tv BBC Newsroom Live BBC News April 12, 2019 11:00am-1:01pm BST
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hello, this is bbc newsroom live. hello this is bbc newsroom live. sweden considers whether to reopen the headlines... an investigation into allegations after the arrest of of rape made against wikileaks julian assange yesterday — the headlines... the labour leader, jeremy corbyn calls on ministers to oppose any founderjulian assange. after the arrest of attempt by america to extradite you're watching bbc newsroom live. julian assange yesterday it's ham and these are the main the labour leader, jeremy corbyn the wikilea ks co—founder. calls on ministers to oppose any it comes after his arrest yesterday over conspiracy charges stories this morning... attempt by america to extradite the education watchdog says english in the united states. councils are spending tens after the arrest ofjulian assange of thousands of pounds putting mr assange's lawyer said yesterday, the labour leader, excluded children in centres that the move to extradite him there jeremy corbyn, calls the wikilea ks co—founder. had set a dangerous aren't registered as schools. on the government to oppose any attempt by america to extradite precedent for journalists. the education watchdog says english councils are spending tens the wikilea ks co—founder. of thousands of pounds putting nigel farage has he is obviously going to fight excluded children in centres that launched his new brexit the education watchdog says english are not registered as schools. party this morning, extradition undivided hard. this councils are spending tens ahead of next month's case raises significant issues about of thousands of pounds putting european elections. free speech. —— and fight it hard. i know, this is a battle excluded children in centres that that we shouldn't be having to fight are not registered as schools. new laws for upskirting offences. but we are having to fight it and we are also this lunchtime: anyone caught taking going to win it. nigel farage is launching his a photo underneath someone's tougher rules called for to new brexit party this morning, clothing without their knowledge — safeguard thousands of children could face two years in jail and be new laws for upskirting offences. attending unregistered schools. ahead of next month's 0fsted reports appalling european elections. added to the sex offenders register. conditions and a lack of care. anyone caught taking a photo after the coup that toppled sudan's new laws for upskirting offences. nigel farage has launched his long—serving president, new brexit party this morning demonstrators want reassurance anyone caught taking a photo they will decide the country's underneath someone‘s clothing ahead of next month's underneath someone's clothes politicalfuture, not the military. without their knowledge without their knowledge could face european elections. could face two years in jail and be two years in jail and be added police unveil new technology i know, this is a battle that we in a bid to crack down on drivers to the sex offenders register. added to the sex offenders register. shouldn't be having to fight but we the first privately funded mission "tel aviv, we've got a problem." are having to fight it and we are we'll be finding out why the first to the moon has crashed after the apparent failure privately—funded mission to the moon going to win it. of its main engine. didn't go according to plan. drivers using mobile phones behind the wheel could be identified using new technology
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the first privately funded mission being trialled by police. to the moon has crashed after the apparent failure of its main engine. lets go back to our main story this hour, the labour leader, before we go back to those stories jeremy corbyn, has said the uk are to catch up with the sport. good morning. government should not extradite good morning. julian assange to the us welcome to bbc newsroom live. the first day of the first golf following his arrest in london yesterday. major of the year didnt tell us the wikilea ks co—founder the labour leader, jeremy corbyn, was detained by police has said the uk government should too much about who the eventual at ecuador‘s embassy, winner might be but americans brooks not extradite julian assange to the us following his arrest koepka and bryson dechambeau where he'd been living in london yesterday. certainly started as they mean to carry on with a share since the country granted him asylum the wikilea ks co—founder of the lead at augusta. in 2012, to avoid extradition was detained by police to sweden over at ecuador‘s embassy, 0ur sports correspondent a sexual assault case. where he has been living andy swiss was watching. since the country granted it was a day when the famous augusta he's also wanted in america in connection with a huge leak of classified us government him asylum in 2012. scoreboard was working overtime. documents in 2010. earlier i spoke to rebecca niblock, he's wanted in the us in connection an extradition lawyer, so many fluctuating fortunes, to hear what arguments mr assange's with a huge leak of classified us not least for rory mcilroy. legal team will use government documents in 2010. after a poor start, mr corbyn says any extradition he rallied in style. to fight his extradition. the favourite finally ofjulian assange for exposing evidence of atrocities in iraq living up to his billing. and afghanistan should be stopped. but having clawed his way up, he slipped back down. julian assange‘s lawyer, jennifer robinson, the main ones that will be engaged visited her client in police custody an error—strewn finish to his at his right to a fair trial and his round and a frustrating first day. last night and says they'll it was far better for tiger woods. right not to suffer inhuman or fight any extradition request. more than a decade after his last degrading treatment because of the
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prison conditions in the us. there major title, some familiar flashes he's obviously going to fight are also several other grounds that extradition and fight it hard. of brilliance leaving this case raises significant he could argue. the process of the issues about free speech. him four off the pace. we've been warning about the prospect of an extradition cost mark carter, he could argue he request from the united states the british challenge is being sought for his political was led by ian poulter. opinions rather than to prosecute and is 2010, since i first europe's ryder cup talisman him for the offence. there is also a has never won a major, but at just two behind, hewill believe anything is possible. real issue about his physical or walked him to the police station it was an american duo that set back in december 2010. mental health. i know the ecuadorian and he sought asylum the pace, brooks koepka in the ecuadorian embassy embassy said they were concerned precisely because of that, and bryson dechambeau, about his health. i'm sure that because he was concerned who certainly won the prize for shot would be something that would be that he would be extradited of the day. for having published us documents, and that's precisely what happened agonisingly close at the last hole, raised in the extradition the moment he walked out, well, but a place at the top proceedings. when you clear up he was pushed out of the embassy. of the leaderboard should 0ur correspondent simonjones be some consolation. is here with the latest. something for me, whether the what's been the reaction in the us? well, with four americans in the top government ultimately takes a five, it was certainly a good day decision on whether that is purely a for the home fans. decision on whether that is purely a decision for the card. it is a decision for the card. it is a decision for the court so the yesterday we had the unusual sight others, including roy mcilroy, ofjulian assange being bundled out will need a second round surge secretary of state in relation to to stop their masters gary mckinnon did have a power to hopes slipping away. ofjulian assange being bundled out of the embassy and then taken to andy swiss, bbc news, augusta. court where he was found guilty of prevent extradition but that was breaching bail. 0ne day two then starts court where he was found guilty of breaching bail. one of his next early this afternoon — court appearances will be over the removed shortly after the gary live text commentary on the bbc extradition request and that will ta ke extradition request and that will take place at the start of next sport website from 1:30pm. mckinnon decision. in a wayjeremy month. we have had a lot of reaction then there's full radio commentary on 5 live sports extra corbyn is saying the minister should from 10pm tonight. over that. for some people this is a
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journalist who wants to tell the three chelsea truth and he should be allowed to do supporters were turned away from their europa league quarter oppose extradition. it is irrelevant final with slavia that. his critics say that by prague last night after a video emerged on social because it is really down to the releasing thousands of articles via media appearing to show them singing an islamaphobic song wikileaks he about their former player judge. yes. thanks for clearing that releasing thousands of articles via wikilea ks he put releasing thousands of articles via wikileaks he put people in danger mohamed salah, who's and it was information that shouldn't have been in the public now with liverpool. up. what about sweden? now the domain. this was to be tested in a statement chelsea said "it finds all forms of discriminatory swedes are talking about bringing initially in the courts but it also behaviour abhorrent" has a political element because we and that the club we will take the strongest possible action have government ministers are saying against "season ticket holders or members involved the charges, sexual assault, rape they welcome the arrest because they say no one should be above the law in such behaviour." etc again. what could be the order butjeremy corbyn the labour leader "such individuals are of precedence between a swedish an embarrassment to the vast says he shouldn't be extradited majority of chelsea supporters..." because he has exposed wrongdoing is extradition request and a us in iraq and afghanistan. also coming 0n the pitch, chelsea got a vital away goal extradition request and a us extradition request? interestingly, thatis in the czech republic. they weren't at their best extradition request? interestingly, that is where a political decision to his defence, his mother. she says we re that is where a political decision were coming because it would be but marcos alonso's late header means they take a 1—0 lead back decision made by sajid javid and he on twitter... to stamford bridge next week. would have to to look at the two arsenal beat napoli 2—0 at the emirates, aaron ramsey opened competing extradition claims and the scoring early on — showing the italian side what to prepare for when he's decide which of them should take atjuventus next season. precedence and he would make his decision based on a limited number lucas torreira's shot perhaps not the most impartial deflected in for the second, of factors. the only sour note — assessment but initially the case the club say they'll investigate will be examined by the courts here a case of alleged racist abuse
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aiumed at napoli's kalidou and that could take perhaps several koulibaly. months or even years if there are appeals. and obviously another huge element of this story is what the us valtteri bottas egded out he would make his decision based ferrari's sebastian vettel in second on a limited number of factors. government does. interestingly practice at the chinese grand prix. donald trump seems to be reversing it would really come down to measuring up the seriousness the mercedes driver managed of the relative offences from previous positions on the to recover from an early spin as against the date virtues of wikileaks. interesting to stay out in front. when the requests were made his team—mate lewis hamilton also and in this case if the swedish spun early but could request does come in, only finish fourth. rape is obviously a serious offence, reaction in the states. you might as against the us request think the us authorities would be max verstappen's red bull which is for an offence was third fastest. which carries a maximum sentence of five years. rubbing their hands with glee at the there was a great return 0n the other hand the us request to competition for great prospect of julian assange britain's claudia fragapane at the european gymnastics is obviously in there first. championships. rubbing their hands with glee at the prospect ofjulian assange being in except, in a way it court facing this charge of she's had a tough year wasn't because in... conspiracy of hacking into a after snapping her achilles way back when this all began, computer which we are told could just before the commonwealth games. the swedish request was first face a maximum sentence of five yea rs face a maximum sentence of five but she looked somewhere and it is just because bail years but he has been asked about it near her best in poland was jumped and the and this was his rather muted as she posted the leading score charges were dropped. reaction. i know nothing about wikileaks, on her way to the floor final. it is not my thing, and i know oh my gosh, i am so excited to be there is something having to do yes, and i don't envy the secretary with julian assange, here and i was so nervous going up i have been seeing what has of state make making that decision happened with assange, there, but i feel a bit emotional because it is going to be and that will be a determination seeing everything that has happened, mostly by the attorney general, very difficult one. like, last year and then coming he is doing an excellentjob, in and doing a big floor routine so he will be making the swedish request coming first a determination. and nailing it, iam is also being dropped so it has i know nothing really about him, really, really happy. to start afresh now. we really like this interesting.
