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tv   BBC News  BBC News  January 26, 2024 5:30pm-6:01pm GMT

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last year. documents nottingham last year. documents shows the government was involved in plans by the post office to second accountants who found faults in its it system. and you can plop�*s departure from liverpool shocking fans jurger departure from liverpool shocking fansjurger klopp. m0 departure from liverpool shocking fansjurger klem— departure from liverpool shocking fans jurger klopp. no other english club and i can _ fans jurger klopp. no other english club and i can promise _ fans jurger klopp. no other english club and i can promise that. - but bbc sport centre. that is quite a breaking story that happened a little earlier today. you know how i talk with teams and currently it is liverpool.
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jurgen klopp has been explaining at length, the thinking behind his decision to leave liverpool at the end of the season. the german, who has truned the club around after almost the german, who has turned the club around after almost nine years at anfield, still has another two years left on his contract but he says he just doesn't have the energy levels to be the best version of himself in the role. he says he told the club last november that he would be leaving in the summer. the important things they had to do was to tell, of course have to tell them but our supporters and the players and to play was top. and really good and i don't say things like that and walk away but i am here and i am fully here and besides that, it'sjust here and i am fully here and besides that, it's just the here and i am fully here and besides that, it'sjust the right here and i am fully here and besides that, it's just the right thing to do and i am convinced in the right
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moment because the club meets time to plan the future while we are solving the present. caging reactions was he seems to hinge that he is taken a year out and promises to never manage in england again and we will see if he sticks to that but the energy levels, you cannot see himself going beyond the end of the season. also. beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful. — beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful. it _ beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful, it spent _ beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful, it spent a _ beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful, it spent a lot _ beyond the end of the season. also, thoughtful, it spent a lot of- beyond the end of the season. i"r thoughtful, it spent a lot of time thinking about that in terms of the fact that a few weeks ago, there was a meeting about next preseason a few days after the previous season that started a realised suddenly, and gone, i'm not sure i'm going to be there for that and that is what sparked this thoughtful process that ended with filling the club in
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november and everyone else today that it has been met here with disbelieving local fans told that it has been met here with disbelieving localfans told me that it has been met here with disbelieving local fans told me they saw the alert on their phones and simply thought it was a hoax because evenin simply thought it was a hoax because even in their deep depths of their mind, he thought to themselves that the end will come but we were not expecting it now, the contract was in 2026 and yet he is departing after you say, he referred to himself as a sports car, still doing pretty good miles per hour but only he realised that the tank was getting little below and he did not want to go to next season and do it again, again and again. it window now he thinks about himself and how he thinks he is to commit to this club which in the future, he said he will not be able to do and so he is going. will not be able to do and so he is anoin. ., , ., will not be able to do and so he is anoin. ., ., going. top of the premier league include when _ going. top of the premier league include when other _ going. top of the premier league
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include when other trophies - going. top of the premier league include when other trophies as i going. top of the premier league i include when other trophies as well include when other trophies as well in football doesn't stand still and there's already a front runner to replace him. there's already a front runner to replace him-— there's already a front runner to relace him. ., , replace him. former liverpool player who was the — replace him. former liverpool player who was the hardest _ replace him. former liverpool player who was the hardest managerial- who was the hardest managerial property in europe right now and top of bundesliga above buyer in munich the others in germany. instead a series of interviews of the last few weeks and fully aware that people are asking what his future might be because it is a former real madrid player can be a future job that he digs in giving the impression saying that liverpool's plan view can club but it's signed the contract was to stay at the 2026 no matter what their perfectly for those who might be suited for liverpool and jurgen klopp's successor next might not be as easy and the semi—present for others and roberto, potentially the
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next man here but maybe not right now and i think liverpool might�*ve had a vacuum wherejurgen klopp's assistant may have been the next off the rank and is also living when michael and the parts of the end of the season, perhaps big boots to fill and time to consider who will fill and time to consider who will fill them. a , fill and time to consider who will fill them. a, , ., it's been another tough day for england's cricketers in the first test against india in hyderabad the hosts have a first innings lead of 175 runs at the end of day two. it started well for england. joe root took a wicket with his part time spin in the first over of the day, yashasvi jaiswal out for 80. and then there was a wicket for debutant tom hartley. he struggled on his first day of test cricket but picked up two today. but almost all of india's batsmen made contributions, and ravindra jadeja was still there
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— unbeaten on 81 at the end as india closed on a21 for seven. novak djokovic�*s incredible run at the australian open came to an end earlier. he hadn't lost at the tournament since 2018 — butjannik sinner was the man who halted his 33 match melbourne unbeaten streak, in their semi—final clash on rod laver arena earlier. djokovic is the 10 time champion at the australian open — but lost the first two sets — and won only three games, but he did manage to take the third on a tie—break. it could have been the start of a great comeback but the italian was to good for him in the fourth set, taking it 6—3, for a place in his first grand slam final where he will play daniil medvedev. and that's all the sport for now.
