tv Breakfast BBC News January 29, 2024 6:00am-9:01am GMT
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for victims and the families is shocking. having now been in the system and seeing _ having now been in the system and seeing how— having now been in the system and seeing how the system deals with things. _ seeing how the system deals with things. it — seeing how the system deals with things, it has got to change. a government ban on disposable vapes as part of government plans to protect child health, but the vaping industry criticises the policy as kneejerk. a vigil last night in bristol for two teenage boys who were stabbed to death at the weekend. president biden vows to respond to the deaths of three us troops killed in a drone strike injordan, saying the groups backed by iran were responsible. could the cost of cut flowers be about to go up from wednesday? delayed brexit rules come into play designed to simplify the market, but pretty —— critics say they will lead to confusion. fan violence suggested a's fa cup tie between west brom and wolves or sees play stopped as players step in
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to remove family members caught up in the chaos. today we have a band of rain across the centre of the country. the heaviest will be across northern england. on either side of that variable cloud but also some sunny spells. details later. good morning. it's monday 29th january. the care quality commission is to carry out a special review of an nhs trust which treated a man for mental illness before he went on to kill three people in nottingham lastjune. valdo calocane has been given an indefinite hospital order, for attacking barnaby webber, grace o'malley kumar and ian coates. i've been speaking to barnaby�*s parents, who say victim support within the criminaljustice system needs reform. yeah, so this was barney's room. remembering his big brother. seven months on, charlie webber says losing barney will never get any easier.
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i mean, obviously, it's massively, massively devastating. and i think... i need people to realise that it's something that isn't just affecting my life, it's affecting everyone's life. like, people i'll know in the future, people i know now, people around me, everyone's life is affected. people who didn't even know him, but they know me, it's affecting them because it's affecting me. so it affects everybody. the thing for me that wakes me up, and it's almost the first thing i think about, is going into the hospital when we had to go and see... oh, don't. ..when i had to go and see my beautiful boy. barney's parents, david and emma, have told breakfast they had a call from the prime minister after their son was stabbed to death. but they say it was six days before they were offered any specialist counselling. that first week of just shock and despair, yeah, that's when you kind of need it the most. barney, and his friend grace
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o'malley—kumar, were heading home to their university accommodation in nottingham when they were fatally stabbed last june. school caretaker ian coates was the third victim of paranoid schizophrenic valdo calocane, leaving their families shattered. barnaby, grace and ian have been failed here. the system has failed. the support, or lack of support, for victims and the families is shocking. having not been in the system and seen how the system deals with things, it's got to change. last week, a court accepted calocane's pleas of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility. he will be detained indefinitely at a high security hospital. when you heard that the court was going to accept manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, that there wouldn't be a murder conviction in this case, what was your... ? sick to my stomach.
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hello! how are you? oh, rubbish. barney and grace's parents didn't know one another until their children were killed together, but now they are joining forces. i like to hope that wherever they are, they are together. and i do feel that they probably are together. the families believe justice has not been done. they say the police, the crown prosecution service and the nhs still have questions to answer, and they want to know if their children's deaths could have been avoided. the heartbreaking thing is it was their last few days, last week of term, and ijust still can't get to terms with that. both families say they will campaign on issues like knife crime and getting better support and counselling for grieving relatives. if the prime minister phoned you now and said, after everything you've been through so far, what do you think should happen to help
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other families who might face this horrendous situation in the future, what would you say? what would you tell him is needed? the ministry ofjustice need to throw proper, considered resources together to support, because the devastation that this has caused... i also think i'd be doing barney a disservice by not using the voice that we've had thrust upon us to try and make some change. shortly before he was killed, barney had told his mum and dad about a special friend called grace. he said they had so much in common. now their families are united in their determination. jon kay, bbc news. later in the programme we will be joined live on breakfast by emma and david webber to find out what else they want to happen next. we will also bejoined by the health secretary, victoria atkins. she will
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explain what that mental health review might mean in nottingham. at six minutes past six, sally has more of the news, and another violent knife attack. that is right, yes. two people have been arrested following the deaths of a 15 and 16—year—old boy in bristol. the teenagers died after they were stabbed on saturday evening. a 44—year—old man and 15—year—old boy are being questioned by police. fiona lamdin is in bristol for us this morning. do we have any more details about what happened, what the circumstances might have been? goad circumstances might have been? good morninu. circumstances might have been? good morning- yes. — circumstances might have been? good morning- yes. i— circumstances might have been? good morning. yes, i am _ circumstances might have been? good morning. yes, i am in _ circumstances might have been? (13mm morning. yes, lam in south circumstances might have been? (13mm morning. yes, i am in south bristol. i am at the age of a road where the attack happened. the two boys are being named locally this morning as max dixon, who was 16, and mason rist, who was 15. it is believed one of the boys actually lived on this street. police were here within minutes of the first call on saturday just after 11 o'clock minutes of the first call on saturdayjust after 11 o'clock in the evening. both boys were rushed to separate hospitals. one went to
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the children's hospital in bristol, the children's hospital in bristol, the other to southmead. sadly, in the other to southmead. sadly, in the early hours of sunday morning, both died. the group that attacked them made a getaway in a car and the police have that car. they have seized that car. so far they have arrested a 44—year—old man and a teenage boy. but they are still looking for others who they believe were in the group. yesterday there was a huge cording here. over 100 houses were in that a police cordoned. and a bus. —— cordoned. they believe some of the passengers on the bus might have seen something. last night there was a spontaneous vigil. you can see behind me flowers and candles, people in the community coming out in grief and shock because this morning max and mason should have been getting up and going off to school, but instead police are now investigating a double murder. thank ou. disposable vapes are set to be banned across the uk because of concerns they are fuelling
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an increase in illegal vaping among under—18s. measures will also be introduced to prevent vapes being marketed at children and to target underage sales. here's our health editor, hugh pym. the increase in underage vaping has caused increasing concern, with recent figures suggesting that one in five children have tried it. headteachers have reported that some pupils have become addicted to nicotine. in a small number of cases, children have needed hospital treatment. research quoted by the government shows that more than two thirds of those between 11 and 17 who are vaping are using disposables. the environmental impact, with single use e—cigarettes adding to waste, is anotherfactor behind the ban announced today. this is the westminster government recognising the health and wellbeing of children by banning disposable vapes. it also recognises the environment is important to us and this ban will help stop polluting the environment. and it also leaves open opportunity
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for people who are using vapes to help their nicotine addiction to use them with the recyclable vaping devices. the ban on disposable vapes is one measure which can be implemented using existing powers. for others, there'll be new legislation restricting flavours, introducing plain packaging and limiting displays in shops. and in england and wales there'll be powers to impose on the spot fines on retailers who sell to under 18. most of these plans will be put out to consultation, and implementation is unlikely till the end of this year at the earliest. the vaping industry has already made clear its objections. the real concern here is that, yes, how do we ensure that the safety of these products only goes into the hands of adult smokers? but the concern around a ban, if that border enforcement or local trading standards money doesn't get to the right place, is this would really revert many smokers back to that killer, which is combustible cigarettes. health officials say that use
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of e—cigarettes is an effective method for smokers to give up their habit. there will now be a debate over which flavors should be allowed after the changes and where the products should be placed in shops so children are deterred, but adults can still buy e—cigarettes if they need them. hugh pym, bbc news. president biden says the united states will respond to a drone attack on an american military base injordan, near the syrian border, at a time and in a manner of its choosing. three service personnel were killed and 3a others were injured. our diplomatic correspondent paul adams reports. the americans say the attack happened at a base known as tower 22, right on the syrian—jordanian border. it's one of many american bases across the region. there have been dozens of drone and missile attacks in recent months,
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but no american personnel have been killed until now. joe biden, seen here attending church, was quick to point the finger. "we know it was carried out by radical iran—backed militant groups operating in syria and iraq," he said. it's not necessarily a tipping point into uncontrolled escalation between the united states and iran, but it's another very dangerous step because, as i say, the us will have to respond even more strongly than it's done to previous attacks. carefully cultivated over years, iran has a wide network of allies and proxies operating in countries across the middle east. they're all opposed to israel and the united states. it's sometimes called the axis of resistance. there are pro—iranian militias in lebanon, the palestinian territories, gaza and the west bank, plus iraq and syria and far to the south. there's also the houthis in yemen. over the weekend, the houthis have been launching their own attacks, hitting a tanker
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in the gulf of aden. british warship hms diamond used an air defense missile to bring down a houthi drone with british help. the us have been hitting houthi military targets for a couple of weeks. so far, the houthis seem undeterred. they say they'll stop attacking ships if and when there's a ceasefire in gaza. the problems america is dealing with across the region aren't all about gaza, but the war there has left the whole middle east a lot more dangerous. paul adams, bbc news. mps have called for the one or two—word judgments, used by ofsted to rate schools in england, to be scrapped after finding "widespread and deep concern" about how the system works. the education select committee inquiry was commissioned following the suicide of primary headteacher ruth perry. an inquest separately found an ofsted inspection had contributed to her death. the labour party has suspended an mp after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as genocide on the eve of holocaust
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remembrance day. kate osamor, who represents edmonton, in london, has apologised for the comment. nine days of industrial action by train drivers in the aslef union are getting under way — starting with an overtime ban. from tomorrow, there will be strikes affecting 12 rail companies on different days over the course of a week. the walk—outs are part of the long—running dispute over pay and conditions. king charles has spent a third died in hospital after undergoing a procedure for an enlarged prostate. greg mckenziejoins us procedure for an enlarged prostate. greg mckenzie joins us from the london clinic where the princess of wales is also being treated following abdominal surgery. good morning. what is the latest you can tell us? ,., ., morning. what is the latest you can tell us? ., , tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted — tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted here _ tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted here on _ tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted here on friday - tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted here on friday to - tell us? good morning. yes, the king was admitted here on friday to the i was admitted here on friday to the london clinic for a corrective procedure pertaining to an enlarged prostate. the queen, queen camilla, has been here to visit him every day
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since and has said the king is doing well. the king is also thrilled and delighted to know that his diagnosis has had such a positive public health awareness, and i said thank you to all of those who have sent him well wishes. in fact, there has been an increase in searches on the nhs website for enlarged prostates. in fact, one search every five seconds since friday. the king is recovering here at the london clinic alongside his daughter—in—law, her royal highness the princess of wales, who was admitted here for a planned abdominal surgery way back on the 16th ofjanuary. planned abdominal surgery way back on the 16th of january. kensington palace issued a statement shortly after on the 17th of january, to say that surgery was successful. she is expected to return home from here,
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the london clinic, tomorrow. as for the london clinic, tomorrow. as for the king, it is widely anticipated he will be discharged at some point today. thank you very much indeed. greg has got his coat on. i almost didn't put one on this morning. it's incredible mild forjanuary. it wasn't that cold, was it? carol can tell us what is going on. happy monday. good morning. same to you. you are both right. it was exceptionally mild or warm yesterday. it is turning a wee bit colder from the north. yesterday. it is turning a wee bit colderfrom the north. yesterday yesterday. it is turning a wee bit colder from the north. yesterday in the islands we had provisionally a new record—breaking temperature for january. 19.6 celsius breaking the previous record of 18.3 celsius way backin previous record of 18.3 celsius way back in 1971. it was also with this high temperature very windy. talking of wind, if you go out this morning and see some dust on your car, for example, it is probably saharan dust. england and wales feeling it
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today. eastern england would be prone to it tomorrow. it is behind this weather front we are seeing the cooler air coming this weather front we are seeing the coolerair coming in this weather front we are seeing the cooler air coming in across scotland and northern ireland. some heavy rain today where we have this band of rain. especially across north—west england. we could have 20 to 40 north—west england. we could have 20 to a0 millimetres. some sleet and snow on the hills of the southern uplands and the pennines. come south of that something drier and brighter. variable cloud puts sunny spells. you can see how it drapes down towards the rest of wales and the south west of england. these are the south west of england. these are the temperatures. seven in lerwick, eight in stornoway. round eight in kinloch you as well today. that is a huge drop interpreter. 13 or 1a further south. huge drop interpreter. 13 or 1a furthersouth. feeling huge drop interpreter. 13 or 1a further south. feeling pleasant in any sunny spells. as we head on through the evening and overnight period, this rain will continue to put eastwards. they will still be some sleet and snow in the southern uplands and the pennines. some clear
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skies follow behind into scotland and northern ireland. here it will be cold. it could be as cold as —5 with some frost and the risk of ice on untreated surfaces. once again this week, all to play for. thank you. it is a thorny issue for many pedestrians, including people who are blind, or parents with a pushchair. we are talking about a pavement parking. and from this morning, drivers in edinburgh could be fined up to £100 as the city becomes the first in scotland to enforce legislation which was passed backin enforce legislation which was passed back in 2019. but we thought we would ask what the situation is across the uk. the welsh government plan to introduce a new law by the end of last year but have now, it says, consultation will start later this year. in northern ireland, new restrictions were introduced in november preventing pavement parking on certain footpaths. that was only in belfast. in england, a government
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consultation on the issue finished four years ago, but so far no lo consultation on the issue finished four years ago, but so far no to has been enforced. i was it going down, this big change in edinburgh? alexandra mckenzie has the latest. good girl. elaine mckenzie is visually impaired. find left. she relies on her guide dog when out walking. good girl. cars like these, parked on the pavement, can be a hazard. tessie, find the way. tessie's been taught to assess height and width. so if she thinks there's not enough space for us to get past, she decides, not me. good girl. i've ended up on really busy roads. and you are — you're putting yourself and the doggy at risk. it's scary for me. i don't know what it's like for her. i think it must be as bad for her. edinburgh is the first place
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in scotland to enforce legislation that was introduced across the country last year. from today, drivers in the city could receive a fine of up to £100 for double parking or parking on the kerb. first and foremost, it's about creating a more equal say. you know, so edinburgh's a really difficult city to move around, and cars on footpaths make that much more difficult, particularly if you've got disability, or if you're a parent or grandparent pushing a buggy, parked vehicles can be a real problem every single day. and manyjuggling buggies and small children do welcome the change. i i do understand that it's trickyl to park and find parking spaces, but we need to be able to get past. and i think it's hard to manoeuvre a buggy off a pavement _ if you have to try i and get round a car. well, ijust hope that most people would know about it. i, for example, didn't know about it. so, yeah, ijust hope that there won't be kind of a period where, you know, some people just haven't heard and maybe theyjust kind of do it out of habit. to ensure that most people
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and businesses were informed, there was a leaflet campaign in the worst affected areas. we've had a few people that weren't happy about it because they think they should be able to park outside their own house as they see fit. but generally, about 95% of people are happy with the new rules, understand the reasoning behind them. it's about keeping everybody safe. it's about making sure people can get from a to b safely. although most seem to agree with the ban on pavement parking, on this street in portobello there are also some concerns. the problem is that people park on the pavement, and they are going to get charged £100 fine for that, then the roads are just going to be completely blocked. we're not going to be able to get even normalfamily sized cars down without delivery drivers and emergency vehicles, which is the main crux of the situation.
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but what we do want is guidance, and we want some kind of ruling about how this is going to work. it's notjust pavement parking the council wants to eradicate — it's also the inconvenience caused by double parking. parking in edinburgh is very difficult. we managed to find this space, but another driver suggested that we move, let him into the space, and that we double park beside him. we said that wasn't a solution because it's actually illegal. elaine hopes her walks will become easier and safer, but she isn't holding her breath. good girl. i'll wait and see. i mean, i come round here, say like wednesday and have a look, there's no guarantee there's not going to be cars on the pavement. edinburgh city council is leading the way, but others are expected to follow. they said it's hoped fines won't need to be issued, but any money collected would be used to help make pavements safer for pedestrians.
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alexandra mckenzie, bbc news, edinburgh. we would like to hear from you on this subject. what is the situation where you live? those careless parking, do cars blocking the pavement, impact you day—to—day? it is a big issue where i live. people put their bins out on the same day and the cars, and you just can't get around. get in touch by e—mail or you can send a message on what's up. always remember to let us know who you are and where your messaging from. —— what's happened. if you have any big pictures we would like to see those as well. 23 minutes past six. let's look at this morning's newspapers. the guardian carries a front page photo of residents holding flowers at that vigil we brought you earlier, the
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two teenagers stabbed in bristol. the daily mail this morning reports on what it calls a strike hell on trains. the latest industrial action is something we will be looking at here on breakfast. the times quotes the united states presidentjoe biden promising reprisals for the deadly drone strike. three american troops were killed and dozens more injured in the attack injordan on sunday. the daily telegraph also leads with that us base strike and reports how royal navy ship hms diamond was forced to use its own missile system to counter a drone attack by iran backed rebels. we're going to show you a picture now of one of my bucket list destinations. beautiful picture coming into us today. look at this. annual venice carnival, which was this weekend. but the grand canal has a rat problem. it is not a real
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right. it is a bolt right. a gondola ride. his name is pat agana. he relied the water procession, releasing those balloons near the rialto bridge. you have to go. i am definitely going to go. it will happen this year. carnival first held in venice a long time ago, the 11th century. the tradition continues. revived in 1979. you have been? i have been. pretty? yeah, it's it's amazing. you've got to go. 25 past six. still to come this morning... dear andrew, we wish to recruit you as a traitor. if you accept our invitation you mustjoin us immediately. we are still talking about it, even on monday morning after weeks of backstabbing and plotting. the winner of the traitors was revealed on friday night. we reveal the secrets behind the scenes. what is it like that ultimate game of trust?
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we are going to have another traitor here, andrew, just before eight. do you think we need to do a spoiler alert? i think we have just spoiled it. lots of liars in that show. and this one! 25 past six. time for the news, travel and weather where you are. hello, good morning from bbc london and also to viewers in the south east. i'm nicky ford. the north london mp kate osamor has been suspended from the labour party after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide. the mp for edmonton made the comments on friday on the eve of holocaust memorial day. critics described her message as inappropriate and unacceptable. she later apologised for any offence caused. an investigation by the labour party is underway.
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if you're planning to use the trains this week, be prepared for major disruption due to another round of strikes. members of the drivers union aslef have started an overtime ban as part of their dispute over pay. they're also staging one day walkouts from tomorrow. there will be a lot of amended timetables across the network. and also this is a national round of action. so it will impact all train—operating companies in one way or form. so, again, we're really asking customers to check before they travel because services will be busy and we do have amended timetables in place. charities say they're seeing more pensioners relying on foodbanks to make ends meet. the trussell trust said emergency parcels handed out to older households rose by a third between last april and september. the government says it's committed to supporting the most vulnerable and is increasing benefits. bow foodbank in east london says the number of pensioners using its service has trebled. when i started a year and a half
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ago, we might have had about 17 pensioners a week. we're now in the kind of, like, 50, 60, 70 pensioners a week. so at the same time of making sure that they've got the food they need, it's really important that we think about making sure they've got access to all of that wider support as well. here's something to make the dark nights feel a bit less gloomy. a new immersive light and sound show is opening in central london. it's called life, and will be projected onto the buildings at st—martin—in—the—fields in trafalgar square. the aim is to take visitors on a journey that celebrates the world around us. now onto the weather with kate kinsella. some brighter spells developing. for the afternoon, we could see one or two brighter spells. hazy sunny spells developing then the temperature except the mouth at the
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end ofjanuary, 1a celsius. a we will see this rent starts to move through, outbreaks of rain lingering in going into tuesday morning. minimum temperature between eight to 10 celsius. for many of rain in going into tuesday morning. minimum temperature between eight to 10 celsius. for many other as tomorrow we start the day in double figures. with a start to see high pressure if few spots of light rain and drizzle. but start to drop. temperatures dropping right the way back down into low single figures. that's all from me. bye for now. hello, this is breakfast with sally nugent and jon kay. the family of barnaby webber have made a direct plea to the prime minister to improve the way
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victims are treated in the criminaljustice system in england. the 19—year—old student was killed alongside his friend grace o'malley—kumar and school caretaker ian coates in nottingham lastjune. barnaby�*s family has also called for a public inquiry to establish whether their deaths could have been prevented. he was so kind and so inclusive and he just didn't care about background, status, looks, ability. he just... if he wanted to be your friend, he would be. and when you hear stories about grace, you hear the same type of personality. did you know grace? did you know of grace before... i knew of grace, which is really which is really telling because barney kept his cards close to his chest. didn't tell us much, despite us asking. yeah, you'd had to extract
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stuff from barney. yeah, he said to me before christmas, last christmas, when he was going out, before he was coming home, he was going out out again. and i said, "oh, where are you going? what are you doing tonight?" he said, "i'm going out, one of my best friends up here." and i said, "oh, what's he called?" and he said, "actually, it's a she and she's called grace, and she's like me, mum." and she'sjust... she's so like me, we'rejust, like, really, really good mates. she was special to him. yeah, yeah. yeah. can we talk about that day... yeah. ..when you found out? how did you realise? how did you hear what had happened? we were in cornwall. our lodge in cornwall, and i was working. so i tried to phone barnaby. ithought, "well, i'lljust phone him," and he'll shout at me because i'm waking him up. but, you know, i'm just being a dad. i want to make sure he's all right. the phone rang out and so i then looked at find my phone,
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i thought, where is he? so i looked at it, i didn't... it looked like he was near to his halls. ithought, "well, maybe he's just crashed at a mate's or something like that." so i didn't think much more of it. and then, as time went on, it got reported it was ilkeston road. went back to my phone, zoomed in on it, and the phone was on ilkeston road. and then i started panicking. well, i phoned the police and spoke to the switchboard, and they... you get a sense that something's not right because i said, "i'm barnaby webber's father. i'm just trying to find out if he's 0k — i can't get hold of him." and the woman at the end of the phone went quite quiet and said, "i just need to speak to someone." i thought, "that doesn't sound right." and then she came back and said, "oh, there's a lot going on at the moment, but someone will give you a call back shortly." and that's when i said to emma, i said, "something's wrong, we've got to go." we just chucked everything in the car. just chucked everything — including the dogs. just chucked in the car and we were just basically ploughing up to nottingham as quick as we could. we didn't get very far before
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the phone rang and we had that — that horrible call. yeah. and then you're all of a sudden you're that family, you know that's happened. you think, "how...how could that be?" how can it be us? the thing for me that wakes me up and it's almost the first thing i think about is going into the hospital and we had to go and see... i had to go and see my beautiful boy and that — i can't get that... that will never leave my mind. no. itjust sits there, you know, and he looked so peaceful, but i was just devastated. and itjust... it wakes me up every night. do you know what i do? because that happens to me. it's a photograph of him last year when we were skiing. aw! and he's got that beaming smile, and he's at the top of the mountain, and he's got his ray—bans on and hejust looked beautiful, but he looks happy. yeah. so i think i think about that because that's him alive. yeah. yes. this was barney's room.
