tv Breakfast BBC News October 21, 2018 7:00am-8:01am BST
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good morning. welcome to breakfast with rachel burden and ben thompson. our headlines today: an end to a cold war—era nuclear agreement — president trump says the united states will pull out of a treaty it signed with russia more than 30 years ago. russia has not unfortunately honoured the agreement so we're gonna terminate the agreement. we're gonna pull out. after hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets to call for a further referendum, the brexit secretary sets out his stall for the next stage of the eu negotiations. the duke and duchess of sussex continue their royal tour in australia but kensington palace says the duchess won't be attending other engagements today. lewis hamilton can win his fifth formula one world title today if he wins the us grand prix from pole and sebastian vettel finishes lower than second. good morning to you. yesterday was a lovely day for many of us — a lot of sunshine around. not quite as much sunshine today and there is some rain in the forecast.
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join me laterfor the details. it's sunday the 21st of october. our top story: president trump has said the united states will pull out of a landmark nuclear weapons treaty it signed with russia more than 30 years ago. the nuclear forces treaty led to the destruction of hundreds of tactical weapons but washington has accused the kremlin of breaching the agreement. here's our north america correspondent chris buckler. the intermediate—range nuclear forces treaty was seen as a landmark accord when it was agreed by russia and the us 30 years ago. it led to the destruction of hundreds of missiles by both countries, but the white house insists that russia has ignored the inf treaty by producing, testing and deploying banned cruise missiles. president trump now says that he is no longer prepared to let the kremlin violate an agreement that america has honoured. we're not gonna let them violate a nuclear agreement and go out
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and do weapons and we're not allowed to. we're the ones that have stayed in the agreement and we've honoured the agreement, but russia has not unfortunately honoured the agreement, so we're gonna terminate the agreement. we're gonna pull out. his national security adviserjohn bolton is holding meetings in moscow at the start of the week and is expected to tell russian leaders that the us is withdrawing from the treaty. chris buckler, bbc news, washington. brexit secretary dominic raab says the uk should boycott proposals to delay leaving the eu, unless brussels relents on the irish backstop. his comments come after campaigners claim around 700,000 protestors marched for another referendum. let's talk now to our political correspondent tom barton. hejoins us now he joins us now from hejoins us now from central london. we've seen the huge numbers, but will this march make any difference?
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yes, hundreds of thousands of people on the streets yesterday, their voices very much being heard. whether or not they are being listened to, well, that is unlikely when it comes to the people in power and that is the two main reasons. firstly britain's exit date the 29th of march next year is laid out in law. second, the government has repeatedly said it is opposed to the idea of holding another referendum and so unless something dramatic changes, it is unlikely the policy will change although at course at the moment as we know politics is so febrile that something could happen at any time and that is partly because the government is stuck between a rock and really too hard places. 0n the one hand, those anti— brexit protesters and on the other hand you have the pro— brexit campaigners and mps and then you have the rock, the apparent
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immovable force of the european union and so today, we have had dominic raab, the brexit secretary, writing in the newspaper, suggesting that the extension to the transition period we've been talking about in la st period we've been talking about in last week's eu summit should be a temporary transition, should be instead of rather than a long side backstop to the irish border. now the idea of a transition being temporary is something the eu has consistently refused to acknowledge and so once again it seems the government is left without very much wiggle room. tom, thank you. what the pictures in the paper this morning of march. —— lots of pictures in the paper this morning of that march. the eu has described the death
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of journalist jamal khashoggi inside the saudi consulate in istanbul as "deeply troubling". it comes as pressure grows on the saudi authorities to explain the circumstances surrounding the death of the prominent critic. turkish officials say they have evidence he was murdered but saudi arabia is claiming he died in a fistfight. his colleagues at the washington post say they're determined to get the truth. this feels like an attack not only onjamal, it feels like an attack on the washington post. he was one of us, he did so much in order to write and so i think that the mood here is one of anger but determination to get to the bottom of this and to not let this go. a woman has died after a suspected gas explosion tore through a flat in north west london overnight. three people, including a baby, were rescued from the property in harrow after the blast set the building on fire this morning. around a0 people were evacuated from nearby properties as firefighters tackled the blaze. children with life—limiting conditions have been let down
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by the nhs and local councils across england, according to a new report. a cross—party group of mps says as many as one in three clinical commissioning groups do not provide specialist out—of—hours care. the report has been seen exclusively by bbc radio 5 live investigates. its presenter adrian goldberg joins us now with the details. good morning. it is a horrible report this, isn't it? it is troubling and as you say one out of three clinical commissioning groups responsible for commissioning mercian, palliative care for these children with life—limiting conditions do not do it out of hours oi’ conditions do not do it out of hours or on weekends, one in five local councils are failing in their local, in their legal duty to provide respite care for these young people so respite care for these young people so that their parents can get a little bit of time away from his deeply problematic issues —— commissioning nursing. . it is
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patchy, a postcode lottery is the phrase that is used, the department of health is palliative care in the country is recognised as being among the best in the world and they are committed to improving end of life ca re committed to improving end of life care choice for all young people. and what have they told you about why it is so patchy because you said the postcode lottery it is so difficult for parents facing these problems. one of the issues that mps highlighted is the gap between who is responsible for exam will in the provision of respite care, is social care, the responsibility of the circle —— local council, and the nhs, they need more communication between local government and the nhs. on cue, adrienne, we will talk more about this later and also will speak to some people affected by these issues. —— thank you, adrian. the duchess of sussex will not attend any engagements on the sixth day of the royal tour of australia. kensington palace has not given a reason for the change of plans, however yesterday, prince harry urged his pregnant wife to pace
