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tv   BBC News at 9  BBC News  March 11, 2019 9:00am-10:01am GMT

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hello, this is bbc news, the hello, it's monday, it's 10 o'clock, i'm victoria derbyshire. headlines. pressure mounts on boeing can theresa may survive the week? after the ethiopia air disaster — tomorrow the prime minister is due china grounds all its 737 max—8s, for urgent checks. to put her plan for brexit to the commons again seven british nationals were among you're watching bbc news at 9:003m the 157 people killed in the crash. after she suffered a crushing defeat they include un workerjoanna toole. first time around injanuary. with me, carrie gracie. the headlines... her father paid tribute to her. how do you want your mp to vote this time around? pressure mounts on boeing let me know. after the ethiopia air disaster. i'm very proud of what she achieved. china grounds all its 737 max—8s, for urgent checks. it's just tragic that she couldn't china has now grounded seven british nationals were among all of the country's boeing carry on to further her the 157 people killed in the crash. 737—max 8 passenger jets career and achieve more. after that plane crash yesterday in ethiopia, they include un workerjoanna toole. killing all 157 people on board. it comes as the first details her father paid tribute to her. of the seven british victims begin to emerge. one is named as un workerjoanna toole. yeah, i'm very proud downing street says talks between the uk herfather paid tribute. of what she achieved. and the european union it's just tragic that she couldn't are deadlocked — just a day before yeah, i'm very proud of what she achieved. carry on to further her career mps are due to vote for a second it's just tragic that she couldn't carry on to further her career and achieve more. and achieve more. time on theresa may's brexit plan. downing street says two years after the killing of kim jong—un s half—brother talks between the uk in malaysia, murder charges and the european union against one of the defendants are dropped. are deadlocked just a day before a 27—year old man is mps will vote for a second time due in court today, on theresa may's brexit plan charged with assaulting a 15—year—old boy is the second aston villa's jack grealish on the pitch during a game. person to be charged
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with the murder ofjodie chesney, who was stabbed in a park in east london. time now for the morning briefing, where we bring you up to speed two years after the killing on the stories people are watching, of kimjong—un s half—brother in malaysia, murder charges against one of the defendants are dropped. reading and sharing. a 27—year old man is due in court today, and of course, that air crash in charged with assaulting aston villa's jack grealish ethiopian it is top of the list. on the pitch during a game. 157 people — including and, your chance to seven britons — have died after an ethiopian airlines plane shape our coverage. crashed, killing all on board. the bbc is in bradford all week, plane maker boeing is facing questions taking an in—depth look about its 737 max 8 aircraft. at the city, and we want to hear ysterday‘s incident came just months after a crash involving the same what stories you want us to cover. type of plane left 189 dead. aviation analyst sally gethin told bbc breakfast that it was unprecedented. details are starting to come out a little more. yesterday was very patchy, a bit fragmented, boeing was making good morning and welcome a very limited comment about what was going to happen. now we know that boeing to the bbc news at 9:00am. the british ambassador to ethiopia is dispatching its own personnel
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says staff are working to establish the details of a plane crash that's killed 157 people, and the ntsb, which is the aviation including seven uk nationals. safety regulatory body in the united states, over to ethiopia. they'll be cooperating with the ethiopian authorities and they'll be getting stuck in right away. right. what do you know about... joanna toole, who was you know, it's very, from devon and worked for the united nations, was among those who lost their lives. very early days. the ethiopian airlines boeing 737 was on its way to kenya. as far as we understand it, it was the second crash in five it was on take—off, or shortly months involving this after it had taken off, specific type of plane. that this happened. yeah. in response, china and ethiopian it was, like, six minutes airlines have grounded the latest in, so that suggests model of their boeing 737 for safety checks. it was still in climb mode. james waterhouse reports. right. climb and descent, but particularly climb, this is where ethiopian airlines are the most critical phases of flight. flight 302 came down, that's just an industry standard just six minutes and 37 miles across the board for all aircraft. into its journey. so, anything that goes the cause is not yet clear. wrong in those stages is going to be more potentially, carry more consequences, worst—case scenario be catastrophic. it's not yet clear what caused the once it comes out of the climb, it stabilises, goes into cruise altitude. 737 max—8 crash. there were 149 passengers you know, there's all and eight crew on board. sorts of speculation aviation experts suspect it plunged about what might have happened, vertically into the ground about a centre that wasn't working properly. i'm sure we'll find all this out and exploded on impact.
