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tv   Afternoon Live  BBC News  April 17, 2019 2:00pm-5:01pm BST

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this is bbc news — our latest headlines. france has announced hello, you're watching an international competition afternoon live — i'm simon mccoy. to design a spire to replace the one today at 2:00... destroyed by fire at as nearly a billion the notre dame cathedral. euros is pledged to fund the restoration work people who view porn websites on notre dame, president emmanuel will have to prove they're 18, macron promises to finish from july 15th, as part the renovations by the time the city of efforts to make hosts the 2024 olympics. the internet safer for children. as climate change protests in london enter a third day, as climate change protests activists are arrested after glueing in london enter a third day, themselves to a docklands light railway train one couple are arrested after glueing themselves in the financial district. to a docklands light railway the private mental health care group the priory train in east london is fined £300,000, i'm here at oxford circus, and following the death of a officers have begun trying to clear 14—year—old girl in its care. the area. they have been making arrests, over a dozen. those who and the royal opera house loses its appeal over remain insist they are going the life—changing hearing damage nowhere. people who view porn websites caused to a viola player at one of their rehearsals. will have to prove they're 18, from july the 15th, as part of efforts to make the internet safer for children. coming up on afternoon live, all the sport. sport now on afternoon live with damien johnson.
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yes, another big night ahead in the we are talking champions league. champions league. manchester city, totte n ha m city, big game tonight. champions league. manchester city, tottenham and liverpool are all involved, with a guarantee of at least one english side in the semifinals. there will be at least one english team, in good afternoon. temperatures have the semi—finals. started to climb. it feels tottenham go to manchester city tonight, noticeably warmer today. plenty more looking to preserve the 1—0 lead, they have from last warmth and sunshine in our forecast week's first leg. for the next few days. i'll have the details and some pictures of snow. this could be a make or break week for city, as they continue their pursuit of the quadruple. they face spurs again also coming up — breathtaking in the premier league on saturday. new satellite images of earth, captured for a bbc i know how focused the players they are, and they desire documentary — tell the story of life on our planet to get to the semifinals, from a new perspective.. to do a good performance, from space to do our best. will it be enough? i don't know. i said many times i got to the final, the champions league with one shot i'm going to take you straight to on target in semifinal second leg. or we lose, don't get to the final, paris. the firefighters involved in
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after 33, choose a target. the battle to bring the blaze under so football is that game. control are giving a news conference. translation: to supervise the building and accompany the expert examining, part by part, attacking threats could be tonight. the expert examining, part by part, the cathedral to see what has been damaged, to see what has to be and liverpool have an advantage. they do, we saw all the drama at dismounted, what will have to be enfield, beating chelsea in the premier league weekend, liverpool consolidated, what will have to be analysed. therefore, this stage lead their quarterfinal tie with basically involves the action of porto 2—0 ahead of that second leg these experts, who will decide upon tonight. bossjurgen klopp says his side these experts, who will decide upon the different measures necessary to are going to portugal to win. be taken to be able to preserve this his players are confident too. building. this building is holding there is a confidence within the squad, and not up. because the two belfry is that an overconfidence, which is very important. but you are never going to play a full season we re playing your best football. up. because the two belfry is that this year it is when we haven't were saved, especially thanks to my played as well as we have liked colleagues, and also the first fire and we have had to grind it out brigades, the first fire engines. and keep going until the 90th minute to get a winner, that is what has impressed me more. they all worked together after the we have dug out the tight games. first call. the number of people that is what has impressed me more, to be honest. involved was 400 fire officers, 200 it could be a big night for manchester united women. they
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play aston villa tonight who acted as support, who were and if they win they'll be promoted to the women's super league involved as reserves, and the at the first time of asking. they were only re—formed last year, but have had a hugely successful hydraulic aspects. and there is also debut season under head coach casey some means that were used, for stoney. example there were some boats that we re example there were some boats that were on the seine, giving us water we now are part of the club's to attack the fire. i'd also like to history, players and staff for season one, no pressure underline these experts, or introduce them, first of all the from the club to go up, but it looks like we are on track to do that, and kernel from the ministry of culture, obviously there is no pressure from the club. one of those teams that is going to it is very much, the mantras we crawl, we walk, we jog and we run, and it is a long—term examine the building to preserve it, project, but that long term project and to see what necessary steps will hopefully leaves a legacy be taken to consolidate it. and for this club forever, that we can build a also, as you know, to rebuild it. team that can compete in europe, to build a team that promotes youth. so every undertone has a clear pathway now right into the first team. a man has been arrested, following an alleged altercation between fleetwood bossjoey barton how many fire officers are still and barnsley head coach daniel stendel at oakwell last saturday. there? translation: there are about the man attended a police station on wednesday 60 that are there to supervise the where he was arrested on suspicion of a racially aggravated public building, the hotter points, supervise the structure of the order offence and racially
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aggravated assault. scaffolding and healthy experts. —— he remains in custody for questioning. south yorkshire police say help the experts. the areas that inquiries are ongoing. the barbados—born pace bowler jofra archer has missed out on england's preliminary squad for the cricket world cup — we re but he has been offered the chance help the experts. the areas that were protected because of the houses, they sent their houses and to force his way into the side. the gel. it wasn't too strong, he's been given his first call up to the one—day squad for a couple because we didn't want to damage the of the warm up games. glass. —— the hoses. we have to be careful, they are held by the roof interesting yesterday that i had the and we want to make sure they are call with jofra and said consolidated. for some of them, of interesting yesterday that i had the call withjofra and said he had been included for the first time with england, he had a little chat, then course, possibly dismantled, some he went out and bowled brilliantly statues. after all, the roof could for registration royals. twenty20 is be affected by the wind. can you not the same as 50 over cricket but the skills jofra archer brings are broadly speaking transferable to the 50 overgame. explain what the firemen are doing in the cathedral? translation: explain what the firemen are doing in the cathedral? translatiosz anthonyjoshua's next the cathedral, the responsibility is big fight is in doubt. he's scheduled to scrutinise the welding, to take on jarrell miller especially the hot points, where the in new york on the 1st ofjune.
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but promoter eddie hearn says miller fire was particularly violent, and also to ensure that in those places has returned an ”adverse sample” to anti—doping authorities. miller's team say they're waiting the fire doesn't begin again. that for more information, and both fighters continue to train is why we still have some hoses. for the fight. israel folau is going to challenge that is why it is ensured by the his sacking over a homophobic post on social media. rugby australia cancelled his fire officers, in case the fire contract after folau said that "hell awaits" gay people. at the weekend, the 30—year—old where to begin again. that is not claimed he was standing the case. as more time passes, that by "what the bible says". he's now asked for a code of conduct hearing. is unlikely. also, they are there to that's all the sport for now. help as experts, because we are there to protect them, for their safety. they a re there to protect them, for their safety. they are looking at the various areas and looking once again thank you very much. climate change at the various crossovers, the various areas. their mission is to protests in london have continued for a third day. two activists were arrested after gluing themselves to save the works of art and evacuate arrested after gluing themselves to a docklands light well they train in what they need to evacuate. i can the financial district earlier. farhana yamin is an international climate lawyer, who was an advisor tell you it is in a good state. have to the republic of the marshall islands for the 2015 paris agreement. you started taking them away? yes. you were arrested yesterday for
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that began on the 15th of april, at superglue in your hands to the pavement outside the london headquarters of oil company, shell. the same time as the fire, and at what did that achieve?” the same time as the fire, and at headquarters of oil company, shell. what did that achieve? i think, i hope it highlighted the fact that these companies have been involved the same time 100 firemen were used in climate misinformation and have to ta ke known about the adverse impacts of the same time 100 firemen were used to take these works of art out. in climate change for a very long time. fa ct, to take these works of art out. in fact, all of the treasures were they have taken an active, proactive evacuated. we have just got to and heavily funded role in stopping climate action, and i think evacuated. we have just got to evacuate the ones in the chapel is around the cathedral. so, there are yesterday's action was designed to highlight that. i wanted to communicate somehow that me walking some more works that are being off in handcuffs for criminal damage evacuated. and you will want to be to their headquarters is really incongruous, when actually the able to intervene in the whole of climate damage is happening as a the cathedral. we are surveying, result of fossil fuel extraction and they have known about these impacts there is reconnaissance, we are and are not being held accountable. saving these works. of course there isa saving these works. of course there the third day of these protests. is a risk. but it is a calculated risk, and it is evaluated, in fact central london has been in gridlock. who are you aiming this message at? i think the message that climate we committed to protect the north change means you have to act now has belfry and make sure the structure really not got through, so i have been active in the climate movement wouldn't collapse. did you work
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for 30 years, actually, and for two hand—in—hand with the police decades we spent a lot of time officers? well, this adventure, this arguing about climate science and having debates about whether climate operation of nine hours of change was happening or not commitment, we worked really hard. happening, so that was actually 20 and all of the state services worked yea rs of happening, so that was actually 20 years of confusion. in the next ten yea rs years of confusion. in the next ten years is what we really need to ramp together. the fireman, the police up years is what we really need to ramp up efforts now. we are trying to get across the message to everybody, officers, the red cross. now with including the british public and globally, so these actions are happening globally in 40 countries experts, those who have a great deal at the moment, that everyone needs of knowledge of the building and who to step up. do you get the will decide on the various stages in impression during your protest that order to be able to consolidate, ta ke order to be able to consolidate, take away the statues, and begin the the british public necessarily supports what you are doing, given that it does bring gridlock, given reconstruction. and what about that it does bring gridlock, given that today you are targeting public samples, the inquiry itself, are you transport, used by people who quite possibly fully support you. isn't going to accompany them? well, there a danger that this backfires? i hope not. the current actions, the paris, the firemen have some data with regard to those elements. all feedback we are getting through polling, our own polling, the of the information will be given to m essa g es we polling, our own polling, the messages we are seeing and hearing the prosecutor so that the inquiry are generally understanding and supportive. that is not to say that can take place correctly. as far as eve ryo ne supportive. that is not to say that everyone is happy. there is genuine
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the inquiry is concerned, we support disruption. we want to apologise for the disruption that is happening, it, and we will report all of the but the point is we need to sit up information to the prosecutor to discover what will happen at night. and listen, and doing some actions i think all of the state services where half a million people, a went there, whether we are talking million people are affected is i'm about the forensics department, afraid necessary at this point. you reconnaissance teams, and all of are taking action during the school those inquiries are going to ensure holidays, you are creating traffic that we will try to find out jams in the centre of london, the precisely what happened. since the climate change within the capital of morning, they were able to go to polluta nts climate change within the capital of pollutants has risen dramatically as notre dame. it is for the police to a result. i'm just wondering if this is the right way to do it? well, tell you and the prosecutors to tell you. i've tried all the other ways, you know, we've done election rounds, we've done legislation, we've done treaties, and i'm not saying they are notan treaties, and i'm not saying they are not an important part... there question inaudible. it was relating are not an important part... there are treaties this country is signed up are treaties this country is signed up to, this country perhaps more to the scaffolding. well, we were than many others does get the issue and signs up to what it can. are you surveying hot points and checking on targeting the right people? we are trying to get across a set of m essa g es