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from bath's freddie burns on thter. it is not my deal in life. we're calling it a double kick. another interesting area he is saying he knows nothing but a is if you can just elucidate for us it might take you a few looks to see couple of years ago it was a the history of extraditions exactly what he's done. from the uk to the us. different story during the 0ne ball on top of the other, we were talking about this presidential election campaign when the bottom one goes over the posts in the office this morning wikileaks released first, then the second one follows presidential election campaign when wikilea ks released thousands presidential election campaign when wikileaks released thousands of e—mails considered to be very as a drop kick. and i was thinking back to the case he claims that was his first attempt. of the algerian pilot back nearly 20 damaging to his opponent hillary i'm not too sure about that one. clinton and this is what he had to lovely. years ago after 9/11 when the uk that's all the sport for now. court actually turned down say about wikilea ks clinton and this is what he had to a us extradition request. say about wikileaks back then. wikileaks, i love wikileaks! i'll have more for wikileaks! you in the next hour. how often does happen? this wikileaks is unbelievable. it happens from time to time. wikileaks has done a job let's return to our on her, hasn't it? main story this hour — the more e—mails wikileaks the labour leader, jeremy corbyn, releases, the more lines this year, in the past year between the clinton foundation, has called for the government the secretary of state's office to block any attempt to extradite and the clintons' personal finances. julian assange to the us, we have had people refused. where he faces a computer hacking charge. mr assange is due to face a hearing over his possible they were both refused extradition on the 2nd may. on the grounds that their conduct so this could end up in the courts would be prosecuted in this country rebecca niblock is an extradition rather than the us. i'm not sure whether that in the us. it is not definite that would be open to assange lawyer, and shejoins me now. extradition will be granted. there to argue but it is possible. have been cases in the past where she will explain some of the issues involved. what do you think is key the british courts have looked at the pregnancy and parenting the british courts have looked at the evidence and decided they did here? well his human rights will be not feel there was a case to answer. club ‘bounty‘ has been fined
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an issue in the extradition we will go through the complexities proceedings. there is obviously of that later. going to be a chance for him to £400,000 for illegally sharing let's head over to coventry argue about all of that in court and the personal information of more now, where nigel farage than 14 million people. is launching his new brexit party. an investigation by the information the main ones that will be engaged commissioner's office found that the company had breached data protection laws between is his right to a fair trial and is 2017 and 2018. (read on) right not to suffer inhumane or degrading treatment because of the prison conditions in the us. there our technology correspondent, rory cellan—jones has been following the developments i think what has happened is our are also other several ground he and joins me now 2—party system simply can't cope bounty uk is a parenting pregnancy could argue. he could argue he is with brexit and the 2—party system being sought for his political glow. millions of mothers will have opinions rather than to prosecute experienced this. they come into has been exposed, frankly, is being hospitals, they have to take photos, him for the offence. there is an issue about his physical and mental they offer various freebies. free unfit for purpose and i think we health. i know that the ecuadorian samples of nappies and so on. they have a parliament that is now com pletely have a parliament that is now completely out of touch with our embassy said they were concerned are found by the data watchdog to about his health. that will be country. i think politics is broken something that will be raising this have collected 34 million records defence in the extradition andi country. i think politics is broken and i want to see this, this party proceedings. the nuclear up over a period of time. they something for me? does the collected them both from their is not here just to fight the website and their app and directly government take a decision or is it at them with the's bedside. but they european elections on the 23rd of purely a decision for the court?m are then found to have illegally may this year. this party is not isa purely a decision for the court?m is a decision for the court. the here to ask people simply to express shared that data, that personal data with a whole range of marketing and their anger by going to the ballot secretary of state in relation to
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gary mckinnon did have a power to credit reference agencies and box and voting for us on that day. prevent extradition but that was organisations, including sky. that no, no. the 23rd of may is the first removed in 2014 shortly after. it is illegal. this huge fine has been step of the brexit party. 0ur task imposed upon them. it is at the end of the matter? well, it is but it all lies with the courts now. jeremy and mission is to change politics for good, to change all aspects of corbyn said that ministers should politics in this country. is, asi of the matter? well, it is but it is, as i said, one of the biggest oppose extradition and that it is find the information commissioner irreleva nt oppose extradition and that it is irrelevant what ministers say or do has ever imposed. it is a real because it is really down to the warning about what the law says judge. yes. helpful, thanks for about taking people's personal data, clearing that up. what about sweden? idid say i did say that if i ever had to come 0riginally clearing that up. what about sweden? sensitive personal data. people were originally the extradition request came from sweden in 2012. now the back into the political fray, next caught at a very vulnerable time and time it would be no more mr nice swedes are talking about possibly it was not made clear that the fact quy: time it would be no more mr nice guy, and i mean it, i mean it. yes, bringing the charges, sexual i'm angry about what's happened. i assault, rape etc again. what would know lots of people out there are. that may be used for marketing but this is not a negative emotion, be the order of precedence between a purposesin that may be used for marketing purposes in a way that you didn't it isa understand at the time. we have the but this is not a negative emotion, it is a positive one and we are swedish extradition request and a us going to use these elections to change things. i said years ago that data protection act, the general one? interestingly, that is where a i wanted to cause an earthquake in political decision will come in data protection from europe and all because it would be a decision british politics. now what i am kinds of protections against this kinds of protections against this kind of activity now. do you think fighting for, whether you're support
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what we will attempt to achieve, is the business, individuals and marketing companies, do you think a democratic revolution in british they have woken up to all of this? politics because that is what we need. even before... even before we the extraordinary thing is that this made by sajid javid. he would make his decision based on a limited offence happened before that of the new regulations came in. they were number of factors. it would really come down to measuring up the breaking the existing regulations, not the tougher new regime. have launched the party, one or two seriousness of the relative offences certainly a lot of the organisations very interesting and exciting things as against the date when the i've had a year now in which to kind have begun to happen. just over ten requests were made and in this case of wa ke i've had a year now in which to kind of wake up to the seriousness of the if the swedish request does come in, days ago the website went live and data protection regulations. we had a statement from bounty uk. they we said two people, if you want to rape is obviously a serious offence, have accepted that they got this sign up as registered supporters or donate money to the party, we are as against the us request which is wrong and they say they did not take open for business. and i think it is foran a broad and a few of our as against the us request which is for an offence which carries a responsibilities. they said it was pretty remarkable that in the first maximum sentence for an offence which carries a maximum sentence of five years, on in the past. they have reformed the other hand the us request is ten days of operation we have their processes and they are determined to win back the trust of managed to raise over three quarters obviously in their first. except, in pa rents. determined to win back the trust of parents. rory, thank you. of £1 million from small donations a way it wasn't because in... way from members of the public. i have today was the second date never seen back when this all began the swedish the uk could have left the eu from members of the public. i have never seen anything like that in my without a deal but instead a six 25 years of campaigning. i was asked request was first and it is just month extension has been agreed. so where does this leave this morning on the today programme businesses and what should because bail was jumped on they be planning for now?
