tv BBC News BBC News June 21, 2018 1:30pm-2:01pm BST
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sample the sounds of what is a to sample the sounds of what is a wonderful city, a few went to the hermitage museum, the world—famous art gallery and took in some local culture, while gareth southgate, the coach, he went out for a leisurely run. it should have been legendary. it didn't go to plan. he tripped to the ground, dislocated his right shoulder and fortunately the england tea m shoulder and fortunately the england team doctor was in close attendance, took him back to the hotel, an ambulance arrived and the ambulance took him to a local hospital in st petersburg and put the shoulder back and he came back in a sling. his right arm being protected. england we re right arm being protected. england were in training this morning and there was no sign of that sling. they were back to business. 22 of their 23 players, the only absentee was dele alli, who is suffering from a thigh strain and that's england's main injury concern. ahead of that match against panama on sunday. david ornstein, at the world cup, thank you. time for a look at the weather. here's ben rich.
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temperatures have ta ken temperatures have taken us slight tumble, 20 degrees is the top value this afternoon but it's only a temporary tumble. by next week some spots are likely to hit 30. we are currently in the grip of some relatively cool air and some brisk winds as well, but we push all that away to the east through the weekend. we bring these orange colours across the charts and that gives the potential for those really high temperatures next week. back to the here and now, actually a fairly cool and fresh feel out there, good spells of sunshine, a bit of patchy cloud. the exception is the far north—east of scotland where cloud will bring the odd spot of rain. it will bring the odd spot of rain. it will be quite breezy, the strongest breeze across the north—east of scotla nd breeze across the north—east of scotland as well and that helps to explain the low temperatures. we're looking at highs of 16 to maybe 21 degrees at best, but it sets us up a very pleasant evening and a long evening in terms of daylight, because it is of course the summers
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summer solstice. in shetland the sunset is not until after 10:30pm. london, more like 9:20pm. plenty of evening sunshine to enjoy. 0nce london, more like 9:20pm. plenty of evening sunshine to enjoy. once the sun goes down temperatures will begin to drop. you can see the green shades spreading across the temperature chart, even in the big towns and cities down to single digits but some spots in the countryside perhaps as low as 3—4d. its a cool start tomorrow but a bright start. another beautiful day to come, long spells of sunshine, perhaps more sunshine than we had today. the exception is the northern half of scotland, more cloud and the odd spot of rain perhaps. a bit of a breeze but winds will be lighter and temperatures will begin to nudge upwards. that's a trend that continues into the weekend. the area of high pressure will slide closer to the british isles. high pressure means settled weather, a lot of
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sunshine on saturday. the sunshine could be quite hazy at times and there will again be more cloud into northern scotland with the odd splash of rain, but noticed the temperature is beginning to creep upwards. 0n temperature is beginning to creep upwards. on sunday, have a look at this chart. remember on our weather maps where you don't see cloud, that's where you'll get sunshine, plenty of it on sunday. " debate of sea breeze but inland up into the mid—20s and as we go into next week it's likely to turn warmer still. some spots likely to hit 30. that's all from the bbc news at one. it's goodbye from me. 0n bbc one we nowjoin the bbc‘s news teams where you are. bye— bye. bye—bye. enjoy your afternoon. good afternoon, welcome along to the bbc sport centre with me sarah mulkerrins. the action is under way today at the world cup in russia and right now in group c, denmark are taking on australia. and after the danes beat peru in their opener,
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they've started quickly in samara. just seven minutes it took for them to break through. their talisman christian eriksen with that lovely finish to put them 1—0 up. you can follow updates online or listen to commentary on radio 5 live. england's players trained this morning after a rest day on wednesday. midfielder dele alli missed the session — his thigh injury is being monitored ahead of sunday's match against panama. also at that session, steve holland s team sheet was photographed. suggests that there may be starts for marcus rashford and rueben loftus—cheek. trent alexander—arnold is due to speak to the media soon, maybe he can shed some light on it all — we will have that here for you on the news channel. but david 0rnstein is in repino. in terms of the players themselves, 22 are training today. the player missing is dele alli who is suffering
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from a thigh strain. he went for a scan. he is recuperating while the rest of the 22 players train. they hope for no further injuries. they train today and tomorrow and behind closed doors tomorrow and then on saturday before flying in the afternoon and then on sunday, on sunday, they play panama. if england win that match they are on the verge of qualifying for the last 16. it depends what happens in the belgium, tunisia game on saturday and then england will know what they have to do to progress. well after ronaldo's exploits yesterday, today, all eyes will be on lionel messi later. what can he do for his argentina side? they will hope to improve, on their opening draw against iceland. they play croatia at 7pm, and you can follow that game on bbc one. the a:00pm kick off between france and peru can be found on radio 5 live and