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there are victims from 35 in the coming hours and days ahead. different countries. but there have been problems many were on their way with this plane before. just a few months ago. to a united nations conference in nairobi, including 36—year—old joanna toole. what does that tell you about this now her father has paid tribute plane specifically and how others saying it's tragic she won't be able might be reacting to that? to achieve more in her career yeah. with the un. well, we mustn'tjump to conclusions i'll probably remember her initially because everything as actually far too hard has to be looked at. working for her own good. it does, it is a bit there was many a time concerning that it is the second aircraft of its type, i advised her to take it easy the b737 max 8 is but when you've got a vocation, a very new aircraft. when you've got a passion there are thousands of orders now for something, it's not like an ordinary 9—5job. for this particular aircraft also named is polar tourism and the b737 max family as a whole — about 5,000 orders for boeing expert sarah auffret, who was on her way to discuss of this aircraft type. tackling plastic pollution in the seas. the legacy of the 737 is very yesterday in south london ben kuria strong but, like you say, the lion air crash came down, heard that his father, joseph waithaka, was among the dead. and that's quite unprecedented to have two modern, cutting—edge aircraft go down within such a short timeframe. found out that nearly everybody had passed away and it was just a frantic rush to work the phones to kind of try and get any with only a day to go before mps information that we could get. are due to be given a second vote on theresa may's brexit the boeing 737—800 max is the same withdrawal agreement, downing street type of aircraft bought by lion air has said negotiations that crashed off indonesia last with the eu are deadlocked.
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conservative mp george freeman — 0ctober. there, 189 passengers and crew were killed, a former head of theresa may's also shortly after takeoff. policy unit — told radio 4's today programme that he hoped mps would vote in favour of the withdrawal agreement and then the pressure is growing for boeing to guarantee the model's safety. choose a new party leader. ethiopian airlines has now grounded i think we're in a very, very serious crisis. serious crisis, because? all planes of the same model, as have china airlines and cayman airways. well, i think brexit is really boeing says it is deeply saddened a very big test for parliament. and ready to help investigators. james waterhouse, bbc news. i think the country sent a big message for change, without being totally clear what that change was. it wants to leave the a spokesman for ethiopian european union, but i think airlines has been giving it was a bigger vote. an update on the crash. and i think parliament at the moment we have grounded all boeing b 737—8 is struggling to adapt to and come to terms with that. i'm very clear i was for remain, my constituency voted 62%, max fleet which ethiopian airlines like many mps, we've got to leave the european union. the instruction didn't say specifically how, was operating and was involved and i think parliament's got to restore trust by in yesterday's accident signalling we're not as a precaution safety measure. going back on this vote, but neither will we make this a triumphalist moment for a narrow minority. but this does not mean that the incident was related we've got to deliver a one—nation brexit. with defects on this specific fleet. if we fail, i think public trust
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in parliament will get worse and worse, and that but we have taken this could be very serious. as an extra safety precaution. but there may be plenty who would say, well, that's not the prime minister's fault, that's parliament. she has negotiated what she thinks china has grounded all its 737 max—8 is the best deal for the country. you could come together, planes. let's speak to robin either to back it or to back some alternative, and it is mps that brant in shanghai. are failing, not her. what are the chinese saying? on the so they would argue it's a sort of indulgence to talk face of it they are acting with an about replacing the prime minister when we're potentially one day away abundance of caution but nonetheless from the most important vote acting swiftly, and order going out in your parliamentary career. yeah, well, let's be just after nine o'clock this morning clear, i'm absolutely not calling for her to go now. saying all 96 737 max—8 planes in i wanted her to see through the withdrawal. it was always clear to me that it would be such a punishing, service here should be grounded and politically punishing should not fly after 6pm tonight, process, that whoever delivers it will then have to go, and i think that is the case. that's less than an hour to go to that's less than an hour to go to i hope this week that my that deadline. in a brief statement they point to the similarities colleagues see sense and realise that this is the withdrawal agreement, between the crash in ethiopia and we have to start this process. the crash in indonesia five months this isn't the end state. ago that happened minutes after the planes had ta ken ago that happened minutes after the planes had taken off. they also talk about management principles of zero tolerance for about management principles of zero tolera nce for safety about management principles of zero tolerance for safety hazards and now let's look at what has caught
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also strict control of safety risks. your attention on the bbc website. this ground stop effectively on the 96 aircraft is indefinite, and it most of them are running in our bbc agenda. the most watched. the top of will stay in place until china's civil aviation administration says that list at the moment is a video it has confirmed the relevant called, is the uk actually in a measures to effectively ensures flight measures to effectively ensures flight safety. a pretty ambiguous crisis? and it looks at crises we term. i hope there's some important have lived through in history. the context to this. china is hugely suez, the winter of discontent, the important as a marketplace for globalfinancial boeing with one in every four new suez, the winter of discontent, the global financial crash of 2008. and boeing with one in every four new boeing planes coming here, and it talks about whether we are in similar scale of crisis on this boeing planes coming here, and boeing has been assembling planes here in china as of last year with a occasion, and with some analysts. so plant not far from here look at that if you have a moment, it is interesting. and there is a here in china as of last year with a plant not farfrom here in shanghai. the important thing to mention is that i think boeing is going to very touching second one in our feature pretty predominantly in list, which is a gentleman called ongoing negotiations between the united states and china in terms of that trade war and those negotiations reportedly due to come toa derek horsington, who came out as negotiations reportedly due to come to a head in the next two weeks. 93v derek horsington, who came out as gay at the age of 68, it took in there have been many reports, particularly from the us side about that long. and he belongs to an lgbt a further tranche of large scale walking group. some of them in that acquisitions of boeing aircraft by
