tv The Papers BBC News May 20, 2018 10:30pm-10:46pm BST
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hello. this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment, first the headlines: the train operator, govia thameslink, has apologised to passengers for cancellations and delays during what it called the "the biggest change to rail timetables in a generation". the united states and china have agreed to drop plans to impose punitive import tariffs on each other‘s goods, in a move that will reduce the threat of an expensive trade war. the royal family has thanked the public after thousands of people lined the streets of windsor to celebrate the marriage of prince harry and meghan markle. chelsea football club owner roman abramovich faces delays in renewing his uk visa. reports suggest his investor visa expired three weeks ago. on hawaii's big island more people are being urged to leave their homes as fountains of lava from the kilauea volcano continue to break through the ground in residential areas. is in residential areas. meet the author, this week, i guest is meet the author, this week, my guest is david hewson who has taken maybe be most famous love story in the world and turned it into a
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novel. juliet and romeo. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the political correspondent at the financial times, henry mance, and the associate editor of the times, anne ashworth. and has told us that we could talk the 12 hours about the royal wedding, but we are not doing to let her do that, don't worry. many of tomorrow's front pages are once again leading with the royal wedding. why wouldn't they, with all of those photos to choose from? the metro leads on a picture of prince harry and his new wife meghan heading to their reception last night. iam i am struggling to know where to lean. the sun says the duke and duchess of sussex had their first dance to whitney houston's i wanna dance with somebody at their wedding bash. a bop apparently they had. only on
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the front page of a newspaper, would you bop. the mirror claims that meghan gave a moving speech in which she said she "had found her prince". quite literally. not taking this seriously, . .. the express features the royal coupleheading to the party. it says the event helped to create a triumphant wedding weekend for britain. the telegraph says buckingham palace has given its blessing to the new duchess of sussex championing women's rights in her royal role. the guardian claims that homeless people are being fined, given criminal convictions and even imprisoned for begging and rough sleeping. the ft reports that britain is looking to australia for help in launching a rival to the eu's galileo satellite system. there is something other than the royal story. not much. there is something other than the royalstory. not much. right, let's make a start, then. we have got four front pages just looking at the royal wedding. and henry,
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front pages just looking at the royalwedding. and henry, i front pages just looking at the royal wedding. and henry, iwill insist that you say something, but let's start with an. neither party, on the front of the metro in a gorgeous frock by stella mccartney. beautiful stella mccartney frock. newspapers are about amazing images, but i think we should always talk about how it is a delight, and you have got to be really stony hearted not to have been moved by the wedding yesterday, the perfect makes java hollywood, of you are looking very sceptical at me, i will persuade you by the end, but this was a very important moment when the nation came together, the sun shone and we were treated to the ultimate soap opera, the royal wedding. and we were treated to the ultimate soap opera, the royal weddingm did look stunning. you have got to admit, windsor looked beautiful, the guests admit, windsor looked beautiful, the gu ests we re admit, windsor looked beautiful, the guests were so well turned out and that chain that dress, i know you must been in raptures from it,...
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which, as those tragic spain to henry earlier is a work of craftsmanship. absolutely beautiful. i will see if i can say something sensible. i think it is great. lots of people get married, and the guests leave, the magic of average, and they are left clinging to the photos. i think it is brilliant that the celebration continues. i find it rather unbelievable, i think there was a spokesman for the duke and duchess who were saying that they are already planning on getting back to work. and you think, they are not, are they? here is that these aren't. a bop to witney classic. does anyone bop, really? i certainly don't. but anyway. while we are about it. the telegraph, meghan to fight forfeminism. about it. the telegraph, meghan to fight for feminism. as is well be get a bit of meat to the story. we are used to the boil is not releasing too much and having to tread a very fine line with anything thatis tread a very fine line with anything that is sort of taken as political.