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herself after she was feeling tired at the opening of the invictus games. 0ur sydney correspondent hywel griffith joins us now. hywel, what more can you tell us? it isa it is a change to their schedule but they have no more details? very few details, short statement saying she was cutting back on her engagement, not cutting out entire days. this morning sydney time she had the morning sydney time she had the morning off and did not go to the cycling at the domain, the greenery behind the opera house there, but she attended a lunch to meet some of the competitors alongside the duke and australia's prime minister and this afternoon australian time she has been out on the water in a boat watching the sailing competition taking place so cutting back i think, although she will not be visible in fraser island in queensland tomorrow, basics, she will still be there. thank you, hywel. the tour continues and loads
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of coverage in all of the papers. it has gone down a storm there. another thing that has gone down a storm. a record—breaking us lottery jackpot of $1.6 billion — around £1.2 billion — is up for grabs tonight. how many zeros is that? you are good at this. like? nine. yes. whoever gets to claim the prize can choose to have the full amount paid out over a 29—year period or they could take a still huge lump sum of $900 million. the chance to become america's newest billionaire comes after players failed to pick the winning numbers on friday. it is rolling over and rolling over. i can't really get my head around how much money that is. that kind of
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money will mess with your mind. how much money that is. that kind of money will mess with your mindm is beyond life changing, not even become a millionaire but to become a billionaire overnight. we will talk about this a little later. pressure is growing on saudi officials to explain how the journalist jamal khashoggi died in the country's consulate in istanbul. it comes after the kingdom claimed mr khashoggi, a critic of the saudi government, had lost his life during a fistfight. however, turkish officials claim they have evidence he was murdered. joining us now is the editor of the arab digest, 0liver miles. thank you for your time. is there any credibility in the saudi regime's version of events as to what happened ? regime's version of events as to what happened? no, very little, i think. it is conceivable i suppose that somebody acted without proper authority and this has happened in other cases in other countries,
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including in england hundreds of yea rs including in england hundreds of years ago, but i do not believe it. no, i'm afraid the saudis are doing a rather inept cover—up and if the turks go ahead and publish the information that they have, as they say they are going to, and if it is as they have been saying for a fortnight, they have been drip feeding more information about it, i think the saudis will be exposed as lying. it is the boldness of their actions, the fact this took place on foreign soil where he thought he would be safe in turkey. what needs to be done, what response does there need to be from the international community to put pressure on them to come clean here and perhaps take responsibility for their actions? well, i think the first and we have got to do is wait for the turks to come up with the information, which they say they are going to publish. they repeated yesterday, after the saudis had admitted he was killed in the consulate, after that when they have the opportunity i think if they
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wa nted have the opportunity i think if they wanted to sweep it under the carpet, so wanted to sweep it under the carpet, so to speak, no, they said you are going to go ahead and publish and if they publish information they have, but will mean the pressure on saudi arabia will grow enormously. what should we do? i think if the information comes about, if it develops as i am expecting it to, what we must do is stop selling arms to saudi arabia because it is the only thing we can do which will affect them. and we should do it in conjunction with the american, instead of doing it by ourselves because as it happens, although lots of countries seldom arms in the middle east, —— countries sell arms to the middle east, suppliers to saudi arabia are america and the uk are the biggest and we have a responsibility if those weapons are used in a war which has created a humanitarian catastrophe with millions and millions of people on the edge off a man. that is an important point to make —— edge of famine. the regime has a highly
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questionable human rights record for many years and it involvement in the war in yemen and the deaths of civilians there has put it in the spotlight and yet in action has been taken. while the death of one journalist, and it is a tragedy, actually make a difference and generate, i guess, and a motivation —— enough motivation for governments to act? it is curious that the death of one man should in no way carry more weight than the death of tens of thousands of yemenis but that is life. the fact is this is now, to use the cliche, the straw that is going to break the camel's back, and we have to do something, and we have to do it with the americans and what i've found surprising myself is as this crisis has developed, there has been strong wording not from the american administration, i think president trump would like to sweep it under the carpet, at the congress, some of the senators who
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have been close to saudi arabia in the past have been using strong language that they are determined to do something and we should encourage them. the arms trade is big business, generating billions of pounds in revenue for this government and takes a strong government and takes a strong government to stand up to that kind of industry, so it is whether they have the guts. that's true. but he should keep this in perspective. it is an important industry and we have worked very hard to achieve these sales to saudi arabia but people sometimes talk as though the whole british economy hung on it but it isn't the case, we sell more industrial goods to saudi arabia than we do weapons and we sell more to countries like the netherlands and belgium and we do saudi arabia, let's keep it in perspective. they give indeed for your time, 0liver miles. —— thank you indeed. here's stav with a look at this morning's weather. and good morning to you. good morning to you then and rachel. you
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can sit some dense fog patches behind me. it is quite pea soup in places. southern and central england most at risk. kit kat if you're heading out in basingstoke and hampshire. the sudden fog patches will appear out of nowhere —— be careful. it is chilly with mist and fog around. northern areas, a difference at day. 0utbreaks fog around. northern areas, a difference at day. outbreaks of rain coming too much of scotland. it will sink south eastwards. and it will fizzle out. not much time by the time it reaches england and wales. a disappointing start to the date for much of scotland and into northern ireland. the south the sunshine once the mist and fog clears. it will be replaced by this band of cloud, a bit of a grey afternoon, apart from the far south—east which should hang on to the sunshine and light winds. further north, it brightens nicely as the weather front klizan southwards. northern ireland with some blustery showers —— klizan southwards. as the head on into the
