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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  February 2, 2024 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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substance, and then fleeing the scene immediately after the attack himself. police have released a new image of azad's, last known sighting, showing he has a significant injury himself on the right side of his face. the 35 year old is believed to be from a newcastle area, and police are appealing to the public, particularly those in the north east, to report any sightings . meanwhile, the number sightings. meanwhile, the number of migrants crossing the english channelis of migrants crossing the english channel is up 13% compared with this time last year. more than 1300 people arrived in small boats last month . that's the boats last month. that's the highest january total since records began in 2018, and compares with the 1100 migrants recorded arriving in january last year . just yesterday, 278 last year. just yesterday, 278 people made the journey in six small boats . a couple is small boats. a couple is expected to stand trial over the alleged arson attack on justice minister mike freers constituency office in london. the pair denied the charges. the tory mp for finchley and golders
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green described the incident as the final straw that made him quit after receiving a series of death threats . downing street death threats. downing street today called the vitriol hatred he's faced as an attack on british democracy . and as you've british democracy. and as you've been hearing, hundreds of farmers have been protesting outside the eu's headquarters in brussels today, their demanding better prices for their produce and less eu red tape. france has been at the centre of a growing dispute across europe, with tens of thousands of farmers staging demonstrations in germany, poland, belgium and italy. this protest today in belgium saw farmers demanding environmental regulations be relaxed and protection against cheap imports . more than half of university students used i to help them with their studies. that's according to the ucas admissions service, which surveyed more than 1200 undergraduates. meanwhile, a separate report from the higher education policy institute agreed that more than
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1 in 8 undergraduate students used ai 1 in 8 undergraduate students used al to generate text for their assignments. the study also found those with asian ethnic backgrounds are also much more likely to have used general ai than white or black students, while male students used it more than female students . and in the than female students. and in the united states, alec baldwin has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter over the fatal shooting of cinematographer halyna hutchins dunng cinematographer halyna hutchins during the filming of rust. the 65 year old actor opted to plead not guilty a day before his court appearance in new mexico , court appearance in new mexico, which is now not going to take place . under the terms of his place. under the terms of his release, baldwin can't possess firearms or drink alcohol. he was pointing a gun at miss hutchins during a rehearsal in 2021, when the weapon went off, killing her instantly . she for killing her instantly. she for the latest news stories sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go
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to gbnews.com. forward slash alerts . we have islamist alerts. we have islamist extremism into britain. >> we've let it fester and now we've let it win our absolute spineless surrender. merchant political top brass are rolling over while government ministers wear stab vests and quit their jobs in fear. veteran tory minister mike freer has had death threats from islamists, as well as an alleged arson attack on his office. the motive there has still not been established. he's standing down because he doesn't want to die. i cannot emphasise how important this is a minister of the government is quitting his job because he doesn't want to be killed by a lunatic jihadi , and our prime lunatic jihadi, and our prime minister has said absolutely nothing . nothing. a spokesman nothing. nothing. a spokesman for rishi sunak said he was saddened . is that it .7 our prime saddened. is that it.7 our prime minister should have been out on the steps of downing street saying that we will not be intimidated. we will not let
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this continue enough is enough. what does he instead .7 he what does he do instead? he tweets xl bullies . yeah, tweets about xl bullies. yeah, fantastic . where's keir starmer fantastic. where's keir starmer on this ? well, he's conducting on this? well, he's conducting focus groups on how to get the muslim vote back. so he's hardly going to come out all guns blazing is he? ed davey. well there's no way a liberal democrat leader would come out and admit that his ideology has helped britain helped turn britain into a poster multicultural poster nation for multicultural failure . the police have let failure. the police have let protesters , which include rabid protesters, which include rabid anti—semites , rampage around anti—semites, rampage around london every flipping saturday for the last three months. and today they are finally saying that they don't support some of the protests , which in the past the protests, which in the past have included a now banned terror group and people holding up anti—jewish signs . as they're up anti—jewish signs. as they're saying, please don't march down whitehall. all right. but will you do anything to stop them if they ignore you, i doubt it. the genie is out of the bottle. this is like when sajid javid was home secretary, right? he should have turned the first migrant boats back in the channel and
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now wouldn't have problem now we wouldn't have a problem there. police there. politicians and police should have clamped on should have clamped down on jihadis immediately instead of being too scared of being called islamophobic to act. i honestly cannot believe that we have sunk to the level where a serving minister stands down because of threats from extremists and our prime ministerjust doesn't feel prime minister just doesn't feel the need to address it, neither does the leader of the opposition, former immigration minister robert jenrick, has been very strong on this. he said it is shameful that an mp has been intimidated out of office. our political discourse should improve , but the far should improve, but the far bigger problem for our liberal democracy virulently democracy is virulently anti—british, islamist extremism, which is both deeply homophobic and anti—semitic and in this case, violent. the ideology has to be confronted and comprehensively defeated . i and comprehensively defeated. i am absolutely fuming about all of this now , and you have to add of this now, and you have to add that, don't you, to the fact that, don't you, to the fact that today, as it currently stands, we have a former asylum
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seeker on the run as a result of an alleged alkaline attack . why an alleged alkaline attack. why was that man in this country as robert jenrick says, why is our beautiful country putting up with all of this anti—british ideology? but let's get the thoughts now of my panel. i have got daily telegraph columnist allison pearson. i've got conservative peer lord sean bailey, and i've also got former labour party adviser matthew laza allison. i'll go to you now . i mean, we have capitulated and rolled over and let some mad fundamentalist tickle our nation's belly, haven't we? >> yeah, we absolutely have. >> yeah, we absolutely have. >> it's a dark day for democracy . when an elected representative, mike craig, a great mp for golders green and finchley for 14 years, has stuck up for jewish constituents , up for jewish constituents, backed israel. and he has been subject to these absolutely vile, anti—semitic and anti—british attacks. and as you
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say, patrick, our political class are terrified of the word islamophobia. they are more worried about being islamophobic than serving the duty of sticking up for the british way of life, of british people and they are, as you said, spineless , despicable. i am like you. i'm absolute fuming. this poor mike, mike freer , you know, he's mike freer, you know, he's joining us later in the studio, by the way. no. you know, office burnt got an email saying people like you deserve to be set alight. we shouldn't have democratic representatives subject to threats like this. and these groups because we've seen these marches in london. metropolitan police have been having a hands off approach . having a hands off approach. they are emboldened. patrick they are emboldened. patrick they are emboldened. patrick they are laughing. they think these people are weak. and we are going to press for more and more. we're seeing it in schools. we're seeing it in attacks on mps. we're seeing in, you know, people being hounded, threatened when they vote the wrong way. this really needed to be the bud and it's
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be nipped in the bud and it's disgusting that a rishi sunak and keir starmer have not come out and said enough , enough. yeah. >> where is rishi sunak ? i'm >> where is rishi sunak? i'm sorry, but if a minister resigns or whatever doesn't stand for re—election because because of islamist threats and death threats as well, and the fact that their office has been a victim of an arson attack, the exact motive of that, we're yet to find out, of course. and our actual prime minister doesn't come out and say anything about that. , but what's the that. i'm sorry, but what's the point anything? mean , how point of anything? i mean, how that says he doesn't care that to me says he doesn't care about his own ministers. about one of his own ministers. he doesn't care about does he doesn't care about us, does he? i think it's things. he? i think it's three things. >> bullies. firstly, the >> xl bullies. firstly, the prime minister come out prime minister should come out and should and say something. so should keir because the idea keir starmer, because the idea that you can intimidate mps into going your way or not is disgraceful. let's be clear, disgraceful. and let's be clear, this happens to people all up and the political and down. the political hierarchy as it happens to councillors. and now it's got all the way up to ministers. so somebody needs something. somebody needs to say something. i the prime i think a word from the prime minister the from keir minister and the word from keir starmer have been starmer would have been powerful, would have meant something. this
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something. of course, this is just cancel just another arm of cancel culture. if you're a tory, it culture. so if you're a tory, it feels like it's open season on tory. write in tory. you can write in newspapers and whatever you newspapers and do whatever you say. abuse you online say. people who abuse you online are then in the are then supported in the newspaper. what that's done newspaper. and what that's done that's emboldened people come newspaper. and what that's done thaand mboldened people come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get>ldened people come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get inened people come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get in your people come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get in your faceile come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get in your face and come newspaper. and what that's done thaand get in your face and say�*ne up and get in your face and say things ultimate things to you. and the ultimate expression of that, of people getting the fray, of getting in the fray, says, of course, mps, two course, we've had four mps, two murdered two and two. and murdered and two and two. and mike freer and also stephen mike freer now, and also stephen timms, who stabbed timms, who was who was stabbed very badly. and if we don't nip this in bud, democracy this in the bud, our democracy is because what it is at risk, because what it means is, as someone in public life, someone in elected life, as someone in elected pubuc life, as someone in elected public will public life, you will think twice you express twice before you express an opinion and that destroys democracy. that democracy. it's a disgrace that it's to happen and it's been allowed to happen and somebody needs to get handle somebody needs to get a handle on starts with the on it. and it starts with the pm, sir keir starmer coming out and saying they do not support this. >> look today they we have a government minister standing down. announced last down. he announced it last night. to be joining night. he's going to be joining us studio later standing us in the studio later standing down threats okay. and we down over threats okay. and we have a former asylum seeker as well on the run this evening at large as it currently stands
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after alleged belly dancing, a woman and a child with alkaline. okay this guy according to reports as well, has already had a conviction for a sexual based offence . it was allegedly turned offence. it was allegedly turned down for asylum twice and then now is what on earth are we playing at? >> well, look, patrick, i can totally understand why people feel so angry about what's going on. >> and i think that both what we've heard about the case in clapham and also totally the threats that mike's had, are absolutely outrageous. and i think hear more from think we should hear more from the prime minister. think the prime minister. and i think we from keir we should hear from keir directly. pleased the directly. i'm pleased the speaker has spoken because speaker has spoken out, because that the right to that we all agree the right to protest is vital. it's invite to protest is vital. it's invite to protest outside an mps office is vital, isn't uh in order, is what seen up and the what we've seen up and down the country from all country with mps from all parties. a of my labour parties. a lot of my labour friends have been besieged in their offices. know, their offices. you know, a female friend of female mp who's a friend of mine, you know, in tears in her office that's office because all that's between, know, the between, you know, the protesters was one protesters and them was one copper that sort of flimsy copper and that sort of flimsy shutter that you get on, you
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know, on a corner shop. and know, get on a corner shop. and so, we need make so, you know, we need to make sure that have systems in sure that we have systems in place to protect our politicians so they speak and so that they can speak out and that don't as mike's that people don't feel as mike's made that very personal decision that can't carry on. that he can't carry on. >> but it goes protecting >> but it goes beyond protecting our politicians, if you >> but it goes beyond protecting omthat, icians, if you >> but it goes beyond protecting omthat, politicians if you >> but it goes beyond protecting omthat, politicians would you do that, politicians would become and be become an elite and we'd be separate, b it'd be, you separate, and b it'd be, you know, line of police between know, a line of police between politicians. have to do politicians. what we have to do is stop this everywhere. you've seen that seen the pressure that certain schools under when schools have come under when they've tried dragged they've been tried to be dragged into political you've into the political arena. you've seen when you go online how certain direct the certain outlets direct the public's order to make public's ire in order to make people about people angry about that individual than individual rather than the politics. they're things politics. they're the things that get on top of, that we need to get on top of, because i really want to get this you're in this across. if you're in political and you to political life and you have to worry about statements you're going to make, you won't make them. when it comes them. and then when it comes to do we to face the boats, do, we need to face the boats, do, we need to face the boats, do we need to talk about islamist terror? we won't. let's be i remember a be clear. i remember reading a report level of terror report about the level of terror we and they kept talking we had, and they kept talking about right wing terror and a police said to me, the police officer said to me, the reason they do that, sean, is
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because in comfort because it's in their comfort zone. they're able that zone. they're able to do that and no, they won't be and not and no, they won't be approached for being racist. and the thing, the other thing, it seems tangential, it's true. tangential, but it's true. everything british seems to be second, know, it's okay to second, you know, it's okay to abuse history, but you abuse british history, but you can't anybody else's can't speak about anybody else's history. all those things history. and all of those things play history. and all of those things pla and i think need to >> and i think people need to speak about both. but but remember that jo cox was killed by extremist, uh, by a right wing extremist, uh, that the mp west lancashire that the mp for west lancashire was, respect, they were was, with respect, they were they were delighted. >> obviously, they >> i mean, obviously, they were very that had happened very sad that what had happened to jo cox. but the relief when it wing lunatic like it was a right wing lunatic like they are. you said that, sir lindsay hoyle, the speaker of the of commons, had spoken the house of commons, had spoken out that he said was out what i saw that he said was basically mps should bit basically mps should be a bit nicer other. there nicer to each other. there is this huge elephant in the room and we poor david and when we saw poor sir david amess to death in amess yes, stabbed to death in his leigh on constituency his leigh on sea constituency office, what did, uh, members of parliament should have parliament do? they should have been they were been standing there. they were so know so embarrassed. they didn't know where and they stood where to look. and they stood there. talked about social there. they talked about social media and tweeting. and you just thought this is an ideology is clearly a big part in this. in
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this instance. want to this instance. don't want to confront it's too confront it because it's too big. and these people are they intimidate them. it becomes intimidate them. so it becomes a vicious circle where no one will talk about everyone shouts talk about it. everyone shouts islamophobia to shut people up, and cannot be these people. and we cannot be these people. they do not want to fit into our into britain. patrick they want britain to fit into them. >> i think i think the concern for lot people, and i think for a lot of people, and i think it's a very valid concern, is if we have imported and allowed to fester and become home fester and then become home grown as well. medieval grown as well. a medieval ideology and people who are also deranged. why are we having to live like this? everyone can see it coming. everyone can talk about it. we're all shouting about it. we're all shouting about it. we're all shouting about it. why are we having to pay about it. why are we having to pay the consequences for it? i just want to say again a little bit later on in the show. not so long now, we are going to be joined mike that mp joined by mike freer, that mp who to walk around who has had to walk around wearing vest. now he's wearing a stab vest. now he's stepping down as a of stepping down as a result of death threats, so we're death threats, etc. so we're really get his views on really keen to get his views on all that. a little bit all of that. and a little bit later on in the show as well.