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thank you very much let's stay with that story and talk to john gibbons. from the anfield wrap — a podcast all about liverpool fc. the reaction is after the day from liverpool fans. mi the reaction is after the day from liverpool fans.— the reaction is after the day from liverpool fans. all seven stages of . rief liverpool fans. all seven stages of grief tests. _ liverpool fans. all seven stages of grief tests, the _ liverpool fans. all seven stages of grief tests, the disbelief, - liverpool fans. all seven stages of grief tests, the disbelief, you - grief tests, the disbelief, you can't quite believe what you've read and what you hear what you see and people are starting to accept that it is true in the you will be moving on and every other determination to enjoy am always here and his team and those of the hope that we can end on the high—end trophy and send them off into the sunset but it would not be an easy day because
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it's really not been easy day will be found out today.— be found out today. talking about the achievements, _ be found out today. talking about the achievements, it _ be found out today. talking about the achievements, it was - be found out today. talking about the achievements, it was so - the achievements, it was so interesting and can be so honest about the reasons because we talked about the reasons because we talked a lot about player burnout with different players also remember too many managers, do you know what, the young man. he is pretty young. been a football manager— young man. he is pretty young. been a football manager in _ young man. he is pretty young. been a football manager in a _ young man. he is pretty young. beer a football manager in a club like liverpool and sometimes, 2a 7a in and getting into football because you love the game but management is so, inclusive out of everything now and need to be media changing, managing people and involved in this. �* . managing people and involved in this. �* , _ managing people and involved in this. _ ,,,
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this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago. _ this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago, they _ this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago, they were _ this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago, they were out - this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago, they were out of- this. and so puzzled by this because 12 months ago, they were out of the top four and had ageing midfield, and you can imagine them walking away and now, now... he and you can imagine them walking away and now, now...— away and now, now... he looks reinvigorated _ away and now, now... he looks reinvigorated by _ away and now, now... he looks reinvigorated by this _ away and now, now... he looks reinvigorated by this new - away and now, now... he looks reinvigorated by this new team | away and now, now... he looks. reinvigorated by this new team but it does show that he wants to leave the club and a better space and may be in the summer, he is of a bit doubtful in that case, putting things right but there's always the season and what he said it is for next year, didn't feel like you quite have the energy and he is an all or nothing sort of person and i don't think he thought he could operate in 70 or 80% of his teams and on the picture, he feels that if he cannot give everything, you will not be the city manager and. looking to the trophies _ not be the city manager and. looking to the trophies and _ not be the city manager and. looking to the trophies and champions - not be the city manager and. looking | to the trophies and champions league is such a triumph for many fans in
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the premier league after such a long period of time it is that you as well? ~ .. period of time it is that you as well? ~ ., , .. well? wondering if you will ever ha en well? wondering if you will ever happen again — well? wondering if you will ever happen again because _ well? wondering if you will ever happen again because ten - well? wondering if you will ever happen again because ten yearsj happen again because ten years because 20 years and suddenly before you know it, it's a fortune 30 and it was holy grail and that's all you will be remembered because other managers got close and it wasjurgen klopp who did it in such a style as well and on the start, 26 the first 27 games or something like that, it had never been seen before in the way he had done it in the way he had his team and played it, the supporters and he will be a legend forever this football club. i can see so many —