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evening and overnight the band of cloud eventually clears away. blustery showers for most of the north—west of scotland. the winner will be more of a feature overnight. we should not see problems with mist and fault —— the wind. single figures across much of the country. this is the big area of high pressure which will dominate the weather into next week. it will keep things largely fine and settle. to the north of the country really tightly packed isoba rs. the north of the country really tightly packed isobars. a windy day on monday. pretty heavy rain across the northern half of scotland and the northern half of scotland and the northern isles. further south, dry and lovely, lots of sunshine around. it is a cooler air mass. we have highs of around 13 or 14 degrees. we have lost the high teens celsius for most of us. it will be notably cooler. the sunshine to compensate. tuesday, similar picture. windy with our greats of rain across most of scotland. the
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wind and rain could venture into the far north of england. most of northern ireland and for england and wales it will be a fine day with lengthy spells of sunshine. the winds, stronger still across the board. very slightly north—west. it will be quite nippy if you are out that sunshine and exposed the wind. midweek onwards it turned dry. but then towards the end of the week and into next week, although it will be dry, it will turn much colder. this time next weekend it will be a lot colder. northerly arctic winds with wintry showers across northern parts of the country. there will be sunshine around. turning very cold towards the end of the week. no. we don't want any of that. mostly in the north. it will be single figure values through the day. come back in half an hour with something better, please. thank you. you are watching breakfast from bbc
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news. last year 3,750 teachers took long—term sick leave due to work—related stress and anxiety. more than three—quarters of teachers in england have experienced mental health issues and more than half are considering leaving the profession. pretty sobering figures. the charity, the education support partnership, campaigns for better mental health provision and says its findings highlight a ‘stress epidemic‘. we're joined now in the studio by secondary school teacher victoria hewett. victoria, good morning to you. explain a little more about your story, what happened to you?” explain a little more about your story, what happened to you? i was working in a school before and the workload was really, really intense, working really long hours, usually about 70 hours per week. as a result of that the pressure and stress built up and i had a bit of a breakdown and had to take time off work and came very close to leaving me profession. the breakdown actually happened in the classroom, that was really distressing to you and those bare at the time. that was really distressing to you and those bare at the timelj that was really distressing to you and those bare at the time. i burst into tears in front of the class,
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said howl into tears in front of the class, said how i really wanted them to do well and that the behaviour was holding them back. as a result, one of them went back, and after the holidays i ended up having to take time off because they could not be in the classroom. externally, a lot of people might look at teaching and think the hour are great, you are in at 8am, you finish at 3pm, the statistics we ran throughout the stuff read it as anything but.“ only it was that short. most of the holidays he will spend several days working. you work usually in the evenings. then there are things like parents evenings, open evenings, they eat into your time outside of school. you were being asked to teach outside of your subject area as well, you are having to do extra work that you are not necessarily for the across, that meant you had to do for the across, that meant you had todoa for the across, that meant you had to do a lot of extra work. how did it manifest itself day to day? it was a buildup of things, wasn't it? it was a buildup. usually anxiety in
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the morning, waking up and not wanting to go to work. then we would have our morning briefings a couple of times a week and i would leave their in tears or visibly shaking, because the anxiety was building up and building up until it turned into panic attacks first thing in the morning. gosh. that is no way to work and lead your life. it does not have to be like this will stop it can be managed better and with the right kind of leadership will stop what needs to be done and what help in your situation? i ended up moving schools will stop the focus that my new school is really on workload reduction and well— being. new school is really on workload reduction and well—being. and teacher well— being reduction and well—being. and teacher well—being is reduction and well—being. and teacher well— being is seen reduction and well—being. and teacher well—being is seen as important as the student well—being. that has a big impact on your work—life balance. by doing so you perform better in the classroom. there is no way you can be an effective teacher when you are experiencing their stress levels. when you talk about workload reduction, you could say it is about having another pair of hands, someone having another pair of hands, someone to take on what you are doing. we know that school budgets
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are stress. is there a way in an existing budget you can make that work better? certainly. taking pressure off things like marking and assessment. turning to strategy such assessment. turning to strategy such as feedback, so that more work is donein as feedback, so that more work is done in the classroom on feeding back for students, assessing their learning, rather than having to take the books home every night and spent three hours also marking them, and then using that to plan lessons. in then using that to plan lessons. in the classroom, given that feedback, assessing the work of there and then. and allowing teachers to have then. and allowing teachers to have the autonomy and trust in them that they will do that and they can help they will do that and they can help the children to progress. the department of education says they are concerned about this, they are aware of it, and are committed to tackling issues that can affect teachers because health and well—being. they talk about flexible working. how would that work was matt leblanc would it take? -- hal
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would that work? may be having days where the teacher can go home or come in later or do the work in other locations. some of the things that exist already in the private sector, for the education system as well. victoria, we are grateful for your expanding your story. great to hear that things are better. thank you for that. you're watching breakfast from bbc news. time now for a look at the newspapers. entertainment journalist emma bullimore is here to tell us what's caught her eye. we'll speak to emma in a minute. first let's look at the front pages. the observer shows the scene in central london yesterday, where an estimated 700,000 people marched in favour of holding another referendum on the final brexit deal. the sunday times is predicting a tough week ahead for the prime minister and claims some tory mps have told her she has 72 hours to save herjob.