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trying to get across a set of messages that action has to be taken the works of art. we have got to now by everyone. it is not a partisan issue. and we are appealing make sure that it is not going to to everybody to understand that the fall down. as far as the scaffolding disruption that is happening today is concerned, of course the scaffolding was deformed because of is necessary and proportionate to the heat. fortunately, didn't the kind of disruption that climate change impacts are having on the rest of the world. but people's collapse. so, for the moment, that is not going to make the volt lives are being disrupted, people's fragile. but we've got to do certain businesses are being disrupted, these protests over three days are things. the experts have got to do costing millions of pounds. do you the necessary to ensure that think hindsight might tell you this scaffolding can be withdrawn correctly, safely, and potentially is not the way that people appreciate protests?” is not the way that people appreciate protests? i appreciate that, i ask you to look at also have a number of... we would parliament square, the statues of have to use some specific techniques for it to be dismantled correctly. millicent fawcett, the suffragettes, nelson mandela, gandhi... but you when do you think reconstruction picked a week when parliament is not will begin? alli even sitting. all of these movements when do you think reconstruction will begin? m“ can when do you think reconstruction will begin? all i can say is that we had to take mass civil disobedience will begin? all i can say is that we will stay there for the necessary action when the political system is time to help these teams of experts. broken. the political system here, you discuss it, poll after poll, many different news channels, is could be scaffolding be withdrawn utterly incapable of solving long and a few days? once again, i can't and short—term problems at the
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moment and we are asking people to a nswer and a few days? once again, i can't answer that question. after all, we become aware to that, and this is are helping the experts and it is the method we are choosing, because the experts who will decide whether waiting for the next round of the experts who will decide whether elections, waiting to lobby your the scaffolding is withdrawal, as mp5, it is being done, that is also well as the withdrawal of certain necessary , mp5, it is being done, that is also necessary, but it is not at the statues, which could be very moment going to achieve the results as fast as we need. we are into delicate and dangerous. three days, when does the stop, what happens next? what we are seeing is there are some statues on the more and more people are joining, northern facade, are there others as happens next? what we are seeing is more and more people arejoining, so that in itself speaks volumes for the fact that people realise that at well? there are a number of statues. some level they realise something different needed to happen. they and stones that will be able to be realise and they are curious and i withdrawn to make sure that the would ask people to come and join and see for themselves and talk to the people who are organising this and who are undertaking these actions. many of them have, like me, pinions, that they are not holding never done an act of civil disobedience in their lives. i have things, the wind can affect them. we never thought that i myself would, got to make sure they do not become you know, stand there waiting to be arrested, but i feel as a lawyer it too fragile, so we have to withdraw is time for the legal community, it is time for the legal community, it a certain weight. we can't answer is time for everybody to stand up and say our political system is not solving this. and to those who say
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some of the structural questions in you are simply as a group a pain in the neck? there is definite more detail. do you think it is because the alarm wasn't functioning properly, that is why you knew about disruption going on, but i want today to highlight the massive it later? that is a question that is climate impacts that are devastating people's lives, not just going to be involved by the inquiry. inconveniencing them, but actually killing people, that is what is happening all around the world. you the inquiry is going to look at that. i haven't got an answer. of saw last year and you will start seeing it again very soon here, the course, one of these establishments there are a number of security impacts of typhoons, how the canes, elements that are established. in floods, the impact of severe other words, a fire detection with a droughts, malnutrition, food tea m other words, a fire detection with a team on the spot. one of that can security. two thirds of the world's population will live in food and water stressed areas. that is a huge majority of the world and those are actually tell us what is happening, not just as far as the detection, so we can majority of the world and those are notjust inconvenient facts, they get there as soon as possible. the are truths that are happening today andi are truths that are happening today and i would like to ask the british inquiry will actually determine and public to extend their sympathies see precisely what happened. will and stand in solidarity with those the fire office also be held? well, people, and to excuse the disruption, and we do apologise for thatis the fire office also be held? well, that is very possible, yes. after that, but if there is a better way, and if the political parties, if you can suggest to be how we should do all, we noted all of our appeals, we this better, please, please go ahead. we are out of time. exactly! note all of our departures.
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inaudible question. we didn't note thank you. yes, you can take it either way. thank you very much for joining us. any specific delays when we were eating even small amounts of red called throughout the whole of and processed meat can increase paris, the firemen arriving in ten the risk of bowel cancer, according to new research. scientists at oxford university say minutes, and that was true that people who stick to nhs guidelines — night, it was not only true for that that's eating no more than three rashers of bacon a day, centre, but for all of the fire engines that were called. there were or half an eight ounce steak — are still at greater risk of developing the disease. 30 that were sent simultaneously, experts say it's further evidence that we should find ways to cut down, because it is an atypical establishment. it is a building as richard galpin reports. which is really extraordinary, which right from the start, of course, we the health warnings about what is a traditional meal for many people are becoming increasingly stark. processed meats like bacon will make sure that all of the means and sausages have, for some time, will make sure that all of the means been known to cause cancer. will go. we have one colleague that is lightly wounded and he is absolutely fine. and this latest study suggests unprocessed red meat might be a cause ican i can tell you that during the nine for concern, too. the six—year project hours, the hoses, thejets, they led by oxford university found that we re hours, the hoses, thejets, they were able to put out the fire in the for every 10,000 people
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in the survey who ate roof. and we made sure that those the equivalent of one rasher of bacon each day, jets were not going to destroy the 40 were diagnosed with bowel cancer. stained glass windows, and they were and that number went up to 48 for those eating the equivalent not damaged by water. that is what i of three rashers each day, can tell you about the stained glass a 20% increase. windows. so, what is it about processed meats, in particular, which links them with bowel cancer? inaudible question. well, when we the link between processed meat arrived on the spot, it was quite clear, we left the centre and there and bowel cancer is likely to do was a lot of smoke in the street, with the chemicals found in processed meat, so they could be particularly near notre dame, obviously. so, i couldn't imagine, added to processed meats, so things in fact, that there was such a fire, like nitrates and nitrites, that it could be possible. we which are preservatives and linked to the increase started seeing flames from the roof in the risk of bowel cancer, as soon started seeing flames from the roof as soon as we started seeing flames from the roof as soon as we got there. and then we asked a great number of as well as natural chemicals found reinforcements, and then our in red meat are also thought priority was of course to fight to increase the risk of cancer. against the propagation of this cancer research uk release the findings of this study about red fire, and avoid the whole thing being destroyed. the head teams and processed meats mean the government should review its current guidelines about how arrived. they were working on the much meat people should eat. towers. and then we limited the but will it change
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people's eating habits? propagation of the two towers, and i absolutely love bacon, the belfry. so we used a maximum so it is not going to put me off it, nothing will. i think it is all about balance, number of hoses. of course, because to be honest, but i have this vegan sausage roll. of all the wood, that made it very difficult. when you got there, did ina in a response to this study, the you realise straightaway that it was meat advisory panel said... really tough? well, yes, because we all know that building very well. despite this, the advice after all, it is a building that is from cancer research uk is the less meat you eat, well known by us. we knew how to the less likely you are have access to it. we knew if, in to get bowel cancer. richard galpin, bbc news. fa ct, have access to it. we knew if, in fact, the roof were to be pierced thanit fact, the roof were to be pierced than it would be very difficult. so, we had a maximum amount of water to limit the propagation of the fire. but it didn't do anything. so we lost the roof. at the same time, we we re lost the roof. at the same time, we were at least able to save the works of art that looked good! let's talk were at least able to save the works ofartand were at least able to save the works of art and two belfry is. how did business in a moment, but first, the headlines on afternoon live. you feel? at the beginning, we were france has announced an international competition incredulous, we could not imagine to design a spire to replace the one the cathedral could burn. afterwards destroyed by fire at the notre dame cathedral. you become professional and carry people who view porn websites
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out your orders, your mission. and will have to prove they're 18, we did our utmost in order to be from july 15th, as part of efforts to make able to limit the spread of the the internet safer for children. as climate change protests fire. as you could see, the first in london enter a third day, people who were in there, they were activists are arrested after glueing themselves to a docklands light railway train in the financial district. having remote communications, but everything to fall. as you saw when here's your business headlines on afternoon live. the spy fl, there were risks. it was house prices rose in february at the slowest rate since september very risky. -- the spire fell down. 2012, while in london house prices fell. that's according to data published by the office for national statistics. more on this in a moment. a surprise court ruling in london has revived was difficult to manage the risk? the possibility of a £14 billion lawsuit against mastercard. you have to go up to the top flight, the court of appeal has ruled a tribunal must reconsider the class through the towers, it is not easy. action against mastercard. it alleges 46 million people paid the breathing equipment is heavy, you to use your hoses and you can't higher prices in shops than they should have due imagine what is going to happen, for to high card fees. example that the whole of the roof is going to collapse. when the spire helium—filled balloons have been collapsed, we pushed our men back, blamed for causing hundreds of train delays for passengers and then we could see all of the across the uk each year. network rail wants to highlight what it says media the various cranes, the
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automatic reigns that we use, from is a growing problem. outside. and when we saw that the the rail infrastructure roof had really gone, we could no firm has recorded 619 balloon—related incidents — many dangerous — across england, longer recuperate that, and we decided to really stay on the belfry, to make sure that they were scotland and wales in the past year. not going to disappear. the bell towers, rather. you, physically, where were you? well, i came in the now, we are going to talk about the competition watchdog, and this is about travel firms, who ask for first fire engine, through notre dame, through the front area of deposits, and then if a customer is ill or has a reason not to carry out notre dame. i made sure there was no longer anybody in the cathedral and the journey then finds that they are that was confirmed to me quickly. liable. so can you get your deposit the two teams, in fact, two main back, is the question? the competition and markets authority accesses , have looked into this, essentially the two teams, in fact, two main accesses, they try to place the you can get your deposit back, hoses on that floor, and then go for depending on the reasoning.” reinforcements. the greatest amount you can get your deposit back, of reinforcement we could get from depending on the reasoning. i wonder what percentage want their money paris, then after that i gave orders back? funny you should ask! 8996, so to my superiors, who took over, in the survey of the cma have done, fa ct. to my superiors, who took over, in fact. and then i found my men on the they found that 89% want their money back they should, if they fell ill, last floor. and then i coordinated action at that particular level. how they had to cancel their holiday, and essentially it is saying lots of
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many hours were you there? nine people are not aware, so there is lots of wrong information out there. hours. were you scared that it was and actually one in five felt they not going to be manageable? when we re and actually one in five felt they were treated unfairly. one in five will the roof went, we knew it was going to be very complicated. it was can you say, i think that is one in quite obvious. basically, we wanted five. da—da! to make sure the staff were safe. we can you say, i think that is one in five. da-da! generally consumers feel like they want to be able to be wa nted to make sure the staff were safe. we wanted to save, in fact, the two eligible for that money back, but we bell towers, and of course save the works of art. the authority said if just need more clarity on it. joining us now is paul latham, director of strategy you had been quarter of an hour and communications at the cma. later, things could have been thank you forjoining us. how do people go about getting their disastrous? i can't confirm that. all i can say is that we were very deposits? so, if you've given a quick. we worked very quickly. the deposits? so, if you've given a deposit to a travel or holiday firm, and you have to cancel your booking, means arrived very quickly and the then that travel and holiday firm, hoses were efficient from the if they are able to resell your beginning. sometimes you can have a booking, may be the holiday home you number of hoses and a very limited have booked, then they should only
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perimeter through the towers. at one be able to keep a fair proportion that cove rs point, with the wooden roof, it was be able to keep a fair proportion that covers their costs. in the not obvious. you certainly were as first instance you should contact them and make clear you are entitled to that money back. so in terms of efficient as possible. so the strategy was to do it in a few the terms of conditions, what are minutes? as far as the two towers, they with this specific rule, the bell if we hadn't used these because the company has to be able very heavy hoses, everything would to sell the holiday, and therefore the customer will be able to be have gone. but in fact the hoses eligible for that money back in that we re have gone. but in fact the hoses situation specifically? so there is were well positioned, and the a mistaken belief among some automatic cranes worked well. when consumers and also businesses that if something is written into the terms and conditions, that you went into these towers, how did absolutely binds you, but actually the consumer rights act, unfair you went into these towers, how did you feel? when you go up into the contract terms law overrides terms and conditions if they are unfair various accesses, it is very narrow, under the law, and therefore what we there is not much light. the equipment is very heavy, for men and are asking travel businesses, women, it is very heavy equipment to holiday businesses today to do is to go up, women, it is very heavy equipment to review their terms and conditions go up, and access is not obvious. to and to check that they are fair, and establish the hoses you need to have we have launched a new website today