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there's a lot of sport on show in here. yeah. yeah, there was a lot of sport on show. - obviously, cricket, hockey, rugby, a little bit _ of football, basketball. to be honest, it's quite painful in a way to come in here. - it's quite...overwhelming i sometimes to come in here. just...it's got a lot of. memories in this room. literally, everything i here is how he left it. no—one's touched anything here. ithat's his bat that he never got. to use, unfortunately, because he ordered it towards the end. he was so excited about it as well. iremember it. it was custom—made and bloody expensive as well. _ i don't remember my dad being too happy about it. j what are the fun things that you remember about barney? what are the things, like, you're kind of brothers, right? yeah, we just play a lot of sport. —— yeah, we used to play a lot of sport. l it would drive mum mad. we used to play hockey in the hall — down that hall with the hockey ball. and it would make a massive noise i
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because it normally get quite heated or we'd play rugby in the garden, especially during covid. - i think, obviously. we already brothers so we were already very close, | but we were really, really close during covid because we had no—one else, like, _ around our age to talk to. so we were constantly with each other. - we made mum and dad order- a badminton net outside and, like, a darts board and stuff like that, so we just had something to do. | what would you like people to know about the impact this has had on you? obviously, it's massively, massively devastating. i and i think... and if you would realise that it's something that isn't _ just affecting my life, - it's affecting...everyone's life, like, people i'll know— in the future, people i know now, people around me, - everyone's life is affected. people who didn't even - know him, but they know me. it's affecting them - because it's affecting me. so it affects everybody. no matter what you do, it happened and you can't change that. _ and it's very difficult to...process that no matter what you do, - where i go, that's always going to be at the back. of my mind, no matter what i'm doing. - it's always there, like, -
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i'm never not thinking of it. how does barney guide you now? a lot of the things i do, especially in sport, - i try to dedicate to him. so he... like, i say, i'm going to do... like, when i play rugby, i say i'm going to do this for him and it - drives me to complete what i'm going to do. i it drives me to play well. it drives me to do well in school. i wear this, whichl was his wristband. so i can, like, sort. of carry him with me. not only have you had to deal with losing barney, you then start going through...the formal processes, the legal process, the investigation, the police process — how has that been? so we knew this person was the person. there was irrefutable evidence, cctv footage — it was him, and that was the end of it. all that was running through my head is — that bit's parked now. you know, justice will be served. he'll go for murder. that'll be the end of it. he'll get locked away. they'll throw the key away. hopefully, for whole life. for whole life. just, you know, he'll get treated,
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you know, he'll get the punishment he deserves for the crime he's committed. when you heard that the court was going to accept manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, that there wouldn't be a murder conviction in this case, what was your... sick to my stomach. yeah. we've had to sit through the ordeal and again, at our request, because we were questioning how could he... was he in such a psychotic state that he was out of his mind and didn't know what he was doing? on the day. we don't refute that he's mentally ill, we understand all of that. but our argument is that he was capable of making a rational enough decision — he knew what he was doing, he knew it was wrong, and he did it anyway. and he's admitted that. we do know some of the previous medical history because we have been given that information. and that's a whole other story that needs to be uncovered. how he was out in the community with his mental health issues, somebody that had been sectioned.
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there was a warrant out for his arrest for assaulting a police officer. so those questions have to be answered. and so, as i... you know, i repeat, we don't dispute that he was unwell, but what has failed in his support network, whatever that might be, to enable this to have happened. you've been speaking to alex chalk, the justice secretary. what is your message to him — what do you want from him, need from him? well, we're now very unhappy with the actions of the cps because we feel that we've been rushed and hastened and actually railroaded into this. and they have not answered our questions and they've not... i think there's a victims' code. i think it's called a victims' code. he was telling us that, wasn't he? and i do not feel that we've been properly consulted or included. bear in mind, the first time we met them online... the cps? the cps — was the end of november. so there's not exactly been a long relationship
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and knowledge with them. that's five months after you lost barney. they haven't contacted us. nothing. there's no sort of... you're not in the process at all, you know, and i think that's wrong. i think they... i appreciate that they have a job to do and, you know, they are the crown prosecution service, therefore, they're meant to be... but it doesn't feel that they're there... as as a victim, it doesn't feel that they're there for us. pa rents a re parents are speaking on unimaginable grief. both sets of parents really almost campaigning now. they really want to make a change will make a difference, don't they? the?e want to make a change will make a difference, don't they?— difference, don't they? they are in this terrible _ difference, don't they? they are in this terrible situation. _ difference, don't they? they are in this terrible situation. if _ difference, don't they? they are in this terrible situation. if we - difference, don't they? they are in this terrible situation. if we have l this terrible situation. if we have to be in this situation we want to use these voices we have, this profile we had, to raise this issue.
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interestingly, this morning, the government has announced there will be a mental health special case review into the perpetrator in this case and the way he was handled by authorities in nottinghamshire over the last few years. we will be joined later on the programme live by david and emma webber to get their reaction. they wanted a full public inquiry, they wanted more. are they satisfied? they wrote to the prime minister and asked for a face to face meeting.— the prime minister and asked for a face to face meeting. more on that cominu u- face to face meeting. more on that coming up in _ face to face meeting. more on that coming up in the — face to face meeting. more on that coming up in the programme. - face to face meeting. more on that coming up in the programme. now face to face meeting. more on that. coming up in the programme. now the johnnies here after a lot of sport at the weekend but really disturbing scenes. . ., , ., scenes. one incident threatens to overshadow _ scenes. one incident threatens to overshadow it _ scenes. one incident threatens to overshadow it all. _ scenes. one incident threatens to overshadow it all. the _ scenes. one incident threatens to overshadow it all. the violence i scenes. one incident threatens to i overshadow it all. the violence that erupted in the stands with west brom taking on wolves. we saw riot police trying to quell the disorder and problems that erupted, some of the players stepping in to try to help
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family members, one fan on a stretcher, one fan emerging with a bloodied face from the chaos, really nasty, horrible scenes and investigations from the police and the fa will continue. a number of arrests, possibly more will come. an unsavoury moment yesterday after what was a brilliant fa cup weekend. "disgusting, inexcusable and completely unnacceptable" is how the football association described events at the hawthorns, as trouble in the stands overshadowed the west midlands derby between west bromwich albion and wolves. the incident happened in an area where some fans were seated. play was suspended for 3a minutes because of crowd disorder. kyle ba rtley emerged kyle bartley emerged with his child in his arms as both sets of players headed down the tunnel at one point. west brom has said they will ban any
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fan caught up in the disorder and the fa is investigating. the trouble came after wolves got their second goal of the afternoon, as the match finished 2—0. understandably, lots of questions afterwards over the incident. we shouldn't be talking about stuff like that in 202a. everyone should be able to come to football, behave themselves, enjoy it for what it is. two teams trying to win a game, enjoy it, except winning and losing. go home. so yeah, really, really disappointing because it's yeah, i should be talking to you about winning a derby away from home that we haven't won for 28 years. of course, we always are disappointed in any type of incident, like that one. against any type of aggression — is something that of course we want to be safe and we just want to be focused on the football and we want to avoid this. but sometimes these things happen and now i will talk about the amazing atmosphere that our fans created. we want to talk about this
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aspect that, of course, we are totally disappointed of this. two days on from announcing his intention to leave liverpool jurgen klopp's side beat norwich. it was an emotionally charged afternoon. liverpool are also in the final of the carabao cup in the final of the carabao cup in the final 16 of the europa league. how was he feeling? very emotional. i have to just have to make sure that i get don't get on that side of it. i pull myself together if you want. but of course, in the games, we need to be warriors and not
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celebrate the old man on the sidelines. so, and that's what that's where them. we need the atmosphere and the people know that. so for today, good first match after the news. now we get used to it. the emotional scenes i am sure will continue. newport staged a staring comeback. manchester united are in control before newport levelled the tribe. bryn morris with their first — and one he'll remember. but it was united who eventually came out on top — scoring two more goals — rasmus hojland with united's fourth. in the women's super league, england's nikita parris scored twice to help manchester united beat aston villa 2—1 — and ease the pressure on manager marc skinner. united are fourth, seven points behind arsenal who beat liverpool 2—0. vivienne miedema with their opener — herfirst goal since returning from an acl injury —
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and herfirst goal since december 2022. england beat india in the first test. ben stokes says it is his "greatest triumph" since becoming the england test captain. heading into day four yesterday, an england victory still looked very unlikely. but ollie pope added a8 to his overnight score — before being bowled for 196 — as england set india 231 to win. and then, debutant tom hartley put india in a spin, picking up seven wickets — to give the tourists a 28—run win in hyderabad. it was the first time india had led by 100 or more runs after the first innings, and then went on to lose the match. a subdued crowd that they are not used to losing on home soil, india. this result has raised eyebrows the
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world over. we've been a part of some amazing games over the last two years. we've had some incredible victories. but i think considering where we are, who we played against, the position we found ourselves going into our second... second innings batting was... to be able to sit here now and say, "we've gone 1—0 up." i think that's a big reason why i feel this is our best victory since i've become captain. they probably deserve a this morning. now, few would denyjannik sinner a lie in this morning — as he produced a stunning comeback to win his first grand slam title yesterday. the italian was 2 sets to love down against daniil medvedev in the final of the australian open — but showed incredible composure to fight back to win the next three. the match lasted nearly four hours. he looked completely exhausted. well done to him with his first major title.
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the nfl love story continues. kelsey stored in scored the first touchdown to set up a rematch with the san francisco a9ers. taylor swift are celebrated in the stands. afterward she joined celebrated in the stands. afterward shejoined in the post—match celebrations with healthy as well. reports suggesting the pop star will still make the trip to the super bowl in las vegas on february the 11th despite performing on the other side of the world in tokyo the night before. no chance she will miss that game. it is going to pick any, it is going to be the super bowl. to be fair, it goes on for about 12 hours. feels like a week! she will probably stop somewhere on the way. and still have time for tea. here's carol with a look at this morning's weather.
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we were chatting about how it felt weirdly warm coming into work. not the same for all of us.— the same for all of us. good morning- — the same for all of us. good morning- we _ the same for all of us. good morning. we had _ the same for all of us. good morning. we had a - the same for all of us. good morning. we had a very - the same for all of us. good l morning. we had a very warm the same for all of us. good - morning. we had a very warm day yesterday in the highlands for the time of year. cooler air is following in from the north today and it will eventually get down to the south, especially three tomorrow. today rainfall some of us was that there are sunny spells in the forecast was that this is the band of rain producing sleet and snow on the hills of england and southern scotland. it extends all the way down towards the south—west. it is a weather front, also a dividing line between the cold air in the north end of milder air in the south. coming up from a long way on the southerly wind, bringing in some saharan dust winner as well. we can see as much as 20 to a0 millimetres of rain today. especially across northern england where it will be heaviest. to the north of that no where near as windy
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as yesterday. dry with a fair bit of sunshine. to the south we are looking at variable amounts of cloud, breezy and again some sunny spells during the course of the day. temperature wise we are looking at a real drop, almost a 12 degrees drop. still milder conditions, 1a, 15 as we push down towards the south—east. way above average. the average in the south—east is about eight, 9 degrees. this evening and tonight the band of rain, there sleet and snow on the hills will push steadily is leaving a lot of cloud in its wake. damp conditions once again. drizzle and patchy light rain. clear skies across scotland and northern ireland. temperatures here could dip in sheltered areas to —5. we are looking at a touch of frost and the risk of ice on untreated surfaces. not the case as we can further south. tomorrow, for england and
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wales, who starred on a cloudy node, drizzly with patchy light rain. that will fizzle out as this area of high pressure builds in. in the south—east, still areas of cloud at times there could be sunny spells. a lot of dry weather across the rest of the uk and the wind was freshening when really picking up across the far north—west. some of the shows we could possibly see on higher ground in the north west highlands could also be wintry in nature. —— de showers. we are looking at temperatures of six in lerwick and nine in cardiff. the low pressure system coming our way. not just wind great is going to be windy with gales by severe gales. severe gales across the north and west of scotland but widely we are looking at very windy conditions and heavy rain. once again the weather is
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changing. dry and blustery as we can further south. temperatures are starting to rise once again. it is four years since the uk formally left the european union, and new border checks on plant and animal products arriving from the eu come into force this week. nina is at a wholesale market in liverpool and can explain. good morning. liverpool wholesale market this morning. i have been admiring the chrysanthemums, which have come in fresh all the way from holland. arrived here yesterday. they will go out to sell tomorrow. from wednesday, products like this will be subject to different rules. it may feel a long time since we left the eu but the board shake—up
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is only happening now. let me talk you through. from this wednesday, things classified by government as medium or high risk will be subject to these new rules. they include cut flowers, fish, meat and cheese. they will need to health certificate to come with them. from april, there will be physical checks on the goods coming through. lorries could be stopped at borders to make sure they are in check. some items which are low risk could be moved to the category of medium to high risk. that could include fruit and vegetables. when you think about the flat three quarters of vegetables imported from the uk come from the eu, that will increase costs by £200 million. we all know that cost trickles down to us. let's meet then. we have met many times before.
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what does this change mean practically, for the chrysanthemums practically, for the chrysa nthemums i practically, for the chrysanthemums i am just holding?— practically, for the chrysanthemums i am just holding? i am “ust holding? plus, another set of i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we — i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we pass _ i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we pass on _ i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we pass on to _ i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we pass on to the _ i amjust holding? plus, another set of cards we pass on to the end - i amjust holding? plus, another set| of cards we pass on to the end user, the florist _ of cards we pass on to the end user, the florist and eventually to the people — the florist and eventually to the people on the high street. —— set of costs _ people on the high street. -- set of costs. ~ , ., , ., ,, costs. why does it cost more? sign u . costs. why does it cost more? sign u- a it is costs. why does it cost more? sign up a it is like _ costs. why does it cost more? sign up a it is like another— costs. why does it cost more? sign up a it is like another tax, - costs. why does it cost more? sign up a it is like another tax, the - up a it is like another tax, the inspection charges, more paperwork for the sake of paperwork. we inspection charges, more paperwork for the sake of paperwork.— inspection charges, more paperwork for the sake of paperwork. we do not need all of this _ for the sake of paperwork. we do not need all of this kind _ for the sake of paperwork. we do not need all of this kind of _ for the sake of paperwork. we do not need all of this kind of stuff - for the sake of paperwork. we do not need all of this kind of stuff going - need all of this kind of stuff going on. need all of this kind of stuff going on this _ need all of this kind of stuff going on. this was in place 20 years ago. all other— on. this was in place 20 years ago. all other sudden, because of post—brexit, it is almost, this is what _ post—brexit, it is almost, this is what we — post—brexit, it is almost, this is what we are _ post—brexit, it is almost, this is what we are going to do. that is it .et what we are going to do. that is it get on _ what we are going to do. that is it get on with— what we are going to do. that is it get on with it, lads. the government would say they _ get on with it, lads. the government would say they are _ get on with it, lads. the government would say they are protecting - get on with it, lads. the government would say they are protecting us - get on with it, lads. the government would say they are protecting us and | would say they are protecting us and the current biodiversity in the uk, what would you say about that? a, lot what would you say about that? a lot of it is checked _ what would you say about that? a lot of it is checked or _ what would you say about that? a lot of it is checked or ready before it leaves _ of it is checked or ready before it leaves we — of it is checked or ready before it leaves. we have plant passports in place _ leaves. we have plant passports in place already and that was done
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prior— place already and that was done prior to — place already and that was done prior to brexit in the first place. therr— prior to brexit in the first place. then we — prior to brexit in the first place. then we shown me earlier, if you look at these plants are already ones coming from the eu have a plant passport. his point is the structure that was already in place did the job. this extra element is not necessary. marco is from the institute of export and international trade. why does this need to happen? part international trade. why does this need to happen?— international trade. why does this need to happen? part of the brexit aareement need to happen? part of the brexit agreement signed _ need to happen? part of the brexit agreement signed in _ need to happen? part of the brexit agreement signed in 2020 - need to happen? part of the brexit agreement signed in 2020 that. need to happen? part of the brexitj agreement signed in 2020 that the need to happen? part of the brexit - agreement signed in 2020 that the uk has to— agreement signed in 2020 that the uk has to establish a functioning border— has to establish a functioning border we do not have at the moment. these _ border we do not have at the moment. these changes are a legal requirement that a part of the uk establishing the most effective border— establishing the most effective border and the most digitally enabled and efficient border over the coming years. you enabled and efficient border over the coming years.— enabled and efficient border over the coming years. you believe in the end coal, the coming years. you believe in the end goal. you _ the coming years. you believe in the end goal, you think— the coming years. you believe in the end goal, you think it _ the coming years. you believe in the end goal, you think it could - the coming years. you believe in the end goal, you think it could be - end goal, you think it could be helpfulfor end goal, you think it could be helpful for businesses. your issue is how the roll—out is taking place. absolutely. there is still confusion and uncertainty in the uk and the eu. and uncertainty in the uk and the eu. just— and uncertainty in the uk and the eu. just last week, there were changes— eu. just last week, there were
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changes set out on a government website _ changes set out on a government website about the reclassification of some — website about the reclassification of some products. that was changed 'ust of some products. that was changed just a _ of some products. that was changed just a day— of some products. that was changed just a day later. still a bit of confusion _ just a day later. still a bit of confusion and we need to do more to make _ confusion and we need to do more to make sure _ confusion and we need to do more to make sure businesses here and in the eu need _ make sure businesses here and in the eu need to _ make sure businesses here and in the eu need to know what the changes are and how— eu need to know what the changes are and how they can comply with new regulations. and how they can comply with new regulations-— regulations. thank you. there are three elements. _ regulations. thank you. there are three elements. this _ regulations. thank you. there are three elements. this week, - regulations. thank you. there are three elements. this week, there j regulations. thank you. there are l three elements. this week, there is april and then we need to see what happens to the fruit and veg market in october. the government claims the cost that will be passed on to consumers will be negligible, less than 1%. there is a these checks and delays will inevitably cost money, as we heard from them. every time they had to read a little bit more about checks and delays it affects productivity as well as charges at borders. as marco mentioned earlier, some of our neighbours within the eu, they had to issue the passports and we are entirely unsure what is going on. increase confusion leads
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to increased costs. that is the last thing any of us won at the moment. coming up on the programme we will be talking to richard walker from the supermarket iceland who backed brexit to see what he thinks about this change that is coming up. still to come on breakfast... we are going to be talking about parking on the pavement. it affects people especially me and mobility issues. people in edinburgh could face a fine of £100 this morning. andrea from south yorkshire has been in touch to say it is a huge problem where she lives. parents and children end up having to walk in the road and pavements are always blocked outside schools. contact details on the screen. make sure you include your name. so far you do not like it. lots of
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you do not like it. lots and lots. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. hello, good morning from bbc london, and also to viewers in the south east. i'm nicky ford. the north london mp kate osamor has been suspended from the labour party after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide. the mp for edmonton made the comments on friday on the eve of holocause memorial day. critics described her message as inappropriate and unacceptable. she later apologised for any offence caused. if you're planning to use the trains this week, be prepared for major disruption due to another round of strikes. members of the drivers union aslef have started an overtime ban as part of their dispute over pay. they're also staging one day walkouts from tomorrow.
