“I think there are lots of people who want to kill him,” says Professor Haykel, “and he knows it.”
"My long term dream for the last 20 years has been building the everything robot. This is what I was doing my PhD work in I do think that is the end goal, but it's a very complicated task," says Mr Pierce."I still think eventually they will be there, but I think that's at least 10 to 15 years away."
"Nothing stops me when I set my mind to it."Pegleg Bennett, 55, grew up surfing with one leg and has conquered some of the biggest waves in the world.Now his story, along with many others, is part of Surf!, a celebration of 100 years of surfing in Cornwall.
Born with a birth defect that led to the amputation of his foot at 13 months old, Pegleg learned to surf without a leg, initially using a beach activity leg provided by the NHS."I didn't want to be sat on the beach, I wanted to be involved," he said.
He even drilled holes in his prosthetic leg to improve its functionality, much to the dismay of his prosthetist.
"The kit we are using now, from carbon fibre and titanium, has taken my surfing to another level," he said.Despite learning that his house was demolished, Jumaa remains insistent that he will return home.
"I won't leave the camp. If they won't let me rebuild my house, I will set up a tent in its place," he said."Isn't it enough that my family were displaced in 1948, now we must face displacement again?"
A Palestinian man jailed by Israel for an attack when he was 13 has been released after nearly a decade in prison.Ahmed Manasra, who is now 23, became