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on the bbc, what big donors do we our business presenter ben thompson request was first and it is just because bail wasjumped on the charges were dropped. yes, and i have? isaid, well, of course has been to a haulage company don't envy the secretary of state in greater manchester to find out. on the bbc, what big donors do we have? i said, well, of course i would welcome big donors but make making that decision because it we are in salford today at this wouldn't it be even more exciting if is going to be very difficult one. regional distribution centre it was hundreds of thousands of where goods are being moved the swedish request coming first is all over the country. small donors that funded the rebirth some of those will have come of democracy in this country. from europe and some are headed back there now but, also being dropped so it has to with all of the uncertainty surrounding brexit, businesses like this have been trying to prepare for what happens next, start afresh now. interesting. to make sure they've got the right another interesting area is if you paperwork in the right place for the right goods. because that is what it is about. it canjust but, whether a deadline that another interesting area is if you can just elucidate for us the keeps moving, how do they keep up with that? history of extraditions from the uk to the us. we were talking about is about democracy. 0ur democratic richard is with me. this in the office this morning and decision is being wilfully he is from the haulage association. overturned and this is coming in the i was thinking back to the case of richard, hello. it is a moving target country that has what was once for you, isn't it? the algerian pilot back nearly 20 you have had to make a lot of contingency plans, called the mother of parliaments. i yea rs the algerian pilot back nearly 20 put a lot of processes in place, can tell you that all over the world years ago after 911 when the uk things that you don't really need yet but that deadline keeps getting oui’ can tell you that all over the world our friends, can tell you that all over the world can't actually turned down a us pushed back so what does that ourfriends, and can tell you that all over the world our friends, and i can tell you that all over the world ourfriends, and i do know one or mean for you? two quite highly placed politicians extradition request. how often does happen? it happens from time to it is creating massive in some other english—speaking uncertainty for this industry. time. this year, in the past year we it is almost impossible to plan countries of the world, and all over if we haven't got certainty and that the world people look on with also means that we need clarity have had someone refused. they were in terms of what those processes look like and, at this stage, incredulity because they still think working very closely with government, with the dft we are a great country, and the
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funny thing is that we, the people, both refused on the grounds that and hmrc, we still haven't still think that we are a great their conduct would be prosecuted in got clarity in terms this country rather than the us. i'm not sure whether that would be open country. but our leaders are happy tojulian not sure whether that would be open to julian assange to of what the end—to—end process to continue down the path of managed not sure whether that would be open tojulian assange to argue but it is possible. how long do you see all of this taking where all of these decline. i genuinely believe right arguments have to go back and looks like for customers, so how can a business plan and put things now this nation, we are lions led by in place if it doesn't understand? possible additional charges being it is notjust about hauliers discussed from the usa? the court or distribution businesses, it is about those businesses that are giving them work, they need to prepare, donkeys. will be very keen to deal with it scale up and gear up, and that is impossible for them because they don't quickly, given the length of time understand the process either. 98% of everything we consume in this that it has taken up. but the country will have been on one of these trucks at some point in its life. not only are our leaders weak, not it is sort of a forgotten industry, isn't it? defence do need time to put together in the sense that we just assume only have they wilfully betrayed all their arguments and there are a this will all work and it has always this result, but they are also lot of arguments that they could worked and always will work. run. soi it is an industry thatjust makes lot of arguments that they could run. so i would say a minimum of a pretty much incompetent. they are things happen, and you are right, we have almost become accepted, year and run. so i would say a minimum of a yearand a run. so i would say a minimum of a year and a half, run. so i would say a minimum of a yearand a half, a maximum... it not actually very good at what they but i think this is a real depends on whether he finds an do, they are not very good at argument to go to the supreme court challenge, you know, anything. too many of them, too many brexit and making sure we are planning for a smooth are not that perhaps three years... transition means we have to have of them have been down the path of time, we have to have clarity going straight from oxford to become thank you very much. i learned a lot of those processes, and volume that from the last three minutes and i comes in from europe into the uk hope the audience feel the same. primes the pump of uk supply chains,
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a researcher, to become a member of take care. thanks, goodbye. whether that is retailers or manufacturers, if that volume drops because of delays parliament in their late 20s, they have no experience of the real 0verall levels of violence in the process, that is going in england and wales appear to be declining, to affect our economy, world, they are classic career despite an increase in knife crime, it's going to affectjobs. richard, for now, thanks. politicians because, to them, according to a new study. it's good to see you. cardiff university's violence getting re—elected matters more than that is the view from here research group looked at data in salford as these sort anything else. they are not in from a&e departments, of trucks gets sent out right minor injury units and walk—in centres to determine the number around this region. politics out of passion or a cause, of course, no deal might now be off of people who'd been wounded during a violent incident. the table as far as departure and in many ways you can understand our home affairs correspondent, from the eu is concerned. why career politicians would embrace danny shaw, reports. there is still a concern about queues and paperwork the european project, it is a everyday there are more victims of checks at the borders, and that could add cost and time knife crime. last year more people wonderful safety net for anyone that to an industry that really does rely we re knife crime. last year more people were fatally stabbed in england and on things working pretty smoothly. feels in national politics. but —— wales than at any time since records the government and labour are continuing talks aimed began after the second world war. at breaking the deadlock but does this mean we have become a fails in the national politics. i in parliament over have been astonished in the brexit more violent society? a new study party by the quality of people who brexit. from cardiff university suggests cabinet ministers michael gove have decided enough is enough, who not. researchers used data from and david lidington accident and emergency departments are putting their names forward as are in discussions with shadow to calculate the number of victims candidates for the european of violence. it is estimated that chancellorjohn mcdonnell. elections and thousands more who eu leaders have agreed to delay have applied to stand for us in the uk's departure date from 12 187,500 people sought treatment last april to 310ctober, local elections, general elections, yearfor injuries after by—elections and whatever else it 187,500 people sought treatment last year for injuries after being may be. i also want to emphasise attacked. is down 1.7% on 2017, to avoid a no—deal brexit.
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that amongst this remarkable talent more on those talks later. thousands of people, including continuing a substantial long—term stevie wonder and snoop dogg, reduction. a study also found that gathered in los angeles last night we have of men and women standing on fewer children and teenagers were to pay tribute to american rapper nipsey hussle. the list, and i believe there lest treated in hospital after being the former gang member who became a community we put before the british public on assaulted. this really means that we activist was shot dead in la last month. a letter from barack 0bama was read don't all of us need to be more may the 23rd will be the most out at the memorial service, scared than we used to be. violence praising the musician's work to help impressive list of political the deprived neighbourhood where he grew up. involving knives is localised, it candidates put before the british public in history, i genuinely affects relatively small numbers of believe that. we have many people on musicians, hollywood people. so overall the risks to us actors and professional athletes all attended all has decreased. according to the the star—studded memorial. survey there was a small increase in the number of women who were one of the rapper's close friends attacked and injured and a rise of these lists who do deals every day, was stevie wonder who played a song more than 5% among men and women but he also delivered a poignant every week, so it is time the aged 51 and over. the reasons for message about gun laws in the us. it is so painful to know political class, showing themselves that are unclear. 0verall that we don't have incapable of doing a good deal, are aged 51 and over. the reasons for that are unclear. overall though, it seems hospitals are seeing fewer enough people taking pushed aside and are replaced by victims of violence but many more those who know how the real world people who have been attacked with a knives. danny shaw, bbc news. works. of course there will be position that says, "listen, we must have stronger gun laws." tougher laws to combat questions about broader issues of terrorism have come into force. it's unacceptable. policy and we will come to that in under the new legislation,
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anyone found travelling to a "designated area of conflict", it's almost like the world time but, for now, we are focused on without good reason, the 23rd of may. for now, we are could face up to 10 years in prison. is becoming blind. focused on the question of the home office estimates more democracy, the question of trust than 900 people "of national security concern" from the uk have and, indeed, the question of travelled to the conflict in syria. competence. how are we going to do? caroline rigby reports. stevie wonder remembering nipsey hussle. stevie wonder remembering i don't know. but i have been to the she left her home in east london in nipsey hussle. a baby is in a critical condition in hospital bookmakers this morning. and i after being attacked by a dog 2015 tojoin the in the scottish borders. she left her home in east london in 2015 to join the islamic state police were called to group. she is just an address in hawick yesterday afternoon, 2015 to join the islamic state group. she isjust one of 2015 to join the islamic state group. she is just one of hundreds of british citizens and residents where the boy was found. remember in the run—up to the he was taken to border general referendum when it was 4—1 against who have travelled abroad to live in hospital, before being flown by helicopter to the royal hospital me winning and i put down a bit and terror hotspots. but under new laws for sick children in glasgow. are into force today people who do police are continuing so are into force today people who do so could face up to ten years in how everyone thought it was so their inquiries into the incident. the headlines on bbc news... terribly funny. i did manage to prison. authorities in the uk hope collect my winnings. and this the legislation will boost their ability to tackle the threat from after the arrest of julian assange yesterday, so—called foreign fighters returning the labour leader, jeremy corbyn, morning i have put £1000 on the home and enable them to disrupt calls on ministers to oppose any attempt by the us to extradite terrorist plots earlier. the home the wikilea ks co—founder. brexit party to top the poll in the 0ffice estimates more than 900 nigel farage says he wants to mount people of national security concern a "democratic revolution" travelled from the uk to syria to to overturn the existing political european election at the odds of order, as he launches his new brexit party. 3-1. who engage with the conflict.
