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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  February 2, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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gb news. it's 9 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . tonight. >> the asylum seeker manhunt is on. >> i can make a personal appeal to him, so do the right thing and hand yourself in. >> police. the church of england judges, human rights activists . judges, human rights activists. well, have they all got blood on their hands? and it's animism of this kind is a cancer. >> it's got to be rooted out and destroyed . destroyed. >> x immigration minister robert jenrick issues a stark warning to home secretary james cleverly, plus . why do we have cleverly, plus. why do we have an lgbtqi history month? but just one day for mothers and a weekend for veterans? also the
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facebook post that shame the bbc revealed right here on this show on my panel tonight , it is gb on my panel tonight, it is gb news star alex armstrong . we news star alex armstrong. we also have x bbc political chief john sergeant and apprentice finalist joanna jarjue. oh, and um, what's going on here? >> it's punxsutawney phil . >> it's punxsutawney phil. >> it's punxsutawney phil. >> get ready britain, here we go is -- is the church of england helping violent, sex crazed asylum seekers stay in britain . seekers stay in britain. next >> good evening. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb news room. two teenagers who killed brianna gheyin teenagers who killed brianna ghey in what's been described as a sadistic attack have been
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given life sentences for her murder. 16 year old scarlett jenkinson , who for the first jenkinson, who for the first time admitted stabbing the transgender teen, will serve a minimum time of 22 years. her accomplice, eddie ratcliffe, was given a minimum of 20 years, the court heard. after coaxing brianna to a park, they stabbed her 28 times in a frenzied and ferocious attack with a hunting knife . in victim statements, knife. in victim statements, brianna's family described her killers as two predators stalking their prey and said they are pure evil . a manhunt they are pure evil. a manhunt continues tonight for a suspected chemical attacker with police saying they found significant and important new evidence . a new image has been evidence. a new image has been released of abdul azizi, who was last seen at london's kings cross underground station on wednesday evening. police say the 31 year old mother, who was attacked, still sedated in attacked, is still sedated in hospital with life changing injuries . met police commander injuries. met police commander john saville also gave an update on the children involved in the attack . attack. >> thankfully we've had an update from the hospital that the two young children that were
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with injuries aren't with her, their injuries aren't as serious as first thought and they are not likely to be life changing in terms of our manhunt for azt, we've got a large team of very experienced detectives leading the manhunt. thankfully due to the great response we've had from the public, we're able to follow him and know that he got on a train at 9 pm, a victim line tube heading south. >> in other news, there are fresh warnings of potential human right breaches on the bibby stockholm barge as asylum seekers face what's being described as a claustrophobic condition. the home affairs select committee says cramped living conditions are contributing to a decline in mental health. for some residents, the of housing, residents, the cost of housing, asylum claimants on the barge is £120 per person per night . it £120 per person per night. it comes as the home office has asked for an emergency £2.6 billion, after spending more than expected on asylum accommodation . last year, the
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accommodation. last year, the government spent around £8 million a day for migrant accommodation with official figures showing more than 50,000 were housed in hotel rooms and the star of rocky movies, carl weathers, has died aged 76. the us actor, who played apollo creed in the first four rocky films, died peacefully in his sleep, according to a statement released by his family. he began his career as an nfl linebacker , his career as an nfl linebacker, but went on to become an action and comedy star, featuring in classics such as predator opposite arnold schwarzenegger and happy gilmore with adam sandler. his family paid tribute to him, saying he was an exceptional human being who lived an extraordinary life . and lived an extraordinary life. and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on the screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts. now it's back to . patrick.
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it's back to. patrick. >> i start tonight's show by inviting you to play a game of broken borders. bingo abdul ezedi is the asylum seeker on the run. okay, so let's play . the run. okay, so let's play. did he come in the back of a lorry? dick? yes. did he fail his asylum application? but was able to stay? tick? yes. is he a sex offender? tick. yeah there we go. did he convert to christianity to claim he'd face persecution? oh, yes , yes he persecution? oh, yes, yes he did. is he violent ? yep. there did. is he violent? yep. there he is. did. is he violent? yep. there heis.can did. is he violent? yep. there he is. can we still now not deport him ? tick. oh, there we deport him? tick. oh, there we go . he still got the full house, go. he still got the full house, hasn't he? people he's done it. abdul ezedi has done it. this is a watershed moment, okay? a catalogue of people and institutions must now be held to account and real change enforced. firstly the role of the church of england and archbishop justin welby is the c of e complicit in helping asylum seekers fake claims by pretending to convert to christianity . the liverpool christianity. the liverpool maternity hospital bomber was syrian. he pretended to be a
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christian to claim that he'd be persecuted if we returned him now. abdul ezedi also pretended to convert to christianity. according to reports , after two according to reports, after two failed asylum bids, but was reportedly still a practising muslim . the archbishop says that muslim. the archbishop says that the rwanda plan is against the judgement of god . he thinks that judgement of god. he thinks that people who arrive here illegally are responsible. city does that not imply that men of the cloth now have carte blanche to do everything they can to keep these people in the country ? we these people in the country? we need to know how many asylum seekers claim to have converted to christianity. what checks are done on them to make sure it's true ? what repercussions are true? what repercussions are there for people the church there for people in the church when goes wrong? this is a when this goes wrong? this is a vital point a z create his asylum claim while living in the uk, he created the reason he was granted asylum by using the church of england. certainly as one of the main reasons. next the role of tribunals and judges . the home office actually did its job here. they rejected him twice . they didn't want him. and
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twice. they didn't want him. and then some judges decided that he could stay next. it's the role of our politicians who got a labour shadow home secretary yvette cooper with the refugees welcome sign. i mean, there's no deterrent there , is there? and deterrent there, is there? and is caroline nokes conservative mp on the bbc last night ? mp on the bbc last night? >> stark reality is, is that every day women will face misogyny and microaggressions. if you're a woman of colour, it will be worse and we have to do better. understand the cultures that make men think that's okay. it's not okay, and actually you can see a pattern of behaviours that lead to really horrific crimes . crimes. >> so she's talking about microaggressions and racial bias there. i think that's pathetic. an asylum seeker that her government allowed aid in allegedly doused a woman and some children with acid and that's her response. but we see this all the time. david amess death was used to clamp down on social media. mike fryer's resignation results in a call
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for mps to speak more nicely to each other . they're both due to each other. they're both due to islamism. okay in some cases. all right . our politicians are all right. our politicians are too weak. next, the role of useful idiots looking to deflect former chief prosecutor nazir afzal says the problem is violence against women, not asylum seekers. well look, violence against women is obviously awful, okay? but the problem here really is about a violent sex offender being able to commit atrocities on our streets , possibly because streets, possibly because they've come from cultures that might have racist, homophobic and misogynistic views. might have racist, homophobic and misogynistic views . people and misogynistic views. people on the left are now coming face to face with the fact that this country has actually imported a heck of a lot of anti—semitic, homophobic, woman hating, transphobic, backward people. and they wanted them here. next, the role of the police. why did it take the police so long to reveal the identity and photograph of abdul ezedi ? he photograph of abdul ezedi? he got on public transport numerous times , apparently, if an urgent times, apparently, if an urgent
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alert went out, i think there is alert went out, i think there is a very good chance this man would now be in custody. he did not wanting to stoke racial tensions get in the way. there i wonder. i have a message for all of those different people and organisations and institutions and the web of human rights lawyers and activists behind them. they've led us to this situation. do you not think you might have blood on your hands? let's get the thoughts now of tonight's panel. we have former bbc chief political correspondent john sergeant . i correspondent john sergeant. i do have gb news star alex armstrong and apprentice finalist social commentator joanna georgie, thank you very much for joining joanna georgie, thank you very much forjoining us. alex, i'll start with you when it comes to situations like this , what do situations like this, what do you think the certain institutions now have blood on their hands? yeah i mean, look all the way from the police, the home office the church of england. >> there's lot of people here >> there's a lot of people here and a lot of people in these institutions need to be institutions that need to be held accountable. >> understand how the
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>> we need to understand how the situation where for the attacker was able to get away for so long, having also having his asylum denied twice, i think it was twice before he was allowed in twice and then being able to run on the streets and come all the way down from up north to come and commit this crime on innocent civilians in london. i mean, this is bonkers that we're we're allowing this. >> joanna, allowed this >> joanna, people allowed this to happen. people wanted these kind of people in the country, and now they're coming face to face reality face with the reality of it. no >> well, think that that's >> well, i think that that's actually unfair to say actually quite unfair to say that people these types that people wanted these types of one case. of people based on one case. let's real when it comes to let's be real when it comes to one case. well, when it comes to acid attacks, for example, this has in this has been going on in this country and the rates this country and the rates of this are rising. so, you know, see are rising. so, you know, we see that. unless of them. that. and unless all of them. yeah, unless you can yeah, but unless you can actually give me stats say actually give me stats to say that the majority of people that the majority of the people who know, doing the who were you know, um, doing the acid have come from acid attacks have come from a back of a lorry or from a dinghy, then i might actually, you know, take people you know, take some people seriously it comes to some seriously when it comes to some cultures, though.
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>> it's a bit of a >> i mean, it's a bit of a cultural thing, isn't it? >> it a cultural thing? >> why is it a cultural thing? >> why is it a cultural thing? >> well, it is when you do >> well, well, it is when you do look at some the very, very look at some of the very, very recent cases have acid recent cases that have had acid attacks the rise, it does attacks on the rise, it does tend to be from cultures where it's a shame and honour thing against women. a of the time. >> no, i think that where that has from and that whole has come from and that whole narrative to see narrative is that we tend to see acid come from certain acid attacks come from certain types countries in terms of types of countries in terms of their over there. that their culture over there. that doesn't that, you know, doesn't mean that, you know, the people actually come to people who have actually come to this country as asylum seekers tend who are tend to be the people who are giving attacks. and giving acid attacks. and i'll give an example. actually, give you an example. actually, there was a really big story that publicised. that was publicised. ferne mccann, who was on towie, her boyfriend did an acid attack and that was due to related that was due to drug related acid people it for acid gangs. people do it for carjackings i think it's carjackings so i think it's completely disingenuous to say that attacks to that acid attacks are due to asylum not just asylum seeking. it's not just asylum seekers. >> i am talking about legal immigration there as be immigration there as well, to be fair, know, we've fair, but john, you know, we've just played broken borders britain there really with britain bingo there really with this i mean, surely this this chap. i mean, surely this has to a watershed moment. this chap. i mean, surely this has to now watershed moment. this chap. i mean, surely this has to now something moment. this chap. i mean, surely this has to now something has�*nent. this chap. i mean, surely this has to now something has�*ne be really now something has to be done about we can't have
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done about this. we can't have these people constantly, these people just constantly, constantly this merry constantly in this merry go round constantly in this merry go rou no, no, agree, lots of lots >> no, no, i agree, lots of lots of things got to tightened of things got to be tightened up. you're you're quite up. and you're you're quite right about it. the role right to talk about it. the role of priests in this, the idea that, know, that kind of that, you know, that kind of young suddenly going young person is suddenly going to convert to to create to convert to christianity implausible. christianity seems implausible. i very it's i mean, it's all very well. it's time people their eyes to time people open their eyes to the fact that it is another way of escaping the asylum procedure, they in procedure, because they can, in fact, be helped. if a priest says to them, no, they're they're really good. you know, conscientious christians. but i wouldn't believe that now. and i don't most people in that don't think most people in that position believe that. position should believe that. they careful they should be very careful about i think it's about that. i think it's extremely important though, extremely important, though, to get with why acid get to grips with why acid attacks are different from , say, attacks are different from, say, attacks are different from, say, attacks knives . and one of attacks using knives. and one of the reasons is that with knives, you can show off and you can have these zombie knives and you can be sort of rather a gang leader. you've got all this equipment the same equipment you can't do the same with just a bottle of what looks like water. but in fact, is acid so constant . great on the fact
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so constant. great on the fact that these attacks have increased acid. why how can increased with acid. why how can you make sure that's reduced? and how can you make sure ? and how can you make sure? certainly in this case, the police not bothering to issue the photograph . right through the photograph. right through lunchtime, i was watching the news thinking, come on now , just news thinking, come on now, just produce the picture. and they didn't until wait for it. the news was over. yeah. >> great point that about about the police there think. the police there i think. >> think the >> yeah, i think the metropolitan have a lot metropolitan police have a lot to answer for in this. and they seem very hesitant. we saw seem to be very hesitant. we saw that the protests that similar with the protests as not willing to share as well, not willing to share certain pictures of people. and i think we all know the reason why were scared i think we all know the reason wibeing were scared i think we all know the reason wibeing called were scared i think we all know the reason wibeing called racistrvere scared i think we all know the reason wibeing called racist or'e scared i think we all know the reason wibeing called racist or scared d of being called racist or scared of being called racist or scared of racially profiling people. we just to on these just need to get on top of these things. really quickly. when there's someone the loose. there's someone on the loose. >> think we can't really jump >> i think we can't really jump to, assumptions to, um, you know, assumptions that because they're scared that it's because they're scared of being called racist because the metropolitan police, especially when it comes to cases women violence cases with women and violence against don't have cases with women and violence aggreat don't have cases with women and violence aggreat track don't have cases with women and violence aggreat track record. �*t have cases with women and violence aggreat track record. so have a great track record. so sometimes the narrative sometimes it fits the narrative to they were just to say, oh, they were just scared. maybe they're just incompetent and they've got a history.