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bbc sport website. emre can is close to finalising his move from liverpool to juventus after arriving in turin this morning. the german international is expected to have a medical with the italian champions — his contract at anfield expires at the end of the month. can made his final liverpool appearance in last month's champions league final defeat by real madrid. danny cipriani will make his first england start in ten years, after being named at fly—half for the third test against south africa in cape town this weekend. cipriani replaces george ford, who drops out of the 23—man squad entirely. flanker brad shields misses out through illness, so chris robshaw returns. joe marler and number eight nathan hughes will start the match. kyle edmund is back in action at queen's this afternoon. the british number one will try to do what andy murray couldn't do against australian nick kygrios in the last round.
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you can follow that match and all the other action at queen's on bbc two from 1:00pm. coming up later is grigor dimitrov and novak djokovic. just time to tell you that england take on australia in the fourth one day international at chester—le—street at 2:00pm. england have already won the best—of—5 series. hugh woozencroft will have more for you in the next hour. the details coming out of westminster in the last hour or so over the details of eu citizens of the brexit. sajid javid, the system, due to begin this autumn said it would be easy and swift as possible
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and there would be no repeat of the failings in the wind scandal. caroline nokes has been giving details. there will be three core things to show they can reside in great britain. applicants will need to prove their identity and nationality. for those who wish to com plete nationality. for those who wish to complete the application entirely online there will be an app available on their mobile phone, tablet. they can send their identity documents by post and a dedicated tea m documents by post and a dedicated team will check this and return it to them as soon as possible. second, we will establish the applicant is resident in the uk and where
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appropriate, their relationship to a fellow eu citizen. what possible, we will help the applicant to continued their continuous residence here and whether it amounts to five years and settled status using an automated system looking at records. we recognise some applicants may lack of such evidence in their own name for various reasons and we will work flexibly with applicants to help them evidence their continuous residence in the uk by the best means available to them. third, we will check the applicant is not a serious or persistent criminal and does not pose a security threat. it is right we do what is needed to protect everyone who lives in the uk. but we are not concerned here with minor offences and these provisions will not affect the overwhelming majority of eu citizens and their family members. overwhelming majority of eu citizens
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and theirfamily members. to rub the process , we and theirfamily members. to rub the process, we will be looking to grounds, not for reasons to refuse and caseworkers will be able to exercise discretion in favour of the applicant where appropriate to minimise administrative burdens. caroline nokes giving details to parliament. taxes will rise to pay for increased health spending, chancellor phillip hammond is expected to confirm when he delivers his annual mansion house speech later. he'll say the cost of the £20 billion funding package, announced by theresa may, will be met by taxpayers in a "fair and balanced way", as jon donnison reports. in the week the prime minister pledged an extra £20 billion of nhs funding, tonight we'll get some indication of how the government intends to pay for it. and the chancellor, philip hammond, is expected to say that taxes will have to rise as he gives his annual mansion house speech on the state of the uk economy. he is expected to say that any
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increases will be fair and balanced, to support the nhs we all use. this could put at risk the conservative party's manifesto pledge last year that there was a firm intention to reduce taxes. and in an early draft of the speech released overnight by the treasury, there is no mention of the so—called brexit dividend that theresa may said could be used to pay part of an increased nhs bill. economist have said they dismissed the idea that there will be a dividend from leaving the european union, arguing that cost to the economy outweigh any reduction in payments to the eu. jon donnison, bbc news. primary school children who walk to school are exposed to 30% more