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some space, establish the hoses you need to have some space, so establish the hoses you need to have some space, so it is a one metre to help them do that. so customers balcony. when you get onto the balcony. when you get onto the balcony and get to the last floor of the tower, and you see this in this situation, will they get all their money back, in terms of, is it catastrophe, with a roof that is not going to be subtracted with starting to just disappear expectancies, so it is all the money everywhere, you try to use the water as quickly as possible, and look at they pay is the deposit? it is in the various priorities, save the fa ct they pay is the deposit? it is in fact as you indicated, if the towers as quickly as possible. and business has had costs associated for example with remarketing or the also to save men. what did you feel about it? well, a catastrophe for holiday home, it is entirely legitimate for them to keep that. notre dame, because it is what they are saying and what the established very well and all french law says very clearly is that it people know it very well. it is a should only be a fair proportion of disaster, because we always imagined that all types of catastrophic the deposit, or it should only be a fair cancellation fee in order to intervention could happen, but it was just as a test, so when you cover that business's costs. and really saw the roof had disappeared, that was very special. we had to this is your recommendation, businesses, what are you doing to intervene very quickly. even though consult businesses so they are more proactive about informing their we knew right from the start it was consumers they can do this?m going to be incredibly complicated. proactive about informing their consumers they can do this? it is not a recommendation, it is the law. did you know exactly what you are we are working closely with a range going to do? absolutely. we know of travel organisations, to spread
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this establishment by heart, we know the word to make it really clear to the access points. we did our utmost businesses. we know the vast with the maximum amounts of means. majority of businesses in this it sometimes with a building that is sector want to do the right thing, we know awareness of the law could be higher so this is really a campaign to drive awareness of that special, it is not obvious, you use and to make sure consumers do get all possible hoses at the beginning, their rights. thank you very much maximum means, and that is what we for joining their rights. thank you very much forjoining us, paul latham, did. do you think you tried harder director of strategy and communications at the competitions and markets authority. a look at the because it was notre dame? well, no, markets. the ftse100 is for any kind of intervention we will and markets authority. a look at the markets. the ftse 100 is flat at the do our best. and there was just one moment, this morning it was in negative territory, had a pretty good day yesterday but mining companies aren't doing too well fireman that was slightly wounded. but of course notre dame is today, because a court in brazil something special. we know that we decided that vale, it can go ahead are going to be supervised. i could see how many people were actually at with its mining operations, it could notre dame, watching us, and that have a knock—on effect of iron or. was quite striking. of course, it is a special intervention. people were bhp billiton and rio tinto are down today. at the moment. thanking us, bringing us a presence. we are going to pull away from the news conference, we will keep an eye
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on it. fire officers, first on the thank you. scene, saying they were not aware of schools across denver in the united states are shut today any delay in getting to the notre as police search for an armed woman dame cathedral or a delay in said to be obsessed with the 1999 columbine massacre. starting to put out the fire. there has been some suggestion of that. also saying that there is still work officials say 18—year—old sol pais travelled from miami on monday night before buying a shotgun and ammunition. being done, 60 firefighters are police describe her as being still at the cathedral, to continue the work that is being done, and also to help in the continuing work "extremely dangerous." to re m ove also to help in the continuing work to remove works of art. he also made we identified miss sol pais the point that, to avoid damage to as having travelled from miami. she has made some concerning the point that, to avoid damage to the stained glass windows, the jets comments in the past. of water, strong jets of water, she has expressed an infatuation which capped away from the stained with columbine, and the shooting glass window so they would not be that happened there 20 years ago. damaged by water. we will keep an eye on that. we are expecting to hear from eye on that. we are expecting to hearfrom a eye on that. we are expecting to hear from a chaplain that was also involved. we will keep an eye on that and if that happens we will because of that, we were concerned. ta ke that and if that happens we will take you back there. so we started looking climate change activists into her actions once she got here. have caused gridlock across london for a third day, we identified that she had departed in protests designed the airport and went to a store, to shut down the capital. protestors have blocked busy where she did procure a weapon. intersections, and two demonstrators glued themselves to the top of a train at canary wharf.
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more than 300 people have been she obtained a pump action arrested so far across the uk. our correspondent matt cole shotgun and ammunition. is in central london. she was then taken to an area where she was last seen, he isjust off out towards the foothills. he is just off oxford street. what is happening? in the last ten and we have been trying minutes or so, police have returned to find her ever since. in numbers to this site. they are because of her comments beginning again to arrest people. and her actions, because of her about an hour and a half ago they travel here to the state, first arrived, en masse. if we turn because of her procurement the camera around, you can see a of a weapon, immediately number of police vans have been upon arriving here, parking up and gathering up the way. we consider her to be a credible threat. i have slowly been pulling people certainly to the community, out of the crowd. they have been warning them that under section 14 and potentially to schools. of the public order act 1986, if now — from astonishingly intimate they don't move on and gather at one film of elephants in the wild, of the other sites on the marble to uncovering the rate of deforestation — arch, they will be under arrest. in a new bbc documentary series hopes to tell the story of our planet the last ten minutes, half a dozen as you've never seen it before. ‘earth from space' uses further arrests. those who are still cameras hundreds of miles up in the atmosphere, here, particularly those that are to explore some of the more significant members of the most remote habitats. let's take a look. demonstration, they have made it perfectly clear they have no intention of leaving the site. as from space, the view you can see, there are sizeable of our planet is breathtaking.
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numbers of people here. they are not all, by any means, protesters. many people are stopping to listen and look at what is going on. to hear about the message that the protesters want. they say, principally, they want to zero carbon emissions by 2025. that is what they are calling for. it is not entirely clear on the methodology satellites orbiting the earth can they want to use to get there, but now look down on it in absolutely extraordinary detail. for now, a largely boisterous, friendly, almost fun atmosphere. one now where the police are getting in and trying to get rid of people. we will get more from you later. thank you. people in the uk who view pornographic websites will have to prove they are 18, from july. using cameras on the ground, the government is bringing in the air, and in space, in compulsory age verification we can tell the story of life checks, as part of efforts to make on earth from a brand—new the internet safer for children. perspective. it means that commercial providers of online pornography will be required by law to ensure that their users are aged 18 or over. margot james is at a time when the earth's surface is changing faster than at any the culture minister. point in human history, good afternoon. how does this work we can see just what impact we are having.
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in practice? well, in practice, when people want to view adult content online, when they go to a website, they will be asked immediately to prove that they are 18 or over. they that is going out at 9pm tonight on will then be diverted to a bbc one. now a look at the weather using his satellites for us now, ben rich. good afternoon. today for most specialist provider of age verification services. they will of us, things have started to feel provide that assurance, assuming considerably warmer, and that trend they are 18, and can prove it. they continues for the next few days, as we head into the easter weekend. will then prove it and they will be high—pressure holding firm across passed back to the site. how can scandinavia, the winds around high—pressure move in a clockwise they prove it? what information do direction and that is going to bring you have to supply? well, that would increasingly warm air in our be dependent on each age verifier. direction over the next couple of days, something a bit cooler flirting with the eastern coastal the independent regulator, the british board of film classification counties, so slightly lower temperatures across the east coast. much of the cloud, mist and fog has will be enforcing these regulations, they have a lot of systems, usually been lingering across parts of northern ireland but for most it has through a passport, drivers license, credit card or something of that turned into a great day with hazy sort. wouldn't that pose a huge problem? you're talking about the sunshine though that is how we close
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creation of a database that would out the afternoon, just a few pose a privacy problem if that was patches of cloud, temperatures, 19 ever to leak, because you have a database of those who use pornography? well, if that were the case, i think we would have a problem on our hands. happily, that in london, 15 in glasgow, quite a is not the case. there are very, warm enter the day. this evening and very strict data privacy controls tonight most places will see clear spells but it looks like we will see that we have built into the system, an area of cloud developing close to the east coast and then drifting which go above and beyond the uk's further inland. some health fog data protection laws. we have across parts of the pennines and the peak district for example is that introduced a voluntary certification cloud goes into the hills. may a scheme, which carries a greater privacy threshold, and no personal touch of frost in the far north—east of scotland. but tomorrow any early data will go between the age cloud mist and fog will break up and then we are looking at another blue verifier and the porn site, assuming sky day for most with quite a lot of sunshine but you will notice the strength of the south—easterly wind, it is part of the accredited schema. and if you are spending your day is quite interesting, the dcms is along the north sea coastline, the department in charge of temperatures are likely to struggle a little bit, 12 degrees in incrementing the gdp are launch in bridlington for example, and even some of these channel coasts where the uk, yet the news release with which you sent out the information you are exposed to that breeze will today on this, i have a copy in my see some slightly lower temperatures. but come inland, those
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hand,it today on this, i have a copy in my hand, it lists the e—mail addresses of more than 300 people. information cabbages tomorrow getting up to 20 may be 21 degrees at once and spreading further north and west as that would normally be put out under we go into friday. friday, good friday of course, looking a bcc. is that embarrassing?m predominantly sunny, blue skies across many parts of the uk, and that would normally be put out under a bcc. is that embarrassing? it is a bit embarrassing, i must agree. it was an error. we are evaluating at those temperatures were nudging upwards ever further, 21 the moment whether that was a breach those temperatures were nudging upwards everfurther, 21 degrees in glasgow, 21 in cardiff, somewhere of data protection law. we don't think it was. but we are taking it could get to 22 degrees. high—pressure tries to hold on for the easter weekend and it looks like seriously. obviously that is a it is going to. frontal systems com pletely seriously. obviously that is a completely different matter. with attempting to push in from the this system... you understand what north—west but not liking a lot of i'm saying? you said there is no way progress. death not making a lot of the databases i'm saying? you said there is no way the data bases can i'm saying? you said there is no way the databases can be breached, and yet here we are, your own progress. death not making a lot of progress. particularly on saturday department, we all make mistakes is it will feel particularly warm. —— the point? well, we have got... we not making a lot of progress. have got real barriers to any leakage of data across... between the age verification companies and the age verification companies and the porn sites. the porn sites will never have that data. they will never have that data. they will never have that data. they will never have any need to have it and they won't be allowed to have it. it
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will be diverted to a specialist age verification provider. that is the system. so there are additional safeguards. i don't think people have anything to worry about in terms of the example you have just given, which is... you know, a means of communication between our department and journalists. margot james, thank you so much for your time this afternoon. breaking news coming from the court of appeal. we are hearing the royal opera house has lost a case, about a viola player his hearing was impaired. it has been decided in court that the opera house fails to ta ke court that the opera house fails to take adequate steps to protect him, and he suffered life changing damage. the case has huge implications. i was talking to clive coleman, our legal analyst. huge
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implications for all live entertainment. the steps the industry will need to take in future to protect those working at live events. it is the first appeal ever on hearing damage caused to those in the music industry. the court has ruled that the royal opera house failed to take reasonable practical steps to protect the player. they failed to act on the dangerous noise levels until after his injury. we will be talking to clive coleman about this case a little later on. the virtuoso viola player has won that case. now let's have a look at the weather. then rich is here. i was walking past your desk and you hello, you're watching afternoon live — i'm simon mccoy. have amazing pictures, not from today at 4... here? no, snowfields are a world away from the weather we will be france announces an international competition to design a new spire having. we have gone half a world for notre dame cathedral.