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european election at the odds of 3—1. who is to say? i don't know. all i can say is this first step in the education watchdog says english councils are spending tens of thousands of pounds putting approximately 40% have since excluded children in centres that returned home. the home office says are not registered as schools. oui’ all i can say is this first step in our journey to change all i can say is this first step in ourjourney to change politics all i can say is this first step in our journey to change politics for the measures will also include the good, the first beginning of longer sentences for several this fight back, all i can say is we terrorism offences and it now are going to provide the british disney has announced becomes illegal to publish terrorist people with a decent, respectable, material or obtain it online. the it is to launch a video streaming service, that it hopes will rival competent political vehicle which netflix. home secretary sajid javid said the disney plus will be they can believe in and vote for, new legislation would give the police the powers they need to available in the us from november for a monthly and after that it is not up to us, disrupt terrorist plots earlier... subscription fee, and will it is up to the public in this offer films and tv shows as well as content from major country. i think we are going to set franchises including pixar, marvel, national geographic and star wars. exemptions will apply to individuals 0ur correspondent dave lee sent this something exciting, a spark. it will happen over the course of the next who have legitimate reasons for few weeks. i believe that we can win being in so—called designated areas update from los angeles. such as aid workers. the new laws these european elections and again this is a big launch for disney will also not allow retrospective because it is something that has start to put the fear of god into prosecutions. caroline rigby, bbc been in the works for several years. oui’ news. in a moment all the business start to put the fear of god into our members are parliaments in westminster. they deserve nothing less tha n westminster. they deserve nothing less than that after the way they have treated us over this betrayal. news after the arrest ofjulian sands yesterday —— julian assange. they would have wanted to launch it
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sooner, you would presume, i really do believe that britain but because of content deals needs the brexit party and we will they had in place with the likes of netflix and other streaming do whatever we can over the next few nigel farage calls for a democratic services they had to wait before they could launch their own revolution as he launches his new weeks to provide that respectable brexit party. the education watchdog exclusive service in those markets. that means there have been vehicle for those who want us. let's something of a delay. says english councils have spent the service won't lodge remind ourselves what this here until november referendum was about. it wasn't tens of thousands of pounds putting the 19th of this year. in other parts of the world it excluded children in centres that could be more than two years away about some economic prognosis from before disney feels it has enough exclusive content to the cbi that we might be worse off, are not registered as schools. offer to those markets. when it does launch here in the us 01’ the cbi that we might be worse off, ora it is going to be pretty the cbi that we might be worse off, or a view of many of the entrepreneurs that support is that aggressively priced. we will be better off, it wasn't the business news. $6.99 or $69.99 for the entire year. jet airways appears to have there are some netflix packages suspended all its international that cost double that about that. it was a very simple and so it is being seen as a very flights, raising fresh fears ambitious price from disney to put choice. did we wish to stay part of about the survival of india's it out there at that level. a political union or did we wish to largest private airline. we don't yet know how much apple is going to charge for its streaming become an independent, service it announced last month. self—governing nation? and none of it is important to note that disney it's saddled with debts of more than £765 million are not going to abandon and is seeking a financial lifeline their traditional way to avoid collapse. barclays bank has set up us self—governing nation? and none of us leave voters have changed our of making money. a "brexit fund" of £14.7 billion aimed at small minds. equally, many people who and medium—sized businesses. it's to help them meet the cost last year they sold more voted remain believe that democracy than 900 million tickets of stockpiling goods. to films around the world, however, it says that the fund making more than $7 billion is also helping british businesses and they are going to continue to do is so fundamental to this country expand in the long term. that traditional method, bringing films out in the cinema and who we are as a people, that uber, the ride—sharing app and releasing them on home u nless and who we are as a people, that unless the will of the people is entertainment platforms,
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and delivery business, blu—ray discs, downloads, that kind of thing. carried out, something will have only after that period changed in our nation forever. so i warns it may never make a profit. will they arrive on disney plus. think, with a bit of luck and a the firm made the stark warning disney's strength in the streaming as it releases details of its plan market is simply going to be the fact that it is disney. following wind, trying our hardest, to float on the new york stock exchange. the deal is likely to value the us i think we can turn this around. i this is a company that has for almost 100 years had hit know this is a battle that we after hit, generation firm at about £76.5bn. shouldn't be having to fight but we after generation, and they have had are having to fight it and we are to innovate with technology atjust about every step on the way. good morning. going to win it. the question is whether they can fairy tale castles, magic innovate into the streaming market. and cartoon heroes — they are chief executive bob iger it's not usually where we start has called this the company's the business bulletin, but we do today. biggest priority and he is right because the media giant disney to call it that because disney must has announced details thank you. now, let me introduce you of its new streaming service. get this right if they are going to be popular with other it hopes families will splash generations in future. toa thank you. now, let me introduce you to a selection, just a handful of the cash on yet another monthly subscription to see its films austrialians will vote the 70 candidates who will be in a general election and tv shows. on the 18th may to decide standing for hours in england, scotla nd standing for hours in england, whether the conservative government scotland and wales on may the 23rd. but disney is entering a very crowded market. wins a third term or is replaced cani leading the pack is of course scotland and wales on may the 23rd. can i please welcome to the stage by a labour administration. netflix with 139 million hywel griffith looks ahead subscribers around the world. through the medium of a sport it spends big on content unique to the country — in a bid to attract viewers, aussie rules!
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reportedly more than $12 billion last year alone — that's it's going to be mean, just over £9 billion. it's going to be dirty, and one things for certain — someone has got to lose. the e—commerce giant amazon has more just like aussie rules football, annunziata rees—mogg ? than 100 million prime subscribers. australian politics can be a brutal game, never more so it says video has been a key driver than in an election. of growth but it's thought to spend on one side, the reigning no more mr nice guy, he said, a less on content than netflix. championsm the coalition, democratic revolution is coming and a team which has been through a lot and apple has been spending a lot he placed £1000 on his party to win of off—field bustups on content and stars — since the last election, dramatically sacking its captain including oprah winfrey — and putting in a new man, elections. he was pretty confident. as it gets ready to launch scott morrison, or scomo its own streaming service. to his team—mates. dave lee is our north america technology reporter and attended he led ukip into 2a european he's only been prime minister the unveiling of disney's plans for a few months, can he make in los angeles. elections and they came top. it will this is a big launch for disney it past may? because it is something that has bea elections and they came top. it will be a big battle for pro—brexit been in the works for several years. well, on form, the government voting between ukip and this new they would have wanted to launch it could struggle to hold on. they've been lagging behind brexit party but nigel forage was sooner, you would presume, but because of content deals in the polls for the last two not pulling any punches. he says he they had in place with the likes and a half years, but there's one of netflix and other streaming key issue they'll want to bring thinks his party could top the services they had to wait before into play time after time. the strong economy. they could launch their own polls. assuming it happens next exclusive service in those markets. that means there have been this is an economy that month. what is the message? a something of a delay. it's on its way back. the service won't lodge when that happens, your here until november economy strengthens. scathing attack on westminster and the 19th of this year. that's what will drive the economy forward. so what about the opposition? what he describes as the political in other parts of the world it establishment for not delivering on could be more than two years away well, since being kicked out the brexit vote. that is a message before disney feels it has enough
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exclusive content to of office by the voters in 2013, she thinks will resonate around the offer to those markets. the labour party has sorted country. the brexit party's big plan out its infighting and, remarkably for australia, stuck to the same leader when it does launch here in the us for the last five and a half years. it is going to be pretty is that leave voters from 2016 who aggressively priced. we are united, we are determined, $6.99 or $69.99 are angry brexit has not happened for the entire year. and we are ready, ready to serve, there are some netflix packages that yet. he thinks that message will cost double that and so it is being ready to lead, ready to deliver seen as a very ambitious price from disney to put it out resonate around the uk. and we will there at that level. a fair go for australia. hear from other parties and party bill shorten could soon be joining us now leaders as the election campaign is alice enders, head of research goes on. australia's next pm. at enders analysis. there's only one problem — the headlines on bbc news... the opinion polls suggest he's even disney execs have been less popular than the talking about a seismic current prime minister. shift in media since 2006. when it comes to political leaders, after the arrest of what's taken them so long? there's no such thing julian assange yesterday, as a fans's favourite. the labour leader, jeremy corbyn calls on ministers to oppose any attempt by america to extradite the wikilea ks co—founder. nigel farage is launching his i think it has really been the new brexit party this morning ahead structure of the model and also the the election is a tussle between two of next month's european elections. main teams but there are plenty problem of acquiring a studio that of other players, minor parties the education watchdog says english and independents will be grappling councils are spending tens would allow them to have more of an of thousands of pounds putting for votes too. some on the right wing, excluded children in centres that fighting on immigration, are not registered as schools. aduu would allow them to have more of an adult entertainment focus. so others coming in from the left yesterday's presentation was also about how disney plans to split with a focus on climate change. their results really matter because if, as in 2016, the election is really tight,
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eight major assets between those two whoever forms the next government and in sport, ian poulter leads the platforms and of course disney plus may well have to depend on those british charge after the first round crossbenchers to keep hold of power. of the masters. he is two shots off is very aggressively priced. not an because voting here is compulsory, every australian has got skin in the game. the lead held by americans brooks expect plenty of rough—and—tumble apparent netflix killer. the right to the final whistle on voting day. koepka and bryson dechambeau. it was company's apparent netflix killer. the compa ny‘s objectives are a good night for english sites in apparent netflix killer. the company's objectives are not to slake metrics. the europa league. arsenal beat company's objectives are not to sla ke metrics. we company's objectives are not to slake metrics. we see that service has been very family centred so very two police forces have become napoli 2—0. chelsea won 1—0. the first in the country to use new technology to help reduce much families with children, the amount of people using their families that enjoy disney products, mobile phones whilst driving. va ltteri bottas merchandise, theme parks, going to the technology can detect napoli 2—0. chelsea won 1—0. valtteri bottas edged out sebastian the cinema and all the rest of it. when bluetooth and hands free vettel of ferrari in second practice devices are being used. disney doesn't want to have that ahead of the chinese grand prix. experience. hejust if motorists aren't hands free disney doesn't want to have that experience. he just wants to give a sign is activated to warn them lewis hamilton, defending champion, was down in fourth. them a plus. is there not a danger to stop using their device. that families will get annoyed by the campaign is being supported the prospect of having to subscribe by kate goldsmith, whose daughter aimee was killed by a lorry driver to yet another monthly service that using his phone three years ago. is going to cost them more each 0fsted inspectors have found that councils in england have paid tens month when disney could have done it aimee was one of four people killed in the crash. of thousands of pounds to place our home affairs correspondent excluded children in centres that aren't legally by licensing its content to be peter cooke has more. registered as schools. distributed via netflix or apple it's a lovely feeling to know new figures from inspectors reveal up to 6,000 children attend stop netflix did have a licensing that your child has made institutions which are suspected a difference in other deal with disney that is being people's lives. i'm just incredibly sad terminated and as you note disney that she didn't get of operating outside the law.