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video discuss the challenges they china airlines may be featuring in faced in coming out. wyatt proved any future deal. boeing have put out any future deal. boeing have put out a statement saying there is no very ha rd faced in coming out. wyatt proved very hard for them. that is quite a reason to grounded aircraft at this moving human interest story. and time. they are saying that they see going back down to the most no reason in the initial aftermath watched... i thought this one at to give any further orders to their number three, i think we will leave customers or regulatory bodies. in a how desserts revolutionise out, but statement from china's aviation administration, it was fairly brief, numberfour how desserts revolutionise out, but number four is how desserts revolutionise out, but numberfour is in kabul and is an extraordinary insight into the lives citing comparisons between the two of ambulance workers in the afghan crashes and then talked in a fairly capital. how children, when they go ambiguous way about safety hazards, out to school in the morning, their zero tolerance, and needing to get pa rents out to school in the morning, their parents don't know if they are going the relevant measures to ensure to come home at night. and it flight the relevant measures to ensure flight safety. it leads some to suspect that there is more to this follows the work of the ambulance than simply just acting workers. and if you have time, it is suspect that there is more to this than simplyjust acting on an abundance of caution. robin, thank well worth it for a look at the you. human story behind the headlines in the british embassy in ethiopia has said that that very, very dangerous and anyone worried about a british loved one who may have been affected by the crash can call them damaged city. anyway, that is on our on 00 251116170100. most watched list this morning and thatis
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most watched list this morning and that is our morning briefing. more on our top story — with only a day to go before mps and pressure is mounting on boeing are given a second vote after the ethiopia air disaster, as china grounds all its 737 on theresa may's brexit withdrawal max—8s, for urgent checks. agreement, downing street has conceded that negotiations 0ur correspondent emmanuel with the eu are deadlocked. igunza as at the scene of the crash in bishoftu. number ten says talks will continue today but there are no plans for the attorney general, geoffrey cox, to join them — what is happening there now? well, and theresa may isn't expected to make a last minute trip to brussels. the recovery efforts have now entered the second day and just conservative brexiteers have warned they won't vote for the agreement as it stands. behind me, the authorities have now this all comes at the start of a crucial week brought in several excavators who for brexit and mrs may. are digging particularly into one there are some key votes area where the plane hit the ground scheduled in parliament. let's take a look at what's when it crashed yesterday morning, expected in the coming days. sunday morning. and we have seen them making a progress and the tomorrow, mps will get another chance to vote authorities have told us the main on the prime minister's withdrawal focus now is to is to try to find agreement. in the previous vote the remains of any of the passengers in january the government was defeated by 230 votes. who were on that plane, but also crucially, trying to find the black box which will offer some clues to but if this time it passes, the investigators into why this the major barrier to the uk leaving the eu on 29th march will have been plane crashed here in this area. cleared, although further
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legislation will be required have you been able to talk to any more witnesses in the area he saw to ensure a smooth exit. the plane coming down? if mps vote against the deal again, the government will table further votes for this week. yes, indeed, and many of them are starting with a vote on wednesday, still here following the crash in which mps will be asked if they support "leaving the eu accident. we were speaking to some without a withdrawal agreement of them. this particular area is a and a framework for a future farmland and there are just houses relationship on 29 march". nearby. we spoke to some of them, this is essentially giving they told us at the moment of the mps the opportunity to decide whether to back — or rule out — the uk leaving the eu crash, what they heard was a loud bang and smoke billowing from the with no deal in place. if mps vote to rule scene. there was fire. and you can out a no—deal brexit. see that evidently here. some of the out a no—deal brexit, parts of the plane are very charred the following day, and we have seen they have made more on thursday, mps will have progress in trying to get the day be the opportunity to vote on whether they support a "short because this is critical in the extension" of article 50 s two—year negotiating period. investigation. -- the debris. we are if mps back this motion then the uk will ask the eu for an extension having difficulty with the line. we beyond the original deadline will try it one more question. of friday 29th march. describe for us, going back to the 0ur assistant political editor, norman smith plans for the next few days, talking is at westminster this morning. about the black box, how is the government and the aviation norman, i hope you enjoyed that