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there will be a lot of amended timetables across the network. and also this is a national round of action. so it will impact all train—operating companies in one way or form. so, again, we're really asking customers to check before they travel because services will be busy and we do have amended timetables in place. as schools london report a drop in the number of students, it's claimed the dip in demand for places will only get worse. a report by london councils which represents all local authorities predicts the number of reception pupils will fall by a% over the next four years. that's more than 3,800 places. it's being blamed on a low birth rate and families leaving the capital. here's something to make the dark nights feel a bit less gloomy. a new immersive light and sound show is opening in central london. it's called life and will be projected onto the buildings at st—martin—in—the—fields in trafalgar square.
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the aim is to take visitors on a journey that celebrates the world around us. let's take a look at the tubes now. now onto the weather with kate kinsella. good morning. it is a mild start to the new week but a rather cloudy one. we hang on to the cloud through this morning, perhaps some brighter spells developing later. some mist and fog patches around first thing. they should lift. largely over higher ground. through the afternoon we could see some brighter spells, some hazy sunny spells developing. the temperature exceptionally mild at 1a celsius. overnight tonight we will see this front move through. some outbreaks of rain, lingering perhaps into tuesday morning. staying cloudy, the minimum temperature between eight and 10 celsius. for many of us tomorrow we are starting
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the day in double figures. high pressure will build through tomorrow. it will stay largely cloudy. a few spots of light rain and drizzle throughout. brighter spells developing in the afternoon. temperatures tomorrow start of mild in double figures but drop as the front clears. overnight temperatures dropping right the way down into single figures. that's all from me. i'll be back in half an hour, but there's plenty more on our website and social media pages. bye for now. good morning and welcome to breakfast with sally nugent and jon kay. our headlines today... a review into the mental health care given to the man who killed three people in nottingham, as the family of one victim, barnaby webber, a direct plea to the prime minister. the support, or lack of support, for victims and the families is shocking. having now been in the system and seeing how the system deals
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with things, it has got to change. president biden promises the united states will respond after three of its troops were killed in a drone strike injordan. strike in jordan. he blames strike injordan. he blames militant groups backed by iran. a vigil last night in bristol for two teenage boys stabbed to death at the weekend. a government ban on disposable vapes as part of government plans to protect child health, but the vaping industry criticises the policy as kneejerk. one of england's greatest overseas victories. how england masterminded a win for the ages over india, ben stokes calling the when his greatest triumph. we have rain across the central part of the uk today. either side of that dry conditions with son. not as windy as yesterday. details later in
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the programme. good morning. it's monday 29th january. the care quality commission is to carry out a special review of an nhs trust which treated a man for mental illness before he went on to kill three people in nottingham lastjune. valdo calocane has been given an indefinite hospital order, for attacking barnaby webber, grace o'malley kumar and ian coates. i've been speaking to barnaby�*s parents, who say victim support within the criminaljustice system needs reform. yeah, so this was barney's room. remembering his big brother. seven months on, charlie webber says losing barney will never get any easier. i mean, obviously, it's massively, massively devastating. and i think... i need people to realise that it's something that isn't just affecting my life,
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it's affecting everyone's life. like, people i'll know in the future, people i know now, people around me, everyone's life is affected. people who didn't even know him, but they know me, it's affecting them because it's affecting me. so it affects everybody. the thing for me that wakes me up, and it's almost the first thing i think about, is going into the hospital when we had to go and see... oh, don't. ..when i had to go and see my beautiful boy. barney's parents, david and emma, have told breakfast they had a call from the prime minister after their son was stabbed to death. but they say it was six days before they were offered any specialist counselling. that first week of just shock and despair, yeah, that's when you kind of need it the most. barney, and his friend grace o'malley—kumar, were heading home to their university accommodation in nottingham when they were fatally stabbed last june. school caretaker ian coates was the third victim of paranoid
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schizophrenic valdo calocane, leaving their families shattered. barnaby, grace and ian have been failed here. the system has failed. the support, or lack of support, for victims and the families is shocking. having not been in the system and seen how the system deals with things, it's got to change. last week, a court accepted calocane's pleas of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility. he will be detained indefinitely at a high security hospital. when you heard that the court was going to accept manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, that there wouldn't be a murder conviction in this case, what was your... ? sick to my stomach. hello! how are you? oh, rubbish. barney and grace's parents didn't know one another until their children were killed together, but now they are joining forces.
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i like to hope that wherever they are, they are together. and i do feel that they probably are together. the families believe justice has not been done. they say the police, the crown prosecution service and the nhs still have questions to answer, and they want to know if their children's deaths could have been avoided. the heartbreaking thing is it was their last few days, last week of term, and ijust still can't get to terms with that. both families say they will campaign on issues like knife crime and getting better support and counselling for grieving relatives. if the prime minister phoned you now and said, after everything you've been through so far, what do you think should happen to help other families who might face this horrendous situation in the future, what would you say? what would you tell him is needed? the ministry ofjustice need to throw proper, considered resources together to support,
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because the devastation that this has caused... i also think i'd be doing barney a disservice by not using the voice that we've had thrust upon us to try and make some change. shortly before he was killed, barney had told his mum and dad about a special friend called grace. he said they had so much in common. now their families are united in their determination. david and emma webber will be joining us live in an hour's time to give their reaction to the fact the government has announced this morning there will be a special review into mental health services in nottinghamshire, which were treating the killer in this case. we will also speak to the health secretary, victoria atkins, to talk about what that review might lead to and why there is not going to be at the moment a full public inquiry.
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the time there is six minutes past seven. sally has more of the news, and another brutal knife attack? that's right. two people have been arrested following the deaths of a 15—year—old and 16—year—old boy in bristol. the teenagers died after they were stabbed on saturday evening. fiona lamdin is in bristol. do you know anything more about what might have happened? goad do you know anything more about what might have happened?— might have happened? good morning. yes, i am might have happened? good morning. yes. i am in — might have happened? good morning. yes, i am in south _ might have happened? good morning. yes, i am in south bristol— might have happened? good morning. yes, i am in south bristolwhere - yes, i am in south bristol where police are now investigating a double murder. the bbc understands it was 16—year—old max dixon and 15—year—old mason rist. one of them actually lived on the street where they were attacked. police were here within minutes of the first call. the boys were rushed to two separate hospitals. one, the children's hospital, and the other in southmead. but very sadly, in the middle of sunday morning, in the early hours of sunday morning, both
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boys died. now, the car that was used as a getaway was seized yesterday. police now have that. they have arrested a aa—year—old man and a 15—year—old boy. they are still looking for other members of that group. that attacked them. last night there was a vigil here. you can see the signs. they say, stop knife crime, and huge floral tributes. they were over 70 people that came out last night from the community. it was a spontaneous vigil. reading some of the messages, really personal. this one says, max, you taught romy football, you are always there for me. i remember how you got me into football and how you broke your elbow while playing on our road. these were boys that should be getting ready to go to school this morning and now police are investigating a double murder. thank you. president biden says the
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united states will respond to a drone attack on an american military base injordan near the syrian border. three service personnel were killed and 3a others were injured. yolande knell is injerusalem for us this morning. good morning. what more do we know about this attack? well, there have been previous attacks on us bases around the region since the deadly attacks by hamas on the 7th of october. but this is the first time we have had american service personnel who have been killed. this really has become the most serious attack of its kind. president biden came out and he blames what he called radical iran backed groups. iran has denied any involvement. but really, this is going to increase fears about a regional spill—over of the war in gaza. and also, regionalfears of
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war —— more direct confrontation between the us and iran. iran backs palestinian armed groups in gaza. it also backs the lebanese armed group hezbollah. we heard from the israeli prime minister's office of the weekend that there were constructive talks that took place involving us intelligence and qatari mediators as they try to come up with a new ceasefire and hostage release deal. we are told there are still significant gaps. they will continue the negotiations in the coming weeks. we have got very fierce fighting going on meanwhile from the top to the bottom of gaza. israeli air strikes, artillery fire particularly in the north and in the south israeli military forces saying they are eliminating terrorists in their words with these close quarter battles that are going on with palestinian armed groups, particularly in khan younis. i made the steepening humanitarian crisis we have in the gaza strip, we have
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now got the un secretary—general antonio guterres, coming out imploring countries to continue supporting unrwa, the biggest un agency that operates in gaza, this was after we heard on friday that israel had accused a dozen of its employees of taking part in the october seven attacks. since then, a number of donor countries, the us and the uk included, have said they are suspending their support. unrwa have said if that happens they will have said if that happens they will have to stop its support for gas or by the end of february. thank you. disposable vapes are set to be banned across the uk because of concerns they are fuelling an increase in illegal vaping among under—18s. measures will also be introduced to prevent vapes being marketed at children and to target underage sales. here's our health editor, hugh pym. the increase in underage vaping has caused increasing concern, with recent figures suggesting that one in five children have tried it. headteachers have reported that some pupils have become addicted to nicotine. in a small number of cases, children have needed hospital treatment.
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research quoted by the government shows that more than two thirds of those between 11 and 17 who are vaping are using disposables. the environmental impact, with single use e—cigarettes adding to waste, is anotherfactor behind the ban announced today. this is the westminster government recognising the health and wellbeing of children by banning disposable vapes. it also recognises the environment is important to us and this ban will help stop polluting the environment. and it also leaves open opportunity for people who are using vapes to help their nicotine addiction, to use them with the recyclable vaping devices. the ban on disposable vapes is one measure which can be implemented using existing powers. for others, there'll be new legislation restricting flavours, introducing plain packaging and limiting displays in shops. and in england and wales there'll be powers to impose on the spot fines
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on retailers who sell to under 18. most of these plans will be put out to consultation, and implementation is unlikely till the end of this year at the earliest. the vaping industry has already made clear its objections. the real concern here is that, yes, how do we ensure that the safety of these products only goes into the hands of adult smokers? but the concern around a ban, if that border enforcement or local trading standards money doesn't get to the right place, is this would really revert many smokers back to that killer, which is combustible cigarettes. health officials say that use of e—cigarettes is an effective method for smokers to give up their habit. there will now be a debate over which flavours should be allowed after the changes and where the products should be placed in shops so children are deterred, but adults can still buy e—cigarettes if they need them. hugh pym, bbc news.
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king charles has spent a third died in hospital after receiving treatment for a large prostate. the procedure was carried out at the london clinic a private hospital on friday morning. it's not yet known when the king will be discharged from hospital. nine days of industrial action by train drivers in the aslef union are getting under way, starting with an overtime ban. from tomorrow, there will be strikes affecting 12 rail companies on different days over the course of a week. the walk—outs are part of the long—running dispute over pay and conditions. japan says its moon lander, which was shut down due to a solar panel malfunction, is now working again. the probe, illustrated here by computer generated images, has begun to explore the moon and is already sending back images of its surroundings. japan is only the fifth nation, after the us, the soviet union, china and india, to land on the lunar surface.
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it's a bit too far away to switch it off and on again. it's working. it's miraculous. looking forward to those pictures. what about the weather picture? carol can tell us. whisper it, it kind of feels like spring here. for some, yes. at that for everybody. yesterday was very warm in the highlands. 19.6 celsius. provisionally the warmest january day on record. the met office will confirm that. it is cold this morning in the northern half of the country. in glasgow and belfast it is ranging between —1 and —a. further south it is milder. you can see the uk is under all of this cloud. the rain is extending through southern scotland, northern england, northern ireland, wales, down towards the south—west of england. some of this will be heavy, particularly on higher ground. push northwards. we have clear skies and sunshine.
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some sleet coming out of this rain on higher ground. the rain moving out of northern ireland but remaining across wales and south—western cannes. for the midlands and into the south—east you will start off on a cloudy note. but through the day we should see some breaks and some sunny spells developing. sunshine prevailing in the north and west. nowhere near as windy as it was yesterday. temperatures way down. sixes and sevens in the north, 13, 1a, even 15 in the far south—east. that is way above average. in the far south—east it is roughly usually eight to 9 degrees at this time of the year. the rain cools way towards the east overnight. behind it, cloud, tank conditions, rain, to the north under clear skies it is going to be culled. in fact, clear skies it is going to be culled. infact, in clear skies it is going to be culled. in fact, in some sheltered areas you could see temperatures as low as —5. for scotland and northern ireland it is going to be frosty, the risk of ice, possibly some frost
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across cumbria and also northumberland. thank you. just after quarter past seven. mps have called for the system that gives schools in england a one or two word judgment like good or inadequate, to be scrapped. thea;r or inadequate, to be scrapped. they sa the or inadequate, to be scrapped. they say they have _ or inadequate, to be scrapped. they say they have widespread and deep concerns about rating schools in that way. their inquiry was commissioned after the suicide of primary head teacher ruth perry. an inquest separately found an ofsted inspection had contributed to her death. we will be talking to ruth's sister in a moment. at first, this report from branwenjeffreys. the head teacher and deputy of a small primary in leeds, both leaving theirjobs because of ofsted. their school went from good to inadequate, and back to good again last year. an experience they told me broke their trust in the system. it
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experience they told me broke their trust in the system.— experience they told me broke their trust in the system. it was a moment in time that — trust in the system. it was a moment in time that l — trust in the system. it was a moment in time that i will— trust in the system. it was a moment in time that i will never— trust in the system. it was a moment in time that i will never forget. - trust in the system. it was a moment in time that i will never forget. it - in time that i will never forget. it was a moment in time when i looked over at my deputy kate and i could see in her eyes, and i am sure she could see in mind, that this was it. this is actually happening to us. it was a hard sinking moment. it was incredibly difficult, incredibly emotional for incredibly difficult, incredibly emotionalfor me, and incredibly lonely. emotional for me, and incredibly lonel . ., ., lonely. the impact of having ourselves — lonely. the impact of having ourselves described - lonely. the impact of having ourselves described as - lonely. the impact of having - ourselves described as inadequate is... ourselves described as inadequate ism was— ourselves described as inadequate is... was traumatic. it is something that will— is... was traumatic. it is something that will always be there. and it's one of— that will always be there. and it's one of the — that will always be there. and it's one of the main things that has stayed — one of the main things that has stayed with me from the process. injune _ stayed with me from the process. injune last— stayed with me from the process. injune last year stayed with me from the process. in june last year inspectors visited. they did not like the record—keeping on children's welfare. everything else was good, but the whole school was labelled
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inadequate. the staff and families of the school, thejudgment the staff and families of the school, the judgment was a shock. within three months the school was re—inspected, this time judge good overall. there was no evidence any child had been at risk. today, mps say this kind ofjudgment is wrong. they call for one or two word judgment of schools to go. inadequatejudgment on judgment of schools to go. inadequate judgment on safeguarding only where a school is fundamentally failing to keep children safe. with less frequent, more detailed inspections for good schools. and more effort to capture parents' trees. overall mps say school inspection needs to work for parents and for schools.— and for schools. what we heard is that the trust _ and for schools. what we heard is that the trust has _ and for schools. what we heard is that the trust has come _ and for schools. what we heard is that the trust has come to - and for schools. what we heard is that the trust has come to a - and for schools. what we heard is that the trust has come to a low l and for schools. what we heard is i that the trust has come to a low ebb in recent years. there is a need to rebuild trust with the profession. and i think following the tragic events at caversham primary and the death of ruth perry, and what we have seen from the coroner's inquiry, there is a need to reassure
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the profession around the role of ofsted and ofsted to take teacher and parent responsible to very seriously. and parent responsible to very seriousl . ., and parent responsible to very seriously-— and parent responsible to very seriousl . . , ., ., seriously. head teachers are leaving their 'obs seriously. head teachers are leaving theirjobs early _ seriously. head teachers are leaving theirjobs early because _ seriously. head teachers are leaving theirjobs early because of _ seriously. head teachers are leaving theirjobs early because of the - theirjobs early because of the pressure. not enough people want to step up to do the job. and we know that who leads a school makes a huge difference to the pupils. i that who leads a school makes a huge difference to the pupils.— difference to the pupils. i think there needs — difference to the pupils. i think there needs to _ difference to the pupils. i think there needs to be _ difference to the pupils. i think there needs to be a _ difference to the pupils. i think there needs to be a systematicj there needs to be a systematic rethink— there needs to be a systematic rethink of— there needs to be a systematic rethink of the approach that ofsted take _ rethink of the approach that ofsted take the _ rethink of the approach that ofsted take. the one word judgment need to be not _ take. the one word judgment need to be not in _ take. the one word judgment need to be not in existence. that's— be not in existence. that's a _ be not in existence. that's a decision only ministers can make. laboursay that's a decision only ministers can make. labour say they would move to a report card for schools. some changes are already happening in school inspection. but it feels like bigger ones may be on the horizon. our education editor branwen jeffreys joins us now alongside, ruth perry's sister —
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professorjulia waters. good morning. julia, can i ask you to start with, you have been wanting change within ofsted, the ratings system, and how it works. these proposals today, is it good enough, doesn't go far enough? yes. proposals today, is it good enough, doesn't go far enough?— doesn't go far enough? yes. i 'ust ho -e the doesn't go far enough? yes. i 'ust hope the government i doesn't go far enough? yes. i 'ust hope the government now i doesn't go far enough? yes. ijust hope the government now realise | doesn't go far enough? yes. i just - hope the government now realise how untenable the position of hanging on to those harmful and reductive single word judgment are, and actually make the changes that are needed to keep teachers, and their four children, safe in schools. you want them — four children, safe in schools. you want them to _ four children, safe in schools. you want them to act _ four children, safe in schools. you want them to act on _ four children, safe in schools. you want them to act on this report? i | want them to act on this report? i want them to act on this report? i want them to act. 18 hours of meetings with the dfe, the department for education, and gillian keegan, this last year. they have made some changes but they don't go far enough. i have been arguing that. he wants key thing that would make the most sort of appreciable change would be to get rid of single word judgments. so, come on, get up, gillian! make those
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changes now. in come on, get up, gillian! make those changes now-— come on, get up, gillian! make those changes now. in those 18 hours where ou have changes now. in those 18 hours where you have said. — changes now. in those 18 hours where you have said. i— changes now. in those 18 hours where you have said, i am _ changes now. in those 18 hours where you have said, i am assuming, - you have said, i am assuming, face—to—face with these people, how do they counter your argument? i'm interested to know what they say to you about why, we don't know when this is going to happen? it is you about why, we don't know when this is going to happen?— this is going to happen? it is the same lines _ this is going to happen? it is the same lines all _ this is going to happen? it is the same lines all the _ this is going to happen? it is the same lines all the time - this is going to happen? it is the same lines all the time about. same lines all the time about parents appreciate the clarity and simplicity when deciding on which school to choose for their child. and my argument always is, parents don't generally have that much choice. they want their local school to be good enough. and two, that these words, one word can never sum up these words, one word can never sum up the school, let alone a horrible word like inadequate. it doesn't help parents to be treated like imbecile, really, that they can't read a report, they can't see beyond one word to look at the details and
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make the decision for themselves. yes, the dfe argument all the way through is this. it's simple, it's clear and it's what they do across hospitals and care homes and prisons and so on, and so, they need to stick with it.— stick with it. branwen, it was interesting — stick with it. branwen, it was interesting hearing _ stick with it. branwen, it was interesting hearing from - stick with it. branwen, it was. interesting hearing from those schools in leeds where the significance of a word, and the word changing very rapidly and the impact that can have? find changing very rapidly and the impact that can have?— that can have? and what really struck me _ that can have? and what really struck me about _ that can have? and what really struck me about that _ that can have? and what really struck me about that was - that can have? and what really| struck me about that was kate, that can have? and what really - struck me about that was kate, the deputy— struck me about that was kate, the deputy head, that word inadequate, which _ deputy head, that word inadequate, which i _ deputy head, that word inadequate, which i know really weighed on your sister's _ which i know really weighed on your sister's mind, also weighed on hers. she found _ sister's mind, also weighed on hers. she found herself writing it out time _ she found herself writing it out time and — she found herself writing it out time and time again thinking, i will i inadequate? i time and time again thinking, i will i inadequate? lam time and time again thinking, i will i inadequate? i am trying time and time again thinking, i will i inadequate? lam trying my time and time again thinking, i will i inadequate? i am trying my best in a job _ i inadequate? i am trying my best in aiob~ correct— i inadequate? i am trying my best in a job. correct or am i inadequate? i am trying my best in ajob. correct oram i inadequate? what _ ajob. correct oram i inadequate? what is _ ajob. correct oram i inadequate? what is striking in this report is the language that is used. describing a situation is toxic. and saying _ describing a situation is toxic. and saying the — describing a situation is toxic. and saying the word head teachers use most _ saying the word head teachers use most was — saying the word head teachers use
