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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  March 26, 2024 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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originating in china, including the targeting of democratic institutions and parliamentary organs in the united kingdom and beyond . beyond. >> oliver dowden, now the former isis bride shamima begum, has lost her initial bid to challenge the removal of her british citizenship at a supreme court. miss begum left the uk nine years ago at the age of 15, to to travel syria and join the islamic state terror group. her citizenship was taken away in 2020. last year, miss begum lost her first appeal against the decision to revoke her citizenship on national security grounds at the special immigration appeals commission. she had asked the court of appeal for permission to take her case to the supreme court, but it has now been refused in the united states. donald trump will go on trial next month, the first ever criminal trial of a former or current us president. separately, he scored a significant victory after an
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appeals court judge granted him an extension to pay a fine in ten days time, also reducing his liability from 360 to £140 million. it means that new york state authorities can't now seize his assets in a fraud case, during which he's been accused of inflating his net worth, republican fans overseas spokesperson jennifer ewing told gb news earlier that mr trump's legal challenges are having a positive effect on his popularity in the polls, with each one, trump's numbers went up right, so people do not care about this. >> they know that donald trump, especially in this case, has been one of the most well known real estate moguls in new york city for half a century. nothing like this has ever been brought up. he ran for president as we know, nothing like it was brought up during his presidency. and so now when he decides to run again, this is coming out. >> jennifer ewing, those are the
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latest news stories. to sign up for gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen right now or go to gb news. common shirts. >> all right, it's 9 pm. it's time to crack on the extremists were at the gates. we let them in, and then we let them win. it's time to fight back. if you feel too scared to talk about certain topics for fear of repercussions to you and your loved ones , you are not alone. loved ones, you are not alone. dame saira has identified dame saira khan has identified the rise of freedom, restricting harassment , the rise of freedom, restricting harassment, a damning report highlighting threats to the uk's social cohesion . here are the social cohesion. here are the facts 85% of the public believe freedom restricting harassment occurs in the uk, 60% believe it's worse than five years ago, 76% self censor in public to protect themselves or loved ones, 69% feel people are having to censor the way they live. their professional or personal lives due to freedom restricting
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harassment . lives due to freedom restricting harassment. eight of lives due to freedom restricting harassment . eight of the 27% who harassment. eight of the 27% who say they have experienced life altering harassment get this , altering harassment get this, 20% have come off social media. 17% have increased security measures, 15% have changed jobs, 13% have even moved house the islamists are top of the extremism charts. the fact is that people will censor what they think about hard line elements of the muslim community, because there is only one major religion operating in the uk right now that comes with a death sentence for any critics. the report gives several examples batley grammar school, the school, the police and the local council didn't know how to behave in the face of a baying mob. they suspended a teacher who is still in hiding and suffering from ptsd, didn't make arrests, when the make any arrests, even when the mob turned up at his house and they openly that they they openly said that they behaved way they did because behaved the way they did because they wanted maintain links they wanted to maintain links with community. with the muslim community. extremists overthrowing our extremists are overthrowing our political system. the local government association says 90%
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of councillors has received abuse and intimidation, 68% of those are not seeking re—election . when they say it's re—election. when they say it's because of the abuse, a female council leader had received thousands of death threats and individuals had threatened to gang rape and traffic. her two year old daughter, whom she makes sleep with a fire blanket after a fellow councillor had their house firebombed. could it be because of stuff like this? >> why is the motion being put to this chamber ? we were told to this chamber? we were told that we would be happy the labour group would be happy to put a motion to this chamber. why has that not happened? i will not let you guys get out. >> good. >> good. >> we know mps have faced threats . that's why we had threats. that's why we had a botched ceasefire vote. but just today, philip davies in shipley had a mob turn up at his office. he looked like a broken man. bless him. they'll come after your business too. you could just own a kebab shop that
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supports palestine, but was selling coca—cola, which is apparently a zionist monster in apparently a zionist monster in a can. he was battered . it's a can. he was battered. it's interesting because the old mad mullahs aren't too afraid to censor themselves, are they? >> sitting next to a guy who's going to go and penetrate and sodomise another guy tonight , sodomise another guy tonight, and you're going to expect a lot to give you victory . to give you victory. >> why aren't they afraid? maybe it's because our entire political , police it's because our entire political, police and legal framework protects them, not us. forget fear of speaking out. sometimes we're too afraid to go out . here's sometimes we're too afraid to go out. here's james cleverly wishing everyone a very happy christmas . christmas. >> merry christmas everybody. and at this time of celebration , and at this time of celebration, i'd like to say a big thank you to the counter—terrorism police who have been working all year round to keep us safe . if you're round to keep us safe. if you're out and about and you see something that just doesn't look right, makes you feel uncomfortable, it's just out of place. let police know we're place. let the police know we're changing our way of life because of extremism .
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of extremism. >> but it's not just islamism. there's the trans mafia, an artist simply said she didn't think children should be given puberty blockers, and she was booted out of her own art exhibition. a teacher was allegedly to allegedly sacked for refusing to use preferred pronouns use a child's preferred pronouns . police scotland have apparently recorded a hate incident against a serving tory politician because, he said, choosing to identify as non—binary is as valid as choosing to identify as a cat . choosing to identify as a cat. but you're about to be censored in your own home. staying in scotland now, humza yousaf is keen to pass a law that would criminalise speech in your house, so if you had christmas dinner and your nan said something about channel migrants that her woke 17 year that offended her woke 17 year old granddaughter, then the police could come round. the family to snitch on family would have to snitch on each and nan ends up in each other and nan ends up in handcuffs. if you have the wrong views , you'll also be debunked. views, you'll also be debunked. 340,000 people had their bank accounts closed last year, reportedly , they were given reportedly, they were given little to no warning and as nigel farage found, that could very easily just be because they
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didn't subscribe to modern woke progressive views . today, it's progressive views. today, it's emerged that keir starmer's net zero plans could cost us all £117 billion. but don't you dare speak out against it just in case this lot turn up outside your house, you might want to know. >> i'm also breaking the bail, i've got bail. not to go to any mps house, i don't know if you want to, like, follow up on that, considering, as you can see, like, that was our only intention . intention. >> look who's doing the harassing. okay? islamists eco lunatics, radical progressives and the trans mafia . i am sick and the trans mafia. i am sick and the trans mafia. i am sick and tired of these reports telling us what we already know. the solution isn't to set up a buffer zone to stop seemingly unemployed islamic fanatics from protesting outside a school, for example. no, the solution is arrest . where possible, deport. arrest. where possible, deport. tell them to shut up and go home. and definitely never, ever surrender. britain has had enough of this rubbish. let's get the thoughts now of my
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panel get the thoughts now of my panel. i am joined this evening by the star columnist carole malone. i have got trade unionist andy mcdonald and political editor at the daily express. it's sam lister. carole, are the extremists winning? yeah >> no, of course they're winning. yeah. no, we have a government and a police force that are cowed by them. you know, we've got to a point now where there are subjects in this country that we can't talk about any more. >> islam is one of them, diversity is one of them, the other one is transgenderism . and other one is transgenderism. and anyone who speaks out about those things is, you know, is , those things is, you know, is, you know, is slated, threatened, abused. know, we we abused. you know, we have we have where you're have organisations where you're no where you're no platformed, where you're threatened. you mentioned that horrific case of that that lady councillor who, who these these idiots threatened to gang rape her daughter. i mean, god almighty. what kind of moron do you have to be to do that to someone? and i just think you know, where free speech is now under threat. you know, we are
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no longer a free country. it's not a free country where a woman can be punched in the face and physically assaulted because she dares criticise question dares to criticise or question the gender id it's not a free country when people are scared to express their views and their opinions on a whole host of things. so we're not living in a free country anymore. and that has been happening gradually and gradually, and it's been happening the happening because the authorities the government authorities and the government are too scared to do anything about it. >> well, andy, understand you >> well, andy, i understand you don't that the extremists don't think that the extremists are winning. >> think they're >> i don't think they're winning. think an winning. but i think that an environment over environment has been built over the however many years that the last however many years that they win if nothing is they could win if nothing is done about it. i think there have been consistent domestic policy failures. you know, it was outlined and outlined quite clearly review, the clearly in the khan review, the social cohesion policy has failed. it's been seen as something nice to have something that's nice to have but essential . social but not essential. social cohesion essential. cohesion policy is essential. i think we're at that think genuinely we're at that kind of point where we're getting to the point of no return, if we don't return, that if we don't implement the recommendations of this. >> did listen to all the >> did you listen to all the examples? i did his intro. i did
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just just gave us did well, just he just gave us i did well, not getting to the point. well way point the and way past the point the and i think those examples are absolutely abhorrent and i condemn entirely condemn them entirely as a normal person would. condemn them entirely as a nor but person would. condemn them entirely as a nor but they're would. condemn them entirely as a nor but they're not ld. condemn them entirely as a nor but they're not they're not >> but they're not they're not everyday situations. think everyday situations. i think if they winning, would be they were winning, it would be every day. >> are everyday situations . >> they are everyday situations. every day reading stories every day we're reading stories about being no platformed every day we're reading stories abotare being no platformed every day we're reading stories abotare being. eing no platformed who are being. >> there's a difference between being no platformed having being no platformed and having horrific threats against you, no platformed right up platformed when you go right up to happened teacher to what happened to that teacher in birmingham. >> yeah, i'll come you >> yeah, sam, i'll come to you now. so 75% public feel now. so 75% of the public feel they refrain from they have to refrain from speaking mind. 27% have speaking their mind. 27% have changed their way of life. whether it's employing security to moving jobs or even moving house. it's damning. >> it's astonishing. i mean, people actually having to move house because of intimidation and threats . and threats. >> i think the problem is, though, although we have a conservative government and have had for 14 years, the problem all started way , way, way before all started way, way, way before that under the blair era and the idea ideological capture of our
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institutions. so essentially now you're playing whack a mole every time a bit of guidance is criticised for being ridiculous , criticised for being ridiculous, another bit of guidance will pop up in another nhs department, for example, or the bbc will take another bizarre approach to something. so you're constantly having to kind of chase this, lunacy round and round and round and round the clock. because in the institution themselves, the people who are running them are so gripped by this need to be kind, which actually ends up, doing anything. >> but when you have politicians , you know this in your job, when you have politicians told that abuse and death threats are now part of their job, it's astonishing that it should not be part of their job. you know, how many, what kind of calibre of politicians are we going to get the future? if we if we get in the future? if we if we know that everyone who comes into is going get into politics is going to get better, get idiots better, you get idiots like those people up at your those people turning up at your front at home and the cops front door at home and the cops are negotiating with those protesters. them from
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are negotiating with those protpoliticians them from are negotiating with those protpoliticians door. m from are negotiating with those protpoliticians door. m let rom the politicians door. don't let them there . them be there. >> and what's interesting, though, it's across the though, is it's across the board. actually it's across board. it's actually it's across the spectrum. these the political spectrum. these protests happening outside protests are happening outside mps homes and offices. it's always the staff who are actually in the offices. it's not the mps themselves most of the time, example, lindsay the time, for example, lindsay hoyle, his hoyle, speaker, after his debacle parliament, had debacle in parliament, had a load of protesters turn up, pro—palestinian protesters outside his office in chorley. he's not even there most of the week. and but so it's people on on low wages who are trying to do good things, who are being intimidated and day in, day out, why is it always the people who we keep being told we need to stand up for, who are doing the harassing, whether or not it is, you know, hardline elements of the muslim community, whether or not or not it's the eco lot, whether or not it's the eco lot, whether or not trans law, it not it's the trans law, it always to be those people always seems to be those people who are doing the harassing. >> the public believe >> 85% of the public believe that restricting that freedom restricting harassment that freedom restricting harasdon'tt that freedom restricting harasdon't think we're often >> i don't think we're often told stand climate told to stand up for climate protesters or zealots . protesters or eco zealots. >> politicians doing it net >> politicians are doing it net zero by 2030 to the cost of £116