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the sunday telegraph carries the story we've been running on breakfast this morning — the comments from the brexit secretary dominic raab that the uk must not agree to extend the brexit transition period unless the eu ditches its demand for a backstop. the mail on sunday is another paper which suggests theresa may is under increasing pressure. it says she's being forced to attend a high—stakes "show trial" by tory mps. good morning. let us talk about what is inside the papers. we started this one in the mirror. this is about nhs parking. we have talked about nhs parking. we have talked about this for people visiting, maybe sick relatives family, this is about a lot of the staff. we can all agreed is pretty outrageous if you are visiting a sick relative that you then spend ages looking for parking. nobody really thought about how that would be for the stuff.
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nurses in particular are struggling to find, not only are they being fined and struggling to pay fines, but they are saying one in five nurses is spending up to half an hour looking for a space, a space to park. that will lead to them going oi'i park. that will lead to them going on to shift feeling stressed and having that content with every day, it is madness. they talking about the kind of attitude of these big parking companies who just try to make money out of people being late. examples of people leaving a permit oi'i examples of people leaving a permit on their passenger seat rather than in the window, that kind of thing. the mirror has been doing a campaign for that kind of thing for some time to stop the charges were i don't understand by the gover outs get involved. in a lot of sectors you will find increasingly that parking charges are getting higher and higher as they encourage people to ta ke higher as they encourage people to take different forms of transport into work. —— government. if you are a nurse working on shift, working at a nurse working on shift, working at a late at night or starting early, thatis a late at night or starting early, that is not always an option. you
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might have to change into your uniform and you get there, things to carry. this is not something they should have two content with. the 0bserver this morning, netflix, they have had a good week, they have added thousands of new subscribers, but have come in for controversy over the advertisements. this is not a good look for netflix, they are the young and sexy broadcast or streaming service, this is a story about films, the poster that is being shown, the personalised artwork being targeted to people of colour using netflix, it has changed, so people think it is a black story. people are up in arms saying why not give us some proper representation on screen, give us a series that involves black actors rather than manipulating the algorithms. netflix is known for its algorithms. netflix is known for its algorithms and recommending things it knows you like based on your taste. people are saying this is shoddy. it is not showing the real story. exactly quite offensive. it
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comes after the equal pay row after the crown and claire foy not being paid properly. is not a good look for them. -- it is not. it is interesting about the artwork in general. amazing statistics recently about how we choose a field based on that tiny pic you get on the screen while flicking through. —— film. you might have read the blurb on the back of the video, but now it is just that little picture. it also leads to some strange choices. if you like romantic comedies, and there is an actor in a thriller, can be confusing because the way the algorithms are working. the suggestions algorithm is working well, but the picture is not so well at the moment. do you get a full lunch break when you are working? has an people only get 22 minutes i'iow. has an people only get 22 minutes now. in 2012 it was about 33 minutes —— they are saying. people are just sitting at a desk. they haven't ventured, what they have talked about is that people don't have any
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options and they have so much what they —— they haven't mentioned. people have a heavy commute awaiting them. they think that mijas get my work done so they can get home earlier and rush hour. work done so they can get home earlierand rush hour. —— let work done so they can get home earlier and rush hour. —— let me just. it is not the way we want working culture to be.|j just. it is not the way we want working culture to be. i was speaking to a friend of mine the other day who goes home for an hour in her lunch break. i was like, what is this world?! quite close. within a mile. she goes home, but is the washing on. i used to live very close to where i worked in london. you feel like you never switch off, you never leave work because you are so close. sometimes, as much as we hate commuting and we complain about busy trains, it is a switch off time. psychologically, it is a demarcation from when you are at work. that makes sense. you could soon work. that makes sense. you could soon give the eulogy at your own funeral. this is about hologram is being used. this is a strange one. —— holograms. they said they do not wa nt —— holograms. they said they do not want tojust —— holograms. they said they do not want to just record a video
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—— holograms. they said they do not want tojust record a video message for a funeral but to be there as a hologram. he will deliver his own eulogy. we have seen a hologram tours. we have seen it with elders and queen. i'm not sure how much this will catch on. i have been —— i haven't been 20 funeral so people are givena haven't been 20 funeral so people are given a video message, let alone are given a video message, let alone a hologram. somehow it helps the grieving process that people are able to be best people i think at my funeral people would want me to shut up funeral people would want me to shut up for once. rather than banging on beyond the grave. thanks. we will talk again in the next hour. we must doa talk again in the next hour. we must do a quick review of strictly. see you later. they have been talking about it all morning. coming up in the next half hour: we'll hear the uplifting story of the animator who has used a doodle a day to help him and his children cope with the death of his wife. they are really beautiful drawings. do stay with us. hello, this is breakfast
