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tv   Our World  BBC News  July 7, 2018 4:30am-5:01am BST

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talks with cabinet ministers has produced an agreement on future relations with the european union after brexit. the deal proposes continued free trade in goods, but it says the current free movement of people will end. the us and north korea have agreed to set up a joint working group on denuclearisation, after a meeting in pyongyang between seretary of state mike pompeo and the north korean leader's right hand man, kim yong—chol. mr pompeo is due to meet kim jong un on saturday. rescue teams in thailand say an air supply line has been installed in the cave where 12 boys and their football coach have been trapped for two weeks. there had been concern about falling oxygen levels as rescuers try to work out how to bring the boys to safety. thousands are expected to march through the capital this weekend as part of london pride, to celebrate the city's diversity. it's the biggest event
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of its kind in the country, and the 46th time it's been held. but according to figures from the metropolitan police, attacks against the lgbt community have doubled over the last four years. paul murphy—kasp has the details. attacked outside a nightclub. two men sat upon during a bus journey on a night out. just to of the growing number of hate crimes against london's growing lg btq+ number of hate crimes against london's growing lgbtq+ community. william was attacked on the tube last october. they grabbed hold of me and got me in a headlock, they threatened to stab me and told me to apologise for being gay. my friends tried to get them off me. they held me in such a tight headlock i couldn't read. —— breeze. me in such a tight headlock i couldn't read. -- breeze. many consider london to be one of the safest cities in the world to be 93v, safest cities in the world to be gay, but according to a recent poll, half of lg btq+ gay, but according to a recent poll,
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half of lgbtq+ londoners have been victims of abuse over sexuality or gender identity, and according to figures from the mat that number is on the rise. in 2014, just the 1100 hate crimes were reported in london against the lg btq+ hate crimes were reported in london against the lgbtq+ community. that has increased steadily and last month had doubled to —— last year had doubled. there is a spike in the summer had doubled. there is a spike in the summer months but police say it is ha rd to summer months but police say it is hard to to pride. we do patrols in any areas where we think there might be looking to abuse people homophobic lee. we have specially trained officers, hate crime liaison officers. and that is exactly what william did. in may, his attackers we re william did. in may, his attackers were given referral orders and had to pay compensation. that is a punishment he believes is too lenient. i don't feel like justice was served. i don't feel it sets a very good example that homophobia is com pletely very good example that homophobia is completely an acceptable. although will wasn't physically injured in the attacks, eight months on mental scars remain. there are times when you do get nervous, you get concerns
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when you are on public transport. for me, i am not going to let it, you know, completely change the way iam, it is you know, completely change the way i am, it is that is letting other people win. and also, i am still proud gay man and i'm not going to change in that way. now on bbc news, our world. we have a pursuit. sirens wail ..heading eastbound, about 70mph... it's a pursuit. they're on the freeway, they're coming east. the crime situation is high. it's very, very busy for law enforcement. but, again, it's a very small percentage of people that are causing the problems. all right, bad guyjust crashed. all right.
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i'm going to get us a little bit off because we have, like, 17 guns pointed in this direction. radio: they are starting to take the occupants into custody. a night patrol with the la sheriffs in the city of compton. two suspected members of the southside compton cripps gang are under arrest. it would be really unsafe for them to be in their rival‘s area and if they are there they are going to have to have protection, because it's almost expected for them to be armed. police estimate there are almost 4,000 gang members in compton. 0urarea, ourservice area,
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is ten square miles. fireworks explode fireworks. ten square miles. so for every square mile we have six active gangs. 37 gangs compete for control in a city ofjust 100,000 people. it's always gang on gang, gang on gang. the violence is there, the major, major problem is when we have an innocent person who gets caught in the crossfire, or, and it happens way too often, that case of mistaken identity. sirens wail compton gained its grim reputation for gang violence during the ‘80s and ‘90s at the height
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of america's crack epidemic. this is a mad man gun. a double barrel. a man's man gun. a man that goes and kills with this is really mad. out of that mix emerged west coast gangsta rap and one of the most influential groups of all time, nwa. 30 years on, the trauma of that era lives on. yeah, i grew up around here. this was my childhood home. born and raised right here in this house. i had a history of taking things that wasn't mine. if i saw it and liked it, i would take it.
