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tv   The Papers  BBC News  July 11, 2018 11:30pm-12:01am BST

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hello again. for most of us it was more of the same, really. more warm sunshine across england and wales and it is a peaceful end to the day as well. in topsham, devon, thank you for this picture of the setting sun. we have had plenty of sunshine across england and wales but it has been different, cloudy, for northern ireland in scotland and we have seen outbreaks of rain as well. some of the wettest weather has been across the wettest weather has been across the north and west of scotland. looking at the weather picture through the night, the cloud could continue to be thick enough for a patch of rain across western scotland, maybe a little bit as well for antrim and down. england and wales will have a mixture of cloud and a few clear spells. temperatures overnight between 11 and 14 degrees for most, so it should be a fresh enough night's sleep ahead. looking at the weather picture tomorrow, it should be a dry start to the day. cardiff scotland and northern ireland, sunshine in the morning across england and wales, but it won't be a dry day everywhere because as we go through the afternoon shower clouds are going to
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develop and those showers will turn out to be happy in hungary, stretching from parts of dumfries & galloway down the western side of england and wales, the shower is formed by the sea breezes converging and pushing a bit more moisture in across these areas to make those showers. not everyone will see the downpours, for sure. outside of the showers, 20 to 26 degrees in london so it will feel warm but if anything the shower activity will tend to pick up and intensify as we had through friday. the lion's share of the showers will be across western areas of england and wales, quite a few towards the south—west and maybe central and southern england as well. it is mainly the sea breezes coming in which will make the showers form. because of that the showers form. because of that the showers will be slow in nature and could be very happy as well. 20 millimetres of rain falling in the space ofjust millimetres of rain falling in the space of just an millimetres of rain falling in the space ofjust an hour. good news for the gardens but it could be too much rain on the hard baked ground so we could see some localised surface water flooding issues. could see some localised surface waterflooding issues. low pressure
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to the west of the uk, we find ourselves with pressure building and temperatures building as well. as we go through the weekend we will probably see temperatures peaking at around 30 degrees across parts of south—east england during the course of sunday. that is your latest weather. goodbye for now. are hello. this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment. first, the headlines. initial excitement turned to disappointment for fans in hyde park — and across the uk — as england went out of the world cup, losing 2—1 to croatia. consternation at nato headquarters as us president donald trump says allies must increase spending on defence. we are protecting germany, we are
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protecting front. we are -- we are spending a lot of money. it is lot of money to the taxpayer. new pictures emerge of the operation to rescue i2 boys and their football coach from caves in thailand. it's been revealed they were heavily sedated to stop them panicking. a company that offers pregnant women and new parents health advice and gifts, faces a fine of £1a0,000 from the uk's data watchdog for illegally sharing more than a million people's personal data with the labour party. and in tennis — roger federer crashes out of wimbledon losing to kevin anderson — while rafael nadal beats juan martin del potro to reach the semi—finals. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are benedicte paviot, who's the uk correspondent for france 2a, and steve hawkes, deputy political editor at the sun. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. there's one story dominating — the end of england's world cup dream — for now, at least. they lost 2—1 to croatia. lets start with the telegraph — the front page shows england manager gareth southgate comforting his "pride of lions" at the end of extra time — but their main headline is donald trump accusing germany of being totally controlled by russia. it's the end of the dream — the guardian also lead with gareth southgate consoling another england player in what will surely become an iconic
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set of pictures documenting the end of england's journey in the world cup. kick in the balkans says the metro with the england team on their knees, but says they're still "our heroes". also supporting the england team in their darkest hour is the express, who says "we lived the dream — thank you england". the ft goes with theresa may abandoning plans for a close relationship with the eu in financial services after brexit. and the times' headline focuses on president trump surprising nato allies yesterday by calling for them to double their defence spending target. let's begin with the daily express. that wonderfully framed photograph of gareth southgate. dignity in defeat and a big thank you. yes, a very deserved, i think, the english should say thank you to gareth