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>> absolutely >> well, absolutely true. >> well, absolutely true. >> let's not. >> really bad. so let's not. >> really bad. so let's not. >> yeah, there's certainly a strong argument for incompetence. >> joanna, that, you know, the our incompetence our old friend incompetence comes doesn't it. comes up so often doesn't it. you . all these wonderful, you have. all these wonderful, clever arguments as to why they might have done this, but just sheen might have done this, but just sheer. oh, no, we're waiting and we wait for this and we haven't got i do, i do, i do got that. but i do, i do, i do suspect once the attacks happen and they've spoken to the victim, they'll go describe the victim, they'll go describe the victim information >> that can be information that's escalated very quickly to those that need to those those those that need to know it and distribute the pictures. that took know it and distribute the piclong. that took know it and distribute the piclong is that took know it and distribute the piclong is crazy. that took know it and distribute the piclong is crazy. andt took know it and distribute the piclong is crazy. and there's: so long is crazy. and there's got to be something there that's wrong. there wrong. why is there a hesitation? what is the hesitation? what is the hesitation about? >> i am in morbid way, quite >> i am in a morbid way, quite looking to the day looking forward to the day that the really the the left really meets the consequences of own consequences of its own ideology. and i, as a woman, i'd be keen get your views be quite keen to get your views on or not you have on whether or not you have concerns that we might be importing from countries importing people from countries legally who really legally or illegally, who really do treat women as second class citizens. as i mean, i'm concerned to women concerned when it comes to women being treated as second class citizens. >> of course, but what i'm worried about as well, equally,
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is taking a group of people, lumping them all under one brush and pretending that because that's essentially racist , isn't that's essentially racist, isn't it? essentially, you know it? that's essentially, you know , people as if, okay, i , treating people as if, okay, i have an idea of what i think your like, and every your culture is like, and every single has bad bits of single culture has bad bits of it. okay. and every single, you single culture has bad bits of it. ok'pocketsavery single, you single culture has bad bits of it. ok'pockets of�*ry single, you single culture has bad bits of it. ok'pockets of society e, you single culture has bad bits of it. ok'pockets of society havej know, pockets of society have different of, you know, different types of, you know, crimes and things like that. so i don't think that we should kind take pocket, one kind of take one pocket, one person, example, who has person, for example, who has done and paint the entire done this and paint the entire community under brush. community under one brush. >> we have >> well, look, we don't have a lot of recent data on acid lot of the recent data on acid attacks . there's attacks. there's some complicated as to why, complicated reasons as to why, but 38% of the but up until 2017, 38% of the suspects of acid attacks were african—american , african, african—american, african, caribbean, should i say 38% of the 32% were european white. so look, there's certainly something to say there about like what are the percentage of black communities, particularly where the attacks are happening in london and what's the percentage attackers we can percentage of attackers we can easily then say, well, that's a high percentage for that community, makes such community, which makes up such a small percent you just
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small percent that you just said a european. a white european. >> point is, is that >> but the point is, is that there's a much smaller population of black people in the are white the uk, as there are white people. >> you can start to >> so you can start to see, yes, maybe there a cultural issue maybe there is a cultural issue there, if the percentage is there, but if the percentage is way concentrate on on way higher, concentrate on on the acid. the use of acid. >> seems if you use >> it seems to me if you use acid, much more likely that acid, it's much more likely that it's premeditated in terms of what you then with so what you then do with it. so this getting into this isn't someone getting into a rage and saying, get out a wild rage and saying, get out my knife or get out my gun. this is saying, going to is someone saying, i'm going to get and i'm going to spray get you and i'm going to spray stuff you , which will ruin stuff on you, which will ruin your life. i suppose that's premeditated. mean, more premeditated. i mean, it's more likely to be domestic. yeah, i spoke to a survivor an acid spoke to a survivor of an acid attack last night at 10 pm. on this show. >> w pie wi- >> actually. and it was a case of mistaken identity. someone had driven 300 miles and knocked on his front he opened his on his front door. he opened his front door and he like front door and he got like a pint acid the pint of sulphuric acid in the face. right he said that face. right um. and he said that apparently, apparently he. the law at moment, if you get law is at the moment, if you get caught with acid in a water bottle at the bottle around london at the moment, it's across moment, presumably it's across will the uk as well. will be across the uk as well. once right, you have
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once that's all right, you have to caught with twice to get caught with it twice before actually get it. before you actually get it. >> has to be insane. it >> also has to be insane. it also has be in a public also has to be in a public place. yeah. so you've got it place. yeah. so if you've got it at home, um. oh, well, just for ordinary. ordinary what ordinary what ordinary use. do you what ordinary use. why do you have highly corrosive have this highly corrosive substance shouldn't substance at home? it shouldn't matter it's public or matter whether it's public or private. go after it for photograph. the people buying this or tighten the whole this stuff or tighten the whole rules up. make sure the whole system is very odd for someone saying, i want an acid, which will disfigure someone. >> yeah, i just want to tease ahead to something. i can get your reaction on it. i've done an interview with robert jenrick, the immigration jenrick, the former immigration minister. play that jenrick, the former immigration minforer. play that jenrick, the former immigration minfor you play that jenrick, the former immigration minfor you at play that jenrick, the former immigration minfor you at 10:00. play that jenrick, the former immigration minfor you at 10:00. one y that jenrick, the former immigration minfor you at 10:00. one of hat jenrick, the former immigration minfor you at 10:00. one of the out for you at 10:00. one of the key questions that i ask him is whether not we will actually, whether or not we will actually, let's this let's say we catch this particular individual, abdul aziz. obviously, aziz. and, you know, obviously, if then proven to be if he is then proven to be responsible for the allegations that are against him at the moment, and we know that he's had a history of a sexual offence and he had two offence and that he had two failed asylum bids, etc. would we actually be able to deport him then ? and well, you'll find
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him then? and well, you'll find out what robert jenrick says about that. but, you know, do you think that if there's a chance that we can't surely that makes an absolute mockery of this situation unequivocally , this situation unequivocally, anyone to this anyone that comes to this country, are country, whether they are illegal immigrants or refugees or asylum seekers, and they break the law there should be a zero tolerance policy. >> you are automatically deported. you cannot take the goodwill of people in the country that you go to seek asylum and refuge, and then break the customs and laws. it absolutely needs to be fixed. >> no? well that's great, the zero tolerance. what if the country refused accept this country refused to accept this person to go back to that country? mean, you know, think country? i mean, you know, think practically, know, all practically, you know, it's all very away with very well to say, do away with this. shouldn't have this. we this. we shouldn't have this. we shouldn't have that. how are you actually going this out actually going to carry this out through the courts? in what through the courts? and in what sort and you sort of way? and how will you force onto these planes? force people onto these planes? >> courts are >> well, the courts are certainly problem ask certainly a problem to just ask quickly, do think that this quickly, do you think that this individual should deported, then? >> potential plea. >> i think potential plea. i think we should look into
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think that we should look into it, you know, but i think that, you all are you know, all cases are different and actually different and we don't actually know enough about this individual he is individual yet. and he is actually technically still suspect. >> he is he still a suspect. >> he is he is still a suspect. what we do know him, what we do know about him, though, that he did fail his though, is that he did fail his asylum application twice and then potentially about one then potentially lied about one of to keep him in of the reasons to keep him in the country. guilty of the country. and is guilty of a sexual so there is that sexual offence. so there is that side but yes. all right, side of it. but yes. all right, loads more from my panel coming up earlier as i mentioned, up now. earlier as i mentioned, i down with former i did sit down with former immigration minister robert jenrick take on jenrick to get his take on multiple things, the ongoing migrant that's gripping migrant crisis that's gripping the nation. will want to the nation. you will not want to miss that. also, he's got a strong of warning and some strong word of warning and some quite astonishing revelations about james cleverly as well, but marked but also yesterday marked the start month. so start of lgbt history month. so why do need an entire month why do we need an entire month to commemorate everything but the kitchen sinks days the kitchen sinks these days look lgbt campaigner look renowned lgbt campaigner peter tatchell will be live in the battle out. the studio to battle this out. but first head's ahead but first my head's ahead were picking theme that we picking up on a theme that we mentioned a little bit at the start. there i'll be joined by kelvin and a church of kelvin mackenzie and a church of england vicar to into england vicar to delve into the institutions if had
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institutions role. if it had one at all abdul ezedi eady being at all in abdul ezedi eady being granted asylum in uk, is granted asylum in the uk, is there a massive problem our there a massive problem with our church of england and illegal migration? this is patrick christys tonight only on gb news
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news . as patrick christys news. as patrick christys tonight , and news. as patrick christys tonight, and it is now time for our head to head .