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content is also distributed on other to do that for the rest of her life. as well as excluded children, they include somejewish, platforms. we are really talking kate goldsmith knows more than most muslim and christian centres. the devastating consequences about streaming rights. disney is the government has promised to give of someone using a mobile inspectors stronger powers to investigate places operating giving a lot more to the family than phone while driving. illegally as schools. 0ur education correspondent just the film pipeline and so on. it sean coughlan has more. her daughter amy, amy's stepbrothers ethan and josh, inspectors investigated more than 500 schools that and the boys' mother, tracy, is investing in original content, were unregistered or suspected providing access to the disney were all killed by this man of operating illegally. vault. sleeping beauty, mickey in some, they found poor conditions on the a34 in berkshire in 2016. — rat traps, holes in the wall mouse, all the classics. that is of huge value to the average family. i and exposed electrics. think you need to understand that thomas croker had been scrolling almost 150 of the investigations through music on his phone were of so—called alternative when he hit a line families do have multiple provision centres, used for children entertainment need ten children do who might have been excluded love watching those movies over and of stationary traffic. or taken out of mainstream school. over again and at $6.99 a month that he was jailed for 10 years. 0fsted says it has found councils thomas croker didn't go out intentionally to kill my daughter paying up to £27,000 is really a compliment to netflix but he's not the only one. per yearfor a place, particularly because now netflix even though the centres are not won't have the content. why is he was driving a lethal registered and some left children weapon, effectively blind disney so intent upon owning those because he was using playing computer games all day. his mobile phone, the education watchdog says relationships? because nowadays and many other drivers that the biggest concentrations digital business is a data driven are doing that. of unregistered schools it's not a soft crime. are in london and the west midlands, business. without those consumer with one in five having relationships, disney is starved for kate is now supporting a new initiative a religious link. information about what consumers by thames valley last year saw the first
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ever convictions for really like. so it is very central running an illegal school. for disney to establish that and hampshire police. but inspectors say the rules director consumer service and own on registration are too vague, and they want more powers theirjoint road policing unit to shut down those those relationships itself. given it has become the first that break the law. in the country to buy these devices the department for education says is launching at a similar time as to reduce mobile phone use. that it's put in £3 million to help at the moment, the detector can identify apple, is a room in the market for when a passing motorist is using their mobile phone stop illegal schools and that such both of them? disney has a very but not on hands—free. places are a danger to the quality of education different focus. there is no other and the welfare of children. sean coughlan, bbc news. the police will then use that company that has ever mastered information to target children's entertainment the way particularly the hotspots. disney had. i would say family those behind the technology hope 0fsted's national director, that in the future they will be able sean harford, explained why some entertainment because it is a wider to record registration plates and issue children end up being sent tent. it stretches all the way from people with fines. early childhood all the way up to to unregulated schools. tougher penalties for using a phone illegally this some of these children aduu early childhood all the way up to adult and it has a lot of appealing were introduced in 2017. are placed by their parents, characters. i think disney, where it thinking, some of whom, will be unwittingly thinking drivers now face six penalty points they are sending them to a regular school and they are just paying for them to do that. has had weaknesses is in series and and a £200 fine if caught. thatis others will be parents who know has had weaknesses is in series and that is where it is going to focus that these places are not figures from the rac show 40% operating within the law, its original content and investment. but they want them to you are right that in the us there of drivers admit checking have a particular type of education, social media in traffic. area you are right that in the us there are a lot of families that must be statistics show it's so that may be very specifically males between 26 and 45 on a very tight who are our targeted audience. having the fatigue because every this is a joint partnership working. religious curriculum. time they turn around there is a new i can't do it on my own. others, and this is a large group fragmentation, a new service. i the mobile phone warning system is not a stand—alone. of the ones we have concern about, this is just one tool are alternative providers
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who are not registered, that we, the police, use. some of whom are funded through local authorities, think we are seeing a technological four people in that corsair and it to be placed in these settings evolution. you have to understand and they end up kind of playing had been reduced to the size that these are platform services so of lorry tire. video games all day and not getting they are being served to a variety drivers caught using their phone an education at all in many cases. of devices at all times of the day were given a chance to hear and of course to every member of the kate goldsmith‘s story. a new criminal offence family. so there is a lot of value, of "upskirting" takes effect not only from the technical point of her family's life forever scarred view, but from the content point of by a moment's destruction. in england and wales from today. view, but from the content point of view and of course we are talking a fate she says we can anyone caught taking a photo all fall victim to underneath someone's skirt if our mobile behaviours without their knowledge, about very solid disney branded don't change. peter cooke, bbc news. could face a potential two year prison sentence and be placed content that is tried and tested for on the sex offenders register. it follows an 18—month the family. 0k, alice, i share that campaign by gina martin, who was targeted at a music sense of being overwhelmed. i've a marble staircase said to have festival in 2017. only just sense of being overwhelmed. i've onlyjust gone hd so thanks very been climbed by christ she explained why the incident spurred her to campaign on his way to be sentenced for a change in the law. much for that. to crucifixion has been restored to its original state after nearly 300 years. the so—called holy staircase, administrators for the fashion which lies in rome, has been chain lk bennett say it was one of those things where 15 stores will close — a popular place for catholic including belfast, birmingham, york, pilgrims for centuries. i didn't have any legal background and knightsbridge in london. kathryn armstrong has more. or political background, 110 staff will lose theirjobs. it may look like your average marble so i thought i'd give it a go. i think there is a propensity staircase, but for many when these things happen to kind the luxury retailer — of shout that someone should change popular with the duchess of cambridg catholics around the world, things, and i just and theresa may — this particular set of 28 stairs wanted to try myself. has huge significance. yeah, if you told me i'd be went into administration last month. sitting here now and we'd have changed the law, most of the business has the scala sancta, or holy staircase, all that time ago, i don't think been sold to byland uk,
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a chinese owned firm. is thought to have been climbed i would have believed you. byjesus on his way to be i think my advice to everyone it'll take on the company's as a community would be to call it headquarters, 21 stores, sentenced to crucifixion. out when you see it, all of its concessions to support victims and to report it, but for nearly 300 years the stairs because if a new law is there, and more than 300 employees. have been encased in wood to protect great, but if we don't know about it black, them from the wear and tear and are not reporting it, of millions of pilgrims who, it doesn't do anything. asian and other ethnic minority we have to have a picture workers are a third more likely by tradition, crawl up them. of how much this happens now, for a limited time only, to be "trapped" in insecure work because it happens a lot. the staircase has been uncovered. thejustice minister, than white workers, says the tuc. translation: i am really emotional lucy frazer, explained how because i am having family problems. the new law will be enforced. there was an opportunity 1 in 19 white employees i think about my children to prosecute people for this type are on zero—hours or of act in two specific temporary work contracts. circumstances, either, as you say, and their health. under the public 0ffences act, if you were doing this act in a street, a very public place, the figure for ethnic i will pray for my family minority workers is1 in 13, and you could prosecute as well according to the tuc report, and for everyone and for peace. if you are doing it in a very which uses figures i already did it when it from the government's was the wooden steps private place, like a street, labour force survey. more on this story with but it is much more moving now. but there was a gap in the law jamie robertson this and it was very unclear afternoon. you might be a fancy if you were doing it in neither coder in silicon valley, if you think about the fact that of those types of places, but that won't stop you riding jesus was here and where he was held for example, if you are doing it the national express in a school, which is neither public to work very soon. and where he suffered, nor private, or in a workplace, could you be caught it is very emotional. by this legislation? while preparing the staircase and so that is why we have brought the company bought 60% of wedriveu, for the public, experts in some laws to make it absolutely which is descibed as "an employee from the vatican museums were amazed clear that taking a photograph up someone's skirt, wherever shuttle company serving you do it, is wrong. many of the world's largest to find thousands of notes left and fastest growing companies the first privately—funded mission to the moon in silicon valley,". by pilgrims over the centuries, including one from an italian man has failed after crashing a fancy coach company, to you and onto the lunar surface, who had escaped from slavery.
