at 1800 BST with Mike Embley, including a 26 second countdown. Recorded date: SUN, 1 July 2007.
Teammates acknowledge the amazing career of the 2006 Norm Smith Medallist Andrew Embley.
Mike Embley presents this edition of BBC World News, recorded at 1200hrs SGT on 17 Feb 2015. Ukraine's government and separatist rebels have failed to begin withdrawing heavy weapons from the front line, despite a Monday deadline. The two sides were given until not more than two days after the latest truce came into effect to start the pullout. The government said it would not pull back until fighting ended in the beleaguered town of Debaltseve. Separatists say the agreement does not apply there because the town is surrounded. They have offered Ukrainian troops encircled there a safe corridor to leave. The following news article is reproduced from the BBC News online website @ http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-31495099 France, Germany and the US expressed concern at the continued fighting. The Ukrainian military command said pro-Russian rebels had attacked 112 times since early Sunday, mostly around Debaltseve. A Ukrainian officer said there was also fighting near Mariupol, a port city. The rebels accused Ukrainian forces of shelling Donetsk airport. Meanwhile, further EU sanctions against Russia have gone into effect. The new sanctions list targets 19 officials - most of them in the pro-Russian separatist strongholds of Donetsk and Luhansk, but also two Russian deputy defence ministers and a Russian celebrity singer and MP, Iosif Kobzon. 'Not an indicator' Under the Minsk ceasefire agreed last week, the withdrawal of heavy weapons from front line areas was due to start no later than the second day after the truce came into effect and be completed within two weeks. The withdrawal would create buffer zones 50-140km (30-85 miles) wide. But a Ukrainian military spokesman quoted by Reuters news agency said there would be no withdrawal of heavy weapons yet because the rebels were violating the ceasefire. "The pre-condition for withdrawal of heavy weapons is fulfilling Point One of the Minsk agreements - the ceasefire. One hundred and twelve attacks are not an indicator of a ceasefire," said Andriy Lysenko. Rebel commanders also said there were no grounds yet to withdraw heavy weapons from the combat zone. Rebel "defence minister" Vladimir Kononov said: "We will withdraw heavy weapons from the contact line if we get a definite sign that the Ukrainian side has started doing the same thing." Observers from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) have been seeking to reach Debaltseve after being denied access by the rebels on Sunday. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande have called for the OSCE to be granted free access to eastern Ukraine. Meanwhile, US state department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the US was "gravely concerned by the deteriorating situation in and around Debaltseve" and called on "Russia and the separatists it backs to halt all attacks immediately". Elsewhere on the front line reports say the ceasefire has broadly been observed. Under the agreement reached in Minsk last week, the ceasefire is only the first step. Analysts point out that previous ceasefires initially appeared to be holding but eventually failed, and say the next 48 hours are critical. Officials say more than 5,400 people have been killed since the conflict erupted in eastern Ukraine in April, but the UN believes the actual death toll to be much higher.
With Mike Embley and Amanda someone. (c)BBC.
a BBC world interruption from 2005. it stays 34 seconds black, and then you see Mike Embley preparing for the next BBC news bulletin.
Michael Embley Executive Principal of The British School of Beijing discusses the differences between British and Chinese education.
Check out Eagle Vision's first ever WAGS special.
Winner, check out Steve's input at the end, "Where do we start?", good question steve!!
I was on the Daily Politics show responding to the leader's speech.
Katty Kay presented research that showed companies with women in senior executive positions were more financially successful. Speaking at Connected Women NC,...
BBC World News coverage I secured of the Audi City launch on 16 July 2012
25 March 2015 Last updated at 05:02 GMT ... Everybody on board escaped unharmed. Mike Embley reports ... Related video / audio. 1:00
BBC News 2015-03-2517 March 2015 Last updated at 07:00 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter WhatsApp.
BBC News 2015-03-1718 February 2015 Last updated at 06:28 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing ... Related video / audio. 0:37
BBC News 2015-02-1817 February 2015 Last updated at 05:04 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing ... Related video / audio. 1:38
BBC News 2015-02-173 February 2015 Last updated at 09:19 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter WhatsApp.
BBC News 2015-02-0322 January 2015 Last updated at 07:02 GMT ... local time (21:30 GMT), affecting about 400 residents ... Mike Embley reports ... World.
BBC News 2015-01-2212 December 2014 Last updated at 04:51 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter ... 1:50
BBC News 2014-12-123 December 2014 Last updated at 10:09 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter ... World. UK.
BBC News 2014-12-0319 November 2014 Last updated at 08:15 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter ... World.
BBC News 2014-11-1913 November 2014 Last updated at 04:36 GMT ... Mike Embley reports. Share this story About sharing. Email Facebook Twitter ... World.
BBC News 2014-11-1326 September 2014 Last updated at 06:32 BST ... Mr Groubert has been freed on bail ... Mike Embley reports. Read more ... World.
BBC News 2014-09-2622 August 2014 Last updated at 04:45 BST ... Mike Embley reports. Read more. MH17: ... Share this story About sharing ... MH17: ... World.
BBC News 2014-08-2217 June 2014 Last updated at 03:39 BST ... Mike Embley reports. Read more. Deadly US tornadoes strike Nebraska ... video 0:20
BBC News 2014-06-17Mike Embley (born 1955 in Surrey, England) is a presenter on BBC World News, an international news and current affairs television channel operated by the BBC.
Before moving on to the BBC, Embley began his career training as a journalist with Thomson daily papers in Wales, on the South Wales Echo and Western Mail. He started in broadcasting in 1983, working for BBC Wales followed by the BBC programme Watchdog in 1987, and Public Eye in 1989. Whilst with the programme, he was the first British reporter to reach San Francisco to report on the earthquake that struck there in 1989 for BBC News. Later he worked for Channel Four News as a producer and reporter before returning to the BBC, reporting for the One O'Clock, Six O'Clock and Nine O'Clock News bulletins. During this time, Embley also worked as a series presenter for Nature on BBC Two and made two films for Panorama.
Embley joined BBC World in 1995, and stayed there for two years until he became the main presenter of Newsroom South East, the BBC's regional news programme for the south-east region of the UK. After the programme was replaced by two separate regional bulletins (BBC London and South East Today) in 2001, Embley rejoined BBC World as a presenter. Since then, he has also presented on BBC News 24, the BBC's 24 hour rolling news channel, and carried out one-on-one interviews for the BBC programme HARDtalk, as well as reporting several series for the radio station BBC World Service.
Jamie Robertson (born May 30, 1981) is a film score composer from England.
Born in Essex Jamie studied music from a very young age. With a theatrical background from just 10 He grew up knowing his love of music was to aim for film, TV and Radio. Jamie's style includes the use of Choirs, Orchestral with a contemporary feel. His passed work has included ambient soundtracks for both Game and screen. And orchestral sound tracks for Film including the award winning Beneath the Mask: Portrait of an American Ninja. In 2006 Jamie was a keen paranormal investigator and was asked to attend some filming for the TV series "Secret Life of Suburbia" where he investigated a house in Dover claimed ot have been haunted by a mysterious figure. The Series was filmed on a very hot July day a few days after the July bombings in london which postponed filming by 1 week due to the TV crew being spread around london on various jobs. the programme was produced by the company Shine TV
Jamie has extensive music and sound design in Audio Drama including Doctor who and the VETO NIX. He has gained much praised from fans in the online community and rave reviews on his Scores in Magazines that class his music as "Hollywood Movies"