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tv   The Papers  BBC News  November 30, 2018 11:30pm-12:01am GMT

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kaitlyn's mum, charlene, who suffers from a chronic condition, made a full recovery after paramedics arrived. herfather simon says she's a superstar. she really is. stay with us. we'll be taking an in—depth look at the papers. tim stanley and susie boniface. that's coming up after the headlines at 11:30. well, the first of december marks the first day of meteorological winter but the weather is looking a little bit more autumnal. it's going to be relatively mild across the south of the uk. some spells of wind and rain on the way. this is the next weather system that will upset the weather for a time on saturday gci’oss the weather for a time on saturday across the southern up of the uk.
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we've got the wind and the rain. the rain can be quite heavy and then in the afternoon, we start to see some areas, the skies clearing up. still areas, the skies clearing up. still a little bit of brain mcdermott. million guests have their personal details compromise. then as we head through saturday night, into sunday, the next weather system night, into sunday, the next weather syste m co m es night, into sunday, the next weather system comes off the atlantic ringing some rain and wind began through the southern half of the uk and through the course of the day we will see some rain spreading into northern parts of the country, suffice to say the weekend is looking very changeable and u nsettled, looking very changeable and unsettled, and in fact with these weather system so close to each other, one moving off the scene they are, more coming in off the atlantic, we have these breaks in a cloud, it is difficult to get the timing right. but they will be some bright weather and hopefully some sunny weather at times. 15 could be the temperature in the south. next
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week if you are watching the forecast of the last couple of days we have been forecasting very changeable week ahead next week, again wind and rain on the way as a succession of low pressure systems sweep gci’oss succession of low pressure systems sweep across the country, in fact they will be forming to the west of oui’ they will be forming to the west of our neighbourhood, developing and moving right next to us, here is another one gci’oss moving right next to us, here is another one across scotland on monday, some wintry weather that, gci’oss monday, some wintry weather that, across the hills some window blowing from the north, but here winds are blowing from the south—west and much milder weather conditions, again rain moving through, so 13 in london but only around seven in that northerly wind across scotland, a bitter contrast there. that is one way to —— weather system putting into scandinavia, a bit of a brake on tuesday before this next low comes in. this break in the weather system comes in. this break in the weather syste m m ea ns comes in. this break in the weather system means that on tuesday, particularly eastern and northern areas are in for some fine weather, even some sunny skies. but very quickly and other weather front will move off the atlantic, ringing mild and windy conditions without rain,
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and windy conditions without rain, and that will push through the country during the course of the middle parts of the week, low pressure stuck right across the country, a lot of cloud, wind and rain once again but that southern portion of the country will always bea portion of the country will always be a little bit milder, 10— 12, whereas only four degrees in parts of scotland. but guess what, one low moves out of the way, yet another one moves in, i have lost ground of how many low pressures are coming through. —— lost count. next week is very autumnal even though we are in meteorological window of —— winter. a jetstrea m meteorological window of —— winter. a jetstream next week into next week and may suggest colder air starts arriving from the north bringing some of that colder air, and not a lot of certainty. the overall message is that for quite sometime 110w message is that for quite sometime now we are going to see changeable weather conditions and then maybe towards the end of next week into next weekend the weather will settle down just next weekend the weather will settle downjust for a short next weekend the weather will settle down just for a short while. hello.