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as it tried to land. after a seven weekjourney, the steps will remain open to the public for two months before the israeli spacecraft called me. it central bank showed that new beresheet suffered an apparent being covered once more to preserve engine failure on its descent. 0ur correspondent them for future generations. rebecca morelle reports. a selfie from space. loa ns me. it central bank showed that new loans and total lending surged in the final images from march as a result... trading is flooding has brought disruption to parts of derby. the beresheet spacecraft. water from a broken pipe left city centre roads looking this one was taken moments before it like rivers and forced guests crashed on the lunar surface, at a hotel to leave via a ladder. homes and businesses in the city the end of the mission that was set have been left without a water to make space history. light as investors reflect on a week supply and four schools were forced to close. built in israel, the probe in a moment it's time was the first privately funded of brexit. more business throughout for the one o'clock news attempt at a moon landing. with kate silverton but first it's time for a look at missions like this usually cost the afternoon but back to you for the weather with mel. billions, but with a price tag of £70 million, this was space now. now for something rather exploration on a shoestring. for the landing, the team at the moment it's a case of spot the difference as far as our weather gathered at mission control, but minutes into the descent, different. a marble staircase said is concerned. it settled but it's to have been climbed by christ things started to go wrong. on his way to be sentenced cool and while we're seeing some to crucifixion has been restored to its original state good spells of sunshine, there has we currently have a problem in one after nearly 300 years. been a of a frosty start to this the so—called holy staircase, in rome, has been a popular place of our initial measurement units. morning. it is subtle because we for catholic pilgrims for centuries. kathryn armstrong has more. have got high pressure in charge. it we lost telemetry for a few moments. it may look like your average marble is over scandinavia. low pressure in it was soon clear there staircase, but for many catholics was a serious problem. we seem to have a problem around the world this particular set the atlantic trying to send rain our of 28 stairs has huge significance.
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with our main engine. way but it gets blocked. around the the scala sancta, or holy staircase, area of high pressure we are drawing we are resetting the spacecraft, is thought to have been climbed trying to enable the engine. in quite coolair byjesus on his way to be area of high pressure we are drawing in quite cool air working its way the spacecraft had crashed. across the north sea and particular sentenced to crucifixion. we had a failure in the spacecraft. but for nearly 300 years, fresh in the north sea coast. increasing amounts of cloud. the low we, unfortunately, have not managed the stairs have been encased in wood be had through south—west england is to land successfully. to protect them from the wear now starting to look but we are now we are the seventh country to orbit and tear of millions of pilgrims who, by tradition, crawl up them. drawing in more cloud along eastern the moon and the fourth to reach the moon's surface, areas. through the afternoon there isa and it's a tremendous now, for a limited time only, areas. through the afternoon there achievement up to now. the staircase has been uncovered. is a chance of one or two showers translation: i'm really emotional, for north—east scotland, east anglia and down toward the south—east but because i'm having family problems. for a team who got so close, i think about my children most and down toward the south—east but m ost pla ces and down toward the south—east but most places remaining dry, some they will be trying to find out and their health. bright sunny intervals to be had. exactly what went wrong, but with other commercial i will pray for my family, but still feeling quite cool, missions already lining for everyone, and for peace. particularly in that breeze down the up to get to the moon, translation: i already did it north sea coast. the best of the it won't be the end when it was wooden steps, of low—cost lunar exploration. but it's much more moving now. temperatures that the further west rebecca morelle, bbc news. you are but even they are below average for the time of year. as we let's now talk to our global science if you think about the fact head into this evening, the winter thatjesus was here, correspondent, rebecca morelle. and where he was held, will strengthen for northern ireland and where he suffered, it's very emotional. in the west coast of scotland. the the investigation begins into what cloud tending to dissipate us and went wrong. are they any closer? goes on. under clear skies once again it is going be chilly. many while preparing the staircase what is interesting about this as for the public, experts places thing a touch of frost first there were several things which from the vatican museums were amazed thing tomorrow morning, particularly happened during this final descent, to find thousands of notes that had out in rural spot where temperatures so we happened during this final descent, so we do know that the rocket engine been left by pilgrims over willdip out in rural spot where temperatures will dip lower than freezing. as we
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the centuries, including one failed, stopped working, so the last from an italian man who had head into the weekend, it is going escaped from slavery. to bea head into the weekend, it is going to be a very similar setup. settled reading from the telemetry data the steps will remain open showed that about 150 metres above stop many places will remain dry, it to the public for two months before being covered once more to preserve the surface it was travelling about will still be cool but we will see them for future generations. catherine armstrong, bbc news. some sunshine. the best of the 300 mph, which is really fast, which sunshine will probably be on is why it crash landed. engine fires saturday. i coal start. we have some to slow down the rocket. we don't showers feeding into east anglia. we know what caused the engine to stop now the weather. thank you very much firing. there was talk of an indeed. we had of sunshine this could have a mix. blustery in morning but clouds are starting starting to bubble up and build. it inertial measurement unit and that northern ireland, the south—west of will be cloudy this afternoon. this isa inertial measurement unit and that is a bit of the spacecraft which is the satellite imagery from england. many places remaining dry, tells you where it is in space, how feeling quite pleasant on the earlier. the biggest crowd in north—eastern scotland at the sunshine but still cool, with some eastern side of england. this fluffy it is travelling, and that reset places only thing made single figure itself so whether that prompted the cumulus cloud is just starting to engine to stop firing or whether two show up. that is what it looks like temperatures. 0n places only thing made single figure temperatures. on sunday, generally more cloud around. so quite from the surface. that white fluffy things happened they do not quite know yet so they will be looking cloud developing as we go through blustery, in northern ireland where carefully through the date. there is we may start to see this rain edging this afternoon. the cloud will a chance there might be images at a lwa ys this afternoon. the cloud will always be thicker in parts of closer. showers in western areas. some point of the crash site picked eastern scotland. that is the away from that, a fine, dry day for up some point of the crash site picked up by some point of the crash site picked south—east of england where there up by one of the orbiter is many but still feeling quite cool. currently going around the moon, so could be the odd shower across it must feel like a bit of a bad norfolk and showers in warming up though, perhaps, as we 00:26:55,728 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 had through next week. dream for the team this morning but aberdeenshire. 0therwise, norfolk and showers in aberdeenshire. otherwise, it is a they have a bit of a job to do to day of dry weather again for most of
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find out what went wrong and how us. day of dry weather again for most of us. mark out this afternoon compared to this morning. we've still got close they got. i was impressed by that north—easterly wind and that is the positive attitude in the clip, having an effect on the temperature. that kind of failure is just a way seven to nine celsius on the east station on the road to success side. ten to 13 degrees. tonight, attitude. space exploration is hard and things do go wrong. what was some clear skies. it will turn quite interesting about this mission is chilly again and there is a chance the cost of it, around £70 million of frost across mainly central and to build and launch this into space, northern part of england and up into scotland. major towns and cities and to even get it into orbit around the moon, that is a big deal. staying above freezing and not as missions like this normally cost cold in northern ireland. 0vernight billions. 0bviously missions like this normally cost billions. obviously it failed at the final moment but the fact they got lows of 4 degrees. the weekend had a so final moment but the fact they got so close is really interesting. cold start but a lovely sunny start there are other teams lining up to the day. just like the last few do this as well, other commercial days, there is not a great deal happening. whether cloud developing. missions, one in the states called the chance of some showers in the south—east of england but otherwise min express, and another team in there is a lot of sunshine. it is india got quite close to this, so going to feel pretty chilly, someone especially when you are in the wind, india got quite close to this, so someone will get around the moon and onto the moon for not much money but especially when you are in the wind, especially western areas where the it hasn't happened with this wind will be stronger. high pressure particular mission. do you think it from scandinavia are still in charge
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but we have this weather system that is trying to bump into it, trying to is within the foreseeable future shoveit that this kind of commercial project is trying to bump into it, trying to shove it away. it is not making much will be happening much more often? progress. it is going to stay up it is interesting because there is towards the west. the western areas quite a big resurgence in interest and northern ireland through the isles of scilly, the far west of in the moon at the moment. it is the cornwall there will be more cloud and outbreaks of rain. elsewhere, 50th anniversary of the apollo landing and america has announced it mcleod on sunday compared to wa nts saturday but there will still be landing and america has announced it wants astronauts on the moon by bright spells and temperatures, they 2024, which is really soon, so the big space agencies are looking at it are bright spells and temperatures, they a re really bright spells and temperatures, they are really struggling. eight to ten as well but they are looking at to 11 celsius. below average for using smaller, cheaper landers to this time of year. if you don't like get their experiments on to the it back cold, going into next week moon. the team behind this you can see that blue is starting to spacecraft already had orders from get moved away from the yellow and spacecraft already had orders from space agencies to use their lander to get experiments down there. orange. a southerly wind will bring temperatures up into the maid to whether that will happen now, high teens as we go through next obviously they have to create a week, particularly the later half of lander which works but to the the week. commercial and low—cost aspect of lunar exploration is changing. now it's time for a look at the weather.