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forever this football club. i can see so many pictures - forever this football club. i can see so many pictures coming l forever this football club. i can | see so many pictures coming in forever this football club. i can see so many pictures coming in and jurgen klopp during the fist pump as he does at the end and a couple questions because as a coach, he was quite something as well and he improved players. look at pep guardiola and not all coaches fall into that basic category.- into that basic category. some managers _ into that basic category. some managers like _ into that basic category. some managers like 27, _ into that basic category. some managers like 27, 28 - into that basic category. some managers like 27, 28 and - into that basic category. some l managers like 27, 28 and evolve into that basic category. fine managers like 27, 28 and evolve them into a winning team and jurgen klopp, you like to unlock potential and that's a big reason why he got the liverpooljob and players like jordan anderson and people like that and mo salah, in the years now, plenty others is one you can see in the next generation now that the likes of curtisjones and others who
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come through and i think when they do retire, working withjurgen klopp and how he made them believe that they could achieve and if you're can club tells you that you can be a champion, you better believe it because of the way he talks and outcomes across. and people say alonzo should be the replacement because the slings would liverpool and how well he is doing and taking our buyer in munich in the teams in this country as well and alonzo is probably the best choice but big shoes to fill but puritan jurgen klopp. jurgen klopp. thank you so much for s-ueakin jurgen klopp. thank you so much for speaking to us- _ here in the uk, the attorney general is considering whetherjudges should review the sentence of a man who killed three people
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in nottingham last year. valdo calocane fatally stabbed grace 0'malley—kumar, barnaby webber and ian coates — and tried to kill three others by running them over. he was given an indefinite hospital order after pleading guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility — but the victims' families felt justice was not done, as nickjohnson reports. three families united in grief and despair. we will never come to terms with the loss of our beloved daughter grace and how she lost her life. premeditated planning, the collection of lethal weapons, hiding in the shadows and the brutality of the attacks are of an individual who knew exactly what he was doing. he knew entirely that it was wrong, but he did it anyway. valdo calocane pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility due to his paranoid schizophrenia.
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yesterday, thejudge sentenced him to an indefinite hospital order. but that didn't feel like justice to the devastated families. this man is a killer. murder was the only thing he cared about and he fulfilled this in horrific fashion on tuesday, the 13th ofjune last year. all we can do is hope that, in due course, some sort ofjustice will be served. this man has made a mockery of the system and he has got away with murder. now, after receiving a referral claiming the sentence may be unduly lenient, the attorney general�*s office confirmed it will now consider whether it should be reviewed byjudges. 19—year—old students barnaby webber and grace 0'malley—kumar were killed as they walked through nottingham city centre after a night out. moments after this footage, both had been fatally stabbed. 65—year—old ian coates, a caretaker and grandfather of eight, was then attacked while in his van on his way to work. stay where you are!
