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tv   The Papers  BBC News  February 28, 2019 11:30pm-12:01am GMT

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hello, this is bbc news. i'm sharanjit leyl in hanoi, we will be taking a look at tomorrow where the trump—kim summit ends and wet and windy weather. this next area of low pressure will bring wet with no deal, no morning's papers in a moment. agreement, no warm words. first the headlines: weather to southern parts of the president trump points the finger, country for sunday. a ridge of high a woman convicted of killing her saying north korea wanted pressure for friday top lots of all sanctions lifted, husband with a hammer wins an appeal against the murder conviction. cloud and one or two showers. rain sally challen now faces a retrial, after defence lawyers argued she had something he could not accept. suffered decades of arriving across northern ireland psychological abuse. you always have to be prepared to later on. a few degrees above the a man is found guilty of manslaughter after he supplied his girlfriend with drugs walk. i could have signed an at the bestival music event in 2017. agreement today, and they knew average for the time of year. during ceon broughton did little to help people would have said, oh, what a 24—year—old louella fletcher—michie as she suffered a reaction friday night, this feature will bring a spell of gales and rain, terrible deal, what a terrible thing to a class—a drug. certainly for saturday for this will two men tell the bbc he did. no, you have to be prepared they were abused repeatedly bea by the pop star michaeljackson to walk. but that has been flatly certainly for saturday for this will be a shock to the system. it starts contradicted by north korea. it says it was only asking in the 1980s and early 1990s. largely dry with good spells of for partial sanction relief. the agents who arranged the doomed translation: if the united states sunshine up and down the country. flight carrying the footballer weekly the wind and cloud will pick emiliano sala say that removes up weekly the wind and cloud will pick up and outbreaks of rain, heavy and cardiff city had let him down. persistent slowly moving to the you're playing all the wrong notes. east. wind gusts of 60 miles per and andre previn, the oscar—winning film composer, conductor, hour, maybe 70 miles per hour in and star of this famed
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morecambe and wise sketch, dies at the age of 89. western scotland and could potentially be disruptive. 0n sunday, and other teacher bringing potentially a wet day for some of us. potentially a wet day for some of us. a little bit unsure how far north it will move but much of wales, and england wet and windy. further north mixture of blustery hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be showers and sunny spells and some will be wintry. it will feel cooler bringing us tomorrow. with me are the former fleet street editor eve pollard and the financial times political oi’ correspondent laura hughes. will be wintry. it will feel cooler or all. at the start of next week, many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the i leads with the decision tightly packed isoba rs. by court of appealjudges to overturn sally challen‘s conviction for murdering her or all. at the start of next week, husband, after suffering four tightly packed isobars. quite windy at times. showers and longer spells decades of controlling behaviour of rain. wintry falls, even on the and abuse from him. higher ground of england and wales. cooler air down from the north—west. plenty of winter showers across the lawyers quoted by the telegraph said high ground of scotland. the decision will now pave the way temperatures in single figures for for dozens of other women most of us. slightly below the in similar situations to appeal their own convictions. the mail also features that story on its front page, seasonal most of us. slightly below the seasonal average. most of us. slightly below the seasonal average. tuesday, a similar sort of day. breezy and windy in as does the mirror.
