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Documentary from the BBC World Service, I'm Dorie Ture.
You're going to be joining us in Sierra Leone for a very special homecoming trip.
For many of our ancestors that were enslaved and taken from the mainland, this was the last stop where their feet was on African soil.
Listen now by searching for the documentary wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
Hello and welcome to NewsHour from the BBC World Service.
We're coming to you live from London.
My name is Paul Henley.
Coming up on the program today, the latest on the ceasefire in Gaza, a valuable archaeological find in Pompeii, and the response to a decision taken by the US Supreme Court to uphold a ban on TikTok and to the US Government.
I'm never forgiving you for this and.
I'm never going to trust you ever.
Again because you just like that took away millions of people's income and livelihood.
And who does that?
So I'm never trusting you ever again with anything.
Emotions are high as the app is likely to be banned in the US from Sunday, despite TikTok's CEO ATT Monday's presidential inauguration.
We'll have more on that later, the street parade having been cancelled now and the ceremony moved indoors because of freezing temperatures predicted for Washington on the day.
We'll hear from a veteran White House correspondent about the historical precedent which led to the change of venue.
First, during Donald Trump's election campaign, he claimed he could end the war in Ukraine in a single day.
As his inauguration nears, the goal widens.