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most was terror. very powerful. although — most was terror. very powerful. although people think there has to be a inspection system, the mps are really— be a inspection system, the mps are really clear. — be a inspection system, the mps are really clear, parents need that, they— really clear, parents need that, they need — really clear, parents need that, they need to clear, reliable information, that the system at the moment— information, that the system at the moment is— information, that the system at the moment is fundamental —— needs fundamental change. that moment is fundamental -- needs fundamental change.— moment is fundamental -- needs fundamental change. that is what i would like to _ fundamental change. that is what i would like to talk— fundamental change. that is what i would like to talk to _ fundamental change. that is what i would like to talk to you _ fundamental change. that is what i would like to talk to you about, - would like to talk to you about, julia. what else needs to change? the one word is hugely significant. branwen mentioned the word terror. how else could inspection be different?— different? oh, ithink the parliamentary _ different? oh, ithink the parliamentary inquiry's i different? oh, i think the - parliamentary inquiry's report lays out some really important key changes that need to come into make the inspection system reliable, dependable and less dangerous, less terrifying, for teachers. the high stakes that currently hang on inadequate or requires improvement judgments mean that there is generally a forced academy catalyse asian and head teachers lose their jobs on the basis of the say—so of a
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couple of inspectors on two days. disregarding whatever the parents might think about their school and the head. so, they have said that that needs to stop. there needs to be a range of options. and the other thing that i think is really key is the criticism of the current complaints procedure. the lack of any independent complaints procedure, which has allowed ofsted far too long to be completely unaccountable. it won't listen to criticism because it doesn't allow criticism. if you don't listen to criticism, and you don't listen to feedback, how are you going to learn, how are you going to make improvements? if they had listened to criticisms over the years about inspectors' conduct, about the terror that head teachers feel, they might have learnt and my sister
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might have learnt and my sister might be here today.— might have learnt and my sister might be here today. there is a new chief inspector _ might be here today. there is a new chief inspector of _ might be here today. there is a new chief inspector of hospitals - might be here today. there is a new chief inspector of hospitals who - might be here today. there is a new chief inspector of hospitals who hasj chief inspector of hospitals who has set a slightly different tone and mood in his public comments. does that give you optimism? yes. mood in his public comments. does that give you optimism?— that give you optimism? yes, it does. that give you optimism? yes, it does- i've _ that give you optimism? yes, it does. i've met— that give you optimism? yes, it does. i've met martyn - that give you optimism? yes, it does. i've met martyn oliver. . that give you optimism? yes, it. does. i've met martyn oliver. we that give you optimism? yes, it - does. i've met martyn oliver. we had a long and frank meeting. and he genuinely seems committed to change. he recognises that ofsted has lost the trust of the teaching profession. and that that needs to change. and it needs to change by bringing in these reforms that will make head teachers and teachers have confidence in the system and therefore, will be a system that parents themselves can believe in. this is yourjob, branwen, talking to people in education. do you changes coming? it to people in education. do you changes coming?— to people in education. do you changes coming? it certainly feels as thou:h changes coming? it certainly feels as though this _ changes coming? it certainly feels as though this is _ changes coming? it certainly feels as though this is a _ changes coming? it certainly feels as though this is a turning - changes coming? it certainly feels as though this is a turning point i as though this is a turning point and there — as though this is a turning point and there is momentum for change. the government has to respond to
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this report — the government has to respond to this report from a committee which has a _ this report from a committee which has a majority of conservative mps. and the _ has a majority of conservative mps. and the mps are very clear that there _ and the mps are very clear that there is— and the mps are very clear that there is a — and the mps are very clear that there is a consensus for change now. ithink— there is a consensus for change now. i think you _ there is a consensus for change now. i think you are right, jon, the new chief— i think you are right, jon, the new chief inspector set a different tone~ — chief inspector set a different tone. some of the things this report is suggesting, he has already promised to look at. he wants to hear— promised to look at. he wants to hear from — promised to look at. he wants to hear from parents. promised to look at. he wants to hearfrom parents. he is going promised to look at. he wants to hear from parents. he is going to launch— hear from parents. he is going to launch a — hear from parents. he is going to launch a big consultation in a couple — launch a big consultation in a couple of— launch a big consultation in a couple of months. parents will have their chance to say what they want. do they _ their chance to say what they want. do they want deeper, more informative reports, which this report— informative reports, which this report from mps suggests they do? wei know report from mps suggests they do? know that report from mps suggests they do? 7 know that when we talk about this we get quite a lot of parents getting in touch and saying, you know what, i am never, in touch and saying, you know what, iam never, in in touch and saying, you know what, i am never, in a in touch and saying, you know what, iam never, in a busy life, going to look through a whole report, i like the simplicity and the clarity of a one—word judgment because it gives me a headline and it makes it digestible. what more do you say to them? i digestible. what more do you say to them? ., _ .,, digestible. what more do you say to them? ., , them? i would say, as the inquiry reort them? i would say, as the inquiry report says. _ them? i would say, as the inquiry report says. that _ them? i would say, as the inquiry report says, that no _
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them? i would say, as the inquiry report says, that no school- them? i would say, as the inquiry| report says, that no school should be judged report says, that no school should bejudged inadequate on report says, that no school should be judged inadequate on the report says, that no school should bejudged inadequate on the basis report says, that no school should be judged inadequate on the basis of minor clerical errors that can be put right before the report comes out. so, by the time the caversham primary school report came out, those really flimsy issues on which that inadequate judgment was based, had already gone. it already wasn't inadequate. so, how was that report ever helpful to the parents of caversham primary, who knew ruth, who knew the school, who flock in their numbers to get their children into that school? they never believe thatjudgment. —— believed. ithink if you haven't got time to read a report, parents, then, you know, it's lazy. and it's not really a good excuse. the reports are only about six pages and quite flimsy. if you haven't got time to look through that and look at more detail, well that's your lookout. it is not for the government is to decide to
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simplify things for you. i think one of the key things to remember is inspection due to take a weeki _ remember is inspection due to take a week, maybe five to six inspectors. now it _ week, maybe five to six inspectors. now it is _ week, maybe five to six inspectors. now it is two days and they are really _ now it is two days and they are really roast. they have got may a day to _ really roast. they have got may a day to write — really roast. they have got may a day to write it up. that is one of the questions mps are asking. if you want to— the questions mps are asking. if you want to help parents... go in and spend _ want to help parents... go in and spend more — want to help parents... go in and spend more time. get to know the school— spend more time. get to know the school and — spend more time. get to know the school and give a broader range of information. it is also worth saying that the _ information. it is also worth saying that the labour party are proposing a report— that the labour party are proposing a report card system. so you would have _ a report card system. so you would have a _ a report card system. so you would have a summary with strengths and weaknesses. and it may be that that is one _ weaknesses. and it may be that that is one of— weaknesses. and it may be that that is one of the — weaknesses. and it may be that that is one of the ideas that will pub up. thank up. - thank you up. — thank you both are up. thank you both are comin- in and thank you both are coming in and talking about it. it is really interesting. i am sure our viewers will get in touch in numbers again. thank you very much indeed. now the news, travel and weather where you are.
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hello, good morning from bbc london and also to viewers in the south east. i'm nicky ford. the north london mp kate osamor has been suspended from the labour party after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide. the mp for edmonton made the comments on friday on the eve of holocaust memorial day. critics described her message as inappropriate and unacceptable. she later apologised for any offence caused. an investigation by the labour party is underway. if you're planning to use the trains this week, be prepared for major disruption due to another round of strikes. members of the drivers union aslef have started an overtime ban as part of their dispute over pay. they're also staging one day walkouts from tomorrow. there will be a lot of amended timetables across the network. and also this is a national round of action.
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so it will impact all train—operating companies in one way or form. so, again, we're really asking customers to check before they travel because services will be busy and we do have amended timetables in place. as schools in london report a drop in the number of students, it's claimed the dip in demand for places will only get worse. a report by london councils which represents local authorities predicts the number of reception pupils will fall by a% over the next four years. that's more than 3,800 places. it's being blamed on a low birth rate and families leaving the capital. here's something to make the dark nights feel a bit less gloomy. a new immersive light and sound show is opening in central london. it's called 'life' and will be projected onto the buildings at st—martin—in—the—fields in trafalgar square. the aim is to take visitors on a journey that celebrates the world around us. let's take a look at the tubes now.
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there are severe delays on the the central line, and minor delays on the dlr and the piccadilly line. now onto the weather with kate kinsella. good morning. it is a mild start to the new week but a rather cloudy one. we hang on to the cloud through this morning, perhaps a few brighter spells developing later. some mist and fog patches around first thing. they should start to lift. largely over higher ground. through the afternoon we could see some brighter spells, some hazy sunny spells developing. the temperature exceptionally mild at 1a celsius. overnight tonight we will see this front move through. some outbreaks of rain, lingering perhaps into tuesday morning. staying cloudy, the minimum temperature between 8 and 10 celsius. for many of us tomorrow we are starting the day in double figures. high pressure will build through tomorrow. it will stay largely cloudy. a few spots of light rain and drizzle throughout. brighter spells developing
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in the afternoon. temperatures tomorrow start off mild in double figures but drop as the front clears. overnight temperatures dropping right the way down into single figures. that's all from me. i'll be back in half an hour but there's plenty more on our website and social media pages. bye for now. hello this is breakfast with sally nugent and jon kay. as we have been reporting this morning, a special review has been ordered into the nhs trust before a man went on to stab three people in nottingham. we're joined now by health
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secretary victoria atkins. a review of mental health services. the families of the three victims tell us what they really want is more can a full public inquiry. why won't you agree to that? first more can a full public inquiry. why won't you agree to that?— won't you agree to that? first of all, can i won't you agree to that? first of all. can ijust — won't you agree to that? first of all, can i just say _ won't you agree to that? first of all, can i just sayjust _ won't you agree to that? first of all, can ijust sayjust how - all, can ijust sayjust how horrific these crimes have been. we have all been horrified by the reporting of these terrible, terrible crimes and that our sympathies are very much with their families. i have been watching and following it very carefully. as soon as the criminal case came to an end, i called the chief executive of the mental health trust in to see me to discuss what had happened with the mental health service aspect of these cases and following that, over these cases and following that, over the weekend, i took the unusual step of ordering what is called a section a8 review by the sea qc, the
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regulator, for them to go in and look at the facts of this case and also to reassure local residents because, of course, it is notjust the families who have been devastated by these crimes. local residents in nottingham will also want reassurance.— residents in nottingham will also want reassurance. they are asking for a full public _ want reassurance. they are asking for a full public inquiry. _ want reassurance. they are asking for a full public inquiry. why - want reassurance. they are asking for a full public inquiry. why not i for a full public inquiry. why not one of those?— for a full public inquiry. why not one of those? precisely because i want to get _ one of those? precisely because i want to get answers _ one of those? precisely because i want to get answers quickly, - one of those? precisely because i want to get answers quickly, for i want to get answers quickly, for families and local residents, that i have ordered this review. a public inquiry has many, many valuable aspects to it but i want to get answers as quickly as possible for residents and families. the cqc is going to report back to me by the end of march to see if there are practical measures that can be taken to tighten up the services and ensure safety of families and residents across nottinghamshire. in terms of the families call for a public inquiry, i very much
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understand why they are asking for that. at the moment what we are doing these very focused, small inquiries into health services and the sentence himself and also the policing minister is meeting with the police leads this week to discuss what went on in nottinghamshire in relation to this particular individual. and so i think, with the combination of these reviews, the nhs is also conducting its own independent review into the precise steps that happened in this case. with all of this review we will have a much better view of the individual parts of the system that had clearly gone very, very badly wrong. had clearly gone very, very badly wront. had clearly gone very, very badly wron. _ ., , , . had clearly gone very, very badly wront. . ., had clearly gone very, very badly wron., . ., had clearly gone very, very badly wront. . ., ., wrong. one aspect of the system that barnaby weather's _ wrong. one aspect of the system that barnaby weather's family _ wrong. one aspect of the system that barnaby weather's family had - wrong. one aspect of the system that barnaby weather's family had told - wrong. one aspect of the system that barnaby weather's family had told us| barnaby weather's family had told us this morning that they say needs to be urgently suggested is mental health support given to grieving families. they say it took nearly a week after barnaby and the others
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were killed for them to be offered any specialist psychological support and counselling. you werejustice minister before you were health secretary, that is not acceptable, is it? nearly a week. i secretary, that is not acceptable, is it? nearly a week.— secretary, that is not acceptable, is it? nearly a week. i also worked in the criminal— is it? nearly a week. i also worked in the criminal courts _ is it? nearly a week. i also worked in the criminal courts for _ is it? nearly a week. i also worked in the criminal courts for two - in the criminal courts for two decades before i came into politics and very much understand the needs for grieving families. i am hoping and very much understand the needs for grieving families. iam hoping i will be able to meet the families today or earlier this week so we can talk these things through. clearly, they should have received that help sooner and i will be racing very urgently with local services as to why that did not happen because it should have done. == why that did not happen because it should have done.— should have done. -- raising. i am sure they — should have done. -- raising. i am sure they will _ should have done. -- raising. i am sure they will be _ should have done. -- raising. i am sure they will be pleased - should have done. -- raising. i am sure they will be pleased to - should have done. -- raising. i am sure they will be pleased to hear l sure they will be pleased to hear that because they have written to you, they also want to meet the prime minister and thejustice secretary. they are meeting with keir starmer this afternoon. when you commit with them being able to meet the prime minister and alex chalk as well?—
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chalk as well? certainly. i know there's conversations _ chalk as well? certainly. i know there's conversations are - chalk as well? certainly. i know i there's conversations are ongoing. chalk as well? certainly. i know - there's conversations are ongoing. i hope to meet them later today. i am very conscious, with every process, with grieving families, this process has to be led by then. it is their grief, they are seeking justice and so i will make myself available to them at the earliest opportunity to meet them. this case was horrific. one cannot imagine what the families went through. there are some very, very moving reporting this weekend about how the families found out and just how their world collapsed around them when they heard the news. we can totally, totally understand that and i do want to meet with them to talk this through. you are announcing today that disposable dates will be banned as part of the government's plans to stop this incredible rise in use
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vaping. how will that work and when will it come into force? ihts vaping. how will that work and when will it come into force?— vaping. how will that work and when will it come into force? as mums and dads watching _ will it come into force? as mums and dads watching at _ will it come into force? as mums and dads watching at home _ will it come into force? as mums and dads watching at home will— will it come into force? as mums and dads watching at home will know, i will it come into force? as mums and| dads watching at home will know, the rates of vaping in young people had ballooned when they have tripled over the last three years. we are looking to do with this alongside our long—term ambition to create the first smoke free generation. this is a package of measures to help ensure people do not start smoking in the first place. we know four out of five smokers today started before they were 20. we want to stop that. we also want to help current smokers, adult smokers, quit. we are announcing a doubling of the funding of samosas smoking cessation services and we want to help children avoid the tremendous pull of nicotine habit, for which the
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vapes can very often be the gateway. the bill itself will be brought forward very shortly. that takes a bit of time with legislation through both houses of parliament. we are confident we will have it passed by the time of the general election. in terms of the smoking ban, that will come into force on the 1st of january 2027. that means a 15—year—old or younger child today will never be able to buy a cigarette legally from a shop. in terms of disposable vapes, and other restrictions when they will come into full sweeping early next year because we have to get through various statutory instruments and consultations and so on, so it will be next year before we are looking at implemented in high streets up and down the country. what at implemented in high streets up
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and down the country.— and down the country. what will ha en and down the country. what will happen to _ and down the country. what will happen to a _ and down the country. what will happen to a 15-year-old - and down the country. what will happen to a 15-year-old who i and down the country. what will| happen to a 15-year-old who was happen to a 15—year—old who was found with a disposable vape? haste happen to a 15-year-old who was found with a disposable vape? we are brinttin in found with a disposable vape? we are bringing in powers- — found with a disposable vape? we are bringing in powers. we _ found with a disposable vape? we are bringing in powers. we want - found with a disposable vape? we are bringing in powers. we want to - bringing in powers. we want to direct powers towards the vendor is. i do not want children getting into trouble with trading standards. what we will be doing is focusing as we already do want trading standard enforcement provisions against shops and trading standards will be able toissue and trading standards will be able to issue fixed penalty notices to people, give them a £100 fine on the spot, because trading standards have said that is what they need. the independent _ said that is what they need. the independent trade association has said that bands do not work. many mps, conservative mps, would agree with that. —— bans. that mps, conservative mps, would agree with that. -- bans.— with that. -- bans. that has been shown rrot — with that. -- bans. that has been shown rrot to _ with that. -- bans. that has been shown not to be _ with that. -- bans. that has been
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shown not to be correct. - with that. -- bans. that has been shown not to be correct. i- with that. -- bans. that has been shown not to be correct. i can - shown not to be correct. i can remember a pub being filled with smoke and people saying it will never work. smoke and people saying it will neverwork. nowadays smoke and people saying it will never work. nowadays he would be astonished if somebody tried to spark up a cigarette in a public or public facility. about a decade ago we had a big debate about smoking, aduu we had a big debate about smoking, adult smoking in cars in front of their children because of the enclosed space of the car. people said it would never work. evidence shows it simply is not correct. this is about a generational shift and saying to children and young people, smoking does such terrible harm to you. as we have been on air, a couple of people will have been admitted to hospital with a smoking related disease because sadly salmon is admitted to hospital every single minute of every single day with a smoking—related condition. i have not met a smoker who does not regret taking it up vertically when they took it up if they were young. i imagine you are watching the situation in new zealand where they
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implemented a smoking ban change their minds very quickly. ideas their minds very quickly. new zealand's _ their minds very quickly. new zealand's is — their minds very quickly. new zealand's is where _ their minds very quickly. new zealand's is where this - their minds very quickly. ii? zealand's is where this has been used as an argument against. if you look at what new zealand was proposing when they were seeking to reduce the number of outlets across new zealand that could sell cigarettes from 6000 to 600. and so, one can imagine, if he had this smoking addiction, trying to get across to new zealand to buy a cigarette, that would not be popular. they had a licensing system as well but was very different from what we are proposing. we are saying very cleanly and clearly, as of the 1st of january 2027, children who are currently 15 and younger will not be able to buy a cigarette from a shop. not be able to buy a cigarette from a sho -. �* . not be able to buy a cigarette from a sho -. �* , ., not be able to buy a cigarette from a sho. �*, ., ., ., a shop. let's move on to the situation _ a shop. let's move on to the situation with _ a shop. let's move on to the situation with the _ a shop. let's move on to the situation with the doctor - a shop. let's move on to the - situation with the doctor strikes. your message to junior doctors is simple. call of the strikes by come back to the table, we will get this done. i imagine you mean start
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negotiations, come to an arrangement, come to a deal. there are currently no strikes planned, no doctor strikes in the calendar. does that mean you were calling the bma today? i that mean you were calling the bma toda ? ., ., , that mean you were calling the bma toda ? . ., , ., that mean you were calling the bma toda ? . . , ., ., that mean you were calling the bma toda ? . . , . ., g today? i already have done. my ministers meeting _ today? i already have done. my ministers meeting the - today? i already have done. my ministers meeting the junior i today? i already have done. my - ministers meeting the junior doctors committee this week to discuss the next steps. with the consultants, you will know that last week sadly, the consultants voted by a very narrow margin against the fair and reasonable settlement we put forward by that we negotiated with the dna itself. we think there are around 600 votes are crossed both unions which stopped that from getting across the line. we are in touching distance. i look forward to speaking to the bma about how they can manage the divided opinion and some of the technical aspects raised during the ballot period. i generally think we
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can get a job done but we'll need reasonable expectations as we get around the table.— around the table. thank you very much indeed. _ around the table. thank you very much indeed. we _ around the table. thank you very much indeed. we were _ around the table. thank you very much indeed. we were talking i much indeed. we were talking initially about the victims of the nottingham stabbings. in the next half an hour we will be joined by the family of barnaby whether to get reaction from the fact the minister has agreed to meet but it does not look like there will be a public inquiry. i guess the very worst when supporters, fans, people loving to go to a football match feared for their safety. violence erupted in their safety. violence erupted in the stand yesterday as west brom hosted wolves in the fa cup yesterday. we saw some supporters being pulled up by family members, by the players. i guess that is the real worry. you want to be assured
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of your safety. the way things transpired yesterday it was not the case and i am sure there will be more arrests to come. chaotic scenes yesterday. 'disgusting, inexcusable and completely unnacceptable' is how the fa described events at the hawthorns as the midlands derby decsended into horror. the incident happened in an area where some fans were seated. fighting erupted after wolves scored their second goal of the game, in an area of the stadium, where some families of the west brom players were seated. play was suspended for 38 minutes — because of the disorder, which spilled out onto the pitch. the west brom defender kyle bartley was seen emerging with his child in his arms. west brom have said they will ban any fan caught up in the disorder, with the fa now investigating. this was the goal from matheus cunha, as the match finished 2—0 — the first black country derby in front of fans in 12 years. understandably lots of questions over the incident.