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with rachel burden and ben thompson. good morning. here's a summary of today's main stories from bbc news: president trump has said the united states intends to pull out of a nuclear weapons treaty it signed more than 30 years ago, accusing russia of violating the deal. the intermediate—range nuclear forces treaty led to the destruction of hundreds of tactical weapons and is meant to protect the security of the us and its allies in europe and the far east. brexit secretary dominic raab has said the uk could avoid a potential extension to the transition period after brexit to prevent a hard border in northern ireland. his comments, made in today's sunday telegraph, claim that any extended transition period would be instead of the so—called backstop arrangements being demanded by the eu. it comes after over 500,000 people attended a march organised by the people's vote movement. the eu has described the death of journalist jamal khashoggi inside the saudi consulate in istanbul as "deeply troubling". it comes as pressure grows
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on the saudi authorities to explain the circumstances surrounding the death of the prominent critic. turkish officials say they have evidence he was murdered but saudi arabia is claiming he died in a fistfight. his colleagues at the washington post say they're determined to get the truth. a woman has died after a suspected gas explosion tore through a flat in north west london overnight. three people, including a baby, were rescued from the property in harrow after the blast set the building on fire this morning. around a0 people were evacuated from nearby properties as firefighters tackled the blaze. the duchess of sussex is cutting back on the number of engagements she will attend during the remainder of the royal tour of australia. kensington palace has not given a reason for the change of plans, however yesterday, prince harry urged his pregnant wife to pace herself after she was feeling tired at the opening of the invictus games. meghan will continue on the rest of the tour in fiji, tonga and new zealand.
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the red arrows are set to hold their largest ever tour of north america next year, spending nine weeks in the us and canada. the royal air force aerobatic team has not performed in the region since 2008. the government says it will generate £2.5 billion of investment for britain. great photographs there and catch is he with all of sport and we are talking formula i. —— cat. it is a great tactical battle because hamilton is closing in on the world title and sebastian vettel really is the most likely to stop him but he needs to come second and is down in fifth after he had a great place penalty for not slowing up enough in practice for a red flag so you have a gap between them but they have also got valtteri bottas who with hamilton's teammate and kimi raikonnen in there as well so that
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will be inching around and holding each other off. so it should be a great race, a lot of formula i's criticism is that it is a bit of a procession sometimes, someone takes the lead and that is it from start to finish but kimi raikonnen is right up alongside hamilton on the front of the great and he can take the lead and hold hamilton back in second and somehow, vettel could move up. it should be a really great race. the briton only needs eight points more than sebastian vettel to win the title, and he has the advantage of starting the us grand prix from pole, as nick parrott reports. some sporting rivalries can be bitter, but this one is cordial. it would appear that the briton is to win a fifth world title in texas. in the lone star state, he has no equal — hamilton has won the last four races in austin and looked unbeatable again in qualifying. he was so relaxed during the first session, he had time for oscar winner matthew mcconaughey — perhaps getting advice on acceptance speeches for the award ceremonies that will follow. when he got down to the real business, he set a new track record to claim pole.
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vettel was a very close second, but because of a penalty picked up in practice, he'll start from fifth. i didn't know how close it was going to be once we got to qualifying but obviously when we went into that last run, i knew it was quite edgy between us and it was gonna require solid laps. but you know in some races where i've not haven't actually done a better time and had to bail out the second lap, so i was very, very adamant that today, i was gonna do a better second lap, so i'm really happy with that. i was pretty close, obviously. always a bit of a shame when you miss out on just that little of time — i think 600s you can debate that you had them somewhere in you, but i was pretty happy with the laps i had. regardless of what happens today, hamilton seems destined to match juan manuel fangio's five titles this year. next in his sights will be surpassing michael schumacher‘s seven to become the greatest of all. nick parrott, bbc news. we've already had one motorsport world champion crowned this morning — marc marquez in the motogp, for the fifth time — the third in a row. his main rival, italian andrea dovizioso slid off his bike
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with just two laps to go. marquez is nowjoint third in the list of world championship winners. another fiery afternoon forjose mourinho at stamford bridge but he says all is forgiven after a bit of a scuffle right at the end of the match. ross barkley equalised for chelsea late in injury time and the match finished 2—2. afterwards, one of the chelsea coaches, marco ianni, appeared to say something to mourinho, who was held back by several stewards. he was very impolite but sarri took care of the situation. he apologised immediately, and after the game, his assistant also apologised to me, which i accept these apologies, so for me, the story is over, but don't do what everybody does that says that is mourinho that does thing. manchester city are still top of the table this morning. they beat burnley 5—0.