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our head to head. >> the church of england has found itself under a white hot spotlight in recent days, after the london chemical attack, suspect abdul ezedi was revealed to have been a third time lucky asylum seeker after a priest or vicar vowed vouched for his claims of a conversion to christianity. he was twice denied asylum before being allowed to stay, and it's also been revealed that he has a criminal record of sex offences , criminal record of sex offences, as this isn't the first time a dangerous criminal claimed asylum on the basis of conversion to christianity. ahmad al amin blew himself up outside a liverpool maternity unit on remembrance sunday in 2021. so why does the church of england hierarchy seem to care so much about letting everyone and their dog into the country, but clearly don't have much concern for the safety of its residents ? i also do have residents? i also do have a little clip now, because i think this might come from the top right of archbishop justin welby , talking about things like the rwanda plan. so let's just play
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that compassionate policy is one that compassionate policy is one that recognises we have a share of global responsibility . of global responsibility. >> it's not a solution. it's a mistake and it will be a failure when migrants arrive here. our system is grossly wasteful in both human and financial terms. control has become cruelty in the system for years, unable to build a life or to contribute to our society . our society. >> i'm joined now by the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie and church of england vicar and internet personality , vicar and internet personality, reverend dan beasley. thank you very much, calvin. i'll start with you. should we investigate what church of england do what the church of england do you it comes to their you think when it comes to their potential role our asylum potential role in our asylum seeker scandal ? seeker scandal? >> yes . i seeker scandal? >> yes. i think in this case it's quite simple . i think the it's quite simple. i think the priest , um, it's quite simple. i think the priest, um, should come it's quite simple. i think the priest , um, should come forward priest, um, should come forward and explain to the public, uh, who are now alarmed about their own, their own families, etc. how, um , he believed this
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how, um, he believed this particular person. what was it that was said to him that made him say, oh, yes, you are no longer a muslim. you are clearly committed to being a christian. and the further than that , how and the further than that, how would this vicar or priest view the fact that friends of this zigi now say he was a good muslim and only a day before the attack had actually gone and bought half sheep because it was a halal sheep. the truth about the matter is he either pulled the matter is he either pulled the wool over the priest's eyes, or the priest decided , i don't or the priest decided, i don't care whether you are muslim or christian, i'm going to allow you to stay in this country. it's this is known as pray to stay among those in the those in the migrant community. >> reverend, would you welcome
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an investigation, do you think into the church's potential role, into our ongoing asylum seeker scandal ? seeker scandal? >> we have to understand what's happening . you've got to happening. you've got to remember, as parish priests , remember, as parish priests, we're here on the ground. you know, there's immigration is happening , people are coming in. happening, people are coming in. but we have local churches. we are called by god to serve in our local churches. we are called by god to help people who are coming towards us. and, you know, we're not trained in all this in one sense. so are people to help us. um, and so it's kind of difficult to understand the circumstances of what's happening in this situation. but that local parish priest, you will get people coming in and trying it on, as they say, um, you know, and the priests, we got a good hearts. we're there to help people. people are coming in in need. and so what's happening in this situation? yes, it needs to be understood because there's a you know, a lot of people will be looking at the church of england and saying, going on? we saying, what's going on? and we are said, to help
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are there like i said, to help people, especially people coming in need they're approaching in need as they're approaching us parishes . us in our parishes. >> i wonder, yeah, not >> i just wonder, yeah, not necessarily talking about yourself reverend, yourself there, reverend, but i do there is a bit do wonder whether there is a bit of 80 times. and calvin, of naivety 80 times. and calvin, when you hear those statements from the archbishop, justin welby, there , what i hear there welby, there, what i hear there is that, you know, if you have someone who is an asylum seeker who presents themselves at one of your churches and you think that there is even the slightest possibility they might be deported or sent to rwanda , that deported or sent to rwanda, that probably you should do everything you can to try and keep them in the country. and i wonder if that's what's happening. >> well, let's face the reality of it that the under asylum rules, which the home office operates on, if you claim that you have a religion which says you have a religion which says you will be persecuted back in your homeland, you basically have to stay. so i am not sure that this would just be a parish priest that decided whether this
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this bloke is easy. was in fact, um, okay to come into our country. i suspect it might be a little bit higher up the line, but we need to know this. we've now seen a disaster happen in our nation, and it is time that we investigated the way this is done. of course, with welby going around saying, i don't care how many there are, you're all god's people. come on down. well, actually, this is one of the effects of it. he's not god's people and he's not even allah's people. he is a nasty, you know. well, he is a suspect of a very serious , um, violent of a very serious, um, violent invasion . and we don't know that invasion. and we don't know that there may not be more going forward . it's a shocker. forward. it's a shocker. >> yeah. this is the thing. i mean, reverend , if there are mean, reverend, if there are more cases like this, we have had the liverpool bomber. we've got this guy. obviously he's a suspect at the moment. the police are currently looking for him. if more and more of these things emerge , all of a sudden things emerge, all of a sudden the spotlight really, really does shine even more than it
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already is. now, on the role that the church of england is playing in this. and i just wonder, you know, is there not an irony here about church an irony here about the church of parish of england dwindling parish numbers? on numbers? okay. sitting on billions pounds worth of billions of pounds worth of resources, certain parishes resources, but certain parishes are they're skint to are saying that they're skint to the point some people who the point where some people who work in parishes even work in the parishes even consider i consider taking strike action. i mean, last time i went to an mean, the last time i went to an anglican church was a few months ago, and the talk there, the collection was for the local migrant hotel. there were people sitting in the back who were clearly middle east, clearly from the middle east, and whether the and i just wonder whether the church has got its priorities right here. >> judges have got their priorities right . the church of priorities right. the church of england is a broad church. you can my church and see can come to my church and see what my church is like there. patrick. um you know, all churches are called do churches are called to do different things. you know , different things. you know, different things. you know, different will different parish priests will live their calling in live their calling out in different ways , as if the different ways, as if the question about if there's any more people out there, you know, people will come and play the system in that sense. but there are many, many, many genuine
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people who are seeking asylum , people who are seeking asylum, and the churches are there to help need, like help people in those need, like i said, at the local parish level, we're not asking those questions. and they're not going to tell us those, you know, seeking asylum. please say that i'm a christian vouching for them, though, and i know this is not, again, not personally. not, again, not you personally. >> really don't want >> right. i really don't want to. end up dragging to. you know, end up dragging you side of it. but, you into that side of it. but, you into that side of it. but, you people from the church you know, people from the church are vouching for these people. so, mean , there has to be an so, i mean, there has to be an element responsibility, so, i mean, there has to be an element responsibility , does element of responsibility, does there not? from the of there not? from the likes of justin welby, reverend, you know, if there are people , know, if there are people, pansh know, if there are people, parish priests actually vouching and, and saying this in these circumstances is absolutely there needs to be an investigation into that, because that's not what we do as christians, you know, and that isn't right. >> so if that's happening and it's been proven to happen, then absolutely, an investigation needs to be had into those people . people. >> calvin, i'm going to give you the final say on this now. and i want to know what question is,
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do you to put to justin do you want to put to justin welby to church as a whole? welby to the church as a whole? what the things that you what are the things that you think the great british think we as the great british pubuc on think we as the great british public on now ? >> well, the 7 >> well, the question ? >> well, the question i'd like to put to ezidi, i would like to have him. i would like to ask him , have you ever read the him, have you ever read the bible , or have you ever prayed ? bible, or have you ever prayed? at what point did you see christian as the way forward and not islam? right? i'd like to know those questions because somebody must have asked those questions prior to him being given the go ahead. after all, the vicar or priest who asked it who didn't ask these questions will have known that he was already a convicted sex attacker. this happened after his second asylum was turned down, so he would have known that newcastle crown court. he was convicted . so there were was convicted. so there were lots of questions that that priest would have should have asked. did he ask them or did he just say, i'll tell you what, i don't really care . come on down. don't really care. come on down. nothing will happen.
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>> okay, all right. look, both of you, thank you very, very much. i really, really do appreciate you both coming on. especially at this time on a friday night that former friday night that is a former editor sun, kelvin editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie church of mackenzie and the church of england and internet england vicar and internet personality, dan personality, reverend dan beasley. a statement beasley. i've got a statement now from the church of england. i am not sure you're going to like this. says this is like this. it says this is clearly a shocking and distressing incident, and our thoughts are thoughts and prayers are with all affected by it. it all of those affected by it. it is of the home office is the role of the home office and the church to vet asylum and not the church to vet asylum seekers merits of seekers and judge the merits of their cases. well the their individual cases. well the comeback to that is if the church is vouching for people and people are using and those people are using the church of their court church as part of their court case stay the country , case is to stay in the country, then is it not the role of the church but look, coming church as well? but look, coming up, two teenagers who up, the two teenagers who murdered 16 year brianna murdered 16 year old brianna ghey have been publicly named by a judge. they asked scarlett jenkinson and eddie ratcliffe and their faces have now been plastered across the nation. but is it right to name and shame kids who commit crimes no matter
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what the severity is? bother at the bbc as well, because a beeb staffer has caused quite a stir after making highly opinionated posts online, leading to furious accusations of aggressive anti—semitism . you will not anti—semitism. you will not believe. i mean, it's borderline holocaust denial. this stuff. okay is it now time for the to bbc act? i've got a very special guest for you. all right, because it's actually one of gb news own people. they left the bbc over its refusal to call hamas terrorists , and they shine hamas terrorists, and they shine a very, very interesting light on what is going on at our state broadcaster. but shortly earlier, i sat down with the former immigration minister, robert jenrick, and i got his take on numerous different things. the ongoing migrant crisis. jane cleverly and what he could do when it comes to turkey remarkably, being declared an unsafe country for us to deport a load of turkish economic migrants. and also, he answers, some very serious questions about this asylum seeker, alleged acid attacker, all right. most notably, can we
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actually deport this guy even if we wanted to? you will not want to miss that. but next. yesterday marked the start of lgbt history month. why we lgbt history month. why do we need an entire month to commemorate everything but kitchen these kitchen sinks these days? renowned lgbt campaigner peter tatchell me live in the tatchell joins me live in the studio and we're going to
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monday to thursdays from six till 930. >> is patrick christys tonight only on gb news now february
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marks the celebration of lgbt+ history month, which kicked off yesterday. but do we really need a whole month for this? so mother's day, father's day, valentine's day, holocaust memorial day, even remembrance that just gets a weekend . so why that just gets a weekend. so why do issues affecting a much smaller group of people get a whole month by the time that we've had lgbt+ history month , we've had lgbt+ history month, pride month, and black history month were a quarter way through the year, aren't we? so is all of really necessary? of this really necessary? joining now in the studio is joining me now in the studio is human rights campaigner and activist. tatchell . activist. it's peter tatchell. peter, thank very much. why peter, thank you very much. why on do we need an lgbt on earth do we need an lgbt history month? >> lgbt history month is >> well, lgbt history month is not compulsory . it's entirely not compulsory. it's entirely voluntary. if you don't want to do it, don't do it. but the reason why there's a month is because there's such a huge wealth of activities filled arms, talks, plays , you name it, arms, talks, plays, you name it, andifs arms, talks, plays, you name it, and it's happening all over the country. um if you tried to go to all of them, it'd be
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absolutely impossible. even within spread out over a month . within spread out over a month. so that's the why the idea why the month came about. >> okay. all right. i mean, do we really need it, though? seriously i mean, what's the what's the black history month? i mean, i'm not sure why we necessarily all necessarily need that all the time. then you've got you've already got pride month. so what's additional what's why the additional month for history. well pride is for the history. well pride is part pride right? part of pride month right? >> an >> okay. so it's not an additional but you know, it's entirely voluntary and people really enjoy it. i mean, people come from london to london from all over the country and all over the world. for the lgbt, would you back a actually a boost to our economy? >> what about a white history month, white working class history month ? history month? >> well, if white working class people want to celebrate their month, wholly supporting it. >> do you think people would be shouting the rooftops? this shouting from the rooftops? this is thing is a ridiculously bigoted thing to have a white working to do, to have a white working class history month. they've already their own already got everything their own way, that way, all the privilege that white van drivers white working class van drivers and schoolboys appear to be bathed in at the moment. >> well, is a point. but,
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>> well, that is a point. but, you know, working class history in general is very much underrated in this country . and underrated in this country. and i think that transcends not just about white working class. it's about white working class. it's about other ethnic about black and other ethnic minority class as well. minority working class as well. and women working class and that's of the great things that's one of the great things about the about sylvia pankhurst, the suffragist or suffragette. she she championed not just women's right to vote, but also the rights of working class women , rights of working class women, who often not only got poorer jobs, lower pay , longer hours jobs, lower pay, longer hours and no childcare support. so i think there are lots of issues here, and i think any community has a right not to celebrate who they are. >> i think some people will be concerned that certainly when it comes to probably more pride month, etc, is the kind of thing that our schools get involved with as well, because they think, it's a nice thing for think, oh, it's a nice thing for the all of this. and the kids and all of this. and then wonder it crosses then it does wonder it crosses that potentially if some that line potentially if some people with, well, hang on a minute are we are we forcing this down? kids throats. this stuff down? kids throats. well, we do it with