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we shouldn't be talking about stuff like that in 202a. everyone should be able to come to football, behave themselves, enjoy it for what it is. two teams trying to win a game, enjoy it, except winning and losing. go home. —— accept winning and losing. go home. so yeah, really, really disappointing because it's yeah, i should be talking to you about winning a derby away from home that we haven't won for 28 years. two days on from his shock annoucement that he's leaving, jurgen klopp was back in front of the liverpool fans for the first time in the fa cup as they beat norwich. they beat the championship side 5—2 — darwin nunez with the pick of the goals for the home side at an emotional anfield. the fans letting their feelings known for klopp. could it be a very
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special season for their manager? league two newport had a dream tie against manchester united. i don't know if you caught this yesterday. and they staged a stirring comeback despite slipping to defeat. united were in control at 2—0 up — before newport came back to level the tie — bryn morris with their first — and one he'll remember. but it was united who eventually came out on top — scoring two more goals — rasmus hojland with united's fourth. a really nice touch from the manchester united manager yesterday, giving the new pull bass a bottle of wine that had been picked by sir alex ferguson, nonetheless stop the nice gesture. i am sure he enjoyed a glass of two —— or two after the game.
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in the women's super league, england's nikita parris scored twice to help manchester united beat aston villa 2—1 — and ease the pressure on manager marc skinner. united are fourth, seven points behind arsenal who beat liverpool 2—0. vivienne miedema with their opener — her first goal since returning from an acl injury — and herfirst goal since december 2022. captain ben stokes says it's his 'greatest triumph' since becoming test captain. india very rarely lose a test match at home. heading into day four yesterday, an england victory still looked very unlikely. but ollie pope added a8 to his overnight score — before being bowled out for 196 — as england set india 231 to win. and then, debutant tom hartley put india in a spin, picking up seven wickets — to give england a 28—run win. india have only ever lost three of their previous a6 tests at home slipping to defeat. this win, so memorable for england. we've been a part of some amazing
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games over the last two years. we've had some incredible victories. but i think considering where we are, who we played against, the position we found ourselves going into our second... second innings batting was... to be able to sit here now and say, "we've gone 1—0 up." i think that's a big reason why i feel this is our best victory since i've become captain. certainly lays the foundation with the rest of the series to come. and the nfl love story continues to blossom between kansas city chiefs' travis kelce and singer taylor swift as the defending champions booked their place in the super bowl once again. the nfl love story continues. kelce scored the first touchdown for the chiefs as they beat the baltimore ravens 17—10 to set up a re—match with the san francisco a9ers. swift celebrating there in the stands and afterwards she joined in the post—match kelsey stored in scored the first celebrations with kelce. reports suggesting the popstar will make the trip to the super bowl in las vegas on february 11th, despite performing on the other side of the world in tokyo the night
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before. it is going to be a long trip for her but one i imagine we'll be well worth making. notjust the super bowl but when your new boyfriend is planning to make you want to be there. true love, isn't it?! do not talk about carbon footprint. that is probably of the table. after weeks of backstabbing and plotting, the winner of 'the traitors' was revealed on friday night. we saw friendships tested, trust broken, deceit reigning triumphant, as more than five—million viewers tuned in to see traitor harry clinch the £95,000 jackpot. we have a traitor amongst us this morning. i we have a traitor amongst us this mornint. ., ., ., we have a traitor amongst us this mornint. . . ., ., we have a traitor amongst us this mornint. . . . ., , let's take a look at the moment andrew was recruited as a traitor.
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good evening. evening. i'm going to ask you to take the traitors oath. do you commit to lie and deceive throughout the game? i do. do you promise to murder your fellow players every single night? i do. and do you vow to keep your identity and the identity of your fellow traitors a secret? i do. you are now officially a traitor. here is your cloak. thank you.
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i love that moment. morning. how are ou? a bit i love that moment. morning. how are you? a bit shell-shocked _ i love that moment. morning. how are you? a bit shell-shocked to _ i love that moment. morning. how are you? a bit shell-shocked to see - i love that moment. morning. how are you? a bit shell-shocked to see you i you? a bit shell-shocked to see you in the flesh- — you? a bit shell-shocked to see you in the flesh. congratulations. - in the flesh. congratulations. you've played a blinder. you went to the dark side but you played quite a relatively honest game. do you feel thatis relatively honest game. do you feel that is how you did? i relatively honest game. do you feel that is how you did?— that is how you did? i struggled when i moved _ that is how you did? i struggled when i moved from _ that is how you did? i struggled when i moved from a _ that is how you did? i struggled when i moved from a faithful. that is how you did? i struggled when i moved from a faithful to j that is how you did? i struggled i when i moved from a faithful to a traitor. it was a game but i had good morals, which is a good thing. it is hard to accuse people of lying when you are telling the truth. inside, ifelt awful. there when you are telling the truth. inside, i felt awful. there were moments at breakfast when everyone comes in and you look slightly like a rabbit in headlights. you can tell
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you are meant to act one way but you are thinking, how can i keep my face straight? i are thinking, how can i keep my face straitht? , ., ., , straight? i should have sat in my cloak at breakfast. _ straight? i should have sat in my cloak at breakfast. it _ straight? i should have sat in my cloak at breakfast. it is - straight? i should have sat in my cloak at breakfast. it is paranoia | cloak at breakfast. it is paranoia commuting everybody was looking at you, talking at you. you were trying to pick up on different things. just so paranoid that the first few days. harry took me under his wing. he called me a baby traitor. i was twice the size of him and he called me a baby traitor. he twice the size of him and he called me a baby traitor.— me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monke , me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monkey. isn't — me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monkey, isn't he?! _ me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monkey, isn't he?! am - me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monkey, isn't he?! am i - me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky monkey, isn't he?! am i going i me a baby traitor. he is a cheeky| monkey, isn't he?! am i going to do it? am i not?— it? am i not? paul and harry, their lan it? am i not? paul and harry, their plan backfired- _ it? am i not? paul and harry, their plan backfired. they _ it? am i not? paul and harry, their plan backfired. they could - it? am i not? paul and harry, their plan backfired. they could see - it? am i not? paul and harry, their plan backfired. they could see i i it? am i not? paul and harry, their| plan backfired. they could see i was very happy. paul came out with a classic line, trust me. trust you? really? how can i possibly trust you after what i have seen you do with the other guys? you after what i have seen you do with the other guys?— the other guys? you were really 0 ”enin the other guys? you were really opening the _ the other guys? you were really
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opening the programme - the other guys? you were really opening the programme about | the other guys? you were really i opening the programme about your life, that car accident and how devastating it was. it life, that car accident and how devastating it was.— life, that car accident and how i devastating it was.- their devastating it was. it was. their recovery- _ devastating it was. it was. their recovery- how _ devastating it was. it was. their recovery. how has _ devastating it was. it was. their recovery. how has doing - devastating it was. it was. their recovery. how has doing the - recovery. how has doing the programme help you talk, i guess? mr; programme help you talk, i guess? ij�*i aim programme help you talk, i guess? ij�*i: aim is programme help you talk, i guess? ii: aim is to help inspire people. people do not talk. it sounds easy, communication. it took me 20 years to talk about them. —— things. it does not make you any less of a person, it is not easy to open up and talk. i spoke to my family about the accident for the first time seven months ago and it happened 2a years ago. i was offered counselling and i was 21 at the time, matt chad. there was a stigma at the time. 21 years ago i was offered counselling. i did not want anyone in a white coat to psychoa nalyse i did not want anyone in a white coat to psychoanalyse me, judge me. i did not talk to my family. an
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amazing family, three brothers, amazing family, three brothers, amazing parents were great upbringing. we are old school, we thought it was a sign of weakness. i did not talk to my family or a counsellor. i bottled it up for 20 years and kept it to myself. i wore a mask for 20 years. i was the life and soul of the party, bubbly and fun. i did not get up in the morning and wanted to die in the accident and wanted to die in the accident and people did not see that side. they said make you seem bubbly and fun. i did not have thunderbolts over my head. it does not work like that. normally people with smiles on their faces struggle behind that. normally people with smiles on theirfaces struggle behind closed doors. important to ask people how they are doing. like doors. important to ask people how they are doing-— they are doing. like traitors, the truth comes _ they are doing. like traitors, the truth comes out _ they are doing. like traitors, the truth comes out eventually. - truth comes out eventually. unfortunately, people take their own lives, they bottle things up. i
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never got that far but people out there do. if these people talked how many lives could be saved? i said to people, make yourself available. when unfortunately someone takes their own life, i didn't know they were like that, why don't they come and talk to me?— and talk to me? instead of interrogating _ and talk to me? instead of interrogating them, - and talk to me? instead of interrogating them, keep i and talk to me? instead of| interrogating them, keep it and talk to me? instead of - interrogating them, keep it simple. you know somebody is having a bad day, having a tough time, just say, how are you doing? just day, having a tough time, 'ust say, how are you doing?h day, having a tough time, 'ust say, how are you doing? just say to them, follow u- how are you doing? just say to them, follow up with. _ how are you doing? just say to them, follow up with, when _ how are you doing? just say to them, follow up with, when you _ how are you doing? just say to them, follow up with, when you need - how are you doing? just say to them, follow up with, when you need to - follow up with, when you need to talk, when you are ready to till i pick up the phone and i am ready to talk to you. leave it like that. normally, i am fine. no, talk to you. leave it like that. normally, iam fine. no, you talk to you. leave it like that. normally, i am fine. no, you are not. i know there is something wrong with you. i am fine. they want to talk but not at that moment. wait for them to come to you. i talk but not at that moment. wait for them to come to you.- talk but not at that moment. wait for them to come to you. i feel your assion for them to come to you. i feel your passion coming _ for them to come to you. i feel your passion coming onto _ for them to come to you. i feel your passion coming onto the _ for them to come to you. i feel your passion coming onto the subject. is| passion coming onto the subject. is that something you want to help people with formally in the future?
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sounds bold but i believe i can help inspire people. i want to try to help to break the stigma and move forward. i am a big, help to break the stigma and move forward. iam a big, strong help to break the stigma and move forward. i am a big, strong guy. help to break the stigma and move forward. iam a big, strong guy. i played rugby all my life and was insecurity. talking does not make you more week or less of a man. it is a break to open up and talk to people. very brave and makes you more of a man. man being vulnerable is a big thing. showing vulnerability, i did not do it for years. behind closed doors, i am a big softy. i cry with films, simple things. it big softy. i cry with films, simple thins. . big softy. i cry with films, simple thins. ,. ., , big softy. i cry with films, simple thints_ ,. ., , , big softy. i cry with films, simple thints_ ,.., , , big softy. i cry with films, simple thints_ ,..,y , .y things. it is crazy. did you cry over the _ things. it is crazy. did you cry over the traitors? _ things. it is crazy. did you cry over the traitors? i _ things. it is crazy. did you cry over the traitors? i cried - things. it is crazy. did you cry over the traitors? i cried at i things. it is crazy. did you cry i over the traitors? i cried at the end, i did _ over the traitors? i cried at the end, i did not _ over the traitors? i cried at the end, i did not know— over the traitors? i cried at the end, i did not know the - over the traitors? i cried at the | end, i did not know the ending. over the traitors? i cried at the - end, i did not know the ending. we sort of knew who won but nobody actually had that conversation. we did not know how close it was. i got
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banished and i assumed it pretty much ended straightaway afterwards. you were hushed out of the way, where you? i you were hushed out of the way, where you?— you were hushed out of the way, where you? you were hushed out of the way, where ou? ., , ., . where you? i was banished, gone. we not to chat where you? i was banished, gone. we got to chat and _ where you? i was banished, gone. we got to chat and talk _ where you? i was banished, gone. we got to chat and talk to _ where you? i was banished, gone. we got to chat and talk to each _ where you? i was banished, gone. we got to chat and talk to each other. - got to chat and talk to each other. not about the game. we kept cards close to our chest. when i watch last friday and i saw mollie writing his name did she do it? time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. hello, good morning from bbc london and also to viewers in the south east. i'm nicky ford. the north london mp kate osamor has been suspended from the labour party after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide. the mp for edmonton made
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the comments on friday on the eve of holocaust memorial day. critics described her message as inappropriate and unacceptable. she later apologised for any offence caused. an investigation by the labour party is under way. if you're planning to use the trains this week, be prepared for major disruption due to another round of strikes. members of the drivers union aslef have started an overtime ban as part of their dispute over pay. they're also staging one day walkouts from tomorrow. there will be a lot of amended timetables across the network. and also this is a national round of action. so it will impact all train—operating companies in one way or form. so, again, we're really asking customers to check before they travel because services will be busy and we do have amended timetables in place. now onto the weather.
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today will be mainly cloudy and dry. feeling mild with a top temperature of 1a degrees. that's it from me. see you in half an hour. good morning and welcome to breakfast with sally nugent and jon kay. our headlines today... a review into the mental health care given to the man who killed three people in nottingham, as the family of one victim, barnaby webber, a direct plea to the prime minister.
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the support, or lack of support, for victims and the families is shocking. having now been in the system and seen how the system deals with things, it has got to change. president biden promises the united states will respond after three of its troops were killed in a drone strike injordan. he blames militant groups backed by iran. a vigil last night in bristol for two teenage boys stabbed to death at the weekend. a ban on disposable vapes as part of government plans to protect child health, but the vaping industry criticises the policy as kneejerk. four years on from brexit, i look at the rules being rolled out now that could see the price of fruit and veg go could see the price of fruit and veg 9° up could see the price of fruit and veg go up again. good morning, a really cloudy start
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for money. we have also got a band of rain across the central swathe of the country. on either side of that rain we should see some sunny spells developing. details later. good morning. it's monday 29th january. the care quality commission is to carry out a special review of an nhs trust which treated a man for mental illness before he went on to kill three people in nottingham lastjune. valdo calocane has been given an indefinite hospital order, for attacking barnaby webber, grace o'malley kumar and ian coates. i've been speaking to barnaby�*s parents, who say victim support barnaby�*s barna by�*s parents barnaby�*s parents are calling for reform of victim support within the criminaljustice reform of victim support within the criminal justice system. the ministry ofjustice need to throw proper considered resources together to support because the devastation that this has caused, the support, or lack of support for
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victims and the families is shocking, and if there is anything, if we do take advice, it will be at our legal costs, which could be tens and tens and tens of thousands. earlier we spoke to the health secretary victoria atkins and she told us there are currently no immediate plans for a public inquiry. i want to get answers quickly for the families and for local residents that i_ the families and for local residents that i have — the families and for local residents that i have ordered this review. a public— that i have ordered this review. a public inquiry has many valuable aspects — public inquiry has many valuable aspects to— public inquiry has many valuable aspects to it, but i want to get answers— aspects to it, but i want to get answers as quickly as possible for residents— answers as quickly as possible for residents and for the families, and so the _ residents and for the families, and so the coc— residents and for the families, and so the cqc will report back to me by the end _ so the cqc will report back to me by the end of— so the cqc will report back to me by the end of march on this. to see if there _ the end of march on this. to see if there are — the end of march on this. to see if there are practical measures that should _ there are practical measures that should be — there are practical measures that should be taken to tighten up these services _ should be taken to tighten up these services and to ensure the safety of families— services and to ensure the safety of families and residents across nottinghamshire. in nottinghamshire. in a _ nottinghamshire. in a few minutes we will get a reaction to that from barnaby�*s parents, emma and david, who are
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going tojoin us live on parents, emma and david, who are going to join us live on the programme at quarter past eight. at four minutes past eight, sally has more of the news and another brutal knife attack. that is right. two people have been arrested following the deaths of a 15 and 16—year—old boy in bristol. the teenagers died after they were stabbed on saturday night. fiona lamdin is in bristol. good morning. what more can you tell us about what might have happened? yes. what more can you tell us about what might have happened?— might have happened? yes, good mornint. might have happened? yes, good morning- i— might have happened? yes, good morning- i am — might have happened? yes, good morning. i am in _ might have happened? yes, good morning. i am in south _ might have happened? yes, good morning. i am in south bristol, i morning. i am in south bristol, where police are now investigating a double murder. max dixon was 16, mason rist was 15. both boys were attacked here at about 1120 pm on saturday. as soon as the police were called they were here within minutes and the two boys were taken to separate hospitals, one to the children's hospital, one to southmead, but in the early hours of sunday morning both boys died.
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police have seized the car. there was a group that attacked them. they have now got that car. aa5—year—old, a aa—year—old man been arrested, and a aa—year—old man been arrested, and a teenage boy. yesterday there was a video. they were over 70 people here. they turned up. you can see there are flowers, there is a football shirt, and people have been coming all morning, people visibly very understandably upset. very shocked that this has happened. the schoolchildren going off to school this morning. max and mason should have been going to school but instead, the community are coming to terms with this murder and police are investigating what is now a double murder. fiona lamdin, thank you. president biden says the united states will it respond to a drone attack on an american military base injordan near the syrian border at a time and a manner of its choosing. three
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service personnel were killed and 3a others were injured. yolande knell is injerusalem. she has explained the significance of this attack. there have been previous attacks on us bases around the region since the deadly attacks in october by hamas. this is the first time we have had american service personnel who have been killed. this really has become the most serious attack of its kind. president biden came out and he blamed what he called radical iran backed groups. iran has come out since then and the any involvement. but really, this is going to increase fears about a regional spill—over of the war in gaza. and also, regionalfears of more spill—over of the war in gaza. and also, regional fears of more direct confrontation between the us and iran. of course, iran backs palestinian armed groups in gaza, it also backs the lebanese group hezbollah. disposable vapes are set to be banned across the uk because of
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concerns they are fuelling an increase in illegal vaping among under—18s. measures will also be introduced to prevent vapes being marketed at children and to target underage sales. here's our health editor, hugh pym. the increase in underage vaping has caused increasing concern, with recent figures suggesting that one in five children have tried it. headteachers have reported that some pupils have become addicted to nicotine. in a small number of cases, children have needed hospital treatment. research quoted by the government shows that more than two thirds of those between 11 and 17 who are vaping are using disposables. the environmental impact, with single use e—cigarettes adding to waste, is anotherfactor behind the ban announced today. this is the westminster government recognising the health and wellbeing of children by banning disposable vapes. it also recognises the environment is important to us and this ban will help stop polluting the environment. and it also leaves open opportunity for people who are using vapes to help their nicotine addiction, to use them
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with the recyclable vaping devices. the ban on disposable vapes is one measure which can be implemented using existing powers. for others, there'll be new legislation restricting flavours, introducing plain packaging and limiting displays in shops. and in england and wales there'll be powers to impose on the spot fines on retailers who sell to under 18. most of these plans will be put out to consultation, and implementation is unlikely till the end of this year at the earliest. the vaping industry has already made clear its objections. the real concern here is that, yes, how do we ensure that the safety of these products only goes into the hands of adult smokers? but the concern around a ban, if that border enforcement or local trading standards money doesn't get to the right place, is this would really revert many smokers back to that killer, which is combustible cigarettes. health officials say that use of e—cigarettes is an effective
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method for smokers to give up their habit. there will now be a debate over which flavours should be allowed after the changes and where the products should be placed in shops so children are deterred, but adults can still buy e—cigarettes if they need them. hugh pym, bbc news. mps have called for the one or two—word judgments, used by ofsted to rate schools in england, to be scrapped after finding widespread and deep concern about how the system works. the education select committee inquiry was commissioned following the suicide of primary headteacher ruth perry. an inquest separately found an ofsted inspection had contributed to her death. ruth's sister, professorjulia waters, told us it is time for the system to change. ijust system to change. i just hope that the system to change. ijust hope that the government now realise how untenable their position of hanging on to those harmful and
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reductive single word judgments are, and actually make the changes that are needed to keep teachers and their four children safe in schools. nine days of industrial action by train drivers in the aslef union are getting under way — starting with an overtime ban. from tomorrow, there will be strikes affecting 12 rail companies on different days over the course of a week. the walk—outs are part of the long—running dispute over pay and conditions. the labour party has suspended an mp after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as genocide on the eve of holocaust remembrance day. kate osamor, who represents edmonton, in london, has apologised for the comment. king charles has spent a third night in hospital after undergoing a procedure for an enlarged prostate. greg mckenziejoins us from the london clinic where the princess of wales is also being treated following abdominal surgery. good morning. what is the latest you can tell us? good morning.