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four of the goals came in the second half. they're ahead of liverpool on goal difference. next up for city, a champions league date with shakhtar donetsk on tuesday. liverpool hadn't won in four games but beat huddersfield yesterday. salah scored the only goal of the game. huddersfield haven't scored at home since last april. a first win of the season for cardiff city — 4—2 against fulham. the win moved them out of the relegation zone. fulham, though, drop into it. spurs are up to fourth after winning 1—0 at west ham. newcastle united are bottom after they lost 1—0 to brighton. watford beat wolves, and there were no goals in the south coast derby between bournemouth and southampton. hearts recovered from their defeat by rangers to beat aberdeen 2—i, arnaud djoum with the pick of the goals. hearts now lead the scottish premiership by three points. champions celtic are up to second after they beat hibs. kilmarnock are third after winning at st mirren.
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livingston thrashed dundee and motherwell lost to stjohnstone. one of the biggest names in football, lionel messi, has broken his arm during barcelona's clash with sevilla. the pictures coming up are not for the squeamish, so look away now if that sounds like you. if you are eating your breakfast, maybe look away! the 5—time ballon d'or winner had already left his mark on the game having teed up philippe coutinho for the opener before doubling his side's lead at camp nou. minutes later, however, he fell awkwardly on his right arm. you can see he's visibly in pain. tests have confirmed that he has a fracture of the radial bone and will be out for approximately three weeks. it hasn't been a great couple of days for danny cipriani — overlooked by england for the autumn series, he's now set to sit out some matches for gloucester. he was sent off in their champions cup match against munster for this challenge. munster took full advantage. they won 36—22. it was a much tighter affair
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for wasps, who came from behind to draw with bath. thomas young's converted try eventually sealing the 35—35 draw. edinburgh put in a blistering performance at murrayfield to see off three—time champions toulon. this try by chris dean earned them the bonus point, which puts them top of their pool. elsewhere, exeter lost at castres, while saracens beat lyon. kyle edmund has the chance to win his first tour title. he's into today's final of the european 0pen. britain's number one, who is the top seed in antwerp, beat richard gasquet in straight sets. he'll meet gael monfils in the final. edmund lost his only previous appearance in a final, which was in morocco earlier this year. it's been an eventful week for ronnie 0'sullivan at the english 0pen snooker. he's made the headlines for all kinds of reasons, including his rather damning assessment of the venue. but his run is over. he was beaten 6—1 by mark davis, who made a century and three 50 breaks. today's final will be a first
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for davis, who'll play stuart bingham after the former world champion beat stephen maguire 6—3. bianca walkden has won silverfor great britain at the taekwondo grand prix in manchester. shuyin zheng of china stretched to a 6—1 lead in the final and, despite a late fightback in the third round, the bout finished 6—4 and walkden had to settle for silver. later today, double 0lympic taekwondo champion jadejones is in action, and you can watch live on the red button or the bbc sport website. live tae kwon do for you! what a way to spend your sunday! thank you. when former disney animator gary andrews suddenly lost his partner of almost 20 years last year, his grief was immense. but over the last 12 months, he has found comfort by creating a doodle a day to chronicle the challenges of dealing with grief with young children. he joins us now from
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his home in surrey. good morning. so nice to meet you. tell us a little bit about your partner, first of all, her death was tragic of cause and so sudden and unexpected. yeah, that's right. she was the most amazing woman, so kind and loving and always a smile for everybody. i was away on business in canada at the time and had a phone call to say that she, she phoned up to say that she felt like she felt a bit rubbish and went on to a couple of days and on the third day when i tried to facetime her they couldn't get her and they took into hospital quickly because they thought it may have been a kidney and then they said to come home because it was serious and i got an early flight and by the time i had landed, we had lost her said it was quick, it was
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sepsis. it is such a vicious, vicious disease and it must have been a terrible shock to you and for your kids lily and ben. how are they doing now? incredible, actually, children have an incredible capacity to ta ke children have an incredible capacity to take on board a thing that has happened and accept it as what it is as part of their life and move on. but the fact that we constantly talk about her and what happened. we never used any euphemisms. we just said right from the beginning that mummy has died. we need to sort of accept that and we do talk about it regularly but they are doing extraordinary, lily has been made head girl at school and they both — area head girl at school and they both — are a lovely, wonderful, warm children and i could not do this without them. credit to you, gary and congratulations to lily and tell us and congratulations to lily and tell us about your doodling because daly doodles predated losing joy?|j
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started this in my 55th birthday in 2016, because i proffer myjob but it is electronic, a draw on a graphics tablet all the time and i missed using a pen on paper so i decided to do a doodle everyday to draw again properly and i use it like a draw again properly and i use it likea diary, draw again properly and i use it like a diary, a record of the day, something that has been happening on the day, something funny or quirky or emotional and we used to look at it every night and have a giggle and are used to post them out on facebook and twitter and so my friends could have a laugh and have a few people looking at them but then afterjoy died, it became a kind of therapy for myself and they usedit kind of therapy for myself and they used it to process the way i was grieving and did not shy away from ifi grieving and did not shy away from if i was having a bad or sad day but by the same token, if something happened, i would by the same token, if something happened, iwould put by the same token, if something happened, i would put it on there as well to show people the rollercoaster of grief, that life does go on even though it has changed fundamentally. so beautiful,