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toxic pollution than their parents because they're shorter, and therefore closer to exhaust pipes and fumes. the research from the environmental charity global action plan also shows that those children face two and half times more pollution if they are taken to school by car. rick kelsey has been to south london to see how much pollution the one family face as they walk to school. za ra zara and her kids take this walk to school every day through one of the most polluted parts of the city. for an adult walking their children to school in the middle of the city, can be bad for their lungs. but if you come down here, it can be up to 30% worse. since moving to south london from the country a few years ago, three of zara's children have got asthma. lots of cars come around here because it is busy here. they release the fumes which can cause lung cancer and asthma. it is the
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pollution, lots of cars and vans dropping off deliveries and the kids are asthmatic. they will be coughing. it is a long journey but what can we do? how much do you worry about the pollution on the wall, do you worry about it at all? i don't have a choice. i would love to, but i don't have a choice but i live inside the pollution area. research by global action plan suggests exposure to pollution is 2.5 times lower if it is possible to ta ke 2.5 times lower if it is possible to take a route to school along quiet backstreets, compared to busy roads. za ra backstreets, compared to busy roads. zara is living in central london, within the central congestion charging zone. we know air quality in this area is particularly bad. some of the worst in london. we know the levels of pollution the children are breathing in our very bad for
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the lungs. they are damaging the growth of their lungs and this could be damaging their health long term. za ra be damaging their health long term. zara hopes fewer people use their ca rs zara hopes fewer people use their cars so her kids can have better lungs in the future. let's head over to repino. this is the run—up to england's game next sunday. i am excited to be here, soaking up every minute of it and getting to know the lads and settle into the team. you are the youngest member of the squad, have you been the but of anyjokes? member of the squad, have you been the but of any jokes? not really, to be fair. the [ads have been really good to me and they know that age doesn't really matter in football. it is all about your ability and i
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think they understand that. so eve ryo ne think they understand that. so everyone has got respect for each other in the group and that is something that has worked well for us. how is gareth southgate, we heard the news about his dislocated shoulder, how did you hear about the news? he broke the news too was yesterday when he had his arm in a sling at the meeting. we were wondering why cant he broke the news to us and obviously we wish him a speedy recovery. what did he say to you, he had a smile on his face? yes, hejoked you, he had a smile on his face? yes, he joked about it and he put it in the funniest way possible and he said he hoped nobody else had an afternoon like he did, obviously with the injury he got. yes, he tried to put a smile on everyone's face. obviously you have spent some time around harry kane and you have seen ronaldo, diego costa scoring goals so far in this tournament, as
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has harry kane, how does he compare with the rest of the well? he is clinical in front of goal and has proved it over the last couple of seasons and now he is proving it at the world cup with his two goals the other night. you cannotjudge from one game, but his opening game, you scored two important goals for the tea m scored two important goals for the team and it got us the win. for him personally, he prefers to get the tea m personally, he prefers to get the team result than his own accolades and that is why he is the captain of the team. talk to me about var, it has been used to varying elements of success , has been used to varying elements of success, how are does the england tea m success, how are does the england team feel about it? there is the chance of getting the correct decisions in games but we have seen the official still haven't got every decision we have seen, right. but they are trying the best and with
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var, they have the best chance of doing that. was there some anger from yourself on the england side when he saw what happened to harry kane and those penalty appeals were not reviewed? we have spoke about refereeing decisions not going our way and it is part of the game, not every decision will go your way and you have to get on with the game. we tried to ignore the fact we didn't get the two claims we appeal for and we put that behind us and the manner in which we did win, it shows the lads can put it behind them. when you look at the other big nations in this tournament and how they have performed so far, how do you compare england to the best teams you have seen? obviously, it is still early days and most teams have only played one game. it is hard to pick and
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compare from just one game. teams can have off days and teams can have really good days. no one is really looking at it like that at the minute. we are trying to focus on ourselves in the camp and you cannot look at other teams, only in your group because you are not playing them right now, only the teams in your group them right now, only the teams in yourgroup and we them right now, only the teams in your group and we still have belgium and panama to play. you are competing with kieran trippier right now for the starting wingback role, he is not making it easy for you, is he? he is a top player and he has proved it throughout the season with totte n ha m proved it throughout the season with tottenham and he proved in the game the other day. you don't come to a world cup expecting to get your place straightaway, you have to fight for it and that is what all 23 others are doing, fighting for our places and each day in training, it is competitive. basically two