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the latest is it is widely anticipated that the king will be discharged at some point today. having been admitted on friday for a procedure to correct an enlarged prostate. queen camilla has been here at the london clinic visiting the king and says that he is doing well. and that he is delighted with the public interest into his diagnosis, which was made public on friday. nhs england reporting one search every five seconds in relation to enlarged prostate. meanwhile, his daughter—in—law, her royal highness the princess of wales, has been recovering here at the london clinic since january the 16th, following abdominal surgery. kensington palace has issued a statement saying that once she is discharged she will not be returning to royal duties until after easter. it is widely anticipated the king will be discharged at some point
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today. thank you. greg has got his big winter coat on there in london. some parts of the country it is really mild. here is carol. .., ., mild. here is carol. ., ., mild. here iscarol. ., ., ., here is carol. good morning. you are ritht, it is here is carol. good morning. you are right. it is mine. _ here is carol. good morning. you are right, it is mine. it _ here is carol. good morning. you are right, it is mine. it is _ here is carol. good morning. you are right, it is mine. it is the _ here is carol. good morning. you are right, it is mine. it is the north - right, it is mine. it is the north this morning that is cold. the site is still in those milder conditions. in the south we have got murky conditions as well. some mist, some ford, general dampness in the air as you can see from our weather watchers picture in hampshire. we do have a band of heavy rain across southern scotland, northern england, wales and the south—west of england. east of that there is a lot of cloud to start with. very slowly we will start to see some holes developing. across northern england and southern scotland we could see some sleet and some snow on higher ground. the rain continuing to push away from northern ireland. some brighter skies, clearskies. northern ireland. some brighter skies, clear skies. a cold start to the day in scotland and the north of northern ireland. as we go through
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the day we will continue with some sunshine in the north west. not nearly as windy as it was yesterday. in the south we will see further holes develop in the cloud. sunny spells developing. we hang on to the rain in parts of the north and west. temperatures today in the south 1a to 15, the average at this time of the year is roughly eight or nine. compared to 19.6 we saw yesterday in the highlands, quite a difference. seven and eight. this evening and overnight the rain pulls away to the east. we are left with a lot of cloud. some patchy light rain and drizzle. clear skies across scotland and northern ireland means that we will see a touch of frost, and also the risk of ice on untreated surfaces. we can also see the odd touch of frost across sheltered parts of northern england. temperatures are hanging on in the south. tomorrow, not a bad day. try for most of us as a ridge of high pressure builds in. thank you. —— dry for most of us.
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the parents of barnaby webber say they would be 'doing him a disservice by not using the voice thrust upon them' — to call for an overhaul of victim support in the criminaljustice system. barnaby, his friend grace o'malley—kumar and school caretaker ian coates were killed in nottingham, injune last year. valdo calocane has been detained indefinitely at a high—security hospital. barnaby�*s brother, charlie, told us about the impact losing him has had on the family. yeah, so this was bernie's room. a lot of sport on show? yeah, - yeah, so this was bernie's room. a lot of sport on show? yeah, there i lot of sport on show? yeah, there was a lot of _ lot of sport on show? yeah, there was a lot of sport. _ lot of sport on show? yeah, there was a lot of sport. obviously - was a lot of sport. obviously cricket, hockey, rugby. a little bit of football, basketball. to be honest, is quite painful anyway to come in here. it's quite overwhelming sometimes to come in here. it's got a lot of memories in this room. literally everything here is how he left it. no one has touched anything. that is is bag he
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never got to use unfortunately. he ordered it was the end. he was so excited about it. it was custom—made and bloody expensive as well, i don't remember my dad being too happy about it!— don't remember my dad being too happy about it! what would you like --eole to happy about it! what would you like people to know _ happy about it! what would you like people to know about _ happy about it! what would you like people to know about the _ happy about it! what would you like people to know about the impact i happy about it! what would you like i people to know about the impact this has had on you?— has had on you? obviously it's massively. _ has had on you? obviously it's massively, massively - has had on you? obviously it's - massively, massively devastating. and i think i need people to realise that it and i think i need people to realise thatitis and i think i need people to realise that it is something that is not just affecting my life. it is affecting everyone's lie. people i will know in the future, people i know now, people around me, everybody. it is affecting them because it is affecting me. so it affects everybody. no matter what you do, it happened and you can't change that. and it's very difficult to process, the matter what you do, where i go, it will always be at the back of my mind. no matter what i am doing it is always there. i have never not thinking it. what an amazing boy charlie is. he really is. he chose to record on
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video a victim impact statement in his brother's veijer to be played to the judge last week before sentencing to tell the court in his own words the impact of losing badly. —— in his own bedroom. we can speak to barnaby�*s mum and dad, emma and david, whojoined us from london. good morning. it is a few days since i was at home with you in somerset. what are we now, four days since the sentencing? how are you doing? holding on by ourfingernails? we are ok. charlie is not welcome unfortunately. we were hoping he would be able to be with us. but i think it has finally caught up with him. he has got a grotty cold. he is doing ok. we are doing ok.- doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david, you — doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david. you carry — doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david, you carry on. _ doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david, you carry on. i— doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david, you carry on. iwas- doing ok. we are doing ok. sorry, david, you carry on. i wasjust - david, you carry on. i was 'ust ttoin david, you carry on. i was 'ust totin to david, you carry on. i was 'ust going to say. i david, you carry on. i was 'ust going to say. asi david, you carry on. i was 'ust going to say, as you i david, you carry on. i was 'ust
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going to say, as you say, i david, you carry on. i wasjust going to say, as you say, the l david, you carry on. i wasjust i going to say, as you say, the last four days — going to say, as you say, the last four days it's like going back to june _ four days it's like going back to june 13 — four days it's like going back to june 13 again and being pulled back into the _ june 13 again and being pulled back into the vortex of where we were before, _ into the vortex of where we were before, the hell that we have been thrust— before, the hell that we have been thrust into — before, the hell that we have been thrust into. but we are holding on and we _ thrust into. but we are holding on and we are — thrust into. but we are holding on and we are still here and we are still going _ and we are still here and we are still going. so...— and we are still here and we are still going. so... ok, i am glad you are holding — still going. so... ok, i am glad you are holding on. _ still going. so... ok, i am glad you are holding on, and _ still going. so... ok, i am glad you are holding on, and we _ still going. so... ok, i am glad you are holding on, and we appreciate l are holding on, and we appreciate your time this morning because your voices, and your stories, and ian and grace's families as well, it has resonated with families across the country who now want to know sort of more about what you want in the future. the government have announced this morning that they have committed to have a special review of mental health services in nottinghamshire. and the way that mental health services there looked after, if that is the right phrase, the perpetrator in this case. what is your reaction to the fact there is your reaction to the fact there
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is going to be that review? 5haii is your reaction to the fact there is going to be that review? shall i to first? is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah. — is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go _ is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go on! _ is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go on! it - is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go on! it is - is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go on! it is a - is going to be that review? shall i go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe i go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe in the water- _ go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe in the water. it _ go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe in the water. it is _ go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe in the water. it is absolutely - go first? yeah, go on! it is a toe in the water. it is absolutely not| in the water. it is absolutely not going to be enough. we are calling for a pull —— full public inquiry. i have heard the comments of victoria atkins and i disagree. it needs to be much more than reviewing the mental health failings. and services in nottingham. i bet it is notjust nottingham that there are failings going on, by the way. i think it is across the whole country. but it is also the failings of the police to investigate and act accordingly up to the attacks. and also, the investigation of the case. we have got real concerns about that. the way that we have been managed by the cps. and of course we are really unhappy with the outcome from last week. �* ., . unhappy with the outcome from last week. �* . , , ., ., week. and i am sure you will have heard the minister _
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week. and i am sure you will have heard the minister saying - week. and i am sure you will have heard the minister saying on - week. and i am sure you will have heard the minister saying on this i heard the minister saying on this programme within the last hour, no plans for a public inquiry. what is your reaction to that?— plans for a public inquiry. what is your reaction to that? that's wrong. i think we are _ your reaction to that? that's wrong. i think we are horrified. _ your reaction to that? that's wrong. i think we are horrified. horrified i i think we are horrified. horrified atain. i think we are horrified. horrified again. disappointed. _ i think we are horrified. horrified again. disappointed. it's- i think we are horrified. horrified again. disappointed. it'sjust- i think we are horrified. horrified again. disappointed. it'sjust thej again. disappointed. it's 'ust the amount of stuff * again. disappointed. it's 'ust the amount of stuff that _ again. disappointed. it's just the amount of stuff that we're - again. disappointed. it'sjust the i amount of stuff that we're hearing, and i_ amount of stuff that we're hearing, and i know — amount of stuff that we're hearing, and i know —— and i think that the public— and i know —— and i think that the public have — and i know —— and i think that the public have heard, and itjust keeps coming, _ public have heard, and itjust keeps coming, if— public have heard, and itjust keeps coming, if they don't feel that warrants— coming, if they don't feel that warrants a public inquiry, i, you know _ warrants a public inquiry, i, you know. what— warrants a public inquiry, i, you know, what does? it's disgusting. i think— know, what does? it's disgusting. i think its— know, what does? it's disgusting. i think its time. there's so much stuff— think its time. there's so much stuff that— think its time. there's so much stuff that goes on in this country at the _ stuff that goes on in this country at the moment. we have seen the post office _ at the moment. we have seen the post office scandal taking countless years _ office scandal taking countless years and reckon countless lives to .et years and reckon countless lives to get there — years and reckon countless lives to get there. just listening —— does this need — get there. just listening —— does this need to be another one of those? — this need to be another one of those? do— this need to be another one of those? do we need to keep fighting for the _ those? do we need to keep fighting for the rest of our lives to get some — for the rest of our lives to get some form ofjustice and get this look that— some form ofjustice and get this look that property?— some form ofjustice and get this look that property? yeah, we don't want to be — look that property? yeah, we don't want to be the _ look that property? yeah, we don't want to be the next _ look that property? yeah, we don't want to be the next post _ look that property? yeah, we don't want to be the next post office - want to be the next post office families or hillsborough families, but i say this to anybody in charge and decision makers, you have got
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the full weight of the webber family, the o'malley coup my family and the codes family all united behind this. if we are still here, and i have to be here in 20 years' time, claiming my pension, iwill still be fighting to get appropriate justice and appropriate answers. what the health secretary told us is that she has ordered the special review rather than a full public inquiry because she says this will get answers for you more quickly and that speed is what matters here. you're shaking your head, emma? yeah, everything has been raised through. —— rushed through. we feel rushed and hastened by the cps. don't want to be rushed and hastened on this. it is dredging up the same evidence presented last week. at the hearing it needs to be more in—depth than that, i believe. iwould hearing it needs to be more in—depth than that, i believe. i would like them to provide, government ministers, to provide evidence that
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these reviews do anything productive. give me some hard evidence from reviews in the past that have caused real change. because i am concerned that a review is a deflection. because i am concerned that a review is a deflection-— is a deflection. what i'm getting from ou is a deflection. what i'm getting from you is _ is a deflection. what i'm getting from you is the fact _ is a deflection. what i'm getting from you is the fact that - is a deflection. what i'm getting from you is the fact that even i from you is the fact that even though a public inquiry would take longer, you would rather have one and it take longer than quick results with a mental health review? i think that's exactly where we're coming _ i think that's exactly where we're coming from. i know it is echoed through— coming from. i know it is echoed through the other families. this whole _ through the other families. this whole thing has been rushed through. i cannot— whole thing has been rushed through. i cannot believe that somebody who has done _ i cannot believe that somebody who has done what they have done has now been sentenced within the seven months — been sentenced within the seven months or— been sentenced within the seven months or however long it is. i don't _ months or however long it is. i don't understand how the process moved _ don't understand how the process moved so — don't understand how the process moved so quickly. and thisjust seems — moved so quickly. and thisjust seems another step on to move it as seems another step onto move it as quickly— seems another step on to move it as quickly and _ seems another step on to move it as quickly and get it off the public
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agenda — quickly and get it off the public agenda. obviously we know the public have erupted at what's happened. and quite frankly, it warrants a proper investigation. someone needs to look at this— investigation. someone needs to look at this belt— investigation. someone needs to look at this belt and braces and actually work out _ at this belt and braces and actually work out what has happened and come up work out what has happened and come up with— work out what has happened and come up with some proper objectives and how they— up with some proper objectives and how they are going to deal with it going _ how they are going to deal with it going forward because we can't bring barnaby— going forward because we can't bring barnaby back, we can't bring grace or tan _ barnaby back, we can't bring grace or tan back, — barnaby back, we can't bring grace or ian back, but we can hopefully do something _ or ian back, but we can hopefully do something that will may be, even if it stops— something that will may be, even if it stopsjust one more family something that will may be, even if it stops just one more family having to go— it stops just one more family having to go through the pain we have gone through. _ to go through the pain we have gone through, that to me would be a result — through, that to me would be a result. like my wife, i do not believe — result. like my wife, i do not believe just a review is going to .ive believe just a review is going to give us — believe just a review is going to give us enough. it's not going to go deep _ give us enough. it's not going to go deep enough. i give us enough. it's not going to go deep enough-— deep enough. i think it's really important _ deep enough. i think it's really important that _ deep enough. i think it's really important that we _ deep enough. i think it's really important that we say, - deep enough. i think it's really important that we say, and - deep enough. i think it's really important that we say, and i l deep enough. i think it's really - important that we say, and i know how many messages we have had from people and the public about how they can't imagine our grief and how difficult it must be, and it is, it is as bad as you can imagine and worse, but what i am pretty
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disgusted at, actually, and so disappointed in, is that we are even here talking about this today. we foolishly trusted in the criminal justice system. we thought that he —— we would have a voice to talk about knife crime, to talk about the lack of proper support for victims' families. and the failings leading to this. what we didn't expect was to this. what we didn't expect was to be having to make such a noise on top of all the tragedy and trauma we have already experienced, to just get barney, grace and ian's voices heard and looked at properly. any mistakes made. it's hard to not be really angry. we're trying to channel that so we can be effective. but we will keep on and we do have some meetings today, which may be the beginnings of that.— the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something _ the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i _ the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i want _ the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i want to _ the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i want to pick - the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i want to pick up - the beginnings of that. yeah. that is something i want to pick up on i is something i want to pick up on with you. you have faced and the other families have faced the most indescribable loss and here you are,
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on breakfast television this morning, standing on the steps of the court, speaking out at every opportunity, which i can't imagine is easy for anybody? it’s is easy for anybody? it's exhausting. _ is easy for anybody? it's exhausting. how - is easy for anybody? it's exhausting. how much i is easy for anybody? it's - exhausting. how much more do is easy for anybody? it's _ exhausting. how much more do you want to speak _ exhausting. how much more do you want to speak to _ exhausting. how much more do you want to speak to the _ exhausting. how much more do you want to speak to the people - exhausting. how much more do you want to speak to the people in - want to speak to the people in power? want to speak to the people in tower? ~ ., ., , , power? well, we have to because i think you've _ power? well, we have to because i think you've got — power? well, we have to because i think you've got to _ power? well, we have to because i think you've got to speak _ power? well, we have to because i think you've got to speak to - power? well, we have to because i think you've got to speak to the i think you've got to speak to the people that make the decisions. i would like to speak to the cps. we need to directly let them know some of the details about how we were dealt with. we weren't consulted at all. every single family will say that. i would be very happy to speak to the chief constable and the assistant chief constable of nottinghamshire police. i have obviously commented on rob griffin already. with regards to the outstanding arrest. and of course we are meeting today with keir starmer,
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all of the families, and we are hopeful to also be able to meet with victoria atkins and possibly alex chalk later today. victoria atkins and possibly alex chalk latertoday. but victoria atkins and possibly alex chalk later today. but we shouldn't be having to do this. we should be trying to get over, not get over, trying to get over, not get over, trying to get over, not get over, trying to process and move forward and find a way forward over the soulful loss. this catastrophic loss of our child. soulful loss. this catastrophic loss of our child-— of our child. victoria atkins did tell us on _ of our child. victoria atkins did tell us on breakfast _ of our child. victoria atkins did tell us on breakfast a - of our child. victoria atkins did tell us on breakfast a short - of our child. victoria atkins did i tell us on breakfast a short time ago, when we mentioned the u had written to the government asking for meeting, she said that she and the justice secretary and the prime minister would be prepared to meet you. does that give you hope that you. does that give you hope that you are being listened to? that it is worth this?— you are being listened to? that it is worth this?- i _ you are being listened to? that it is worth this?- i think - you are being listened to? that it is worth this?- i think so. i is worth this? yeah. i think so. alwa s is worth this? yeah. i think so. always be _ is worth this? yeah. i think so. always be positive. _ is worth this? yeah. i think so. always be positive. all- is worth this? yeah. i think so. always be positive. all you - is worth this? yeah. i think so. always be positive. all you canj is worth this? yeah. i think so. i always be positive. all you can do in these _ always be positive. all you can do in these situations is, hastened to use the _ in these situations is, hastened to use the word, make as much noise as possible. _ use the word, make as much noise as possible. but— use the word, make as much noise as possible, but i think that is where we feel— possible, but i think that is where we feel we — possible, but i think that is where we feel we have been left. like my
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wife said. — we feel we have been left. like my wife said, we never felt we'd be in this position. this was not the fight _ this position. this was not the fight i — this position. this was not the fight i expected to be having. i expected — fight i expected to be having. i expected to have the fight we talked about _ expected to have the fight we talked about a _ expected to have the fight we talked about a second ago about knife crime — about a second ago about knife crime we _ about a second ago about knife crime. we knew there were failings. we knew— crime. we knew there were failings. we knew there was stuff happening but we _ we knew there was stuff happening but we just felt that that was going to be _ but we just felt that that was going to be part — but we just felt that that was going to be part of what was looked at by other— to be part of what was looked at by other people and we would not have to think— other people and we would not have to think about that. we would be dealing _ to think about that. we would be dealing with the loss of our child and then— dealing with the loss of our child and then looking at, you know, what can we _ and then looking at, you know, what can we do— and then looking at, you know, what can we do in— and then looking at, you know, what can we do in his name and grace's name— can we do in his name and grace's name and— can we do in his name and grace's name and ian's name, to change something — name and ian's name, to change something in this country with knife crime, _ something in this country with knife crime, mental health services, all the stuff— crime, mental health services, all the stuff that has failed my son in this situation, and grace and ian... it this situation, and grace and ian... it all— this situation, and grace and ian... it all needs— this situation, and grace and ian... it all needs to be looked at. that is where — it all needs to be looked at. that is where my fight, that is where i thought— is where my fight, that is where i thought all— is where my fight, that is where i thought all my allergies were going. as you _ thought all my allergies were going. as you can _ thought all my allergies were going. as you can imagine i don't have a lot of— as you can imagine i don't have a lot of energy and i know emma
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doesn't — lot of energy and i know emma doesn't have either. it is exhausting trying to do all of this. but for— exhausting trying to do all of this. but for barney i will do this, and grace _ but for barney i will do this, and grace and — but for barney i will do this, and grace and ian. the but for barney i will do this, and grace and ian-— but for barney i will do this, and grace and ian. the video you run of chard , grace and ian. the video you run of chardy. that _ grace and ian. the video you run of chardy. that is _ grace and ian. the video you run of chardy, that is what _ grace and ian. the video you run of chardy, that is what keeps - grace and ian. the video you run of chardy, that is what keeps us - grace and ian. the video you run of. chardy, that is what keeps us going. —— iran of charlie. that boy, i will not let his light be ruined because of this monster and what has done. charlie's life will be different but i am damn sure i am going to make sure that! i am damn sure i am going to make sure that i do all i can to give charlie the happiest life and everything that he deserves because he is so brave. he really is. that is my motivation. that is what keeps me going. he is my motivation. that is what keeps me totin. . ., is my motivation. that is what keeps metotin. ,. ., ., is my motivation. that is what keeps me totin. , . ., ., ,, me going. he is an amazing kid, it reall is. me going. he is an amazing kid, it really is- it — me going. he is an amazing kid, it really is. it was _ me going. he is an amazing kid, it really is. it was a _ me going. he is an amazing kid, it really is. it was a privilege - me going. he is an amazing kid, it really is. it was a privilege to - really is. it was a privilege to meet all of you. a privilege to be in a room with you and the kumars last week and seeing your shared determination to work together and get answers. and in court last week you had more details about how grace had tried to protect barney in those last moments. i
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had tried to protect barney in those last moments-— had tried to protect barney in those last moments. i know. it's... what a hero. last moments. i know. it's... what a hero- you — last moments. i know. it's... what a hero. you know. _ last moments. i know. it's... what a hero. you know. barney _ last moments. i know. it's... what a hero. you know. barney was - last moments. i know. it's. .. what a - hero. you know. barney was ambushed. he didn't have a chance. this monster took him first. he tried to defend himself, as we have heard, but couldn't. and then grace tried to intervene. i mean, what kind of human being must she have been to do something so great? i'm a bit angry with herfor not running. i don't think barnaby would have run either. the barbarity of those monstrous acts and how he dealt with ian. his behaviour during that whole period has to be looked at in more detail because he knew what he was doing and he knew that it was wrong and he did it anyway. he was mentally ill but he was capable of making decisions. and he knew what he was doing and he planned it. that is not manslaughter. and it never will be. emma, david, manslaughter. and it neverwill be. emma, david, i know you can't see the screen while you are talking to us but we were
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just playing those lovely pictures you sent me yesterday afternoon of barney and him smiling. those pictures that i know are the ones you look at in the darkest times to remind you of that lovely boy of yours. thank you forjoining us this morning. we appreciate your time. i know is incredibly tough. but clearly, people are listening. thank you. clearly, people are listening. thank you-— thank you. thanks, guys. gu s, thank you. thanks, guys. guys. thank _ thank you. thanks, guys. guys, thank you, - thank you. thanks, guys. guys, thank you, thanks. thank you. thanks, guys. | guys, thank you, thanks a thank you. thanks, guys. - guys, thank you, thanks a lot. morning live follows us this morning at 9:30. let's find out what they have in store. helen and gethin. we are sending our thoughts to emma and david. coming up, innocent people are being left with hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of debt from fake companies set up in their name. i had three different letters - with three different company names, congratulating me on opening three i different businesses literally within days of each other. i with new laws trying to stop the fraudsters, scam interceptors' nick stapleton tells us about the database that flags if you're at risk. and scammers aren't the only thing
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causing sleepless nights. millions of people are being kept awake because of their bladder. dr xand's answering your questions. one in three adults i experience nocturia — the frequent needj to be in the night. not only is it frustrating, but it could be a sign - of other health issues. i'll explain how ten - seconds of tensing a day, could help sort it. —— pee. also on the show, if you're one of the 1.8 billion passengers who travel by train each year, then listen up. bbc�*s cost of living correspondent, colletta smith has tips that could save you a fortune. yes, train prices are set tojump more than 8%i in some parts of the uk, but simple tricks - like buying two single - instead of a return could help you make big saving. plus, i'll tell you about the sale offering half price fares, - but you'll need to act fast i because it ends at midnight. plus, they had a one way ticket to banishment. over four and a half million watched the explosive final of the
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traitors, so we're catching up with finalist jaz to find out what happened after cameras stopped rolling at the castle. see you at 9:30. we watched it, don't worry. i hope everybody at home has as well. everyone has seen it. more to come on breakfast. time for the news, travel and weather where you are. hello, good morning from bbc london. i'm nicky ford. the north london mp kate osamor has been suspended from the labour party after she said the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide. the mp for edmonton made the comments on friday on the eve of holocaust memorial day. critics described her message as inappropriate and unacceptable. she later apologised for any offence caused.