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this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow morning's papers in a moment — first the headlines. the universities minister sam gyimah has resigned in protest at the prime minister's brexit deal — in an article for the daily telegraph he called the deal "naive" and "not in the national interest" theresa may is at the 620 summit in argentina — she's demanding "full tra nsparency" in the investigation of the murder of journalist jamal khashoggi — as she holds talks with the crown prince of saudi arabia. one of the world's biggest hotel groups, marriott international, says hackers have managed to gain access to the personal details of half a billion guests — after the reservations' data base for its starwood division was breached. average rail fares will increase by 3.1% injanuary, with annual season tickets going up by around £100 a year,
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some transport groups have called for prices to be frozen. a keeper at a zoo in the west midlands is facing disciplinary action, after a snow leopard got out of its enclosure and was shot dead. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are tim stanley, leader writer for the telegraph , and susie boniface, columnist for the daily mirror. i thought you are going to say communist for the daily mirror! not since i was about 16. many of tomorrow's front pages are already the daily telegraph breaks the news that the universities minister — sam giymah, has become the latest member of government to resign over theresa may's brexit plan — saying "we have surrendered our voice, our vote and out veto". that resignation comes
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as the prime minister is at the g20 in buenos aires. the times shows a key moment so far at the summit — mohamed bin salman and vladimir putin's enthusiastic high five. a record number of children are being excluded from school for racist bullying, according to guardian analysis — leading to calls for government intervention. the ft claims theresa may is planning to sack the chairman of the hs2 rail programme — terry morgan — after only four months in the job. rail fares rise 37% in a decade, writes the i — saying there is fury over the increase in prices after cancellations and timetable chaos. ‘christmas bonanza. . . if brexit is agreed' — promises the daily express, saying that if theresa may's deal is backed by mps, it will prompt a boom on the high street. and on the subject of christmas, the daily star says the country could face the snowiest winter in seven decades — ‘dreaming of a white out christmas' the paper says. let's start, with the front page
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story from your paper, tim, the resignation of universities minister sam gyimah, not what theresa may would want to see. i think it will be the story of the weekend. there are some people who quit from the government in protest because they are brexiteers, there are some people like sam gyimah who quit because they are remain as. he was the universities and science minister and he said it was his experience of the eu's handling of the galileo programme, one of the things that really pushed him to ta ke things that really pushed him to take a stand. he argues the way in which the eu 27 handled that, they tried to take it away from the british and lock them out is an example of how the deal gives leveraged to the eu, in a way that europeans will exploit. therefore, he says, this deal is about one to britain. he also says theresa may
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should not rule out a second referendum, what is known by some people as the people's vote. this resignation you can class alongside that ofjoe johnson, essentially this is a man who campaigned for remain coming out and saying that this deal is a good example of why leaving the eu actually means we surrender power and influence, in order to become rule takers. there are some brexiteers who he now finds himself in alliance with, who say things like the ute —— eu's relationship is one that we need to get rid of. either way it is troubling for the pm because it points to the coalition in parliament that she faces when she tries to get her withdrawal deal through. it is notjust racketeers, thatis through. it is notjust racketeers, that is where a lot of the media attention is, it is also —— rex adheres. —— brexiteer the mac.
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attention is, it is also —— rex adheres. —— brexiteerthe mac. it attention is, it is also —— rex adheres. —— brexiteer the mac. it is also tory remain as. just to be clear that galileo is the satellite navigation system, the eu's satellite navigation system. in a sense this shows how difficult things are for theresa may because there is no consensus and she is getting objections from both sides. people on both sides are having an argument. in sam gyimah's piece he says that leaving the eu is costing out says that leaving the eu is costing our sovereignty. and it is going to lead to a democratic deficit. that is the kind of argument we were given for voting for brexit. now he says the same thing we are voting for is what we are losing. it is interesting as well is that this is not v deal. this is the transition —— the deal. this is the transition agreement that comes into place while we negotiate the actual deal with could take up to a decade. and