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firefighters have described their initial shock at being away, two and a half thousand metres called to the blaze. above sea level in the mountains of translation: in the beginning, we were incredulous, japan. what we are looking at is we could not imagine that a cathedral could burn. this wriggling pathway, this is the and then afterwards you become professional, and you carry alpine routes. these pictures are out your orders, your mission. amazing. incredible. we have walls of snow that are 16 metres high, and as climate change protests you can travel through the spy boss, in london enter a third day, activists are arrested after glueing you can travel through the spy boss, themselves to a docklands you can travel through the spy boss, you can go and have a look and take light railway train photographs. it is simply because of the amount of snow they have had in in the financial district. that part of japan over the winter iamat i am at the heart of oxford circus, time. look at that. it's amazing. and many more members of the so—called extinction rebellion are occupying london, saying they will stay here all night. amazing. a centimetre of snow on the people who view porn websites will have to prove they're 18, a40 and this country grounds to a halt, and then you have this!m from july the 15th — as part of efforts to make closes all winter, it has onlyjust the internet safer for children. reopened. my big question was, how on earth do they take that out? the best and so we can find is that they coming up on afternoon live all the sport. use machines. i wasn't thinking it the countdown is on to another was blokes with spades. at a pretty pivotal night of champions league
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action with liverpool, manchester big snowplough. they reckon you get city and spurs all bidding for a place in the last four. ben rich has some snow even remaining here as some better news on the weather? late as august in the season because it is so high up it doesn't get that warm. the walls will get lower. if you want to visit, plenty of time. temperatures have really started to climb now. that trend continues to lets turn attention closer to home. the next few days, into the easter you've got some good news?“ weekend. so, how long will the fine lets turn attention closer to home. you've got some good news? if you like warmth and sunshine, yes. and warm weather last? find out later on. we know what simon likes, and most also coming up, in news nationwide, we'll hear about the medical of you will like this as well. high assistance dog that has been pressure in charge of the scene. the making life—saving detections. high sets across scandinavia. the flow of wins in a clockwise direction, that is going to be bringing warm air. certainly no sign of snow in this weather set up. something a little bit chilly in western areas. temperature the french prime minister, edouard philippe, has announced struggling to rise quite as much. we an international competition to design a spire to replace the one started today with areas of fog and destroyed by fire at notre dame cloud. most places enjoying sunshine. some high cloud in the cathedral in paris on monday.
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sky, sunshine was a little bit hazy he said it could be a replica in places. that is not going to of the 19th—century original, or something more modern. spoil things very much through the rest of the afternoon. just the nearly a billion euros has already outside chance of a shower. some been pledged for the restoration. and in the past hour, misty knesset laughing onto southern the paris fire brigade has given its first account of the nine hour battle to stop coasts. —— misty areas latching onto the fire spreading. a spokesman said if the flames in the north belfry had taken hold the southern coasts. we go through the whole structure would have tumbled in a chain reaction. this evening and tonight, we will be our correspondent, hugh schofield, dry with clear spells. it looks likely we will develop some extra cloud close to the east coast. it reports from paris. will roll inland. temperatures for day two since the fire and fire most of us five or 9 degrees. you crews were out on the roof might geta and towers of notre—dame. most of us five or 9 degrees. you might get a touch of grass frost the job for now is to make the place across the far north—east of scotland. into tomorrow, early cloud safe, shore up what is unstable, and fog will lift. once again, we remove what is likely to fall. the longer—term task of restoration are expecting a lot of sunshine. if and repair is one that is too far off to contemplate. but at the government's weekly meeting, the long—term you are close to the eastern coasts, is what they were discussing and a vision of the day when notre—dame will once again stand proud. 11 degrees in dundee. even some of
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translation: this is a big challenge and an historic the channel coasts, 12 degrees responsibility of this generation. france and the government important. coming on land tomorrow, will deliver. we have already started and set up real warmth, 20 or 21 degrees. even a special committee to deal with the restoration. in glasgow, 17 degrees. the temperatures continue to climb into good friday. blue skies from dawn until dusk in many places. still a pictures from inside the cathedral reveal the scale of the work that lies ahead. little bit cooler on coastal areas. it's notjust the roof temperatures up to 21 or 22 degrees. that has gone, parts of the stone vaulting, too. even temperatures up to 21 or 22 degrees. eve n a cross temperatures up to 21 or 22 degrees. even across some parts of scotland. president macron has said he wants the set for the easter weekend the job done by 2024, five years away, in time brings high pressure. frontal systems trying to work in from the for the paris olympics. overambitious? not necessarily. north—west. there is uncertainty translation: it is possible about how much progress they will that the restoration work could take five years, but we would need hundreds make. for most of us it stays dry. of workers to make that happen. it's up to everybody involved to determine how long the reconstruction takes. on saturday, feeling very warm for me, the urgency is to preserve what is already in place now indeed, temperatures perhaps up to and in the next few weeks planning 25 degrees. will start on how to rebuild the cathedral.
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disasters there have been before to medieval buildings, this at france's beloved notre—dame was may be more devastating than most, but every time it is the same question, what kind of restoration to be chosen? we try to recreate the original woodworks and timber framework. it is a fascinating one, it is well known, well designed. there were a lot of surveys, this is bbc news — so this is one issue. our latest headlines. another one which is to recreate something new, as nearly a billion euros is pledged using new tools and techniques, to fund the restoration and that is the debate that's work on notre dame — starting about right now. president emmanuel macron promises to finish the renovations by the time the city hosts the 2024 olympics. as climate change protests in london enter a third day, notre—dame will eventually be one couple are arrested restored, the goodwill is there and the skills. after glueing themselves to a docklands light railway train money is pouring in, but the task ahead is of monumental proportions. in the capital's financial district. people who view porn websites will have to prove they're 18, from july 15th, as part of efforts to make jean—marc fournier is the chaplain the internet safer for children. of the paris fire brigade. the private mental health he saved the blessed sacrament care group the priory and the crown of thorns from the burning cathedral is fined £300,000 —
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following the death of a fourteen—year—old girl in its care. on monday night. sport now on afternoon live translation: it is a realjoy to with damien johnson. have participated in preserving this champions league. manchester united important landmark for the french out last night, city playing people, as well as the catholic tonight, they play a team, spurs, heritage. it brings us a lot of who have a slender lead at the moment. yes, it was a magical night, happiness to see the prison messi starred again for barcelona, population showing their affection, with their applause and kind words. beating manchester united pretty co mforta ble beating manchester united pretty comfortable in the end. but the attention as you say switches to —— the parisien population. this country, there will be at least one english team in the semifinals philippe demay is the deputy chief as well, because tottenham go to of paris fire brigade and says city tonight as you say looking to it was a risky operation. translation: at the beginning, preserve the 1—0 lead they have from we were incredulous. we couldn't possibly imagine a cathedral could burn. last week's first leg. afterwards you become professional, carry out your orders and mission, and we did our utmost in order to be this could be a make able to limit the or break week for city, as they continue their pursuit spread of the fire. of the quadruple. as you can see, the first people they face spurs again who intervened were, in fact, in the premier league on saturday. having remote communication. but everything could fall. i know how focused the players they as you saw with the spire, it fell. so there were risks. are, and they desire to get to the it was very risky. semifinals, to do a good performance, to do our best. i said
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many times i got the final, the champions league with one shot on target in semifinal second leg. 0r we will be getting the latest from we lose don't get to the final after paris and that competition from hugh schofield a little later. 33, choose a target. so football is that game. climate change protesters have caused gridlock across london for a third day, the thoughts of pep guardiola. that around a dozen people have could be a really interesting if been carried to police vans at oxford circus, totte n ha m could be a really interesting if tottenham get an early away goal and after they refused to comply city have to come out and try to get with a public order direction by the police to leave the area. past them. quite a game. liverpool protestors have blocked busy roads, and some demonstrators glued are ina themselves to the top of a train past them. quite a game. liverpool are in a strong position as they at ca nary wharf. more than 300 people have been face porto. every game is a must not arrested so far across the uk lose at the moment for liverpool. we since the protests began saw the excitement and drama of the game against chelsea withjurgen klopp punching the air at the end. earlier this week. liverpool, meanwhile, have one foot in the last four. they lead their quarter—final tie the mayor of london sadiq khan says with porto 2—0, ahead he understands the right to protest, of tonight's second leg. bossjurgen klopp says his side but said public transport helps are confident of progressing and are going to portugal to win. to protect the environment well, the right to peaceful protest there is a confidence within the is just that, it's a right. squad, and not an overconfidence, it's one of the cornerstones of our democracy. which is very important. but you are and the issue about which those who are protesting are protesting never going to play a full season playing your best football. this is one that is very important.