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players for each position, so you have direct opponents within training. you are trying to outdo them and it takes the standard of training up an extra level and it makes you better players, each and every one of us, we are training against players who are more motivated to try hard in training. only positives can come out of training in that sense and everyone is fighting for a position. you cannot rest, you have got to keep fighting and keep wanting to get your place in the team. fighting and keep wanting to get your place in the teamlj fighting and keep wanting to get your place in the team. i am from itv news. pictures have emerged today of some notes carried by one of the coaches suggesting there may be changes, in the next team. presumably by this stage in the week, the squad pretty much knows who will be starting at the weekend, is that correct? not necessarily. we haven't been directly told of who is
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starting and who is not. all the positions are still up for grabs and until the manager lanes the team it doesn't matter what came out what is lea ked doesn't matter what came out what is leaked because the lads don't focus on stuff like that until it is out of the manager's mouth. they are the only words that really matter to us at this moment in time. we are trying not to get caught up in articles, we are trying to focus on ourselves. until the manager names the team everyone is still fighting for their position. would it be fair to say, in any game if you had information on how the opposition we re information on how the opposition were going to line up, would it help, give you an advantage?” suppose, if we knew how the opposition were going to play, we could plan for it and prepare ourselves. but you never know and especially in a world cup like this, there has been surprises so far in there has been surprises so far in the tournament and i am sure there
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will be many more to come. like i said, we arejust will be many more to come. like i said, we are just trying to focus on ourselves. studio: we believe that press conference now, trent alexander—arnold taking questions from journalists. not giving too much away, the next england game on sunday against panama. our correspondents out in russia will be keeping an eye on that and we will have more from them later in the afternoon. in a moment a summary of the business news this hour but first, the headlines on bbc news: the home secretary, sajid javid, has said the system for allowing eu nationals to stay in the uk after brexit, will be as simple as can reasonably be expected. the conservative minister, greg hands, has resigned from the government, in order to vote against plans for a third runway at heathrow. the murder of an iraqi asylum seeker was motivated by racism
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and entirely avoidable, a safeguarding report has found. iamjamie i am jamie robinson. in the business news: the bank of england has held interest rates 0.5% but given a firm signal that they are likely to go up in august. more on this in a moment. the government borrowed £5 billion in may, that's £2 billion less than it did in may last year and the lowest annual level of borrowing in 11 years. the borrowing level is lower than nearly any economist was expecting and so far this year stands at £11.8 billion, which is £4.1 billion less than in the same period in 2017. a warning from car maker daimler that a trade war between china and the us would hit its profits has sent shares in all the big european car makers falling. daimler has big factories in the us that export to china. obviously, it is caught in the
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middle of that trade war. as we've been hearing, the bank of england's decision making body, the monetary policy committee, has voted to hold interest rates at 0.5 but the way in which voting was divided is interesting. the nine—member mpc was split 6—3, with bank governor mark carney leading the group who voted to hold rates at 0.5%. in a decisive move, andrew haldane, the bank's chief economist, joined two other monetary policy committee members in voting to raise rates to 0.75%. the last time three people "dissented" from the overall view, injune 2017, rates rose the following november. joining us now is sarah hewin, chief economist, europe, standard chartered you reckon the same pattern, we will
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see rates go up in august? we think rates will probably go up in august. if you look at what the monetary policy committee said today, they talked about strong household spending, strong confidence, employment doing well, business sentiment improving and even the global economy, they expect, will be a strong source of the man in future months. they indicated that inflation was likely to rise over the next couple of months because of higher oil prices and the weaker pound. all these factors together suggest they are limbering up for a rate hike which will be on the 2nd of august at the next meeting. sterling is weak, i know but it's not getting any weaker, so i would argue perhaps the inflation pressures a re argue perhaps the inflation pressures are not getting any worse.