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how these clowns in government have been eating themselves from the feet up been eating themselves from the feet upjust the been eating themselves from the feet up just the past two years just while we are limbering up to enter the starting blocks, this is not even the race yet. how can we possibly hope that the next ten years is going to be a success, which the negotiation needs to be, when all they are doing is resigning and demanding and changing, this isn't even the deal! i can understand resigning on points of principle, but when there are this lacking in any kind of unity or message your purpose, then what hope for the next decade, which is the important bit? this isjust... get your shoes on, we are going for a i’ui'i. your shoes on, we are going for a run. that is a reflection on the quality of politicians, not necessarily on whether leaving the eu isa necessarily on whether leaving the eu is a wise decision. implementing something that was not in the
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referendum... let's go to the front page of the daily mail, which is related, it is about brexit, like all go, chief brexiteer within the cabinet is calling for unity. the story there is that he is saying in the cabinet, so our story is a minister resigning, the daily mail's story is a minister staying put and making a case for the deal. it is not just any minister, making a case for the deal. it is notjust any minister, is michael gove, one—time leadership candidates, very important figure during the leave campaign, the face of the leave campaign, the fact that he has chosen to stay within the cabinet leads brexiteer credibility to theresa may's deal. he says it is not 100% what we want, but the referendum did not deliver a 100% vote to leave either. i have issue with that, that is how democracy
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works. some people take issue with referendums. northern ireland might ta ke referendums. northern ireland might take issue with some of those points. if we are discussing the competence of politicians, they have to hand it over to the people in the cause of a referendum. nonetheless, the point is there are brexiteer is, who have chosen to stay with the cabinet and back the deal to see it through. 0ne cabinet and back the deal to see it through. one reason for that might very simply be that as the prime minister keeps insisting, there is no alternative. there is no plan b currently being considered. the prime minister's argument is it is this or chaos. not only can we not really conceive, not guess whether 01’ really conceive, not guess whether or not it will pass, but the numbers don't look good, the question is what will happen if it doesn't. that is the striking thing. you were saying things not just is the striking thing. you were saying things notjust about michael gove, but about the position of the
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daily mail when it comes to brexit. normally when editors change it is something that readers may not even notice in terms of change of tone. but paul baker has been shifted upstairs, the mail on sunday editor has come across —— paul dacre. the biggest newspaper in the country, like it or not, which are little koala go was calling judges —— which a little while ago was calling judges emily of the —— in the —— and unease that people because it was slowing down brexit. now it is calling people like jacob rees mogg saboteurs and so forth. it is interesting the way it has altered. there are a lot of people saying this is a changing editor that is responsible for this, and is probably a part of that. but i think also the one thing the daily mail and some other papers, but the
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mailing particular is very good at sensing the public mood, particularly the mood of its readership. if people who were generally perhaps middle of the road but fairly probe racks are starting to question whether this is what anybody voted for, and whether this is actually satisfactory, whether it is actually satisfactory, whether it is the road you want to go down, it is the road you want to go down, it is very well to have a binary vote saying do you like unicorns not like unicorns, and someone says the best ican do unicorns, and someone says the best i can do is unicorns, and someone says the best ican do isa unicorns, and someone says the best i can do is a donkey with a tube on its head. at what point do you sense the fact that there are no unicorns and it is a silly vote. one can literally never leave the eu. this is the problem with the way the referendum was worded. wales, england and scotland can leave the eu, northern ireland cannot because it had its own referendum on a softer border. the entire united
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kingdom cannot leave, that is the entire problem, most people i am pretty sure had forgot that we had a land border with the eeo pretty sure had forgot that we had a land borderwith the eeo —— eu, we had a referendum on that. this is back before the good friday agreement... we had to be one of two other stories. two stories on the front page of the guardian. pupil exclusions for racist bullying. 4590 cases of racial abuse among pupils that were deemed serious enough to warrant fixed period or permanent exclusion which is up from 4000 previous year. this comes in the context of a video which went a viable, whiteley or wrongly —— rightly or wrongly. 0ne