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meanwhile, the times says that nhs england wants to scrap four—hour exposure to the north—west wind. waiting targets for a&e, because it thinks the rules possible heavy showers. some good encourage hospitals to prioritise patients waiting the longest over those in most need of urgent care. spells of sunshine between showers. the guardian leads with criticism of the government's gender pay beyond tuesday, it remains pretty gap reporting scheme. u nsettled. beyond tuesday, it remains pretty unsettled. low pressure always it claims mathmatically impossible nearby so we continue to see data still hasn't been corrected, and says not one firm has showers. winds from the north—west, been fined forfailing to comply with legislation. never a direction, particularly this time of year. a milder temperature the metro reports that ceon broughton has been found guilty of the manslaughter of his girlfriend, louela fletcher—michie, the daughter of a holby city actor, after he gave her drugs nudging in towards the end of the at bestival in dorset. week. temperatures average. a little below average at times through next week. wind and rain and showers as well but also some sunshine in between. sally challen, and the front of the daily mail, is this justice at last for abused wives? they are immediately going from one pace into
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the broader category of cases. are they justified in doing the broader category of cases. are theyjustified in doing that?” think it is more a case of looking into the future and looking at how juries and defence barristers handle these cases, judge these cases, view them, what the public at large also understand by domestic abuse. i am not sure in retrospect how much of a difference it will make. i don't know because of course this case today, the grounds of appeal were that she had these mental health issues, but the lawyers have made a huge issue of coercive control. and this is something where the law has been changed much more recently, by theresa may. yes, when theresa may was home secretary she changed the law so coercive control was officially recognised as a form of abuse and if you are found guilty you can go to prison for up to five yea rs. you can go to prison for up to five years. so our understanding of domestic abuse is changing and i think it has followed a public awareness that has grown. i remember
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on the archers there was that famous storyline where people started to understand why some wives are driven to killing their husband. it wasn't as simple as people had thought on the outside. and in terms of the future for abused wives, in terms of oui’ future for abused wives, in terms of our understanding of what women feel they can say to their gps, of what women feel like they suddenly are able to claim is happening to them, hopefully also women will feel like they can tell people and they will be believed, and they will be able to rationalise it by putting on paper and giving these definitions, and the law changing to recognise it. i do think it will impact our justice system. and impact the way people live, because there will be millions of women who read this story tomorrow, and they perhaps we re never story tomorrow, and they perhaps were never thinking of killing their husbands, perhaps, they were thinking of leaving him, but too terrified and lost their confidence and have been eroded, their whole spirit has been eroded by alpha
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males, as you say, who are not worthy of this, and i will control everything, and you can only eat this, drive this, go there, allthe re st of this, drive this, go there, allthe rest of it. i think in a way it will affect the way we look at relationships. and as we say, years ago, when these refuges were opened, this was... domestic abuse, it was hitting, dashing, and often people living close enough to hear it.” hitting, dashing, and often people living close enough to hear it. i am interested , living close enough to hear it. i am interested, because you remember that his back in the 1970s, i think the first one might have been in chiswick, in west london. you became a newspaper editor in that period. did you find any kind of resistance from other journalists, predominantly male journalists, to weather these stories were really as big a deal? 0h weather these stories were really as big a deal? oh yes, male journalists said yes, some men give their wives
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a bit ofa said yes, some men give their wives a bit of a hard time, said yes, some men give their wives a bit ofa hard time, but said yes, some men give their wives a bit of a hard time, but isn't that pa rt of a bit of a hard time, but isn't that part of it? we were discussing even earlier about your grandparents and my parents who conned only argued about money, and that was accepted, and the wife was supposed to note every penny and make sure... wife got the housekeeping every week, and all of that. or even the other way around. she knew where it was going otherwise. but it is very, very interesting that so many particularly middle—class people, where nobody can hear you being bashed around, nobody can hear the husband being horrible to you, and perhaps in public you can keep up the facade, i think this willjust change the atmosphere. it will be slow, and it may not be about women who are going to kill their husbands, but behaviour, behavioural patterns. exactly, and the government put out a draft domestic abuse bill a few weeks ago which
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said it will recognise economic abuse so i think in the future we will see more cases of that, men controlling their wives because salaries, controlling the bank account, preventing them from leaving the relationship, preventing them... and if you have no money of your own, you feel powerless, however nice your house may be, or whatever. and that is what is fascinating, these women living in beautiful million pound houses, dressed impeccably, who on the surface have this perfect life, you go round for dinner parties and there are these pictures of them with the children, everything looks perfect. and this trouble, there are literally pictures of them cuddling one another. people from the outside would have had no idea. but her sons did, and they said we like the idea that she will be freed for the first time since she was 15. that is when she met him, and since then she has either been in his control after she killed him, in the control of the