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authorities in ethiopia handling explanation of what will happen this this, are they looking for week. i did. let's international assistance? explanation of what will happen this week. idid. let's see. we explanation of what will happen this week. i did. let's see. we always say it's another critical brexit week, maybe. because there are signs we do understand that the that there was a series of votes manufacture of the plane, boeing, has already sent its investigative might not happen because there are tea m has already sent its investigative initial indications that once again team here, they will bejoining has already sent its investigative team here, they will be joining the ethiopian authorities. we also mrs may could seek to fudge, delay, what's shaping up to be an understand other international experts willjoin the investigation absolutely crunch vote tomorrow tea m experts willjoin the investigation team and we expect this to go on for because all the signs are there will not be a breakthrough in brussels, several days because even as we and if there is no deal in brussels speak macro recovery efforts are then she is heading to almost still ongoing, we expect that to go certain defeat if the vote goes on for several days as they search for the black box that will offer ahead as planned tomorrow because clues. the ethiopian government has tory brexiteers, all the signs are also declared a national day of some have peeled off but most are still determined to vote against mourning today for all those her. labour mps haven't been impressed by the bits and bobs they individuals who died in that plane have been offered, a bit more cash crash. so it is quite a sombre mood. for some of their towns, guarantees the airline is a source of pride for on employment law, its only picked off two or three labour mps and many ethiopians, so the news of the there is no real movement behind mrs crash has sudden —— saddened many may's deal. so if the vote goes because this airline has a good ahead tomorrow, i think pretty much
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safety record and this came as a eve ryo ne ahead tomorrow, i think pretty much everyone thinks she will lose and surprise to many, and they are lose big time. this is mark really at a period of mourning for those who died in that accident. francois, one of the big names in jacob rees—mogg's erg group, who was immanuel, thank you so much for that asked this week what chance of the update from the scene. let's get deal going through. more analysis now. we are joined now by aviation expert i think it's very unlikely, because, to use her favourite phrase, nothing john strickland for an update. what are your thoughts at this has changed. the house of commons point, what is your attention on? voted it down by 230 votes, it was it is at the stage where the the biggest defeat for a government accident investigators begin their work and leisure reporter said, the in parliamentary history, and because the negotiations seem to key for them is finding the flight have stalled, unless geoffrey cox data recorders and the voice comes up have stalled, unless geoffrey cox comes up with something amazing recorders to start piecing together overnight, we will essentially be what happened in the seconds and voting on exactly the same withdrawal agreement that we voted minutes before this tragic accident. on last time, and in very simple they can't establish anything until terms, if you ask the same question, they have that information. and we you are likely to get pretty much see the crash site is very much a the same answer. crater. a lot of the debris is very so faced with a parliamentary brick wall, what might mrs may do? hold on fragmented. it is the accident investigation team who take the to your braces, the suggestion is lead, it is not down to boeing or either delay the vote with some the airline to make decisions until
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leading tory brexiteers are saying, no point going down to a that team finds the first pieces of catastrophic defeat, just buy information that it believes it can yourself a bit more time and shunt act on. and we were hearing from the vote until next week. 0r, sally a moment ago saying it is yourself a bit more time and shunt the vote until next week. or, and perhaps this is a clever wheeze, add fairly unprecedented for such major onto your deal a sort of wish list, crashes to happen within short an amendment that might say, we will succession, course, the indonesian support mrs may's deal but we really lion air crash and now this, for a like the eu to guarantee that the backstop won't last forever and a modern, cutting—edge, new aircraft. are you concerned about that? day. mps probably will support that certainly, there are three elements but the difficulty is, the eu are of similarity, the same kind of thinking, that's actually not on plane commit relatively new aircraft, both only a few months offer. and at the same time, there old, and the same phase of flight, only minutes from departure. having is renewed speculation about mrs said those three elements are the may's own position with tory mps are same, there are so many different beginning to wonder, frankly, variables that can contribute to or whether she can go on much longer if cause an air accident, although it she is forced to radically change may seem simple enough to link those her deal. this is george freeman, factors, it may not in fact be the who used to be head of mrs may's case, this is why the investigators had to do their painstaking work and policy unit. i hope the prime minister can get get some actual clear data. so in withdrawal through and then i think terms of decisions about what may happen next, we heard about the
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we need to get a new leader with a chinese authorities their decision new vision of conservatism that can today about fleet groundings in make sense of brexit and re—inspire china, came on airlines has done and reunite the nation. i hope we that with two aircraft and ethiopian can do that having secured a airlines, the affected airline, has sensible withdrawal agreement. i panicked change of leader now i done it, but it doesn't necessarily follow there would be a decision of think will solve nothing. we've got to get this through and i hope that kind by the safety regulators colleagues this week will recognise u nless that kind by the safety regulators unless it is quite clear they have that, vote for the deal, and then we seen a safety critical element in can change. their research which means that that so, although we say it's another isa their research which means that that is a decision that is right to take. crunch week... may be. we will have we have seen aircraft groundings to see if we get that big meaningful occasionally in modern times, but it is really a decision that has a lot vote or whether mrs may, as she has of weight behind it. before it might done many times before, just seeks be taken. i suppose while airlines to hoof the ball into the long grass. but you have to say that she wait for any announcement on that is running out of grass. picking up on what we just heard george freeman score from the safety announcement, it must be a nervous time for anyone say, do you think there is beginning to be chatter about what happens flying a fleet of 737 max 8 next after this week in terms of the aircraft. airlines and manufacturers leadership of the party? it's not and safety regulators are in contact just that there is beginning to be every day, there is a regularflow of communication which the public chatter, there is chatter because if would ordinary be aware of, not be mrs may is forced to... i don't aware of, because there is no need.