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southgate. what an extraordinary manager, i will put it in the current tense, he is proving to be. let's remember that he helped everybody here live a dream and unite the country behind england and also it is not over, a lot of these papers are putting things in the past tense. i understand why, what of heart rate and agony, but there is still one match to play and that the week needs to continue. —— belief. and a picture of gareth southgate and the players and also he and the supporters of. each time they have gone out of their way and it is so genuine. in this one, yes, you can see players who are disappointed, but you can see them held high. they need to really hold their head high because what they have accomplished is nothing short of extraordinary. they are also young and yet they played very
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collectively and made his nation dream. maybe i am misremembering four years ago, but it is a lot better than coverage in past years of. i think a lot of us had a realistic expectations, none of us thought we would get near the quarter—finals, let alone the semifinals of. but still, we believe, we dream, is about pride restoring a relationship. and we didn't expect much and got far more than we ever dreamt of. deservedly. now we move on. as benedict says, gareth has helped restore people ‘s belief in the national team but also unified nation. particularly in the times we live in at the moment. the eye has a picture of carrie kane
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the. —— hurricane irma. —— harry kane. the ca ptain's the. —— hurricane irma. —— harry kane. the captain's label is not an a lwa ys kane. the captain's label is not an always easy one to bear, previous ca pta i ns always easy one to bear, previous captains have not always found it easy to live up to expectations. football wise he had quite a game. but everywhere, harry maguire, kieran trippier, jordan pickford. all of these players who we have never really heard of. it is great stories everywhere and it isjust never really heard of. it is great stories everywhere and it is just a shame we couldn't take on france at the final. one of my two countries. i like this that says heartbreak thatis i like this that says heartbreak that is true. it has captured the expression. there is something almost like a kind of, a mediaeval
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painting, do you see it in his face? almost as if he is looking an icon or something. he's notjust looking up or something. he's notjust looking up in this photograph. there is a belief, tiredness, disappointment. he is so respected by his players, when you see how he plays, i felt really sorry for him at one point where he was literally punched in the chest and completely winded, no play acting involved whatsoever. it is important when it says that southgate's team will return as heroes after a superb effort. absolutely. on the front of the sun, they are coming home, but everyone isa they are coming home, but everyone is a hero. he seems to be comforting everybody on the pitch.|j is a hero. he seems to be comforting everybody on the pitch. i think we
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capture it best with the headlines, singing the songs. we came up to a team that was a little bit more streetwise and aggressive and our players will learn a lot from that. the sun has gone further in track to pick apart some of the thoughts behind this double page spread inside the papers tomorrow. this is a really good piece of. it resonates, certainly from me, because what gareth southgate and the three lions have done is they have united the countries. john terry talking about now we are england united. the country has been so divided and the point he makes here is that very much what is quite extraordinary is that with this division, let's mention the word brexit, that is the reality that a lot of people... it was close, and a
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496 lot of people... it was close, and a 4% and whether you were a remainer ora 4% and whether you were a remainer or a lever, it was quite extraordinary. i think it is extraordinary. i think it is extraordinary in the byline where he says thanks to a polite englishman and a bunch of ordinary modern lab. there is no pretension. some of the things gareth southgate comes out with reminds me up of peter sellers being there. he is the gardener of a us president and people start reading into, as they come to mourn this fictitious president, come to read into what he says. i think somebody on twitter was saying gareth southgate for pm. it is the fa ct gareth southgate for pm. it is the fact that he seems to be keep calm and carry on and it is the belief. in the last 15 minutes of the game i felt that the players on the english players were too polite. i gather it
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is called streetwise. when i lived in new york it meant some indifferent. i think they were too nice and the croatians were ruthless. routine was commentating and we would have loved him because he would have fought back. there are two key things in this spread. you think back to october 2017, in qualifying, winning 1—0 and people we re qualifying, winning 1—0 and people were throwing paper planes on the pitch because they would order. jo cox said we are far more united and have far more in common than the things that divide us. and he saw that with all the pictures down the country, a lot of people had no particular passion for foot all day in day out,. imagine if gareth