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well, we you know, we do it with black history month or are we doing with month doing it with pride month or with lgbt history month? mean, with lgbt history month? i mean, it too do we it does it go too far? do we devote much time to what devote too much time to what are, by definition, minority groups? >> well, just take a look at pride in london. the main parade. probably at parade. there's probably at least million people least half a million people spectating at the spectating and looking at the demographics statistics, demographics and the statistics, it's half people it's more than half the people there straight families with there are straight families with kids them, it's a great day kids for them, it's a great day out. colourful, it's music, out. it's colourful, it's music, it's lively , people enjoy it and it's lively, people enjoy it and it's lively, people enjoy it and it's not sexual. it's just about celebrating the lgbt plus community and when it comes to schools again , no one's talking schools again, no one's talking about sexual reality. they're talking about respecting other people and the fact that there are some kids who grow up in a family with mum and dad, some with just a single parent, and some with same sex parents. it's just fabric of life. just part of the fabric of life. >> i wonder if it's a fine line between saying or recognising the genuine struggle for rights that the lgbt community has had , that the lgbt community has had, and then also creating a fake , and then also creating a fake, uh, notion of ongoing
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persecution in today's society, where, well, sadly, we have to look at the facts. >> you know, a third of all lgbt+ people in this country have been victims of homophobic hate crime in more than 15, have been actual physical violence . been actual physical violence. now it's much less than it was. but that's still a reality . and but that's still a reality. and many people are living with those traumas as even today. and of course, we just heard about the tragic case of brianna ghey . the tragic case of brianna ghey. you know, jay, she is indicative or symptomatic , an extreme or symptomatic, an extreme example of the kinds of persecution that trans people can face. not all trans people , can face. not all trans people, you know, suffer bad things, but a lot do much higher rates of prejudice, discrimination, hate crime , and of course, higher crime, and of course, higher rates of mental health. because of that . so, you know, we have of that. so, you know, we have made progress. of that. so, you know, we have made progress . and i want to made progress. and i want to thank everybody gay and straight who's listening. you know , for who's listening. you know, for helping us get there. it's fantastic work. but there are still issues to fight for and win. >> do you think there is a risk,
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though, of pigeonholing people and creating more division in society, as opposed to an umbrella unity by really umbrella of unity by really shining light on people's shining a light on people's differences and by shining a light on, uh, some of the divisions in society as well. the points of difference between us, think this certainly us, i think this certainly applies, in my view. anyway when it race. but when it it comes to race. but when it comes to sexuality as well, does that do more to divide us than bnng that do more to divide us than bring us together? >> well, i think, you know, all these different celebrations. black history month, lgbt+ history month, and i'd like to see a working class history month. yeah. um but, you know, you could have the veterans month, example . month, for example. >> yeah. all of this stuff, they're not about hating or being opposed to other people . being opposed to other people. >> it'sjust being opposed to other people. >> it's just about celebrating a particular community and culture. i think, know, culture. and i think, you know, when obviously i'm not when i'm not obviously i'm not black, but i think, you know, black history month great. black history month is great. it's learn about it's fantastic to learn about how long black people have been in this country and the contribution made. contribution they've made. >> concern with that >> some the concern with that again, is that then it again, though, is that then it feeds into things like critical
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race theory, right? it never just to stop oh, look, just seems to stop at, oh, look, you know, martin luther king or whatever. it then feeds very quickly this idea of quickly into this idea of ongoing against ongoing persecution against black people and that white people to blame that, people are to blame for that, etc. it shouldn't it >> yeah. well, it shouldn't it shouldn't that. that's not the way look at it. but yeah, way to look at it. but yeah, i've been really impressed to learn about i can't remember the names this black box at the names of this black box at the turn was turn of the 20th century was a champion . he was completely champion. he was completely forgotten . the first black forgotten. the first black footballer completely forgotten, the first black officer in the british armed forces to lead men into battle. completely forgotten, but their names and their contribution is being resurrected through black history month and organisations like it does the gay community or trans community, etc. really need any more highlighting? >> i mean, everywhere you move now there's a rainbow flag on something, you know, at uh, the train stations, especially around well. there's around london, as well. there's all the flags , etc. on bollards all the flags, etc. on bollards and all of this road crossings, they're slapping on the side of hospitals, etc, you know, does it actually really seriously need highlighting any more than
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it well all we know it already is? well all we know from history when i was growing up , there was no affirmation or up, there was no affirmation or validation of being lgbt, and that's why among our community there were rates of there were very high rates of depression , suicide , um, things depression, suicide, um, things like that. >> um, nowadays, because there is this validation, the rates of mental health and anxiety , mental health and anxiety, depression, suicide has gone way , way down. so i think it's really important that that visibility is there to encourage better mental health among young people coming to terms with their sexuality and gender identity . identity. >> peter, thank you very, very much. as peter tatchell, who is, of course, human rights campaigner and activist. um, look , coming up earlier, i sat look, coming up earlier, i sat down with former immigration minister robert jenrick. he speaks to me about a wide range of things, our inability to of things, from our inability to deport people that we know are criminals, etc. also, what on earth is going on when it comes to this idea that turkey is now
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an unsafe nation? he's got quite an unsafe nation? he's got quite a start . warning actually, for a start. warning actually, for our current home secretary, james cleverly, and the two teenagers who murdered 16 year old brianna ghey have now been publicly named by a judge. so scarlett jenkinson and eddie ratcliffe , their faces are ratcliffe, their faces are plastered across the nation. they're on your screen right now. if you're watching us on television, but is it right to name and kids who kill no name and shame kids who kill no matter the severity , bother at matter the severity, bother at the beeb, a bbc staffer has caused a stir after making highly opinionated posts online, saying highly opinionated. i mean really, some cases it's mean really, in some cases it's borderline holocaust denial. actually this for the actually is this time for the bbc ? will speak to bbc to act? now i will speak to a former member of staff at the bbc quit their job over just bbc who quit their job over just this kind of stuff, and he shines a light on the true culture at the beeb. you will not want to miss out. i'll see you in
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tick it's patrick christys tonight. just a reminder that we're going to be hearing very shortly from former immigration minister robert some quite robert jenrick with some quite astonishing revelations actually. the bbc has actually. but now the bbc has found in water again found itself in hot water again after of its employees, after one of its employees, called jewish people nazis and white people. parasites in a string of social media posts. so dawn cueva has received a lot of backlash for her online attacks, doesn't seem to be bothered at all, by the way, as she posted a facebook post today saying come at me by all means. my shoulders are broad. well, despite calls for her to be fired, the bbc haven't. i'm hoping that we're going to bring up a couple of those images for you as well as some of the things that she's actually been posting, but they include to include things like alluding to the the holocaust was the idea that the holocaust was a a holohoax that it a was a holohoax and that it might have been people like the rothschilds, in of rothschilds, etc. in charge of it. go. so, um, you it. there we go. so, um, you know, there's a lot of stuff in there. i'll read just some of it out for you now, which is 26 million died in world
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million russians died in world war all hear about, war one. but all we hear about, uh, at and made never forget uh, at and made never to forget are million. never are the jewish 6 million. never mind the rothschilds. she says all of this of the holohoax. i mean, this is remarkable . isn't mean, this is remarkable. isn't it, that this stuff is out there working at the bbc? i mean, there's a fair bit more of this stuff, by the way, joining me now is gb news producer, noah abraham. uh, former, i should say, recently left the bbc say, who recently left the bbc over to call hamas over his refusal to call hamas terrorists. look, thank terrorists. noah, look, thank you much. could you you very much. and could you just me a little bit just explain to me a little bit about , uh, just explain to me a little bit about, uh, some just explain to me a little bit about , uh, some the just explain to me a little bit about, uh, some the things at about, uh, some of the things at the when comes to this the bbc when it comes to this kind which appears kind of culture, which appears to of ideology to allow this kind of ideology and idea, anti—semitism really is what it is, isn't it, to run riot ? riot? >> it's absolutely anti—semitism i >> -- >> and here we are again. patrick talking about the bbc and anti—semitism. >> so yeah, i stopped working for the bbc because of their refusal to label hamas as a terrorist organisation , because terrorist organisation, because the most influential broadcaster on the planet,
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the most influential broadcaster on the planet , who the most influential broadcaster on the planet, who i was representing, could not and still won't say that a group who were responsible for the biggest loss of jewish life since the holocaust was a terrorist. so i stopped working for them, for them, because i have a moral compass, because i won't endorse or represent an organisation who won't stay . fact. and if our won't stay. fact. and if our national broadcaster can't state fact , then they simply cannot be fact, then they simply cannot be trusted . that's the kind of trusted. that's the kind of culture at the bbc. and why would i, as a jewish person, work for an organisation who are harming our community? >> i just find it remarkable , >> i just find it remarkable, though, because they do have a duty to report actual facts, don't they? and when it comes to things like hamas, i mean, that was a terrorist atrocity and they a terrorist they are a terrorist organisation. and you know, what was like when you was it like for you when you came look to leave the bbc came to look to leave the bbc and some of the conversations that. >> well, what i, what i came to leave the bbc, i did it in an internal conversation before i left. i warned them of what i was going to do if they didn't
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change their stance to be honest, i thought they would change their stance. it's such a bafic change their stance. it's such a basic ask. it's such a basic necessity. and i was astonished that they didn't. you know, this is hamas we're talking about. they killed over a thousand jewish people . if that were to jewish people. if that were to happen anywhere else in the world, they would be labelled straight away. straight away, uh, as a terrorist organisation. but the bbc, uh, chose not to, to go down that path. um, and, and with this issue, i recognise that the mistakes in workplace employment can occur. but this is catastroph and it follows catastrophic broadcasting. patrick. do you think this individual now clearly feels so emboldened that they've put something out there saying, come at me. >> my shoulders are broad and we've got stuff out there from her about the holocaust . she her about the holocaust. she calls holohoax . um, i mean, calls the holohoax. um, i mean, that implies to me that there is a certain culture at the bbc that you think you can get away with that. >> it's pathetic . it's pathetic >> it's pathetic. it's pathetic to think you can get away with
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that. this story comes less than a holocaust memorial a week after holocaust memorial day. let's remember that two days ago, i was sat in parliament listening to the testimonies of those who were actually there on the 7th of october. why this angers october. that's why this angers me much. and it troubles me me so much. and it troubles me even more because i don't believe for a second that the bbc didn't know about this particular employee. and her hate crimes and their hate crimes . they're not just this crimes. they're not just this isn't just an employee going rogue. an employee rogue. this is an employee breaking the this is also breaking the law. this is also an employee that in two thousand and seven posted on her facebook that the bbc ran by zionists that the bbc was ran by zionists and still employed her. and the bbc still employed her. it's mind blowing how incompetent that organisation are . are. >> all right, well, look, noah, thank you very, very much for coming on. it's great to chat to you and it's great to have you around the office as well as gb news is noah abraham, sir. thank you very, very well look, you very, very much. well look, coming the two teenagers who coming up, the two teenagers who murdered old brianna murdered 16 year old brianna ghey have been publicly named by a judge . so scarlett jenkinson a judge. so scarlett jenkinson
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and eddie ratcliffe. their faces are right your screen. are right there on your screen. if watching us your tv if you're watching us on your tv or is it actually or online. but is it actually right to name and shame kids who commit these kind of crimes, no matter what the severity is ? at matter what the severity is? at 10:30 pm, we will bring you the very first of tomorrow's pages, hot off the press. but next i sat down with former immigration minister robert jenrick and he absolutely blows the lid off our broken borders . stay tuned. that broken borders. stay tuned. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsor of weather on gb news is . news is. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. good evening . tomorrow we'll stay evening. tomorrow we'll stay pretty mild across the south. a blustery day again across parts of the north, with a mixture of sunshine and showers. we've got high pressure to the south, low pressure to the north and in between. this weather front is just edging southwards, the isobars squeezing together. it's been over northeast been very gusty over northeast england, scotland england, southeast scotland
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staying . that way into this staying. that way into this evening. but slowly, overnight the winds will ease at least a little bit. staying breezy though, particularly in the far north with more showers in here. some rain for wales and some patchy rain for wales and northern england, but many areas staying look at the staying dry. and look at the temperatures degrees in temperatures 9 or 10 degrees in most towns and cities, certainly through wales. through england and wales. so a pretty the weekend pretty mild start to the weekend for february. onto the for early february. onto the details for tomorrow and cloudy with some rain into wales, particularly on the west coast. some of that rain will trickle into northern england, the midlands anglia midlands and maybe east anglia later south. most places later to the south. most places just dry and cloudy and further north day for much north a bright day for much of northern ireland. southern and eastern but blustery eastern scotland, but blustery again showers across the again with showers across the highlands and the western isles. a cooler feel here, but again for most places. pretty mild on sunday we'll see a bit more rain tracking back across northern ireland, perhaps into parts of western scotland and across northern england again , much of northern england again, much of the south bar a bit of drizzle over the hills, just dry and fairly getting quite windy fairly drab, getting quite windy in places once more on sunday
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and again it's going to be mild double the board double digits across the board with in the south. with teens in the south. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers as sponsors of
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>> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight. >> their home country , we're >> their home country, we're told, is afghanistan . told, is afghanistan. >> and so that will be difficult i >> -- >> can we actually deport . the >> can we actually deport. the alleged acid attack asylum seeker? plus islamism of this kind is a cancer. >> it's got to be rooted out and destroyed . destroyed. >> x immigration minister robert jenrick is on shortly with a warning as well to our new home secretary and scarlet jenkins for the murder of brianna ghey . for the murder of brianna ghey. >> i set the minimum terms at 22 years less the 352 days that you have spent on remand .