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gary, iam nearly changed fundamentally. so beautiful, gary, i am nearly crying looking at them. we have bought looking at pictures of them as we have been talking to them and you can feel the emotion and the love you had for your wife and it is still there, you still have, in all of those pictures. you have been doing this about one year and it is difficult, i know, when you come up to an anniversary and i am sure she is in your thoughts all the time anyway but will you do with these? i know they are published online but will you put them into a book or if anything further you would like to do? hoping to. i'm hoping to get a book. i'm looking to a publisher, i'm working with somebody towards achieving that and a lot of people who have been looking at these online are saying how much it helps them as well which is gratifying and make joy's death them as well which is gratifying and makejoy‘s death was pointless to, because it is helping people, so it would be nice to get it to a wider audience, not everyone has twitter and it is nice to have it in a book i'm hoping i can and if we do get a
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book deal, i want to tie in with the sepsis trust so a percentage of profit can go to them as well. good luck with it, i think it is a wonderful project and whether it goes further or not it doesn't matter because for you and your kids it is obviously been worthwhile and obviously i think you are an kind to yourself in those pictures, gary. —— yourself in those pictures, gary. —— you are unkind. i draw howl yourself in those pictures, gary. —— you are unkind. i draw how i feel, not how i look! you are unkind. i draw how i feel, not how! look! it is you are unkind. i draw how i feel, not how i look! it is great to see the smile on your face, all of the best to you and really and ben with your ongoing journey. you are all doing a brilliant job. lovely pickings. really moving. here's stav with a look at this morning's weather. good morning to both. and good morning to at home. a different story for part two of the weekend. yesterday, plenty of sunshine. warm
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as well, particularly north—east scotland. this morning we start with dense fog patches, optically central and southern parts of england, where it will be quite chilly as well. —— particularly. further north we have a weather front moving in. is particularly. further north we have a weatherfront moving in. is moving oppressive into scotland and northern ireland as it pushes into england and wales it will fizzle out and become a band of cloud. apart from the fog patches across the south, we start with the sunshine for england and wales. before that area of rain and cloud moves southwards. barely anything on it by the time it reaches england and wales. the far south—east staying dry and sunny with light winds. the skies lightened up across scotland and northern ireland across the afternoon. some showers could be quite heavy. fresher than what we saw yesterday. across england and wales, particularly in the south—east, you could see 18 or 19 celsius. the band of cloud continues to sink southwards. light rain or drizzle on it as we had through the
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overnight period. for most it is clear skies, blustery showers. blustery in the north of the country. mist and fog by the end of the night into monday morning. a chilly morning, single figure values. into next week, high pressure will be the dominating factor. this strong area of high pressure will hang on for quite a few days. across the north of the country we have —— weather fronts with tightly packed isobars. it will be windy throughout monday with outbreaks of rain. some of that rain will be quite heavy for the far north of scotland and the northern isles. further south it will be dry, good spells of sunshine. a blustery wind blowing in from the west. notice the temperatures, 13 or 1a celsius, instead of17— notice the temperatures, 13 or 1a celsius, instead of 17— 19 we have seen celsius, instead of 17— 19 we have seenin celsius, instead of 17— 19 we have seen in the past few days. a similar story as we had introduced a. high pressure still with us. to wind stanning north—westerly —— had on tuesday. the rain could push into
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southern scotland, maybe the far north of england. most central and southern area should be dry, sunny spells. the same for northern ireland. quite a blustery day across the board. that will take the edge of the temperatures, only 13 or a0 degrees. high pressure holding on for much of the week. —— 1a degrees. largely dry with sunshine. by the end of the week it should turn cold as arctic ms down from the north. we could even see some wintry showers across the north of the uk. what do wintry showers mean? what we told him about using the word wintry? wintry showers mean? what we told him about using the word wintry7m was are good recently it had to turn cold at some point. so long as i am warm and cosy inside a do not mind the cold outside. we'll have the headlines at eight, but first it's time for click with spencer kelly. woman on radio: all
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systems are ready. ignition. japan has just done something amazing. it has flown a spaceship to a one—kilometre—wide near—earth asteroid called ryugu to do some incredible science. this is hayabusa2. it has just deployed three rovers onto ryugu's surface — the german and french mascot probe on 3 october, and before that, the japanese minerva ii robot. their mission: to measure temperature and magnetic properties, and take photos of the surface. and amazingly, this
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is how they get about. yep, they bounce. i have come to the japanese aerospace exploration agency, jaxa, to meet the team who designed the mission and try and get my head around this bonkers mode of transport. in summary, this hops off the surface of an asteroid, it jumps about 10—15 metres into space, it stays... off the surface for about 15 minutes, and then comes back down... bounce and bounce and bounce. the images already returned by the minerva ii bots are wowing the world, but the risks they face are high. we did not have much budget, so we did not use very expensive devices.
