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tv   BBC News  BBC News  April 23, 2017 5:00am-5:31am BST

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hello, my name is tom donkin. a warm welcome to bbc news broadcasting at home and around the globe. here's our top stories — tight security across france — tens of thousands of police and soldiers on patrol as the country prepares for the presidential elections. a day of mourning declared in afghanistan after the deadly attack on an army base, that left more than 100 soldiers killed or wounded. emergency teams rush to stop an oil slick threatening the canary islands after a ferry slams into a pier, damaging fuel pipes. science fights back — doctor who joins the worldwide protests to combat what's seen as a political attack on hard facts. tennis star ilie nastase is banned from a major tournament after ranting at british players during the federation cup. hello and thanks forjoining us.
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there's high security across france as the country prepares for the first round of its presidential election in just a few hours. 50,000 police officers and 7,000 soldiers are being deployed following the death of a policeman in a shooting on thursday. it's one of the most important and unpredictable elections in recent years. james reynolds reports from paris. no—one wants to miss a single second of the big moment. these people are running not for a vote, but for a football match. 0n the eve of the election, paris st—germain played a home game. it was a final test of the capital's security before the polls opened. these supporters, french voters, have made it through months of campaigning. translation: the campaign was very long, and it was contaminated by all that's happened. translation: for us, the people down there, we will never have anything.
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so no matter who is the president, it doesn't matter. it will always be the same for us. translation: the campaign has been necessary. we listened to each party's programme. now it is time to choose. to the relief of everyone here, the speeches over, the arguments have been made, and for this entire country, it is now decision time. for these protesters in paris, security comes before all else. the afternoon before the vote, the wives of police officers called for more support for the security forces. their march follows the killing of a police officer on the champs—elysees on thursday. fear of further attacks means that these, france's polling stations, will be well guarded. 50,000 police officers have been deployed to protect voters. in bordeaux, election officials make their final manual checks. the candidates themselves are now
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silent, and 47 million french voters get their turn to speak. the bbc‘s karin giannone is also in paris, assessing the mood of voters. today is a day of political silence. the campaign is over, the politicians have gone quiet, and it is a chance for the french to catch their breath after months and months of relentless campaigning. so it is a relatively normal scene on this street market on the boulevard saint—germain in paris, a very affluent area of the capital. but the background to all this is anything but normal. france is under a state of emergency, and then there was the terror attack on thursday night on the champs—elysees which left a policeman dead, just a couple of miles from here. so how much is all that weighing on voters‘ minds as they prepare to cast their ballots tomorrow? translation: the attack hasn't really changed anything for me. we'd already taken it into account.
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there have already been quite a few events like this. it's just more of the same. translation: i've had the same idea about voting since childhood, same as my parents. we've never changed. i'm absolutely certain. all the kids are voting. everyone's voting. vive la france! translation: even if you're not that enthusiastic about any one candidate, you have to go and vote. it's your duty as a citizen — and for the second round, especially, even more than the first. so the scene here at least is very much what france is known best for — buying good food, sitting outside cafes, drinking coffee, wine and beer. but the run—up to this election has been so extraordinary, so dramatic and so unpredictable, there is absolutely no way of knowing what the outcome of sunday's first round will be. there is of course, much more on our website,
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with a live page bringing together the latest news, video, and analysis. there's also profiles of all the main candidates — just go to to bbc.com/news. and from 17.30 gmt on sunday afternoon, there will be special coverage across bbc news as france decides. a day of national mourning is beginning in afghanistan for the victims of the taliban attack on a military base close to the northern city of mazar—e—sharif. more than 100 soldiers were killed or wounded when militants fired on them as they left a mosque. justin rowlatt reports. it was during afternoon prayers that two suicide bombers blasted open the entrance to this army base in the north of afghanistan. at least eight other fighters dressed in afghan army uniforms used heavy machine guns to attack the dining area of the base and the mosque. the taliban has claimed responsibility and issued this picture of the men it claims were behind it. one was captured,
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the rest are now dead. afghan troops have been pouring in to secure the area today. the afghan president, ashraf ghani, visited some of the dozens of injured in a local hospital. the attack took the troops by surprise, and the battle that followed lasted five hours. translation: when i came out of the mosque, after prayers, three people with army uniforms and an army vehicle started shooting at us. islamic tradition requires that burials take place as soon as possible, and the bodies of many of the victims have already been placed in coffins. the assault on the army base is a shocking reminder ofjust how tough the ongoing battle in afghanistan is. last month, an afghan army helicopter landed special forces troops on the roof of the military hospital in kabul after it was stormed by gunmen
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disguised as doctors. around 50 people died in that attack. 2.5 years after the international combat mission in afghanistan ended, and the taliban now controls more than a third of the country. and, with casualties amongst the afghan forces running at almost 7,000 a year, there are questions about how long the afghan army can continue to defend the ground it still holds. justin rowlatt, bbc news. in other news — hundreds of thousands of people have staged silent protests across venezuela to remember those killed in three weeks of anti—government demonstrations. the government accuses the opposition of trying to trigger a coup. a un report on south sudan says the government of president salva kiir is to blame for much of the fighting and famine in the country.