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we're going to be talking to a top cop as a manhunt continues for this former asylum seeker who run after who is on the run after allegedly dousing a woman and a child corrosive substance child in a corrosive substance on the streets of britain. i'm also by also going to be joined by a very brave acid attack survivor to get their story about what happened and the kind of happened to them and the kind of impact had on their impact that it's had on their lives. uh, look, gear now lives. uh, look, gear change now because this certainly a lot because this is certainly a lot more positive time for our brand new great british giveaway, a chance to win £18,000 in cash. here's all the details that you need a chance make that yours. >> this is your chance to win £18,000 cash in our very latest great british giveaway. cash to spend on anything you like. that's like having an extra £1,500 in your bank account each month for a whole year. what would you use that for? it could go towards your mortgage or rent, buy monthly treats or just send some of those day to day financial stresses packing for your chance to win £18,000 in tax free cash text gb win to 84 9002. text cost £2 plus one
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standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero two, p.o. post your name and number two gb zero two, po. box 8000 690. derby d1 nine, double tee, uk only entrants must be 18 or oven only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on friday. the 23rd of february. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win . gbnews.com. forward slash win. good luck . still to come, i good luck. still to come, i interview the man himself, mike freer mp is live in the studio to explain why he simply cannot go on as an mp, but up next, research has found that it's a view increasingly being held by gen z boys that feminism has done more harm than good. >> what's all this about anime? manga goes head to head with pearl davies and connor tomlinson drops in as well to give the male gen z view . this give the male gen z view. this is patrick christys tonight we are only on
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news . news. >> it's patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news coming up. mike freer mp joins me live in the studio to explain how death threats and an arsenal attack have driven him out of parliament. we will also be keeping you to date on the keeping you up to date on the manhunt for that former asylum seeker who is allegedly involved in attack last night. in an acid attack last night. but first, it's time now for tonight's head to head . so new
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tonight's head to head. so new poll has revealed that gen z or gen z. i don't know how i'm supposed to say it. and british boys and men are more likely to believe that feminism has done more harm than good when compared respondents . compared with older respondents. so the polling also found that a quarter males aged 16 to quarter of uk males aged 16 to 29 believe it's harder to be a man and a woman, with 1 in 5 looking favourably upon controversial influencer andrew tate. 37% of them also agree that the phrase toxic masculine city is unhelpful, so who with gen z boys increasingly holding this view ? has feminism done this view? has feminism done more harm than good? let me know your thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news and make sure you take part in our poll. but i'll bring you those results shortly. going head to head on this tonight. our author and commentator, anna may youtuber and may mangan, and youtuber and social media influencer pearl davies. both of you, thank you very much. pearl i'll start with you. as feminism done more harm
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than good, especially when it comes to these gen z boys . comes to these gen z boys. >> um, yes. yes, it has. feminism really has turned into a bunch of cry—baby women that want to complain that we're not given equal opportunity when really women are given more opportunity than men. um, and so, yeah, i would say feminism is a hate group, and it's a bunch of cry—baby women. >> uh, anna, would you like to come back to that cry—baby women? apparently women? feminism? apparently we've right lad with us we've got a right lad with us tonight with pearl in her opinions, haven't we? >> could possibly do >> how could it possibly do harm, pearl wouldn't? i hope you vote. >> i vote. »| >> i assume you do. >> i assume you do. >> i assume you do. >> i hope you're not chained to the sink at home. um, the kitchen sink at home. um, i'm sure you've got i'm not sure if you've got a job. i sorry, i don't know very much about you, but you're probably. >> if there's a bloke doing the same thing as you, you're probably earning less him. probably earning less than him. >> feminism is >> so, of course, feminism is something got us the something that it got us the vote first place. vote in the first place. >> and still doing a power >> and it's still doing a power of good. it's just whingeing men. >> and actually i changed that. there lads. >> not men who >> they're not men who are probably devotees of andrew tate
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who this. who extol this. >> and really it's >> and it's really it's pathetic. a shame that pathetic. and it's a shame that their intellects aren't as big as mouths. as their mouths. >> okay. >> okay. >> what does feminism accomplished in the last hundred years ? years? >> think , you know, go and >> i think, you know, go and look it up, pearl . look it up, pearl. >> i mean, that's such an ignorant question . ignorant question. >> look. no, look. what is it ? >> look. no, look. what is it? we've brought you women in general. so can you answer? >> that is, let's start with a vote. let's start with educational but educational opportunities, but not . i mean, i would not enough. i mean, i would answer not enough that question. >> every women has an std. one out of three women has had an abortion . 40% of children are abortion. 40% of children are born into single parent homes. >> women didn't have the right to abortion until they fought hard for it. so that's that. you can strike that one off your list . list. >> well, women, women . but why >> well, women, women. but why is that a good thing ? why is is that a good thing? why is that a good thing, though? now we're aborting our children. we have stds. um, well , would you have stds. um, well, would you like to be in charge of your body, pearl? >> yourself a man or some >> yourself or a man or some man? unnamed man, some man? some unnamed man, some politician? you
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politician? what? what are you talking about ? talking about? >> what say? that again. sorry. broke up . broke up. >> you talked about abortion . i >> you talked about abortion. i mean, isn't abortion a woman's right, and they had to fight hard for that. would you take that away from them? >> it's not right. no, i don't think women have the right to kill their children. no >> okay, well, i don't know where you are. >> what cage you're locked up in, but you're like. and what century you're living in, but you're way, way outdated. >> you else is >> i'll tell you what else is disingenuous. yes. women have never cage. never been locked up in a cage. you know, the first female property was in the 1600s. property owner was in the 1600s. it was the 1600s. women have it was in the 1600s. women have always able work if they always been able to work if they wanted there's always been wanted to. there's always been political movements that women have to be a part have been allowed to be a part of. this idea that women were somehow oppressed in the past and just no rights. it's not and just had no rights. it's not true . the reason that women true. the reason that women didn't vote was they didn't vote was because they couldn't can't couldn't believe, i can't believe what hearing. believe what i'm hearing. >> earning less than >> women are earning less than men so they have less opportunity property on opportunity to buy a property on their ftse 100. there their own. the ftse 100. there are very few at the top. are very few women at the top. there very few women in the
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there are very few women in the house of commons. there aren't enough 51% of the enough women. 51% of the population and we should be equally represented . and women equally represented. and women like well, i even like you, well, i don't even think you are a woman. i'm not sure what you are. if you anneliese your views on how we should 2024, i'm should be living in 2024, i'm actually by you. actually quite shocked by you. but maybe just but then maybe it's just clickbait. mean, that is clickbait. i mean, is that is that job? oh. that your job? oh. >> all right, pearl, come back to then we will to that and then we will actually in a gen z man actually bring in a gen z man for his view on all of this as well. go on, pearl, come back to that then. >> do 80, 88% of the food >> men do 80, 88% of the food supply 93% of the power grid, 95% of transportation, 90% of communications 78% of material production 80% of software. do you know what women lead in? what what jobs ? school teachers, what what jobs? school teachers, secretaries and childcare workers, of course, the men , workers, of course, the men, they're useless. >> what about having children, childcare and caring responsibilities? do you not count that as important point ? count that as important point? >> i wouldn't say that it is worth as much money as running
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the entire infrastructure of society. all right. the market determines what's a job i'm gonna get. >> i'm just gonna get get a pin back in the grenade. all right, well, stay where you are. stay where you are. both of you. all right. okay. stay with. stay. good, good. i'm just going to bnng good, good. i'm just going to bring in. i'm just going to bnngin bring in. i'm just going to bring in a gen z man now, because when i talk about because often when i talk about these talk about, these issues and we talk about, you know, women's issues and we get blokes about it get to blokes talking about it and know, it all looks and then, you know, it all looks and then, you know, it all looks a bit much, doesn't it. so we've got and commentator got writer and commentator connor i believe. connor tomlinson. i believe. connon connor tomlinson. i believe. connor, you are classed as a gen z i think. right. yeah. z man i think. right. yeah. >> in so i'm, i'm >> i was born in 98, so i'm, i'm one of the xennials. >> i went to school before phones, so i'm one of the more well—adjusted ones. i'd hope connor i'll be really honest with you, mate. >> really what any >> i don't really know what any millennials gen z thing millennials or gen z thing really but basically, really means, but basically, young men are now thinking that feminism far feminism has gone too far and that men have a worse that actually men have a worse time. it's harder to be a man than are you on than a woman. where are you on this? >> well, not surprised that >> well, i'm not surprised that they feminism so
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they find feminism so radioactive be repugnant, radioactive to be repugnant, because to anna mae in because listening to anna mae in the conversation, i just the last conversation, i. i just started tuning out because i just the same platitudes just saw the same platitudes that every that i hear from every institution denigrates male institution that denigrates male accomplishment. sort of accomplishment. as some sort of emissary toxic patriarchy. emissary of toxic patriarchy. meanwhile are actively meanwhile men are actively discriminated against with preferential hiring policies under or under the equalities act or affirmative action. the united states, discriminated states, they're discriminated against in family courts, leading many men growing up leading to many men growing up without certain without father in certain communities is up to 70. it's about nearly 50% of children in the uk grow up between two households, often their households, often without their father very father present. it's not very good men either. and good for young men either. and then on top of all that, when they of they are bottom of the achievement for colleges achievement pile for colleges picked last various jobs picked for last various jobs because of preferential hiring. again, they're told that even if they stick their head above the parapet and complain, well, they're being misogynistic. parapet and complain, well, theit's being misogynistic. parapet and complain, well, theit's shocking isogynistic. so it's not shocking that they're this. but they're frustrated by this. but i say one quick thing. if i will say one quick thing. if i may, and i appreciate everything that paul has said here, but paul of a cohort of new paul is part of a cohort of new inheritors of manosphere inheritors of the manosphere mantle, who say that they want to for men. is like to speak for men. this is like fresh fit and the whatever
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fresh and fit and the whatever podcasts and the the podcasts and the like. the problem is problem with this is, is that it's of weaponizing it's kind of weaponizing male resentment, and it's not teaching them to be responsible husbands and fathers. instead teaching them to be responsible hussayingand fathers. instead teaching them to be responsible hussayingand “should instead teaching them to be responsible hussayingand “should go .tead teaching them to be responsible hussayingand “should go and teaching them to be responsible huss.aingand “should go and teaching them to be responsible huss.a corporate|ould go and teaching them to be responsible huss.a corporate jobd go and teaching them to be responsible huss.a corporate job and and teaching them to be responsible huss.a corporate job and get work a corporate job and get a harem of women out in dubai and intimidate them into being attracted like attracted to you, just like andrew. don't think that's a andrew. i don't think that's a helpful message for many. >> okay, look, firstly, >> okay, okay, look, firstly, i'm go to anna. uh, on i'm going to go to anna. uh, on this and then we'll then this and then we'll and then we'll respond to all we'll let people respond to all of um, so anna, of that obviously. um, so anna, you've what carlos said you've heard what carlos said there. that's that's conner's lived do lived experience, right? do you do conner's do you disagree with conner's lived experience difference here? >> of course i do. only a man could make feminism about him. i mean, it really is nothing to do with men. it's about moving women forward. men should women forward. and men should welcome it. that real men will welcome it. that real men will welcome it. that real men will welcome it. starting in the domestic setting and then moving out into the world, into business, into education, into culture. it should all be a joint thing. so it's about women , but it needs everybody to get on board. so what you've just said is a load of nonsense .
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said is a load of nonsense. >> okay. >> okay. >> all right. pearl i think a lot of people might think, you know what conner's just said about you. that's quite unfair. look, your your views on this. >> well , well, what look, your your views on this. >> well, well, what did he say about me ? that was unfair. about me? that was unfair. >> well, you i think i forgive me. i don't want to paraphrase here, but maybe say that it was a bit of a lack of authenticity or something like that. you know, or maybe kind of pitting men against each other. but i don't know necessarily don't know if that's necessarily true. it? pearl? i mean, you true. is it? pearl? i mean, you seem you seem be, to be seem you seem to be, to be honest with you, pretty genuine and your views, and cast iron in your views, aren't you? >> i mean, i know of the >> i mean, i know a lot of the guys that these shows. these guys that run these shows. these women are coming in their own free will. so i don't really understand how that's like utilising resentment. utilising male resentment. but what i actually wanted to address, why address, more importantly, why should propped up? why address, more importantly, why should we propped up? why address, more importantly, why should we need propped up? why address, more importantly, why should we need to»ropped up? why address, more importantly, why should we need to be�*ped up? why address, more importantly, why should we need to be pushed’ why why do we need to be pushed forward? if you are a competent woman, have woman, you have every opportunity you could opportunity that you could possibly i need possibly have. i don't need feminists push up because feminists to push me up because i'm and i do well on my i'm smart and i do well on my own. know, all i'm hearing own. you know, all i'm hearing from feminists is a bunch of excuses, is bunch of excuses .