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year it is when we haven't played as we do face a climate emergency. well as we have liked and we have the government has had to grind it out and keep going been too slow to act. what i would say to the protesters until the 90th minute to get a is you have to make sure winner, that is what has impressed you are safe, and you have to make me more. we have dug out the tight sure you are not causing games. that is what has impressed me danger to others. more, to be honest. away from it also, you don't want to inadvertently cause problems with our public transport, which is what we are going to be encouraging people to use when we face a climate emergency. and i am worried about protesters football... targeting public transport, because i'm trying to encourage more barbados—born pace bowler and more londoners to use public jofra archer has missed out transport because it is better on england's preliminary squad for the environment. for the cricket world cup — our correspondent dominic casciani but he has been offered the chance to force his way into the side. is in central london for us. he's been given his first call up yes, it is basically a carnival to the one—day squad for a couple of the warm up games. atmosphere at oxford circus. this is obviously twe nty20 is the third day that this really obviously twenty20 is not the same as 50 overs cricket but the skills that jofra archer as 50 overs cricket but the skills thatjofra archer brings as 50 overs cricket but the skills important junction has been that jofra archer brings are broadly the third day that this really speaking transferable. high—profile importantjunction has been occupied by the extension rebellion followers, supporters. the party has tournament like the ipl is obviously going to give a player exposure to just kicked off for a third time in as many days, the dj on the pink high pressure situations. he has had a good amount of experience now, now yacht, you might be able to catch a he gets a chance to play for glimpse of that behind me. they are england, as he wants to do, and show getting going. why is there a pink what he wants to do here. yacht? simply because they are highlighting the emergency they say thatis highlighting the emergency they say that is going to engulf the planet,
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with rising seas. oxford circus itself may ultimately be under water. the way they are occupying it could be a big night this territory is by basically for manchester united women. they sitting down and refusing to move. play aston villa tonight and if they win they'll be promoted the police are trying to play it to the women's super league fairly delicately here. there have at the first time of asking. they were only re—formed last year, been a number of arrests this but have had a hugely successful afternoon. they are saying, you can debut season under head coach casey stoney. we now are part of the club's protest at marble arch, you have to history, players and staff for season one, no pressure from the leave this area. when people resist, clu b season one, no pressure from the club to go up, but it looks like we are on track to do that, and effectively very passively by lying obviously there is no pressure from on the ground, the police very the club. it is very much, the gently pick them up and take them to mantras we crawl, we walk, we jog a van and take them to be arrested and we run, and it is a long—term ata a van and take them to be arrested at a police station. that would be project, but that long term project hopefully leaves a legacy for this on suspicion of public order offences. it is very passive and clu b hopefully leaves a legacy for this club forever, that we can build a peaceful. there is no aggression in team that can compete in europe, to build a team that promotes youth. so the atmosphere. the police are quite good—natured. the atmosphere. the police are quite good—natu red. they are every undertone has a clear pathway the atmosphere. the police are quite good—natured. they are also very low now right into the first team. in numberas good—natured. they are also very low in number as well. a bit of an old situation. i think it raises the question about where it is going to go from here. the protesters i've been speaking to are determined to and anthony joshua's next been speaking to are determined to be here all night. they say they big fight is in doubt. he's will carry on as long as it takes. scheduled to take onjarrell miller in new york on the 1st ofjune. they have food stalls, diy loos at but promoter eddie hearn says miller
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has returned an ”adverse sample” to anti—doping authorities. miller's team say they're waiting for more information, the other end. chris packham, the and both fighters continue to train for the fight. israel folau is going well—known wildlife presenter spoke to challenge his sacking over to the crowd a few moments ago. he a homophobic post on social media. rugby australia commended them for being peaceful, cancelled his contract after folau called them brave for standing up, said that "hell awaits" gay people. at the weekend, the 30—year—old saying they were on the right side claimed he was standing by "what the bible says". of history. what is interesting he's now asked for a code of conduct hearing. about that is that if you go on to that's all the sport for now. social media, some people are saying that these are a bunch of... basically, people accusing them of thank you very much, talk to you later on. more on that breaking being hippies, crustyjugglers, but story. the court of appeal supporters like chris packham say has ruled unanimously they are standing up for what is that the royal opera house failed right. i think we might be able to to take reasonably practicable steps hear from right. i think we might be able to to protect a virtuoso viola player who suffered life changing hearing hearfrom him. damage at a rehearsal of wagner's thunderous opera ‘die walkure'. i wanted to show solidarity with our legal correspondent these people who are peacefully drawing to the well's attention that clive coleman is here — we have a grave issue at hand, that it is the implications as much as anything else that people will look of climate change, overpopulation, we know politicians are not at. absolutely, because this is a listening or not acting on the one—of—a—kind case. no musician has ever taken this kind of a legal issues broadly or urgently enough. action before. let me tell you about we are all collectively concerned
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that unless we do something about it the virtuoso viola player, he has now, and pretty quickly, we will not played with some of the great have a sustainable planet in the orchestras in the world. in 2012 he very near future. it is very, very was in rehearsal in the famous pit serious. to be quite honest with at the royal opera house, where the you, we've got to the point now orchestra sits, and he was sat in where most of us believe our front of the brass section, they politicians are acting negligently, we re very front of the brass section, they were very close behind him. the and this gives us real concern. noise generated by the horn behind his ear was something in the region this is all very well, a nice of 130 decibels. to put that into atmosphere, they are targeting public transport and they have brought the centre of london to context, it is about the noise a jet chaos. it is costing people time and a lot of money for local businesses. engine would generate, but that close to your ear. he claims as a they want to know how much longer result of that he suffered something this is going on? absolutely. this called acoustic shock, a sort of is why the police find themselves in instantaneous hearing damage. a mix a dilemma. i can think back 20 years of ten it is, hyperacusis, dizziness, and it ruined his career, ago, major protests against capitalism in the heart of london, and it has had a very serious effect on his life. he sued the royal opera the police has to effectively shut down oxford circus. they have taken house and he won in the high court on the basis that they had failed to a completed different tactic to today. businesses are clearly getting wound up. across the road ta ke on the basis that they had failed to take reasonably foreseeable practical steps to protect him. from me is the large nike superstar. musicians were effectively asked, told that they could take their own
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protection, they could put in earplugs and if they wanted to, although this case is not simply and then there is a branch of h&m. about earplugs. this is such a big they have accused both of being part issue for the music and of fast fashion, and protesters have entertainment industry. thus far it has almost been a zone that has been tried to get into the stores. the businesses want the protesters to exempt from noise protection law. move on, but they say they will not the royal opera house appealed this move on, but they say they will not move until the core demands are to the court of appeal and they were acted upon, which is a change of supported by a number of heart in government, more action on organisations, the association of climate change. it's very difficult british orchestras, the society of to know exactly how this will be london theatres, who also had an interest in this, and backed the resolved at the moment. waterloo royal opera house's position. the bridge, spanning the thames, it is royal opera house's position. the also still occupied at the moment. royal opera house's position. the royal opera house's position was essentially that they said acoustic shock did not exist and if it did, that is a key thoroughfare into the he didn't have it, he got some other city. i have crossed it three times in the last couple of days. no naturally occurring hearing damage. traffic is crossing the bridge. i think people are asking questions about when they are going to get the but they also adopted a defence, city back. thank you very much. some people might find this curious, an offence that —— a defence that people in the uk who view effectively allow them to argue that pornographic websites will have to prove they are 18, from july. ina effectively allow them to argue that in a case like this, because the the government is bringing in compulsory age verification artistic quality of the music being checks, as part of efforts to make produced was so high, those players the internet safer for children. it means that commercial providers of online pornography will be producing it, a little collateral required by law to ensure damage to their hearing was that their users are aged 18 or over. acceptable. that defence exists
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under the compensation act. i am slightly paraphrasing it. today the court of appeal have had a look at this case and resoundingly found against the royal opera house. we well earlier i spoke to the culture are not talking about amplified music here, orchestras and music minister margot james mp. she began by telling me how that has been around for a long the new measures will work. time. is it something that is well, in practice, when people getting worse, what's going on? want to view adult content online, when they go to a website, they will be asked immediately certainly it is the case that the material the instruments are made to prove that they are 18 or over. of, they are harder, more durable they will then be diverted and louder than they used to be. but to a specialist provider of age verification services. you are right, this is not coming they will provide that assurance, assuming they are 18, through a huge set of speakers, this and can prove it. is the naturally occurring sound of the orchestra. but just is the naturally occurring sound of the orchestra. butjust to look at the orchestra. butjust to look at the way the court of appeal looked at it, they said the royal opera house failed to take steps reasonably practicable to reduce they will then prove it and they will be noise without hearing protection. they were therefore in breach of passed back to the site. how can they prove it? their statutory duty to protect what information do you have to supply? well, that would be dependent musicians from the risk of hearing on each age verifier. the independent regulator, damage, and they also effectively the british board of said the risk assessment is being film classification will be enforcing these regulations, carried out were not good enough, they have a lot of systems, usually through a passport, and this has a massive implication drivers license, credit card for all music and live events. those people organising those events now will have to think carefully about or something of that sort.
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protective measures. and they also have to anticipate sudden spikes in the noise level, because that's what wouldn't that pose a huge problem? happened to chris gold scheider. i you're talking about the creation don't think this case will mean the of a database that would pose a privacy problem if that was ever music stops playing but i think it to leak, because you have a database will mean the music stops playing as of those who use pornography? well, if that were the case, loudly, and orchestras may be will i think we would have have to be rearranged...” a problem on our hands. happily, that is not the case. loudly, and orchestras may be will have to be rearranged... i want to talk to you about that, because the there are very, very strict data conductor rules when it comes to the privacy controls that we have built into the system, setup of the orchestra, they will which go above and beyond the uk's have to start taking account of who data protection laws. will be loud next to who? yes, the we have introduced a voluntary certification scheme, conductor will have to talk to which carries a greater privacy health and safety, i'm not sure that threshold, and no personal data will go between the age isa health and safety, i'm not sure that is a conversation that has been head verifier and the porn site, of the past. talking about the assuming it is part of the accredited schema. geometry and the geography of the orchestra, how far apart people said, different levels, perhaps screens that absorb sound, that kind well, some have expressed concern that the new measures could infinge of thing. but this also applies to on people's privacy online. earlier i spoke tojim killock. he's the director of gigs. p0p of thing. but this also applies to gigs, pop concerts, you know, i the open rights group — think organisers will have to take a campaigning organisation concerned with preserving digital rights and freedoms. into account roadies, perhaps people he told me why he thinks the government is wrong to introduce age restrictions to view pornography selling programmes are from the
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speakers. it is a real warning, a real shot across the powers of those who organise live music. and an issue to be taken seriously, it has been around for a long time but when i talk to a little earlier, you are they are not reducing the risk to children very much here. telling me about pete townshend. because they are only going to apply yes, although i said no musician has age verification to a very ever really sued on this basis, but small number of websites. the availability of pornography we are used to hearing rock is not really going to change very much. there are tens of thousands musicians, pete townshend and lemmy of websites with pornography, there are sites which are mixed had suffered hearing loss. pete townsend famously said in the 19705 with pornography and other material, like reddit, twitter has pornography on it, and the sites like that he went will not be restricted. townsend famou5ly said in the 19705 he went to the doctor about going that is because the percentage of those accessing adult content on the deaf, and the doctor said you better site is not as big as other sites? learn to lip read. a survey was done it is very hard to tell companies in 2015 which revealed that 60% of mu5icians say they suffer from to apply age verification, and it would be potentially disproportionate, and costly, hearing loss and 78% said doing and probably the companies their job, hearing loss and 78% said doing theirjob, playing their music made would not abide by it. it worse. british universities so the government would be faced are being accused of using gagging with having to block twitter, orders to stop claims of bullying, and probably people would not discrimination and sexual misconduct being made public. figure5 obtained by the bbc 5how stand for that. that universities have spent nearly £90 million on pay—offs since 2017, using so—called so they have simply brushed those
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non—disclosure agreements — questions aside and said, well, which prevent people from making their complaints known. we will go for a handful of very dozens of academics say they've been large pornographic publishers. driven out of theirjobs unfortunately, in doing this, and made to sign nda5 they have said they are not after making complaints. here's our reporter, going to regulate privacy, the government is putting out mixed messages here today, frankly what they are saying rianna croxford. is borderline lying. which bit of that i've been bullied for six years, across two would come under that? universities, by the same man. so, they have said they are once designed to protect trade going to improve privacy. 5ecret5, now creating what they have actually done is to provide a voluntary scheme a culture of silence, for privacy which companies don't nondisclosure agreements are keeping allegations of misconduct in the dark — have to abide by. feeling trapped but so, some people will get the products, using this new privacy desperate to be heard. scheme, they will have some extra protections around being tracked and profiled, after i complained, i was advised according to what they watch. and others won't. to sign an nda and leave. i ended up hundreds of miles away at a new university, ijust ask myself, why do only for the bully to follow me some people deserve more and continue his hara55ment. privacy than others? i'm depressed and it's crippling my career. the bbc has spoken to dozens of people who say they felt pressurised into 5igning an nda. you're watching afternoon live, many had faced raci5t these are our headlines... and 5exi5t bullying. france has announced an international competition others de5cribe being to design a spire to replace the one destroyed by fire at groped and ha rassed.