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boy, he was a syrian refugee, being bullied by another boy. that's the context of this. the question is, what is it that is driving these figures up? is it the climate? as britain become more racially antagonistic? as a consequence of brexit? 0ne antagonistic? as a consequence of brexit? one does not know. 0r antagonistic? as a consequence of brexit? one does not know. or is it that people are reporting it. people are more conscious of it and are looking for it. it could a combination. i do not know that in the context of that video, it's troubling. it's troubling because it reflects a general rise in hate crimes being reported, children merely reflecting what is happening with the rest of us. this number is rising at a faster rate than the student population so it's something thatis student population so it's something that is infecting people rather than simply being a larger number of pupils. pupil exclusions. how do is
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excluding children from the education system help cure bigotry and stupidity in the group 's? it doesn't. there is nothing in the data, saying these are permanent exclusions or temporary exclusions. but it pupils are being sent out from mainstream schools were relatively diverse populations to pupil referral units where there are the children have been excluded for racially antagonistic behaviour, what are they learning apart from how to be more racist? my argument is, they should be kept in education, and that is what they are lacking, and you can'tjust say, it is paramount. put them in a holding cell equivalents. you have to try to fix the problem and excluding them doesn't do it. let's stick with the guardian, look at its picture from
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the 620. guardian, look at its picture from the g20. the outsiders, vladimir putin owned mohammed bin salman of saudi arabia. i will also bring in the front page of the times which has the two men in this now famous moment high—fiving each other. reflections on the g20. moment high—fiving each other. reflections on the 620. the world is seizing upon this image of vladimir putin greeting the crown prince and one can take away from that whatever one can take away from that whatever one wishes but the world powers with which saudi arabia has the closest relationship, surely britain and america. there are some video out there of them shaking hands, an awkward looking meeting, and she has a p pa re ntly awkward looking meeting, and she has apparently raised the issue of the murder of thejournalist
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apparently raised the issue of the murder of the journalist jamal khashoggie and the war in yemen so people are drawing a comparison between the visceral awkwardness between the visceral awkwardness between western leaders and vladimir putin with saudi arabia. the west is supplying saudi arabia with arms, not that it prudden. what kind of influence are they bringing to bear to get it to change its foreign and domestic policies? this is awkward for britain and america. they have been the primary suppliers of saudi military power in the region. that to me is more important than a few photographs. it's a particularly tense summit. it's behind the scenes where the real deals happen. that is a lot of focus on jamal khashoggi, especially among journalists who are most concerned about the murder of the journalists. are we appeasing them? this happening? the issue is,
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out them? this happening? the issue is, our relationship with saudi arabia provides a footprint in the middle east. a footprint can weaken. hopefully we've used them to anchor opposition to the syrian regime, try to bring some kind of peace. and also yes, we saw them weapons but if we didn't, russia would be. you can guarantee this is why vladimir putin is sucking up to the crown prince while he there. he would love to be to supply arms to them, if we are so upset that there is a breach in relations. it's not good to be talking to some of these people but would you rather all the bullies be there with one of them was on your side and working against the big bully, and vladimir putin? it is a big dilemma. we should be doing this, we shouldn't be doing that. the alternatives are all bad. we are going to have to wrap it up there.
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that is it for the papers denied. don't forget, you consider front page of the papers on line the bbc news website. it's all there for you — seven days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers. and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you to tim stanley and susie boniface. goodbye. hello — i'm sarah mulkerrins at the bbc sport centre. tyson fury says he has achieved one of the "best comebacks of all time" as he prepares to face deontay wilder in a bout labelled highly significant for british boxing. the pair weighed in today in los angeles ahead of saturday's wbc title fight and for the briton, the fight comes less than six months after his return from a 30—month lay—off, during which he battled depression, drink and drugs. so what kind of bout can we expect, former undipsuted champion
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of the division, evander holyfield gave us his assesment. if tyson fury makes this fight so ugly. if tyson fury makes this fight so if tyson fury makes this fight so ugly, i think what's going to happen? certain people get under your skin happen? certain people get under yourskin andi happen? certain people get under your skin and i think that tyson fury would get under your skin a little bit. as an up—and—down fight, because when you're a good fighter, you know how to agitate people and i think the only way —— the only way you can beat them is agitated. cardiff manager neil warnock‘s 70th birthday celebrations may have started early after his side came from behind to beat wolves 2—1. junior hoilett produced a stunning second half winner to move the welsh team out of the premier league relegation zone on the eve of his manager's landmark birthday.