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an hour and a half after the first attack, valdo calocane was caught by police. passing sentence, the judge said calocane would very probably spend the rest of his life in a secure hospital. the attorney general�*s office now has 28 days to weigh up whether to refer the case to the court of appeal. even if that happens, there's no guarantee the case will be heard or reviewed, let alone the sentence changed. but it's the first step in a process that could go some way towards giving three families the justice they feel wasn't served. nickjohnson, bbc news. live now tojulian hendy in leeds, the founder of hundred families charity, which supports and advocates for families bereaved as a result of mental health related homicides. thank you for being here in the programme and i know that your
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father was killed by someone with mental health issues 17 years ago and we have a case like that and nodding a masher in the sentencing, yes, how much do you relive everything that she went through? this is all horribly familiar and my dad was killed, it was so difficult to get any information in any support in people making decisions and that's the reason why a set of the charity to try to make sure that other families going to this process and reset some support and help and bring it all back and the problem is the happening far too often. another sampling 220 times each and every yearin sampling 220 times each and every year in the uk and urgent, lots of bereaved families in closure and will be see time and time again is that people are not learning from these lessons and it doesn't lead to
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meaningful change and that is what needs to happen. and we must be clear that people with serious mental health problems are nonviolent but a few, a small number undoubtedly are in need better care and treatment and i've supported around 2050 families in the uk and bereaved result of mental health in homicides the vast majority of cases where people were unable and seriously and have not able or unwilling to get assertive care effective care from services that were not assertive enough making sure they get the care and treatment they need. sure they get the care and treatment the need. ., . ~ ., ,.. they need. coming back to some thins they need. coming back to some things that _ they need. coming back to some things that need _ they need. coming back to some things that need to _ they need. coming back to some things that need to change, - they need. coming back to some things that need to change, or . they need. coming back to some l things that need to change, orjust a question of proper communication and we listen to the families, they were stunned that they found out
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that it was going to be a manslaughter charge so late in the legal cycle and how important is it that the authorities properly communicate with the victims families so they understand the process did not feel as these families do that some injustice is not been done? families do that some in'ustice is not been done?h families do that some in'ustice is not been done? there is a think of the victims — not been done? there is a think of the victims cold, _ not been done? there is a think of the victims cold, the _ not been done? there is a think of the victims cold, the prosecution l the victims cold, the prosecution service, the health service and the duty under the code to improve families they're not doing it and there appears to be in a sanction for people, not doing this properly in the difficult year in this case was a severe question to be had around the psychiatric evidence and he was in police custody for weeks and nobody seems to have addressed any concerns about his mental health and there seems to be and he was on seen by a psychiatrist for months
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after this incident and that psychiatrist was able to stay with his mental health state was and his ability years history, and he had been thrown out of his flap for smoking cannabis and there was none of this discussed in court and were just told that in none of the evidence was produced in court and the families that have not been seeing that and this was not a big and i agree that the scene seems to have been trialed by doctors in the service did not interrogate or investigate robustly other avenues of how this could have been disposed. of how this could have been disposed-— of how this could have been disosed. .. ., ,, �*, . disposed. your groups it's about mental health _ disposed. your groups it's about mental health professionals - disposed. your groups it's about. mental health professionals working better with others and backed up
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with your case 17 years ago and further because there were other cases around that period as well, you could probably make the same list and so, why are these things still happening in such a familiar way in the short time later. industries don't talk to each other and they seem to think it's a way of his problem. there was a mass stepping in birmingham a man had been released and seriously unwell and went on a stabbing spree in birmingham and killed a young student very similar situation it would seem to think of somebody else's problem and theyjoined up services and people do not like to talk about violence and serious mental illness, it's a small amount of people who do not engage properly and more robust care is needed and often we see people saying that
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someone else's problem in what happened will be all right and that is something that should not happen. you end up with devastating consequences. thank you for taking the time to speak with us on bbc news. bbc news has obtained documents showing the government was complicit in a decision by the post office to sack the forensic accountants who had found bugs in its it system. a sub—committee of the post office board took the decision in april 2014. yet the post office kept the governments involvement in it secret ? and continued to claim the accountants had vindicated its horizon computer system. andy verity has this exclusive report. the post office hired independent forensic accountants second sight to investigate complaints that its horizon computer system generated false evidence of cash shortfalls used to prosecute subpostmasters. oh, my god. it...it�*s just doubled right in front of my eyes. they found evidence of computer bugs doing just that in 76 branches and told the post office