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know, water down her deal or accept there is a routine if there are delay, accept moves by parliament to technical issues or modifications or changes to the approach, those go on ta ke delay, accept moves by parliament to take control, except perhaps some sort of customs union arrangement, sea mlessly changes to the approach, those go on seamlessly all the time, but whether that would be crossing her red lines it is an airline, manufacturer or and the argument is, could she the safety regulator, safety is really carry on if a deal which she a lwa ys the safety regulator, safety is always paramount, that is always the has fought tooth and nail for over watchword whatever dislocation there the last two and a half years, may be and commercial impact for airlines or manufacturers if basically, has hit the buffers. i aircraft you have to be taken out of think a growing number of tory mps service for a period of time, it has to be that safety is the overriding think, no, it isn't credible. if factor. usually, we don't get to there's going to have to be a rethink then somebody else will have that position of having to have a grounding. so at the moment, as i to do it. my impression is that said, it depends on what they find won't happen before march 29 because and if they are able to get these chucking mrs may overboard now, as flight and if they are able to get these flight recorders pretty quickly and we head towards that cut—off date of start to establish exactly what happened. thank you. march 20 night, i think everyone recognises that is a no—no. put the sport now, and for a full round—up, from the bbc sport centre, here's... immediate aftermath, there is a lot sally. good morning. good morning. of talk on whether mrs may can go on. “— of talk on whether mrs may can go on. —— cut—off date of march 29.
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the headlines on bbc news... a man been charged with invading the pitch and assaulting jack grealish in yesterday's championship derby between birmingham city and aston villa. pressure mounts on boeing the game was stopped briefly after the ethiopia air disaster—— china grounds all its 737 max—8s, as a fan jumped out of the crowd for urgent checks. and ran up to the villa captain. downing street says he was led away by stewards and police and grealish talks between the uk and the european union was able to continue. he even went on score are deadlocked just a day before mps the winning goal for villa. will vote for a second time, earlier, i spoke to the bbc‘s west on theresa may's brexit plan. a fifteen—year—old boy is the second person to be charged with the murder ofjodie chesney, midland's reporter richard wilford. who was stabbed in a park in east london. it's a very difficult situation, in the sports news, a man has been isn't it, because in recent years, we've become used to grounds with charged with assaulting jack just the wool around it, the track grealish during yesterday's game on the edge of the ground, and between aston villa and birmingham stewards will be in key areas. now, city. a fan ran onto the pitch and this was a soft spot that was punched the player, sparking real breached at st andrew's. we have course can't go back to the days concerns for player safety. liverpool are still in touch with where fans were caged in because of the premier league title race, just the incident at hillsborough all those years ago, you don't want to one point behind leaders manchester ever see a repeat of anything city after a 11—2 win over burnley remotely like that. but what you do and ireland keep their six nations with high profile games, you may be empty out the front few rows of hopes alive with a dominant matches like that and give the performance over france, 26—14 was stewards a fighting chance? equally, the final score in dublin. more on you can't afford to man mark the
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entire front row of the ground. it all those stories in about 20 isa entire front row of the ground. it is a difficult situation. these soft spots will be on every ground of the minutes. uk and may be what it has to be is a 15—year—old boy has become that the individual punishment for somebody who breaches the pitch like the second person to be charged with the murder of a teenage girl thatis somebody who breaches the pitch like that is severe. who was stabbed to death speaking on the bbc‘s match in a park in east london. of the day 2 last night, the england women's team manager jodie chesney was knifed phil neville said he feared soon a player could be seriously hurt. in the back near a children's playground in romford on 1st march. she was 17. when you are on the pitch like jack the metropolitan police said a further four arrests have grealish or chris smalling today, been made in connection because you're that much in the zone, you probably don't realise with the investigation. what is going on and then you go home and you see actual footage, and an american man has claimed to have found a video tape allegedly showing ijust think that something serious will happen. and i am actually sort the musician r kelly sexually of like scared a little bit because abusing underage girls. i think of like scared a little bit because ithinkl of like scared a little bit because i think i hear it all the time, it's gary dennis told reporters just got to happen, the death that he handed the tape to authorities after discovering it threats on social media, the at his house. homophobic, the racial chance, you've just got to put up with it. i r kelly was charged last month actually don't think we need to put with 10 counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse involving four up actually don't think we need to put up with that any more. well, not surprisingly, alleged victims, three of whom were minors. that incident dominates this morning's back pages. the r&b artist has denied the mirror reports how incidents appearing in the video, and all other charges. in both the birmingham villa match
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one of the two women accusing and the arsenal v manchester uited of murdering kim jong—nam, game overshadowed the the half brother of the north korean action on the pitch. leader, kimjong—un, has had the express echoes that the charges against her dropped. with the headline "the day that she was accused of smearing shamed our game" — nerve agent on his face claiming that football's reputation was in the gutter. at kuala lumpur airport two years and the sun's columnist and bbc ago but denied murder. match of the day expert alan shearer says he's worried that next thejudge in a malaysian court time, someone could take said her discharge did not amount to an acquittal. a knife onto the pitch. 0ur south east asia correspondent jonathan head told us why the charges against siti aisyah were dropped. a man also got past stewards and ran there was never any video evidence onto the pitch in arsenal's game with manchester united at the emirates. he appeared to make contact of the indonesian actually putting with united defender chris smalling, before being led away. anything on kim jong—nam's face the match resulted in a first of the indonesian actually putting anything on kimjong—nam's face or premier league defeat going to wash her hands afterwards for 0le gunnar solksjaer, his side beaten 2—nil. whereas security camera footage does the gunners leapfrog them into fourth place. liverpool moved back exist for the other woman. it seems to within a point of league leaders manchester city, siti aisyah‘s lawyers have pushed very ha rd siti aisyah‘s lawyers have pushed very hard for a long time to get beating burnley li—2 at anfield. that result. they say the case they went 1—nil down, but recovered, with sadio mane against her was always weak and one and roberto firmino of the points against her was that both scoring twice. eden hazard scored in injury time as long as you couldn't catch the