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you're watching bbc newsroom live. we have a view from space coming up. these are today's main stories... after the arrest ofjulian assange yesterday, the labour leader, it is showing as lots of sunshine jeremy corbyn, calls on the government to oppose any over the uk at the moment. some fair attempt by the us to extradite weather cloud building in parts of the wikilea ks co—founder. england and wales but thicker cloud the education watchdog says excluded around the coast of east anglia into children are being placed in centres the north—east of scotland. as we go that are not registered as schools. through the day, the sunshine being replaced by a little bit more cloud throughout this afternoon but there will be some brighter sunny spells. ata at a cost of tens of thousands of some showers in aberdeenshire, the pounds. risk of some showers in norfolk and nigel farage says he wants to mount a "democratic revolution" to overturn the existing political order, as he launches his new brexit party, suffolk. tonight it is going to turn ahead of the european elections. i know this is a battle we shouldn't be having to fight but we are having to fight it quite chilly once again. we have been used to this over the last few and we are going to win it. nights. there will be a frost developing in central and northern new laws for upskirting offences. parts of the uk. in northern anyone caught taking a photo underneath someone's clothing without their knowledge could face ireland, not quite as cold. 0ver two years in jail and be added to the sex offenders register. parts of the uk. in northern ireland, not quite as cold. over the weekend, fine and dry for most of "tel aviv, we've got a problem." us. weekend, fine and dry for most of us. some sunshine on saturday. by
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we'll be finding out why the first sunday, more cloud and of those privately—funded mission to the moon temperatures are still on the cool didn't go according to plan. side. good morning. welcome to bbc newsroom live. the labour leader, jeremy corbyn, has said the uk government should not extradite julian assange to the us following his arrest in london yesterday. the wikilea ks co—founder was detained by police at ecuador‘s embassy, where he has been living since the country granted him asylum in 2012. he's wanted in the us in connection with a huge leak of classified government documents in 2010. mr corbyn says any extradition ofjulian assange for exposing evidence of atrocities in iraq and afghanistan should be stopped. julian assange's lawyer,
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jennifer robinson, visited her client in police custody last night and says they'll fight any extradition request. he's obviously going to fight extradition and fight it hard. this case raises significant issues about free speech. we've been warning about the prospect of an extradition request from the united states and is 2010, since i first walked him to the police station back in december 2010. and he sought asylum in the ecuadorian embassy precisely because of that, because he was concerned that he would be extradited for having published us documents, and that's precisely what happened the moment he walked out, well, he was pushed out of the embassy. 0ur correspondent simonjones is here with the latest. lots of drama yesterday, pictures of julian assange being marched out of the embassy and marched into court where he was found guilty of breaching bail. today is a focus on the extradition proceedings. there
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is due to be an extradition hearing at the start of next month. he has divided opinion. some say he is a freedom fighter, releasing information that the authorities do not want us to know for the wider good. 0thers not want us to know for the wider good. others say he is dangerous because by releasing this information he has left people in a dangerous position, identifying classified information that should not be out there. as well as legal ramifications there are also political reactions. we have had from government ministers a feeling that this arrest is justified and no one is above the law but then we have had a tweet from jeremy corbyn, backed by diane abbott to the shadow home secretary, saying he should not be extradited because he exposed wrongdoing in iraq and afghanistan. we have also had a tweet from julian assange's mother.
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perhaps not the most unbiased view but ultimately the initial allegations will be tested in the courts here and it could lead to extradition which could ultimately lead to a jail term of five years. 0ne lead to a jail term of five years. one thing matters about clarifying whose decision it is. whether it is just in the hands of the court or whether there is a role in decision—making for the government itself. jeremy corbyn says the government should intervene but ultimately the home secretary has limited powers. he has to sign off the extradition if it is granted by the extradition if it is granted by the courts but ultimately that is largely a rubber—stamping issue for him. he hasn't got a great deal of power. he can look and if he were to decide that actually the us wanted
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to tryjulian decide that actually the us wanted to try julian assange decide that actually the us wanted to tryjulian assange on further cases which they haven't mentioned here, he could to try to intervene and block it on those grounds but largely it is rubber—stamping. political pressure but limits to what politicians can actually do. and we haven't spoken yet about the americans, because of course the present donald trump has a complicated history when it comes to wikileaks. yes, complicated as a good word because you might think he would see a great opportunity to see julian assange in court to answer for allegedly leaking classified information, documents considered to have damaged us interests, but he was asked about it byjournalists, what he made of it. i know nothing about wikileaks, it is not my thing, and i know there is something having to do with julian assange, i have been seeing what has happened with assange, and that will be a determination mostly by the attorney general, he is doing an excellentjob, so he will be making a determination. i know nothing really about him,
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it is not my deal in life. he says it is not his thing, not his deal. quite a contrast to two or three years ago during the presidential election campaign when wikileaks released presidential election campaign when wikilea ks released a presidential election campaign when wikileaks released a lot of e—mails considered damaging to his opponent, hillary clinton. this was his reaction back then. wikileaks, i love wikileaks! wikileaks! this wikileaks is unbelievable. wikileaks has done a job on her, hasn't it? the more e—mails wikileaks releases, the more lines between the clinton foundation, the secretary of state's office and the clintons' personal finances. the extradition proceedings could ta ke the extradition proceedings could take several months or even years in this country, if there are challenges. to add into the mix, there is also the issue that sweden may reopen the allegation of sexual
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assault. the authorities in sweden are saying they are going to look at it after a request from the complainant. they say no decisions have been made and they are not going to give a timescale but ultimately we are likely to be talking about julian assange ultimately we are likely to be talking aboutjulian assange for quite a while. 0fsted inspectors have found that councils in england have paid tens of thousands of pounds to place excluded children in centres that aren't legally registered as schools. new figures from inspectors reveal up to 6,000 children attend institutions which are suspected of operating outside the law. as well as excluded children, they include somejewish, muslim and christian centres. the government has promised to give inspectors stronger powers to investigate places operating illegally as schools. 0ur education correspondent sean coughlan has more. inspectors investigated more than 500 schools that were unregistered or suspected of operating illegally. in some, they found poor conditions — rat traps, holes in the wall and exposed electrics.
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almost 150 of the investigations were of so—called alternative provision centres, used for children who might have been excluded or taken out of mainstream school. 0fsted says it has found councils paying up to £27,000 per yearfor a place, even though the centres are not registered and some left children playing computer games all day. 0fsted says it has found councils paying up to £27,000 per yearfor a place, even though the centres are not registered and some left children playing computer games all day. the education watchdog says that the biggest concentrations of unregistered schools are in london and the west midlands, with one in five having a religious link. last year saw the first ever convictions for running an illegal school. but inspectors say the rules on registration are too vague, and they want more powers to shut down those that break the law. the department for education says
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that it's put in £3 million to help stop illegal schools and that such places are a danger to the quality of education and the welfare of children. sean coughlan, bbc news. 0fsted's national director, sean harford, explained why some children end up being sent to unregulated settings. some of these children are placed by their parents, thinking, some of whom, will be unwittingly thinking they are sending them to a regular school and they are just paying for them to do that. others will be parents who know that these places are not operating within the law, but they want them to have a particular type of education, so that may be very specifically on a very tight religious curriculum. others, and this is a large group of the ones we have concern about, are alternative providers who are not registered, some of whom are funded through local authorities, to be placed in these settings and they end up kind of playing video games all day and not getting an education at all in many cases. the former ukip leader nigel farage has launched a new political party — the brexit party. the party's launch comes after the prime minister agreed
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an extension to leaving the european union, until the end of october, which means the uk is set to hold european parliament elections on the 23rd of may. mr farage explained why he believes a new party is necessary. i think what has happened is our 2—party system simply can't cope with brexit and the 2—party system has been exposed, frankly, as being unfit for purpose and i think we have a parliament that is now completely out of touch with our country. i think politics is broken and i want to see this, this party is not here just to fight the european elections on the 23rd of may this year. this party is not here to ask people simply to express their anger by going to the ballot box and voting for us on that day. no, no. the 23rd of may is the first step of the brexit party. 0ur task and mission is to change politics for good, to change all aspects of politics
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in this country. annunziata rees—mogg, the sister of the eurosceptic conservative mp, jacob rees—mogg, will be running for the brexit party in the european parliament elections. introduced at the launch of the party this morning, she told the audience "0ur democracy has been so betrayed that i have felt the need to be here." 0ur political correspondent nick eardly is in our westminster studio. nigel forage was scathing at the handling of the brexit process, ski thing about westminster politicians, and making the argument that if you believe in brexit then this is the party for you. he will have
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competition. his former party, ukip, will make the same argument. nigel forage thinks his old party has become extremist and to right—wing and that is why you saw the broad range of candidates being unveiled. jacob rees—mogg's sister, annunziata i jacob rees—mogg's sister, annunziata , former tory donors they are as well. it is trying to say to people that they are a broad church. are all the other party is now gearing up all the other party is now gearing up to launch their european parliamentary election campaigns? they are although some of them are doing it reluctantly and hoping that they might still get away with there being no european elections. the government is still saying they do not want it to happen and they will do everything to make sure it
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doesn't. they are arguing that they could pull the vault up to the 22nd of may, the day before it is due to ta ke of may, the day before it is due to take place. that argument is that people would expect when they voted to leave the eu that we would not be taking part. it is interesting hearing both from people like nigel —— nigel farage. .. hearing both from people like nigel —— nigel farage... european elections normally in the uk are fairly low— key affairs elections normally in the uk are fairly low—key affairs to general elections whether considerably lower turnout, down at about one third, and some people will think that this time because of their interest in brexit and the strongly held views on both sides of the spectrum about the way it is going, the turnout might be much higher this time. more on today's main stories
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coming up on newsroom live here on the bbc news channel, but now we say goodbye to viewers on bbc two. and we'll be hearing from other parties as the election campaign goes on. 0verall levels of violence in england and wales appear to be declining, despite an increase in knife crime, according to a new study. cardiff university's violence research group looked at data from a&e departments, minor injury units and walk—in centres to determine the number of people who'd been wounded during a violent incident. our home affairs correspondent, danny shaw, reports. every day, there are more victims of knife crime. last year, more people were fatally stabbed in england and wales than at any time since records began after the second world war, but does this mean we've become a more violent society? a new study from cardiff university suggests not. researchers used data from accident and emergency departments
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to calculate the number of victims of violence. it was estimated that 187,500 people sought treatment last year for injuries after being attacked. that's down 1.7% in 2017, continuing a substantial long—term reduction. the study also found that fewer children and teenagers were treated in hospital after being assaulted. this really means that we don't, all of us, need to be more scared than we used to be. violence involving knives is localised, it affects relatively small numbers of people, so, overall, the risk to us all has decreased. according to the survey, there was a small increase in the number of women who were attacked and injured, and a rise of more than 5% among men and women aged 51 and over. the reasons for that are unclear. overall, though, it seems hospitals are seeing fewer victims of violence but many more people who've been attacked with knives.