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excuses, is a bunch of excuses. i want special privileges and special treatment that i don't deserve. okay right. >> all of you. thank thank you. that was very that was very lovely. we are, we are. we are going to knock it on the head there now. thank you very much. all you. really really really all of you. really really really insightful stuff. so great stuff. look, uh, look, who do you as you agree with? okay. as research that it is a view research finds that it is a view increasingly being held by gen z boys feminism more harm boys has feminism done more harm than good? tonda on the than good? tonda on x says the problem feminism, problem isn't so much feminism, but that white working but more that white working class left behind class boys are being left behind with to support with no legislation to support them. yeah there's a lot them. yeah i think there's a lot of to that. elliot says. of truth to that. elliot says. it depends on the type of feminism you're talking about. early mostly early feminism was mostly positive, but third wave feminism mostly negative and feminism is mostly negative and divisive demonise men. divisive and demonise men. again, a lot of great comments. so far tonight. diana says yes, it has. and i say that as a woman myself, right, okay. to be fair, not a huge amount of shades of grey in the inbox there, but 80% of you think that feminism has done more harm than good. 20% of you say that it good. wow 20% of you say that it has everyone has not. thank you to everyone who part in that
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who took part in that poll coming after greta thunberg coming up after greta thunberg faced trial today at a british court, political firebrand ann widdecombe some of her widdecombe offers some of her wisdom young climate wisdom to the young climate activists. but next forced to quit the job he loves after death threats from islamist extremists and an arson attack, tory mp mike freer is live in the studio to explain his shock resignation . this is patrick resignation. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on
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isabel monday to thursdays from six till 930.
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>> this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news now . political firebrand ann now. political firebrand ann widdecombe is waiting in the wings. lots to talk about with her, but first, veterans minister mike freer announced last night that he will be standing down from his role as mp for finchley and golders green after serving the for community more than 30 years, telling gb news earlier today that an arson attack targeting his constituency office was the final straw. he has previously received death threats after expressing pro—israel views, largely in line with his constituency's sizeable jewish community, and this comes two years after the murder of sir david amess by jihadist ali harbi ali, who might actually also unwittingly had something to do with it as well. jo cox was also killed in recent years, while simply doing her job. i'm while simply doing herjob. i'm very pleased to say that mike freer joins me now. very pleased to say that mike freerjoins me now. mike, thank you very much for coming. thank you very much for coming. thank you for inviting me. firstly, how are you? it's been a busy
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day and it's been a quite traumatic experience . traumatic experience. >> it's it's a real wrench to >> it's a it's a real wrench to walk away from a job that you love, but also a constituency that you've become. you know, i lived there, it's my home and i regard many of my constituents as friends . and, um, it is an as friends. and, um, it is an amazing, amazing place. and to walk away from that is really quite it's quite emotional. um, renee to think this was a job i loved and but unfortunately , i loved and but unfortunately, i can't do it anymore. >> can you talk me through the process because you mentioned about the alleged arson attack, etc. being the final straw, but this has been a really quite vile journey to get to this point. so what kind threats point. so what kind of threats have what's that look like? >> well, like every mp, i mean, day in, day out, you get abusive emails, you get low level stuff that whether we should accept it, but we it's graffiti, it, but we do. it's graffiti, you know, um, things like, you know, it's um, things like, you know, it's um, things like, you i've in the past, you know, i've had in the past, i've a mock molotov cocktail i've had a mock molotov cocktail left on the door, meaning left on the office door, meaning we to evacuate the whole we had to evacuate the whole building . i've and out building. i've come out and out of house and found a, you
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of my house and found a, you know, a note on my car . of my house and found a, you know, a note on my car. um, where i live is common knowledge, but what i drive is less so. and there's a few weeks after john mann had had the afterjohn mann had had the wheel nuts and his car tampered with. that kind of makes with. so that all kind of makes you bit. you know, what on you a bit. you know, what on earth's but i've had earth's going on. but i've had two run ins with the organisation muslims organisation that was muslims against crusades people like against crusades and people like anjum behind anjum chowdhury, who was behind that been that organisation in, um, been to prison. online it said i to prison. but online it said i used to do surgery in mosques , used to do surgery in mosques, surgery, mosques, so i wanted to go out and see people and online there's a picture of me saying, you're not welcome in our our mosque. like stephen timms. be a pointed reminder. so it's not very subtle. well, for just our viewers and listeners, you might not timms, not remember that stephen timms, of stabbed by a of course, was stabbed by a woman who'd been radicalised. um, heavens he survived. um, thank heavens he survived. so a very unsubtle saying, so he's a very unsubtle saying, we're coming for you as well. and you, they did. they came to the mosque. they broke into the surgery. um, pushed surgery. they, um, pushed someone out of the way, and they basically then started abusing me. and i was moved into the
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office for my safety the office for my safety until the police they came police could arrive. they came back the next surgery. back at the next surgery. luckily police were there, luckily the police were there, but demonstrating but were demonstrating an abusive was the abusive outside. so that was the start it . and you kind of as start of it. and you kind of as mps, kind of shrug it off. mps, we kind of shrug it off. it's the course. it it's par for the course. it shouldn't be. and then the shouldn't be. and then just the routine stuff. and then we had ali harbi ali, when he went ali harbi ali, who when he went on to kill david, was then on sadly to kill david, was then obviously arrested and they went the police were thorough, went through phones and found through his phones and found he'd several recces on he'd done several recces on finchley, evidence , finchley, and in his evidence, terrifying. the time , terrifying. surely at the time, of course, i was no idea. but of course. and when i was told it wasn't that he'd done recces, but actually come to but actually he'd come to finchley and he told the police he with the intention he was armed with the intention to it's by a to harm and it's only by a stroke of that on that stroke of luck that on that thursday night, boris often joke, saved my life . not joke, boris saved my life. not many say that. yeah many people can say that. yeah um. it moved me from the whips office to so instead of office to export. so instead of being in finchley, i came into westminster. otherwise i'd have beenin westminster. otherwise i'd have been in my office that friday. and that was really when the rot set in. >> do we take now ? it's
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>> do we take now? it's important to say that there was this arson attack at your office. don't yet know the office. we don't yet know the root cause behind that. and so i don't really want to speculate there because there's also enough to go out. right. so when it to the attacks that it comes to the attacks that you've you've faced, do we take islamist threats seriously enough, do you think? >> well, i don't think it's just, um, it's threats. i don't want to tar a whole community because my local mosque, my nonh because my local mosque, my north finchley mosque, were amazing. they were horrified by what had happened. and that's not a reflection on my local community, but we do have a problem where people and i think my personal view is this is where social media has a lot to blame because people get their news from social media, and it's kind of unfiltered. and if it's on social media, it must be true. but the social media companies really don't do enough to take harmful content off. if or you complain about or when you complain about something that's on there, basically, either you don't get an answer to your complaint or
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nothing happens. and so i think there's two parts. one is social media with content that allows people to be if like indoctrinated and i think and beyond that, slightly broader problem we have is , is, you problem we have is, is, you know, we do need to do far more to ensure that people in the uk side own up to our british values . you know, i'm a gay man. values. you know, i'm a gay man. that's not a that was one of the reasons why i'm muslim. games, crusades also came after me as being pro—israel and gay in a mosque that's a whole different story. but it's like, i don't need like me . i don't need you to like me. i don't need you to like me. i don't need accept but i do need you to accept me. but i do need you to accept me. but i do need to understand that this is britain and these are our values. you don't like values. and if you don't like it, well, that's going to be your problem. expect your problem. i don't expect you to me. um, one thing to come after me. um, one thing i expecting was maybe rishi i was expecting was maybe rishi sunak to a bit more vocal sunak to be a bit more vocal about this. >> are you a bit disappointed that he hasn't made more of a statement, do you think? >> um, i think it's difficult for, um, for rishi. i've spoken to him. in fact, i've just, um,
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we had an event for the parliamentary party, and to be fair , absolutely , um, fair, he was absolutely, um, effusive about , uh, how this fair, he was absolutely, um, effusive about, uh, how this is not acceptable . but equally , um, not acceptable. but equally, um, for him, this is obviously a very personal decision . he very personal decision. he understands the motivation for my decision. and you know, to be fair to him, he's giving me lots of support, but also giving me a lot of space for me to handle it the way i want to handle it. so i wouldn't criticise the prime minister for that. >> okay. all right. well, we >> okay. all right. and well, we do a look at this arson do have a look at this arson attack that took place at your, um, constituency office. again, we don't know the motives behind that at the moment or certainly not publicly. um, but can you just talk me through what happenedin just talk me through what happened in terms of what that was for you? was like for you? >> well, i don't think i you know, appreciate that . you know, i appreciate that. you know, i appreciate that. you know, there's a court going know, there's a court case going on, individuals have on, uh, two individuals have been in prison, on, uh, two individuals have be
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more than that. the police and the fire brigade were exemplary in terms of responding. but what he's for me. he's he's done is it for me. he's like , you know, the alarm goes like, you know, the alarm goes off. christmas eve. oh, here off. um, christmas eve. oh, here we another false alarm. i we go. another false alarm. i won't to the office on my own won't go to the office on my own at night. so, angela, my husband came and then we pull came with me, and then we pull up and see the whole area cordoned off and fire engines, and just stand watch and you just stand and watch the, know, of your the, you know, the back of your office burning with a massive police and fire presence. and then you see the damage afterwards. and you think , why afterwards. and you think, why does someone do this? you know , does someone do this? you know, is it, is it just random? is it because and you can't because of me? and you can't divorce it what's gone divorce it from what's gone before? so i might be jumping to conclusions. we'll see what the court from point court trial. but from my point of a pattern of of view, it's a pattern of behaviour. now and my behaviour. now and angela, my husband, rightly said husband, is quite rightly said this enough. this has got to stop. >> so did it this decision, was it driven a bit by your husband as well? i mean , because it must as well? i mean, because it must have. also, i did want to ask you this actually, which is that, you know, this must have had a huge impact. it would on
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anyone close to you. you know, if fiance, for if it was my fiance, for example, anything like that. example, or anything like that. absolutely. be going out of absolutely. i'd be going out of my know? so what was my mind, you know? so what was that home? if you that like in the home? if you don't me asking, it's don't mind me asking, it's difficult because obviously, you know, as mps, we kind of shrug it off a bit. >> know, or wrongly, >> you know, rightly or wrongly, but we forget the impact, not just our partners, just actually on our partners, but staff who have but also on our staff who have to with it a day to day to deal with it on a day to day basis. you know, they're the ones answer the phone and ones who answer the phone and open door. but, you know, open the door. but, you know, when come home and know when you come home and you know your spouse and partner, um, is worried safety, you worried about your safety, you know, the ali habib know, and after the ali habib ali incident , know, and after the ali habib ali incident, um, angela doesn't let me walk in the streets to the tube station. it wants to drive me to the tube. if he even likes me on the tube, i tend to drive to work now, but if am drive to work now, but if i am on the tube he wants to pick me up. you know, it's like, well, you know, what are doing you know, what are you doing today? um, wanted know, today? um, wanted to know, you know. you know. are you inside? are you outside? and also, when i do, like many mps do what's called supermarket know, like many mps do what's called sup
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people to come and talk to you. um, know, he'll see me in um, you know, he'll see me in a stab vest. and so, yeah, it's been tough on him. >> just on that. just one more with if that's all right. with you, if that's all right. which is the stamp vest point the calls for more more security for mps and what that would look like in practice. i don't know, a personal bodyguard for every mp or whatever. where are you on that ? because you know, this is that? because you know, this is this something to consider this is something to consider now, people? now, isn't it, for people? >> um, mean, i was lucky is >> um, i mean, i was lucky is probably wrong but, probably the wrong word, but, you the number of you know, after the number of incidents, office incidents, my office is a fortress . it's my home after fortress. so it's my home after the big incident with the guy that kill david, my that went on to kill david, my house was kind of ripped apart. but that's fine. but actually, where vulnerable where are you? more vulnerable is travelling to is when you're travelling to the, know, to the office. the, you know, to the office. when about doing when you're out and about doing your school visits, doing your supermarket searches. that's where you're more vulnerable when you're doing it, just when you're just doing it, just doing shopping . so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine shopping . so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine , shopping . so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine , but;hopping . so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine , but it)pping . so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine , but it doesn't so security when you're just doing it, just dcfine , but it doesn't solve curity is fine, but it doesn't solve the root cause . so just wrapping the root cause. so just wrapping us in, you know, a ring of steel , it's just a symptom . what?