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the notre dame cathedral. one woman said she was disciplined for not being at work people who view porn websites on the day of her miscarriage. and this academic has will have to prove they're eighteen, from july the 15th — decided to break her nda. as part of efforts to make it's actually been super—helpful... the internet safer for children. as climate change protests she signed one during ongoing in london enter a third day, grievances relating activists are arrested after glueing to her di5abilitie5, themselves to a docklands teaching and research role, particularly following her cancer light railway train diagnosis, that she felt had not been fairly addre55ed. in the financial district. and manchester city continue their pursuit of a quadruple, trailing in the champions league against spurs, we need to be a community, who they face again in the premier even if we don't know each other. we need to know that there are other league on saturday. no place for jofra archer in england's people out there who have been preliminary 15 man world cup squad, through the same horror5 that we have. it's not... it's not a small thing, but he has offered a chance to impress in the warm up games. and and i think it's important for other people to see people like us. the world heavyweight champion anthonyjoshua's next the world heavyweight champion anthony joshua's next fight the world heavyweight champion anthonyjoshua's next fight could be in doubt after his opponentjarrell the university of liverpool said... miller returned an adverse finding ina drugs miller returned an adverse finding in a drugs testing sample. i'll be back with more on those stories at half past. it refutes the5e it refutes these allegations in the strongest po55ible term5. they did not fail to make reasonable adjustments. let's ta ke let's take you life to paris, the for those still trapped in the present, nda5 may conceal
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the problem but they don't heal latest pictures of notre dame the wounds left behind. cathedral. this, coming shortly i'm now being prevented after we got a clear idea of how from doing myjob. close the entire building came to i've been prevented total destruction. minutes away is from doing myjob for years since this person arrived. how the fire brigade in paris have because of the nda, i can't tell described it, as they went into some people what went on in the past. of the details of the operation they launched as soon as they heard of i can't tell them why he's doing this, and so the university 5et5 aside a pot of money. the fire breaking out. much of the they'd rather pay off people to leave rather than push out building, including the famed towers, survived. thoughts are now the person doing the bullying. the government is trying to tighten turning to how to reconstruct what the rules on what nda5 are used for. these women hope breaking has been lost. let's go to our paris their 5ilence will stop them being misused. correspondent hugh schofield. perhaps controversially, this idea that the new spire, the replacement spire, should be the subject of a now — from a5toni5hingly intimate film of elephants in the wild, to uncovering the rate competition? well, it seems to me of deforestation — a new bbc documentary series hopes to tell the story of our planet what the government... well, what as you've never seen it before. emmanuel macron, frankly, wants to ‘earth from space' uses cameras hundreds of miles do commies have continuity with the up in the atmosphere, to explore some of the possibility of innovation. i think most remote habitats. there will be a lot of pressure let's take a look. essentially to reconstruct as was. and that will mean potentially
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spending an awful lot of money on from 5pace, reconstructing the roof, using the from space, the view of our planet same kind of timber beams that were i5 from space, the view of our planet there before. an enormousjob, is breathtaking. because that section of the roof was known as the forest for the amount of old oak that there was in there. that side would be conservative, in a way. but then there is the satellites orbiting the earth can possibility of having a more modern, now look down on it in absolutely 21st—ce ntu ry possibility of having a more modern, 21st—century style spire. the spire of notre dame cathedral was not the extraordinary detail. most important feature by any means. the spire that fell was only a 19th—century addition, replacing the original that had long since disappeared. the spire is not using cameras on the ground, in the something that purists would say was fundamental to notre dame in any air, and in space, we can tell the case. but just to fundamental to notre dame in any case. butjust to complete my thought, the government has left story of life on earth from a open the possibility of having a brand—new perspective. at a time new, modern, 21st—century style spire, but it hasn't necessarily said it is a choice it will make. it wa nts
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when the earth's surface is changing said it is a choice it will make. it wants offers to come in. but it does show a sign that it wants to combine fa5ter when the earth's surface is changing faster than at any point in human conservatism, looking back at the past, but with a nod to the future. history, we can see just what impact we are having. nearly 1 past, but with a nod to the future. nearly1 billion euros has been pledged. the president has put a timeline on this. he really wants earth from space goe5 this done by the time paris hosts earth from space goes out on bbc one the olympics. yes, we have1 million at 9pm tonight. look5 stunning. thank you for coming in with all the bu5ine55 euros raised, that will be a huge thank you for coming in with all the business news. letters macro dent in the bill, nobody knows what it will be, certainly billions. the money is not going to be a problem. the french president promises to finish the renovation it is already there in large of notre—dame cathedral within five amounts. the mini controversy is not year5 — as nearly a billion euros i5 pledged towards the restoration work. a5 climate change prote5t5 even a amounts. the mini controversy is not eve n a co ntrove rsy , amounts. the mini controversy is not even a controversy, the debate is in london enter a third day, over whether this five year one couple are arrested after gluing themselves to a docklands light deadline, which emmanuel macron has railway train in east london. said is realistic, is welcome, even, people who view porn websites will have to prove they're 18 might encourage a too hastyjob? from july 15th, as part shouldn't time be left to do the of efforts to make the internet safer for children. necessary work, even if it takes ten, 20 years? macron's view is that here's your business having a deadline is good. 2024 is headlines on afternoon live. house prices rose in february at the slowest rate since september the olympic games and it would be
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2012, while in london good to have that target. the house prices fell. craftsmanship, the money, the will that's according to data is there to do the job in the time. published by the office for national statistics. more on this in a moment. others beg to differ, politely, a surprise court ruling in london saying, hang on, there will be a has revived the possibility temptation to cut corners, a of a £14 billion lawsuit against credit card temptation to cut corners, a temptation perhaps to do things less bu5ine55 mastercard. the court of appeal has ruled a tribunal mu5t reconsider the class traditionally, coming with new modern materials that are quicker action against mastercard. and easier to put in. that debate it alleges 46 million people paid higher prices in shops than they should have due needs to be had and time needs to be given to the debate. so we shouldn't to high card fees. set these deadlines. but it is a polite debate that is going on. you saw the fire. i saw that had popped and shares in italian football giant juventu5 fell by 22% on the milan out. have i got you? got you, yes. stock market this morning, after the club was knocked out of the champions league you saw the fire, you have been covering the story relentlessly. we by ajax amsterdam. have heard from the fire brigade how close the structure came to actually total destruction. this is the moment to look around and realise how close this all was, how lucky 22%? yes, quite considerable, after paris has been? this is what we ju5t 22%? yes, quite considerable, after just one loss. oh, well. oh, well! hear. i have no reason to doubt them or to doubt the minister yesterday, house prices rose in february he said the same thing, that it was at the slowest rate since september
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2012 while in london touch and go, there was a key moment house prices fell. so there's been of 15 or 30 minutes when it could a slowdown in house price growth over the past two years. have gone the other way. when the but in london there's been a fall in house prices — north tower, i think what they are the largest fall since mid—2009. referring to is the moment of the the average price in london is north tower, the tower on the right, roughly double the national average where fire caught in the north still. there are a number of tower. inside the north tower it is factors, they say it is because they stone, you would think it wouldn't have been a tax on landlords to burn, but inside it is a belfry, the discourage people having more than wooden structure around where the one property, there has been bells are. that had caught fire. it increases in stamp duty, and also brexit uncertainty as well, and the required quick intervention by the prospect of higher interest rates. so we have had a hike and fire services, in a way, moving away potentially get out more, so from the roof, which was clearly a a p pa re ntly potentially get out more, so apparently that has all contributed write off, to the north tower. it to the slowing in growth. to the required a quick intervention to put united states, technology giants out that fire. had the north tower apple and qualcomm have agreed to not been put out, the fear is that settle a n apple and qualcomm have agreed to settle an ongoing lawsuit. qualcomm the wooden structure would have collapsed inside, the bells would make chips and semiconductors. they have dropped by 60 or 70 metres to have been in this battle with apple, a legal dispute over the cost of the ground, causing huge damage on the ground, causing huge damage on the way. maybe then water in the processes that phones used to stone would have started to burn and connect to mobile networks. it melt, or disintegrate. the structure
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sounds a bit complicated. samir of the tower would have been hussein is here to tell us more in compromised. if the structure of the the new york stock exchange. oh, tao is compromised, the structure of the whole building would have been she'll know! it is incredibly compromised. -- tower. complicated, this legal battle, tell us more complicated, this legal battle, tell us more about it. that is a great the court of appeal has ruled unanimously lead—in, it is really complicated, that the royal opera house failed go for it! chuckling to take reasonably practicable i think steps, to protect a viola player go for it! chuckling ithinkl go for it! chuckling i think i can break it down. the who suffered life changing hearing dispute was between apple and qualcomm. apple said qualcomm have damage at a rehearsal of wagner's opera die walkure. this knowledge, they have these chips and they are one of the only chris goldscheider was exposed makers of these particular chips, to noise levels in excess of 130 decibels, as loud as a jet engine, during a rehearsal. and they were asking for unfair the opera house says it's disappointed by aspects of the ruling. royalties. qualcomm was saying look, apple is abusing its dominance in the iphone market by not paying it some royalties. so this was a lets speak to chris goldscheider lawyer, chris fry — lawsuit, a counter lawsuit, and he's represented the musician actually the trial had already begun since 2012. and ina first of all, your reaction to the actually the trial had already begun and in a really surprising decision, the two sides came to an agreement ruling? well, obviously delighted, for undisclosed amounts of money primarily delighted for christopher both sides will be paying to each goldscheider. since 2012, he has other. so that sounds terrific, doesn't it? well, then enter intel been living with. .. goldscheider. since 2012, he has been living with... well, his life
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into the picture. why are they even has been upside down. everything he in this? they are also a maker of worked for since being a child was taken away from him on that day, the these particular chips, and as apple 1st of september 2012. for him, this was fighting with qualcomm, it was starting to use intel chips. well, was not just a 1st of september 2012. for him, this was notjust a job. it was a way of life, it was a vocation. now his then intel made a really surprise announcement and says it is no longer going to make these chips for hearing is so sensitive and damaged that you can't pick up the the five g network. and is this of the five g network. and is this of the last we will hear of this now, instrument anymore. he is unable to will it put an end to this? it work. this case has taken an enormous toll on him and his and certainly puts an end to the dispute friends. i am delighted that the between apple and qualcomm. they court has found again in his favour. have signed a year's long agreement. just explain, i think he was... was so that is certainly very good, but ata it does put qualcomm in the sort of just explain, i think he was... was at a french horn he was next to? the position of being one of the only brass section is traditionally loud, but they have been playing loudly makers of this particular 56 chip. for years, they have been playing die walkure for years. what was it but at the same time, qualcomm about this particular rehearsal that really needs apple, apple continues went so wrong? well, interestingly, to dominate in this space, and in terms of trying to build its own 56 the evidence in this case was that, network. so it is really that they although the pit, the sunken area both really needed each other so that the orchestra plays in at the they had to get along and play in royal opera house, was designed
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they had to get along and play in the sandbox together. we will leave it there, thank you forjoining us today, sorry for dropping you in it. deliberately for a magnificent sound, on this occasion under the where she was more having a go at direction of the conductor. so they me, but all right. the markets. two deliberately arranged rows of brass big miners on the ftse100, they are instruments immediately behind mr down today because of a court in brazil deciding that varley, another goldscheider in a way that was totally new and unexpected. when it big mining company, can proceed with came down to it, although he expected this part of die walkure is operations there. investors are worried that might impact the price a lwa ys expected this part of die walkure is always going to be loud, just how of iron or, which is clearly an intensely loud it was was completely important element of the business mix of these mining companies. the unexpected. strangely, it was a ftse100 has climbed a bit, it is a bit flat now, but mining companies deliberate act, arranging the orchestra in that way. and it was make up such a big part of the ftse 100 so it way interesting to see how without due regard for the impact it they do for the rest of the day would have on the musicians. as a because they do cry way quite a bit on this. i will see you later, thank consequence, mr goldscheider has been damaged for life. presumably there are other musicians that have similar cases. in the meantime, what you. can orchestras do? are we going to go to concerts and see boarding up between brass and string sections?