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i think it is really interesting. meghan is actually a order then diana was when she died, and just remember, this is a person who comes into the royal family, very silly formed with opinions and experience ina way formed with opinions and experience in a way that other rural brides are not necessarily. for charles, the struggle to really find a role, to find his passions, divine things that are appropriate for him as prince of wales to care about. she is very strong about what year is passionate about. the time that she has spent in soup kitchens and charities. it is basically saying, and still the person i was before i became a memberof and still the person i was before i became a member of the royal family andl became a member of the royal family and i will use my platform. there is and i will use my platform. there is an expectation that the young royals will put his provision of privileged to sam hughes. you see them stepping forward for new roles, and this is like pressing rheostat. —— to some use. like pressing rheostat. —— to some use. like pressing reset. the women,
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as prince charles has done, with the prince's trust has gone into new areas where royalty wasn't there, and we see meghan moving to be a spokeswoman for lots and lots of causes, and is very vital, and she is setting out her store, very early, which is quite impressive. and finish with the daily express on the wedding story. absolutely stunning, therewith they are in that beautiful car, with train a lot of big chaps here, did more on behalf rock. that's not more than on her frock. lots and lots of special souvenir editions. they will be being prepared, and people will keep them, and people will enjoy them. they will try to look tremendously cynical as they reach them, as if they were above all these things, but i think privately, people enjoyed it a lot more than they expected to. stay with the daily express. for those of the story. abramowitz, stranded in russia after
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uk visa delay. his spokespeople have said that he —— abramovich. uk visa delay. his spokespeople have said that he -- abramovich. he was not there to see chelsea winner of the fa cup final, and we now hear that he has decided to go back to russia, but his beazer has expired. the type of these that he has had, an investor visa, it's says on the home office website, if you apply for this, you will hear back usually within three weeks. well his is by three weeks ago, and no of it being... i think this is significant. is this the start of us being tough on the oligarchs, following the skripal attacks. he is the most prominent oligarchs, the most well—known one. he is whiling
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his ways away in moscow, while the whole of the london season is happening. this is the time when the russians want to be in london, when everything is looking lovely, big social occasions are happening. and exactly what is he going to have to do to secure a renewal of the visa? it has been increasingly difficult for anyone to get a beazer to go to russia or russians to come here. normally, being wealthy, you can sort of speed things up a bit —— to get a beazer. but borisjohnson asset we are going to go after the money. winter is becoming in terms of relations between the uk and russia, and for a long time, politicians have been saying, if you're a long time, politicians have been saying, if your visitors about it, boris, evra reserves about it, theresa may, you have got to go off to these rich individuals. the us has sanctioned people very badly, but the uk does not publish those lists or target those individuals. things may now be changing. or you might geta things may now be changing. or you might get a beazer tomorrow. we don't know. ——
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might get a beazer tomorrow. we don't know. -- and what are the cause of this is the jazzy bubble clu b cause of this is the jazzy bubble club if he can't come back. —— visa. this is not going to help manufacturers in the united states. it is energy products and things like that. we know that donald trump likes deals. we are seeing a bit of a pattern, a war of words and as it looks a kid is going to get nasty and the global economy will crash, there seems to be some kind of detente. some kind of deal or copyrights. the provisional deal announced over the weekend, is that china will buy many more things from the us, and as you say, it is not good to be manufactured products, not necessarily any steel or cars, but agricultural goods, and energy, and that will be fresh that exact what that means. but, that thought of the bills, donald trump has pledged to reduce the trade deficit,
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although that not everyone is happy about it. if it is true and this happens, you will be at say, look, we're not being exposed by china a nyway we're not being exposed by china anyway that we have been in the past. is about how they look at home, isn't it? this was one of his huge pleasures when he came into power. some of the languages that he used about this massive trade deficit, $330 billion deficit with china, bury tremendously outspoken, so china, bury tremendously outspoken, so he has got to do something. but as you say, you guessed the break and then retreats. and, you have got to think that he has also got to appease his power base, which is the farming community. and he will need to be much more clever about this, because it is all really rather vague. is it a problem or is it not? it is an interesting one. another story on the ft. the uk looks to australia for help in launching a rival to the galileo system. this is
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a satellite project, and it would be a satellite project, and it would be a move away from collaboration with the eu? this is another one of these compaq stories, one of the side—effects of brexit. —— complex stories. this whole row over this big satellite navigation system, with many different layers, and at the moment, it looks as if we are going to be excluded from one of those layers, which is the encrypted system. but, the australians may be about to get us out of our tremendous pickle, and there are going to be meetings in canberra, and they may be the people who write the rescue, but without this, any space industry would be lost. four billion pound project. that is the whitehall estimate. salsbury modest. sort of reinventing the wheel. the uk contributes a lot of money to
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this idea, it has pulled out and the eu has been very hard mind about this. it means that uk is good to be going alone, and it feels very bizarre in the way that you are working on a manufacturing project, and you might have a partner that is many thousands of miles away, and yet, the uk does have a security russian ship with australia, it does share intelligence, and maybe it can just abound as grounds, but there is a sense of reinventing the wheel, here. there is a brinkmanship ear that if the uk really gets what it wants, that would be to convince the eu, let us in, even to the most in cryptic, the most sensitive part of this project. should be finished with the guardian. homeless people facing fines and prison says this exclusive. on what basis are they find and imprisoned? this is about homeless people being treated basically as prisoners of
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anti—social behaviour, and councils using legal powers they have to say in certain parts of the city, you are not allowed to behave in this way, and it is sort of a... egregious case such as a man who was jailed for four once the begging, and the judge was sending him down said, —— four months, the judge said... this is about treating begging and homelessness as an anti—social behaviour problem rather thana anti—social behaviour problem rather than a poverty or addiction problem. it it is of whose the abuse of what they call the public space protection order. i did big that was intended to clamp down on homelessness. it is good to see that this is getting back to life, this kind of reality. that we all know in oui’ kind of reality. that we all know in our towns and cities, we see a great many more homeless people and what is being done to them at the minute is being done to them at the minute is that they are receiving jail sentences which is going to compound the problem, because they are never going to be able to return to normal life. where is the impetus coming
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