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southgate said anything about brexit. if he can back tomorrow and saidi brexit. if he can back tomorrow and said i would love to leave, that would have such weight. theresa might makea would have such weight. theresa might make a call. number ten will be absurdly lost this. basher will be absurdly lost this. basher will be upset. —— will be upset. be absurdly lost this. basher will be upset. -- will be upset. the times, trump tells nato to double your money, or i quit, almost. times, trump tells nato to double your money, ori quit, almost. he'll be selling to the nato countries, you're fired! we knew from his tweets and we knew from his previous, whether it is the g7 and the trudeau debacle. what has stunned tory —— angela merkel —— what has stunned theresa may and allies, he has doubled the spending, 296 allies, he has doubled the spending,
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2% to 4% and that is obviously a huge increase and one that most countries do not want to go ahead with the. france is 1.8, 1.9% and has a target of 2% by 2025. at the point is, whether it is britain or france, well france doesn't certainly think it is just about a percentage of your gdp, it is about putting troops on the ground and france is doing that repeatedly and are very consistent. it is also about france wanting that money, not just to go on various things for nato, but infrastructure and on equipment and also we know that president macron, is that he very much believes that the eu must honour anyway, not just because much believes that the eu must honour anyway, notjust because of this trump and this us president, that the eu must be able to also increase its own defence and this is
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very important to. there was a time not very long ago where france wasn't a member of nato and french presidents were sceptical about the nato model because it was a bit too american led. is there an opportunity here? sceptical, yes, but it was still pa rt sceptical, yes, but it was still part of nato. an opportunity in which way? an opportunity if donald trump is... if america is losing interest, for france to take leadership here. well, this us president and administration appears to be losing interest unless we have aus to be losing interest unless we have a us president yet again saying something and then his us administration in lamenting something else. and i think you were saying earlier, as well, steve, and someone else was saying earlier, this is only saying what obama was saying a couple of years ago. this isa saying a couple of years ago. this is a different tone, but actually the message was the same, you are not doing enough, you are not paying enough. firstly, when you look at
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all of this stuff and tomorrow donald trump comes to britain, that will be one big story, the don is coming. like him or not, and a lot of people don't like him, and i will bea of people don't like him, and i will be a bit controversial, what you think, i can't really disagree with what he is saying. he has come in as a businessman, as a titan, an entrepreneur, and saying why are we spending all of this if they are not spending all of this if they are not spending it? he has come into a boardroom and said, hang on, we are the ultimate defender of the whole of the western world, but they are not hitting the target and we are. germany are not meeting the target and we are supposed to be defending ourselves against russia but they are buying their energy from russia. he is asking these questions in a very controversial and spiky way but you can see the argument when he is talking to his home market, especially. i was reading a poll today and the german people, there
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are thousands and thousands of us troops in germany, and actually the german people are quite divided and there seems to be a small majority in favour of us troops leaving germany. and there was a story saying that the americans were doing an assessment of what might be the costs involved. correct, and that is why they have commissioned the poll. soi why they have commissioned the poll. so i think this is... what we are witnessing, and often this is exaggerated, but we are really witnessing a real change in institutions, we are witnessing a real loss of power of democratically elected governments, that is partly also to do with a more vocal social media. also, certainly in western democracies, a greater cynicism towards politicians, a lack of trust towards politicians, a lack of trust towards institutions, whether it is politicians, the media, et cetera. so we are really witnessing a lot of