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, it's just a symptom. what? it's what is causing people to feel that mps are are, you know, it's open season on mps. feel that mps are are, you know, it's open season on mps . that's it's open season on mps. that's the issue that needs to be. i just think it's absolutely desperate state of affairs. >> if we've got good people like yourself who feel as though they can't serve a community anymore, then something has gone in incredibly, incredibly wrong. and very fearful. but thank and i'm very fearful. but thank you very much for coming. >> for inviting me. >> thank you for inviting me. >> thank you for inviting me. >> and look after yourself. obviously and hopefully we'll stay well going stay in touch as well going forward. that's mike ferrier there. gosh. look there. mp oh gosh. well look coming have you seen this coming up. have you seen this man year abdul azadi has man. 35 year old abdul azadi has been by police as the been named by police as the alleged chemical attacker of a mother and her two children. he's believed to be from, or at least living in the newcastle area. have very latest area. i'll have the very latest with former met police with a former met police officer, brennan , and as officer, norman brennan, and as well an acid attack survivor to discuss what their life was like following that incident . but following that incident. but next, greta thunberg was on trial british courtroom trial in a british courtroom today, widdecombe tells the today, and widdecombe tells the climate sort her act climate activist to sort her act out. and will have a huge out. and we will have a huge pharma kicking off
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pharma protest kicking off outside eu parliament. bring outside the eu parliament. bring to as well patrick christys to you as well patrick christys tonight we're only on
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gb news. it's patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news. coming up, all of the very latest on that horrific alkaline attack in clapham, london last night, including in the last few moments, some startling new details about the alleged attacker . i reveal details about the alleged attacker. i reveal this details about the alleged attacker . i reveal this to you attacker. i reveal this to you shortly. it just keeps getting worse. but first, great thunberg and a gang of well, whatever you want to call them really have rocked up to a london court today after they were arrested in october last year while protesting outside a hotel full of oil and gas, industry leaders , accused of , tom burke stands accused of failing comply with an order failing to comply with an order from the police to move their protest to designated protest to a designated area. you also notice there the you will also notice there the kind of scarves that they're wearing. nice, isn't it? it comes after she was fined by a swedish court last year for disobeying police orders in a
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similar she similar demonstration, she argued that the protest was a form of self—defence due to the existential climate crisis, and vowed continue to, even if it vowed to continue to, even if it meant more sentences. i'm joined now by former conservative minister whittaker minister and whittaker man, thank very much. please, can thank you very much. please, can you just maybe educate greta thunberg a little bit? what would some of amsterdam's words of wisdom be? well first of all, i think she should grow up. >> i mean, this nonsense started when she was a silly little schoolgirl who believed that she should tell world leaders what to do, and unbelievab only the world leaders are actually, you know, gave her encouragement, which was a act of complete folly. so now she's she thinks she's above being told by a policeman what to do. now, any citizen who is asked by a policeman to move should move. and because the policeman is the representative of law and order and greta thunberg and co um are representing disorder. yeah. and what's it all about ? what's it what's it all about? what's it
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all about? it's all about the stupid pursuit towards net zero. why isn't she in china? why isn't she demonstrating in china , which is belting 25% of the world's carbon emissions into the atmosphere? why isn't she demonstrating in india? why is she demonstrating here where we contribute 1% toward the world's carbon emissions? and of course, she knows that she will be very, very well treated. well apparently she's smirking in the courtroom. >> they're not taking it seriously. you can just see the kind of great unwashed that she turns up with, with that palestinian scarf thing going on as well. why does anyone listen to her? and seriously , why are to her? and seriously, why are we all paying more to money appease thunberg ? appease greta thunberg? >> well, we shouldn't be. we should have told her to get back to a schoolbooks a long time ago, and she's past that stage now, but she hasn't, uh, she hasn't matured. she's just acting like a silly child . i acting like a silly child. i mean, most people, when they're in do not smirk and mess in court, do not smirk and mess about. in court, do not smirk and mess about . and as rightly say ,
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about. and as you rightly say, should we lock her up, anne? >> we her up ? >> should we lock her up? >> should we lock her up? >> oh, i think it might be quite a shock for her, but the law must take its own course. >> um, let's let's just whizz you over now, uh, to the continent. anne, if that's all right. because not content with besieging paris, european farmers have converged on the eu's headquarters. so is brussels today . they're brussels today. they're blockading roads, they're burning tires . i've often burning tires. i've often thought it, but now i can actually say it. brussels is revolting. the demonstrators are the latest in a week of protests across europe over increased environmental regulations. the french government are the first to cave in. look anne, what do you make of when you see you make of it? when you see these people now rising up against the beloved eu ? against the beloved eu? >> well, first of all, let me say that don't agree with the say that i don't agree with the sorts demonstrations they've sorts of demonstrations they've been blame been mounting, but i don't blame them mounting , been mounting, but i don't blame them mounting, uh, a them for mounting, uh, a different sort of demonstration because it is quite true that there oppressed by a lot of legislation that is making it very, very difficult for french
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farmers. and i would just say to them, well, there's an answer to this. how about voting frexit ? this. how about voting frexit? >> um , do you think you will end >> um, do you think you will end up seeing the disintegration of the european union? then >> uh, eventually ? i don't think >> uh, eventually? i don't think it's going to happen tomorrow morning. i think there's going to be a lot more. but, uh , this to be a lot more. but, uh, this is very good straw the is a very good straw in the wind. just our own discontent wind. just as our own discontent was straw wind. but it was a straw in the wind. but it will take time and a load of media outlets. >> they just swerve it down there because we can't possibly have in the beloved have riots in the beloved european union at. >> we, uh, the french >> oh, well, we, uh, the french have always been prone to riot. if they felt like that, they've always been to demonstrate always been prone to demonstrate against you against the brits. do you remember burning remember when they were burning animals and, you know, so animals? uh, and, you know, so i mean, that is that is in the french nature. that's, that's how they demonstrate. but yes, i mean, i'm quite i'm not pleased to see, as i say, the nature of the demonstration, but i'm quite pleased to see them making their views loudly known , views very, very loudly known, uh, eu itself , so they uh, to the eu itself, so they can be ignored by a load of
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people they never even voted for. >> but thank you very, very much. always a pleasure. you take care. that's all wonderful. and whitaker there. now look, coming up . we are giving in two coming up. we are giving in two extremists. i'm absolutely fuming about everything that's taking place in this country at the moment . konstantin kissin the moment. konstantin kissin speaks out after his run in with a pro—palestine rabble rouser on bbc question time. but next, gb news understands that the alleged chemical attacker currently on the run is a former asylum seeker who had his appeal for asylum, reject voted twice. i also have some absolutely startling revelations for you about this guy. more and more is coming out at previous criminal history as well, and you will not believe how he got into britain . got all the very latest britain. got all the very latest on that story gripping the nation. it's patrick christys tonight . we are only on gb news tonight. we are only on gb news and after that as well, and we'll be joined by a very brave survivor of an acid attack as, of course, in the line of what happened last night, allegedly
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in clapham. keep your gb news >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on gbh . news. weather on gbh. news. >> good evening, i'm alex burkill. here's your latest gb news, weather forecast through the end of the week it is going to be largely cloudy, mild but also windy because we have a tight pressure gradient across the uk. an area of high pressure to the south of us, leading to a westerly flow, and that westerly flow will push the heavy rain that we saw across much of scotland through today towards the overnight and we are the east. overnight and we are going to drag in increasing amounts of cloud from west . amounts of cloud from the west. so some clearer skies towards the southeast to start the night means start a little means it may start a little chilly. a touch but as chilly. a touch of frost, but as the rolls in, we going the cloud rolls in, we are going to our temperatures lifting. to see our temperatures lifting. so by the time many of us wake up tomorrow, it's going to be quite mild some places quite a mild start. some places already in double figures. otherwise, go through otherwise, as we go through friday and a cloudier friday and it's a much cloudier day than for most of us, day than today for most of us, outbreaks the outbreaks of rain where the
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cloud thick enough, cloud is thick enough, particularly towards west, particularly towards the west, perhaps more perhaps something a bit more persistent parts of persistent across parts of scotland into northern ireland for east, this is for a time in the east, this is where we have the greatest chance of some brighter skies where we have the greatest charwhere some brighter skies where we have the greatest charwhere it'se brighter skies where we have the greatest charwhere it's going1ter skies and where it's going to be mildest highs of around 14 or 15 celsius, but you do need to factor in some strong winds. risk in spots risk of gales in exposed spots and ground. two on and around higher ground. two on saturday it's going to be a cloudier, wetter picture across southern areas. staying mild here, a bit chillier further north though, albeit with some sunny skies and blustery showers , could bring sleet or snow , could bring some sleet or snow over higher ground of over the higher ground of scotland into sunday. and i think the picture will think the mild picture will become widespread again, become more widespread again, though quite though it is looking quite cloudy of rain. cloudy with outbreaks of rain. two by looks like things are heating up . heating up. >> boxt boilers sponsor of weather on gb news is
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i >> -- >> it's 10 pm. emm >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . an asylum christys tonight. an asylum seeker is still on the run after an alleged chemical attack. i talked to a top cop about the manhunt . and this brave man , manhunt. and this brave man, andreas. christoforos was suddenly doused in acid in a horrific case of mistaken identity . he tells us horrific case of mistaken identity. he tells us his horrific case of mistaken identity . he tells us his story. identity. he tells us his story. thank you very much for coming in. also on the way tonight. remember this. you are saying shame on you for talking up britain. >> and that is exactly the problem we're talking about. okay, this is one of the best places to live in the world. >> britain's most astute commentator, konstantin kissin, is live in the studio. plus a 13 year old girl was saved from an arranged marriage to her cousin. i've got tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you today. and here to smash through all of this is star columnist at the telegraph, allison pearson. lord shaun bailey and labour mouthpiece matthew laza and. hey, look, just when you think
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you've seen the last of this pair on netflix, pleasure to meet you, your majesty . well, meet you, your majesty. well, big harry and meghan, news is they're going to be a sequel. get ready britain here we go. i can reveal that gb news understands that the individual is believed to be responsible for the alleged chemical attack. yesterday in clapham came to britain in the back of a lorry and failed the asylum twice. chemical attack. manhunt. that's . next. >> and the top story tonight a police manhunt is ongoing tonight after it was revealed the suspect in last night's london chemical attack was convicted of sexual offences in
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2018. going on to be granted uk asylum in 2021. it's understood abdul azadi failed twice in previous asylum applications but was eventually successful on his third attempt, gb news also understands he got into the uk illegally by hiding in a lorry in 2016. the suspect, as i said, is still on the run tonight after injuring a mother and her child with a corrosive substance once then fleeing the scene immediately after the attack. police have released this new image of azad's last known sighting, showing he has a significant injury himself on the right side of his face. the 35 year old is believed to be from the newcastle area and police are appealing to the public, particularly people in the north—east, to report any sightings to local police. meanwhile the number of migrants crossing the english channel is up 13% compared with this time last year. more than 1300 people arrived in small boats last
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month. that's the highest january total since records beganin january total since records began in 2018, and compares with the 1100 migrants recorded arriving in january last month, just yesterday, 278 people made the journey in six small boats . the journey in six small boats. a couple is expected to stand trial over the alleged arson attack on justice minister mike frear's constituency office in london. the pair denied the charges. the tory mp for finchley and golders green described the incident as the final straw that made him quit politics after receiving a series of death threats. downing street today called the vitriolic hatred he's faced as an attack on british democracy . an attack on british democracy. the former subpostmaster , who's the former subpostmaster, who's led the campaign for justice in the post office scandal, has rejected the government's compensation offer . alan bates, compensation offer. alan bates, whose two decade fight inspired the itv drama mr. bates versus the itv drama mr. bates versus the post office, says the offer was offensive and cruel. he told
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the daily telegraph the offer was only a sixth of what he'd requested and calling it a terrible way to treat human beings . now it's been revealed beings. now it's been revealed tonight the formula one star lewis hamilton , is leaving lewis hamilton, is leaving mercedes after 11 years and joining motor racing team rivals ferrari. the 39 year old will drive for ferrari starting in the 2025 season. it's understood he's using a break clause in his £100 million contract with mercedes . to make the move, mercedes. to make the move, mercedes. to make the move, mercedes issued a statement confirming hamilton's early exit from contract. he won six of his world titles with the mercedes team and said he's proud of what he and the teams achieved after 11 amazing years together for. and you'll be pleased to hear the escaped japanese macaque from the highland wildlife park in scotland has been safely captured today. the elusive monkey named honshu well, he's japanese , was discovered in a japanese, was discovered in a local garden this morning . and local garden this morning. and guess what? eating from a bird
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feeder park officials responded to a call from a local deploying keepers and a drone team to tranquillise him first, and then take him back to the zoo. he's now there undergoing health checks by keepers for the latest news stories, do sign up to gb news alerts. scanning the qr code on the screen right now . code on the screen right now. >> let's get more now on last night's shocking chemical attack in south london. so police have launched a dramatic manhunt for 35 year old abdul azadi . 35 year old abdul azadi. officers have warned the public not to approach azad, who is below , said to be residing in below, said to be residing in the newcastle area , and said the newcastle area, and said that he could have made his way back to the north—east in the past few hours, the metropolitan police have released an image that show damage to the right side of face. i'd also like side of his face. i'd also like to warn you that viewers to warn you that some viewers may that image distressing, may find that image distressing, but met's this is the may find that image distressing, but confirmed this is the may find that image distressing, but confirmed sightings the may find that image distressing, but confirmed sighting of1e may find that image distressing, but confirmed sighting of azad last confirmed sighting of azad in a tesco supermarket on