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i would protect him by any means necessary. i would protect him the same way. even if it means hurting someone else? pretty much. i mean, ultimately, if i had to hurt someone to keep him from being hurt, ultimately that would be my choice. compton's notorious street gangs, the cripps, the bloods and the pirus, were formed in the late 1960s. their clothes, their tattoos and even theirjewellery all marked which gang they belong to. wearing the wrong coloured shirt would have and still could get you killed. there'd be all different types of shootings happening on this street. willjoined the cripps when he was just nine years old. i went through this ally,
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i was going to the store to get some kool—aid and i saw the guy pass me and he looked at me and next thing i hear is a whole bunch of gunfire. right here? yeah, right here, where we're standing. sirens wail trombone music today, compton is on the up. a quarter of the population lives below the poverty line, butjobs are coming back and there's a sense that things are starting to turn around. will works as a community activist, trying to stop youngsters from ending up in gangs. i see you! you know i'm going to come over there and give you a hug. i love you!
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i love you too, girl. keep up the good work! this is really nice! i'ma definitely do that. i'm a mother who lost sons and when my kids got killed and other mothers' kids got killed, they came here and he helped us. i didn't have no money. she lost two sons within 60 days and that's where her motivation comes, to get out here. she's also out here in the trenches with us. compton's youthful mayor aja brown has made it her mission to transform the image and the economy of the city. in 2013, early into her first term and after 16 killings injust four months, aja brown decided to hold a crisis meeting. she put a call out to the bloods and cripps to try to
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bring about a truce. it was rocky at first. you know, we had a few people threatening to leave and i said, the ground rules are we have to stay until we're finished. what gave you the confidence to do that? this is my community, i'm not afraid of my own people. it was just really interesting to hearfrom them. but they are very pragmatic. they talked about the need for employment opportunities that they can access, they talked about the barriers to their employment because of their criminal records. but i told them, it's not aboutjust what can i do for you, i told them i'm willing to work with you if you all can make a commitment as well. compton has switched from a majority black to a majority hispanic town. but half the gangs are still african—american, and it was to these gangs that aja brown turned first.
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most of the time, like he said, we wouldn't be sitting at a table together, but she did it. it was over... how many of us? 50, 60, 300 in a room together. so you were all there at the first meeting, when everybody got together? to be in there with 300 guys... that's disrespectful. ..that‘s terrible. terrible to sit down and listen. a lot of men wouldn't do it. why is she doing it? she came in the room and it was disarray when she came. and they got it in order and we got to business. did they listen to her, cynthia? yeah, they listened to her. they listened to her, yeah.
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because this is a first. this is a mayor where if it's the middle of the night and you need to call her, she'll say, what's wrong? what's going on? she's there. you don't get that, not even in other cities, from people that i spoke with. so you don't get that from a lot of mayors. and then, like he said, in the room with a bunch of men. i'm gang banging! i'm in there looking at 'em sometimes, thinking, they crazy! don and fred are from rival gangs. don's a blood, fred's a cripp. fred, if you had come across don in the street ten or 15 years ago? well, there would have been a problem. what do you mean a problem? it would have been a fight or a stabbing or a shooting. one of the three. because you are on rival gangs? because, like i said, you know what i'm sayin', i was young and dumb. you know what i'm sayin', i didn't have an understanding of life or nothin' else. all i cared about was my gang and representing my gang to the fullest and didn't nothin' matter but my gang. so you would have hurt him? he'd have tried. yeah. he would have tried, you know?