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billion. that's your eco party, isn't it? >> i don't think believing in net zero by 2030 or 35 is eco zelenskyy, but bankrupting a nafion zelenskyy, but bankrupting a nation might be. really. nation might be. not really. i think stripping of the kind think the stripping of the kind of industrial infrastructure of our really our country has really bankrupted the nation , which bankrupted the nation, which goes back to, you know, when they took the mines, but they took away the mines, but they took away the mines, but the of past two the think tanks of the past two days will this days have said this will this will harm the nation. the will really harm the nation. the 101 think tank aurora, which isn't a think tank, it's isn't really a think tank, it's a policy pressure but, a policy pressure group. but, you of think tanks you know, lots of think tanks and pressure groups say and lots of pressure groups say lots things. lots of things. >> but you also know, being >> but but you also know, being being labour, that every being part of labour, that every single they put is single policy they put out is wrongly costed. it happens all the not wouldn't say every >> not i wouldn't say every single policy. no i would, i think ultimately all this essentially got here essentially what we've got here is, bullies haven't we? is, cry bullies haven't we? >> people who portray themselves as you know, cry about as victims, you know, cry about how, how victimised they are, but then actually bully people into silence. and that's the problem we've got. >> yeah, it's a massive problem. and people expect the authorities something authorities to do something about they don't authorities to do something ab
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gb news. it's patrick christys tonight. only on gb news now. nigel farage joins me live very, very shortly. are we being lied to about the number of migrants and asylum seekers who are committing violent and sexual offences? but first, should parents be banned from sending kids to school in nappies? it's time for our head to head . yes, time for our head to head. yes, a recent report found that 1 in 4 new primary school children are still not toilet trained,
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and polling from the charity kindred has revealed why only 50% of parents thought they are solely responsible for toilet training . their child, 1 in training. their child, 1 in 5 parents, thought children do not need to be out of nappies before starting reception , and another starting reception, and another 1 in 4 believed schools should be hiring additional staff specifically to help toilet train their kids back in november. on this show , tory mp november. on this show, tory mp and leader of the new conservatives miriam cates sounded the alarm a massive deal for schools just to start with. >> no, i've spoken to headteachers who are having to move teaching assistants down from higher primary from higher years in primary school into the lower years, just to change nappies and clear up mess . this is a very, very up mess. this is a very, very bafic up mess. this is a very, very basic problem and if we can't get that right, then it shows there's something wrong. >> what's your view? >> all right. what's your view? is this lazy, disgusting parenting kids be banned parenting should kids be banned from turning up to school in nappies? let me know your thoughts. email me gb at thoughts. email me gb views at gb news. tweet me at gb news gb news. com tweet me at gb news and make sure you take part in
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our poll. i'll bring you the results very shortly. but doing battle now, a pair of battle on this now, a pair of journalists anna battle on this now, a pair of jourrmangan anna battle on this now, a pair of jourrmangan rebecca anna battle on this now, a pair of jourrmangan rebecca reid, may mangan and rebecca reid, both of you, thank you very much. great to have you on the show. anna. i'll start with you. do you think that parents should be presenting their be banned from presenting their children knappett up 100. >> they should. and if they do, do that, they should be the person that they call. if they have to have a nappy change when they're five or 6 or 7, i mean, what is going on that they can't sort out the nappy problem ? now, sort out the nappy problem? now, i'm not talking here about children who have special needs or medical needs or obviously i'm excluding all of that, but the children who turn up for primary school and they have they're nappies , they can't they're in nappies, they can't put their coats on, they can't brush teeth. there's all brush their teeth. there's all sorts the sorts of things. what are the parents mean, rebecca, parents doing. i mean, rebecca, there's elements to this which i find really, really concerning , find really, really concerning, which is that teachers have to then have a witness whenever there's a nappy change because of, you know, rights and all the
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concerns that might surround that. i'm amazed that parents are comfortable enough with essentially a total stranger changing their naked young child at school. i find it remarkable . at school. i find it remarkable. >> well, yes, but the majority of the children will have been a nursery for up to 2 or 3 years previously, where the same thing will have been children who go to nursery are changed by their key worker, or you're a key worker, or if you're a childminder, the childminder changes them. so it's very unusual children to arrive unusual for children to arrive at having not been at school having not been changed paid care changed by a paid child care professional previously. obviously be obviously that person has to be fully but no, it's fully dbs checked. but no, it's not strange to have a stranger change. child is part of change. your child is part of using childcare. >> just to with you, >> and just to stick with you, rebecca, think all rebecca, you think it's all right that, are right then that, kids are turning up in quite high numbers to their school with nappies on, so it's it certainly wouldn't be my ideal . my ideal. >> it's not. it would not be my goal >> it's not. it would not be my goal. i would absolutely want to be trying to get potty training done as quickly as possible. but if you have a child who is
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difficult to potty train, which some children are, would some children are, i would prefer they that prefer that they started that they started school, particularly summer particularly if they're a summer born who is starting and born child who is starting and they're really they're four and they're really very in class. i'd very young in their class. i'd rather than them turning up rather that than them turning up and being traumatised by being rushed into it, and rushed and forced into it, and perhaps accidents at perhaps having accidents at school. i wouldn't aim for school. so i wouldn't aim for it. i don't think it's ideal, but think every child is but i think every child is different and there are times where it happens and we should be not aggressive be kind about it, not aggressive and cruel about it, i know. >> you the parents >> would you refer the parents to services? to social services? >> social but >> oh, not social services, but they talking and they they need a talking to and they some rules. if you're bringing your child to school, your child to primary school, they be potty trained. they have to be potty trained. and what says and i hear what rebecca says about professionals about other professionals changing their changing them throughout their young ultimately young lives. but ultimately it's the and let's face the parents job. and let's face it, free to potty train. it, it's free to potty train. what does it cost? it takes patience. it takes a bit of time. it takes some interest to do sake of the do it. and for the sake of the teachers are, by way, teachers who are, by the way, highly trained, educate teachers, they're not nappy changers. not enough changers. there's not enough budget nappies and budget in school for nappies and other workers , like you say, for other workers, like you say, for safeguarding. there has to be two. so really we this should
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not be happening and it's the parents. the parents need to parents. the parents need to parent and take responsibility for this. it's not about being unkind. even if you are going in there nappy, that the other children will be unkind to them because they'll smell it, they'll see it, they'll know it, and they make life harder for everybody. >> even if you accept, even if you accept that a failure >> even if you accept, even if yo parenting 1at a failure >> even if you accept, even if yo parenting for a failure >> even if you accept, even if yo parenting for your failure >> even if you accept, even if yo parenting for your child. e of parenting for your child. start in nappies. and start school in nappies. and i think some cases that's think in some cases that's probably case. what world probably the case. in what world is appropriate thing to do is the appropriate thing to do for a child who has parents who can't to potty train can't be bothered to potty train them, sent home spend them, to be sent home to spend more time with? >> could i, could can i just >> could i, could i, can i just say my i wouldn't send them home. >> i wouldn't let them in. in the first place. if they're not potty trained, they're not ready. >> if you have a bad parent that i see it. >> and also this is a one at a time, one at a time. >> and i linked. >> and i linked. >> so it's not just the potty training that's the problem. normally a wife, rebecca, 50. >> no rebecca rebecca 50% of parents apparently don't think it's solely responsibility
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it's solely their responsibility to potty train their own child. i mean, that is remarkable. >> well, i think a lot of parents would say it's not solely the responsibility because they have friends who help, parents who help grandparents would grandparents who help. i would all parenting is all of my parenting is predominantly responsibility , predominantly my responsibility, but mum does a huge amount. but my mum does a huge amount. my but my mum does a huge amount. my does huge amount, so my sister does a huge amount, so nothing i do is solely my responsibility, but i think the important is here those important thing is here in those occasions have a bad occasions where you have a bad parent just can't be parent who just can't be bothered you don't bothered if you don't let a child go to primary school because they're not toilet trained, not learn. trained, they will not learn. they home with a they will just be at home with a parent who can't be bothered. that's punish that's worse. we do not punish children the sins of their children for the sins of their parents. is failure of parents. that is a failure of the state. >> i agree with that. but we do have concentrate. parents have to concentrate. the parents mind them to do what they mind to get them to do what they need and not allowing need to do, and not allowing their children to be at school is going to speed potty is going to speed up potty training. that training. no end. nhs say that they should potty trained they should be potty trained between 3. so if they're between 2 and 3. so if they're getting school at four and a getting to school at four and a half, that's a dereliction of duty, it? yeah duty, isn't it? yeah >> rebecca, it's not that. >> rebecca, look, it's not that. it's the responsibility of
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it's not the responsibility of teachers. is this not symptomatic of kind of symptomatic of the kind of society we live in, where society that we live in, where everything is somebody everything else is somebody else's and think, oh, else's fault and they think, oh, great, a free education great, it's a free education system. i say it? maybe system. dare i say it? maybe they're into they're not all paying into society anyway it is. and society anyway as it is. and they them to school. they they lob them to school. they think, all right, think, oh, it's all right, someone kid's someone else will wipe my kid's backside. someone else will wipe my kid's back�*mean, there's no suggestion >> i mean, there's no suggestion that this is a class issue, samantha, brett a piece in samantha, brett did a piece in the mail about this being the daily mail about this being mostly mums. so. so mostly middle class mums. so. so the who the suggestion that people who are training, are not putting their training, their aren't paying their children aren't paying into don't think is into the state, i don't think is accurate. think is accurate. i think it is a difficult thing to do. i think parenting is very complicated. and also in mind the and also bear in mind the children are going into children who are going into school the moment school at the moment are pandemic a very pandemic babies. that is a very weird of children. weird generation of children. anybody who somehow weird generation of children. anyltell who somehow weird generation of children. anyltell you who somehow weird generation of children. anyltell you that who somehow weird generation of children. anyltell you that they) somehow weird generation of children. anyltell you that they were ehow will tell you that they were very more likely to be potty trained they'd been home trained if they'd been at home with parents for a long time. >> it's just not true, honestly. >> it's just not true, honestly. >> like it's genuinely not true. they are a very different, very odd of babies who had odd group of babies who had a very hard entry to the world. and understandably, have and understandably, they have been that. and understandably, they have beeokay. that. >> okay. >> okay. >> and a final point five >> and a final 1 in 2 point five hours day when teachers have
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hours a day when teachers have to personal care tasks to do these personal care tasks and teacher assistants. so it's selfish. impacting. it's selfish. it's impacting. it's not just the one child they're impacting the 30 others in the class. also that same study class. and also that same study that you mentioned said that kids aren't developmentally kids who aren't developmentally up there, even as early as 20 months have a worse outcome as adults educationally. so it's not just about a bit of poo in a ”appy' not just about a bit of poo in a nappy, it's about their whole futures. >> but the point about development is important because we're we were all saying, oh, but not disabled kids. we're not saying about disabled kids. a lot of children who are starting school at four will not have had a formal diagnosis a a formal diagnosis yet. so a lot of children who being of those children who are being diagnosed saying diagnosed who were saying started may well started in nappies may well actually have learning difficulties, particularly something which something like autism, which makes complicated. makes children more complicated. >> be this bad. >> didn't used to be this bad. this is the thing i get this is this is the thing i get the lockdown of it that has the lockdown side of it that has screwed kids up, all right. and there's there's absolutely no there's no there's absolutely no two around that. and i two ways around that. and i think we're going to be reaping the of the benefits or sorry, lack of benefits. of that, benefits. the problems of that, for come literally for years to come for literally an generation. so