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un experts are calling for an arms embargo. a spokesman for mr kiir said the report was biased. pope francis has urged governments not to keep migrants in holding emergency teams have been despatched to contain an oil spill on one of the canary islands. that's after a ferry crashed into underwater fuel pipes. a 2—mile—long slick is threatening the coast around las palmas, on gran canaria, and telde, which is further south. sarah corker has the latest. the ferry had just left port when it suddenly lost power. adrift, and at the mercy of the sea, it crashed through the harbour wall. 140 passengers were on board the friday night crossing from las palmas to tenerife. after the ordeal, one woman is helped off the ship, but suddenly drops to the floor. up to five people suffered minor injuries. in daylight, the scale of the damage became clear. the collision damaged fuel pipes, releasing oil into the sea. the nearly 2—mile oil spill is focused around las palmas, and stretches down the coast to telde — the two main towns on the spanish
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resort island of gran canaria. and this is what is left of the ship's bow after the collision. on saturday, the government temporarily shut down a water plant to avoid contamination of drinking water and emergency teams are now working to contain the oil spill. sarah corker, bbc news. here in the uk, disagreements over tax policy have deepened as leading politicians hit the 2017 general election trail on the first weekend of the campaign. the british prime minister, theresa may, refused to say whether she would raise income tax, vat or national insurance. meanwhile, the labor leader jeremy corbyn promised, if he wins onjune 8th — the tax burden will fall on those with the broadest shoulders. here's our political correspondent ben wright. get ready for the knock at your door. today, the prime minister took her campaign message to dudley, and one voter may have spoken for many.
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i couldn't understand why you called an election, you know, with three years to go. well, ithink we need — i need... i want a stronger negotiating hand, the strongest possible negotiating hand in europe. but this general election is notjust about brexit and all the parties are rapidly writing manifestos full of pledges and promises. the issue of tax will of course be prominent, and theresa may was asked whether she would be keeping the tories‘ 2015 manifesto pledge not to raise any of the three main taxes. at this election, people are going to have have a very clear choice. they will have a choice between a conservative party — which always has been, is, and will continue to be a party that believes in lower taxes, in keeping taxes down for ordinary working people — or the choice is a labour party, whose natural instinct is always to raise taxes. two years ago, david cameron said there would be no vat, national insurance, or income tax rises. theresa may's comments today suggest
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that guarantee might not be in the new manifesto, and it follows the chancellor, philip hammond, yesterday saying he wanted more flexibility in managing the economy. good morning, everybody. today is flying—start saturday in our general election campaign. already on his eighth campaign visit of the election, jeremy corbyn was in warrington... nice to meet you. good to see you, too. what a lovely house. it's quite nice. ..wooing voters, insisting the election was not a foregone conclusion, and sketching out labour's own approach to taxes. we will produce our manifesto very soon, and you will see all the details in that. but i tell you this — our tax burdens will not fall on those with low incomes. 0ur tax burdens will not fall there. they will fall on those with the broadest shoulders, who can bear the greatest burden. the liberal democrats haven't set out their tax plans yet, either, but warn more money will be needed. one thing is absolutely clear —
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whoever‘s in government is going to have to increase taxation. because the effect of brexit will be to slow down the economy, reduce government revenue, so more taxes are going to have to be raised. the tories are going to have to raise taxes, it was very clear from the budget. the question is how it's done. where i would start is not with those taxes, but with corporation tax. at the last election, more than 50 snp mps were swept into westminster, and today the party announced that all but two of them, who now sit as independents, have been reselected as candidates this time around, in an election that will soon have competing policies to flesh out the slogans. ben wright, bbc news. stay with us on bbc news. still to come — rolling out the white blanket — the latest weapon in the battle against a warmer world. the stars and stripes at half—mast outside columbine high.