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danny shaw, bbc news. the headlines on bbc news... after the arrest of julian assange yesterday, the labour leader, jeremy corbyn, calls on ministers to oppose any attempt by the us to extradite the wikilea ks co—founder. the education watchdog says english councils are spending tens of thousands of pounds putting excluded children in centres that are not registered as schools. nigel farage calls for a "democratic revolution" to overturn the existing political order, as he launches his new brexit party. sport now. the second day of the masters gets underway in just over an hour's time. ian poulter‘s the best placed brit after day one, he finished four under par,
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a couple of shots off the leaders, who are americans brooks koepka and bryson dechambeu. day two then starts early this afternoon — live text commentary on the bbc sport website from 1:30. then there's full radio commentary on 5 live sports extra from 10 o ‘clock tonight. three chelsea supporters were turned away from their europa league quarter final with slavia prague last night after a video emerged on social media appearing to show them singing an islamaphobic song about their former player mohamed salah, who's now with liverpool. in a statement chelsea said "it finds all forms of discriminatory behaviour abhorrent", and that the club we will take the strongest possible action against "season ticket holders or members involved in such behaviour." ..stating... "such individuals are an embarrassment to the vast majority of chelsea supporters." arsenal meanwhile have started an investigation after a video emerged online where a supporter can be heard racially abusing the napoli defender kalidou koulibaly during their europa league
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quarter final last night. the cardiff boss neil warnick has been charged by the fa over controversial comments he made about match officials. he called them the "worst in the world" after his side's 2—1 defeat to chelsea on at the end of march. he's got until tuesday to respond to the charges. the players of league two side bury say they won's —— the players of league two side bury say they won't play in tomorrow's match against colchester united unless they're paid today. they've been meeting the club's chairman steve dale this morning to try and get some assurances. yesterday, a winding up order against the club by the high court was adjourned until may. meanwhile the bolton wanderers defender andrew taylor has been speaking about the devastating effect that the club's financial crisis is having on its employees. players and staff are still waiting for their march salaries, and some players have been helping the academy squad get to training... a couple of the lads helped out a few of the younger boys because they
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we re few of the younger boys because they were unable to pay for the train ticket to get to training, so i do know that we contributed to certain players to help them out and i am sure that talks will be ongoing now, if it is a few young boys who needs help through the situation, i'm sure we will help as well. that's all the sport for now. i'll have more for you in the next hour. a new criminal offence of "upskirting" takes effect in england and wales from today. anyone caught taking a photo underneath someone's clothing without their knowledge, could face a potential two—year prison sentence and be placed on the sex offenders register. it follows an 18—month campaign by gina martin, who was targeted at a music festival in 2017. she explained why the incident spurred her to campaign for a change in the law. it was one of those things where i didn't have any legal background or political background, so i thought i'd give it a go.
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i think there is a propensity when these things happen to kind of shout that someone should change things, and i just wanted to try myself. yeah, if you told me i'd be sitting here now and we'd have changed the law, all that time ago, i don't think i would have believed you. i think my advice to everyone as a community would be to call it out when you see it, to support victims and to report it, because if a new law is there, great, but if we don't know about it and are not reporting it, it doesn't do anything. we have to have a picture of how much this happens because it happens a lot. thejustice minister, lucy frazer, explained how the new upskirting law will be enforced. there was an opportunity to prosecute people for this type of act in two specific circumstances, either, as you say, under the public 0ffences act, if you were doing this act in a street, a very public place, and you could prosecute as well if you are doing it in a very private place, like a street, but there was a gap in the law and it was very unclear if you were doing it in neither of those types of places, for example, if you are doing it in a school, which is neither public nor private, or in a workplace, could you be caught by this legislation? and so that is why we have brought
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in some laws to make it absolutely clear that taking a photograph up someone's skirt, wherever you do it, is wrong. tougher laws to combat terrorism have come into force. under the new legislation, anyone found travelling to a "designated area of conflict", without good reason, could face up to 10 years in prison. the home office estimates more than 900 people "of national security concern" from the uk have travelled to the conflict in syria. caroline rigby reports. shamima begum left her home in east london in 2015 tojoin the islamic state group. she is just one of hundreds of british citizens and residents who, in recent years, have travelled abroad to live in terror hot spots. but under new laws which come into force today, people who do so could face up to ten years in prison. authorities in the uk hope the legislation will boost their ability to tackle the threat from so—called foreign fighters returning home
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and enable them to disrupt terrorist plots earlier. the home office estimates more than 900 people of national security concern travelled from the uk to engage with the conflict in syria. of these, around 20% were killed whilst overseas, but approximately 40% have since returned home. the home office says the measures will also include longer sentences for several terrorism offences, and it now becomes illegal to publish terrorist material or obtain it online. the home secretary, sajid javid, says the new legislation would... exemptions will apply to individuals who have legitimate reasons for being in so—called designated areas, such as aid workers. the new laws will also not allow retrospective prosecutions. caroline rigby, bbc news.
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the first privately—funded mission to the moon has failed after crashing onto the lunar surface, as it tried to land. after a seven weekjourney, the israeli spacecraft called beresheet suffered an apparent engine failure on its descent. our correspondent rebecca morelle reports. a selfie from space. the final images from the beresheet spacecraft. this one was taken moments before it crashed on the lunar surface, the end of the mission that was set to make space history. built in israel, the probe was the first privately funded attempt at a moon landing. missions like this usually cost billions, but with a price tag of £70 million, this was space exploration on a shoestring. for the landing, the team gathered at mission control, but minutes into the descent, things started to go wrong. we currently have a problem in one of our inertial measurement units. we lost telemetry for a few moments.
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it was soon clear there was a serious problem. we seem to have a problem with our main engine. we are resetting the spacecraft, trying to enable the engine. the spacecraft had crashed. we had a failure in the spacecraft. we, unfortunately, have not managed to land successfully. we are the seventh country to orbit the moon and the fourth to reach the moon's surface, and it's a tremendous achievement up to now. for a team who got so close, they will be trying to find out exactly what went wrong, but with other commercial missions already lining up to get to the moon, it won't be the end of low—cost lunar exploration. rebecca morelle, bbc news. well, we can now speak to dr ranah irshad, a researcher at the science and technology facilities council who's worked on the nasa
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mars insight mission. are we any clearer now what caused the engine failure? we are not. but it is not something which is rare in space travel. this is the riskiest moment in any mission, the landing. the fact that it failed at this point is nothing to be ashamed of. extraordinary for a private enterprise to get to the moon at all. it is. it is notjust the fact that they did it for very little money in the grand scheme of things but the fact that it was independent. when the rest of us do this sort of work, we collaborate and benefit from decades of heritage and benefit from decades of heritage and we stand on the shoulders of giants, we learn from the apollo
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programme, the russian lunar programme, the russian lunar programme and the chinese programme happening at the moment, and yet this team managed to do it without all of the detailed knowledge that we have garnered over the decades. the fact that they managed to not only put a spacecraft in orbit and sent back incredible pictures, but managed to get so close to landing on the moon, is an enormous feet. managed to get so close to landing on the moon, is an enormous feetm is interesting they did it without the benefit of that huge heritage most other scientists have. just to be clear, that is because it is a private operation not public sector? it is because they didn't have the opportunity, perhaps. they chose not to collaborate. that is more likely with private funding. with government operations, we are encouraged to make the most of our funding and it is a necessity. it is difficult to achieve something like this on your own. when you are able
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to ta ke this on your own. when you are able to take advantage of the fact that nasa might have its own funding, the european space agency can benefit from all of the member states and theirfunding, it from all of the member states and their funding, it means from all of the member states and theirfunding, it means you are sharing not only the cost of the mission but also all of that knowledge spread across the globe. asa knowledge spread across the globe. as a real —— israel didn't have that but they achieved something incredible. will people be encouraged at got as far as that did? it is a phenomenal achievement, incredibly ambitious not just to get into orbit around the moon but to land an instrument they and send back data. what they managed to do is something we struggle to do not just because if you go too quickly going into orbit you can miss, spin
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straight around and come back to earth, if you go too slowly you will not make it, and there are only seven countries which have managed it so not only have they managed to do that but also sent back incredible pictures which will be seen incredible pictures which will be seen around the globe and inspire young people not just seen around the globe and inspire young people notjust in israel but around the world and the rest of us will be very encouraged to work with israel as well. now it's time for a look at the weather. very little change in the weather at the moment. settled but cool. this afternoon, more cloud, the chance of some showers in north—east scotland, east anglia and the south—east of england. good spells away from that of sunshine. it will be cool on the north sea coast with the obvious
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breeze. the winds will strengthen this evening for northern ireland and the west coast of scotland. the cloud tends to dissipate so under clear skies it will be another frosty start for many places first thing tomorrow morning. particularly in rural spots and in northern ireland of the breeze. the temperatures falling too far. saturday will have the best sunshine, one to shower in the and east anglia. a bit of sleet could be in there. but to gusty winds for northern ireland and the west coast of scotland. still feeling quite cool
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