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have spent on remand. >> children named shamed and caged. should we be naming kids who kill ? i've got tomorrow's who kill? i've got tomorrow's newspapers tonight for you as well with my panel. es gb news star alex armstrong, ex bbc political chief john sergeant and apprentice finalist joanna jaflue. and apprentice finalist joanna jarjue . also what on earth is jarjue. also what on earth is happening . here? yeah, get ready happening. here? yeah, get ready britain, here we go. astonishing revelations from the ex immigration minister. next >> good evening. i'm sofia wenzler in the gb newsroom . some wenzler in the gb newsroom. some breaking news. in the last half houn breaking news. in the last half hour, the us has begun a wave of
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retaliatory strikes targeting militants in iraq and syria. that's according to officials. a statement from us central command said forces struck more than 85 targets. it comes after a deadly attack in jordan that killed three us troops and injured 40 others. two teenagers who killed brianna ghey gi in what's been described as a sadistic attack have been jailed for her murder. 16 year old scarlett jenkinson , who for the scarlett jenkinson, who for the first time admitted stabbing the transgender teen, will serve a minimum time of 22 years. her accomplice , eddie ratcliff, was accomplice, eddie ratcliff, was given a minimum of 20 years. the court heard. after coaxing brianna to a park, they stabbed her 28 times in a frenzied and ferocious attack with a hunting knife. in victim statements , knife. in victim statements, brianna's family described her killers as two predators stalking their prey and said they are pure evil and a manhunt continues tonight for a suspected chemical attacker, with police saying they found significant and important new evidence. a new image has been
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released of abdul ezedi , who was released of abdul ezedi, who was last seen at london's kings cross underground station on wednesday evening. he got on a victoria line tube at 9 pm, heading south. police say the 31 year old mother, who was attacked, is still sedated in hospital with life changing injuries . met police commander injuries. met police commander john saville also gave an update on the injuries of her daughters, aged three and eight, saying they are now not likely to be life changing injuries as there are fresh warnings that potential human rights breaches on the bibby stockholm barge as asylum seekers face what's being described as claustrophobic conditions . as the home affairs conditions. as the home affairs select committee says, cramped living conditions are contributing to a decline in mental health. for some residents, the cost of housing, asylum claimants on the barge is £120 per person, per night . it £120 per person, per night. it comes as the home office has asked for an emergency £2.6 billion, after spending more than expected on asylum accommodation given last year. the government spent around £8
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million a day for migrant accommodation, with official figures showing more than 50,000 were housed in hotel rooms . and were housed in hotel rooms. and tv presenter jonnie irwin has tv presenterjonnie irwin has died at the age of 50 after being diagnosed with terminal cancer in 2020. mr irwin was best known for presenting channel four's a place in the sun and the bbc's escape to the country. the presenter had been open about his illness since his diagnosis, this in the hope of inspiring others to make the most of every day. tv presenter jasmine harman has paid tribute to her place in the country. sun co—star and partner in crime jonnie irwin, following his death . for the latest story, death. for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts now it's back to . patrick. >> an asylum seeker, sex offender and alleged acid attacker is on the run . he
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attacker is on the run. he failed the asylum process twice and manufactured his asylum claim in britain by pretending to be christian. a serving minister has stood down because of threats from islamist turkey, a leading holiday destination and a nato ally. he might now be classed as a safe country, so we couldn't deport turkish economic migrants there . everything seems migrants there. everything seems broken, but i want answers and i want you to get answers. so i spoke to former immigration minister robert jenrick, who voted against the rwanda bill because he didn't think it was strong enough. and i started by asking him if we do catch abdul ezedi . convicted sex offender ezedi. convicted sex offender who allegedly doused a woman and children in acid . and then if children in acid. and then if he's found guilty of course, could we actually . deport him? could we actually. deport him? >> well, good evening, patrick. i think this terrible case just highlights how important it is to have a fully functioning, robust rwanda policy. >> so that if somebody arrives, they're actually detained and
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not allowed to abscond and live in our country for months or years and are swiftly removed to a safe third country like rwanda , the problem with the present situation , and indeed the weak situation, and indeed the weak version of rwanda that the government's pursuing, is . that government's pursuing, is. that people are able to make these spunous people are able to make these spurious claims and drag out their removal for many years. >> course, i that this >> of course, i hope that this individual, if they are responsible for this terrible crime, and serves crime, is convicted and serves time in jail and then is removed . country, we're . but their home country, we're told, . and so told, is afghanistan. and so that will be difficult as you say, although there are some countries that are removing people back to afghanistan or at least exploring it . and i think least exploring it. and i think many people would take the view that somebody who had committed such crime as this such a serious crime as this individual is now alleged to have done, deserved to be sent back home, wherever that is . back home, wherever that is. >> so, to be clear, we would have a problem sending him or others like him to afghanistan
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if he's found guilty of this very serious crime , then, as very serious crime, then, as i say, he will spend time in prison and off our streets, and then there will be a process to try to remove him at the present time. >> we wouldn't send somebody to afghanistan, but that might change in the years ahead. uh, when perhaps he served a prolonged sentence in prison for what appears to have done or what he appears to have done or is alleged to have done. but i think the lesson of this incident is that we mustn't allow people like him just to break into our country, and then to be able to live here for years, years, whilst pursuing endless claims. this is the definition of a merry go round of spurious claims and counterclaims . this is exactly counterclaims. this is exactly what suella braverman and i set out to stop. this is what the rwanda policy is supposed to do . rwanda policy is supposed to do. unfortunately, the government has chosen the weaker version of that policy where individuals can make claims.
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that policy where individuals can make claims . as you know, can make claims. as you know, i strongly, vehemently disagreed with that and encouraged them to change tack. they haven't done that yet. i hope perhaps that one day they will, because we have to stop this. we can't allow individuals to be frustrating our system with grotesque and absurd claims, such as somebody has converted to christianity , uh, which to christianity, uh, which probably isn't correct . um, and probably isn't correct. um, and by doing so , we prevent their by doing so, we prevent their removal. we've got to get to a simple system where people come here illegally , are detained and here illegally, are detained and swiftly removed . that's what swiftly removed. that's what i've always advocated . i've always advocated. >> yeah, a lot of people agree with that. but i mean, it is absolutely astonishing, isn't it, that as it currently stands, this individual, if indeed he goes on be proven guilty, goes on to be proven guilty, etc, probably won't be deported back afghanistan because back to afghanistan because apparently under our current laws we have laws we can't. so we have a merry go round of legal challenges being shamelessly gamed by by treacherous activists and human rights lawyers. does mrjenrick think
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lawyers. does mr jenrick think the current version , then, of the current version, then, of rishi sunak's rwanda bill would do anything to change that and let me explain why. >> because what we know here, uh, from the facts that are available, is that home office officials , in fairness to them, officials, in fairness to them, rejected his claim twice. but that a tribunal judge ultimately was sympathetic to him. uh, despite the fact that he had been convicted of a sexual offence . uh, serious one. and offence. uh, serious one. and then granted him asylum or a form of humanitarian protection to remain in the uk and the form of the rwanda policy that the government is pursuing enables people to make individual claims and places a lot of store on the same types of people. these tribunal judges and hopes that they won't be so naive in the future. but i'm afraid the evidence suggests that they are sympathetic towards the asylum seekers, and they often do make
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errors of judgement , as this may errors of judgement, as this may well be. and what i want to see is that whole process cut out. and so if somebody into the country comes here illegally , country comes here illegally, then they get detained and removed and this merry go round is ended once and for all. >> so if we have this situation again, like the exact situation that we've got now and the rwanda bill as it currently stands is passed in its current form, clearly there is every chance that that will do nothing to stop that. okay. so today it emerged that we might not be able to deport anyone to turkey, where millions of people go on houday where millions of people go on holiday every single year and it's a nato ally, by the way, because home office officials have decided that it's not a safe country . safe country. >> billions of brits go on houday >> billions of brits go on holiday to turkey . uh, we do holiday to turkey. uh, we do business there. it's an ally. it's a partner. um, it's a member of the council of europe, a nato member state. it is a safe country, but we are told today that the home office have
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decided not to deem it as such in law . that's very in law. that's very disappointing. if that's correct , i initiated negotiations with the turkish government in the summer of last year and had very productive conversations about how we can get illegal migrants from turkey back home and how we can work together to tackle organised immigration crime, much of which stems from turkey , much of which stems from turkey, because the boats and the engines themselves that are used in the channel are either manufactured passed manufactured there or passed through into europe. so through turkey into europe. so it's a crucial , uh, through turkey into europe. so it's a crucial, uh, part of the chain behind this whole issue. what seems to have happened is that the home office have said that the home office have said that whilst it might be generally safe , that there are generally safe, that there are sufficient instances of persecution or human rights abuse in turkey for us not to be able to deem the entire country to be safe, that means that the process will be far more bureaucratic. it will be much easier to appeal . and this, as easier to appeal. and this, as you said earlier, may we go round of claims will be able to
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continue. that's very worrying because we're seeing a great increase in the number of essentially economic migrants from turkey getting into small boats and coming to the uk in search of a better life . that's search of a better life. that's got to stop. we've got to be able to detain and remove those people as quickly as possible . i people as quickly as possible. i don't know the full detail behind what's happened here, but i would strongly urge the home secretary to change tack when officials presented me and suella braverman with similarly cautious advice, with respect to india, we overruled them and declared india to be safe and that enables us now to remove people back to india swiftly . i people back to india swiftly. i think james cleverly has to do the same for turkey . the same for turkey. >> that's actually a really big line there. okay, so it appears that our home secretary could stop this madness if he wanted to and declare turkey safe . it's to and declare turkey safe. it's like it's definitely in his
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remit, though. that's what i wanted to know. >> absolutely. and as i say, suella and i did that for india and georgia and other countries. and so i hope that home secretary will take the same robust decision with respect to turkey or else i'm afraid we'll find thousands of turks, as i say, who are mostly economic migrants, coming here on small boats and have no prospect of removing them . and the public removing them. and the public will then be left having to pick up the cost of looking after them to tune of tens or them to the tune of tens or hundreds of millions of pounds for years to come. and that's completely unacceptable. >> according to the former >> so according to the former immigration minister robert jenrick, james cleverly, our home could step in home secretary, could step in and overrule this idea that turkey unsafe, in part turkey is an unsafe, in part country and just run straight over that. will he? a serving minister, quit over islamist threats as well? rishi sunak decided to not even bother speaking about that, nor did sir keir starmer. so i wanted to ask mr jenrick if we should be mrjenrick if we should be calling this kind of islamist
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intimidation out for exactly what it is . what it is. >> i think we should. it's obviously desperately sad for mike freer , who is a superb mike freer, who is a superb member of parliament, has been a fantastic representative for finchley and golders green and for the british jewish community as it's one of the constituencies with the largest number of british jews in the country. and i will miss him enormously from parliament. but there have been those who have reacted to this with, to my mind, trite comments like mps need to be nicer to each other or discourse on social media needs to improve those things may be true, but that's not the nub of the issue here. the issue is that someone like mike freer and others across the country are victims of virulent anti—british islamist extremism. we have to call that out properly , diagnose it and take properly, diagnose it and take action against it. islamism of this kind kind is a cancer. it's
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got to be rooted out and destroyed, and you don't even begin to do that until you have an honest conversation about the fact that it exists in our society , and that it's society, and that it's threatening people all of the time. it's pervasive and growing, and we've got to tackle it very strong stuff there from mr jeremy. >> look, the tories mrjeremy. >> look, the tories are some 20 odd points behind in the polls at the moment. there is no question that these issues have ansen question that these issues have arisen on their watch. but labour could be in power soon when are they on the issues of illegal immigration and islamism ? >> well, 7- >> well, i 7— >> well, i don't ? >> well, i don't think they're anywhere on these issues . that's anywhere on these issues. that's the sad truth . i think, as you the sad truth. i think, as you say, one of the most important questions facing the country is how can we control our borders ? how can we control our borders? how can we protect the security of the public? how can we ensure that the pace of change in our country through legal migration is not too fast? and how do we guard against the most dangerous