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an entire generation. right. so yeah, get that. but but yeah, i do get that. but but people were not presenting their children years and children at school years and years years that were years and years ago that were all nappies. look, all wearing nappies. but look, thank much, both of thank you very much, both of you. was a cracking head to you. it was a cracking head to head, look, who do you agree with? 10 adults say that with? as 9 in 10 adults say that pupils should be trained? pupils should be toilet trained? should be banned from should parents be banned from sending school in sending kids to school in nappies? on x says yes. nappies? rita on x says yes. teachers are there to help children learn, not teach children to learn, not teach bafic children to learn, not teach basic wonder one basic hygiene. no wonder no one wants go into the profession. wants to go into the profession. i you completely. you i agree with you completely. you know go into teaching, know when you go into teaching, you think going to you don't think you're going to end wiping a kid's backside, end up wiping a kid's backside, do says. would do you? shauna says. why would you the idea of you begrudge the idea of teachers children? yeah, teachers helping children? yeah, helping. look, shauna helping them helping them helping. look, shauna helping then english, helping them helping. look, shauna helping then english, helping ping them helping. look, shauna helping then english, helping them hem helping. look, shauna helping then english, helping them with with english, helping them with a french, maybe a smattering of french, maybe not of something not a smattering of something else. says if a kid is 4 else. chris says if a kid is 4 to 5 years old and can't go to the toilet on their own, what the toilet on their own, what the hell have the parents been doing? isn't that hard to teach a to use the loo? your a kid to use the loo? your verdict is now in. 95% of you agree that should agree that parents should be banned kids to banned from sending kids to school nappies. you say school in nappies. 5% of you say they up as the they shouldn't. coming up as the government vows crack down on
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government vows to crack down on chinese cyber attacks, can chinese cyber attacks, what can be to stop their repeated be done to stop their repeated campaigns against our country? why are we so soft on china ? why are we so soft on china? fleet street kingpin kelvin mackenzie joins me live in the studio, i think he's got studio, and i think he's got a few words, by the way, for our foreign secretary one david cameron. next, should cameron. but next, should the british government follow the lead their danish lead of their danish counterparts? fascinating counterparts? a fascinating story. they've recently story. this so they've recently published figures the published figures showing the breakdown violent crime breakdown of violent crime convictions by the offenders nationality. by the way, can you guess which nationalities are at the anyway? nigel farage the top anyway? nigel farage certainly thinks that we should be to access that be able to access that information here. he will tell us more right after this very,
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welcome back. it's patrick christys tonight. we're on gb news loads. coming your way. fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie on the alleged chinese cyber attack against millions of british voters very soon. but first, it's time now for brexit broker nigel farage. now tory backbencher neil o'brien has called on the government to pubush called on the government to publish more details of immigration records as he attacked what he called the great immigration data disaster. this comes after denmark published figures showing conviction rates for violent crime by nationality, with the highest ranking nationality being the kuwaitis. now i'm just going to talk you through a couple of the others here tunisia, lebanon, somalia, jordan, uganda, morocco, iraq,
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algeria , ethiopia, egypt, iran, algeria, ethiopia, egypt, iran, afghanistan, kenya, turkey . afghanistan, kenya, turkey. syria. ghana. pakistan. yeah. there is it appears a correlation, isn't there ? the correlation, isn't there? the kuwaitis were convicted for nine times more violent crime than nafive times more violent crime than native danes between 2010 and 2021, but here in britain, we have no such luck. the ministry of justice does publish the nationality of current prisoners , but if you ask for any further analysis of that, such as what type of crime they're committed or whether they are asylum seekers, they will not provide it. we sent a freedom of information request weeks ago , information request weeks ago, but as of tonight, we are yet to hear back. nigel joins me now. nigel, why aren't we able to access the same information as denmark? >> so i got these figures on friday and i put them out on twitter or ex as it now is. you know what's interesting, patrick? i've had no media pickup at all. none zero. nobody
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even wants to debate the truth. and the truth is this i'm not suggesting for one moment that everybody that comes here from iraq or syria or kuwait or wherever it may be, and the parallels with denmark, of course, are there. i'm not suggesting they're all bad people. what i'm saying is you have a lax border policy when you allow illegals to come in and stay . the you allow illegals to come in and stay. the criminal gangs see ficher and stay. the criminal gangs see richer pickings in our countries than where they come from. in some cases where they might get their hands cut off. i mean, literally their hands cut off. and so we've opened the doors in western europe to mass criminality . now, western europe to mass criminality. now, denmark are brave enough to publish the figures. sweden prohibit by law, the media even discussing the background or ethnicity of perpetrators of horrible, violent or sexual crimes. and in this country, everyone stays schtum, you can't get the figures. you don't know the
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truth. but you know, and i know in london that the bad guys from romania, the bad guys from the middle east have flocked to our country in numbers. you cannot now walk down the street in chelsea as a woman wearing expensive jewellery. no one does it anymore. these figures are absolutely shocking. now i know that our critics will say we're being racist. we're not. we're just. the reason i put this out, we're just representing the facts. it is appalling. >> well, we'd know for sure, wouldn't we? this is the thing. we would know for sure if they published the data and they showed us all and they told us all what was really going on. the one thing that i'm really focused on, and we are working out here to do our best to get if they'll give it to us, is sexual convictions and sexual crimes based on nationality, immigration status and asylum status. because there is. we
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asked again today, by the way, for that we are we are yet to get a reply, if why why do you think they're covering that up from us at the moment, or at least withholding it? >> because the truth is, patrick, that many of these young from those young men who come from those countries a culture countries come from a culture where aren't even second where women aren't even second class citizens. all right . class citizens. all right. where, you know, sexual exploitation , abuse, of all exploitation, abuse, of all kinds is frankly, mainstream. and they're coming into a country where, you know, and we've been more progressive than most, actually, over the years. you know , we find this you know, we find this unacceptable. they refuse to assimilate it. they refuse to integrate. they bring their cultures with them, but it can't be discussed, can't be discussed . it's too awful. it's too difficult. and of course it is. patrick racist, remember? and anyone that discusses it is far right and therefore evil and bad and wrong . and so we're prepared and wrong. and so we're prepared to allow british citizens to
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suffer at the hands of these bad people that come from these countries. not all bad people from these countries. i reemphasize that point. and we'd rather shut up and let the lady population suffer than tell the truth. >> it has to be a part. it has to be a part of the immigration debate. we have 750,000 650,000 whatever we have got, plus people coming across the channel and it has to be a part of pubuc and it has to be a part of public discourse and parliamentary discourse to be able discussion able to have the discussion about what kind of crimes some, some of these people may be committing , and that can committing, and that can therefore shape policy. >> you've got no chance of parliamentary debate on this. >> no chance sir, it would . lee >> no chance sir, it would. lee might get up and say something virtually nobody else in the whole house of commons dares to get up . if we had the if these get up. if we had the if these figures were published in this country, then frankly, the conservatives poll ratings would tank even from their current low levels because they've allowed
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this to happen under 14 years of their tenure. yes, i know tony blair started it, but it's got so much worse in the last 14 years. >> yeah, those figures that are just before we move on, nigel, you know, kuwait, tunisia, lebanon, somalia, jordan, uganda, morocco, iraq, algeria, yugoslavia , ethiopia, serbia, yugoslavia, ethiopia, serbia, egypt' yugoslavia, ethiopia, serbia, egypt, iran, afghanistan, kenya . egypt, iran, afghanistan, kenya. you've got to go all the way down, all the way down before you get to denmark. really, yeah, yeah, certainly all the way down before you get to denmark. and those are the figures, course, of the figures, of course, of the crimes there in denmark, which i find astonishing. but find absolutely astonishing. but anyway, approached anyway, look, we've approached the ministry of justice for comment, are to comment, but they are yet to respond. of course, respond. we will, of course, continue to try to get some answers but now an answers out of them. but now an archdeacon for the church of england caused after england has caused uproar after calling anti whiteness and calling for anti whiteness and smashing the patriarchy, writing on x, formerly known as twitter, miranda threlfall homes lovely isn't it? so i want i went to a conference on whiteness last autumn. it was very good, very interesting and made me realise whiteness is to race as
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patriarchy is to gender. so yes, let's have anti whiteness . let's let's have anti whiteness. let's smash the patriarchy. that's not anti white or anti men, it's anti—oppression. this completes anti—oppression. this completes an unholy trinity of recent blunders for the church. after they decided that their £100 million fund to tackle the legacy of slavery should be upped to £1 billion, while the diocese of birmingham recently advertised for a deconstructing whiteness officer help whiteness officer to help the church address white fragility, this forced the archbishop of canterbury to condemn the job advert. even, he said it was like something out of a bbc sitcom. one day. i mean, i wonder if he put that on his ramadan message, nigel. but does the church of england need a complete overhaul? >> i won't go to my local church, i won't go, i am christened and confirmed in the church of england. all my family on both sides have been church of england. i used to believe in it. i used to pretend not every sunday, but regularly during the yeah sunday, but regularly during the year. i will not go . it is year. i will not go. it is hopeless. they've given up. they've surrendered . and her
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they've surrendered. and her name sums it up. you know, i don't know her personally, but i'll have a bet. she's upper middle class. you know, completely detached from reality. and on slavery . can i reality. and on slavery. can i remind everybody that today is the 217th anniversary of the passing of the abolition of slavery act , as it became passing of the abolition of slavery act, as it became in parliament, pushed by a man called william wilberforce, which then led us through the royal naval squadron to attempt to drive slavery out right across the atlantic, stopping other countries from doing so. when it comes to this issue, you think to listen to some of our lefties that we are the only country that ever practised it? no, far from it. slavery persists to this day. we as a nafion persists to this day. we as a nation have done more to stop slavery than any other nation in the history of our earth. >> now let's be quite quick with this one, nigel. so american sports brand nike put english noses out of joint last week. they unveiled what they called a playful update to the saint
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george's flag on england's new football shirts. now, liverpool star elliott seemed to star harvey elliott seemed to reject the new flag he might have been wearing his have just been wearing his collar course, but he collar up, of course, but he turned collar up anyway. turned his collar up anyway. dufing turned his collar up anyway. during england match. not during the england 21 match. not one senior players, not one of the senior players, not one, has decided to protest this design. england faced design. when england faced brazil beaten, by the brazil and got beaten, by the way, wembley this weekend. way, at wembley this weekend. look, should england's way, at wembley this weekend. look, football)uld england's way, at wembley this weekend. look, football starsanland's way, at wembley this weekend. look, football stars be .and's way, at wembley this weekend. look, football stars be making senior football stars be making a a stand over this ? a bit of a stand over this? >> well, there are footballers, not politicians, and they're conscious know conscious of that. they know that earning that they're also earning a fortune. frankly , frankly, fortune. but frankly, frankly, i think given that the crowd themselves made their own cross of saint george in the crowd, which is a very beautiful image. i think our top footballers on this one should have intervened. they didn't . this one should have intervened. they didn't. it's a bit this one should have intervened. they didn't . it's a bit gutless, they didn't. it's a bit gutless, nigel, look, thank you very much. as always. that was nigel farage. until next time. now, coming up , a farage. until next time. now, coming up, a gb news exclusive for you. and it reveals a new way that our broken asylum system could cost you, the taxpayer , millions of pounds. i taxpayer, millions of pounds. i know, as if it wasn't already
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costing you enough. i'll reveal all just after 10 pm, but next, with the government today blaming china for a pair of terrifying cyber attacks that accessed information of up accessed the information of up to british voters. so to 40 million british voters. so with respect, probably you, with respect, is probably you, is to finally stand up is it time to finally stand up to the super state? kelvin mackenzie is live. he's in the studio next. and as we mark three years since the batley school teacher went into hiding, have officially lost to have we officially lost to extremists? is patrick christys tonight we
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gb news. is patrick christys tonight on gb news. now i am joined by the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie. quite a bit to get through tonight, but after it was revealed that chinese hackers accessed 40 million british voters personal details. so is probably you. former so it is probably you. former tory duncan smith tory leader iain duncan smith called a press conference demanding that china be labelled called a press conference d
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these demonstrate these actions demonstrate a clear and persistent pattern of behaviour that signals signals, hostile intent from china. >> well, all right, but he basically decided to do absolutely nothing all about it, didn't he, kelvin? china has branded the accusations as fabricated and malicious slanders . look, isn't this all slanders. look, isn't this all david cameron's fault? >> well , he david cameron's fault? >> well, he didn't help it. >> well, he didn't help it. >> neither did osborne. they were going to have a good relationship with china, which probably meant bending over in some eton way, i don't some kind of eton way, i don't know. >> but anyway, it's completely shocking hasn't worked shocking and it hasn't worked out well. >> but that oliver dowden , >> but that guy, oliver dowden, what waste of space he is. and what a waste of space he is. and actually to the fact that actually due to the fact that labour appear to be winning by about 28,000% now he will be here. he'll pushing a broom here. he'll be pushing a broom outside some corporate comms unit, probably towards the end of this year. and this is the problem. the problem is we talk tough, but we don't do tough . tough, but we don't do tough. how can we do tough against 20% of humanity who don't care?