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in july 2013. but instead of coming clean, the post office kept insisting in public their system was robust, while in private, it agreed a plan to take second sight off the case. this envelope contains documents that post office bosses didn't want you, the public, to see — minutes of a subcommittee of a post office board that were kept from subpostmasters as they fought their way through the courts. they were eventually released a few years later with heavy redactions. look at those blacked—out passages. i've got hold of the unredacted version and they show exactly what was going on and who knew about it. spoiler alert — the government knew all about it. the minutes show post office chair alice perkins, chief executive paula vennells and a government representative, richard callard, discuss second sight�*s independent role investigating subpostmasters' complaints for a mediation scheme. behind the redactions, it shows that in april 2014,
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they agreed a plan to continue to investigate cases but to bring it within the control of the post office, cutting out second sight�*s independent role. and they reveal that post office bosses didn't plan to pay anything like the compensation subpostmasters were claiming — in fact, only around £1 million for all cases. yet in public, the post office continued to claim second sight�*s review as vindication, saying it found no systemic issues with horizon. in the meantime, you'll need to make good the loss. i haven't got that money! when in fact, as told in a tv drama this month, false evidence had been used to prosecute people like jo hamilton. i mean, what's it all about? do we live in a democracy or don't we? you know, and they've done some terrible things to people. why they didn't just tell the truth and sort it out then, i do not know. to mp5 who've campaigned for subpostmasters it again proves what they've long suspected. this was a government organisation being overseen by government representatives, and it's
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the government that has to take responsibility for everything that went wrong. it's a distinctly corrupt, murky story that goes right the way into government and it's deeply worrying. we contacted alice perkins and paula vennells, but didn't receive a response. richard callard and the government declined to comment while the inquiry was ongoing. the post office also declined to comment. andy verity, bbc news. why make a fresh inquiry into the uae back to bed for the telegraph and redbird said the structure of their bid seeing the ownership of
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their bid seeing the ownership of the new company would now resign in the new company would now resign in the uk and that said it was minded to look at the bid again and the culture secretary said it is to start a fresh inquiry into that a uae bid for the telegraph and that is it for verified life and thank you so much watching and hopefully will see you at the same time tomorrow. we saw a lot of sunshine and dry weather during the week and some wet and windy weather overnight which is long gone now but we have seen a
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slight change of the weather because if introduced cooler and fresher air around the top of the area of high pressure and closer to the high around southern parts of the uk, the winds are a bit lighter but further north, we still have the stronger gusty winds and gales in the northwest of scotland and it will be a customer than scotland that we see most of the showers and water or two maybe for northern ireland to prep the far north of england and clear skies further south and quite chilly and across subject to press the far north of england and clear skies further south and quite chilly and across subjects of england, we could start early saturday with a touch of frost. the prospects for this we can looking pretty good and for many places will be travelling some sunshine and the winds will pick up to the weekend but that will lift the temperatures that saturday, most of the rain will be flat bed of cloud across northern scotland and maybe a few spots of rain later for northern ireland in western scotland as it should be trimmed some sunshine in the sunshine to be a bit hazy with some high cloud around but
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temperatures would be a bit higher around nine or 10 degrees and weather friend around nine or 10 degrees and weatherfriend waiting around nine or 10 degrees and weather friend waiting in the wings in the atlantic and they'll eventually slide towards the northwest of the uk but i had her that we're going to pick up a stronger southerly wind on sunday and bring them some the warmth we have seen as of late but we missed some cloud around western hills and close in the best of the sun shall be eastern areas of the uk and that with her from be eastern areas of the uk and that with herfrom bringing rain towards northern ireland and particularly in the northwest, and during the afternoon. it will be a windier day but temperatures continued by the murray firth and even along the north coast of northern ireland and have every on the weather front and pushes ireland overnight making slow progress in the england and wales and some of the string to be quite heavy for a while with cold coming in, there may be some snow over the scholarships for a while. not much progress beyond that in northern
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england and wales in the midlands and east anglia in the study still drowned monday and quite warm as well with the rise of 1a region 15 celsius.
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today at 6:00pm, an order to israel to prevent genocidal acts in gaza by the un's top court, but it stops short of calling for an end to the war. in gaza, every day is a scramble to survive. israel's prime minister says they are acting in self—defence. israel's commitment to international law is unwavering. equally unwavering is our sacred
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commitment to continue to defend our country and defend our people. i've been speaking to a surgeon who works in scarborough about his constant fears for his family trapped in gaza. also on the programme... the murder of nine—year—old alfie steele by his mother and her partner — the authorities were alerted more than 60 times that he was at risk. jurgen klopp says he's standing down as liverpool manager at the end of the season. and the twins stolen and separated at birth in georgia, now reunited with their mother through social media. in sportsday later in the hour on bbc news, we'll have more onjurgen klopp's decision to leave liverpool and who is likely to replace him at anfield in the summer. the former midfielder xabi alonso is the current favourite.

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