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to salvage a point for chelsea north korean culprits, the agents against wolves at stamford bridge. it finished 1—all. who hired these two women, the chelsea are sixth. agents who escaped and fled the country shortly after kim jong—nam died, you could never have a satisfactory trial. now half the two defendants who were on trial have been released and we are not england completed a 3—nil entirely sure what will happen with t20 series whitewash against west indies in saint kitts. the trial against the remaining after the hosts were bowled out for 71, eoin morgan hit defendant. the winning runs to give the public health england has published a series tourists an eight—wicket victory. of recommendations to improve air quality, saying up to 36,000 ireland beat france deaths a year can be attributed 26—14 in dublin, to keep to long—term exposure to pollution. their six nations title hopes alive. it's calling on local councils to discourage highly polluting vehicles from entering populated areas and impose congestion charges in keith earles scored cities across the uk. the bonus—point—winning fourth try. it also wants more ambitious targets it was his 30th for his country. for electric car charging points. ireland play wales in cardiff next saturday, in the final round of games. the government's decision to approve the expansion of heathrow airport will be challenged at the high court later. we'll try to focus on what we can five separate cases are being brought by environmental groups, control and it's pretty hard to local authorities and residents against the transport control and it's pretty hard to control wales. they make themselves secretary, chris grayling. very difficult to control. so we'll his department said it just try to do the best we can to would robustly defend its position in backing a third runway. recover over these next two days and then maybe get together and may be
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train wednesday, thursday and heads one of the world's biggest dairy to wales from there. firms plans to reduce carbon emissions by 30% over the next decade, to meet rising demand from customers for more british men's tennis number one sustainable products. kyle edmund eased into the third arla foods has faced round at indian wells. increasing pressure, he beat the world number 86 along with the rest of the food nicolas jarry in straight sets, industry, to reduce emissions. dropping just two games. our environment correspondent claire edmund winning in under an hour. fellow british number one marshall has this report. johanna konta is out, though. the dairy industry produces a large she lost her third—round match against the world amount of the gases that number 7 kiki bertens. the belgian winning help to heat the atmosphere and contribute to climate change, in straight sets. in order to supply us with our pints of milk. ronnie 0'sullivan has become a cow's digestive process emits the first player to make 1,000 methane, a potent greenhouse gas. career century breaks — there's also the carbon created and he did it in style! have a look at this. by packaging and transportation. but there are now signs 0'sullivan was closing that the industry's starting to address the problem. in on the milestone and decided environmentalists have long to switch from right—hand criticised the dairy industry to left—hand, to pot the red that for how much it contributes brought up the hundred. is that showing off?! to climate change but now europe's biggest dairy company 0'sullivan achieved the feat in the final of the players is going to do its bit and it's starting right here at farm level. championship in preston. kari is already working to help arla his break of 134 also saw him win meet its target of going carbon the title with a 10—4 victory
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neutral by 2050. against australia's neil robertson. she's updated her farm to use more efficient, environmentally—friendly technology. this milking parlour uses a lot less energy and her cows only calf once a year. keeping herfarm small means lower methane emissions. we love him. now, finally, have a look at this it's an ambitious target from the german bundesliga but if everybody works together, yesterday. pretty atrocious conditions in hannover. and there are 2000 arla they were up against bayer leverkusen. hannover were 2—nil down. dairy farmers in the uk, but watch. foiled by the snow. and if everybody does leverkusen went on to win 3—2. their little bit, it's all going to make a difference. vegan campaigners argue just before we go, a reminder that that dairy can never be climate friendly. sportsday is on the bbc however, scientists say that if all emissions news channel at 6:30 this evening, are included in the dairy giant's calculations, then it could set a new benchmark. john watson's in the chair to guide you through all today's sports news and talking points. claire marshall, bbc news, somerset. plenty of chat going on. that's all the sport for now. the venezuelan government has told more from the bbc workers and students to stay sport centre at 11:15. thanks, that was fun. at home on monday as many parts of the country remain without power. some parts of the country have now been without power for 72 hours,
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and there's no indication of when it might be restored. there's also been reports seen from the sky, the iron age of sporadic looting in the capital. 0ur correspondent in caracas, h i llfo rt seen from the sky, the iron age hillfort maiden castle in dorset is spectacular, and it is also home to will grant sent this report as the power cut hit its fourth 2,000 sheep, farmed byjohn hoskin. straight day, things in venezuela are turning ugly. gates taken off its hinges, back in, tempers that were already frayed load up the sheet from of the are boiling over as hunger and desperation take hold. castle. john has had sheep stolen from him every year and he is losing more each time. last year was the at one supermarket in caracas worst we have had in terms of what a group of local mothers demanded was taken. that was ewes and their to be let in in search of food for their children. lambs four weeks old, they were turned away, by the afternoon some neighbours took matters worth 200 pounder couple. could you put a figure on how much it has cost into their own hands, sacking and looting the supermarket and clashing with police. you? over the years, i suppose between a0 and £50,000, at least. it dozens were arrested and taken away, prompting complete hysteria is demoralising, to be quite honest. among their families. screaming. and as a family, we get really translation: i shouldn't have annoyed about it, very annoyed. and to do this at my age. john is not the only one losing more we only did it because our grandkids are dying of hunger. sheep to thieves. the number of they maybe eat once a day if we're lucky. animals reported stolen across who's to blame? england and wales jumped from just we're not. we're not to blame for this.