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don't tell us anything . and don't tell us anything. and actually our manufacturers all want to be there anyway . so want to be there anyway. so honestly, we'd be probably better off to say nothing . and i better off to say nothing. and i really admire duncan smith because at least he's been pushing this now for way north of a decade. he knew huawei was was a danger, and it took years before the rest of the government caught up with it. we do not possess a real will. if we had a real will, we'd say we will never trade with you again. now, china may not give us stuff, but at least we'd be. at least we would be strong. >> we've done nothing to them about hong kong, okay? we've done about the done nothing about the old coronavirus done nothing about the old coronavirithe good thing >> well, the good thing about hong that load of hong hong kong is that a load of hong kongers come here. that's kongers have come here. that's true. the best true. and that is the best import we will have ever had. they will generate and they will generate money. and not their mates, not only that, their mates, right, will give them money which not allowed to which they're not allowed to ship out china to come over ship out of china to come over here. and they will invest in businesses, property. businesses, invest in property. and the greatest import and that is the greatest import we will have. >> yeah we are. and i mean, it's there's two chinese nationals that have been sanctioned and
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one minor chinese one relatively minor chinese company for the for the small price of 40 million of us having our details hacked by beijing. so cheers, oliver dowden, thank you very much, mate . that'll do nicely. >> he makes himself look an idiot. >> an absolute idiot makes the government look an idiot. >> he just as well say nothing. >> he just as well say nothing. >> all right, now look elsewhere. a new elsewhere. a shocking new government report that 76% government report shows that 76% of are too scared to share of brits are too scared to share their personal views. published today, the khan review, authorised khan , authorised by dame saira khan, uses grammar as a case uses batley grammar as a case study where 2021 a teacher study where in 2021 a teacher was out by local muslim was hounded out by local muslim protesters showing school kids an image of the prophet muhammad. we've seen plenty muhammad. and we've seen plenty of flare since. of communities flare up since. this essentially a report this is essentially a report that says we are now at the mercy of extremists. calvin was britain surrendered. i batley is beyond beyond shocking and what is fantastic about this report is fantastic about this report is that that lady is a muslim, and she was born and raised in bradford and she is massively upset about it. >> the council at kirklees did
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nothing. why 41% of the area surrounding batley is muslim right? the police did nothing. they said they didn't know that there was a big problem. really? >> what do you think these people doing shouting outside the school? >> the school said nothing right ? in the end, so the whole ? and in the end, so the whole thing and this guy said he felt this the teacher, this is the teacher, right? a father of four had to change his name, fled his job. he'd been doing the same thing, showing the same cartoon now for two years. nothing had gone wrong before , right? nobody. nobody. before, right? nobody. nobody. a few commentators and few media commentators and actually a guy i got to know up in batley . he actually a guy i got to know up in batley. he did something about it. he raised money for that guy . he about it. he raised money for that guy. he raised, you about it. he raised money for that guy . he raised, you know, that guy. he raised, you know, they raised around about £100,000. without that, that guy and his family would have starved to death. we worry about the of the world starving the rest of the world starving to death. it was an absolute disgrace. the main point disgrace. and the main point that that very, very, very good report i urge all your report and i urge all your viewers to read it actually was the point that they were
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introducing by backdoor those protesters a blasphemy law and nobody, nobody said anything about it. and who said anything about it. and who said anything about it? leadbitter didn't say anything about it. the woman, who went on to be mayor of west yorkshire , said nothing about yorkshire, said nothing about it. but did the prime minister say anything it? the say anything about it? did the leader opposition say leader of the opposition say anything did a lib dem leader of the opposition say a|nobody did a lib dem leader of the opposition say a|nobody gave did a lib dem leader of the opposition say a|nobody gave a did a lib dem leader of the opposition say a|nobody gave a damna lib dem leader of the opposition say a|nobody gave a damn about�*em leader of the opposition say a|nobody gave a damn about that ? nobody gave a damn about that quy- ? nobody gave a damn about that guy. they didn't give a damn about it. three years later, a fantastic report comes out, but it's three years later. how is that chap? is that chap ever going to be able to work again? right. what's going to happen to him? yeah, exactly. >> we reached out to the, the mp for the area did say to us, for the area who did say to us, look, she did comment on it at the and, all of this. the time and, and all of this. so you know that that she actually actually changed actually she's actually changed her says i accept all this. >> she says i accept all this. >> she says i accept all this. >> didn't she say that at >> why didn't she say that at the time? >> well, she. yeah. okay. fine. what she says is she was saying this at the time and you know, we'll have to take that at face value whether she was doing it
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more privately. >> well then. more privately. >> no, l then. more privately. >> no, nobody, nobody locally more privately. >> everiobody, nobody locally more privately. >> ever saidiy, nobody locally more privately. >> ever said that»body locally more privately. >> ever said that to dy locally more privately. >> ever said that to me.>cally more privately. >> ever said that to me. and! has ever said that to me. and i've tens of hundreds of i've had tens of hundreds of thousands of reactions. >> right. fine. it's not >> all right. fine. but it's not just about batley grammar as well. we've got councillors, you know, saying that well. we've got councillors, you know don't saying that well. we've got councillors, you know don't want saying that well. we've got councillors, you know don't want to saying that well. we've got councillors, you know don't want to do ;aying that well. we've got councillors, you know don't want to do it'ing that well. we've got councillors, you know don't want to do it anymore they don't want to do it anymore because of threats, threats to gang two year old gang rape, their two year old daughter and trafficker all daughter and trafficker and all of this you know, and how of this stuff, you know, and how common is this stuff now? and we just to live it, just have to live with it, you know, even just know, it's not even just that, is it? know, it's not even just that, isit? the know, it's not even just that, is it? the old christmas is it? it's the old christmas market walk round the market stuff. walk round the christmas happy christmas market. happy christmas. bombs. christmas. watch out for bombs. it's mad. it's just mad. >> it's a very. but batley is >> no it's a very. but batley is a on first of all on west a stain on first of all on west yorkshire and actually a state. and where what did you and where about what did you hean hear and where about what did you hear. hear anything from hear. did you hear anything from the education union. the national education union. >> the employer wasn't one >> no, the employer wasn't one arrest batley even when arrest made in batley even when they the teacher's they turned up at the teacher's house, wasn't one arrest made. >> no, i, i honestly i it makes me and there will be lots me wonder and there will be lots of these battles going on in a smaller way. not as serious now because now we've got this template , a fantastic report, by template, a fantastic report, by the way, by a muslim , a muslim
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the way, by a muslim, a muslim academic. i can't tell you how much joy i got by reading it. >> okay. all right. well, look, kelvin, thank you very, very much. as ever, kelvin mackenzie, the former editor of the sun, in response to dame sarah khan's review, kim leadbeater said response to dame sarah khan's revlzw, kim leadbeater said response to dame sarah khan's revlzw, kat leadbeater said response to dame sarah khan's rev i w, k at the dbeater said response to dame sarah khan's revlzw, k at the time,er said response to dame sarah khan's revlzw, k at the time, there said response to dame sarah khan's revlzw, k at the time, there cani as i said at the time, there can be absolutely no excuse for the intimidation and threats against him. is the teacher. whilst him. this is the teacher. whilst i advocate of free i am a strong advocate of free speech right to peaceful speech and the right to peaceful protest, also fully protest, i'm also fully supportive restricting supportive of restricting protests as protests outside schools as recommended by the report. yes, okay, restricting protest okay, but restricting protest outside quite possibly outside schools quite possibly does very little to actually resolve core issue , resolve the real core issue, which of the people which is some of the people involved those protests. but involved in those protests. but coming as russia torment coming up as russia torment and abuse terror suspects abuse for moscow terror suspects with one force fed his own ear by putin's agents, is the torture of terrorists ever justified ? but next, i bring you justified? but next, i bring you an absolutely staggering gb news exclusive. now this is important, okay? it's on a channel. migrants lawsuit that could have devastating consequences on our border security and cost you, the
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taxpayer. millom of pounds. there could well be a very worrying precedent that is being set here. i reveal the absolutely astonishing cost that absolutely astonishing cost that a you're already paying for, and b , frankly, you are potentially b, frankly, you are potentially about to be paying for. if you've got a wallet at home, you might as well empty it. now and send it to your nearest immigration lawyer. you can get in touch gb views at gb views. comm. this is patrick christys. tonight we are only on gb news. comm. this is patrick christys. toni nowve are only on gb news. comm. this is patrick christys. toni now it's re only on gb news. comm. this is patrick christys. toni now it's timely on gb news. comm. this is patrick christys. toni now it's time for n gb news. comm. this is patrick christys. toni now it's time for your news. and now it's time for your weather with the wonderful alex deakin. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. good evening to you. the rest of this week we'll be for prepared further heavy downpours and temperatures. staying around about or a little bit below average. low pressure is truly in control of is well and truly in control of our weather and will be for the rest of this week. these weather
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fronts have been making for a pretty soggy day for much of the uk. the rain across scotland falling over the hills falling as snow over the hills that continues in the east through night. elsewhere, it through the night. elsewhere, it does little bit drier, does turn a little bit drier, staying fairly cloudy and some staying fairly cloudy and some staying fairly cloudy and some staying fairly chilly. temperatures down into single figures not far a freezing in northern scotland and small wintry showers coming into the northern and the western isles as into tuesday. still a as we go into tuesday. still a bit more snow over the grampians, that should bit more snow over the gramfurther that should bit more snow over the gramfurther showers that should bit more snow over the gramfurther showers though)uld ease further showers though to come the coast of come on the east coast of scotland, central southern scotland, central and southern scotland, central and southern scotland a little scotland looking a little bit dner scotland looking a little bit drier will drier compared to today, it will be wetter though, for the be a wetter day though, for the southeast as that rain moves in through tuesday and that spreads into midlands and rain again into the midlands and rain again for ireland. but for northern ireland. but something a bit brighter in the south south wales, and south west and south wales, and for eastern england to some glimmers sunshine. is glimmers of sunshine. but it is going feel pretty chilly, going to feel pretty chilly, particularly across scotland, where and hill snow where the rain and hill snow continues into wednesday and then elsewhere. bands of then elsewhere. it's bands of showers moving in. be prepared for heavy downpours on for some heavy downpours on wednesday. there will be some brighter spells between the
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heavy showers, a bit of sunshine. we'll see temperatures up to double digits but generally feeling cooler in the breeze and plenty more of those heavy showers to come in run heavy showers to come in the run up easter. up to easter. >> like things are >> it looks like things are heating boxt boiler as heating up boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . go go go go go christys tonight. go go go go go . ali kadi a gb news exclusive asylum lawyers have got a new way to cost you millions of pounds. plus, is it okay to torture terrorists like the russians and tens of incidents of hate crime incidents? >> it's important that they are recorded. because what it does
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is it gives police an idea of where there might be space and hatred. >> they want to criminalise what you say in your own home, or so. >> more opportunities for noah lynn van leuven , outrage over lynn van leuven, outrage over men and women's darts. >> i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages and my panel are bang up for it. it's columnist carole malone, trade unionist andy macdonald and express political editor sam lister, and find out what the heckis lister, and find out what the heck is going on here. get ready britain, here we go. empty your wallets for the asylum seekers . next. asylum seekers. next. >> but first the news. at 10:01. and our top story from the gb newsroom tonight is that the
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deputy prime minister has accused china of being responsible for two malicious cyber campaigns targeting the electoral commission databases containing the names and addresses of 40 million registered voters were visible to chinese hackers in 2021 and 2022, but the government says it didn't affect the outcome of local elections at the time . local elections at the time. oliver dowden also said that national cyber security support would help political parties make sure they're protected from foreign influence. in the run up to the general election . to the general election. >> we want now to be as open as possible with the house and with the british public because part of our defence is calling out this behaviour. this is the latest in a clear pattern of hostile activity originating in china , including the targeting china, including the targeting of democratic institutions and parliamentarians in the united kingdom and beyond.