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things. of course, this is on the front of the times today, if we get, as we think we will get, 50,000 protesters in the streets of the capital, interestingly donald trump is spending most of his time sleeping at the us ambassador's house but he will be mostly, from what we can see, not in a motorcade but in helicopters, to blenheim palace, to chequers and the windsor castle, and then going off to scotland. but until he is off british soil, i know that i will be, as many otherjournalists, on 2a hour permanent standby and we will see what he says. but certainly mrs may must be a little bit worried by some of the things he has said before he even left for brussels about possibly ringing borisjohnson and seeing boris johnson. about possibly ringing borisjohnson and seeing boris johnsonlj about possibly ringing borisjohnson and seeing boris johnson. i would love to know what she really thinks, but i think 50,000, she would take that. it is supposed to be this mass movement against donald trump, and 50,000 would be quite small, i would
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think. you have to think about macron, and lots of people saying we shouldn't roll out the red carpet, but macron, arguably, who they would argue is their choice as a progressive centrist leader, he welcomed donald trump with a fly past, the whole thing. let me be very clear. the polls show us the feeling in france is similar, but what is not similar is you didn't see massive protests. why should we accept the president of the united states ? accept the president of the united states? and let's also point out this is a working visit, not a state visit. because we are still too scared to give it. i couldn't possibly comment. what do you make of his intervention on germany and his remarks that germany is controlled by russia. it is one of those things where someone comes in and it is what we would have thought. on sanctions when it comes
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to russia, germany won't do it because they are worried about them turning the gas. it is a new person coming in and saying, look... wasn't one of the things ofjournalism supposed to be giving truth to power? you could argue that is a bit of what donald trump is doing. trouble is the administration don't know one day to the next if they are going to wake up to something different. donald trump hasjust tweeted something. the point is that a great country, whatever... but in the interest of fairness, the daily telegraph points out that the foreign minister attempted to fire back that even during the cold war nato allies were trading with russia. and that is a healthy thing. well, not necessarily. potentially
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healthy. let's move a little to the right to the trump cartoon. i am now thinking of the trump blimp which will be flying over london. you are right to mention it, which is quite extraordinary, to be outside the house of commons, the mother of all democracies in parliament, but anyway. unfortunately he will not see it unless his helicopter bumps into it. at the police has a veto until the last minute, they could decide to stop it. this is a great cartoon over my shoulder. out on the pitch, at the end of the match. mrs may saying it was a good outcome and it gave us most of what we wanted. it segues brilliantly from the disappointment of football the brexit. peerless in what he does. it sums up what people are feeling, and there are concessions everywhere. the party is in absolute turmoil, as
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donald trump says. civil war, people handing in resignations, and mrs may saying it is a great outcome. as you are leaving for a foreign trip a new comment on someone else's internal domestic policy, come on. comment on someone else's internal domestic policy, come onlj comment on someone else's internal domestic policy, come on. i am not saying it was great, just that that is what he said. we are in turmoil. people have their own ways. france is trying to nick all our banks. talking of which... seamless. on the front page of the financial times, keep disagreeing. theresa may teachers hope of keeping city in tight tie—up with eu after brexit. philip hammond said the one area he wa nted philip hammond said the one area he wanted to stay close to brussels was neutral recognition. and michel barnier said you cannot have your
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ca ke barnier said you cannot have your cake and eat it. why didn't he say let them eat cake? that as a whole different ball game. this is all compromise everywhere, michel barnier says france doesn't want us to have anywhere near equivalents because of the opportunities for paris. luxembourg has said they will be severe financial repercussions if we don't. so tomorrow's white paper, among the hundreds of pages and rewrites, we won't have this ultra— a+) rewrites, we won't have this ultra— a+ ) relationship on banks, but equivalents like the us has. co—habitation and not a marriage is the analogy given by the financial times. a mistress. co-habitation does not necessarily mean a mistress. so the white paper concedes... we have lost everyone! everyone is having a cup of tea. so we will get a lot of this tomorrow, a load of chapters where we work out