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the school sealed off, the bodies of the dead still inside. i never thought they would actually go through with it. some places have already had nearly as much rain as they would normally expect in an entire year. for millions of americans, the death of richard nixon in a new york hospital has meant conflicting emotions. a national day of mourning next wednesday sitting somehow uneasily with the abiding memories of the shame of watergate. and lift—off of the space shuttle discovery with the hubble space telescope, our window on the universe. this is bbc news. i'm tom donkin.
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the latest headlines: a huge security operation is under way in france with tens of thousands of police and soldiers on duty for the presidential election. a day of mourning has been declared in afghanistan after the deadly attack on an army base that left more than 100 soldiers killed or wounded. the leader of germany's anti—immigration party, alternative fur deutschland, or afd, has suffered a crushing defeat as delegates at a conference refused to support her plans to appeal to the wider public. frauke petry, who will not be the party's candidate in september's election, had asked delegates at its annual conference in cologne to vote to become more mainstream and forge partnerships with other parties. translation: i understand that delegates wanted to concentrate on policies, but it's a mistake to refuse to discuss the future
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direction of the party. a party strategy and a political programme go hand in hand. outside the conference, thousands of anti—afd protestors clashed with police. two officers were injured as they tried to protect delegates entering the building. jenny hill has been watching the day's events in cologne. it's been a day of protests here in cologne against germany's most controversial political party. you can see that the demonstrators are starting to disperse now. but there were tens of thousands of people on the streets of cologne today, many of them held back from the city centre hotel where that conference is happening by armed police officers, some of them in riot gear. in fact, two officers, we're told, were injured during minor scuffles, although, by and large, the protests have passed off peacefully. far more fractious, it has to be said, was the mood inside the conference hall, and that's because afd is really a party in crisis. not only is it slipping in the polls, it seems that its very fierce anti—islam, anti—immigrant platform is no longer enough
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to attract the german electorate. but it's also a party bitterly divided over its future political direction. and there is still a great deal of discussion about how the party is going to move forward. if you look at the polls, afd is still on course to win seats in the general election. but really, its chances of significant political success rest now on whether it can come together, agree, if you like, on, first of all, a candidate to go into that election to stand against angela merkel, but, perhaps more importantly, to agree on the very political identity of the party itself. the captain of romania's federation cup team, ille nastase, has been reported to the international tennis federation for a second time in just two days after an outburst of obscenities against match officials and the british team. andy beatt reports. the semifinals of this year's fed
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cup reduced to a sideshow, overshadowing the clash between romania and britain, comments from romania's captain, former world number one ille nastase. in a tense match marred by shouting from the crowd, nastase row with the umpire and the match referee then verbally abused two british players, reducing johanna konta to tears. play was suspended and she was escorted from the court. what he said directed to bothjohanna the court. what he said directed to both johanna and the court. what he said directed to bothjohanna and myself is not something i'm going to repeat here because it's language that is not appropriate for anyone to speak to any other human in that particular way and that's not what we've come here for. we've come to play a competitive match against romania in afair competitive match against romania in a fair environment, and certainly we don't expect verbal abuse. a fair environment, and certainly we don't expect verbal abusem a fair environment, and certainly we
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don't expect verbal abuse. it kind of snowballed quite frankly. it snowballed i think once you promote something like that, it gives courage to a lot of people to think it's ok. quite frankly itjust got out of hand. the international tennis federation is already investigating nastase for remarks just a day earlier about the world number one and mum to the serena williams. his words defended and described as a joke by the president of romania's tennis federation. the fed tie will resume on sunday without ille nastase. he's been banned from the stadium, his accreditation removed. andy beatt, bbc news. tens of thousands of people have taken part in marches across the world as part of a global day of action in support of science. many of those taking part were demonstrating against what they see as political attacks on scientific facts. 0ne of the largest gatherings was in washington, dc, from where our correspondent