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>> oliver dowden, now , in other >> oliver dowden, now, in other news today, a review has found prosecutors were correct not to accept nottingham triple killer valdo calocane manslaughter plea by diminished responsibility. rather than pursue a murder case. grace o'malley kumar and byrne barnaby webber, along with school caretaker ian coates, were killed by calocane in june last year when he was suffering from schizophrenia. he was sentenced to a hospital order instead of being sent to prison for murder. his majesty's crown prosecution inspectorate said the correct decision was made by the correct decision was made by the cps . the protest groups save the cps. the protest groups save british farming and fairness for farmers of kent, have driven their tractors into central london tonight to protest about substandard imports and the dishonest labelling of food. they're also protesting against low cost agriculture imports, saying it all amounts to a threat to food security. it comes after european farmers
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ramped up their demonstrations across the continent, protesting against eu and national measures . the home office is launching social media adverts to deter vietnamese migrants from trying to travel to the uk illegally in small boats, the government says an increasing number of illegal migrants from vietnam are attempting to come to the uk via the english channel, new government sponsored ads, building on similar examples already used in albania, are being designed setting out the risks of being exploited by smuggling gangs or being deported . and lastly, the ceo of deported. and lastly, the ceo of boeing is to step down by the end of the year in a major management shake—up at the aircraft manufacturer, following aircraft manufacturer, following a raft of safety concerns, dave calhoun and other senior executives will step down after a series of scandals to hit boeing, including the apparent suicide of a whistleblower who had reportedly raised concerns about the company's production issues. the company has been
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under particular pressure to do something following the sudden blow—out of an aircraft fuselage at 16,000ft on an alaska airlines boeing 737 max in january . airlines boeing 737 max in january. those are the airlines boeing 737 max in january . those are the latest january. those are the latest top stories for the latest news, sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen or go to gbnews.com/alerts . to gbnews.com/alerts. >> strap yourselves in today , >> strap yourselves in today, it's emerged that the legal aid bill for channel migrants is £71 million. that's over the last five years. that's a £38,000 a day bill. a record more than 500 migrants crossed in a single day on wednesday . channel crossings on wednesday. channel crossings are up 10% on this time last yeah are up 10% on this time last year. the total is more than 4000. the home office expects to spend £1.2 billion on housing, asylum seekers in large accommodation sites. that's around £46 million more than using hotels . some ex—raf sites
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using hotels. some ex—raf sites were set to cost £5 million each. instead, it's cost £49 million for wethersfield and £27 million for wethersfield and £27 million for wethersfield and £27 million for scampton. rwanda could cost £1.8 million per asylum seeker , and that's before asylum seeker, and that's before we've paid the wages for all the lords and mps who are dead set on blocking it. lords and mps who are dead set on blocking it . a former home on blocking it. a former home office official told me that we will be paying hundreds of millions of pounds in benefits and social housing for channel migrants who will never, ever get a job for here the rest of their lives. james cleverly has got a cunning plan. let's release a video in english that we can show to illegal immigrants in calais, telling them how dangerous it is to get on small boat. on a small boat. >> everyone has this sense of idea that it's simple. idea that it's just as simple. they a and they come they get in a boat and they come oven they get in a boat and they come over. not as simple as that over. it's not as simple as that . nine times of ten, these . nine times out of ten, these boats are, these dinghies are overloaded. really overloaded. they're really poorly . poorly constructed. >> and we just tow them here >> and so we just tow them here anyway . that'll learn them, mr anyway. that'll learn them, mr cleverly. but here is your gb
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news exclusive. are you ready? there is another way that the lawyers and the human rights bngade lawyers and the human rights brigade are probably going to take the british taxpayer to the cleaners, and it's because of something happening right now in france. family of an illegal france. the family of an illegal migrant who died with 26 others when crossing the english channel are currently suing the french government. they claim the french authorities did not do enough to stop their deaths. three children and a pregnant mum were sadly included in the death toll, which happened in november 2021. now the french coast guard had been accused of criminal negligence over the incident, which claims that they ignored repeated and increasingly desperate pleas for help from the migrants. new claims, which emerged last week , claims, which emerged last week, include the french military boat patrolling the waters was not monitoring channel 16, which is the international distress frequency on which the british rescue centre had issued mayday calls to help the boat. its crew also allegedly ignored three distress signals, 15 warnings
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are said to have been ignored, and seven military personnel have now been charged , so the have now been charged, so the claim is believed to run into the hundreds of thousands of euros. now, obviously, if you times that by 26, then you're into the millions, aren't you? there are also fears that victims of other tragedies now may sue the british government. as a result of this , and it's as a result of this, and it's easy to see how this won't just be for deaths. it could be for injuries or harm suffered like hypothermia or mental trauma. the same kind of mental trauma that human rights lawyers tell their clients to emphasise when they're trying to stay in britain, tory mp nigel mills said that he fears that britain could face legal action over the more than 200 migrants who have died trying to make the journey. mr mills, mp for amber valley in derbyshire, said i fear they'll come for britain next. it's a tragedy but there needs to be personal responsibility. a french law enforcement were to blame. they should face the full force of their laws. but i fear
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britain will be sued next. it's wrong. they have my sympathy. but they are taking the risk and it's against the law. a burglar who falls over and breaks his leg when burgling a house cannot sue the homeowner for damages, and rightly so. it's not as straightforward as that here, but the principle remains the same . well said. that man. the same. well said. that man. the deaths are a tragedy. but look at everything i've outlined that you are already paying for that, and there's loads more on top of that. and there's loads more on top of that . it is and there's loads more on top of that. it is not and there's loads more on top of that . it is not the that. it is not the responsibility of the british taxpayer to cough up millions more pounds to pay compensation for the family of somebody who willingly paid to leave a safe country , to get in a small boat country, to get in a small boat and be pushed across the busiest shipping lane in the world. the same lawyers and human rights groups who were licking their lips at church of england lips at fake church of england baptisms will practically baptisms will be practically drooling get ready to drooling over this. get ready to empty your wallet, britain. let's get the thoughts of my panel let's get the thoughts of my panel. it is daily express columnist carole malone . i have columnist carole malone. i have got trade unionist andy mcdonald
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and political editor at the express, sam lister. carole do you fear that we're going to be on the hook for millions more pounds? >> yes. as soon as i read the story today, i thought absolutely that, you know, as you just there, every death you just said there, every death is a tragedy . but let's not is a tragedy. but let's not forget the vast majority of people the channel are people crossing the channel are doing illegally. having doing it illegally. having paid traffickers, thousands of traffickers, many thousands of pounds, they're crossing from a safe country to come here. but, you know, this government has repeatedly said that it's dangerous. people are going to die, so they have to stop it. and yet all that has been ignored and suddenly it is all it's going to be our fault that they're coming here. it is outrageous. it is going to be a it's the next source of income for these lawyers. this is going to forever. the government to go on forever. the government surely now has to see what lies ahead. i mean, the figures you just there just read out there are astonishing the that we're astonishing the money that we're paying astonishing the money that we're paying even stuff paying out already, even stuff that didn't know. not that i'm that i didn't know. not that i'm the font all knowledge, but the font of all knowledge, but you saying? i you know what i'm saying? i mean, a lot of research on
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mean, i do a lot of research on this stuff, and i didn't know some of those figures, and i, and i just, i this is the next problem waiting that every asylum, every now is asylum, every lawyer now is going to asylum seekers, going to say to asylum seekers, sue mental trauma, sue for this, for mental trauma, for for, you know, for whatever, for, you know, for dehydration. a bit. dehydration. you got cold a bit. you're not well, this is going to happen all time. to happen all the time. >> to be the hook >> we're going to be on the hook here. see it happening here. you can see it happening now. lawyers are on the phone as we speak. >> oh, really? i think if you we speak. >> ohourally? i think if you we speak. >> ohour ify? i think if you we speak. >> ohour if our think if you we speak. >> ohour if our coastguardr we speak. >> ohour if our coastguard had know, our if our coastguard had been as criminally negligent as it's the french it's been alleged, the french coastguard been here, coastguard have been here, then. yeah, should a payout. yeah, they should get a payout. you the fact that they if you know, the fact that they if they this is true, they had they if this is true, they had ignored 15 calls for help. you know, channel the know, the channel 16, the international a call from the frequency, not a call from the migrants, a call the migrants, but a call from the british rescue centre. these aren't people in a dinghy that they've allegedly ignored here as know, is as well. you know, this is seriously, seriously negligent. so did seriously, seriously negligent. so then, did seriously, seriously negligent. so then, yeah, did seriously, seriously negligent. so then, yeah, they did seriously, seriously negligent. so then, yeah, they should that, then, yeah, they should be. should they should be be. they should they should be sued the high heavens for sued to the high heavens for that. >> e- e— e think you know, >> do you think you know, foresee a future whereby people push themselves off into the channel across the busiest shipping get out into
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shipping lane? they get out into british etc? something british waters, etc? something goes a bit too busy goes wrong. we're a bit too busy to be able to deal with it. people sadly die or are injured or whatever, and before you know it, lawyers are on the phone it, the lawyers are on the phone and saying you should and they're saying you should have more. members our have done more. members of our coastguard who, i say, i coastguard who, dare i say, i mean shock, horror. by way, mean shock, horror. by the way, shock horror have shock horror might have been deaung a shock horror might have been dealing a british dealing to a british sailor who's or something who's capsized or something like that. having to that. they end up having to answer questions in court for criminal negligence. >> but you know, >> well, maybe. but you know, that's bother you. that's doesn't bother you. that's this is that's not what this story is about at this is about, you about at all. this is about, you know, 30, people died in know, 30, 26 people died in this. it been alleged that this. and it been alleged that there was serious criminal negligence. about there was serious criminal neglige being about there was serious criminal neglige being bit about there was serious criminal negligebeing bit dehydrated there was serious criminal neglige being bit dehydrated or people being a bit dehydrated or a tired because a journey a bit tired because of a journey that took across the that they took across the channel. is about channel. this is about people dying because else dying because someone else didn't do. they broke into your house, that's not even house, and that's not even remotely it is. it's remotely similar. it is. it's not even similar. if it not even remotely similar. if it was my house was my job to protect my house and that anyone who and make sure that anyone who was their by was injured their house by hurting someone, you'd be the one in court, not the person. it's remotely similar. it's not even remotely similar. it's not even remotely. >> you can you foresee >> look, can you can you foresee the british taxpayer we're the british taxpayer here? we're already fork out already being asked to fork out an unbelievable amount of money.
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already being asked to fork out an lknow,yvable amount of money. already being asked to fork out an lki'iow, hundreds)unt of money. already being asked to fork out an lki'iow, hundreds of|t of money. already being asked to fork out an lki'iow, hundreds of millionsiey. you know, hundreds of millions of pounds, of pounds of pounds, billions of pounds when to you add the when it comes to you add up the legal fees, you add up the legal aid fees, you add up the cost of rwanda, you add up the cost of rwanda, you add up the cost of rwanda, you add up the cost of the migrant hotels, all of stuff. i'm just worried of that stuff. i'm just worried that going be the that this is going to be the next the old legal next rung on the old legal ladder here. next rung on the old legal lad it's here. next rung on the old legal lad it's an e. next rung on the old legal lad it's an industry. i mean, >> it's an industry. i mean, let's be right there are already many, lawyers who are many, many lawyers who are making lot of money out of, making a lot of money out of, asylum cases about appealing, etc, etc. this is an industry. we have to be clear on that. and i think ultimately this is a tragedy when people die crossing the channel. but the bottom line is they shouldn't be crossing the channel. they're told they should crossing the should not be crossing the channel and that's that. that is the and bottom of it. you the top and bottom of it. you cannot, a state. you cannot, penalise a state. you cannot, penalise a state. you cannot and pursue a state cannot try and pursue a state for compensation for an activity thatis for compensation for an activity that is illegal. >> it's interesting. there's this bloke really angered me today, president of the human rights, a guy called patron baldwin. he's talking about the murderous policies of non—assistance at sea. hello. the french navy escorts them to
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our border, and then our border patrol goes out and puts them on the boat and brings them over here. there's no murderous policies at sea. we're saving the rnli and the border control have become a taxi service for these migrants. and then they take it. >> then they're taken hotels >> then they're taken to hotels that costing million a day. >> that's the besides the point on this story, think the most on this story, i think the most important thing is that they weren't weren't weren't they allegedly weren't monitoring weren't they allegedly weren't mo that's] weren't they allegedly weren't mo that's that's huge. >> that's that's huge. >> that's that's huge. >> saying and sort of >> you're saying and i sort of half agree with you. >> that's that's really bad. >> that's that's really bad. >> andy, should they be in >> but andy, should they be in the channel in the first. >> no, they shouldn't be. >> no, they shouldn't be. >> no, they shouldn't be. >> no shouldn't they >> no shouldn't be. they shouldn't illegally. shouldn't be illegally. just because there because they shouldn't be there doesn't people doesn't mean that these people can criminals, criminally can be criminals, criminally negligent, emergency negligent, the emergency services. ignore services. you can't just ignore the british centre. how services. you can't just ignore theweitish centre. how services. you can't just ignore theweitish that? centre. how services. you can't just ignore theweitish that? centbritishr do we know that? the british rescue wasn't rescue centre, if it wasn't these migrants, if they were talking something, talking about something, people who there, that who should have been there, that were in trouble, how do we how do that? do we know that? >> how we know that they >> how do we know that they weren't other call outs? >> i guess we've got to wait until this court case goes through. you know, this all through. you know, this is all alleged. what's
