tv The Papers BBC News January 14, 2018 11:30pm-11:46pm GMT
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a sleaziness and of wales, maybe a sleaziness and showers. adding in the strength of the wind, and i told you it would be cold. then we move on into wednesday. still a strong run of westerlies and then a bit of doubt, because it is a long way away at the moment. just where that centre ends up moment. just where that centre ends up is crucial. it is wet and windy, but on the northern flank buries snow. not quite sure where that northern flank is going to be. and a lot of wind is the centre moves away. the north—westerly winds could be very strong as well and just for a time it gets a fraction mother. but that is not the main story. hello. this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment. first, the headlines. the government considers a judicial review into the decision to release the serial—sex attacker, john worboys. every victim out there, every friend oi’ every victim out there, every friend orfamily victims every victim out there, every friend or family victims that has read about this case would like to know
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that we are doing everything that we can to make sure that victims are properly protected. police searching for a man in connection with a suspected crossbow attack which left one man dead and a pregnant woman injured, discover a body in a vehicle. the future of the engineering giant carillion remains in doubt, ministers are due to resume crisis talks tomorrow to try to save it from collapse. make the most of this deal to the papers because tomorrow we take you into the future, hopefully. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are martin bentham, home affairs editor at the london evening standard, and owen bennett, deputy political editor of huffpost uk. i hope i haven't built it up too much. tomorrow's front pages: the metro leads on the future of ukip's leader henry bolton, after his girlfriend was suspended from the party for apparently making racist remarks about meghan markle.
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the ft reports on the trouble—hit contractor carillion, it asks why it was awarded £2 billion in government contracts, despite issuing a profits warning last year. the times also has that story. it also pictures a plane which skidded off a runway in turkey, plunging down the side of a cliff. the express has research claiming that adding more fibre to your diet could help fight rheumatoid arthritis. the i has a special report about arms deals to countries such as saudi arabia, following the brexit vote. the sun reports on the marriage difficulties of tv star anthony mcpartlin. the telegraph claims medical records of british cancer victims have been passed to a us firm working for one of the world's biggest tobacco companies. and the guardian unveils a new look, it claims medical students are being urged to volunteer in accident and emergency wards to help ease winter pressure on the nhs. we will start with the mail this
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time. the facebook drug deal was exposed, cannabis peddled to children on social media. get another concern that facebook are going to have two face up to. —— yet. another illustration of the concerns that have been raised about the activities of people and what is being allowed to be seen and distributed by facebook and some of the other social media sites. this one talks about kernels freely touting business on the site, selling cannabis to somebody else offering to sell cocaine, suggesting that facebook isn't doing enough to identify and take an average and these activities happening. it fits a pattern, as the story says, of failure of facebook and twitter and some of the other sites to deal with things like terrorist content and
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other serious content on their sites. there are a victim of the road sites. there are a victim of the roa d su ccess sites. there are a victim of the road success in some ways because they have got so big so quickly policing every single page on the site is just an policing every single page on the site isjust an uphill policing every single page on the site is just an uphill struggle policing every single page on the site isjust an uphill struggle is policing every single page on the site is just an uphill struggle is a bit -- site is just an uphill struggle is a bit —— they are. site is just an uphill struggle is a bit -- they are. it seems like a game of why, all, as one thing goes down one thing pops up. they have become very big very quickly but they are so big that they can afford to get people in place to look for these kind of things. —— whack a mole. there are ways to do this, is there that the will? frankly i don't think there has been because they value their claim of being completely free... they are not publishers, they maintain that. this was a puppy in a where you knew this was a puppy in a where you knew this was going on it would be closed down by the police, no different. was going on it would be closed down by the police, no differentlj was going on it would be closed down by the police, no different. i was at the home affairs select committee
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before christmas when they had facebook, twitter and google before them raising all sorts of concerns on theirfailure to them raising all sorts of concerns on their failure to do all sorts of other serious content on there and i think facebook in particular and there are executive was complacent and arrogant. there has been this long—standing denial by facebook that it long—standing denial by facebook thatitis long—standing denial by facebook that it is or isn't a publisher, claiming it is a conduit for other people to post and advocating its responsibilities in these areas. they are cleverer at promoting staff and finding ways of putting stuff at the head of the feed and so on, clearly they have got the capacity to be able to at least try to address this and i don't think they have really done enough. certainly mps have very clearly ta ken have really done enough. certainly mps have very clearly taken that view over recent months and will be critical of their activities. looking at the times, ministers dismiss failing firm, this is carillion, almost too big to fail
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because they have so many government contracts. they work across so many different fields, across the nhs and maintaining prisons and it says here they have a 500 and £90 million —— £590 million pension deficit and the story here is that the government gave in contracts last year at the same time after profit warnings had been issued by the company, highlighting its potential problems and the criticism from the lib dem leader and others was that they should not have given the contracts at that stage, throwing money after bad. 0n the other hand it may be that the company needed those contracts to keep it going and indeed it is sort of inconceivable that it can all be allowed to fall into the ground because clearly all of these jobs need to be done. is a big problem for the government to
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get through, to keep this company going without incurring a whole lot of cost. if you believe in the free market, should they be propped up? well no, you could say the same about the banks. it is funny how lot of mps, about the banks. it is funny how lot of mp5, i remember when the steel crisis came up a lot of tory mps who had steelworkers with them suddenly they wanted intervention. what you will see here is if again if there is perception that the public takes the risk and the hit but in the good times it is the private sector which reaps the benefits, which we have seen across reaps the benefits, which we have seen across many reaps the benefits, which we have seen across many industries, you can understand why a lot of these people in the country are moving away from these free market economics, this is these free market economics, this is the reason why. households face fines and fly tipping crack down. it seems like a good idea if you can police it. exactly right. idon't think the council is cashed up our struggling to get social care under control, yes this will cost them a