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the rover hops and then bounce and bounce, so in that moment, the mechanicalfailure would happen, so something was broken. so this is a replica of hayabusa2. and believe it or not, deploying the landers is not even the coolest thing that this is going to do, in my opinion — because this is going to land on the asteroid, take a soil sample, and then take off again. which i think is absolutely incredible. the first attempted landing is hopefully going to happen very soon — by the end of october. and then a little later, a second landing will collect more soil. if we can get the organic matter, we can study what kind of organic matter were exist, when the earth was born.
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now... that is a model of hayabusa2 there. it looks very delicate to me, and you are going to try and land that on an asteroid. what are the risks, and what is the most risky part? there are lots of boulders. big and small. we cannot find a wide area with no boulders. so that is our main issue. assuming all does go well, next year hayabusa2 is going to go one better and try to collect soil from under the surface. and it is going to do that by using an explosive to blow a hole in the asteroid! and then, in one final heroic act of science, it is going to fly back to earth and return the soil samples to jaxa scientists, possibly to help them unlock the secrets of life itself. we don't know where
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the life was born. it may be on the earth, or it may be in the universe. we don't know that. so we want to study the original organic matter that exist when the solar system was born. thank you very much for your time. very best of luck. thank you very much. he is going to lend a space ship on an asteroid and then take off and fly back to earth! now, every year in october, the tech world turns its attention to ceatec, japan's big tech show, which is a fascinating glimpse into the direction this country is taking its innovation. this is notjust another tech expo. it is quirky. yes, that is a sort of green pea alexa. and how about replacing alarm clocks
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with blowing air from the ceiling to wake us up? even though you don't like to be woken up. it is like somebody quietly going... laughs. so it is just a question of us finding what we think could be the next big thing. you know what it is like. you are stuck behind a car and you can't overtake, because, you just can't see beyond that vehicle. well, this car might be able to help you. it is fitted with a demonstration of a new technology called xtravue, and it means that you can see through the car ahead using its camera rather than yours. the vision of makers valeo is that the live stream from cameras in our cars will be available to everyone within a certain area. the forthcoming 5g cell network will make this tech more workable. imagine not having to guess what it could possibly be that's holding you up.
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horn honks. lucky escape! here is another angle on cars from mitsubishi. as the viewer changes position, so the car and lighting effects shift with them. obviously the car would not move like this in real life. what it would do is that as you move around it, the lighting and reflections would change, and that is what this is trying to demonstrate. the hope in the future is that it can be used on billboards so that the objects within them glint and shine as you pass by, as if they were really there. but you had better hope it is a quiet street because at the moment it only works with one person. does it look as though the headlights are following you around the room? look up and see how natural these skylights look. up until now, if you wanted a fake window, the fitting would contain either a blue light
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or blue glass or perspex. there is actually no blue light behind here, it is just two white leds either side, with suspended diffusers, mitsubishi describes them as, in between, to replicate the way that natural light comes through the atmosphere. they won't give us any more information, and they say it is about 2—5 years away before something like this could be installed in our homes, hospitals, or maybe even the underground, to give us a little bit of extra natural light. it is almost like i am expecting to see outside! japan is on the cusp of a tv first. this is sharp's very impressive second generation 8k tv on sale next month. but the real news is that the broadcasting of 8k starts on the 1st of december this year by the national broadcaster, nhk, so there will be something to watch. now another thing that might be
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of interest to japan's ageing population are these. they may look like normal glasses, but if i press the touch sensor on the side, you may have seen a little flash, and what that was was liquid crystals inside the glasses shifting orientation and changing the focus, meaning it's easier to see things close up, just like bifocals. now, the upside of these is that you can then turn them off and goes back to your regular prescription. and we'll finish with something mind blowing, eye—popping, and jawdropping. i can't even walk in. it's messing with my perspective. this is borderless. the latest otherworldly experience from digital art collective teamlab. this amazing space is their first
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permanent home in 0daiba in tokyo. a 10,000 square metre magical transcendent world of projected art that's never the same twice. this is just astonishing. it really is alive. the exhibits react to your presence and your touch. nothing is just played on loop. everything is changing and reacting all the time. behind the scenes, 520 computers and a70 projectors bring to life the work of cg! artists, engineers, and architects. some of the artjust doesn't stay put. characters leave their point of origin and wander into other rooms and across other works. visitors even get their chance to add their own art
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to the exhibition. colour an animal, scan it in, and it comes to life, joining the user generated menagerie that is flying, swimming, and crawling the floors and walls. the other reason it's called borderless — thanks to all the mirrors some of the works seem to go on forever. it's certainly a place where time becomes irrelevant, until you really have to leave. and that is it from japan for this week. i cannot think of a better way to end the programme. don't forget, we live on facebook and on twitter and we will put up loads of backstage photos and videos there. the address is @bbcclick. thank you so much for watching. we will see you soon. good morning, welcome to breakfast
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with rachel burden and ben thompson. 0ur headlines today... an end to a cold war era nuclear agreement — president trump says the united states will pull out of a treaty it signed with russia more than 30 years ago. russia has not unfortunately honoured the agreement so we're gonna terminate the agreement. we're going to pull out. after hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets to call for a further referendum, the brexit secretary sets out his stall for the next stage of the eu negotiations. the duke and duchess of sussex continue their royal tour in australia but kensington palace says the duchess won't be attending other engagements today.
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