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caledon road in london. at 848 last night. the force say that if you see him, call 999 immediately and not approach immediately and do not approach him circumstances. him under any circumstances. well, it's that he's well, it's emerged that he's come to the uk illegally in the back a lorry in 2016. he'd back of a lorry in 2016. he'd been living in a rented property in newcastle , where a charity in newcastle, where a charity action foundation, housing migrants to help them get on their feet. the chief executive, duncan macaulay, has spoken out. he said we'd like to first of all, express our sympathy to the people involved in this shocking incident. we can confirm that abdul in abdul azad was supported in rented through our rented property through our action letting project for refugees, who've granted refugees, who've been granted leave the uk leave to remain in the uk between dates of april 29th between the dates of april 29th and 2022. march, we and 2022. in march, we understand that he then moved to other homeless accommodation in newcastle . what i'm going to do newcastle. what i'm going to do first i just want to get first is i just want to get a bit of info on the police operation, what it will be looking like. on earth is looking like. how on earth is this still missing? joining this guy still missing? joining me now expert analysis is me now for expert analysis is former london cop. it's former top london cop. it's norman thank former top london cop. it's nor|very thank former top london cop. it's nor|very much. thank former top london cop. it's nor|very much. okay, thank former top london cop. it's nor|very much. okay, so thank former top london cop. it's nor|very much. okay, so there nk you very much. okay, so there was push back initially
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was a big push back initially about why aren't we naming this guy that happened? okay. so we know he's out now. know that he's out there now. what police operation is what kind of police operation is going be place? a lot going to be taking place? a lot of thinking, how can of people are thinking, how can he still missing? he still be missing? >> well, he's britain's most wanted. >> um, tonight there isn't anybody sought anybody that's being sought more than individual that, uh, than this individual that, uh, may well have been involved in this horrific and evil crime . this horrific and evil crime. um, uh, the police would have obviously looked at his phone, looked at friends where he lives. >> they would have, uh, scanned out photograph and details out his photograph and details of this individual to every airport, every port, every railway station, coach station and any area where he has friends or associates . friends or associates. >> so really, britain has been flooded. >> uh, so this particular individual probably won't be able to hide for much longer. i'm personally expecting a fairly prompt arrest because he's lost. he's running now. he's out of ideas. >> he's injured. >> he's injured. >> uh, clearly in a lot of pain. so he can't go to hospital or can't go to a doctors. he can't self—treat himself. >> uh, i believe it's a matter
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of time, but people who commit horrendous crimes , uh, and they horrendous crimes, uh, and they run away pretty much like the prison escapee we had everybody looking for that individual for wandsworth . wandsworth. >> um, but we managed to track him down, uh, hunt him down to a certain particular area and then we went in and he was arrested. >> i'm sure very much the same will happen in this case, sir patrick. >> and presumably norman. he's not walking around with a load of money in his pocket by the sounds of things which might end up mean that he's restricted in terms movements as well. terms of his movements as well. so have wait and see so we'll have to wait and see for that. norman in your capacity a police officer, capacity as a police officer, how kind how commonplace were these kind of corrosive of attacks with corrosive substances and presumably from a police perspective police officer's perspective as well? these well? if you're attending these scenes, you know, it's incredibly for as incredibly dangerous for you as well as the victims. >> it's not as high as some may think. >> maybe is. >> or maybe it is. >> or maybe it is. >> it came to peak around >> it came to a peak around about there were about 2017, when there were about 2017, when there were about 941 attacks. >> yes, there . >> yes, there. >> yes, there. >> horrific. um, they really are because they maim people. >> uh, often you have to have
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numerous operations. >> um, last year , uh, it's begun >> um, last year, uh, it's begun to pick up. >> it went up nationally by 69, 45% in london. >> and until recently predominantly believe it or not, it was males that were predominantly victims. >> well , predominantly victims. >> well, women have just overtaken it now . overtaken it now. >> in the past year there was um, 710 such attacks , 339 um, 710 such attacks, 339 against women, 317 against men . against women, 317 against men. and it's quite ironic that the most horrific ike acid attack area in britain is where this individual has come from. it's northumbria where there were 183 last year. london 163 and merseyside 116. now every attack , excuse me normally gang wise patrick it is male against male. when you've crossed them they want to get revenge . when it's a want to get revenge. when it's a particular woman , it's. if particular woman, it's. if i can't have you , nobody can have
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can't have you, nobody can have you. and that's why they probably carry out that . and it probably carry out that. and it leaves a scar behind that you will always have to look at. your family will see. and i deal predominantly with homicide , gun predominantly with homicide, gun and knife crime and acids attack. i would sort of rank as second to murder norman, thank you very much for coming on, sharing your expertise on what this police operation will look like tonight. >> you're right. the most >> you're right. it's the most wanted man in britain. that's norman former top wanted man in britain. that's nornthank former top wanted man in britain. that's nornthank you former top wanted man in britain. that's nornthank you much.�*ner top wanted man in britain. that's nornthank you much. now,)p cop. thank you very much. now, my next guest, andreas. christoforos he was christoforos says that he was rather shot than rather have been shot than suffer 60 agonising operations after an attack that left him severely scarred and blind in one eye. mr christoforos, who runs a property development and events business as well, was attacked in 2014 when a man who travelled 300 miles to carry out a revenge assault targeted the wrong house. i'm very pleased to say he joins me now. look, say that he joins me now. look, thank very, very i do thank you very, very much. i do want to draw a quite clear distinction, i think, between obviously are obviously the events that are going this, you going on now with this, you
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know, asylum seeker on the run, etc. what happened you? but etc. what happened to you? but how you feel at the moment how do you feel at the moment when you see acid attacks or corrosive substance attacks that are taking because you've are taking place because you've had experience , right? >> really difficult for me >> it's really difficult for me to, um , read some of these stories. >> it's, you know, knowing what that lady is about to go through the journey. >> she's now has to take on it. >> she's now has to take on it. >> there's only a handful of people in the country who understands the pain that she's going to be going through. >> it's very hard for anybody who hasn't been in that situation to get their head around it. >> could me a little >> could you tell me a little bit if it's okay about exactly what happened you and the what happened to you and the journey that been on journey that you've been on since? >> t y 2014, on since? >> 2014, on december 2014, >> so in 2014, on december 2014, i from home at the i was working from home at the time, was running time, i was running running several businesses, um, from home, cornwall just home, living in cornwall just before christmas. home, living in cornwall just befwe christmas. home, living in cornwall just befwe have mas. home, living in cornwall just befwe have couriers to and >> we have couriers come to and from house quite regularly. from the house quite regularly. um, had a on the front um, i had a knock on the front doon um, i had a knock on the front door. went and opened it and door. i went and opened it and i would anybody instantly would to anybody and instantly received about a pint received a pint of about a pint of sulphuric acid to my face whilst my attacker, david phillips, said, this is for you,
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mate. the way he was stood about two foot down. um, and he threw it in an upward motion. so it came, splashed on my left hand side, more so from the way i opened the door. >> it hit the ceiling above me and rained acid down, and i had dropped marks all down my back. um, see, fully, fully um, as you can see, fully, fully full facial scarring. scarring to scarring on my arms to my torso. scarring on my arms and scarring to back . i lost and scarring to my back. i lost my in my left eye. and for my sight in my left eye. and for a time i was very limited. sight to my right, but thankfully to a lot of operations, i've got my sight back. back to quite a good standard on that. i um, i knew instantly it was acid when it hit me. i don't know, i don't know how, but i knew my t shirt disintegrated. it just rolled away. i think that was the real telltale sign . i'd worked around telltale sign. i'd worked around corrosive substances a lot in the hospitality industry, and i think that as a lot think that as well. a lot swimming pool, chemicals, you know, aware of in the know, being very aware of in the past . and knew there and then past. and i knew there and then that i had just been attacked with acid. my wife had been up
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all night with my young, my young son at time. so she young son at the time. so she was bed out of harm's way. was in bed out of harm's way. um, yelled up to her, call um, and i yelled up to her, call 909. someone had thrown acid in my obviously she was my face. obviously she was bewildered going on. bewildered to what was going on. um, ran through my ran um, and i ran through my ran through the house, got to the kitchen, took off the clothing that i was covered in that i that i was covered in acid dousing myself acid and started dousing myself with water as could , with as much water as i could, not knowing that was the right thing the time, it thing to do at the time, it seemed logical. um, if i'd known what i know i would have what i know now, i would have gone the shower and gone and got in the shower and stayed there until the paramedics. arrived? paramedics. paramedics arrived? >> and look, it must >> oh, okay. and look, it must have been, i imagine, just agony i >> -- >> it's an inexplicable pain . >> it's an inexplicable pain. i've been asked to put it into words. so many times. it's so difficult. it's not like being burned with fire. your my burned with fire. your skin, my skin , it swelled up very quickly skin, it swelled up very quickly . um, but it felt dead. >> it felt touched. >> it felt touched. >> like it just didn't feel like my face anymore. um, but it was agonising pain. absolutely agonising pain. absolutely agonising pain. >> and since then, you've had around 60 operations. is that right ? um, i stopped counting. right? um, i stopped counting. >> right a long time ago. um,
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yes. the nhs saved my life. they really did. um mark steyn. i got taken to on the first night. i got taken to hospital, our local hospital, and they sat down with my wife and my mum and said, look, we don't think he's going to make it. you've got to prepare for the worst. and this is why i always say i'd rather be shot or stabbed. puts me in the of survival. the same category of survival. but the recovery from being shot or recovery from being or the recovery from being stabbed in the ocean stabbed is a drop in the ocean compared have to compared to what you have to recover from. when you full recover from. when you have full facial or even less facial scarring or even less than that from an acid attack. facial scarring or even less than they from an acid attack. facial scarring or even less than they eventually id attack. facial scarring or even less than they eventually got ttack. facial scarring or even less than they eventually got mek. um, they eventually got me stable about hours. uh, stable after about 24 hours. uh, it them that long to get me it took them that long to get me stable to move by plane up stable to move me by by plane up to burns unit. up. up to morrisons burns unit. up. up in swansea. whereas in an induced for the first five induced coma for the first five days made icu for well days and i made an icu for well over a month and we heard that quite a lot of stats norm brennan. >> i'm pretty sure you're across some of the as well. it some of the details as well. it does appear as though acid attacks are becoming more frequent maybe than they were. what do you put that down to? i
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mean, or what can we do to stop it? because it seems i would imagine it's quite an easy thing to get hold of these kind of corrosive substances, you know , corrosive substances, you know, it's when i got attacked in 2014 that, for me, seemed like the start of a crime wave. >> from then, things just escalated quite, quite badly . escalated quite, quite badly. um, i've campaigned for years for, for tougher sentence. so my, my attacker, david phillips, he was originally sentenced to life with minimum of eight life with a minimum of eight years. we appealed to sentence we i think the attorney general had close to 70 appeals all of the same nature, that eight years isn't long enough. no, we got told that the judge acted fairly in line with other case law. is no appeal to be granted. unbeknown to us, at the same time, he had appealed the life aspect of his sentence and his appeal got granted. so he went up to the to the court of appeal myself and the senior police officers from devon and cornwall police went up. we were the only people in the room that day
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along with the three judges and they deemed him not to be a danger to society and lifted life sentence, um, of life from his sentence, um, of which sentence, which lightning a sentence, 16 years was only to years of which he was only to serve eight. in prison he only actually spent five and a half serve eight. in prison he only actuaiin spent five and a half serve eight. in prison he only actuaiin prisonfive and a half serve eight. in prison he only actuaiin prison befored a half serve eight. in prison he only actuaiin prison before he half serve eight. in prison he only actuaiin prison before he gotf years in prison before he got moved to an open prison near his family. um, i've campaigned for years. i've called for tougher sentences, still stand by sentences, and i still stand by that as the primary deterrent for wants to cross for anybody who wants to cross that anybody to that line. anybody who wants to use corrosive substance as a use a corrosive substance as a weapon should be facing life with a minimum tum of 20 years. yeah. you know the deterrent. it works. there many countries works. there is many countries in this world who base their legal system on the legal legal system on the uk legal system, and they have even managed to take steps to create more stricter laws with acid crime. the uk government have yet to do so. um, so the tougher sentences i would like to see decanting legislation where it becomes as um, an offence to remove acid and put it in an unmarked bottle. yeah >> because what are you planning on doing with that? there's no
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reason for, for that. >> you know, you talk >> and it's, you know, you talk to people. it seems very simple. and the two strike policy, if you're in you're caught carrying acid in boston, in london once, that's okay. twice you face jail okay. twice you can face jail time. why is that? as twice time. why why is that? as twice thing. um, and ultimately better understanding from the judges. i feel let down by the justice system. i feel let down by those three judges who deemed my attacker not to be a dangerous man. and i don't think that that day they understood the severity of the injuries. i don't think they realised that in ten years time, i would still be this. i'd still be having regular surgery. i'd still be having regular hospital appointments. i've been backed up by two great charities, the katie piper foundation and face forward in la, have picked up the la, who have picked up the pieces from then on. >> now, can i just ask you, i'm going to get shouted out here because i know i'm aware that i'm a little bit over time, but i'm a little bit over time, but i think this is really important. actually there is believed to be a woman and we understand a child that have sadly latest, i think is
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sadly got the latest, i think is life changing they life changing injuries. they said. wondering if said. i was just wondering if you just give a little you could just give a little message to them , you. message to them, you. >> it's tough. everybody handles their situation differently and i would never have expected me to do come through it the way i have. um, a big part of surviving, though, for me was normality finding, chiselling out those moments of just watching trashy tv with my wife in an icu just, you know, those moments to remind you that there's still a life there, and then you build back up on those, and you keep building and you keep building. >> thank you very, very much for coming and speaking so openly coming in and speaking so openly and about that . it is and honestly about that. it is seriously much appreciated . so seriously much appreciated. so thank very much. take thank you very much. you take care all right. gosh, look, care all right. um, gosh, look, i've got a lot more coming your way over the course of this show. i'm going to be doing all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages keep a pages today, so we'll keep you a little bit ahead of the curve when it comes to being top of when it comes to being on top of tomorrow's news. i'm also going tomorrow's news. i'm also going to konstantin to be speaking to konstantin kissin, most
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kissin, one of britain's most forthright political commentators, was commentators, as he was on question well. question time recently as well. but time now for the great but it is time now for the great british giveaway. you could win £18,000 free tax, free cash £18,000 cash free tax, free cash even. it'd be awful if it was cash free, wouldn't it? fancy some chance to make that yours? here's how we entered ten, 2024 into 2020. >> more with your chance to win £18,000 in cash to spend however you like. you really could be the next big winner of our great british giveaway. phil from west yorkshire won our last one. listen to his reaction when we gave him the news. i never won a pennyin gave him the news. i never won a penny in my life. >> well congratulations because you've won £10,000. >> oh my god . >> oh my god. >> oh my god. >> wow! >> wow! >> for your chance to win £18,000 in tax free cash . ten gb £18,000 in tax free cash. ten gb win to 84 902. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number gb news zero two, po box 8690. derby de192, uk only entrants must be 18 or over.