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alleged. see what what's been said court and then said in the court case. and then we'll able properly debate we'll be able to properly debate the got the fact that you've got hundreds people hundreds and hundreds of people breaching our borders every day. >> pressure >> that's enormous pressure on pubuc >> that's enormous pressure on public in france public services, both in france and but that doesn't give >> yeah, but that doesn't give you an excuse be you it's not an excuse to be criminally negligent. >> this allegation >> again, this allegation has been already. not been. >> it's a it's a very serious allegation. seven people have been charged, however. >> know, >> but as sam said, you know, the control the the border control and the french do not french border control do not exist save people crossing exist to save people crossing the channel illegally. >> are we are one. my the channel illegally. >> one are we are one. my the channel illegally. >> one successfulire one. my the channel illegally. >> one successfulire one. in! fear one successful lawsuit in this from us doing this from far from us doing anything actually anything to deter them actually having ready of having a ready supply of boats lined our british lined up right on our british waters to take them in so that we sure we don't paying out we make sure we don't paying out any compensation claims. any kind of compensation claims. that my worst case that would be my worst case scenario of but scenario in all of this. but thank you very coming up, thank you very much. coming up, another exclusive on another gb news exclusive on keir energy plans. you keir starmers energy plans. you won't it's won't believe how much it's going cost. will labour's going to cost. so will labour's energy britain next, bankrupt britain and next, as russia released shocking images of the four main moscow terror suspects, with one having had his ear severed, another reportedly losing an eye during their interrogations by russian
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authorities . is the torture of authorities. is the torture of terror suspects ever acceptable ? terror suspects ever acceptable? coercive interrogation expert bnan coercive interrogation expert brian leslie and former british intelligence officer philip ingram offer their unrivalled analysis. that's next. stay tuned
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all right. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight on gb news, i will bring you the first of tomorrow's front pages. very,
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very soon. now, there were absolutely horrific scenes on friday night as four gun wielding terrorists stormed the crocus city concert hall and massacred at least 137 people. isis have since claimed responsibility for the attack, despite the russian government's uncertainty over the claim, the russian security services managed to capture the four suspects within hours and it looks like they were subjected to some pretty gruesome treatment. images were released of one of the suspects being electrocuted and through his genitals, with graphic footage of another having his ear cut off and fed to him that's spread over the weekend. a third suspect appears to have lost an eye during his capture and interrogation by the russian forces . i'm delighted to welcome forces. i'm delighted to welcome to the show brian leslie, who is a coercive interrogation expert, and philip ingram, a former senior british military intelligence officer. both of you thank you very much. and i will start with you, brian, if that's okay. is it ever okay to torture terror suspects in the
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way it looks like the russians have ? have? >> no, no, because it's unreliable. first of all, depending on how they actually discovered and what evidence led them to the individuals , that's them to the individuals, that's a big, important part of the whole picture , and coming up whole picture, and coming up with, using torture, it becomes they become confession compliant because they don't want the, the fear anymore. they don't want the hurt, the pain , and that's the hurt, the pain, and that's why they give them what they want to hear . want to hear. >> so how regularly philip, in the heat of battle is stuff like this used? i mean , you know, this used? i mean, you know, have the british done this when we were in iraq or afghanistan or anywhere? >> well, it's not used , by >> well, it's not used, by anyone that's professionally trained or who understands interrogation techniques. there have been examples , where the have been examples, where the british, the americans, allied forces and other forces in the heat of the moment have with untrained people, thought that they were doing some good, in
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trying to get information out of people and actually causing much greater harm. and even in more controlled like abu controlled environments like abu ghraib in iraq, there were issues that have led to longer terms problems. but using force in any way, shape or form, and i've had to sign off interrogation techniques and interrogation techniques and interrogation plans and different operational theatres. you it doesn't work. whenever you hurt people because they give you what they think you want to hear, and you spend more time trying to unpick the untruths that they're giving you just to stop the hurting than you do in using more, recognised interrogation techniques that are well within the geneva conventions, and recognised by the international committee of the international committee of the red cross and won't get any criticism. and you persuade people to work for you and with you and that that works much better. >> brian. what if times of the essence, though, you've got people there who've just killed about 130 odd people in a theatre area in russia, there
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may or may not be others out there. there may or may not be another pressing danger. there might be somewhere. you might be a bomb somewhere. you need this very, need to establish this very, very brian. some people very quickly. brian. some people might what, just might think, you know what, just just them. might think, you know what, just justyeah, them. might think, you know what, just justyeah, wellzm. might think, you know what, just justyeah, well ,n. might think, you know what, just justyeah, well , that's you're not >> yeah, well, that's you're not going to get what you want. torturing anybody , because what torturing anybody, because what they refer to that as is enhanced interrogation , which enhanced interrogation, which basically is torture, and the individuals that you go out looking for , you may get looking for, you may get information that's bad and you'll end up with end up interrogating them in a, in a enhanced situation and you'll get wrong information and maybe even tying another individual to the same crime , and it becomes the same crime, and it becomes an emotional thing when you have that many people , murdered at that many people, murdered at that, at that time . that, at that time. >> yeah. okay. now, look, philip, one thing that really stood out to me was this. the fact that these pictures have gone public second you get gone public the second you get out the sphere western out of the sphere of western norms, obviously norms, this stuff obviously happens all the time, doesn't it? russia , it doesn't,
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it? like in russia, it doesn't, it? like in russia, it doesn't, it doesn't. you're once you lose your humanity. and i have to question why the russians are putting this out. you know, if you look at the attack itself, yes , islamic state have come in yes, islamic state have come in and they've admitted responsibility and they would do and they've come in really quickly . and there's never been quickly. and there's never been an incident where they've admitted level of admitted this level of responsibility and given the evidence have done evidence that they have done where been where they haven't been involved. there are involved. however, there are other that we have to other questions that we have to ask. the russian security forces were within minutes of this concert hall. it took them over an hour to respond, the russian security forces had, weapons and capabilities inside the concert hall. it took them a long time to respond. there's more to this than we know about, and it's going to take time for that to come out if it ever does come out. but, you know , getting into out. but, you know, getting into the position where what they're doing is they're admitting to what if it was in a conflict situation or war crimes. they
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don't seem to care about that. they're trying to scare other people. they're trying to send a message out. but the message they're sending out to the international community and to those that would potentially capture russians and all the rest of it, is , well, if that's rest of it, is, well, if that's what you're going we're what you're going to do, we're not to show you any mercy not going to show you any mercy whatsoever future, and whatsoever in the future, and that's a good message to that's not a good message to send out. >> no, i think, you know, there might be short effect might be a short term effect where if my might be a short term effect where one if my might be a short term effect where one had if my might be a short term effect where one had just if my might be a short term effect where one had just been my might be a short term effect where one had just been killed loved one had just been killed in a terror i might get in a terror attack, i might get a small amount of comfort from knowing person who'd knowing that the person who'd done just had his done that had just had his genitals more. genitals causing more. >> causing more >> you'd be causing more problems loved ones. problems to your loved ones. that the big that that's that's the big issue. you make it more difficult to get the information that fine and this is that you need. fine and this is where you have to take the emotion away from what you're doing treat it, from doing and treat it, from from a completely non emotional perspective and just, just, just on that. >> brian , as a, as a coercive >> brian, as a, as a coercive interrogation expert, what kind of techniques are there that frankly don't involve cutting someone's ear off and making them eat it? >> well, you've got your
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standard ones that are minimisation, maximisation , minimisation, maximisation, ltns, narrative integrations, narrative traps , those sorts of narrative traps, those sorts of things are used in the domestic, interrogations, that have even those have been impeached now as being unreasonable , the fact of being unreasonable, the fact of the matter is, is if you're a goodif the matter is, is if you're a good if you're a good interviewer, a good interrogator, and a good investigator , you'll know how to investigator, you'll know how to deal with the person you're deaung deal with the person you're dealing with and you don't have to resort to these techniques because they're unreliable . if because they're unreliable. if you're acting on information they've perhaps they've provided, perhaps another suspect that they tell you that did it, distance distanced themselves from that particular individual or the crime. you may find that without the proper investigative techniques that you're using, which are inductive or deductive , you're not going to end up with the right person in the first place. and you'll end up with a, with going, targeting an individual perhaps wasn't individual that perhaps wasn't involved have involved and may have been symbolism that, what occurred symbolism of that, what occurred and thrown to the dogs basically
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as a decoy. >> yeah. all right. well, look, both of you, can i just say a massive thank you? i would happily have carried this on for the hour , but i've got the half an hour, but i've got the half an hour, but i've got the front pages to get to, brian leslie, coercive leslie, who's a coercive interrogation philip interrogation expert. philip ingram, british ingram, a former senior british military intelligence officer. right okay, look, so i am about to show you all the front pages coming up. the hockey has become the latest battleground in the gender wars. >> so more opportunities for noah lynn leuven . noah lynn van leuven. >> is there any place for trans darts players in the women's game? tonight's panel of pundits have their say before that, though, we will run you through the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. they're the very first of tomorrow's newspajin' front pages. they're the very first of tomorrow's newspajin thick: pages. they're the very first of tomorrow's newspajin thick and es. they're the very first of tomorrow's newspajin thick and fast. hey're
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welcome back to patrick christys. tonight on gb news and it is time to bring you all of tomorrow's newspaper. from pages. let's do it . i've got the
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pages. let's do it. i've got the independent uk hits back over china's cyber attack on mps and voters. can i just say barely ? voters. can i just say barely? we've sanctioned two total randomers and one small business. so all that i showed them , right. the i, i've got them, right. the i, i've got a uk cabinet clash on how to fight china spy threat presumably the clash is whether we did naphthol orjust a little bit. let's go to the mail. oh, here we go again. beijing hacked details of 40 million voters, inspired an mps. uk's response is mps. the uk's response is compared to taking a wooden spoon to a gunfight. good the mail have got it, the telegraph secret court for speeding and tv fines must end. oh, here we go. magistrates call for judicial overhaul to stop vulnerable being prosecuted in private. so apparently a major intervention is called for the overhaul of secretive single justice procedure, which has resulted in vulnerable people being prosecuted behind closed doors in absentia or without legal representation. that all sounds , representation. that all sounds, ironically, a bit like china, doesn't it? the guardian israel
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isolated after un security council demands gaza to ceasefire. yeah, there we are at the mirror. the kate effect huge surge in web cancer checks after princess statement. brave kate has triggered a spike in web searches about cancer after speaking of her own diagnosis. and we go to the sun now again, brave kate saves lives . the brave kate saves lives. the princess of wales is shocked revelation that she's been treated for cancer has inspired hundreds of thousands to get checked. there we go. also a slight contrast on the front of the sun there cokeheads footie ban. there we are. so he's really got it all. that sun front page, hasn't it. all right, now look, i'm pleased to be joined by my press pack. we have star columnist carole have got star columnist carole malone. unionist malone. i've got trade unionist andy mcdonald and political editor express , sam editor at the daily express, sam lister, look, i am going to get straight to a developing story, okay? so this is happening right now as we speak, border force at
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manchester airport have been accused of discriminating against israeli survivors of the 7th october terrorist attack. the jewish representative council of greater manchester has demanded an urgent investigation after two jewish israeli passport holders, who reportedly suffer from ptsd faced this, quote, aggressive officer at the border checks we need to conduct. >> okay , nobody's saying that. >> okay, nobody's saying that. nobody has said that once. so not the attitude off. we've made the decision and you're coming in. so just let us do the checks we need to do and keep quiet . we need to do and keep quiet. look at me. okay. you clear with that? okay. good we're the bosses, not you. all right, all right. obviously we don't know the full context of that video yet, but the allegation is that they were treated badly because of their israeli passport. >> the jrc claims that the two men were detained for two hours simply because they were israeli and border officer and the same border officer allegedly we had to make and the same border officer allegthat we had to make and the same border officer allegthat you're we had to make and the same border officer allegthat you're notiad to make and the same border officer allegthat you're not going make and the same border officer allegthat you're not going toike and the same border officer allegthat you're not going to do sure that you're not going to do what you are doing in gaza over here. i'll just read that again,
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okay? same border officer okay? the same border officer allegedly said we had to make sure that you are not going to do what you are doing in gaza . do what you are doing in gaza. over here. manchester airport is investigating the allegations, and in the past few minutes, home secretary james cleverly has tweeted we are investigating this . we do not tolerate this. we do not tolerate anti—semitism or any form of discrimination . the incident discrimination. the incident will be handled in line with our disciplinary procedures. we're going to keep across that story for you. it is obviously, you know, absolutely astonishing. it is, like i've said , breaking and is, like i've said, breaking and happening right as we speak. they allegations , and i they are allegations, and i don't think it will be too wise for us to really comment more widely on that at the moment. so i knock on to another i will knock it on to another story us at the moment. and story for us at the moment. and it's starmer announcing it's keir starmer announcing that offshore that he will float offshore wind. this exclusive wind. but after this exclusive story from gb news, the labour leader shouldn't feeling too leader shouldn't be feeling too easy breezy about his plan. energy experts slapped