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we're working people and live over 6020 16 to nearly 10,000 last in a poor neighbourhood. year. so we are looking out for the desperation of these mothers, whose children have been taken livestock raiders... with nearly 400 because they were allegedly trying to break into a supermarket, reports of sheep theft, only one is overwhelming. they are absolutely resulted in anyone being charged. dorset saw the second highest beside themselves. increase in animal stolen, so i am on patrol with the forces rural they say that they face no other choice but to try and get food, engagement officer, tom. there are even if it was illegal. two of you for the whole of dorset, it was yet another sign of a city, two of you for the whole of dorset, two dedicated people. is there any of an entire country, frustration within the farming in terminal decline. community? i think there is armed pro—government motorcycle frustration in the community due to gangs known as colectivos previous budgets and cuts. we would enforced order at gunpoint. all like to have more feet on the and to add to the situation, the fast blackout shows ground, but at the end of the day, little sign of ending. we are constrained to what we have got and that is where we need the public to help us, as well as people in those areas where power has been restored, its patchy, reporting things. but john says he's often lasting for only a few hours. in other states, hospitals, tired of reporting sheep thefts. how maternity wards and homes for the elderly are said to be much more do i put up with this, do at breaking point. drivers are queueing for hours we get rid of the sheep and say, to fill up their cars amid fears forget it? we're not going to of an all—out energy shortage. provide illegally somebody else.
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gradually the dollar is becoming the most used currency — more on this on inside out for those that have access to them. translation: the really strong in the south at 7.30 tonight currency that is working at this moment is the dollar. and afterwards on the bbc iplayer 0ur currency, the bolivar, nationwide. is worthless. and afterwards on the bbc iplayer nationwide. who's going to charge 20 as we've been discussing, or 50,000 bolivars in bills? this is the start of a crunch week for brexit. this all comes after bbc inside out south west has gone a weekend of protests, too. back to talk to people living on the route taken by vote leave's president maduro says the entire big red campaign bus. the bus spent most of its first day blackout was part of the attempt campaigning in cornwall, and jemma woodman has been retracing to force him from office. the route taken by boris johnson and his team. his opponent, juan guaido, has accused the government it was to become one of the symbols of failing to maintain the hydroelectric plants that keep the lights on in venezuela. of the referendum campaign. vote but beyond the politics, leave deployed their battlebus for ordinary venezuelans are just the first time here in truro on the exhausted at the situation. 11th of may 2016. costing uk their country feels like it's collapsing around them and they fear that the weeks ahead business £600 million a week. so will only get worse. will grant, bbc news, caracas. what do people here think now? and following the route burris and his 3,500 extra school places are to be created tea m following the route burris and his team took, travelling through for children with special cornwall. most parts of connell educational needs, or those that have been excluded
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from mainstream schools. voted for brexit, despite the county 39 new free schools will be built across england to create the places — receiving more than £1 billion of eu two of which will cater solely aid. when we first took over this for children who've been expelled. the news follows warnings building, it was a complete shell, from police chiefs that excluded pupils are more at risk it had been derelict for a long time and we had eu funding to come in here and to renovate the building. of being "sucked into criminality". if we want to send around, cromwell everywhere dissented, people can buy it. do you think you can postpone brexit? i have absolutely no idea. 0ur brexit? i have absolutely no idea. our next up is charlestown, now a this week, the bbc is giving trading port, now often used as a the audience the chance to shape our coverage. we're going to be in bradford film location. 0ne all week taking an in—depth look trading port, now often used as a film location. one of the founders of,‘s eden project owns the museum. at the city, but also to hear the thing that is really what stories you want us to cover. 0ur correspondent depressingly and distressingly, it david sillito is there. is not about losing the brexit vote, good morning. you can see exactly where we are, the branding says it it has been the poverty of our politicians to talk about... our all, but to give a better idea, i am ina tent all, but to give a better idea, i am young people need to hear about a in a tent inside a shopping centre. country that belongs to all of us that has a vision for how we can this is our pop—up studio. we have improve ourselves and how we can be the technology here of the blue happier. when making one extra stop. room. if we walk round the corner, the fishing port of looe. anybody we can see the inner workings of the people in charge of everything. good who voting remain gets the