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consequences of mass migration, such as rising extremism and damage to our british way of life? and i hear nothing from the labour party on those issues , as i would be extremely worried to live under a labour government for precisely those reasons. the labour party would scrap our rwanda policy even if it was working and stopping the boats . that's what yvette cooper boats. that's what yvette cooper and keir starmer have said , and and keir starmer have said, and they have said nothing but platitudes and warm words on the issue of extremism . i want to issue of extremism. i want to hear them calling out anti—british islamist extremism , anti—british islamist extremism, um, and setting out how they would take action to stop it if they're a serious party of government. that's exactly what they would do . they would do. >> so as it stands , we will >> so as it stands, we will struggle to deport a two time failed asylum seeker who lied about his religion, committed a sex crime, and then allegedly doused a woman and children with acid. surely everybody can see that. that's madness . and it that. that's madness. and it needs changing when it comes to
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turkey's a safe country. our home secretary can apparently decide that for himself . so will decide that for himself. so will he. why didn't he overrule home office officials ? the big office officials? the big question to answer there for james cleverly, islamism is a cancer society that needs cancer in our society that needs to be eradicated. but it looks as party that let it as though the party that let it fester are about to be voted out, and a party that doesn't seem care about it are going seem to care about it are going to voted in. spare a thought to be voted in. spare a thought for britain, won't you? let's get panel get the thoughts of my panel now. okay? i am joined now. okay? and i am joined tonight and gratefully so tonight and very gratefully so by chief political by former bbc chief political correspondent sergeant. correspondent john sergeant. we do social commentator and do have social commentator and apprentice finalist joanna jaflue apprentice finalist joanna jarjue and gb news star alex armstrong. alex a lot to unpack there when comes to, um, what there when it comes to, um, what robert jenrick had to say there. this idea of turkey not being a safe country , i think, but the safe country, i think, but the home secretary potentially or definitely, according to him, having it within his powers to actually decide that for himself. i mean, that's remarkable . that hasn't happened remarkable. that hasn't happened yet. >> know, i think the public >> you know, i think the public are going saying you've are going to be saying you've had decade in power and now had a decade in power and now we're talking about it right on
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the precipice of an election . the precipice of an election. what is going on with the tories 7 what is going on with the tories ? and much as i agree with ? and as much as i agree with everything, said, everything, jenrick has said, and very sensible and he said some very sensible things whilst he was a things and whilst he was a minister, did some good minister, he did some good things. this too little, too things. this is too little, too late. how can the public trust the tories on immigration going into this election, and how can they sit there and blame the labour and they're labour party and say they're scared labour party? scared about the labour party? they've the highest they've overseen the highest migration figures on record . i migration figures on record. i mean, it's all a little bit mean, so it's all a little bit too in my opinion, in terms too late in my opinion, in terms of yes. he has of james cleverly. yes. he has the to do it. i wonder why the power to do it. i wonder why he's not doing it. where is he? where is the foreign secretary? this is bonkers. yeah, yeah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look,)nkers. yeah, yeah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look, i|kers. yeah, yeah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look, i thinkyeah, yeah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look, i think izah, yeah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look, i think i thinkaah. where is the foreign secretary? thi�*look, i think i think that's >> look, i think i think that's i'll you next. um, i'll come to you next. um, joanna. after but joanna. after. afterjohn. but i think the big question think that's the big question for out of of that, which for me out of all of that, which is that if it is the case, as robert jenrick is saying, that the home secretary could have just over any kind just run straight over any kind of that, turkey of suggestion that, uh, turkey is unsafe as he and is an unsafe country as he and suella did, apparently, when it comes to india. well, why hasn't he i'm not sure they think
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>> well, i'm not sure they think it would work. president erdogan has quite clear what his has made it quite clear what his position is. the turks feel that they've had, uh, enormous number position is. the turks feel that th> i know, but the way that you describe this is if oh, it could just be done with all that james cleverly has got to do is turn around make it quite clear. around and make it quite clear. but most these things but most of these things are much than that. but most of these things are m doesn't than that. but most of these things are m doesn't . than that. but most of these things are m doesn't . and than that. but most of these things are m doesn't . and when than that. but most of these things are m doesn't . and when tihear, at. it doesn't. and when you hear, i don't know, jenrick going on and on about how it's unacceptable , on about how it's unacceptable, we must call them out. we mustn't do this. and then you think of just one simple point. the supreme court has made it absolutely clear their ruling absolutely clear in their ruling before christmas that have before christmas that you have to consider asylum complaints and jurisdiction in britain. now, you can't get round that. as far as they were concerned, the ruling was stark. now there's nothing in the rwanda bill that somehow means we've got through all this. and it goes back to the thing with the
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rwanda bill. this will be sorted. it won't be sorted. >> the thing with the rwanda bill is he was making the point. there is this that supposedly, anyway, if somebody like this individual did come into britain, the one who's being hunted at the moment for this alleged attack into alleged acid attack came into britain. they would have been detained. wouldn't detained. they wouldn't have been out, and been allowed straight out, and then would sent then they would have been sent for processing in rwanda. so they the they would never have had the chance actually on quite. chance to actually go on quite. >> if the rwanda bill were everyone's voting. >> thing know, >> but this thing i know, everyone's well, not everyone's voting well, not everyone. loads people are everyone. loads of people are voting now. the voting against this now. the media against media class are all against it. and you an incident. and then you see an incident. >> there's not the media class. you're saying, can, you know a lot of people would be prepared to bill if to accept the rwanda bill if they it could get they thought it could get through complications through the legal complications and international treaty and the international treaty obligations, people would obligations, and people would say, that's pretty say, oh, well, that's pretty impressive. but at the moment there no consistent there seems to be no consistent argument as to argument from the lawyers as to how magical bill could how how this magical bill could actually become law. >> almost they look >> it's almost as if they look at, refugees and asylum at, um, refugees and asylum seekers. very simplistic. seekers. it's very simplistic. basically, be basically, bombs have to be dropping your for you to
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dropping on your head for you to be, know, eligible. so yes, be, you know, eligible. so yes, we to turkey and we go, you know, to turkey and on holiday. and that apparently makes but makes it a safe country. but actually we have a history in this country of calling out other countries maybe other countries who maybe have really when it really bad practices when it comes lgbt. q there's so many comes to lgbt. q there's so many different that respect different things that we respect at you could get a turkish >> you could get a turkish airlines flight. yeah, from turkey. lambda heathrow. and according to this, you could just say basically i don't want to go back. i'm essentially going to i'm going to be persecuted by urdu. or maybe i'm an academic like. and an academic he doesn't like. and we'd let you stay. we'd have to let you stay. >> but even looking at the case of this acid attack person, um, you know, this person has has done this, but now allegedly, allegedly allegedly done allegedly, he has allegedly done this, at same time, he's this, but at the same time, he's come afghanistan. and i'm this, but at the same time, he's conenoughafghanistan. and i'm this, but at the same time, he's conenough t0|hanistan. and i'm this, but at the same time, he's conenough to knowtan. and i'm this, but at the same time, he's conenough to know and and i'm this, but at the same time, he's conenough to know and remember old enough to know and remember when kabul fell and we were all saying, and i'm saying that saying, and i'm not saying that this you know, this person, you know, specifically worked with the british but to british armed forces, but to kind of have this you kind of have this blanket, you know, response to this, to know, um, response to this, to say anybody coming say that anybody who's coming from varne then we from afghanistan varne then we need to afghanistan need to the afghanistan especially, is overtly prioritising our own citizens
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here. >> yeah. well, look, i think what british people care about is that they can live in a safe country. mean, when you've country. so, i mean, when you've got figures in the got migration figures in the millions every in the millions now, every year in the millions, and can't verify millions, and we can't verify some those people, we're some of those people, we're now going them jobs in going to be giving them jobs in the home secretary hang on, the care home secretary hang on, hang on. >> immigration about >> immigration is about 7000 million with illegal migrants. >> we're talking about giving them jobs, right? we can't even verify some of who some of these people are. we don't have documentation now. they're going people are. we don't have do be nentation now. they're going people are. we don't have do be lookingn now. they're going people are. we don't have do be lookingn now. thehomes.ng to be looking after care homes. i reasonable i think there's reasonable concern here from the british public. sure. public. oh, sure. >> lots concern. >> lots of concern. >> we're going to have move >> we're going to have to move it now, coming up, it on now, look, coming up, coming so a, uh, this is coming up. so a, uh, this is a shift in tone. a pigeon suspected of spying? yes has been released week . and the been released this week. and the apprentice kicked off. bert started with awkward started off with an awkward moment contestant. we'll moment for one contestant. we'll be at 1030, just be revealing all at 1030, just about probably a bit later. we'll bring you the very first of tomorrow's pages . hot of tomorrow's front pages. hot off the landing in off the press. the landing in thick and fast as we speak. but next, very serious story. so two teenagers who murdered 16 year
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old brianna joy have now been publicly named. right, old brianna joy have now been publicly named. right , they publicly named. all right, they are they're are scarlett jenkinson. they're eddie their faces are eddie ratcliffe. their faces are everywhere. is it right that everywhere. but is it right that we name and shame kids who kill no matter what the severity is? i'm going to be joined by legendary radio dj pete price, who past three decades who spent the past three decades fighting james bulger's fighting for james bulger's killers up and not killers to be locked up and not be able to hide with fake identity . stay tuned
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb
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news . news. >> welcome back. the two teenagers convicted of murdering 16 year old brianna jai were formally named today at a sentencing . scarlett jenkinson sentencing. scarlett jenkinson and eddie ratcliffe was sentenced to 22 and 20 years, respectively . both killers were respectively. both killers were just 15 at the time of their crimes. now, the revelation of the murders names has reignited a massive public debate over whether minors who commit horrific crimes should be identified to the public. many believe that despite their young age, the nature of the offence warrants public knowledge . but warrants public knowledge. but brianna's own father , despite brianna's own father, despite referring to the killers as evil monsters, actually said they shouldn't be named. he said shouldn't be named. so he said there's nothing they are nothing. sorry. they should just be forgotten about. so should we name and shame child killers? joining me now is the legendary radio dj pete price, who spent
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the past three decades fighting for james bulger's killers to be locked up as well. pete, thank you very , very much. where are you very, very much. where are you very, very much. where are you on this, then? should we be naming child killers? >> i think we should . >> i think we should. >> i think we should. >> i think we should. >> i grew up with this dreadful case.i >> i grew up with this dreadful case. i was on radio on the night that ralph bulger's mother, helen bulger, jamie's grandmother , rang my show and grandmother, rang my show and said, i don't think i'm ever going to see that angel in my house again. that was when the story broke . we then found out story broke. we then found out what had happened, and as journalist and broadcasters, we weren't allowed to say what had happened to that child . and that happened to that child. and that child was a baby for five nights a week, four hours a night, every night for weeks and weeks. people were tortured, were demented with pain over what had happened to this child. james
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bulger . happened to this child. james bulger. people had seen these two children take him. they'd seen him from the bus . it seen him from the bus. it started to become this ridiculously big story. started to become this ridiculously big story . and i ridiculously big story. and i then became the voice of liverpool throughout the world. not that i wanted to be, but i was chosen because i broke story. i then got involved with denise. i got involved with ralph. i went to the trials when they were found and i went on they were found and i went on the marches to keep them in prison. i've heard the stories about them coming out. venables in particular, and telling everybody who he is . there's everybody who he is. there's been whispers that he's been by, um, denise s home, which is petrified her and she's lived how she has lived through the torturous times . and because he torturous times. and because he appears to be a dreadfully bad person, i think people should know if he's going to get
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married , who he should marry, or married, who he should marry, or who you are marrying. >> well, this is pete. can i just say this brings me this bnngs just say this brings me this brings me on to my next question, which i think is something that people are probably going to be talking something that people are probalin going to be talking something that people are probalin the ng to be talking something that people are probalin the coming talking something that people are probalin the coming days,�*|g something that people are probalin the coming days, which about in the coming days, which is that these two monsters, i mean, judge actually mean, the judge actually described it sadistic described it as sadistic and she's you look she's not wrong. when you look at of preparation and at the level of preparation and the manner they, uh, the manner in which they, uh, slaughtered brian joy, they are, upon release, probably only going to end up with a taxpayer funded new identity and lifelong anonymity. probably okay. should they get that ? they get that? >> i do, i believe they should not in any shape or form. uh, vanderbilt has already apparently had , uh, a new apparently had, uh, a new identity, and he's gone drinking to pubs and told people who he is. so it's then cost us again for another identity. and he's had no punishment. he hasn't. i mean, people still don't know what those children , venables what those children, venables and thompson did to that baby.