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is it still the same today? no, it's not like it used to be. it's not... no, it's watered down. it's not like it used to be, but it's crucial. the majority of these guys don't like the way they're living. they don't like having to watch their back, worry about getting shot, can't go here, can't go there. they don't like that lifestyle. they're in it because they're caught up in their comfort zone and they don't know how to go outside of the box. i remember when i was working custody, some of the gangsters, just because i would see them every day, i had a rapport with them, a lot of them were so, so afraid of the one thing that you and i love, and theirfear is being out here. one of them, who was a very, very important person when it came to the structure,
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he told me, "i have a son, i don't know how to be a father," and he goes further and tells me, "i wouldn't know how to survive out there, "i don't know how to have a job, i don't know how to be "a regular person, all i know is violence and i promise you, "if i get out of here, i'm going to hurt someone else, "and i don't want to do that anymore, i'm tired of it." regardless of whom is in the white house, there is not going to be a helicopter that comes and descends into compton to fix all of our issues. that's just not happening. the height of the crack epidemic saw an explosion in violence as rival gangs fought for control
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of the drugs market. 87 people were murdered in 1991 alone. in 2017, that figure was 19. will served 12 years in prison for a string of offences, including car—jacking and gun possession. in december of 1999, he decided to try to turn his life around. i was significantly depressed, emotionally distraught, you know, i was suffering from a lot of the traumatic experiences i've suffered, you know. you were thinking of killing yourself? definitely, i was thinking about killing myself. i mean, that was the solution to the pollution. i'd decided i needed
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to go see my mom, it was two days after christmas, i decided i needed to go see her at least one more time before i came back and did what i felt i needed to do. i sat right on the street around the corner with an ak—47, ready to just end it all. he didn't. he went to see a preacher. he was basically saying, "you're not the first one who's felt this way, "and you're not the first one who are going through "what you're going through. "but the difference you can make is to hear what i have to say "and make a change." you'll find a lot of the kids are looking for something when theyjoin gangs, there's something missing. and the gangs have learned to cater to those things that are missing. the steady fall
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in crimesince the '90s is partly due to smarter policing. more significantly, as drug markets stabilised, there were fewer turf wars between the gangs. but there are worrying signs. hi, captain thatcher! how are you? i'm doing great, how are you? have a seat. 30% less gang shootings this year than we had last year... oh, wow, that is significant. a lot of your older gang members now, or people who had gang membership in the past, are having a hard time directing the activities of the younger gang members. it's not like it used to be. so they consider the younger gang members lawless. we had an understanding with the gang members as to what was and wasn't within boundaries as to how we treated each other, and we've lost control of that.
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i appreciate your hard work, sir. our crime rates are below the rest of the county, for the most part. well, isn't that a great success! laughs thank you. we're getting an emergency call. it's a vehicle collision with injuries. siren wails who was driving? i was driving. you were driving. are you 0k, just a little shaken up? yeah. 0k. do you have your driver's licence? as far as the violent crimes, it goes up and down. there are times where gangs, they'll have a truce and they will kind of settle down, and then out of nowhere, like if someone turns on a light switch, they are at it again. the reason why the homicide rate has dropped, it is not
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because the violence has gone away, someone didn'tjust sprinkle fairy dust on the city and it's gone — it's there. the reason why the homicide rate has dropped significantly is because of the advancements in medical science — doctors right now, more than ever, more than five years ago, they're saving more and more lives. siren wails why you filming me? 'cause you in trouble, that's why! this is handy‘s. i've been coming to this store since i was going to that elementary over there. all this has changed, we got a lot of homeboys
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get killed up here, just hanging out, because this was almost a shared store between two rival gangs, and so, in the process of that, a lot of people lost their lives up here, you know, a lot of shooting, a lot of drive—bys would happen here. will now spends most of his nights out on the streets, trying to stop conflicts from happening or getting out of control. we just all hitting corner to corner, communicating with those that are always out, you know, a lot of times we need that ourselves, so we can understand what's going on in the communities. because they out here, sometimes they see stuff we don't see, it helps us determine who we need to go talk to. bye! can i get a cigarette? in order to survive, many families
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had to leave the city altogether. of course, this is my mom, my beautiful mother deborah. when will's mum saw things getting out of control, she uprooted her family and fled to nearby san bernardino. my uncle lester, he was killed in 1987. woman: in compton. in compton. shot in his face. so we've been victims of the violence too, you know. i think this was our family's first experience of the violence in compton. i'm willing to bet you there's not a family in compton that didn't lose somebody or someone nearand dearto them... to gang violence, in some shape, form or fashion. we lived through a war.
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it was a war. it was like a war zone. i seen a lot, and it's weird because, i always tell my friends, i'm a nurse now, but i kinda think i seen more death as a child than i have as an adult. there were plenty of days where i'd be playing outside, and we knew, "oh, that car don't look familiar," we probably got about two seconds to get into the backyard and sure enough, by the time we get in the backyard and lay down...bang, bang, bang. come out, and here come my mama, driving down the street, "get in the car, got to get in the house!" it'd be like, all right. but it became a way of life. itjust became... it was not normal, but then it was normal, you know what i mean? i know, as a young kid, i didn't show that as much, but i always loved my mom and it hurts to know that she went through that, to know that she had to suffer, that we put more on her table then she should have had on her table. that's something i have to live with, 'cause the thought occurs every now and it makes me cry,
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it hurts me, even though i been living like this for 20 years, good, doing good work, great work, it still hurts me to know that 20—something years ago, i took my mom through what she had to go through and suffer, you know, and so it's something i will have to live with the rest of my life because i can't change that. but it hurts, it hurts, you know? the whole neighbourhood is totally different. and it's sad when you see, because you know, that dude used to live over there, but he's dead. 0r next door, they all died. it'sjust sad. orthey injail for the rest of their life. the ones that ain't dead, they injail for the rest of their life. there's only a handful that made it out. it's sad. it's really sad. down this quiet street in compton is aja brown's former family home.