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rachel burden has been looking at how do you get round this? well, the issues. certainly things are going to change asa certainly things are going to change as a consequence of this decision. but only in a common—sense way. what every year, tens of thousands of the court of appeal has said is that premature babies are born in the uk. it is really about strengthening the for some mothers, this can mean risk assessing process. so, it is not good enough to just say, yes, we weeks in hospital alongside their know it is going to be noisy, you might need to wear hearing baby. i will stay until about four protection. in this case, hearing protection. in this case, hearing protection isn't the answer for musicians. what the court of appeal or half or, go home, meet my has said is that risk assessments husband, then we just come back for need to be essentially dynamic. so, the evening. meanwhile, maternity just give some thought about the way in which the orchestra and the leave has started and is slowly environment is being configured, slipping away. are not actually at which instruments are blowing in which instruments are blowing in home with my baby now. there are which direction, and think about how thatis which direction, and think about how that is going to impact on the mothers out there whose babies were born the same time, who are at home, individual musician and his or her but i am coming to hospital every single day. i will only be able to hearing. and take steps according to spend proper time with her when she that. so, what we would expect to is back home in them before i know it she probably won't be sitting see is a bit of forward planning now down properly and i will be having to go back to work so it is really in musical environments. yes, we unfair. are the sights and sounds here at the royal oldham just remind me so much of my time on a unitjust might see extra spacing between
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musicians. we might see noise...” like this with my little boy who was born nine weeks early weighing just three l b. it is a very stressful think we have lost chris. what would time but even as you are totally focused on the care of your little one, in the back of your mind you are also weighing up the potential of financial impact. but some music be like if all of the musicians playing it became deaf? it organisations are beginning to change their parental leave policy. is really proactive and hopefully it will be to the benefit of all of us. rachelle had triplets at 25 weeks, all weighing less then two lb each. you're saying that all orchestras should fill out a risk assessment form before they play music? well, when your employer says ok, you're they should. but notjust maternity leave has started now, and you start doing the calculations in form before they play music? well, they should. but not just as form before they play music? well, they should. but notjust as a tick box exercise, here is my risk your head, what, by the time i go assessment, so i am legally compliant. it needs to be a lot more back to work they will be really young and then you start thinking, i have lost out on this, and your detailed, and it needs to be finances, you start thinking about, dynamic. if in the course of a how will i cope? well i have to rehearsal or a performance that leave my employment? once my looks obvious that something is going badly wrong, people are maternity leave is over. you start complaining, and becoming ill, then thinking how will i support myself and how will i support them? her change it. so, the existence of a risk assessment on its own does not employers waltham and how will i support them? her em ployers waltha m forest and how will i support them? her employers waltham forest council we re employers waltham forest council were one of the first to extend provide an answer, it does not
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maternity pay. they paid rachelle absolve liability in terms of for the 14 weeks her babies were in compliance with regulation. risk assessment needs to be a lot more hospital. having that reassurance thorough and it needs to be the case and that bit of stability is a huge help and it is a huge difference. for not just thorough and it needs to be the case for notjust music, but also live other organisations are beginning to follow their lead, including the entertainment. really good of you to join us. thank you for your time. bbc. one mother of premature babies has been driving this change. the smallest things has been campaigning inflation was unchanged last month, at 1.9%. economists had for some time. they introduced acas expected a slight increase. lower food prices offset higher prices for clothes and petrol. guidelines but they don't go far the priory healthcare group has been fined £300,000 over enough. we need to make sure that the death of a child at one of its hospitals. all parents who find themselves in amy el—keria, who was 14, neonatal intensive care have the was found hanged in her room additional time they need. the at the priory in ticehurst, in east sussex, in november 2012. government says it is reviewing an inquest found her death might have been prevented if she had pa rental government says it is reviewing parental rights for parents of received proper care. premature babies. meanwhile, for sangita myska reports. these families, it is a case of taking each day one tiny step at a time. rachel burden, bbc news. amy el—keria was just 14 years now the weather with the one and old when she took her own life. the teenager had been diagnosed with multiple mental health conditions and had been referred only ben rich. thank you, simon, by her local nhs trust for treatment from the private health
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care group, the priory. what an intro. we have some fine weather to come over the next couple of days. in fact, those temperatures today, that company was handed a £300,000 fine by a court for, have begun to climb. more in the way among other things, failing to properly assess the risks to amy whilst she stayed in hospital of sunshine, and that process of it ran in east sussex. outside the court, amy's mother said temperatures climbing, that continues as we go through the next she was disappointed few days. high pressure is in charge by the size the fine. of the scene, centred across scandinavia. the winds and high pressure around it move in a clockwise direction, wafting some the public‘s eyes have finally been opened warm airourway. to what the priory stands for, clockwise direction, wafting some warm air our way. some slightly profit over safety. cooler air closer to the east coast, today is an historic day it will feel cooler here compared with other parts of the uk. in our fight for justice for amy. satellite pictures shows we had some fog and cloud to start off, much breaking up now, but still a bit of missed in this for some of the channel coast in the south. look at amy's mother broke down in court this in argyll and bute, blue skies today when she heard the judge and sunshine, that scene repeated issue that fine of £300,000 to the priory healthcare group. across many parts of the country, in a statement, the priory through the rest of the afternoon. healthcare group said it wanted to repeat its sincere and profound there is just a very small chance of a shower in eastern england but only apologies to amy's family. a shower in eastern england but only a very small chance, and temperatures even at six o'clock, 11
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degrees in newcastle, 17 in cardiff it added that significant steps and birmingham. this evening and to strengthen those areas at the hospital where the court found weaknesses, including additional training and support tonight, it will be dry, clear for staff dealing with emergencies had taken place. spells, but it looks likely we will develop this area of cloud across eastern coastal areas which will then roll its way inland. some of that cloud descending onto the hills the judge said that amy's tragic of the pennines in the peak death had led to a better district, making things a bit misty understanding of how similar vulnerable and suicidal teenagers and murky. the vast majority should be cared for in the future. sangita myska, bbc news, avoiding a frost, maybe a touch of frost across the north—east of scotland. tomorrow a early mist and fog and cloud will tend to break up lewes crown court. and again we are looking at lots of sunshine, but the breeze will be a feature. a south breeze, which if you are spending the day on some of these north—east coast will make it coming up, we have news nationwide. feel quite chilly. even for some of first, let's catch up with the the english channel coast where you weather. good afternoon. are exposed to that south—easterly things have started to feel breeze, portland for example 12 considerably warmer across most parts of the uk, and that is a trend degrees. come inland, and those that will continue. having said that, we started off today with some areas temperatures, 17 degrees across of fog and some cloud. parts of south—west scotland, 20 or much of that, as you can see, has been breaking up 21 for southern england and south to reveal sunny skies. we keep some sunshine into the first wales, and those temperatures climb part of the evening. higher still on good friday. it overnight, many places will keep clear skies overhead.
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could well be blue skies from dawn it does look like we will develop until dusk across many parts of the some extra cloud close to the east uk and some places getting up to 21 coast, which will roll its way or 22 degrees. even for these on land, could make for some misty, murky conditions in places. temperatures generally eastern coasts, those temperatures between five and 9 degrees. tending to nudge upwards as the possibly a touch of grass frost across the far windfall is light. that easter north—east of scotland. so we get on into tomorrow. weekend generally dominated by high early cloud, mist and fog pressure, frontal systems trying to will break up and, like today, push on from the north—west. there is uncertainty about how much we are expecting large amounts of sunshine. quite a keen south easterly breeze, progress they will make but it looks like they will not make a lot of though, if you are exposed to that, progress. the most part, it stays along some of the north sea coasts, it might feel a bit on the chilly side. dry through the weekend, there will be some sunshine and particularly on saturday it will be worn with those temperatures up into the middle 205. plenty more whether coming up, that is all for me from now. come inland, looks like highs of 21 or 17 degrees. those temperatures continue to climb on good friday. by saturday, some of us will get up into the middle 20 celsius.
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hello, you're watching afternoon live — i'm simon mccoy. today at 3. france announces an international competition to design a spire to replace the one destroyed by fire at notre dame cathedral. firefighters descibe their initial shock at being called to the blaze. translation: in the beginning, we we re translation: in the beginning, we were incredulous, we could not imagine that a cathedral could burn. and then afterwards you become professional, and you carry out your orders, your mission. people who view porn websites will have to prove they're 18 from july the 15th — as part of efforts to make the internet safer for children. as climate change protests in london enter a third day, activists are arrested after glueing this is bbc news — themselves to a docklands light railway train in the capital's our latest headlines. financial district. france has announced an international competition coming up on afternoon to design a spire to replace the one destroyed by fire at live all the sport. the notre dame cathedral.
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people who view porn websites three english teams, liverpool, manchester city and tottenham bid to will have to prove they're 18, progress to the semifinals on from july 15th, as part another busy night of champions of efforts to make the internet safer for children. league action. talk to you later. then rich has the weather. good afternoon. no great surprises in the forecast. if you have been with us as climate change protests forecast. if you have been with us for the last few days you will know in london enter a third day, activists are arrested, after it is turning warmer as we head glueing themselves to a docklands towards the easter weekend. details light railway train in the financial district. on that, plus some really impressive the private mental health care group the priory is fined £300,000, pictures from japan. i will talk to following the death of a 14—year—old girl in its care. you later, thank you very much. and the royal opera house loses its appeal over the life—changing hearing damage caused to a viola player at one also coming up — of their rehearsals. ‘buy none get all free' — one asda supermarket in south wales sport now on afternoon live offers ‘free alcohol‘ after a sign is lost in translation. with damian johnson. that's right, three english teams left in the champions league, but of course that game between city and hello everyone — spurs really draws the eye, doesn't it? this is afternoon live. let's cross live to the etihad the french prime minister, edouard philippe, has announced stadium where katie gornall an international competition to design a spire to replace the one is waiting for us.