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laura bicker sent this report. scientists usually steer clear of politics, butjust metres from the white house, thousands gathered to celebrate and defend their work. # stand up tall, stand up strong. this is the first time the annual march for science has had a presence in the us capital. 0rganisers said their message wasn't aimed solely at donald trump, but clearly some thought it was a good time to protest planned cuts to environmental programmes. science must shape policy. science is universal. science brings out the best in us. with an informed, optimistic view of the future together, we can, dare i say it, save the world! cheering in a statement, donald trump said: he added: in london, the star of doctor who,
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peter ca paldi, joined thousands of physicists, astronomers and biologists to highlight the role science plays in everyday life. demonstrators took to the streets in over 500 cities around the world, including sydney, berlin and geneva. many are protesting what they see as an alarming trend among politicians to discredit scientific research. this little girl travelled from flint, michigan to try to speak, however scary that might be. iam a flint kid, and i believe in science because... scientists discovered that thousands of people discovered in flint had been drinking water with high levels of lead, burning their skin and making them sick. listen to me. when we don't believe in science, and especially when our government doesn't believe in science, kids get hurt. that's what happened in flint.
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for the sake of flint kids, and for all over this world, i march for science. cheering the rallies have generated debate in the us about whether or not scientists should involve themselves in politics. but organisers in washington said that now was the time to ensure their voices are heard. laura bicker, bbc news, washington. as the alpine ski season draws to a close, one of the big problems facing resorts is the effect of rising temperatures, causing glaciers to melt. sara thornton has travelled to the austrian alps, where experts are going to great lengths to stop them melting. for tens of millennia, this tyrolean glacier has carved its way slowly through the alps. a century and a half ago,
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it covered almost six square miles. now, it's less than a third of that. well, i'm the on the top of the stubai glacier, in the austrian alps, at around 3,000 metres high. it's an area that is very popular for skiing, and actually, there are about 80 separate glaciers in this area. but there's a problem, because in the last few years, scientists have realised there has been an unprecedented glacial melt. so the question's now are how serious is that melt, and what can they do to stop it? doctor andrea fischer is a world—renowned glaciologist who has made it her life's work to halt the decline of this glacier. and she's hit upon an exciting answer, a blanket, preventing ice melt. on a very small, very local scale, we could prevent some very tiny glacial areas by covering it with geotextiles during summer. but only 1% of glacial area in ski resorts can be protected by this method, and of course, it's very cost—intensive,
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and it needs much labour. to save 1% of the glacier seems almost futile. but with the local economy relying on skiing and tourism here, officials say it's worth it. it is expensive, but it is more expensive to do it not. so i think the cost of this protection is around 300,000 euros. the result is very good. on average, the melting is about one metre, or 1.5 metres, and with this, it protects more than 50%. there are 5,000 alpine glaciers in the world, and some scientists predict that, at the current rate of melting, in 20 years half of them will be gone, and those that are left will be much smaller. but it's far from clear if this expensive, local solution can work on a global scale. sarah thornton, bbc news. a man who's spent seven years cycling around the world has
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returned to the uk. leigh timmis went without water in the australian outback and cycled through temperatures of minus a0 in tibet. simon ward reports. this has been an epicjourney. leigh timmis has cycled through 50 countries in a seven—year ride around the world. today, it ended where it all began. as he cycled into derby, he was reunited with his mother. to be in tibet alone with no one to help surrounded by a desert, when you realise how small you are in comparison to nature, that's the most astounding thing. afterfacing lions, extreme temperatures, ad having his belongings stolen, he was relieved to be back home safely in derby among family and friends. it was lovely to be able to touch him physically and know he is safe and sound. he was only 20—30 miles down the road last night, but you worry until the last minute, but to have him back safe and sound is fantastic. sailing through six metre waves,
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storms and getting bashed around in the middle of the ocean. you realise how small you are. three people in a small boat. you only have the things that you've got. he has raised nearly £10,000 for charity so far. we have no funding from state or local authorities. it is entirely charity. we have lifted the amount of children we have taken each year from a50 by another 300 to 750. we are expanding operations. he hasn't decided what he will do next, but it will be difficult to top such an amazing adventure. simon ward, bbc news, derby. took the long way home. that's it from me and the team. my name's tom donkin. for now, goodbye. take care. hello there.