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economic growth is not terribly strong and also looking at the high street consumer spending, we did see a p°p‘up street consumer spending, we did see a pop—up last month largely to do with the royal wedding and things like that. we are seeing a lot of companies closing shops and having problem selling stuff on the high street, it is not as strong as one would imagine, is it? that is true, the economy is certainly not forging ahead. the point they made was growth was particularly weak in the first quarter, so they looked as if they had been prepared to raise rates in may but they delayed that last month. this time round, there is more strength in the economy. importantly, is more strength in the economy. importa ntly, the economy is more strength in the economy. importantly, the economy is a close to full capacity, low levels of unemployment and the policy members who voted for a rate hike today indicated they were getting worried wages are starting to accelerated
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and that is building on inflation pressures . and that is building on inflation pressures. the longer term outlook for inflation could be there is u pwa rd for inflation could be there is upward movement against the 2% target. sarah, good to talk to you. problems for dixons carphone. last week it had its records hacked putting credit card data at risk. today it reported a big fall in annual profits. last year it made £500 million. this year £380 million. it's also closing 92 of its 700 stores. today it admitted it had "plenty of work to do". earlier we spoke to catherine shuttleworth, chief executive officer and founder, of savvy marketing. lots of us now have mobile phones, 88% have smartphones and we are not replacing them on the same frequency we used to do. we have no need to go into dixons carphone and replaced the phone and we are doing other things from them. phones have so many things we can do with them, there isn't an improvement in the
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technology coming out and we're not buying into the new technology manufacturers are passing to others. so it is bad news because we're not going into their stores as often. quick look at the markets. the pound is looking strong. that is the business news. time for a look at the weather. not a bad day, but temperatures lower than they have been of late. that is only a temporary change because today, we are likely to see top ten treasures of 21 degrees, fast forward to next week, those temperatures will be climbing again and sunspots are likely to hit 30. for the time being, we are stuck with cool air and a strong wind, but we push the cooler weather to the east and we bring in these orange colours over the next few days. the
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potential for those high temperatures. for the time being, it looks quite nice, patchy cloud and sunny spells but it does feel cool. particularly where you are exposed to the breeze across northern and north—eastern parts of scotland. spread of rain across the northern isles. but where there is sunshine temperatures between 16 and 21 degrees. this evening, a lot of cloud will melt away and there will be late sunshine. the sunshine will go on until quite late because it is the summer solstice, the longest day of the year. in london, the sunil seth at 9:20pm but plenty of evening sunshine to enjoy. as soon as the sunshine to enjoy. as soon as the sun has gone down, the temperatures will dip. towns and cities into single—digit but in the countryside,
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temperatures down to three or 4 degrees. tomorrow is looking like a lovely day, blue skies and sunshine for the most part except for the southern side of scotland. breezy in the north and not as windy further south and temperatures beginning to nudge upwards. just a taste of things to come. high pressure becomes increasingly dominant, drifting in from the west. frontal system skipping across the far north of scotla nd system skipping across the far north of scotland and there will be cloud and outbreaks of rain on saturday. elsewhere, hazy sunshine at times but it shouldn't spoil things and temperatures inland up to 2a or 25 degrees. we look ahead to sunday and look at the lack of cloud on the chart. a lot of sunshine to be had. we will start to develop a sea breeze close to the coast. if you wa nt to breeze close to the coast. if you want to bring cooler, had to the coast but inland, temperatures up to
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maybe 25 degrees. cooler for the time being but it will not last. temperatures will climb again and by next week sunspots will hit 30 degrees. health secretaryjeremy hunt calls for a shift from a blame culture into a learning one at the nhs — but there are still fears the scandal at gosport could be repeated. i've worked with a group of whistle—blowers who have said that, basically, if you whistle—blowers in the nhs you will be fired. more than 3 million eu citizens who want to stay in britain after brexit will be able to register to do so from the autumn as the government outlines the process. throughout the process, we will be looking to grant, not for reasons to refuse. president trump vows to maintain his tough stance on illegal immigration after a u—turn on his policy of separating migrant children from their parents. coming up on afternoon live all the sport with hugh.
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