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an investigation by the labour party is underway. police have arrested three men on suspicion of murder following the discovery of a 19—year—old man's body at a park in feltham. officers were called to hanworth park on thursday morning where they found the body of tyler donnelly, who had been stabbed. he left his home on wednesday evening on his bike. if you're planning to use the trains this week, be prepared for major disruption due to another round of strikes. members of the drivers union aslef have started an overtime ban as part of their dispute over pay. they're also staging one day walkouts from tomorrow. there will be a lot of amended timetables across the network. and also this is a national round of action. so it will impact all train—operating companies in one way or form. so, again, we're really asking customers to check before they travel because services will be busy and we do have amended timetables in place.
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as schools in london report a drop in the number of students, it's claimed the dip in demand for places will only get worse. a report by london councils, which represents local authorities, predicts the number of reception pupils will fall by a% over the next four years. that's more than 3,800 places. it's being blamed on a low birth rate and families leaving the capital. let's take a look at the tubes now. there are severe delays on the central line, and minor delays on the circle line, the dlr and the piccadilly line. now, on to the weather with kate kinsella. good morning. it is a mild start to the new week but a rather cloudy one. we hang on to the cloud through this morning, perhaps a few brighter spells developing later. some mist and fog patches around first thing. they should start to lift. largely over higher ground. through the afternoon we could see some brighter spells, some hazy sunny spells developing.
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the temperature exceptionally mild at 1a celsius. overnight tonight we will see this front move through. some outbreaks of rain, lingering perhaps into tuesday morning. staying cloudy, the minimum temperature between 8 and 10 celsius. for many of us tomorrow we are starting the day in double figures. high pressure will build through tomorrow. it will stay largely cloudy. a few spots of light rain and drizzle throughout. brighter spells developing in the afternoon. temperatures tomorrow start off mild in double figures but drop as the front clears. overnight, temperatures dropping right the way down into single figures. that's all for the moment. i'll be back after nine but there's plenty more on our website and social media pages. back now though tojon and sally. goodbye. hello, this is breakfast
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with sally nugent and jon kay. quite mild here in manchester. carol has been saying it is not mild for everyone. definitely did not need our big codes today, did we? if you are having issues with pavement parking you are not alone. do get in touch with us. in edinburgh a new law comes into force this morning with people being fined up to £100 if they park on the pavements. it is causing all kinds of problems for people who are visually impaired, people who are visually impaired, people with pushchairs and the hope is it will improve it but it has not gone down very well with voters who cannot find anywhere else to park. lots of you have been in touch. do keep your comments coming. it is four years since the uk formally left the european union
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and new border checks on plant and animal products arriving from the eu come into force this week. what will it mean for retailers and shoppers? nina is at a wholesale market in liverpool and can explain. what have you got? a lovely cauliflower. £3 50 p. this what have you got? a lovely cauliflower. £3 50 p. this has come from brittany _ cauliflower. £3 50 p. this has come from brittany in _ cauliflower. £3 50 p. this has come from brittany in northern _ cauliflower. £3 50 p. this has come from brittany in northern france. it| from brittany in northern france. it was interest me to see where everything has come from. these peppers, some of them from the spanish mainland. southern spain. many of these products come from the there we are four years on from brexit some border conditions which are being rolled out. from wednesday, things classified by the government as medium and high risk as well as fish and meat and flowers, they will need to compete
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extra paperwork. from april, physical checks may be going on with lorries bringing those into the country. border inspections will slow things down inevitably. from october, many fruit and veg could be added to the medium and high risk categories. they would be subject also to border checks. bear in mind that two thirds of vegetables coming into the uk are from the eu. there is an estimate there is extra checks and the extent to which they slowed things down, as well as the charges at borders, could cost around £200 million. we have been talking this morning... there is ian. have a quick chat to the traders. ian has said he has not really quick chat to the traders. ian has said he has not really been quick chat to the traders. ian has said he has not really been told about these border issues which are around october on fruit and vegetables that when things slow down, talking about perishable materials, how much does it impact you? it materials, how much does it impact ou? ., . materials, how much does it impact ou? , , materials, how much does it impact ou? . , , , , you? it has been held up. it is fresh produce _
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you? it has been held up. it is fresh produce we _ you? it has been held up. it is fresh produce we are - you? it has been held up. it is fresh produce we are dealing. you? it has been held up. it is- fresh produce we are dealing with. it fresh produce we are dealing with. it has _ fresh produce we are dealing with. it has a _ fresh produce we are dealing with. it has a shelf life, it is not a everything which is manufactured. it has a _ everything which is manufactured. it has a shelf— everything which is manufactured. it has a shelf life and it shortens it all the _ has a shelf life and it shortens it all the time. every delay is shortening the life of the of the product — shortening the life of the of the troduct. , ., . , ._ shortening the life of the of the troduct. , ., . , ., , product. the product. delay means diminished quality. _ product. the product. delay means diminished quality. i _ product. the product. delay means diminished quality. i will _ product. the product. delay means diminished quality. i will let - product. the product. delay means diminished quality. i will let you i diminished quality. i will let you clap on —— crack on. not getting out on the shelves quickly enough and prices going up. it came up with that figure, that estimate of £200 million annually, increased costs. quantify that for me. the costs are basically— quantify that for me. the costs are basically a — quantify that for me. the costs are basically a combination of different fees the _ basically a combination of different fees the industry will have to pay to the _ fees the industry will have to pay to the uk— fees the industry will have to pay to the uk government to manage the import— to the uk government to manage the import process and subsequent inspections. we import process and subsequent inspections-— import process and subsequent ins-edions, . ., ., , ., , inspections. we already have systems inspections. we already have systems in lace. inspections. we already have systems in place- could _ inspections. we already have systems in place. could there _ inspections. we already have systems in place. could there be _ inspections. we already have systems in place. could there be an _ inspections. we already have systems in place. could there be an easy - inspections. we already have systems in place. could there be an easy way i in place. could there be an easy way to transition, do you think?- to transition, do you think? there is a much more _ to transition, do you think? there is a much more effective - to transition, do you think? there is a much more effective way - to transition, do you think? there i is a much more effective way about the controls. allowing and supporting the industry to manage
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the controls at the point of destination, suitably approved by the uk _ destination, suitably approved by the uk government. the destination, suitably approved by the uk government.— destination, suitably approved by the uk government. ,., the uk government. the uk government has told us this — the uk government. the uk government has told us this is _ the uk government. the uk government has told us this is part _ the uk government. the uk government has told us this is part of _ the uk government. the uk government has told us this is part of the _ has told us this is part of the brexit agreement, we need to have firmer checks on products when they come in. it firmer checks on products when they come in. ., ., ., ,, firmer checks on products when they come in. ., ., ., , , ., come in. it has to happen in a certain way — come in. it has to happen in a certain way to _ come in. it has to happen in a certain way to protect - come in. it has to happen in a certain way to protect uk - certain way to protect uk bio—security. there are more effective _ bio—security. there are more effective ways of managing uk bio—security at a much lower cost, far more _ bio—security at a much lower cost, far more efficient web meaning uk consumers — far more efficient web meaning uk consumers would be expected to pay less. consumers would be expected to pay less the _ consumers would be expected to pay less. the £200 million i'm talking about— less. the £200 million i'm talking about is— less. the £200 million i'm talking about is in— less. the £200 million i'm talking about is in essence a tax by the uk government to manage this process. no no _ government to manage this process. no no less _ government to manage this process. no no less. for you and i in the supermarkets, the corner shop, where we see an increase?— we see an increase? absolutely. there is no _ we see an increase? absolutely. there is no alternative. - we see an increase? absolutely. there is no alternative. the - there is no alternative. the industry— there is no alternative. the industry cannot absorb these costs unless _ industry cannot absorb these costs unless the — industry cannot absorb these costs unless the government changes its mind _ unless the government changes its mind set — unless the government changes its mind set. the costs will be incurred later this _ mind set. the costs will be incurred later this year. mind set. the costs will be incurred
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later this year-— later this year. let's talk to tom from the national _ later this year. let's talk to tom from the national farmers' - later this year. let's talk to tom i from the national farmers' union. for british farmers, explain why these bio checks are absolutely necessary. istgfe these bio checks are absolutely necessary-— necessary. we are proud of the standards _ necessary. we are proud of the standards we _ necessary. we are proud of the standards we produce - necessary. we are proud of the standards we produce to. - necessary. we are proud of the - standards we produce to. maintaining standards— standards we produce to. maintaining standards at — standards we produce to. maintaining standards at the _ standards we produce to. maintaining standards at the borders _ standards we produce to. maintaining standards at the borders is _ standards at the borders is essential~ _ standards at the borders is essential. we _ standards at the borders is essential. we need - standards at the borders is essential. we need to - standards at the borders is essential. we need to stopj standards at the borders is - essential. we need to stop the risk of any— essential. we need to stop the risk of any plant — essential. we need to stop the risk of any plant and _ essential. we need to stop the risk of any plant and animal— essential. we need to stop the risk of any plant and animal diseases i of any plant and animal diseases coming — of any plant and animal diseases coming in — of any plant and animal diseases coming in. there _ of any plant and animal diseases coming in. there is— of any plant and animal diseases coming in. there is african - of any plant and animal diseases| coming in. there is african swine fever— coming in. there is african swine fever in — coming in. there is african swine fever in europe _ coming in. there is african swine fever in europe.— coming in. there is african swine fever in europe. these controls are essential. fever in europe. these controls are essential- why _ fever in europe. these controls are essential. why do _ fever in europe. these controls are essential. why do you _ fever in europe. these controls are essential. why do you call- fever in europe. these controls are essential. why do you call this - fever in europe. these controls are essential. why do you call this an i essential. why do you call this an existential threat particularly for british horticulture?— existential threat particularly for british horticulture? when we talk about import _ british horticulture? when we talk about import controls _ british horticulture? when we talk about import controls can - british horticulture? when we talk about import controls can they - about import controls can they already— about import controls can they already have _ about import controls can they already have input _ about import controls can they already have input controls. i about import controls can they already have input controls. al about import controls can they i already have input controls. a lot of times— already have input controls. a lot of times they— already have input controls. a lot of times they take _ already have input controls. a lot of times they take place - already have input controls. a lot of times they take place at - already have input controls. a lot of times they take place at the i of times they take place at the business. _ of times they take place at the business. at _ of times they take place at the business, at the _ of times they take place at the business, at the destination. i of times they take place at the | business, at the destination. it of times they take place at the i business, at the destination. it is paramount — business, at the destination. it is paramount to _ business, at the destination. it is paramount to maintaining - business, at the destination. it is paramount to maintaining the - paramount to maintaining the viability— paramount to maintaining the viability of _ paramount to maintaining the viability of their— paramount to maintaining the viability of their businesses i paramount to maintaining the i viability of their businesses and they take — viability of their businesses and they take it— viability of their businesses and they take it very _ viability of their businesses and they take it very seriously. - viability of their businesses and i they take it very seriously. having appropriate — they take it very seriously. having appropriate checks _ they take it very seriously. having appropriate checks in— they take it very seriously. having appropriate checks in propria - they take it very seriously. having i appropriate checks in propria places is essential — appropriate checks in propria places is essential for— appropriate checks in propria places is essential for all— appropriate checks in propria places is essential for all businesses. - appropriate checks in propria places is essential for all businesses. i- is essential for all businesses. i am is essential for all businesses. am sorry i stood here next to is essential for all businesses]. am sorry i stood here next to the french cauliflowers, i saw you
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bristling slightly. a poll from the institute of export suggests 20% of businesses understand how the latest roll—out will work. i guess we spoke to elia, at the other end of things in spain, italy and france but they do not know the changes are happening at all. that could lead to confusion and delay and, the retailers, increased costs and, you know what that means? more big shops and increased costs for you and me. we're joined now by richard walker, executive chairman of the supermarket iceland. explain this to us. the can has been kicked down — explain this to us. the can has been kicked down the _ explain this to us. the can has been kicked down the road _ explain this to us. the can has been kicked down the road for— explain this to us. the can has been kicked down the road for a - explain this to us. the can has been kicked down the road for a long - kicked down the road for a long time, delayed for years and years. from today we are going to have paperback checks, effectively, on certain produce. it is april where we will have physical goods checks. reality is if you ask me exactly what will happen and how it will go,
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i don't know. we will have to suck it and see what the consequences are. it is more friction when it feels it has been bungled by the government in terms of implementation. [30 government in terms of implementation. government in terms of im-lementation. ,, implementation. do you think your customers will— implementation. do you think your customers will end _ implementation. do you think your customers will end up _ implementation. do you think your customers will end up paying - customers will end up paying something more? i customers will end up paying something more?— customers will end up paying something more? customers will end up paying somethint more? ., . ., ~' something more? i hope not. we work da and something more? i hope not. we work day and night- — something more? i hope not. we work day and night- we _ something more? i hope not. we work day and night. we are _ something more? i hope not. we work day and night. we are predominantly i day and night. we are predominantly frozen food with a longer supply chain and we can build up stock. there are headwinds. lise chain and we can build up stock. there are headwinds. use aborted leave during _ there are headwinds. use aborted leave during the _ there are headwinds. use aborted leave during the brexit _ there are headwinds. use aborted leave during the brexit campaign, | there are headwinds. use aborted i leave during the brexit campaign, do you see as a direct consequence? == you see as a direct consequence? -- as ou you see as a direct consequence? -- as you supported leave. i believed in the opportunities of brexit and we have not seen it. the way it has been implemented has been farcical. talking about the way you voted, you are a supporter of the conservative party and looking to become a conservative mp eight fee months ago. you have announced today you are backing labour, why? == a
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ago. you have announced today you are backing labour, why?— ago. you have announced today you are backing labour, why? -- a a few months ago- — are backing labour, why? -- a a few months ago. the _ are backing labour, why? -- a a few months ago. the conservatives - are backing labour, why? -- a a few months ago. the conservatives are i months ago. the conservatives are badly out of touch. they are drifting further to the right. my values and principles have not changed. while conservatives have moved away, labour has moved towards the centre and views i have long held. in business we like objectives. labour, and the way they built up the five key missions, is a very clear set of priorities and the right set of priorities for my businesses, for the environment and the needs of people like my customers. i believe they are absolutely on the right track and the right party. just to add to that, with keir starmer, people often say they do not know who he is or what he stands for. having met the man got to know him, he has genuine kindness and compassion that he is also ruthless. if you look at
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the way he has purged his party of the way he has purged his party of the more extreme elements, i think they are the sort of qualities we need for a future prime minister. istgfe need for a future prime minister. we interview politicians every day on the programme. sometimes it can be difficult to get any mp had any particular party to guarantee any specific thing. what have they guaranteed you and what has changed your mind? guaranteed you and what has changed our mind? ~ ,,., , ., your mind? absolutely nothing. there has not your mind? absolutely nothing. there has rrot been — your mind? absolutely nothing. there has rrot been a _ your mind? absolutely nothing. there has not been a conversation _ your mind? absolutely nothing. there has not been a conversation about. has not been a conversation about that. white you have not met them? i have met them but in terms of being offered anything, certainly not. i have met rachel reeves and some of the shadow cabinet and make keir starmer. the the shadow cabinet and make keir the country is in a mess, a significantly worse place than it was 1a years ago. i am an optimist. you need to get our sense of national pride back, they need to get growth back and seize the
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opportunities of the green revolution. we need to make our high streets safer and we need to reform business rates so we can rejuvenate high street. there are many things that need to be done and i think labour is pledging to do that. you sa that labour is pledging to do that. you say that rishi _ labour is pledging to do that. you say that rishi sunak has aired from one thing to the other and gone off in different directions. haven't you done exactly the same, albeit in the other direction? people might see it as thinking, how can you be a conservative party candidate potentially one minute and a few weeks later be on the television supporting the other side? i have not supporting the other side? i have rrot changed. _ supporting the other side? i have rrot changed. i — supporting the other side? i have not changed, i has _ supporting the other side? i have not changed, i has stood - supporting the other side? i have not changed, i has stood firm, i supporting the other side? i have i not changed, i has stood firm, that is my point. i believe in conservative values with a small c. has it changed that much in a few months? i has it changed that much in a few months? ., . has it changed that much in a few months? ., , ., ., , , has it changed that much in a few months? ., ., , , ., ., months? i was told to pipe down on issues that really _ months? i was told to pipe down on issues that really matter _ months? i was told to pipe down on issues that really matter to - months? i was told to pipe down on issues that really matter to me - months? i was told to pipe down on issues that really matter to me like | issues that really matter to me like the alarming rise of food banks by very senior members in the party. i
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was chairman of surfers against sewage. ii was chairman of surfers against sewate. , ., was chairman of surfers against sewate. ,, . was chairman of surfers against sewate. i. ., , was chairman of surfers against sewate. ., , , .. ,, sewage. if you had been successful in tetttin sewage. if you had been successful in getting a — sewage. if you had been successful in getting a conservative _ sewage. if you had been successful in getting a conservative party - sewage. if you had been successfulj in getting a conservative party seat to stand in at the next election, you could be sitting here this morning as a conservative party candidate. it morning as a conservative party candidate. . morning as a conservative party candidate-— candidate. it is right it did not hat ten candidate. it is right it did not happen for— candidate. it is right it did not happen for both _ candidate. it is right it did not happen for both of _ candidate. it is right it did not happen for both of us. - candidate. it is right it did not happen for both of us. it - candidate. it is right it did not happen for both of us. it is i candidate. it is right it did not i happen for both of us. it is clear my long held values and principles do not align with where the party is today. that is obviously why they did not select me and also why, i have realised actually, as they were drifting away from what i believe in, labour has come to that centrist pragmatic leap. iiot in, labour has come to that centrist pragmatic leap-— pragmatic leap. not long since you said ou pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might _ pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might one _ pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might one day _ pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might one day want - pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might one day want to - pragmatic leap. not long since you said you might one day want to be| said you might one day want to be prime minister. would you potentially be doing that from within the labour party? that potentially be doing that from within the labour party? that was in 'est, of within the labour party? that was in jest. of course- _ within the labour party? that was in jest, of course. we _ within the labour party? that was in jest, of course. we have _ within the labour party? that was in jest, of course. we have an - within the labour party? that was in jest, of course. we have an amazing business. we have 30,000 colleagues adding communities up and down the country and we can really affect change. we ran a campaign recently
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on infant formula, reducing the price and trying to change regulations. the power and influence we have to make a real difference is what i am really excited about and focusing on. what i am really excited about and focusing om— what i am really excited about and focusint on. ~ ., ., ., ., focusing on. would you now want to stand as a labour _ focusing on. would you now want to stand as a labour mp? _ focusing on. would you now want to stand as a labour mp? no. - focusing on. would you now want to stand as a labour mp? no. you - focusing on. would you now want to stand as a labour mp? no. you are| stand as a labour mp? no. you are not totin stand as a labour mp? iio you are not going to stand for parliament. people saying, you are not selected, so you are now a labour supporter. i was not selected, they were not right for me and i was not right for them. i realise labour and the principles are the right set of values for the country and keir is the right guy to take us forward. carol has the weather.— the right guy to take us forward. carol has the weather. quite a murky start to the — carol has the weather. quite a murky start to the day. _ carol has the weather. quite a murky start to the day, especially _ carol has the weather. quite a murky start to the day, especially across - start to the day, especially across the south of england. this picture
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in hastings from a weather watcher. in cornwall, a damp and cloudy start to the day. all associated with this band of rain, a weather front producing heavy rain. especially heavy across the north of england with sleet and snow on the heels of the southern uplands and the northern england hills as well. this is the front responsible, cooler air to the north of it but still mild in the south. in the south we have a lot of cloud at the moment. some murky conditions with hill and coastal fog. murky conditions with hill and coastalfog. through murky conditions with hill and coastal fog. through the day we will start to see that breaking up and hazy sunshine developing. to the north of the band of rain it will be fine with a fair bit of sunshine around, claiming northern ireland. not as windy in the north—west nor as worn. yesterday, there was a temperature of 19.6 celsius and todayit temperature of 19.6 celsius and today it will be seven to eight. still mild in the south of england.