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energy experts have slapped a £116 billion price tag which has sent them into a panic, saying starmer's plan is simply not feasible. speaking to gb news earlier , labour's shadow welsh earlier, labour's shadow welsh secretary jo stevens defended their strategy . their strategy. >> the plan will mean that we take back control of our national energy security and we do through great british do that through great british energy , publicly owned. so the energy, publicly owned. so the profits that are earned go back into government for the benefit of the taxpayer. >> look , andy, you've got >> well, look, andy, you've got to contrast that with rishi sunak saying he's going to quite literally nuclear today, a literally go nuclear today, a labour throw money labour just going to throw money into the with this energy plan. >> well not really, i mean, it does. know, labour does. you know, the labour energy includes energy plan also includes nuclear. important to nuclear. that's important to note. know, note. it includes, you know, getting projects. getting the nuclear projects. hinckley. and sizewell over the line, you know, investing in small modular reactors. so it does include nuclear. it also includes a wider range of offshore and onshore wind and solar power investments. and it creates 500,000 jobs. all right. >> i mean, it also i mean it also is totally unaffordable. >> and it's also not really hit
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working class people. >> the people who are in the least amount of money are going to the most to to have to pay the most to support this. this is stupid. you britain, the uk you know, britain, the uk produces less than the produces less than 1% of the world's carbon emissions. so this to net zero is this rush to 2030 to net zero is completely pointless. as long as china is still building two new coal plants every week, it is the number one emitter in the world. the us the second. world. the us is the second. india is third. until they india is the third. until they get stuff under control. get their stuff under control. what we do is not going to make a bit of difference, but we a damn bit of difference, but we need investing in our need to start investing in our own independent ageing. >> not, no we're not. >> no we're not, no we're not. we're investing. where are we're investing. how where are we? everywhere. >> the farms all >> look at the wind farms all over the country. look at them. we're all time. we're investing all the time. we produce energy. >> energy costs through the roof. years, roof. over the last few years, we've independence i >> -- >> we have less than 1% of the world's carbon. >> sam, does now mean >> sam, does this now not mean though? >> sam, does this now not mean thougbeen saying for quite a have been saying for quite a while miliband as the while with ed miliband as the old minister, etc. old shadow energy minister, etc. you labour's green plan you know, labour's green plan could bankrupt britain . could well bankrupt britain. >> it astonishing figures they'd have to triple the number of solar panels. we've got a four fold increase in wind farms, a
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400% increase in the supply chains for copper , steel, all chains for copper, steel, all those kind of things to make these things happen. the numbers just do not stack up. and we know labour, they've got no money to spend. they've got no money to spend. they've got no money to spend. they've got no money to spend. they are sticking to the conservatives. >> they've got no money to spend. >> they're sticking to the conservatives fiscal rules. but coming plans coming up with ludicrous plans like they fund like this, they can't fund it from set out. from the things they've set out. they it is they just cannot. it is impossible . well, you talk about impossible. well, you talk about all jobs that they're going all the jobs that they're going to jobs don't to create. those jobs don't exist can't pay this exist if you can't pay for this and can't this think and they can't do this think tank said even if they tank today said even if they managed scrape the money managed to scrape the money together, won't, the together, which they won't, the plan still entirely unfeasible. >> things like the >> by 2030, things like the amount of steel that they're going need, they're going going to need, they're not going to be to get by 2030. to be able to get by 2030. >> well, you know, the >> just well, you know, the think a lot of think tanks do say a lot of things. and if the government had supporting, they'd things. and if the government had supportingting, they'd things. and if the government had supportingting steeley'd been supporting the steel plants like which have been supporting the steel plants like closed which have been supporting the steel plants like closed their which have been supporting the steel plants like closed their last hich have been supporting the steel plants like closed their last coking ve just closed their last coking oven ever, you know, if they'd been supporting british steel over they've over the last 14 years, they've beenin over the last 14 years, they've been in government, maybe it
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would would have would have, maybe it would have been finished according to this, according to this think tank. but say lots of but think tanks say lots of things trust things i wouldn't trust everything. think say. all right. >> oh, go on. finally, finally say the labour government say the last labour government could the could have sorted out the nuclear but didn't. >> refused invest in >> they refused to invest in nuclear, coalition nuclear, as did the coalition government. talking government. yeah, we're talking about government. about the labour government. >> recent >> so the more recent government. right. government. all right. >> fairness, let's let's turn >> in fairness, let's let's turn the lights that the lights out on that discussion. hey you're welcome. britain right now . have you paid britain right now. have you paid the bill? i'm here all night. all right. now, dutch darts athlete moving on dutch darts athlete moving on dutch darts athlete noah lynn van leuven made history for being the first trans athlete to win the pdc women's series. let's take a look. >> more opportunities for noah lynn van leuven double ten the target at. up for double five. she's able to pin it well since then. >> two of her female there his his female team—mates have resigned an 18 time grand slam tennis champion martina
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navratilova has said no male bodies in women's sports. please. not even in darts. now carol, does it matter in darts ? carol, does it matter in darts? >> yes, it does matter because you're talking about muscle strength . men have between 30 strength. men have between 30 and 60% more muscle strength than women do anyway, which means their throw was better, tougher, whatever . i don't know tougher, whatever. i don't know about their eyes. i don't know what their eyes are any better, but know, it. there's but you know, it. there's a principle at here. and principle at stake here. and this. transgender woman is this. this transgender woman is going around winning competitions and with competitions with men and with with women. she's winning mixed ones. about money ones. this is all about money for this person. i can't say the name. i've heard your crack at it. not following van it. i'm not following van leuven. whatever just leuven. yeah, whatever you just said . but, you this trans said. but, you know, this trans ideology women's ideology is wrecking women's sport. it's not fair. and what martina navratilova also said , martina navratilova also said, as well as no male bodies in women's sport, she said it stinks and it really does stink. it's a big cheat on women . it's a big, big cheat on women. >> this view i am so fed up of this as an issue because it is
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not wrong to say that men and men and women are women when it comes to biology , and you either comes to biology, and you either believe in women's sport or you don't . and if you don't believe don't. and if you don't believe in women's sport, then fine, let's scrap it. and let's see men take the prizes in everything , because that's what everything, because that's what it is reduced down to. it doesn't matter if you choose to identify in a different way. if your biology is male, you have a physical advantage. absolutely. >> on your view on this, i mean, i agree broadly, you know, i think in genuinely physical sports , like cycling, sports, like cycling, like swimming, tennis. i swimming, like tennis. yeah, i agree, it is kind agree, but you know, it is kind of dark. you know, you look at the the male athletes in the male, the male athletes in darts, hardly, you know, the male, the male athletes in daritop hardly, you know, the male, the male athletes in daritop form hardly, you know, the male, the male athletes in daritop form ofardly, you know, the male, the male athletes in daritop form of athleticism.ow, the top form of athleticism. normally a, know, fat normally it's a, you know, fat bald guy. realistically bald guy. like realistically they from the same they throw from the same distance. i don't think have distance. i don't think men have an advantage of being an inherent advantage of being more with where they more specific with where they throw darts. agree with throw the darts. i agree with you in wider sport. but on this, i mean, it's really do you believe in in male and female categories generally in sport . categories generally in sport. >> so why is this different. >> so why is this different. >> because it's think >> because it's i don't think
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it's really physically based it's a really a physically based sport. there's an sport. i don't think there's an inherent sport. i don't think there's an inhereryou think women have a >> do you think women have a right choose they play right to choose who they play with or do we have to accept men deciding who we play with? >> i, i'm sure that there's many women the women's board women in the women's pdc board that have made this decision. women in the women's pdc board tha i have made this decision. women in the women's pdc board thai don'tnade this decision. women in the women's pdc board thai don't thinkthis decision. women in the women's pdc board thai don't think itis decision. women in the women's pdc board thai don't think it isdecision. women in the women's pdc board thai don't think it is just, on. women in the women's pdc board thai don't think it is just, i'm >> i don't think it is just, i'm afraid lot of women, the man afraid a lot of women, the man who it's the mum who who decides it's the mum who decides you know, decides this and you know, in some makes very point. some makes a very good point. >> know, it is not >> you know, it is not transphobic we're saying. >> you know, it is not tranno,obic we're saying. >> you know, it is not tran no, it's we're saying. >> you know, it is not tranno, it's pro—womensaying. >> you know, it is not tranno, it's pro—womenséhaven't no, no, it's pro—women i haven't said that's point . no, i said that's the point. no, i didn't say you did. i didn't say that. talking about sam's that. i'm talking about sam's point. transphobic. point. it's not transphobic. it's it's pro women's it's pro women. it's pro women's rights. right to rights. it's pro their right to compete with women, to compete with other women, to compete with other women, to compete playing compete on a level playing field. is not a level field. and this is not a level playing field. you just to playing field. you just have to look at difference between look at the difference between the size the women that were the size and the women that were playing. the name playing. and patrick do the name van yeah but that and van leuven. yeah but that and i'm not going to call, call van leuven a her either because it's just not fair. >> it's not it's not the women who are saying we want to play against men. it's the men saying, we want to play in your category. >> woe betide me to interrupt
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you women on this particular topic, i am going have topic, but i am going to have to. afraid. coming up, to. i'm afraid. look, coming up, as expert claims that as a royal expert claims that harry told harry and meghan were not told about cancer about princess of wales's cancer diagnosis . about princess of wales's cancer diagnosis. is it time for the royal family let bygones be royal family to let bygones be bygones ? find out more as bygones? find out more as i crown tonight's greatest britain and jackass. but next and union jackass. but next i will take you to paris to show you the restaurant racing phenomenon. taking the french capital by storm is patrick christys. tonight we're on
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gb news. all right. welcome back. it's time to return to the first off the front pages. let's do it . the front pages. let's do it. i've got the times china said to be declared a threat to national security. yeah. all right. brilliant they've also got the convoy of tractors blocking roads outside parliament. a farmers protest came to parliament today. the daily express . tory mps. we now must express. tory mps. we now must label china a threat to britain.
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britain turns a blind eye to beijing's malign activities, say sir iain duncan smith. and it's true . we absolutely do. big true. we absolutely do. big picture of esther mcvey, esther mcvey urges councils to fix our nation's roads. get on with it, she says. good for her. we like esther mcvey now. >> they weren't cutting local government funding. if only. >> well, if only local governments weren't spending it on diverse nonsense . now i'm on diverse nonsense. now i'm joined again by my press pack daily express columnist carole malone, unionist andy malone, trade unionist andy mcdonald editor at mcdonald and political editor at the express, sam lister. now the snp warned far and snp have been warned far and wide that their controversial new crime law will have new hate crime law will have a chilling effect on free speech. but they're not even bothered . but they're not even bothered. okay, they could criminalise things own home things you say in your own home to your own relatives over dinner. just listen to scottish first minister humza yousaf defending the legislation . defending the legislation. >> tens of incidents in hate crime incidents. it's important that they are recorded because what it does it gives police what it does is it gives police an of where there might be an idea of where there might be space hatred, that behaviour space and hatred, that behaviour might criminal, but they might not be criminal, but they can a pattern that is
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can then see a pattern that is simply so can see if simply done so police can see if there rise there is a rise in anti—semitism, for example, or a rise in, homophobia, right, right country . it's right across the country. it's important that police are able to monitor any patterns of hatred that might emerge. >> so the behaviour might be >> so the behaviour might not be criminal, but we'll call the police anyway. very concerning stuff , carol. it's very stuff, carol. it's very concerning. >> he had >> you would think he had nothing to think about. >> you would think he had nothing to think about . you nothing else to think about. you know, is a basket case. know, scotland is a basket case. currently it's services currently it's health services and education services and a mess. education services and a mess. education services and you know, he and a mess. you know, he promised to change promised he was going to change all came power. all that when he came to power. he's economy he's done nothing. the economy is he's talking about is a mess and he's talking about non—hate hate crime. i mean, it's just stupidity. i non—hate hate crime. i mean, it'sjust stupidity. i mean, it's just stupidity. i mean, there's a serving, there's a serving. >> scottish msp who's a tory up there who said something along there who said something along the lines of , excuse me, being the lines of, excuse me, being non—binary is like you know, you got no more right to say that than you got to say i'm a cat or something. i'm paraphrasing what he said there, and police investigated that. mean, investigated that. i mean, surely better stuff surely they've got better stuff on yeah, i'm sure they do. and >> yeah, i'm sure they do. and i'm glad that that, you know, murdo msp, you
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murdo fraser, the tory msp, you know, seeking support know, he's seeking the support of union. he's going of his trade union. he's going to union. i'm to the free speech union. so i'm very, for him there, very, very happy for him there, but you know, it's a but i think, you know, it's a bit you know, they shouldn't be going him. but going after him. but it's bizarre he'd say like, bizarre that he'd say it like, if serving mp, why if you were a serving mp, why would you compare being non—binary cat? >> serve em— >> serve your constituents, man, i concern for me i think the concern for me anyway, is you know, you're having dinner, nans having christmas dinner, nans round nan's got some views, right. the 17 year old at right. and the 17 year old at the dinner table, he's been through the work education system thinks this is appalling. just to call the police. and it turns yourself into a family of snitches. ripped snitches. and you've ripped apart nuclear apart the nuclear family. >> the sinister >> this is the most sinister policy development in the uk. i can in a long time. policy development in the uk. i can in a long time . and policy development in the uk. i can know, in a long time . and policy development in the uk. i can know, in along time . and policy development in the uk. i can know, in a lot; time . and policy development in the uk. i can know, in a lot of me . and you know, there's a lot of competition. be fair, but competition. let's be fair, but this is essentially the kind of real embodiment of the big real life embodiment of the big brother. 1984 george orwell warnings , you know, from decades warnings, you know, from decades ago, people snooping on each other, snitching on each other. it is like kind of east berlin in the in the height of the cold war. and i think this is a real, it's a real shame because it is the kind of last refuge of the