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lines closed at 5 pm. on friday. the 23rd of february. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win good luck okay look good luck everyone . everyone. >> but coming up, the very first of tomorrow's front pages for you with my passionate pundits and i'm going to be joined as well by constance and kissing absolutely fantastic political commentator right here in the studio. he's going to be talking about whether or not britain's way of life is changing. he's speaking out. he's patrick christys tonight.
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the camilla tominey show sunday
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mornings from 930 on gb news. is patrick christys tonight. >> now one man with his finger on the pulse of britain's place in the world is author and broadcaster and podcaster konstantin kissin, whose book an immigrant's love letter to the west became a sunday times best seller in 2022. let's be honest , seller in 2022. let's be honest, he's never looked back since. in fact , he was looking he's never looked back since. in fact, he was looking quite far ahead before that as well. after growing up in soviet union, growing up in the soviet union, konstantin enjoys a unique konstantin now enjoys a unique perspective brilliance of perspective on the brilliance of the made waves again last the uk. he made waves again last week when his for britain week when his praise for britain on question time sparks on bbc question time sparks a self—loathing and ridiculous response from a pro palestine rabble rouser. well today, as tory mp mike freer is forced to give up politics after death threats from islamists and their supporters. i want to ask whether we're simply giving in now to extremists. konstantin joins me now . look, thank you joins me now. look, thank you very, very much. look, today i
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am legitimately, incredibly angry. we've got an mp who is frankly, having to give up because of largely islamist extremist , because of largely islamist extremist, um, a prime minister who doesn't feel the need to say anything publicly about that. a leader of the opposition who doesn't the need to say doesn't feel the need to say publicly anything about that. i mean, what the heck is going on here? >> well, patrick, we shouldn't be that you remember, >> well, patrick, we shouldn't becourse, that you remember, >> well, patrick, we shouldn't be course, very at you remember, >> well, patrick, we shouldn't be course, very well,j remember, >> well, patrick, we shouldn't be course, very well, the nember, >> well, patrick, we shouldn't be course, very well, the tragicer, of course, very well, the tragic murder of sir david amess, after which mp after both which cowardly mp after mp, both tory and labour went into the chamber after their colleague tory and labour went into the charjust after their colleague tory and labour went into the charjust been their colleague tory and labour went into the charjust been murdered aague tory and labour went into the charjust been murdered by ue tory and labour went into the charjust been murdered by an had just been murdered by an islamic extremist and pretended that he had in fact been murdered by a tweet , that he had in fact been murdered by a tweet, uh, when they talked endlessly about onune they talked endlessly about online hate , digital harm, the online hate, digital harm, the online safety bill, uh, to do , online safety bill, uh, to do, uh, the one thing that they always do, which is avoid naming the problem, which is we have a major issue with islamist , uh, major issue with islamist, uh, extremists in this country who are using violence to intimidate other people into silence. >> and into, uh, doing whatever it is they want. and as long as
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we continue to cower and bow down to this, it will continue, because, uh, one of the most depressing things about, uh, watching the reactions today is, as you've alluded to , not only as you've alluded to, not only have the prime minister or the leader of the opposition said anything but actually nobody has anything but actually nobody has anything say. even the people anything to say. even the people who are deeply concerned, as you anything to say. even the people who i|re deeply concerned, as you anything to say. even the people who! are, eeply concerned, as you anything to say. even the people who! are, they're)ncerned, as you anything to say. even the people who! are, they're not rned, as you anything to say. even the people who! are, they're not sayings you anything to say. even the people who! are, they're not saying we»u and i are, they're not saying we must have a task force within the police, or we must do x, or we must do y. they're all expressing their concern . i have expressing their concern. i have had enough of people's concern. i would like the government to actually do something and the police to actually do something , police to actually do something, to the point where maybe an elected member of parliament can go their business without go about their business without being threatened submission being threatened into submission . could we maybe have that? is that to ask in that unreason to ask in a democratic free country like ours ? ours? >> well, no it's not. but again today, lindsay hoyle, who i think is probably all right, decides to come out and say , decides to come out and say, look, mps need to be nicer to each other. i'm sorry, but it's not mps that have made mike fray
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quit, is it? it's not mps that stabbed david amess to death. it's not mps who are rampaging through london every single saturday with anti semitic signs and occasionally beating up jewish people that they happen to pass in the street. you know, we a massive problem here we have a massive problem here that islamist that is radical islamist ideology , but it's been allowed ideology, but it's been allowed into britain though hasn't it. and people like you have been have been calling this out. why have been calling this out. why have we developed this massive self—loathing in britain, do you think? well one of the things, first of all, that shows the level of fear and cowardice and self—loathing that we have is the fact that a couple of weeks ago, you'll remember patrick, i'm sure you covered it on the show. >> the banning of the islamist group hizb ut—tahrir. uh hizb ut—tahrir banned in the uk. ut—tahrir was banned in the uk. finally, a couple of ago . finally, a couple of weeks ago. do you uh, other countries do you know, uh, other countries where ut—tahrir has been where hizb ut—tahrir has been banned time? banned for a long time? pakistan, , every arab pakistan, bangladesh, every arab country, but three every muslim country, but three every muslim country in central asia, indonesia , the most populous indonesia, the most populous country in the world. and what it shows you is we basically are
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more islamist more tolerant of islamist extremists than muslim countries are , and the muslim rulers are. are, and the muslim rulers are. and muslim governments are. and the muslim governments are. and the muslim governments are. and i just and to say nothing and so i just and to say nothing of the fact, of course, a subject that has been covered both on gb news and on trigonometry, uh, the grooming gangs, again, why were they not given the attention and the police action that they should have been given because people were afraid and initially sensitivities about , quote, race sensitivities about, quote, race and diversity become fears when we allow people to use violence to silence people , uh, into an to silence people, uh, into an action. so until we have a leader or a government or a police constable or chief constable or whoever it is that actually gets a grip of this issue and says, we are not going to tolerate violent extremists in our country silencing mps. uh, this will continue and it will only get worse . will only get worse. >> yeah, indeed. but they're also going to have to be up for the fight constantly. and this is, frankly , a problem that is, frankly, a problem that i can see a mile off. can see coming a mile off. right. which is i don't think
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they are clearly not. i mean, they're all at the moment willing to just roll over and have tickled by a have their bellies tickled by a load right. load of mad islamists. right. and to have to be and they're going to have to be prepared for massive protests. they're be they're going to have to be prepared death threats. prepared for death threats. they're have be they're going to have to be prepared people up prepared for people lining up outside primary schools and trying down. trying to shut them down. they're have to be they're going have to be prepared for all of this stuff. but fact they to but the fact that they have to be prepared surely shows be prepared for it surely shows that have a massive problem. that we have a massive problem. and i don't about you, but and i don't know about you, but i think there's a to lose i think there's a lot to lose here in britain. got here in britain. we have got a lot to lose. and just before i get your answer on this, i know that you think that there's a lot to in britain because lot to lose in britain because this is what happened when you were time. just were on question time. just saying. hope you find saying. i hope you don't find this insulting. quite this insulting. it's, um, quite bafic this insulting. it's, um, quite basic how great basic stuff about how great britain right? is the britain is, right? this is the reaction you got. here. it is. >> i think sunny is absolutely right practical level, but right on a practical level, but i think a cultural level is i think at a cultural level is something perhaps even more important, which is we've got to stop talking country. stop talking down our country. i'm generation immigrant i'm a first generation immigrant to i get to this country, and i get annoyed hearing people talk endlessly how the
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endlessly about how we're the worst country the world. worst country in the world. we're most sexist country in we're the most sexist country in the we're most racist the world. we're the most racist country. it's all nonsense. this is places to is one of the best places to live world. and that's live in the world. and that's what should talking about. what we should be talking about. the that we're. shameless. the fact that we're. shameless. well is is exactly. well this is this is exactly. this is the problem that this is exactly the problem that i'm talking about. >> why do you get >> constantine. why do you get that reaction? how concerned should we be? well one of the things that you would not have seen on your tv screen, patrick, but you would have seen if you'd been there, uh, in the audience or on the panel, actually or on the panel, is actually she was the only one shouting. was not the only one shouting. >> have heard other male >> you may have heard other male voices well. so voices shouting as well. so there several people, uh, there were several people, uh, who offended by the idea who were so offended by the idea that actually that britain is actually a really country , uh, that that britain is actually a reall'felt country , uh, that that britain is actually a reall'felt the)untry , uh, that that britain is actually a reall'felt the need , uh, that that britain is actually a reall'felt the need t01h, that that britain is actually a reall'felt the need to shout|t that britain is actually a reall'felt the need to shout me they felt the need to shout me down. and i think, uh, in her case, as we later discover , it case, as we later discover, it speaks to an issue that we've covered, uh, obviously quite extensively. now which we're extensively. now which is we're educating young people to hate their country . uh, there's their own country. uh, there's no doubt about that. one of no doubt about that. and one of the things that happened with this afterwards, this young woman afterwards, one of uh, one of her
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of her tweet, uh, one of her teachers tweeted at me saying how proud she is of her student for shouting down somebody on the panel . for shouting down somebody on the panel. uh, so. and when i pointed this out, she of course blocked me because these people can dish it out, but they can't take it. how ever. my point is this if we continue to be a society that teaches its young people to hate their own country, own values, their country, their own values, their own civilisation, then we will have the same time, have this. and at the same time, of there unholy of course, there is the unholy alliance of the kind of woke progressive islamists , progressive left and islamists, uh, who, who, who work hand in hand. uh, and you know, as long as we continue to have that, we will continue to have the problem. so the number one thing that i always try to tell british people is, the british people is, uh, the country not perfect. country is not perfect. of course, is not course, the culture is not perfect. history is not perfect. the history is not perfect. the history is not perfect. this a great perfect. but this is a great place by comparison to everywhere has ever everywhere else that has ever existed history existed in the history of humanity . and we to embrace humanity. and we have to embrace our values. the most our values. and the most important you can do important thing that you can do is teach your children the values society, values of your society, the importance valuing you importance of valuing what you have, grateful for the have, of being grateful for the
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opportunity to enjoy the privilege that no one ever talks about. but it's the one privilege that we all have, which is first world privilege. and if people were actually to understand just how fortunate and they are living and lucky they are to be living in societies that are as free and prosperous still as ours and as prosperous still as ours are, maybe , maybe at that point are, maybe, maybe at that point we wouldn't listen to the lunatics who shout out and want to down our country as much to talk down our country as much as people do. as these people do. >> well, i could listen >> well, i mean, i could listen to you all day, so thank you very, very much. constantine. and, um, yep, got and, um, yep, you got trigonometry. you got a couple of other things out there. do you want to just give a bit you want to just give them a bit of shout out while we've got of a shout out while we've got you? please >> patrick, i'm afraid lost >> patrick, i'm afraid i've lost you there. i hear you there. i can't hear you better. thank for having better. um. thank you for having me. really appreciate it. and, me. i really appreciate it. and, uh, night. uh, have a great night. >> all right, take care. >> all right, mate, take care. look yourself. uh, you can look after yourself. uh, you can check him out online. of course. and does have fabulous and he does have a fabulous podcast. shows as well. podcast. and uh, shows as well. uh, trigger commentary. they are. you're aware are. i'm sure you're all aware of but there we are. of it anyway, but there we are. right. look, coming with right. look, coming up with harry working on harry and meghan working on a bunch projects for bunch of new projects for netflix, including a hollywood
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movie documentaries. we movie to documentaries. are we due drama from that due to hear more drama from that troublemaker couple? but we troublemaker couple? but next we bnng troublemaker couple? but next we bring the very first look at bring you the very first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages . off press. . they're hot off the press. they're thick and they're landing in thick and fast we speak. it's patrick fast as we speak. it's patrick christys are
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news radio show . news radio show. >> it's patrick christys tonight andifs >> it's patrick christys tonight and it's time now to bring you tomorrow . who's news tonight in tomorrow. who's news tonight in the liveliest paper review you'll get on the telly. here are your first front pages. okay, so we go with the i millions face stealth tax rise as tories demand cuts. chancellor cannot fully reverse stealth tax effect. look shock horror . we were stealth tax effect. look shock horror. we were promised something and then it might not happen. i think that's really the headline isn't it? the guardian us order strikes on iran backed militia in revenge for base attack. this is the chemical attack story as well that we were running earlier on police hunt injured man which is one way of describing that person, i suppose. the daily