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lot of money, have they got the money for the enforcement? you seen in other parts of local government. seems to be getting worse though? it certainly is a problem and whether it is was not, i agree. anecdotally it is was not, i agree. anecdotally it is was not, i agree. anecdotally it is getting worse and clearly at the very least, a few exemplary fines and people might send a message to others who attempt to do it. looking at the guardian, look at my little copy. it is tiny! it is not really that small, just how we printed it but it has gone from its per letter size to its tabloid size. story we are looking at is students drafted in to plug nhs gaps. an interesting story and basically what it is saying is that fourth and fifth year medical students are being asked, not clear how widely,
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but an illustration here from a university school writing to stu d e nts university school writing to students asking if they would be willing to help on wards. it is an illustration of the pressures they are under, not a desirable situation but on the other hand they are not too far off being trained. the suggestion is that they shouldn't be doing anything beyond their competence. maybe it is not a source of massive alarm as if you have com pletely of massive alarm as if you have completely untrained people on wards but clearly it is not a great situation if people are not fully trained being drafted in at this stage. what year are they in? fourth and fifth. they are not an undergraduate, they will go into the difficult of the accident and emergency, these people will not have had all the training, i know they will volunteer, are they going to have the capacity to deal with what they are going to see and deal with? they could be rushed and on
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what they can do. of course, these things are usually done by healthcare systems things are usually done by healthca re systems and things are usually done by healthcare systems and ward clerks, where are they? this is symptom that it of the fact that workforce planning in the nhs has been completely mismanaged the years. planning in the nhs has been completely mismanaged the yearslj completely mismanaged the years.” am surprised they have time to do it. aren'tjunior doctors am surprised they have time to do it. aren't junior doctors or training doctors rather busy? they are training, aren't they? i think they are training anyway in the hospitals. so from that point of view... it is clearly not a desirable situation that people who previously wouldn't have to do this are temporarily doing it on the other hand, it is not as if they are, be doing thejob of a other hand, it is not as if they are, be doing the job of a fully trained conducting serious surgery oi’ trained conducting serious surgery or anything else. would hope not. it is not desirable but perhaps it is not a complete disaster. a quick comment on the metro, your racist lover or yourjob. a warning to henry bolton weather he will survive. i think it is your turn
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next and my turn the week after, whether or not he will survive after his girlfriend he left his wife for, which is of no importance,... a bit of background. she sent some apparently racist tax about meghan markle. it is not a good look. a good soap opera, but not satisfactory... a couple of stories in the sun on page two. firstly. first, should i say. acts 100,000 migrant target. —— axe. from the home select committee. they are basically saying that the government ‘s target is to get it down to
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100,000 ford migration, it should be scrapped and replaced by what sounds like a complicated series of different targets and controls of. —— and controls. there should be a proper looking out at what kind of targets should be meted and which are making good contributions and which are not. try to skew the migration policy towards that. on the other hand, it may be that it is even more complicated and difficult to achieve and to reach those targets entered deliver those targets entered deliver those targets they do have the existing one. at the moment, if you are doing this system which looks at what your economy needs, in terms of the guardian apparently we need healthcare clerks and you look at carillion need people to come in and work. they need money. you might look at this at what the economy
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needs, it needs migrant workers are. if you look at the construction sector, it needs migrant workers. so actually, the idea that distance be some kind of true, i wouldn't put... that is the whole point, also what is interesting is the committee has tried to struggle the divide —— straddle. they are suggesting the replacing of one target with something that would buy all purposes have some control over migration. but it would fluctuate year on year. and other story underneath, related because it is about brexit. freeing us from free movement across the eu. let's not call him that, borisjohnson, brexit is on call him that, borisjohnson, brexit isona call him that, borisjohnson, brexit is on a knife edge. the great echo continues when nigel farage says
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some in borisjohnson says it is well. nigel farage said the other day that britain is on a knife edge and boris has backed him up, saying yes there may be trouble. the remainers might wear down theresa may. is not an awful lot on this rather than borisjohnson may. is not an awful lot on this rather than boris johnson picking may. is not an awful lot on this rather than borisjohnson picking up a stink. no explanation on how brexit would be frustrated or diverted. two things, one thing suggesting, what he is saying here or apparently sane through friends, what he doesn't want, i can understand this entirely, is that the country ends up having a deal where basically he is arguing that theresa may gets crowned down and agrees. —— saying. not committing to the rules, still subject to the
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jurisdiction of the european court. everything remains the same except for the anomaly outside the european union and that would leave us in a worse situation and he doesn't want that and would rather almost 18 if that and would rather almost 18 if that were the case. so i think, there are two things there, somehow there are two things there, somehow the whole thing might not happen but if it doesn't —— if it does happen it might happen in a way that would in effect destroy what the purpose was in the first place and that is what he is concerned about, according to the story. finishing with the financial times and eight picture of a man standing on something rather precarious and that something rather precarious and that something is the lloyds of london building. this was a building designed by richard rogers, it has won all sorts of awards, and has all its pipes outside the building and is therefore very easy to climb. lloyds have been getting some injunctions to try and stop urban explorers
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