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desperate politician, isn't it? let's , behind all this as let's hide, behind all this as a kind of diversion when, as carol says, the schools are going to pot the health services under pressure, etc, etc, and i think actually the police should be investigating crimes. why are we putting all these things onto the police all the time? social work, thought crimes? why are they investigating burglaries? >> things he's mentioned >> the things he's mentioned there as well. >> can say there's already >> can i say there's already laws that stuff. there >> can i say there's already law already that stuff. there >> can i say there's already law already lawst stuff. there >> can i say there's already law already laws against'here are already laws against anti—semitism. would are already laws against anti—se be ism. would are already laws against anti—se be laws would are already laws against anti—se be laws against)uld already be laws against homophobia, etc. i mean, those things exist and there things already exist and there is . i things already exist and there is. i am convinced there's no real from people now real clamour from people now saying you need to police what's happening my home. and happening in my own home. and look, i'm going to take you now happening in my own home. and lo
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and could not spill a drop. shall we see how they got . shall we see how they got. on? cheater! there you go. it was a lot of clamour in the studio. >> plus the guys years ago were running faster and they had a bottle of wine as well as the glass of fig. that's a cheat. yeah, well, it's all right. >> doesn't really matter >> it doesn't really matter because strike because they went on strike halfway anyway. halfway through that anyway. so, there lazy trope. there we are. lazy trope. everybody now. okay, to everybody now. okay, time to reveal britain reveal today's greatest britain in union. jackass now that carol, your greatest britain, please. >> this is the whole of the royal family. okay, tube. it's much loved. members are now suffering from and being treated for cancer. the rest of the royal family rallying royal family are rallying round
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to the ones who to do the duty of the ones who aren't able to work at the moment. and, know, i think moment. and, you know, i think that's at time that's incredible at a time when, you know, they're suffering what millions of other families this country families in this country are suffering, have other suffering, but they have other dufies suffering, but they have other duties and they're duties as well, and they're doing we've seen doing them there. we've seen more the past two more of edward the past two weeks than have in weeks and sophie than i have in years. and they're all doing their i is very their bit, which i think is very commendable. so and all for our sakes. >> so you've gone for the whole royal from harry, royal family apart from harry, obviously. enough. royal family apart from harry, obv prince enough. royal family apart from harry, ovarince andrew. enough. >> prince andrew. >> prince andrew. >> oh. >> oh. >> anyone else you want to get? anyone crossing anyone else off the list? >> no. you're right. yeah >> no. you're right. yeah >> no. you're right. yeah >> no. yeah. all right. okay. good. right. go on. your greatest britain good. right. go on. your gre oh,t britain good. right. go on. your gre oh,t brigreatest britain. it >> oh, my greatest britain. it was the un security was britain's. the un security council . they've passed council. they've passed a resolution demanding resolution for demanding a ceasefire gaza until the end ceasefire in gaza until the end of ramadan. you know, i know it's flying and out of the it's flying in and out of the news, the kind of crisis in israel. i think is israel. and i think it is important we trying to important that we are trying to find a humanitarian solution. >> you >> it's interesting you mentioned actually, mentioned this, actually, yes. because this broke earlier today, on the today, didn't it? it's on the front guardian. i think front of the guardian. i think it actually, as it is actually, which is as i understand, it's war on understand, it's the war on israel isolated after un
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security demands gaza security council demands gaza ceasefire. abstained ceasefire. so the us abstained on this didn't they? which just mark a shift. okay. but the uk and 13 other members did call for lasting end to the for a lasting end to the conflict. >> i think it's that kind of evolution going down into evolution into going down into the rafah in the south, where a lot of civilians are, and there's kind of pending military offensives there. so i think even us kind of going, even the us are kind of going, oh, we do have to think of it again. >> but then you saw kamala harris, she was going, i've harris, she was going, hey, i've studied okay? and studied the maps, okay? and there's these guys there's nowhere for these guys to mean, there's to go. i mean, there is there's egypt. to go. i mean, there is there's eqyeqypt to go. i mean, there is there's egyegypt taking them. >> egypt aren't taking them. yeah >> oh, well, you know, we can't physically wonder physically get there. i wonder why anyway. right, go on why anyway. all right, go on then, who's your greatest briton? >> p-l >> well, bob wilson, known to your viewers, i'm sure, for being legend, but being a sporting legend, but actually, an interview actually, there's an interview in today in the telegraph today is very powerful , where he talks about, powerful, where he talks about, six his wife, six months ago, losing his wife, megs. they've been together for 70 years. oh, my god. and they lost their daughter when she was only 31, to cancer and set up a foundation , the willow foundation, the willow foundation. and so it's to him and his wife for the good work they did for charity over that
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very long period. >> lovely. oh, well. okay. all right. well, today's greatest britain is obviously it's the royal family because that's just the way it's going to have to be, i'm afraid. yes, but not andrew or harry. >> but not andrew or harry. >> but not andrew or harry. >> neither of them are coming to karl's birthday party. >> okay. >> okay. >> right. >> okay. » right. >> all right. carl, who is your union jackass? please. >> shamima she's lost >> oh. shamima begum, she's lost her she's lost her her beard and she's lost her challenge start again. yeah, challenge to start again. yeah, she wanted to go to the supreme court. she lost her appeal court, appeal last month to have her citizenship renewed. she wanted to the supreme wanted to go to the supreme court. thank god common sense has prevailed . and she's been has prevailed. and she's been told no, which is good, because this girl has tried nine times now get her citizenship back. now to get her citizenship back. it's fortune in legal it's cost us a fortune in legal aid. she'd got her aid. if she'd got her citizenship back , she it was citizenship back, she it was taken because joined taken away because she joined the death cult isis the murderous, death cult isis and did whatever she did over there. but, know, if she got there. but, you know, if she got it back, never going to be it back, she's never going to be able work country. able to work in this country. we'd have support for her all we'd have to support for her all of her life. and we're going. mi5 be
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of her life. and we're going. m15 be looking at m15 are going to be looking at her 24 hours, 24 seven. so that means going to cost means that she's going to cost us multi—millions. good. >> she'd also >> do you think she'd also become wouldn't become a jihadi pinup? wouldn't she? a she? i mean, we'd learn a lot about certain communities. yeah, she a lot she would, and we learn a lot about certain communities in britain where they would absolutely streets absolutely be out on the streets celebrating the return of shamima begum. >> but, you the security >> but, you know, the security services say the women returnees are bit dangerous as are every bit as dangerous as the . the men. >> so that's that's going a&e who's who's your union who's your who's your union jackass >> union jackass. this week is owen know, he's , yes. owen jones. you know, he's, yes. he's, over the last couple of days, he's quit the labor party. you know, to our disappointment, to our disappointment, he's quit the party. started off the labour party. he started off this bizarre little this new, weird, bizarre little faction that doing. faction thing that he's doing. and that dreadful and then he did that dreadful interview with lewis goodall. honestly i'm even disappointed myself that i'm him more myself that i'm giving him more media attention . he's little media attention. he's a little kind wannabe. he kind of peter pan wannabe. he needs of our screens. needs to get out of our screens. i mean, really dislike the boy. round of applause, i think. >> e jean carroll my endorsements are i mean with that one. >> owen jones, owen jones isn't here to defend himself. i would
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like to just make . like to just make. >> he's in neverland, boy. >> he's in neverland, boy. >> and. still it continues . >> and. and still it continues. we normally get you on to offer the balance here when comes the balance here when it comes to labour stuff, but here i am doing there go. doing it. but there we go. right. apparently right. well, apparently owen jones is, is a strong contender. go on. yours. sam. go on. he's yours. sam. >> police scotland, just >> police scotland, we've just been case. murdo been discussing the case. murdo fraser , they recorded his tweet fraser, they recorded his tweet about non—binary , being, about being non—binary, being, like, identifying yourself as a cat, they recorded that as a non—hate. a non—crime hate incident . but yeah. murdo fraser incident. but yeah. murdo fraser only found this out by accident when it was also reported to the scottish parliament with a crime reference number. and that's how he found out that he'd been reported to the police, so police scotland for investigating . nonsense. investigating. nonsense. >> yeah, i agree, i agree with you on that because i think it's just a very, very dangerous slippery slope. today's union jackass oh, good. jackass shamima begum. oh, good. okay two for two, to be honest with you. be honest with you. i thought it was police scotland, but there we go. okay. all right .thank but there we go. okay. all right
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. thank you. thank you very much. i really enjoyed it. thank you, thank you. i'll you, thank you, thank you. i'll be back tomorrow 9 pm. be back tomorrow from 9 pm. it's next. take it it's headliners next. take it easy, people. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. good evening to you. the rest of this week we'll be prepared for further heavy downpours and temperatures , downpours and temperatures, staying around about or a little bit . low pressure bit below average. low pressure is well and truly in control of our weather and will be for the rest of this week. these weather fronts have been making for a pretty soggy day for much of the uk . the rain scotland uk. the rain across scotland falling the hills falling as snow over the hills that continues in the east through the night. elsewhere, it does turn a little bit dry here, staying fairly cloudy and some staying fairly cloudy and some staying chilly. staying fairly chilly. temperatures down into single figures far off, freezing in figures not far off, freezing in northern scotland and small wintry showers coming into the northern and the western isles
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as we go into tuesday. still a bit more snow the grampians bit more snow over the grampians , ease , although that should ease further to come further showers though to come on of scotland, on the east coast of scotland, central southern central and southern scotland looking drier looking a little bit drier compared to today. it will be a wetter day though, for the southeast as that rain moves in through tuesday that spreads through tuesday and that spreads into midlands and rain again into the midlands and rain again for northern ireland. but something brighter something a bit brighter in the southwest and south wales, and for england to some for eastern england to some glimmers sunshine. but it is glimmers of sunshine. but it is going feel pretty chilly, going to feel pretty chilly, particularly scotland , particularly across scotland, where and hill snow where the rain and hill snow continues and continues into wednesday and then elsewhere. it's bands of showers moving in. be prepared for some heavy downpours on wednesday. there will be some brighter spells between the heavy showers, a bit of sunshine . we'll see temperatures up to double digits but generally feeling in the breeze and feeling cooler in the breeze and plenty more of heavy plenty more of those heavy showers in the run up to showers to come in the run up to easter. >> that feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of
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gb news. >> it's 11:00. you're with gb >> it's11:00. you're with gb news. and in a moment, it's headliners. but first, let's bnng headliners. but first, let's bring you the very latest news headunes. bring you the very latest news headlines . and deputy prime headlines. and the deputy prime minister in minister has been speaking in the commons today and the house of commons today and accusing china of being responsible malicious responsible for a malicious cyber campaign targeting the electoral commission databases containing the names and addresses of 40 million registered voters were visible to chinese hackers in 2021 and
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2022, but the government said it didn't affect the outcome of the local elections at the time. the government also said that national cyber security support will help make political parties make sure they're protected from foreign influence. in the run up to the general election. the israeli prime minister has cancelled his planned visit to the white house in washington this week, after the us's decision not to block a un ceasefire vote on gaza. the un security council passed a resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza for the rest of ramadan . the us the rest of ramadan. the us abstained from the vote, with 14 other council members, including russia , china and the uk voting russia, china and the uk voting in favour. after the vote, the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu cancelled his planned visit to washington, saying the us had withdrawn from its consistent position . and in the
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consistent position. and in the united states, donald trump will go on trial next month. the first ever criminal trial of a former or current us president. separately he scored a significant victory today after an appeals court judge granted him an extension to pay a fine in ten days time, also reducing his liability for that fine from £360 million to £140 million. it also means the state of new york can't now seize his assets in a fraud case, during which he's been accused of inflating his own net worth . here, protest own net worth. here, protest groups save british farming and fairness for farmers of kent have driven their tractors into central london tonight to protest about what they're calling substandard imports and the dishonest labelling of food. they also protested against low cost agricultural imports, saying it all amounts to a threat to food security. it comes after europe's farmers ramped up demonstrations across
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the continent, protesting against eu and national measures in their own countries . the ceo in their own countries. the ceo of boeing is to step down by the end of the year in a major management shake—up , following a management shake—up, following a raft of aircraft safety concerns , dave calhoun and other senior executives will step down after a series of scandals to hit boeing, including the apparent suicide of a whistleblower who'd reportedly raised concerns about the country's production issues . the country's production issues. the company has been under particular pressure to do something following the sudden blow—out of an aircraft fuselage at 16,000ft, concerning an alaska airlines boeing 737 max in january . here at home, sarah, in january. here at home, sarah, duchess of york, says she's full of admiration for the princess of admiration for the princess of wales after her cancer announcement post on social media today, the duchess said she hopes kate will now be given the space, time and privacy to heal.
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the space, time and privacy to heal . the duchess added i know

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