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11 to 15 degrees. the average for the time of year is usually eight to nine. this evening and overnight there is band of rain pushes in the direction of the north sea, leading a lot of cloud across england and wales. full scotland and northern ireland under clear skies, it will be a cold night with the risk of frost and ice. temperatures could follow a 2—a, —5 in sheltered glands. there could be a frost in sheltered areas. ten being the overnight low in the south east. tomorrow a fair bit of cloud in england and wales. some light patchy rain and drizzle which all pulls away. residual cloud will be left in its wake. here we will see hull is developing during the day. a ridge of high pressure building across us and then settling down. a lot of dry weather. any showers in the highlands will be wintry on the
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higher ground. a wind picking up across the north west later. these other temperatures, down on today, five to nine north to south. for the rest of wednesday we have a deep area of low pressure crossing into the north of scotland with its weather front draped across us and i will squeeze on the isobars. we are looking at gales, even severe gales across the north and west. gail is widely in the north. heavy rain spilling south—east, wintry on the hills. that goes for northern ireland as well. england and wales cricket will be a drier day and it will be blustery, not as windy as further north. temperatures going up once again the seven in lerwick to about 11 as we push further south. the outlook beyond that remains unsettled. in the north of the country it will be wet and windy, especially in scotland. in the south it will be drier and brighter and windy at times as well. ido
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it will be drier and brighter and windy at times as well.- it will be drier and brighter and windy at times as well. do you need somethint windy at times as well. do you need something good _ windy at times as well. do you need something good to _ windy at times as well. do you need something good to watch _ on the telly? i know what you are going to say. i love that programme. high—stakes thriller 'trigger point�* returned to our screens last night for a new series — and it delivered the nail—biting and almost unbearable tension we've come to expect! last night, the action followed the met police bomb disposal team, led by actor vicky mcclure, as they used their counter terrorism experience to prevent an explosion in central london. let's take a look. what are you doing? what is going on? istgfe what are you doing? what is going on? ~ ., what are you doing? what is going on? . . . what are you doing? what is going on? . ., ., ., . ., , on? we have a timer. our actions must have — on? we have a timer. our actions must have set _ on? we have a timer. our actions must have set it _ on? we have a timer. our actions must have set it off. _ on? we have a timer. our actions must have set it off. take - on? we have a timer. our actions must have set it off. take cover! i on? we have a timer. our actionsj must have set it off. take cover! i am replacing _ must have set it off. take cover! i am replacing it- — must have set it off. take cover! i am replacing it. get—
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must have set it off. take cover! i am replacing it. get away - must have set it off. take cover! i am replacing it. get away from i am replacing it. get away from there. am replacing it. get away from there- get _ am replacing it. get away from there. get away! _ am replacing it. get away from there. get away! take - am replacing it. get away from there. get away! take it. - am replacing it. get away from there. get away! take it. take| am replacing it. get away from i there. get away! take it. take it. three. _ there. get away! take it. take it. three. two. — there. get away! take it. take it. three, two, one.— three, two, one. clear, repeat, clear. almost _ three, two, one. clear, repeat, clear. almost as _ three, two, one. clear, repeat, clear. almost as tense - three, two, one. clear, repeat, clear. almost as tense to - three, two, one. clear, repeat, clear. almost as tense to the i clear. almost as tense to the countdown — clear. almost as tense to the countdown at _ clear. almost as tense to the countdown at six _ clear. almost as tense to the countdown at six o'clock. - clear. almost as tense to the | countdown at six o'clock. that clear. almost as tense to the - countdown at six o'clock. that can be quite tense! checking everyone is awake. we'rejoined now by two members of the show�*s cast — actors natalie simpson and nabil eloua—habi. morning to you both. that was an explosive episode. how exciting is it now you can talk about it? brilliant. i watched it last night and the feedback was fantastic. yen; and the feedback was fantastic. very hat . . and the feedback was fantastic. very
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happy- that — and the feedback was fantastic. very happy- that is _ and the feedback was fantastic. very happy- that is my _ and the feedback was fantastic. very happy. that is my third time watching _ happy. that is my third time watching it. happy. that is my third time watching it-_ happy. that is my third time watchint it. ., ., . watching it. you re-watched the episodes? _ watching it. you re-watched the episodes? you _ watching it. you re-watched the episodes? you get _ watching it. you re-watched the episodes? you get different - watching it. you re-watched the i episodes? you get different things on different viewings _ episodes? you get different things on different viewings of _ episodes? you get different things on different viewings of it. - episodes? you get different things on different viewings of it. it - episodes? you get different things on different viewings of it. it is - on different viewings of it. it is the gift— on different viewings of it. it is the gift that keeps on giving. that is interesting. _ the gift that keeps on giving. that is interesting. lots _ the gift that keeps on giving. trust is interesting. lots of actors do not like to watch.— is interesting. lots of actors do not like to watch. normally, i do not. i not like to watch. normally, i do not- i thought. _ not like to watch. normally, i do not. ithought, actually, - not like to watch. normally, i do not. ithought, actually, this- not like to watch. normally, i do not. ithought, actually, this is. not. i thought, actually, this is fun last night.— not. i thought, actually, this is fun last night. not. i thought, actually, this is fun last nitht. , ., ., ., , fun last night. number one fan of my own show. when _ fun last night. number one fan of my own show. when you _ fun last night. number one fan of my own show. when you have _ fun last night. number one fan of my own show. when you have just - fun last night. number one fan of myl own show. when you have just joined. own show. when you have justjoined. you walk— own show. when you have justjoined. you walk on— own show. when you have justjoined. you walk on to set day one, what are you thinking? — you walk on to set day one, what are you thinking? i was really very nervous — you thinking? i was really very nervous. mark was really sweet and he was _ nervous. mark was really sweet and he was teasing me a lot. had they done _ he was teasing me a lot. had they done your— he was teasing me a lot. had they done your make up? that kind of thing _ done your make up? that kind of thing it— done your make up? that kind of thing. it was good, making me feel at ease _ thing. it was good, making me feel at ease. everyone was just welcoming. at ease. everyone was 'ust welcomingfi at ease. everyone was 'ust welcoming.�* i | at ease. everyone was 'ust - welcoming.�* i think welcoming. just slept in. i think so. the team _ welcoming. just slept in. i think so. the team is _ welcoming. just slept in. i think
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so. the team is fantastic. - welcoming. just slept in. i think so. the team is fantastic. they | welcoming. just slept in. i think - so. the team is fantastic. they keep makes us all — so. the team is fantastic. they keep makes us all feel— so. the team is fantastic. they keep makes us all feel wonderful, - so. the team is fantastic. they keep makes us all feel wonderful, it - so. the team is fantastic. they keep makes us all feel wonderful, it is i makes us all feel wonderful, it is great. makes us all feel wonderful, it is treat. , ,, ., makes us all feel wonderful, it is treat. , ~' ., . , makes us all feel wonderful, it is treat. , ,, ., ., , ., great. they know what they are doint , great. they know what they are doing. don't— great. they know what they are doing, don't they? _ great. they know what they are doing, don't they? what - great. they know what they are doing, don't they? what is - great. they know what they are doing, don't they? what is it i great. they know what they are i doing, don't they? what is it like to be involved in that type of show? must be a dream for an actor. i fell]! must be a dream for an actor. i fell to the floor. _ must be a dream for an actor. i fell to the floor, dramatically. - must be a dream for an actor. i fell to the floor, dramatically. i - to the floor, dramatically. i screamed. to the floor, dramatically. i screamed-— to the floor, dramatically. i screamed. , . ., screamed. just so exciting. you mention to _ screamed. just so exciting. you mention to vicky _ screamed. just so exciting. you mention to vicky mcclure, - screamed. just so exciting. youj mention to vicky mcclure, what screamed. just so exciting. you i mention to vicky mcclure, what is she like to work with? she mention to vicky mcclure, what is she like to work with?— she like to work with? she is a terrible human _ she like to work with? she is a terrible human being. - she like to work with? she is a terrible human being. this - she like to work with? she is a terrible human being. this is i she like to work with? she is a - terrible human being. this is what we want. terrible human being. this is what we want- no. _ terrible human being. this is what we want. no, she _ terrible human being. this is what we want. no, she is _ terrible human being. this is what we want. no, she is wonderful. i terrible human being. this is what i we want. no, she is wonderful. she has so many _ we want. no, she is wonderful. she has so many hats _ we want. no, she is wonderful. she has so many hats on, _ we want. no, she is wonderful. she has so many hats on, producing - we want. no, she is wonderful. she| has so many hats on, producing and acting _ has so many hats on, producing and actint. ,, has so many hats on, producing and actint, ,, , has so many hats on, producing and actint. ,, ,., , has so many hats on, producing and acting. she cares about us, it is wonderful- _ acting. she cares about us, it is wonderful. one _ acting. she cares about us, it is wonderful. one of— acting. she cares about us, it is wonderful. one of the - acting. she cares about us, it is wonderful. one of the classic i acting. she cares about us, it is - wonderful. one of the classic things about the show, _ wonderful. one of the classic things about the show, it _ wonderful. one of the classic things about the show, it is _ wonderful. one of the classic things about the show, it is the _ wonderful. one of the classic things about the show, it is the build-up i about the show, it is the build—up of tension. you are on the edge of your seat, aren't you? when you are recording, when you are in the role, do you feel that? does it come with
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the script and the added? houthi do you feel that? does it come with the script and the added? how tense is it? ifind the script and the added? how tense is it? i find it — the script and the added? how tense is it? i find it comes _ the script and the added? how tense is it? i find it comes with _ the script and the added? how tense is it? i find it comes with the - is it? i find it comes with the scri tt. is it? i find it comes with the script- you — is it? i find it comes with the script. you feel— is it? i find it comes with the script. you feel the - is it? i find it comes with the script. you feel the tension i is it? i find it comes with the - script. you feel the tension going on and on. it keeps you on the edge of your seat. on and on. it keeps you on the edge of your seat-— of your seat. what about the mechanics — of your seat. what about the mechanics of _ of your seat. what about the mechanics of acting - of your seat. what about the mechanics of acting it? - of your seat. what about the mechanics of acting it? you | of your seat. what about the - mechanics of acting it? you have to be convincing in what you do. bomb disposal experts were what your every move. how do you learn to do it? ~ every move. how do you learn to do it? . ., every move. how do you learn to do it? ~ ., , ., , every move. how do you learn to do it? ., , every move. how do you learn to do it? ., ., it? we have people plan. they are to answer every — it? we have people plan. they are to answer every question _ it? we have people plan. they are to answer every question we _ it? we have people plan. they are to answer every question we had. - it? we have people plan. they are to answer every question we had. it - it? we have people plan. they are to| answer every question we had. it was brilliant. .. , ., , answer every question we had. it was brilliant. , ., , . brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enouth brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enough to — brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enough to go _ brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enough to go into _ brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enough to go into a - brilliant. exactly. i was lucky enough to go into a prison, i brilliant. exactly. iwas lucky- enough to go into a prison, someone .ave enough to go into a prison, someone gave me _ enough to go into a prison, someone gave me a _ enough to go into a prison, someone gave me a tour when i was on set. my truck— gave me a tour when i was on set. my truck i_ gave me a tour when i was on set. my truck i thought you meant you had been _ truck i thought you meant you had been to— truck i thought you meant you had been to jail. i was lucky enough to been to jail. i was lucky enough to be able _ been to jail. i was lucky enough to be able to— been to jail. i was lucky enough to be able to go into one. i saw how things— be able to go into one. i saw how things go— be able to go into one. i saw how things go down, there was really helpful— things go down, there was really helpful as — things go down, there was really helpful as well.— helpful as well. what is it like 'oinin t helpful as well. what is it like joining something _
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helpful as well. what is it like joining something like - helpful as well. what is it like joining something like this? i helpful as well. what is it like j joining something like this? it helpful as well. what is it like i joining something like this? it is helpful as well. what is it like - joining something like this? it is a bit nerve-racking _ joining something like this? it is a bit nerve-racking because - joining something like this? it is a bit nerve-racking because you - joining something like this? it is a bit nerve—racking because you do not want to— bit nerve—racking because you do not want to be _ bit nerve—racking because you do not want to be the thing that brings down _ want to be the thing that brings down the — want to be the thing that brings down the show. walking onto it, i definitely— down the show. walking onto it, i definitely felt season one on my as soon _ definitely felt season one on my as soon as— definitely felt season one on my as soon as i_ definitely felt season one on my as soon as i got on there, just another day at _ soon as i got on there, just another day at work! — soon as i got on there, 'ust another day at workt— soon as i got on there, 'ust another day at work! you work! you said you had a very warm _ day at work! you work! you said you had a very warm welcome. - day at work! you work! you said you had a very warm welcome. you - day at work! you work! you said you had a very warm welcome. you had | day at work! you work! you said you | had a very warm welcome. you had a very, very warm welcome, didn't you? it was one of the first few days on set. it was one of the first few days on set we _ it was one of the first few days on set. we were in a car park and it was— set. we were in a car park and it was really— set. we were in a car park and it was really freezing. we were next to space _ was really freezing. we were next to space heaters. iwas was really freezing. we were next to space heaters. i was leaning on it by accident — space heaters. i was leaning on it by accident for a bit of warmth and my trouser— by accident for a bit of warmth and my trouser leg did in fact burn. caught— my trouser leg did in fact burn. caught fire. my trouser leg did in fact burn. caught fire-— my trouser leg did in fact burn. cauthtfire. . , ., ., ., . caught fire. that is more dramatic. it 'ust. .. caught fire. that is more dramatic. itjust--- lt— caught fire. that is more dramatic. itjust. .. it sizzled _ caught fire. that is more dramatic. itjust. .. it sizzled a _ caught fire. that is more dramatic. itjust. .. it sizzled a little - caught fire. that is more dramatic. itjust. .. it sizzled a little bit - itjust... it sizzled a little bit like — itjust... it sizzled a little bit like an— itjust... it sizzled a little bit like an iron that was on too long. scary— like an iron that was on too long. scary though. i like an iron that was on too long. scary though-— like an iron that was on too long. sca thouth. ., ., scary though. i was more scared the costume department _ scary though. i was more scared the costume department was _ scary though. i was more scared the costume department was going - scary though. i was more scared the costume department was going to l scary though. i was more scared the| costume department was going to be really_
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costume department was going to be really angry at me that they were not because they are pros and i, apparently, am not. he not because they are pros and i, apparently, am not.— not because they are pros and i, apparently, am not. he both had memorable _ apparently, am not. he both had memorable moments _ apparently, am not. he both had memorable moments on - apparently, am not. he both had memorable moments on set, i apparently, am not. he both had i memorable moments on set, didn't you? i memorable moments on set, didn't ou? . ., , ., , you? i decided to propose on my last da on set you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to — you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to my _ you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to my fiance. _ you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to my fiance. i _ you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to my fiance. i got - you? i decided to propose on my last day on set to my fiance. i got her- day on set to my fiance. i got her in on at the pretence of being an extra. everyone was in on it. the producers, vicky, eric, all the cast. theyjust helped. they kept telling me, breathe, breathe. iwas very nervous. telling me, breathe, breathe. iwas very nervous-— telling me, breathe, breathe. iwasi very nervous—l very nervous. what was the scene? i do not very nervous. what was the scene? i do rrot want — very nervous. what was the scene? i do rrot want to _ very nervous. what was the scene? i do not want to spoil— very nervous. what was the scene? i do not want to spoil what _ very nervous. what was the scene? i do not want to spoil what is - very nervous. what was the scene? i do not want to spoil what is going i do not want to spoil what is going to happen and i thought, this is great, a nice setup. my fiance had been working on the show as a costume person. i said we need some extras for the day, do you want to come back? she got a bit suspicious
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because nobody would look her in the eye. all the people she knew, nobody wanted to look at her. then i asked her and thankfully she said yes. ihthd her and thankfully she said yes. and she said no- — her and thankfully she said yes. and she said no. she _ her and thankfully she said yes. and she said no. she said, _ her and thankfully she said yes. and she said no. she said, no _ her and thankfully she said yes. and she said no. she said, no thank- her and thankfully she said yes. and | she said no. she said, no thank you, very much- — she said no. she said, no thank you, very much- i — she said no. she said, no thank you, very much. i thought _ she said no. she said, no thank you, very much. i thought the _ very much. i thought the series itself was _ very much. i thought the series itself was full _ very much. i thought the series itself was full of _ very much. i thought the series itself was full of drama - very much. i thought the series itself was full of drama and - very much. i thought the series itself was full of drama and it i itself was full of drama and it seems i've set it is more dramatic with a burning and a proposal. reality was we were backstage playing — reality was we were backstage playing board games got lots of board _ playing board games got lots of board games. playing board games got lots of board games-— playing board games got lots of board games. playing board games got lots of board tames. ., . ., ., , ., board games. congratulations on the engagement- — board games. congratulations on the engagement. great _ board games. congratulations on the engagement. great to _ board games. congratulations on the engagement. great to see _ board games. congratulations on the engagement. great to see you. - the second series of trigger point is available to watch now on itvx.
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live from london — this is bbc news... the united states says it will respond to a drone strike injordan that killed three us military personnel. talks set to continue to try to secure a truce in gaza and the release of hostages held by hamas. the uk is to ban the sale of disposable vapes — to make the products less attractive to children. and the boy—band
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from pakistan finding international success with thanks to a former member of one direction. hello. president biden has said the united states will respond to a drone attack on an american military base injordan, near the syrian border, at a time and in a manner of its choosing. mr biden blamed the attack on radical iran—backed militant groups operating in syria and iraq. tehran has denied any involvement in the attack in which three service personnel were killed and 3a injured. it's the latest in a series of attacks against us bases in the region since the war in gaza began, as our world affairs correspondent, paul adams reports. the americans say the attack happened at a base known as tower 22, right on the syrian—jordanian border.
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