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it was the most and i wouldn't even say it on here. it was the most horrendous torture on this earth . so why should they be earth. so why should they be protected? they've never ever. yes, they've been arrested . yes, they've been arrested. they've been locked up, but they've been protected because people don't know who they are. >> well, what about the argument, by the way? i mean , it argument, by the way? i mean, it turned out that one of the killers of brianna had been was facing expulsion from her previous school for supposedly spiking a pupil with drugs and then had tried to drug brianna. the school weren't made aware. they didn't make people aware . they didn't make people aware. now the local council is getting involved , so they're launching involved, so they're launching an inquiry. i mean, how many inquiries do we need into all of these goodness sake? these things, for goodness sake? but what about the fact that brianna's dad has said, look, i don't think there should be named. why? because it gives them fame because yeah, them fame and because it. yeah, it them. maybe it it makes them. maybe they did it for infamy. so. so is there for the infamy. so. so is there some truth to that? what would you any with
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you have any any stock with that? understand what he means that? i understand what he means about giving them fame. >> they have any >> they shouldn't have any pubuchy >> they shouldn't have any publicity venables and publicity like venables and thompson shouldn't. but i think people be aware who people should be aware of who they knows when they are because who knows when those two come out, which is a long, long way. why should they be involved with another family and the family not know who they are? were stories , all are? there were stories, all sorts of stories going around the liverpool, venables was the liverpool, that venables was going now going out with a girl now and was about marriage. was talking about marriage. shouldn't the parents of that girl know what a monster their daughter's going to get married? so it is a difficult one. and by the way, they will be hit. they'll be targets , absolute they'll be targets, absolute targets, because somebody will take a pop at them . i don't take a pop at them. i don't think that should happen , but think that should happen, but that will be . in the equation as well. >> pete, thank you very, very much. it's great to have you on to and be able to discuss something like this with you, with someone who's been you know, kind of right on the inside of another . it's inside of another. it's obviously not the same, but another ish as another similar ish case as well. there,
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well. so dj pete price there, thank you very much. now thank you very, very much. now coming very much a shift in coming up very much a shift in tone this. a suspected pigeon who has spying on uh who has been spying on uh apparently has been released this week. and the apprentice kicked off but started off with an awkward moment for one contestant. look, uh, yeah . contestant. look, uh, yeah. remarkable stuff coming your way. don't go anywhere
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radio is patrick christys tonight . is patrick christys tonight. >> we're only on gb news and i have got tomorrow's front pages for you right now . so we start for you right now. so we start with the daily mail . he stabbed with the daily mail. he stabbed brianna ghey because he hated trans people. she just wanted to kill fun . this is, of kill for fun. this is, of course, the devastating case now of brianna ghey and the two killers. the daily telegraph teenagers lust for fame led to murder of brianna. teenagers lust for fame led to murder of brianna . now that's murder of brianna. now that's interesting, especially in that debate about whether or not she should be named. they say should be named. they also say royal abandons major
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royal navy abandons major warship patrols around the falkland islands. can't just say the islands have come the falkland islands have come out twitter because out on twitter because that's the done these days and the way it's done these days and called this fake news. but hey, there daily express there we go. uh, daily express unmask evil monsters who killed brianna . there we go. there's. brianna. there we go. there's. look, there's obviously a theme on the front pages here. uh, the mirror brianna ghey killers unmasked, pure evil. they say warped with thirst warped teens with thirst for killing sadistic murder. killing and sadistic murder. the. i gone for something the. i have gone for something different. cut income different. they say cut income tax to ease cost of living crisis . voters urge hunt crisis. voters urge hunt majoritv of voters believe they pay majoritv of voters believe they pay too much tax , as 46% want pay too much tax, as 46% want help for lower earners. oh well, probably involve you paying more tax, but anyway, there we go. the daily star. old romantics work out how much your soul mate with cost. apparently it's £9.67 a day. the cost of falling in love is £9.67 a day. someone might want to have a word with my fiance about that, but there we go. um, look, we will start with my wonderful panel as well . with my wonderful panel as well. we've got john sergeant, of
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course, joanna jarjue and course, got joanna jarjue and alex armstrong. we've got to address leading address the story that's leading the pages. um, tomorrow, the front pages. um, tomorrow, alex, start with look alex, i'll start with you. look should these should these individuals named individuals have been named and shamed? at what's on on shamed? you look at what's on on the front one of them here, the front of one of them here, which she just which is, you know, she just wanted fame. this wanted the fame. this well, we're to now, we're giving it to her now, aren't we? >> yeah, you're certainly right. i mean, don't know whether it i mean, i don't know whether it sets a poor precedent for young offenders. i do believe and a young is able to change young person is able to change their life sometimes. but in this case, these are this case, these two are extremely and i have extremely sadistic, and i have no problem with them named extremely sadistic, and i have no pshamed./ith them named extremely sadistic, and i have no pshamed. and hem named extremely sadistic, and i have no pshamed. and hidon't named extremely sadistic, and i have no pshamed. and hidon't thinkamed and shamed. and i don't think they be released they should ever be released from from prison, frankly, for what to this, what they've done to this, this poor young person. so in this case, but whether sets case, no. but whether it sets a precedent, i'm not sure about that. >> well, you know, she wanted fame, apparently. and she's she's got now, hasn't she's got it now, hasn't she? she's got it. and also she >> she's got it. and also she said she would kill again said that she would kill again and been given life with and she's been given life with a minimum of 22 years. and if somebody quite somebody says that, um, quite bluntly, to take it bluntly, we have to take it seriously. but also he did it because he just simply hates trans people. and think trans people. and i think this just shows we have to be
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just kind of shows we have to be really careful when we debate and have conversations about this topic transgender. this topic about transgender. >> john, think they are. >> john, i think they are. yeah, i evil. we think with i born evil. do we think with something like this if whenever they have clips of brianna talking you think what a talking and you think what a lovely person and they led lovely young person and they led her, deliberately led her to meet them and she'd been bullied at school and she thought, oh, well, maybe i should try and meet people more. and she gets murdered. i mean, you can't get worse than this, can you? i mean, this is if, if, if the word evil means the worst possible. they're evil . possible. they're evil. >> yeah. all right. okay, well, look , that that leading the look, that that is leading the vast majority of front vast majority of the front pages. for you. i just pages. uh, for you. i just wanted to mix things up a little bit. okay, so this is a very different story. so a pigeon suspected of spying for china has been cleared of espionage and released back into the wild after being held by indian police. pigeons historically have been used to carry messages. however, this particular pigeon is innocent.
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the bird was captured in may last year and a three month investigation took place . uh, i investigation took place. uh, i mean, it is remarkable. i think we do have a video. here we go. so this is this is the pigeon. after spending months in this , after spending months in this, uh, pigeon prison being released by indian authorities. um, i mean, john, look, you've been covering politics for a very long time. >> you've been. >> you've been. >> you've been at the sharp end of this news industry, have you? do you? i mean, what does that pigeon look like, a spy to you? >> no, i mean, i would have thought pigeon was innocent . thought the pigeon was innocent. i mean, it's slightly worries me. have they let the pigeon me. is have they let the pigeon fly? because what the pigeons really do is get back really want to do is to get back home to china. >> exactly. well >> exactly. well >> they may. >> they may. >> their views about china may differ from your views about china. but to say to a pigeon, you're not going home, that's pretty evil . pretty evil. >> oh my gosh . >> oh my gosh. >> oh my gosh. >> yeah. i mean, johanna justice , justice for pigeon free the pigeon one i suppose. >> yeah. free the bird . >> yeah. free the bird. >> yeah. free the bird. >> free the free the bird . bird.
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fantastic. >> there you go. but i mean, to be fair, it is funny, but also, people are terrified of things that china could do. we had that. baloo that was, um, flying over the us before and things like that. but i think we've got much bigger. i was going to say fish to fry, and that obviously wouldn't with. yeah. no, wouldn't fit with. yeah. no, i think i only had one shot. um, but yeah, i like the fact that china could be doing than sending pigeon. china could be doing than sensog pigeon. china could be doing than senso muchgeon. china could be doing than senso much time been wasted >> so much time has been wasted in presumably having in india, presumably having a look pigeon capture, look at this pigeon capture, doing pigeon wandering, doing a pigeon wandering, conducting kind of trial . conducting some kind of trial. right. then and then whilst right. and then and then whilst they decide keeping pigeon they decide keeping the pigeon in captivity then releasing in captivity and then releasing it, you would have thought, just kill don't capture it. kill it or don't capture it. >> yeah, i thought was >> yeah, i thought it was something races when something other wacky races when i it, know, it's i first saw it, you know, it's i'd to see the mug shot by i'd love to see the mug shot by the i'm really waiting for the way. i'm really waiting for that moment. yeah, it's bonkers, isn't mean, it just isn't it? i mean, it just reminded those conspiracy reminded me of those conspiracy theorists who think that pigeons are for the are spies for the for the government or they've got robots, also shows how robots, but it also shows how these regimes are these totalitarian regimes are always of absurdity. always on the edge of absurdity. >> yeah.
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>> yes. yeah, yeah. >> yes. yeah, yeah. >> because they don't of >> because they don't sort of there's no sort of feedback from there's no sort of feedback from the to public say, look, i think this is a bit absurd. so they tend to pursue it because they're serious and feel at they're so serious and feel at any moment they may lose their position they don't say the position if they don't say the right thing. conformity right thing. so the conformity at level produces often at the top level produces often these absolute, totally absurd bird things. >> can we can we just bring is it possible to just bring up that that footage again of this pigeon actually being released because i honestly just could not when i saw it not believe it when i saw it before. mean, you know, it's before. i mean, you know, it's in india, this is it. you in india, right? this is it. you know, the pigeon. there's someone there. seriously you know, and they kind of like military has to military police clobber has to walk out carrying a pigeon, which as were saying, which as you were saying, john probably know, probably hasn't. you know, can't even the looks even fly anymore. by the looks of thing's like, of things, this thing's like, why heck have you just why the heck have you just captured me kept me in this? captured me and kept me in this? it's just unbelievable. captured me and kept me in this? it's jlwe anelievable. captured me and kept me in this? it's jlwe are.lievable. captured me and kept me in this? it's jlwe are. iavable. captured me and kept me in this? it's jlwe are. i thought that there we are. i thought that story might be a little bit of light for people. sure. light relief for people. sure. um, the way there. and um, along the way there. and look, i think we've just about got actually about got time to actually talk about something the something that also is on the front today. and again,
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front pages today. and again, and a non, uh, kind of and it is a non, uh, kind of murderous, horrific story. it is about income tax. it's on the front of the eye cutting come tax to ease cost of living crisis. hunt alex crisis. voters urge hunt alex you were you were very exercised about this story. >> well i mean is the >> yeah well i mean this is the highest burden in highest tax burden in generations on people and on top of that, we've we've got all the hidden costs, like the cost of living crisis, inflation. living crisis, food inflation. it's about time the public are given some of their money back, in my opinion. and i think if the have chance the tories have any chance of winning election, winning the next election, they're have to some they're going to have to do some major cuts. it might be the major tax cuts. it might be the only vote for them, only way i ever vote for them, frankly. but yeah, i mean, i really do think they need to do something here. >> of voters believe something here. >> pay of voters believe something here. >> pay too )f voters believe something here. >> pay too muchers believe something here. >> pay too much tax. elieve something here. >> pay too much tax. i ieve something here. >> pay too much tax. i think they pay too much tax. i think especially they always do this a particular point. >> think this. >> they always think this. i mean, they wouldn't said, mean, they wouldn't have said, oh, you know, i'd love to pay more tax. >> never say they do >> people never say they do though, john. it the though, john. i get it all the time. more tax time. i'd love to pay more tax to put towards the nhs. i hear it all the time. >> it's all. >> it's all. >> it's all. >> it's to all do with how the question, how the question is
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raised. say to someone, raised. if you say to someone, do want more tax? do you want to pay more tax? answer you then say, do you answer no. you then say, do you want better public services? yes, i do, yeah. >> yeah. well this it, isn't >> yeah. well this is it, isn't it. yeah. that's exactly what >> yeah. and that's exactly what this as well. but 46% want this is as well. but 46% want help lower earners. mean help for lower earners. i mean yeah okay understand that yeah okay i understand that sounds shoes, but who yeah okay i understand that sou you shoes, but who yeah okay i understand that sou you trying shoes, but who yeah okay i understand that sou you trying to shoes, but who yeah okay i understand that sou you trying to help? s, but who are you trying to help? >> oh, i'd love to help people who are, you know, have a harder time than i do. >> exactly. whenever i hear tax cuts the same cuts and tories in the same sentence, all i think is who are you actually going to give the tax to? that's i don't care tax cuts to? that's i don't care whether conversation whether there's a conversation until actually going until they're actually going to give yeah, yeah. >> but joanna, they do on the vast majority the tax cut vast majority give the tax cut to lowest earners. and to the lowest earners. and that's liz truss. i mean, look i mean, look, i'm not saying they've made economic they've made good economic policies, to policies, but they do tend to look after the poorest first in most uh well most cases. liz truss. uh well well think that result well i think that was a result of economic policies. but she didn't get anything didn't actually get anything done, did so. well. didn't actually get anything dor no. id so. well. didn't actually get anything dor no. well, so. well. didn't actually get anything dor no. well, anywayell. didn't actually get anything dor no. well, anyway britain's >> no. well, anyway britain's tax. yeah. yeah yeah. >> all right. well, more >> all right. well, look, more of tomorrow's papers for you tonight. my splendid panel
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tonight. now, my splendid panel are going to nominate their greatest britain union greatest britain and union jackass this