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telegraph chemical attacker was failed asylum seeker. astonishing detail . they put astonishing detail. they put chemical attacker in quotation marks by the way, is alleged. but the astonishing details about this man emerging reporter . he came to britain in the back of of a sex of a lorry, convicted of a sex offence in 2018, failed asylum twice and you know, now here we allegedly uh, mail allegedly are uh, the mail manhunt . yeah. there's a theme manhunt. yeah. there's a theme here, isn't convicted sex here, isn't there? convicted sex offender flask of offender through flask of chemicals at woman and her daughters. clapham suspect later seen on cctv with severe burns across his face. he's from afghanistan. he's 35 years old. he twice denied asylum, he was twice denied asylum, succeeding by claiming to be christian. there we go. all right. this is again the daily mail's coverage of that. uh, i can't see this is on top of the sun. uh, it's same story. so, uh, we are all right. okay look, time to take a look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages. now, with my press pack, it's daily telegraph columnist allison pierce and conservative peer lord bailey, former labour party adviser matthew laza . party adviser matthew laza. look, before i move on to
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another story , it was important. another story, it was important. i'm just going to stress this again. you know, this is alleged at the moment. this chap has not been found or arrested or charged with anything but astonishing emerging charged with anything but astonaren't emerging charged with anything but astonaren't they emerging charged with anything but astonaren't they justnerging charged with anything but astonaren't they justnerl ing charged with anything but astonaren't they justnerl mean here. aren't they just so i mean , heart sinks, doesn't it? , the heart sinks, doesn't it? >> i mean, so it's such a >> i mean, just so it's such a familiar story as well, isn't it? because obviously applied it? because he obviously applied for rejected twice for asylum once, rejected twice rejected, third time lucky because he suddenly discovered he was a christian. we actually saw that. you'll remember that. we that liverpool. we saw that with the liverpool. the guy who tried to blow up the maternity hospital. and this is very, very common. now that either decide they're gay either decide that they're gay or christian and it's or they're christian and it's just completely cynical. and i just completely cynical. and i just have to say that, um, when i was growing up, we didn't have acid attacks in our country. we got think about the kind of got to think about the kind of people we're allowing come people we're allowing to come here, allowing to come people we're allowing to come here, but allowing to come people we're allowing to come here, but to allowing to come people we're allowing to come here, but to stayowing to come people we're allowing to come here, but to stay to ing to come people we're allowing to come here, but to stay to be to come people we're allowing to come here, but to stay to be an come here, but to stay to be an asylum seeker. and as you say, patrick alleged now, um, he horrible. i got so upset reading the details about a woman and two little girls who are
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probably scarred for life , if probably scarred for life, if indeed this man has thrown this stuff over them. the only the only good point to come out of it, it seems to have splashed himself and taken out half of it, and presumably can't go to hospital as well. can't go to hospital. >> yeah, exactly. and sean , your >> yeah, exactly. and sean, your thinking on this, i mean, what this people like this regardless of whether or not he's even done this right? you just look at his rap sheet. what would let people like this? >> two things leap at me. one, the really important thing is that people are gaming the system and we talk about asylum seekers. we talk about economic migrants people a migrants and people all of a sudden they're leaning sudden they're always leaning towards and talk towards asylum seekers and talk about, be helping about, we must be helping the world. should be world. of course we should be helping world, but also helping the world, but we also have acknowledge system have to acknowledge the system is and this looks is being gamed. and this looks this example of this seems to be an example of that. the other piece that really bothered me, this is this is young and young is young woman and young children, attacked children, and he attacked them in that simply in a way that is simply allegedly them in that allegedly attacked them in that way. no way. there's absolutely no justification and justification for that. and i hope do him, the hope when they do catch him, the book thrown at him because
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book is thrown at him because they to send a message. they have to send a message. because i come from a community that suffered avalanche that suffered from an avalanche of and the only of knife crime, and the only thing was more terrifying thing that was more terrifying than was acid than knife crime was acid attacks. it's real weapon of terror. >> i think we've look, we've obviously a heck of a lot obviously said a heck of a lot on now. so, matthew, if on this now. so, matthew, if it's all right with you, i'm going whizz us on an going to just whizz us on to an inside story. and i'll start with this. so combined with you on this. so combined efforts british police efforts of the british police and 13 year old and interpol, a 13 year old british has been british schoolgirl has been rescued pakistan and saved rescued from pakistan and saved from to her from a forced marriage to her cousin. alarm was raised by cousin. the alarm was raised by the girl's brave mother, who said pakistan last said we went to pakistan last august holiday. when august on a family holiday. when we i found out my we got there, i found out my husband had tricked us both. his family over our lives and family took over our lives and his said, daughter his sister said, my daughter will be married to a 19 year old cousin though she's cousin even though she's a child. i was desperate to save her, so contacted her, so she contacted a neighbour in england who works for abuse for a women's domestic abuse charity. they alerted the authorities and, well, thankfully, not thankfully, uh, that's not happened. this is happened. matthew this is absolute story and absolute disgraceful story and it how it does make me wonder how commonplace is . commonplace this actually is. >> yeah. i mean, look, i'm actually very glad the systems
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worked in this instance because to government its to give the government its credit, two really credit, it's taken two really big should big actions which should have been long time before, been taken a long time before, one which to make forced one of which is to make forced marriage a crime. obviously, child marriage has always been that. and crucially, to raise the age of marriage from 16 to 18, because you used to be able to if your parents signed a piece of paper, you could get married at 16. that's gone. it should have gone a long time ago. so the systems work now. but we must. whether you're on the left or the right of politics, half the cases politics, this is half the cases involve pakistan. we cannot be afraid. seen in afraid. as we've seen in rochdale elsewhere, if we rochdale and elsewhere, if we need need to call what it need to, we need to call what it is, what it is. if this is a particular problem with pakistani and bangladeshi communities, on communities, we need to carry on working we to working and we need to ask questions. when are being questions. when kids are being taken out of school to go to pakistan, why they, why are pakistan, why are they, why are they and this is not this they going? and this is not this is know, and mustn't is not, you know, and we mustn't we never again have a fear we must never again have a fear of being accused racist as a excuse for not tackling a problem which is about the rights women and girls. rights of women and girls. >> can i say that i had
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>> can i just say that i had a letter. an email, actually, from a in bradford who said a teacher in bradford who said some bright some of the exceptionally bright girls pakistan, girls in her class, pakistan, many girls, and they'd come up to they'd fail and to the exams and they'd fail and she couldn't understand it. and she couldn't understand it. and she said, one day of the she couldn't understand it. and she ssaid,)ne day of the she couldn't understand it. and she ssaid, once ay of the she couldn't understand it. and she ssaid, once we've of the she couldn't understand it. and she ssaid, once we've passed girls said, once we've passed the exams we've finished the exams and we've finished school, sent off to marry school, we're sent off to marry our uncles. >> yeah, seriously. >> yeah, seriously. >> and is these are british >> and this is these are british girls who are treated often by men community as if they men in that community as if they are sold off and are chattels to be sold off and to married to cousins and to to be married to cousins and to have children. these have disabled children. these are patrick. okay are british girls, patrick. okay they british rights they deserve british rights and they be in these they should be kept in these communities. it's people communities. and it's people again, not wanting to integrate. you see, my heart goes out to those young women because all the way back to cancel culture. >> have have you >> don't you have you have you have officers, you have have police officers, you have council employees who are so desperate look racist desperate not to look racist that just think, you know that they just think, you know what, i do what, i'll get cancelled if i do this i have a family to this and i have a family to feed, so i'm going to ignore it. i'm going to treat it differently. we have to give people the opportunity to do their job without them being brave. of this brave. the whole point of this country you're meant be country is you're meant to be able to act without fear or
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favour. it looks like cancel culture. it's causing real damage lives. damage to people's lives. bangladesh has lowered the limit of the age for marriage back down 16. down to 16. >> should link putting it >> we should link putting it back 18 to aid. back to 18 to the aid. >> it strong, very, very >> we give it strong, very, very strong start to this press pack. i say. so look, thank you i must say. so look, thank you very there's more of very much. and there's more of this coming your way. british universities selling immigration instead of education. find out more tonight's more as i crown tonight's greatest union jack greatest britain and union jack kaspen greatest britain and union jack kasper. meghan kasper. first, harry and meghan could that we're could it really be that we're going be hearing a sequel going to be hearing a sequel from on netflix and more ? from them on netflix and more? yes, all of that coming your way. see you in a tech patrick christys night
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gb news s patrick christys tonight. i've got some more front pages for you right now, so let's go . to you right now, so let's go. to the times. there we are at bank chief raises hopes that rates have peaked . this is an have peaked. this is an inflation story. the forecast to meet 2. obviously the picture
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story. there is a common theme that we've seen on the front pages. the manhunt underway for the asylum seeker allegedly responsible attack responsible for the acid attack guard guards got gaza on the brain. so easily done. gaza's message is now don't make the same mistakes to me. i tell you what, if gaza was giving advice right to marcus rashford, this is on the mirror , by the way. is on the mirror, by the way. um, then that would be something , don't make same , wouldn't it? don't make same mistakes gaza . mistakes as me, says gaza. right. there we are. this is, of course, after marcus rashford's, uh , uh, booze, uh, soiree . uh, uh, uh, booze, uh, soiree. uh, let's go to the daily express now . uh, hunt plotting new one now. uh, hunt plotting new one p national insurance cut . that'll national insurance cut. that'll make the world of difference. just this wednesday next week, it'll be cancelled . thank you it'll be cancelled. thank you very much. tell the bottom of your heart, jeremy. thank you very much. >> do you think that's a that's a spoof? >> i mean, possibly, is it april the first take? >> it's hard to give it back, isn't it? >> w- t- e“- e“— >> yeah, it is. it is indeed. >> yeah, it is. it is indeed. >> rachel reeves will be the one who cuts taxes, as you've been hearing. who cuts taxes, as you've been hearing still got my paddle with
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>> i've still got my paddle with me. there's no point reintroducing them. know reintroducing them. you know them want them by now. and i do want to talk about an inside story, though, which it's been though, which is? it's been revealed the duke revealed that the duke and duchess sussex quite duchess of sussex are quite a bunch of now with bunch of projects now with netflix as part of their $100 million production deal. a netflix executive said the couple couple couple are working on a couple of, uh, unscripted projects. grief, to be grief, believed to be documentaries well a documentaries as well as a hollywood film and a tv series, are mit matthew. yeah, his new documentaries there on i can't wait. >> that's a reason to cancel the netflix subscription, isn't it? i mean, i mean, look, i was just thinking earlier, why don't they come? don't they know? our come? why don't they know? our regional theatres are struggling? don't they come struggling? why don't they come back regional back and take over a regional theatre, they've theatre, rather than if they've got creative ideas? but got so many creative ideas? but of wouldn't them of course, it wouldn't make them any would you any money, would it? so, you know, they're not going to do they're going to kevin they're not going to a kevin spacey took the old vic, spacey took over the old vic, whatever else you think him. whatever else you think of him. um, it's just outrageous um, i mean, it's just outrageous trading on the name. and you trading on the name. um, and you just, you know, come on. just, i mean, you know, come on. can imagine how bad these can you imagine how bad these projects be? projects are going to be? >> guarantee they'll be >> you can guarantee they'll be back. will give you $100
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back. some will give you $100 million. they want their pound of flesh. so we could be of flesh. okay, so we could be looking at anything from cushions a new cushions to a new to a new animated don't know, animated series. i don't know, but will be seeing but you will be seeing them again. yeah. >> i mean, supposedly there's going of going to be a couple of documentary he's documentary his in this. he's not confirmed but not confirmed yet, but supposedly could supposedly it is. so we could literally get more of that guff. >> i think it's time they had another baby so they could exploit another royal name. what's can charles. >> yeah, they can have charles. >> yeah, they can have charles. >> wouldn't be called andrew, >> it wouldn't be called andrew, would would be >> charles junior would be guangxi bakhmut squeaky. >> nickname? >> americans are ruthless. >> the americans are ruthless. the they seem all the americans, they seem all nice but it's like nice and smiley, but it's like we need 100 million birth. yes right. mean, i think, right. uh, i mean, i think, you know, they've of people right. uh, i mean, i think, you kn exploit. 've of people right. uh, i mean, i think, you kn exploit. 've i of people right. uh, i mean, i think, you kn exploit. 've i think people right. uh, i mean, i think, you knexploit. 've i think it'sple to exploit. really i think it's i going to be this is i think it's going to be this is where they're going to see they're to pull. where they're going to see they'mean, to pull. where they're going to see they' mean, when ull. where they're going to see they' mean, when theard size >> i mean, when i heard the size of their i couldn't of their deal, i couldn't believe it. but i think netflix have made mistake. it's have made a mistake. and it's slowly i think slowly dawning on them. i think it's slowly dawning. yeah. >> the others have cast, the >> of the others have cast, the swedes have away, the swedes have walked away, the americans, have americans, the other people have dumped people, dumped them. so like people, people book people get an advance for a book and spend it before and then they spend it before they book. they write the book. >> that we've got that >> i fear that we've got that situation here. they haven't got it back. it to give back.