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my grandmother was a registered nurse, so she worked overnight and her schedule was a bit different, and there was a home intrusion and then someone raped and murdered her. no—one else was home when this happened? no, just my grandmother. she was all alone? yes. i don't ever remember not knowing what happened to my grandmother, because i remember my mother at the holiday time being really sad, and i would ask her, "mommy, why are you so sad?" and she would just say, "i miss my mother." no—one was ever brought to justice and the case remains open. the loss of a life is not a moment in time, the loss is for a lifetime, and there are holes that are created that can never be filled and so it gives me a level of compassion, respect and even insight and a perspective into what most people are dealing with in my community.
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when you look at this house in this street, what does it make you feel? it's bittersweet for me. it's nice to be able to know where my family spent a lot of time growing up, but at the same time, it's a place of such despair for my family. it's a solemn place, i would say. the mayor's story isn't uncommon. there's a level of post—traumatic stress in this town that comes from decades of extreme violence. but maybe it's that shared experience that could also drive people to end the violence. well, for many of us, it's going to be another hot day.
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temperatures are going to exceed 30 degrees across the south. we had temperatures up to 31 on friday. we'll easily make that on saturday. having said that, there will be a little bit more cloud around during the course of the weekend. in fact, some areas may even be a little bit of overcast, at least from time to time. now, the atlantic weather systems away towards the north of us, they're still closer to iceland than they are to the uk. so that's why we're in this predominantly dry weather. there's no changes absolutely as far as the eye can see, at least through the weekend, into most of next week, in fact, the whole of next week. bad news for the gardens and parks. a lot of scorched grass albert at the moment. anyway, these are the temperatures first thing in the morning. 17 in london. 13 in newcastle. and then those temperatures are going to do one thing
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in the morning, theyjust shoot up and up and up very rapidly. so lots of sun around, but it will be cloudy from time to time, particularly around some north—western areas, may be eastern areas picking up a bit of cloud. cloud's also developing across the midlands. 30 at least in london. i suspect temperatures could get up to around 31 or so. northern parts of the country will be closer to the mid—teens. high pressure's with us pretty much all through the weekend, however, there is this one little cool front that nudges into scotland, and that means basically a little bit more cloud here for the north—west of scotland, the western isles in general, and maybe some spots of rain and these atlantic fresher winds win. so across the north—west here, it is going to be quite a bit cooler on sunday. temperatures perhaps only in the teens. whereas to the south of that, it's just going to be hot. very hot in fact. temperatures across the south could peak at around 32 celsius on sunday, hitting 90 fahrenheit. newcastle will be at a very
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pleasant 24 celsius. now, i already mentioned, not much change on the way next week. in fact, staying dry. but it won't be quite as hot. looks as though the heat is going to be pushed back into europe, and we'll see slightly cooler air riding around this high pressure because the winds around the high pressure blow in a clockwise fashion like so. so any air here will be basically be pushed back into the uk. so that means that we'll see more and more northern parts of the country into the slightly fresher air. still most into the 20s. we're not talking about it necessarily cooling off a great deal. in fact, on monday, it's still in the high 20s across the south. it's only when we get to around tuesday or wednesday, maybe back down to the mid—twenties. and in the north you can see here, closer to the teens. that's it from me, bye—bye. this is bbc news. our top stories: a brexit breakthrough.
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the british prime minster says cabinet ministers are backing her plan for leaving the european union. this is a proposal that i believe will be good for the uk and the european union, and i look forward to it being received positively. divers in thailand succeed in getting an air line to the cave where 12 boys and their football coach are trapped. but conditions still aren't right for a rescue attempt. the us and north korea agree to set up a joint working group on denuclearisation after mike pompeo's latest trip to pyongyang. china retaliates after the us imposes tariffs worth $34 billion, accusing washington of starting the "largest trade war in economic history."
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