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state. a story we will definitely come back to. moving on to the telegraph, the top right—hand side of the front page tomorrow morning, stopping gang violence, says trevor phillips. it is interesting, because we haven't got the whole piece. we have their commentary on what he has written. the chairman of the equality and human rights commission, and he is saying that because we don't, because we are embarrassed and being careful, talk about these boys who are being knifed and doing the drug running and being part of the county lines being as black, he says we are whitewashing it. we are doing exactly what we used to do with asian men who are grooming white women. and he said that doesn't help anybody. we are not being honest. and interestingly, iwent anybody. we are not being honest. and interestingly, i went to an interfaith thing, with muslims and all sorts of other people and nobody dared talk about colour and nobody dared talk about colour and nobody dared talk about race, because we are all quite rightly being so
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careful. so i can't talk about what he is actually saying, but it is very interesting that he has come to this conclusion and is saying we shouldn't whitewash it, we should talk about black boys being killed. it is striking that there is also a sense of kind of inconsistency. we heard the chief constable in the west midlands yesterday saying look at the numbers of lads who are dying in birmingham from knife crime, all that focus on london but actually the question of whether race affect the question of whether race affect the coverage, whether there is less interest from television and newspapers and radio because predominantly the young men who have died have been black. i wonder if hundreds of white teenagers died in london on the same period, would there have been a different amount of coverage? had they been etonians, they would have been. that is an interesting question, and often the cove rage interesting question, and often the coverage gets really blurred. there are so many cases
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coverage gets really blurred. there are so many cases that you almost become acclimatised to it and desensitised. trevor phillips has done a lot of work on this just more generally. he did that incredible programme a few years ago that challenged my own preconceptions. i didn't think you are allowed to say that, but he is very good at this, and he is very good at making everybody sort of sit up. in that case of that lawyer who they did a double page spread where he had a motorhead, he had £5,000, i think, on him, and he had been thrown out of school, which is i think probably going to be part of this story. and we talk this week about the problem of exclusions. and he was definitely making money running drugs. and nobody then... i mean, there was a double page spread that told you all this, it didn't go any further. on the point he made an appointment in that programme was you identify groups, you then can focus on them
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and you can stop what is happening from happening. if you say, you know, actually... too sensitive to say to this group is. and we were four years with the grooming of white girls, and he is saying that doesn't help. you have to look at this honestly and confront it. interesting debate. further down in the telegraph, minister quits. these days ministerial resignation barely makes a paragraph on the front page. it is amazing, it is a nib on the front page that a minister has quit. nib, news in brief, for those who don't know. yes, he is a eurosceptic at the environmental department, which is interesting because of course fishing is a huge issue in brexit negotiations. one that hasn't been entirely resolve, has it? and farmers, as well. i am sure a lot of farmers, as well. i am sure a lot of farmers and fishermen are annoyed that this particular minister has
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chosen to leave when these issues haven't been resolved given he campaigned for us to leave the eu. he has quit because the pm earlier this week promised parliament that it will have a chance to extend article 50. there will be a meaningful vote on 12 march, the day after there will be a vote on leaving without a deal, if that doesn't go through there will be a vote on extending article 50. there area vote on extending article 50. there are a lot of euro skip dick mps who are a lot of euro skip dick mps who are unhappy at that prospect. he is one of them —— eurosceptic. there was an amendment which basically set out what the pm had promised in the house of commons. 100 mps didn't vote for it as they were told to. house of commons. 100 mps didn't vote for it as they were told tom is an indicator of how solid that phalanx of brexiteers really is. and george eustice is sort of saying... had he not been a minister, he would have done it. and he wants to be free to vote potentially for a no deal and against extending article 50 in the votes that come up next month. and it is interesting, the brexiteers are saying the remainers
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are influencing her whereas it looks to me like the brexiteers are influencing her quite a lot, but it isa influencing her quite a lot, but it is a mess. she is going to have to come down on one side. all she has donein come down on one side. all she has done in reality by giving mps this vote in a few weeks' time is delay another decision and kick the can in the wee run out of metaphors. —— until we run out of metaphors. macron was giving interesting signals, saying yes, but only if you give a clearjustification for why you can't get a deal through now. 0bviously you can't get a deal through now. obviously there are eurosceptics who fear they would like to keep extending it. mrs may said it was a 1—off. extending it. mrs may said it was a 1-off. but she never said which june and which year. gender pay. this is what theresa may was championing. to tackle the
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disparity between the pay between men and women forjobs of equal worth. we are weeks of reporting for next year and all these various companies filed inaccurate figures. they have been found to have made m ista kes they have been found to have made mistakes and yet they have not been fined. if there is no punishment, there are no repercussions of... kamran started this. if you work in that company and you see nobody is fined and nothing changes, you do, where are the politicians, whereas the sanctions? it makes your pay gap looks less awful than it is and why would any new fiddle the figures. there was talk about naming and