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>> wanted to draw >> i just wanted to draw people's attention well people's attention as well to another caught my eye another story that caught my eye today. this today. so there's been this uproar over a low traffic neighbourhood, uproar over a low traffic neigambulance from getting this ambulance from getting to a baby girl having a seizure. now, this ambulance from getting to a babfootage|ving a seizure. now, this ambulance from getting to a babfootage iing a seizure. now, this ambulance from getting to a babfootage i appreciatere. now, this ambulance from getting to a babfootage i appreciate is now, the footage i appreciate is a little bit grainy, but, um, that was the ambulance that you've just across screens just seen go across your screens there. unfortunate because there. and unfortunate because of traffic neighbourhood of a low traffic neighbourhood which has bollards in the roads. et etc. it et cetera. et cetera, etc. it had take a detour. right. so had to take a detour. right. so you paramedics having to you see two paramedics having to walk carrying medical walk on foot carrying medical equipment could equipment so that they could get to baby in time. to the baby in time. fortunately, she a full fortunately, she made a full recovery. does recovery. right. but it does make you think, sean, doesn't it? i mean, these ltn neighbours bollards in the roads and all of this i mean, i'm sorry, this stuff. i mean, i'm sorry, but it's potentially even costing lives. >> they're complete rubbish. i remember was campaigning, remember when i was campaigning, i uproar i went to ealing, a big uproar about campaign group i went to ealing, a big uproar aborsaying, campaign group i went to ealing, a big uproar aborsaying, they1paign group i went to ealing, a big uproar aborsaying, they make group i went to ealing, a big uproar aborsaying, they make the up was saying, look, they make the high roads far more busy because the cars have to go there. they make the dangerous at make the roads dangerous at night the side night because now all the side roads so a, roads are abandoned. so it's a, you know, there's no nobody there. somebody said me there. and somebody said to me and, services and, and the emergency services won't complain about it lengthening their arrival times because want to get because they don't want to get involved the politics of all.
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involved in the politics of all. and story shown and this story has shown you that predictions that all of those predictions were , and the people who were right, and the people who supported lived in the supported them lived in the nice, roads nice, leafy roads and effectively wanted to live in a cul sac. they didn't care for cul de sac. they didn't care for everybody to live everybody else who had to live in with now more in a situation with now more traffic ever, that's traffic than ever, and that's before about before you talk about the environmental because before you talk about the env cars1ental because before you talk about the env cars are al because before you talk about the env cars are sat because before you talk about the env cars are sat there because before you talk about the env cars are sat there idlingause before you talk about the env cars are sat there idling one the cars are sat there idling on the cars are sat there idling on the road. the high road. >> okay. i mean, alison, this is i mean, i'd be absolutely fuming if child. yeah if that was my child. yeah >> month old baby >> little ten month old baby struggling having >> little ten month old baby strugglseizures. having >> little ten month old baby strugglseizures. it having >> little ten month old baby strugglseizures. it is. having having seizures. it is. it is a total load of bollards. perhaps everyone . everyone hates. >> no joke. at the night line of the night. >> to be we're past the watershed. >> you know, taxi drivers every, you know, everywhere. people have go work their have got to go to work in their cars, know who loves them? have got to go to work in their carsladies. now who loves them? have got to go to work in their carsladies. callwho loves them? have got to go to work in their carsladies. call clarissa. s them? it's ladies. call clarissa. clarissa on pushbikes going to an artisan deli to buy a piece of cheese that costs £35. >> remember the gail's boycott? that never happened it that never happened because it turned gail's owner turned out that the gail's owner doesn't believe in all of the climate change hysteria. i suppose some matthew, suppose some people, matthew, might the might say they're good for the climate. yeah, look, as . climate. yeah, look, as. a business system, if you ever stood for the local council,
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particularly pre ltns, people always wanted traffic calming and now it's called an ltn and it appears part of a woke agenda. >> they like it. so >> they don't like it. so there's a little of there's a little bit of hypocrisy can be hypocrisy here. but they can be daft. was around the daft. i was born around the corner from that happened corner from where that happened in hosphal corner from where that happened in hospital, so, corner from where that happened in you hospital, so, corner from where that happened in you know, hospital, so, corner from where that happened in you know, it'spital, so, corner from where that happened in you know, it's a:al, so, corner from where that happened in you know, it's a bit so, corner from where that happened in you know, it's a bit daft.o, uh, you know, it's a bit daft. good stuff. >> all right. time >> all right. okay. time to reveal now today's greatest britain and union jackass allison. greatest britain. >> is alan bates , the great >> it is alan bates, the great champion of the postmasters who has turned down a cruel and derisory offer of compensation from the government . one sixth from the government. one sixth of what, alan, are asked for and given the misery these postmasters have been through, why the government can't just give them a proper amount of money without dragging it out yet, yet more . it's just awful. yet, yet more. it's just awful. so well done. alan bates for telling them to get lost and give me some more money. >> it's a strong start. go on sean. >> mine's is mike freer mp , a >> mine's is mike freer mp, a hard working, mp for hard working, dedicated mp for finchley east and golders green, and he worked so hard for those people and is now not going to
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stand at the next election because he's had death threats. his been attacked and his office has been attacked and it's a really poor state of affairs. when we experience affairs. when we have experience politicians stepping down because of death threats, etc. pubuc because of death threats, etc. public is at an all public discourse is at an all time low. we to do time low. we need to do something about it. >> i would say >> mrs. thatcher's, i would say of yes, which we haven't of course, yes, which we haven't mentioned yeah. there mentioned. oh yeah. yeah, there we fond of knowledge? >> fond of knowledge? >> fond of knowledge? >> human wikipedia . >> absolutely. human wikipedia. so mine is harry. i'm going to light. a light. light note harry, who's a lovely old lad from lovely five year old lad from wrexham wales has lovely five year old lad from wrex been wales has lovely five year old lad from wrex been going wales has lovely five year old lad from wrexbeen going into ales has lovely five year old lad from wrexbeen going into aas has lovely five year old lad from wrexbeen going into a care has lovely five year old lad from wrexbeen going into a care home now been going into a care home to read regularly to residents. um his mum works. and, you um where his mum works. and, you know, a grim know, we've had quite a grim news here's some news story day. so here's some good news. harry. yeah, good news. good for harry. yeah, well good news. good for harry. yeah, welgood for you for bringing >> good for you for bringing that up as well, actually. thank you. is you. and look today it is mike freer greatest freer who is today's greatest briton. um, so yes, good nominations round nominations though. all round union time alison, uh, union jack last time alison, uh, it russell group of it is the russell group of universities places at universities selling places at their universities to wealthy foreigners, often with lower grades than british kids who deserve those places. >> it's apartheid and it's demoralising. our young people. >> um. hey, hey.
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demoralising. our young people. >> um. hey, hey . god. >> um. hey, hey. god. >> um. hey, hey. god. >> so mine's is the eu for calling for a ban on gendered language. things such as no man's land, apparently are meant to go and replacing. oh, god, here's the best one replacing joe public with average citizen. considering all the troubles that the eu have, you know , that the eu have, you know, farmers and the like and the state the european economy, state of the european economy, i think they have other things they should be concentrating on. >> to know what the >> i want to know what the translations for joe public is in official of the. >> maybe you could write into patrick and let him know if you can speak another. i mean, look, average joe average citizen to replace joe pubuc average citizen to replace joe public offensive it public joe public offensive it is rolls off the is joe public rolls off the tongue citizen. yeah tongue average citizen. yeah it's terrible matthew. >> and mine is a dacorum borough council in hertfordshire who are sticking their guns and sticking to their guns and finding anybody who caught finding anybody who is caught short countryside short in the countryside in their to spend their borough and goes to spend a penny . um, and a legal a penny. um, and there's a legal rally. is littering or not? rally. is it littering or not? >> you'd have to be incredibly unlucky to get caught. >> two people. they >> they find two people. they find two people already. it's going end up in supreme going to end up in the supreme court. would have noticed court. i would have noticed literally or not. >> oh, it's real lack of >> oh, it's a real lack of decorum. yeah. oh oh da da da
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da. right. okay um, today's union jack is british universities. there we go. wow well, it's been an eclectic mix tonight , well, it's been an eclectic mix tonight, must uh, lots of tonight, i must say. uh, lots of light and shade. and headliners is next. for a more extensive look through the headlines in their unique can their own unique style. can i just say a wonderful thank you to thank thank to my panel? thank you, thank you, and you to you, thank you, and thank you to everybody been watching everybody who's been watching and online. if you've and tuning in online. if you've missed of feel free. go missed any of it, feel free. go back, you check out back, make sure you check it out on youtube. i'll be back tomorrow until then, tomorrow at 9 pm. until then, keep good fight . keep fighting the good fight. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good evening, i'm alex burkill. here's your latest gb news weather forecast through the end of the week. it is going to be largely cloudy, mild, but also windy because we have a tight pressure gradient across the uk , an area of high pressure the uk, an area of high pressure to the south of us, leading to a westerly flow , and that westerly
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westerly flow, and that westerly flow push the heavy rain flow will push the heavy rain that we saw across much of scotland today towards scotland through today towards the east overnight and we are going to drag increasing going to drag in increasing amounts of cloud the west. amounts of cloud from the west. so clearer skies towards so some clearer skies towards the southeast to start the night means it may start a little chilly, a touch of frost, but as the rolls in, we are going the cloud rolls in, we are going to temperatures lifting. to see our temperatures lifting. so time us wake so by the time many of us wake up it's going to up tomorrow, it's going to be quite start. some places quite a mild start. some places already in double figures. otherwise we through otherwise as we go through friday much cloudier friday and it's a much cloudier day today for most of us, day than today for most of us, outbreaks rain where the outbreaks of rain where the cloud enough, cloud is thick enough, particularly towards the west, perhaps a bit more perhaps something a bit more persistent parts persistent across parts of scotland and into northern ireland. time in the east, ireland. for a time in the east, this is where we have the greatest chance of some brighter skies it's going to be skies and where it's going to be mildest around 14 or mildest highs of around 14 or 15 celsius. you need to celsius. but you do need to factor some strong winds. factor in some strong winds. risk of gales in exposed spots and around higher ground. two on saturday it's going to be a cloudier, picture across cloudier, wetter picture across southern . staying mild southern areas. staying mild here, a bit chillier further north though, albeit with some sunny skies and blustery
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showers, bring some sleet showers, could bring some sleet or snow the higher ground or snow over the higher ground of into sunday. and of scotland into sunday. and i think the mild picture will become more widespread again, though quite though it is looking quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain. two that warm feeling inside two by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening you with gb news. >> our top story tonight night. a police manhunt is ongoing after it was revealed the suspect of last night's london chemical attack had been convicted of sexual offences in 2018. then going on to be granted uk asylum in 2021. it's understood abdul azizi failed twice in previous asylum applications but was eventually successful on his third attempt. gb news also understands he got into the uk illegally by hiding
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into the uk illegally by hiding in a lorry in 20 1618. the suspect is on the run tonight after injuring a mother and her child with a corrosive substance and then fleeing the scene immediately after the attack. police have released this new image. if you're watching on tv of azad's last known sighting , of azad's last known sighting, showing he has a significant injury himself on the right side of his face, the 35 year old is believed to be from the newcastle area and police are appealing to public. the public, particularly in the north—east, to report any sightings to them . to report any sightings to them. meanwhile, the number of migrants crossing the english channelis migrants crossing the english channel is up 13% compared with this time last year. more than 1400 people arrived in small boats last month. that's the highest january total since records began in 2018, and compares . with 1100 migrants compares. with 1100 migrants recorded arriving in january last year. just yesterday . 278 last year. just yesterday. 278 people made the journey in six small boats . a couple is small boats. a couple is
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expected to stand trial over the alleged arson attack on justice minister mike frears. conse kc office in london. the pair deny the charges. the tory mp for finchley and golders green described the incident as the final straw that made him quit politics after receiving a series of death threats at downing street today called the vitriolic hatred that he has faced an attack on british democracy . now! the former sub democracy. now! the former sub postmaster who led the campaign for justice in the post office scandal , has rejected the scandal, has rejected the government's compensation offer. alan bates , whose two decade alan bates, whose two decade fight inspired the itv drama mr. bates versus the post office, says the offer is cruel and offensive . he told the daily offensive. he told the daily telegraph the offer was only around a sixth of what he'd request, and calling it a terrible way to treat human beings . now hundreds of farmers beings. now hundreds of farmers have been protesting outside the eu's headquarters in brussels today, demanding better prices
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