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with clear skies for many of us overnight, sunday dawns on quite a chilly note. there will be a touch of frost for some rural parts. this was the sunset on saturday evening, taken by one of our weather watchers in south ayrshire, showing the beautiful blue skies. cloud will increase across this part of the world as we head through the day on sunday, so turning cloudier across northern and western scotland, with a few showers. also some cloud across southern counties of england, and for northern ireland, too. it is, of course, the london marathon on sunday. after a fairly fresh start to the day, by the afternoon, temperatures in the mid—teens. it should be fairly cloudy, but we are expecting it to remain dry. there is just the outside chance, though, of a passing shower in london. so this is 9am, then. you can see quite a lot of cloud across devon and cornwall, up towards east anglia, too, but there will be some brightness around. temperatures around eight or nine degrees at 9:00am, with some cloud across northern england and southern scotland, too. northern ireland starts off a bit cloudier, and that cloud also pushing in across the west of scotland, with some scattered showers across northern
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parts of scotland. now, moving through the day, then, not a bad day for most of us. it is looking predominantly dry, probably the best of the sunshine in a swathe through parts of northern england, the midlands, and across wales. a bit more cloud to the south of that, but most places staying dry. just that small hint of perhaps a passing shower in london for the marathon, of course, temperatures here up to around 16 degrees for the middle of the afternoon. further north, more in the way of cloud, and outbreaks of rain, too, down to the fact that we've got this frontal system approaching from the north. that will bring quite a change in weather type as we head through into the new working week. first thing monday morning, in the countryside it, will be very chilly in the far north, particularly across parts of scotland. could be as low as minus four degrees first thing in the morning. and during the day, that cold air filters in across parts of scotland, then into northern ireland, too. some wintry showers in the north. further south, across england and wales, cloud, outbreaks of rain. but we are still in the milder air here, around 16 degrees or so, whereas further north, only around 6—9 celsius.
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then, as those fronts slip away towards the south, heading towards tuesday, colder air pushes down across all of us, so we return to a quite wintry feel during the course of tuesday, i think, with that cold, northerly wind. there will be quite a lot of dry, bright weather, with showers particularly towards the east, and a bit of a wintry flavour to those showers. temperatures at best for most of us around eight or nine degrees. could be up to around 13, though, in the far south—east. so that wintry theme continues into the middle of the week. still cold for wednesday and thursday, with wintry showers and night—time frosts. the latest headlines from bbc news. i'm tom donkin. france is under tight security as the country prepares for sunday's presidential elections. 50,000 police and 7,000 soldiers are being deployed to protect voters. it follows the killing of a police officer in central paris
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on thursday night. the president of afghanistan has declared sunday as a day of mourning for the victims of the taliban attack on a military base close to the northern city of mazar—e—sharif. dozens of soldiers were killed when the militants fired on them in a canteen and as they left a mosque. emergency teams have been despatched to contain an oil spill on one of the canary islands after a ferry crashed into a pier and damaged underwaterfuel pipes. a 3km—long slick is threatening the coast around las palmas, on gran canaria, and telde, further to the south. 140 passengers and crew were on board at the time. now on bbc news, it's time for the week in parliament.
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