tv BBC News BBC News March 17, 2017 7:45pm-8:01pm GMT
7:45 pm
level of every school could the level of every school could benefit, do deserve after a long of years of austerity, a number of years of austerity, a little bit more funding so that they can intact. little bit more funding so that they can - intact. % vote little bit more funding so that they can . the intact. % vote little bit more funding so that they can . the government 5 vote little bit more funding so that they can . the government if i vote little bit more funding so that they can - the government if. came to on this? zon this? i really 1 on this? i really - the it on this? i really hope the government will be listening . this government—willrbe listening to this interview and government—willhe listening to this interview and a number of my colleagues... we have just lost ;— what 5, what you said. you very much for talking to thank you very much for talking to thank a mother who hid the body of her baby son for more than a decade has been sentenced eligée—ie gee-gs séfieiéésé ”ensuing??— our home affairs correspondent june kelly was in court. fer m’er’sth’en'efissieei’sg'i her baby son. kyzer.rdied.fl . ,, 11 years on, the body was discovered
7:46 pm
hidden in a box in a garden shed at her parents' home. they said they didn't know what had happened. victoria gayle told police she found her son dead. and the postmortem determined that it was inconclusive, and that's due to the passage of time, over ten years. after he left northwick park hospital as a newborn it appears the authorities had minimum contact. there was a tragic family accident. a decade later victoria gayle's two—year—old daughter became ill and died. an inquest found that she had swallowed a tiny battery, and it was then the police began investigating what had happened to kyzer. victoria gayle said that in a bedroom crammed withjunk she kept kyzer‘s body for years before moving it to the shed. on his birth certificate, she didn't name kyzer‘s father, over to his father.
7:47 pm
how the dad wanted it. so it was, if the dad wanted kyzer she wasn't allowed to have any contact. there were any police failings. this is a deeply disturbing, deeply troubling—easethaflalises a number of questions that sfe fifiifi'fi is 75223 is est sfiéiiief'ea the metpohce arenawlooking. they are trying to discover, ,, ., 7 fl-.- children during that time.
7:48 pm
june kelly, bbc news. the headlines on bbc news: president trump and german chancellorangela, merkel,have.! described their first meeting as productive — trade, refugees and nato were on the agenda. the former chancellor george osborne is facing calls to stand down as an mp, following his appointment as editor of the london evening standard editor. he says he can do bothjobs. jeremy corbyn says it makes a mockery of media independence. jeremy corbyn says it makes a mockery of media independence. nicola sturgeon insists the prime minister's opposition to another referendum on scottish independence is unsustainable. the nobel prize winning poet and playwright sir derek walcott has died aged 87. an update on the market numbers for you — here's how london's and frankfurt ended the day. and in the the united states, this is how the dow and the nasdaq are getting on. nowfl wonderzvohethejeyou'vebees able to tip read what i've been
7:49 pm
to have a conversation with a colleague. hlsilgieadmgsklu-egee 7 is”. fame in niafrfl" ' but he admits this is difficult. it can be very hard as well because sometimes some words can to you about. the difficult art of ligzreadingzr= less. see. rs. is. assess. see—gees es}; — — of the challenges of lip—reading.
7:50 pm
so lip—reading is a very difficult problem because there are visual ambiguities in mouth shapes. for example pat, bat and mat are visually identical. by endlessly watching clips of breakfast, newsnight and other bbc news programmes, the computer teaches itself to lip—read. tenet. the sustem sees is learn. things ,, 7 so in this case they're the mouth shapes and the characters, and what the likely upcoming characters are, given the previous characters. let's try it with some words it already understands. the prime minister is at a european union summit. now, the system has heard those words in that context before so copes pretty well. but to get better, it will have to chew through a lot more data. there's a long way to go but the hearing loss charity is optimistic about this technology. this would help people with when they're watching subtitles on television, this will help people when they're out and about in very noisy environments and it's by no means technology that will replace a professional lip—reader. it's something that would very much
7:51 pm
smears brbféss'n n’a sit—gage the nextstagusinis . , ,, ,, 50 yea rs 50 years ago and oil spill ran aground off the isle of sicily. the huge oil slick spread south to the huge oil slickspread seethtothe huge oil slickepreed seethtothe islands, huge oil slickepreed seuthtothe islands, before the channel islands, before reaching the gs— channel islands, before reaching the "as: i; of brittany coastline of brittany in france; environmentalists - somewhere in is still being e—e --——- lee e‘e‘eeeé!i=es —
7:52 pm
that's me in the background, you can see me looking on, captain eric kemp helped with the rescue. absolute dread and disaster, because you knew that we weren't going to be able to cope with that amount of oil. yeu eeuld smell it. fig mile; ' "' was moving on the tide. g hastly. as the days passed, there was a growing sense of chaos. the ship was bombed to try to sink it. thousands of birds were +55 95:— {here—25522142554: re? .... —— — —— 50 years on, some claim the oil frerr! the terrey thgeh; — ,
7:53 pm
in cornwall, chemicals used to get rid of the oil only a detailed record of its recovery. one, two... sues-eh fe'e —.--...- seer-ere; he. .--.-..-.- . . . e eee mn‘heremi“-wm*>ekteweeeq .. ,, , ,, , ,, ,, lthmkthnzflzb'e/ * ' f ' | hope—these whgfihevetherpowen well, the shipping—industryeeye- h r 1 m e n. 14 9, huhe jewel lee—hifléf deer; lh eus', ,
33 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
BBC NewsUploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1298554328)