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i will sleep well tonight, won't i? imean, i'm i will sleep well tonight, won't i? i mean, i'm not getting any younger, as you know. moments this, you've got to treasure. when the whistle goes, you see your family up there, it's an amazing feeling. it is going to be an extra special day tomorrow. i've got all the kids with me tomorrow sun going to be really pleased. i know sharon is organising it. you know what it's like in football. it is going to be good. national league side solihull moors will be in the third round draw of the fa cup for the first time after they held league one blackpool to a goalless draw. a record crowd at their damson park ground saw solihull find the net in the first half, but alex gudger‘s goal was disallowed because darren carter was ruled offside during the corner kick. in rugby union's premiership, exeter chiefs have lost for the first time this season the league leaders were beaten 28—26 by harlequins at the twickenham stoop. exeter scored an early try but quins
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were in front for most of the match. nathan earle scored twice before joe marchant crossed the line late on to seal the win and a bonus point. it's exeter‘s first defeat away from home since february. england were denied a win in their opening match at the hockey world cup — drawing 2—all with china. mark gleghorne scored the first from a penalty corner to equalise after china had gone ahead and it took until the fourth quarter for england to take the lead thanks to this one from liam ansell but china levelled it up though in the the closing seconds. england beat uganda 65—53 in their second test at the copperbox in london tonight and with it claimed the three match series 2—nil. the roses stormed into a 39—22 half—time lead, thanks to helen housby and rachel dunn. uganda rallied in the third and fourth quarters as roses head coach tracey neville rotated her squad, but the match ended with george fisher scoring the final points. great britain won silver in the men's team sprint on day one
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of the track cycling world cup in berlin. the three man team of jason kenny, philip hines and ryan 0wens go off to a flying start against the netherlands, in the gold medal race. but the brits were overtaken by the world champions heading into the final lap and were forced to settle for silver. hello there. looking ahead to the all—important hello there. looking ahead to the all—importa nt weekend weather, hello there. looking ahead to the all—important weekend weather, we've all—important weekend weather, we've all got some rain coming but it's not going to be a complete washout. there will be some dry moments but the weather will be quite cloudy and we will see some rain at times. the satellite picture shows an area of low pressure to the west of the uk willders cloud streaming in this rain bearing cloud. it is already getting into wales and western areas
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of england. there will be some rain around tonight. it —— eastern scotland, north—east england. although its breezy, in some of the deeper valleys, we might get a few patches of frost across the north—east. looking into the forecast for saturday morning, it's a wet one to southern counties of england. the rain is going to be quite heavy and it will push its way eastwards. the rain gets a little patch in nature. the start of the day, scotland. there'll be of sunshine here. they will be there not through rest of the day. the rain band will slowly push its way eastwards. then it's a slow brightening up process but a lot of cloud. 14 degrees, not bad for that time of year. about eight degrees,
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that's what we would expect this time of year. the first band of rain clears away, with another batch of the atlantic. notice it pushes further northwards into northern england and into scotland as well. looking at sunday 's forecast, across east anglia and south—east england, the rain should push through the most areas. there will be brighter weather before we see the cloud thickened again. looking at more rain coming in. wales, south—west england. rain pushing slowly northwards. given all the wet weather we've seen on recent days across scotland, we could see localised surface water flooding. 15 degrees, the top temperature, very mild. it will cool off. for scotland, it could turn out to be quite chilly the time towards the middle part of the week. temperatures in edinburgh coming down to five degrees or so. rain at
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times probably best sums up the weather but it won't be raining all weekend. some dry moments to get out and about and enjoy your weekend. they get is the latest weather. goodbye for now. hello, this is bbc news. i'm ben bland. our top stories: world leaders gather in buenos aires for the g20 summit, but there's tension over trade, climate change, and the situation in ukraine. a 7.0 magnitude earthquake hits alaska, near the city of anchorage, causing widespread damage. a massive data breach at the marriott hotel group. hackers steal the personal details of hundreds of millions of customers. and we'll bring you the extraordinary story of how doctors rebuilt this man's face, after he suffered disastrous gunshot wounds.
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