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how much we are conceding and how much we are conceding to the eu's wishes. and what an extraordinary day to be publishing this, on the arrival of the us president, the first time he sets foot on british soil since his election. interesting. there will be a lot of that in the next couple of weeks. the brexiteers must be regretting this as well, because if and when they are plotting something, when do they are plotting something, when do they put their heads above the parapet? plenty of time for that over the coming weeks. know, until the recess. if she can get through until the recess, the prediction is that then she is safe until the autumn. theresa may. she gets through to the end ofjuly. 24 july is the recess. and let's end on something positive, the photograph on the front of the times. all these
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incredible stories about it. the nation was gripped, these 12 thai boys and their coach, for 17 days before they were found that we found out today, which shouldn't be a surprise, they were sedated heavily to get them out. what could they have gone through, and we will be watching the story in cinemas. in five years' time, or whatever it is. and lovely to see them setting up in their hospital beds. and a water pump used in the operation fails soon after the dives. i walked into my bank the other day and somebody was asking about that, i think it has just resonated. was asking about that, i think it hasjust resonated. what a great story to end on. thank you to both my guests, benedicte paviot, the uk correspondent for france 24, and steve hawkes, deputy political editor at the sun, and goodbye. that's it for the papers tonight. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it is all there for you seven days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers,
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and if you miss the programme any evening, you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you to both my guests, benedicte paviot, the uk correspondent for france 24, and steve hawkes, deputy political editor at the sun, and goodbye. thank you for watching and being with us this evening. next is newsday. hello there. temperatures are set to rise toward the end of the week and into the weekend it could become quite hot across parts of england and wales. there will also be some showers and thunderstorms in the forecast. some good news for somewhere they occur. good news for somewhere they occur. good news for some gardeners and growers but there will be hit and miss. the rest of the nightclub will take a role in the nightclub will take a role in the eastern areas, blanketing the cities in the south. one or two showers continuing to linger on towards wales in central scotland. we start thursday off on a rather grey note. looks like the clouds
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will tend to thin and break with plenty of sunshine developing, and as temperatures rise, a bit more moisture into the air, we could see a few more showers developing. those will be quite out isolated across eastern areas, but fairly heavy ones across south—west scotland, west of the pennines in the wales and the south—west of england because the ground is so parched any slow—moving downpours could cause localised flooding. a warm day to come, 27 celsius across the south—east. the chance of showers and thunderstorms increasing as we head on into friday. we start off on a largely dry note with some sunshine around, a few showers across northern areas from the word go and as the temperatures rise the showers will become more widespread and heavier across parts of wales, the midlands and southern england. so, as with thursday and especially on friday, there could be that more intense. the risk of some localised flooding with some areas staying dry altogether. given those hit and miss showers. into the weekend, an area
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of low pressure to the north—west of the country, more cloud to the north—west of the country, scooping up north—west of the country, scooping up warm airon north—west of the country, scooping up warm air on the near continent, and that is why england and wales will see those temperatures rising. this is the picture for saturday. more of a breeze and cloud for scotla nd more of a breeze and cloud for scotland and northern ireland, especially across the hebrides, and the western scottish mainland. further south and east you are, dry, sun—yu, light winds, and it will feel warm or even locally hot. 28 or 29 celsius across the south—east. into sunday, a similar picture. more cloud across the north—west corner, a few showers even into north—west wales, but much of england and wales dry, sunny and hot. values in the south—east potentially reaching 30 or 31 celsius, so things certainly heating up. still the chance of the odd shower at the weekend, mostly reserved for thursday and friday. the showers could be quite heavy to end the week in places, and certainly warming up, with lots of sunshine as we head into the weekend. welcome to newsday.
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i'm sharanjit leyl in london. the headlines: croatia come from behind to beat england and book their place in the world cup final. they'll play france on sunday. showdown in brussels — as president trump demands nato countries double their defence spending. i'm rico hizon in singapore. also in the programme: fears of disease injapan as the flooding death toll passes 170. and we're doing fine —
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first pictures of the rescued thai boys recovering in hospital.
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