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shaming. that would be quite interesting. as we have a list of the best schools and hospitals. the times, an interesting story. waiting for ame to be scrapped. this was put in by labour, the whole thing about people waiting in corridors and the nightmare that it is. now they are saying that they are very worried that, because somebody has been there for three hours, somebody coming in with a straight may have to wait which would be dreadful. basically the targets destroyed the medical calculations. it seems to me we do not have a proper desire for a proper hospital. i have had a friend
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with a straight. a different number, a different hospital if he goes somewhere with a different hospital. medicine has changed so much. somebody has to be in the a&e, someone judging what is more at or less serious. hospitals have not been built that way. it was a concern for labour in the 90s. tories said they wanted to get rid of targets because of a distorted the medical priorities but all governments have found useful tools. journalists and the public would have no way of holding them to account because you do not know what
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they are doing if you get rid of them. where is the accountability? do we do itjust before winter comes in when they have the most people going in. it is a risky one. there is the accountability issue. let end on the paper used to edit. just got it was quite a nice sweet story, kate feeling broody for number four. there may be more babies. there we go. you are cheered. more babies. more headlines. more photographs.” hope they do hand—me—downs. more headlines. more photographs.” hope they do hand-me-downs. you can
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see the front pages on our webpage. and if you missed the programme, you can watch it later on the iplayer. most see it thanks, was a pleasure to have you here. thank you for your company. at next is sport. ——up. five weeks on from the plane crash that killed the player, sala, and a pilot, treble arrangements were made
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after the team abandoned him. cardiff city reject their claims insisting sala was making his arrangements. he was abandoned in the hotel, more or less. no—one at cardiff seemed to be doing anything and it was a bit embarrassing because they paid 70 million euros and then left him in a hotel by himself, trying to go on the computer and look for a flight. fulham have sacked claudio ranieri. the club is still struggling. ten points from safety. claudio ranieri ali took over in november. he was in
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charge for 16 league games but won just three. the chairman, said khan, said that claudio agreed to that decision and that a change was best to everyone. claudio ranieri has not been the right appointment. at that timei been the right appointment. at that time i reluctantly accepted it. i was was disappointed when he left thejob, i was was disappointed when he left the job, i thought was was disappointed when he left thejob, i thought he was was disappointed when he left the job, i thought he deserved more time considering the amazing work that he did to get full in the premier league. ranieri's mission was simple, keeping fulham in the premier league but now you would have to accept that fulham are almost certainly relegated. criticism by leading players are the concerns welfare are not at the
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forefront of world rugby proposals. new zealand to travel the world 12 times. it is an ready packed international and domestic schedule. they are accused of being out of touch. the deer of playing three games in consecutive weeks across the southern hemisphere, which is a huge geographical challenge, and then back into the competition, five matches in five weeks for the teams who make it through to the final, it is just who make it through to the final, it isjust and who make it through to the final, it is just and ask too much for most players. ed clancy led britain to silver in poland as australia smashed the world record to claim gold. the team finished in a time of
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three minutes 48th second. that lowered that world record which they sat at the commonwealth games. leads toa sat at the commonwealth games. leads to a markup for the tokyo 0lympics. the women also took silver. just like the men, they were beaten by australia in the final. they were beaten by just two tenths australia in the final. they were beaten byjust two tenths of australia in the final. they were beaten by just two tenths of a second. saint helens have got top of the league. a comfortable win over the red devils. the first try midway through the first half. it was a captain who sealed the rather co mforta ble captain who sealed the rather comfortable win late in the second half. st helens fought from four in
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the season. enjoy the rest of your evening. the weather is not quite back to where it should be. still quite mild. the february heatwave will soon be a distant memory because the weather turning ball turbulent across the atlantic. low pressure coming our way. we've have had some damp weather today, particularly across southern and western areas. a lot of mist and merck i the end of the night. five degrees in the north. the weather tomorrow not to bat, particularly across western parts. —— not too bad. belfast perhaps getting some sunshine but for most of us quite a cloudy and
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mild day. rain sweeping into northern ireland western parts of the uk on friday night. it could be quite heavy. by saturday, that reina more patchy and you can see it stretches along the eastern coast of the uk. saturday looking blustery. this is the low pressure of setting the weather. this is what we really should be having this time of the year, from the atlantic. the weather does not look as though it will be that bad across the south—east, perhaps better than we initially thought. 0n perhaps better than we initially thought. on saturday, it will be quite right. the rain and wind across all western areas and that rain will take time to reach at parts of the country. it is sunday that will not be particularly pleasa nt that will not be particularly pleasant across the south. another
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weather front moving through. the south getting a bit of a soaking. probably not raining through all of the day but a big chunk will be wet. la ke the day but a big chunk will be wet. lake district northwoods is looking dry on sunday. —— north. it looks we keep the relatively cool weather with unsettled conditions continuing. 0n the whole, some sunny spells from time to time as well. it is not a write—off but it will be quite changeable. that is it from me, goodbye.
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