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morning, gentlemen. we have a full democratic vote of the country are p°p‘up morning, gentlemen. we have a full pop—up newsroom gathered, and down traitors, get them out and pay them nothing. ijust want people to here we have bbc sounds and bbc understand about the industry that i am in, i think our country is great, weather. what's this all about? it everybody wants to come here, we wa nt everybody wants to come here, we sprang from a conversation with the want to build on our industry, build national science and media museum on other industries, but can't move forward because we don't know what's here in bradford. they have an exhibition on asking the question, happening. so it isjust stalemate there has been a lot of bad news all round. after its stay in como, over the years about bradford, but is this the full story? it got us the vote leave battlebus headed off thinking, maybe we ought to look at to campaign in the rest of can't the that, bring somejournalists country. almost three years old, the thinking, maybe we ought to look at that, bring some journalists to the city, talk to the people and ask brexit debate seems no nearer its what their stories are and what they wa nt to what their stories are and what they want to have told about bradford, to final destination. gemma woodman, give a bigger picture of bradford. bbc news, cornwall. time for a look at the weather. when i see bradford on the news, i often see poverty. we had a bit of everything crime. yesterday, sleet, rain, sunshine, rainbows. this morning is much the gloom and guns, the rape. quieter, plenty blue skies and it is never anything to do sunshine. that was the scene this with our achievements. morning in suffolk. the ridge of high pressure across the uk at the this is we are bradford and it began moment and that is keeping things
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with a meeting at city hall. relatively quiet today. but towards the west, we have area of low the bbc‘s editorial director and a group of young people talking pressure moving in and with it some about the news and bradford. weather fronts as we go to tonight. there's hundreds of people in this city who have incredibly so for the rest of today, plenty positive stories to tell. there are so many things that have blue skies. 0ne changed my life in bradford that so for the rest of today, plenty blue skies. one or two showers around the greater manchester area i wouldn't have been able and the west of scotland but those to do in london. eating away at a lunch time. i'm not moving out for uni, i'm staying in bradford. sunshine, turning milky but hazy i'm going to show these people what i'm made of. further west as high cloud spreads bells toll. its way in. the maximum temperatures and this is just the start of the conversations. coinciding with an exhibition today up to 9 degrees in northern on the topic at the city's science and media museum, parts to 12 degrees across the bbc news is setting up shop in bradford to try south. into tuesday, an area of low a new approach to news. pressure really ramping up and with so, what's happening is that the bbc is bringing its resources here to help local people it bringing weather fronts across tell their own stories. the uk into tuesday. tuesday morning this isn't about sugarcoating the truth or being a pr really quite wet and windy, quite exercise for the city. widely gusts of a5, 50 mph, it's simply an attempt to paint a broader and perhaps a fairer particularly in northern and western picture of bradford. areas where they are higher than are you from bradford? that. and rain spreads down towards where are you from? the south east of england, gusty london. this woman is part of the bbc team winds associated with that. to the north and west, drier and brighter. that's here in bradford. 0h, highfive!
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when you think of bradford wintry showers across scotland, the in the news, what do you think? far north west of england, maximum temperatures of six or 7 degrees in we are doing a project called the north, 9—12 in a south. this is bbc we are bradford. we're shifting the news narrative, you know, we want to make sure our area of low pressure moving even closer to the uk through wednesday. people from bradford get to tell their own story. look at the white lines, the isobars i love the diversity. i love how there's so many different really close together, very strong cultures in bradford. the buildings, music, some winds expected into wednesday overlooked part of bradford life, morning. thus potentially of 70, 70 whatever people come up with is what we are five miles per hour in the north and bradford will be. west, so severe gales for scotland, northern england and northern ireland which could cause travel there it is. we have the studio and disruption throughout wednesday morning. and we keep the winds will be here all week. i have some eager film—makers who have arrived throughout the day. wide across here to be working with local england, wales, a0, 50 mph and people. all we require now our perhaps more than that in places. people. all we require now our people to come forward and tell us sunny spells on wednesday, blustery what they want to be reported on so showers moving through. mostly we can give that broader picture of towards the north and the west, but when stay strong for much of the bradford. people in bradford, go to day. we continue to have strong talk to david. he looks lonely! winds on thursday and into friday. generally speaking, this week stays very unsettled. the wind is certainly a big feature of the weather. so severe gales, especially
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let's look at yesterday's weather. tuesday night and into wednesday morning. heavy rain with that. but there will be drier and brighter interludes, particularly through today and as we go through to the end of the week, that is all for me, goodbye. this was from hackney wick yesterday. a reminder that you can be taken at any time, so be thankful for surviving another day. more strong wind on the way this week as we go through tuesday and wednesday in particular. starting off quiet, wind nowhere near as strong. largely fading, one ortwo in scotland and northern ireland. sunshine turning hazy later. not as cold as the weekend, especially with the sunshine gaining strength each day. this is when we start to take a turn for the wet and windy tonight. wet initially across scotland and
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northern ireland with extensive snow across the grampians and wind could pick up to 60 or 70 mph before we see things turn less fierce later. finishing tonight with north west england and persistent rain and some flooding over hills. rain pushing south and east across england and wales during the day with lively bursts of rain. thing is turning to sunshine and showers in the west as we go through the day. but another bout of strong winds coming in through tuesday night. more details on that through the morning.
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