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more front pages for you now . more front pages for you now. okay. so shall we whizz through them? because we have got, uh, them? because we have got, uh, the times. yes. outcry over asylum for suspects in alkali attack. we've spoken about this attack. we've spoken about this a heck of a lot on the show. we've had the former immigration minister robert jenrick on home office was unable to reject the third attempt this guy to be third attempt for this guy to be booted of the country. booted out of the country. i mean, it astonishing, isn't mean, it is astonishing, isn't it? really? and as we heard from robert jenrick, even if this guy it? really? and as we heard from rccaught�*nrick, even if this guy it? really? and as we heard from rccaught�*nrick, ehe'sif this guy it? really? and as we heard from rccaught�*nrick, ehe's found guy is caught and if he's found guilty unlikely, we're guilty is very unlikely, we're going to be able deport him going to be able to deport him anyway, think makes anyway, which i think makes a mockery. yeah. us hits back mockery. um, yeah. us hits back in syria iraq after troop in syria and iraq after troop deaths as the ongoing issues in the east there. got the middle east there. we've got the middle east there. we've got the as well, which is the guardian as well, which is our page the day. our final front page of the day. exceptionally brutal teens jailed is, jailed for murder this is, again, the brianna ghey story
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there. um, yes. so i am joined again by my wonderful panel. john sergeant joanna jarjue and alex armstrong . i do feel as alex armstrong. i do feel as though we've covered most of the stories on the front pages here, so i would quite like to talk about the new season of the apprentice, mainly because we've got former apprentice finalist got a former apprentice finalist here us as well. so it here with us as well. so it kicked this week. but one of kicked off this week. but one of the contestants had a little bit of look. >> he found of 52. what are you doing? hey, clapping. >> we've still got £300 profit. no no, no, that's the overall. >> don't you just let tim >> why don't you just let tim finish it out for. my sole would have left my body. >> then i think. joanna, you were on the apprentice. yes. what was it like? did anything like that ever happened to you or people around you? can you how feel for him? how do you feel for him? >> i did have one gaffe and it was task when was actually was one task when i was actually project and we were project manager, and we were looking items that were to looking for items that were to do with lord sugar, and i said,
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is lord even jewish? and is lord sugar even jewish? and everybody of everybody just kind of crucified, crucified silently. but that's probably the but i think that's probably the worst being worst thing. but i think being in where it's very in the boardroom where it's very serious, know, it's crunch serious, you know, it's crunch time the last time time and there's the last time you kind of you want to be kind of embarrassing yourself when you literally could be fired five minutes lord is minutes later. and lord sugar is probably person who probably the type of person who would joke then about the would make a joke then about the thing that you just did and then tell you, see you later, you're off. >> can i ask you like, how old were you went it? were you when you went on it? >> mind me asking? >> do you mind me asking? >> do you mind me asking? >> 23. i just turned 23. >> 23. i just turned 23. >> i mean, that is amazing. >> i mean, that is amazing. >> it must have intimidate, >> it must have been intimidate, i don't know, did you relish it? were you intimidated it? were you intimidated by it? >> it like? >> what was it like? >> what was it like? >> i always say, it's the best and worst thing i've ever done in life. was traumatic in in my life. it was traumatic in some so people, some instances. so people, people it and they of people see it and they kind of say, these people are so say, oh, these people are so stupid, but you are sleep depnved stupid, but you are sleep deprived you're deprived so badly and you're away for two and a half away for like two and a half months. no phone, no nothing, barely with anybody. barely any contact with anybody. once speak to once a week you get to speak to your family for about ten minutes. anybody would go insane. so think that insane. yeah. so to think that you're kind of turn up you're going to kind of turn up and be best corporate self
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and be the best corporate self is just an absolute fallacy. is it easy. it's it always looks so easy. it's also best. yeah. looks also the best. yeah. it looks easy you're sat on the easy when you're like sat on the couch being like, oh, not everyone see exactly. everyone can see that exactly. but don't have internet. you but you don't have internet. you don't have any of that. so i always i'd like to see always say, i'd like to see everyone else try. mhm. yeah. >> point. >> good point. >> good point. >> it is one of the best >> but it is one of the best things i've ever done in my life. >> would you ever consider giving it a go. i'd love go >> would you ever consider givit,| it a go. i'd love go >> would you ever consider givit, but) go. i'd love go >> would you ever consider givit, but that's d love go >> would you ever consider givit, but that's because go >> would you ever consider givit, but that's because igo on it, but that's because i watch it from home. >> but i watch from home and >> but i watch it from home and i god, at i think, god, look at these idiots. mean, could do a idiots. i mean, i could do a better but then obviously better job, but then obviously you sinner tide you get the sinner tide information. the one thing i would struggle with that i do think about now is they think about now is that they have with have to try and navigate with a map. i think i'd be rubbish at that project manager for that map. >> you made me the project manager. i was like, i'm northern. barely northern. i've barely been to london now already >> obviously now i'm already in london. >> i still navigate >> i still can't navigate london. for uber, london. if it wasn't for uber, i wouldn't anywhere. london. if it wasn't for uber, i wotyeah, anywhere. london. if it wasn't for uber, i wotyeah, beenhere. london. if it wasn't for uber, i wotyeah, been a re. london. if it wasn't for uber, i wotyeah, been a tremendous >> yeah, it's been a tremendous bbc to john, bbc success, to be fair, john, this, apprentice, this, this the apprentice, hasn't mean, it was it was >> sure. i mean, it was it was revolutionary it. it amazing. >> i mean also there was >> i mean it's also there was always complaints that the bbc didn't enough people always complaints that the bbc didn were enough people always complaints that the bbc
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didnwere entrepreneurs people who were entrepreneurs and in business, and that was true. i mean, was when mean, there was no when i started in the bbc, they wouldn't even report the ftse news. i they wouldn't news. i mean, they wouldn't say what's happened in the stock market normally market today. you know, normally at bulletin or at the end of a bulletin or right they'll at right at the end, how they'll at least a towards least give some a nod towards the they used the city. but they never used to do can just very quickly ask >> can i just very quickly ask you, right when you , do you, right when he fires you, do you, right when he fires you, do you him again? is you just never see him again? is it right, you're fired. you just never see him again? is it thenjht, you're fired. you just never see him again? is it then you you're fired. you just never see him again? is it then you go 're fired. you just never see him again? is it then you go 're fi you walk and then you go out, you walk past receptionist, you past that receptionist, you pretend phone call and pretend to take a phone call and you're cab and you're off. pretend to take a phone call and yothat cab and you're off. is that it? >> you're off. right. >> yeah. you're off. right. the only him if you only time you see him is if you get invited back for final only time you see him is if you ge kind ted back for final only time you see him is if you ge kind ofi back for final only time you see him is if you ge kind of help( for final only time you see him is if you ge kind of help the final only time you see him is if you ge kind of help the people al only time you see him is if you ge kind of help the people who to kind of help the people who are the but that's it. are in the final. but that's it. >> like a returning who >> like a returning hero who should first should have won in the first place. right? okay so it's time now today's greatest now to reveal today's greatest britain jackass . uh, britain and union jackass. uh, john, who's your greatest britain, please. >> well, the greatest britain is a scottish secretary, alister jack. but to understand, why have i chosen him? i've also got to admit straight away who? my union jackass is. well, i've got to. otherwise you can't understand. why have i chosen alister jack? okay, i've understand. why have i chosen alisterjack? okay, i've got
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understand. why have i chosen alister jack? okay, i've got to go on. do it then. so it's nicola sturgeon then because she denied that she had any thoughts about promoting scottish independence during the pandemic. right. and alister jack was not at all impressed by that. he completely denied her her promise that she gave about that and also talked about her crying at the inquiry. yeah, he said, and said if she had won, i right. if she could, if she could cry with one eye, she would. yes. and i thought that was such a neat all right. and the first time i've ever heard that maybe it's a northern phrase. i don't know , i don't phrase. i don't know, i don't know. a very neat know. well, it's a very neat phrase and very, course, in phrase and very, of course, in very taste . yeah, yeah. very bad taste. yeah, yeah. >> right. uh, joanna, go on. >> all right. uh, joanna, go on. who's your greatest? britain, please. >> well , mine please. >> well, mine meghan. and >> well, mine is meghan. and harry's foundation. harry's archewell foundation. they're doing great and they're doing great work, and that's calling for social that's for calling for social media platforms to adopt better content moderation policies and other fixes, saying that these modification options need to be made addictive apps that can
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made to addictive apps that can harm young people's mental health. really important . great health. really important. great job, meghan and harry. >> all right, i don't think you're gonna win. love who's you're gonna win. we love who's your greatest? who's your greatest your greatest? who's your gre mine's a really random one >> mine's a really random one tonight. honorary greatest britain. phil, tonight. honorary greatest britain. phil , the britain. punxsutawney phil, the groundhog. predicting an groundhog. he's predicting an early spring for us, which i cannot wait for. i'm sick of it . cannot wait for. i'm sick of it. >> just for a bit of context, i think we might have got a little clip of whatever the heck this is. >> it's attorney phil glad tidings on this groundhog day. >> an early spring is on the way i >> -- >> ah, america . >> ah, america. >> ah, america. >> okay, so we've got . oh, >> okay, so we've got. oh, right. okay, go. the greatest britain um, i'm going to go, uh , britain um, i'm going to go, uh, i'm going to go for the groundhog. why not? you know, you don't you don't see that very often, do you? right well done. groundhog. right. okay. so look, done your union look, we've done your union jackass. through jackass. let's rattle through quickly. please my union. jackass. please join my union. >> jackass. michael who jackass. please join my union. >> jlobbied michael who jackass. please join my union. >> jlobbied iachael who jackass. please join my union. >> jlobbied ia firm. who jackass. please join my union. >> jlobbied ia firm that who was lobbied by a firm that became single biggest
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became the single biggest recipient contracts recipient of ppc contracts through vip lane, and it through the vip lane, and it ended being £680 million. ended up being £680 million. >> right . okay. mines, the >> all right. okay. mines, the british justice system, funnily enough, uh, judge john laws , enough, uh, judge john laws, ironically named, has let greta thunberg the hook thunberg off the off the hook for protest . uh, serial for another protest. uh, serial offender, isn't she with public offence offender, isn't she with public oferes. okay i am going to go >> yes. okay i am going to go for nicola sturgeon. actually, to just resurrect john's choice from before . um, the greta from before. um, the greta thunberg one ran it close, i must say, as did michael gove. good choices. can i just say a massive thank to massive thank you to this wonderful panel thank wonderful panel tonight? thank you, and you, thank you, thank you and thank you to everybody who's been listening at been watching and listening at home or wherever you are. i will, be back again home or wherever you are. i wilmonday be back again home or wherever you are. i wilmonday eveningyack again home or wherever you are. i wilmonday evening atk again home or wherever you are. i wilmonday evening at 9again home or wherever you are. i wilmonday evening at 9 pm. for on monday evening at 9 pm. for another rip roaring week . i hope another rip roaring week. i hope you have a lovely weekend, but make keep news make sure you keep it gb news because headliners because up next it's headliners and they're to be whizzing and they're going to be whizzing you the in way and they're going to be whizzing you only the in way and they're going to be whizzing you only thknow in way and they're going to be whizzing you only th know how. way and they're going to be whizzing you only thknow how. until|y that only they know how. until then, keep fighting the good fight . fight. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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news. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news good evening. tomorrow we'll stay pretty mild across the south of blustery day again across parts of the north, with a mixture of sunshine and showers. we've got high pressure to the south, low pressure to the north and in between. weather front is between. this weather front is just southwards. the just edging southwards. the isobars together. it's just edging southwards. the isoba very together. it's just edging southwards. the isoba very gusty together. it's just edging southwards. the isoba very gusty over|ether. it's just edging southwards. the isoba very gusty over northeast been very gusty over northeast england, southeast scotland staying that way into this evening. but slowly overnight the winds will ease at least a little bit. staying breezy though, particularly in the far north, with more showers in here. rain for wales here. some patchy rain for wales and but many and northern england, but many areas and look at areas staying dry and look at the temperatures 9 or 10 degrees in most and cities. in most towns and cities. certainly through england and wales. mild start to certainly through england and walweekend mild start to certainly through england and walweekend for mild start to certainly through england and walweekend for early.d start to certainly through england and walweekend for early february» certainly through england and walweekend for early february . the weekend for early february. onto the details for tomorrow and cloudy with some rain into wales , particularly on the west wales, particularly on the west coast. some of that rain will trickle into northern england , trickle into northern england, the midlands and maybe east anglia later. to the midlands and maybe east anglia later . to the south. most anglia later. to the south. most places and cloudy and
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places just dry and cloudy and further bright day for further north a bright day for much of northern ireland. southern and eastern scotland, but again with showers but blustery again with showers across highlands and the across the highlands and the western isles. a cooler feel here, but for places, here, but again for most places, pretty mild on sunday we'll see a bit more rain tracking back across northern ireland, perhaps into parts of western scotland and across northern england . and across northern england. again, much of the south bar a bit of drizzle over hills, bit of drizzle over the hills, just dry and fairly drab, getting quite windy in places once more on sunday and again it's going to be mild double digits board with digits across the board with teens in the south that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> good evening. >> good evening. >> i'm sophia wenzler in the gb news room . some breaking news in news room. some breaking news in the past hour, the us has begun a wave of retaliatory strikes to targeting militants in iraq and syria . that's according to syria. that's according to officials , a statement from us officials, a statement from us central command said forces struck more than 85 targets. it comes after a deadly attack in jordan that killed three us troops and injured 40 others. president joe biden said in a statement . the us response will statement. the us response will continue at times and places of our choosing . but he added, the our choosing. but he added, the united states does not seek conflict in the middle east or anywhere else in the . world. two

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