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destroyed by fire at notre dame how big is tonight's game cathedral in paris on monday. for the two managers? it isa it is a huge game for both managers but you would say the pressure is a he said it could be a replica of the 19th—century original, bit more on pep 6uardiola for this or something more modern. one, because this is a weak really nearly a billion euros has already been pledged for the restoration. and in the past hour — that could define city's season. the paris fire brigade has tonight they need to win to keep given its first account of the nine theirdreams of hour battle to stop tonight they need to win to keep their dreams of the quadruple alive, but beyond that pep 6uardiola knows the fire spreading. a spokesman said if the flames he was brought to city to deliver in the north belfry had taken hold the champions league and that will the whole structure would have be very much on his mind. it was on tumbled in a chain reaction. his mind and yesterday's press our correspondent, hugh schofield, co nfe re nce his mind and yesterday's press conference when he sarcastically referred to himself as a failure for reports from paris. having failed to deliver that so far the second day since the fire and fire crews were out on the roof for city, in essence a victim of his and towers of notre—dame. the job for now is to make the place own success, and you can contrast that with the way pochettino was in safe, shore up what is unstable, his press conference yesterday, very remove what is likely to fall. relaxed, joking with the media, said the longer—term task of restoration he is enjoying his first experience and repair is one that is too ofa he is enjoying his first experience of a champions league quarterfinal. far off to contemplate. his side spurs have been in a but at the government's weekly meeting, the long—term quarterfinal before but in a sense is what they were discussing this is uncharted prospects for and a vision of the day when notre—dame will them, they arrive at the etihad 1—0 once again stand proud. up
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them, they arrive at the etihad 1—0 up from the first leg, and they know translation: this is a big if they can score tonight city will need to put three past them to challenge and an historic responsibility of this generation. progress, not out of the question france and the government but a tough ask. city fans have not will deliver. we have already started and set up a special committee to deal a lwa ys but a tough ask. city fans have not always had the warmest relationship with the restoration. with this, but will it be a factor tonight? it is certainly something pep 6uardiola has been talking about pictures from inside the cathedral reveal the scale in the build—up. city fans have a of the work that lies ahead. it's notjust the roof bit of a tetchy relationship with that has gone, parts of the stone vaulting, too. uefa, they often boo that uefa president macron has said he wants the job done by 2024, anthem at kick—off, in fact something 6uardiola mentioned in his five years away, in time for the paris olympics. programme notes, saying we need to overambitious? not necessarily. impose ourselves on the pitch and from the stands in this game. but in translation: it is possible his press conference, he went a that the restoration work could take five years, little bit further and said he wants but we would need hundreds the fans to show that they have the of workers to make that happen. it's up to everybody involved desire to get to the semifinal. to determine how long the reconstruction takes. for me, the urgency is to preserve what is already in place now and in the next few weeks planning will start on how to they are human beings, and there will be bad moments of the game and rebuild the cathedral. we need our supporters. at this stage without supporters you cannot go through, so hopefully i am really curious as to how our fans will
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react tomorrow. being disasters there have been before to medieval buildings, slightly provocative to try to get a this at france's beloved notre—dame was may be more devastating more hostile atmosphere at the than most, but every time it is the same question, what kind of restoration etihad. spurs will be without the to be chosen? injured harry kane, more on the we will try to recreate the original shoulders of their striker son woodworks and timber framework. it is a fascinating one, human, you would think. it is well known, well designed. there were a lot of surveys, so this is one issue. another one which is to recreate something new, using new tools and techniques, and that is the debate that's starting about right now. his players are upbeat too. there is a confidence within the squad, and not an overconfidence, which is very important. but you are never going to play a full season notre—dame will eventually be playing your best football. restored, the goodwill this year it is when we haven't is there and the skills. money is pouring in, played as well as we have liked but the task ahead is of monumental proportions. and we have had to grind it out and keep going until the 90th minute to get a winner, that is what has impressed me more. we have dug out the tight games. that is what has impressed me more, to be honest. it could be a big night for manchester united women. earlier we heard from they
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play aston villa tonight philippe demay, the deputy chief and if they win they'll be promoted of paris fire brigade. to the women's super league at the first time of asking. they were only re—formed last year, but have had a hugely successful translation: at the beginning, we debut season under head coach casey we re translation: at the beginning, we were incredulous. we couldn't possibly imagine a cathedral could stoney. burn. afterwards you become professional, carry out your orders a man has been arrested following an alleged altercation and mission, and we did our utmost between fleetwood bossjoey barton in order to be able to limit the and barnsley head coach spread of the fire. as you can see, daniel stendel at the first people who intervened oakwell last saturday. the man attended a police station on wednesday were, in fact, where he was arrested on suspicion of a racially aggravated public order offence and racially aggravated assault. the first people who intervened were, infact, having remote he remains in custody for questioning. south yorkshire police say communication. but everything could fall. as you saw with the spire, it inquiries are ongoing. fell. so there were risks. it was very risky. the barbados—born pace bowler jofra archer has missed out on england's preliminary squad people in the uk for the cricket world cup — but he has been offered the chance who view pornographic to force his way into the side. he's been given his first call up websites will have to prove they are 18, from july. to the one—day squad for a couple the government is bringing of the warm up games. in compulsory age verification checks, as part of efforts to make the internet safer for children. it means that commercial providers of online pornography will be required by law to ensure that their users are aged 18 or over. we had a chat, he was very pleased well earlier i spoke to the culture
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minister margot james mp. and when out and bowled brilliantly she began by telling me how the new measures work. for rajasthan royals, so that is a well, in practice, when people little piece of information. want to view adult content online, twe nty20 is not little piece of information. twenty20 is not exactly the same but when they go to a website, they will be asked immediately to prove that they are 18 or over. the skills jofra archer brings they will then be diverted co nveyor the skills jofra archer brings conveyor broadly speaking to a specialist provider of age transferable to the 50 over game. verification services. that is all the sport for you. they will provide that assurance, assuming they are 18, and can prove it. now on afternoon live — let's go nationwide — and see what's happening around they will then prove the country — in our daily visit it and they will be passed back to the site. to the bbc newsrooms around the uk. how can they prove it? first, ellie crisell is in tunbridge wells talking what information do about a medical assistance dog. you have to supply? well, that would be dependent on each age verifier. i was going to say there is an animal theme to this whole afternoon the independent regulator, but you're proving it with your the british board of film classification will be enforcing address. anyway, you will be telling these regulations, they have a lot of systems, us about a special dog in just a usually through a passport, moment. drivers license, credit card peter levy in hull or something of that sort. wouldn't that pose a huge problem? talking about how far people would go to save their pets. that grin tells me we are in trouble but let's go back to early. this is
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you're talking about the creation of a database that would pose a medical assistant dog, and it has a privacy problem if that was ever to leak, because you have a database been working to make life—saving of those who use pornography? detections. a beautiful dog, you will see a photo of him in a moment, an absolute sweetheart, but notjust well, if that were the case, i think we would have an absolute sweetheart, but notjust a problem on our hands. a companion, he is actually a happily, that is not the case. life—saver. his name is powell, very there are very, very strict data a ptly, life—saver. his name is powell, very aptly, because he has been a great privacy controls that we have pal to his owner claire pearson. he built into the system, which go above and beyond the uk's data protection laws. has been with claire for six years and she says he has saved his life we have introduced a voluntary certification scheme, literally thousands of times. he has which carries a greater privacy threshold, and no personal data will go between the age alerted her to more than 12,000 blood sugar changes, meaning he has verifier and the porn site, assuming it is part prevented countless nhs call—outs and fewer hospital admissions, so of the accredited schema. claire has had type one diabetes from birth, after renalfailure and a transplant, she was left unable to tell when she was hyperglycaemic. so is quite interesting, the dcms is the department in charge that meant she could collapse at any of incrementing the gdpr launch time. she had primary school age in the uk, yet the news release with which you sent out children, they would come home, find the information today on this, her collapsed at home. clearly it i have a copy in my hand, put a huge strain on the family, it lists the e—mail addresses
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of more than 300 people. claire got quite depressed, felt unable to leave the house, and in desperation saw this advert for a information that would normally be put out under a bcc. medical detection dog, applied for it and was introduced to is that embarrassing? 16—month—old powell, as he was then. it is a bit embarrassing, she said he is absolutely i must agree. it was an error. transformed her life, as our we are evaluating at the moment reporter found out when whether that was a breach transformed her life, as our reporterfound out when he transformed her life, as our reporter found out when he went to meet them. coming this way? come on of data protection law. we don't think it was. then. powell and clare have formed a but we are taking it seriously. unique bond based around his unique obviously that is a completely ability to sniff out a dangerous different matter. drop in claire's blood sugar levels, with this system... something that could lead to a loss you understand what i'm saying? of consciousness and potentially a coma for a diabetic like claire. pal you said there is no way the databases can be breached, saved my life thousands and and yet here we are, thousands of times. i would know if your own department, "we all make mistakes" is the point? pal was even thinking my blood sugars we re pal was even thinking my blood well, we have got... sugars were changing. we've got 5 million preceptors in our nose, and we have got real barriers to any leakage of data across... a dog has over 500 million. once between the age verification companies and the porn sites. they have picked up on that odour, the porn sites will they have picked up on that odour, they need they need to tell someone if it is an emergency situation or never have that data. not. pal was trained they will never have any need
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to have it and they won't be if it is an emergency situation or not. palwas trained by if it is an emergency situation or allowed to have it. not. pal was trained by a charity, medical detection dogs, and the it will be diverted to a specialist age verification provider. organisation has realised a sensitive dog's nose is capable of that is the system. much more so began training bio detection dogs that can smell so there's additional safeguards. disease. these are dogs that are i don't think people have anything to worry about in terms sniffing samples, so they are not working on humans in the same way, of the example you have just given, which is... but they can detect tiny, tiny um, you know, a means minuscule parts of very complex of communication between our department and journalists. diseases. already working with the nhs trail in cancer detection, it's work has expanded and includes the climate change protesters have caused gridlock across london for a third day, around a dozen people have possibilities of sniffing out been carried to police drug—resistant vans at oxford circus, after they refused to comply possibilities of sniffing out drug—resista nt infections, parasitic with a public order direction malaria and neurological diseases by the police to leave the area. such as parkinson's. we've got protestors have blocked busy roads, and some demonstrators glued themselves to the top of a train different samples of some people who at ca nary wharf. have diseases, and then over here we more than 300 people have been arrested so far across the uk have diseases, and then over here we since the protests began have a parkinson's sample. earlier this week. the mayor of london sadiq khan says successful trials will be presented he understand their right to protest to the health industry to prove but public transport helps their work could save money, time to protect the environment. and ultimately save lives. all well, the right to peaceful protest
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is just that, it's a right. it's one of the cornerstones of our democracy. building on ten one's success now and the issue about which those who are protesting are protesting recognised by the animal charity is one that is very important. we do face a climate emergency. pdsa for his outstanding devotion the government has and awarded the animal equivalent of been too slow to act. the obe. isn't he lovely? claire's what i would say to the protesters is you have to make sure you are safe, and you have to make sure you are not causing health has subsequently improved so danger to others. she said he is not needed quite as it also, you don't want to inadvertently cause problems much as he was. he is enjoying a bit with our public transport, which is what we are going to be ofa much as he was. he is enjoying a bit encouraging people to use of a retirement, getting his paws when we face a climate emergency. up, now he has the medal of course and i am worried about protesters you can go out on a high. putting targeting public transport, because i'm trying to encourage more his paws up, i like it. peter leavy, and more londoners to use public transport because it is better thatis his paws up, i like it. peter leavy, that is a tie and a half. it is, i for the environment. wore it especially for you, simon. the priory health care group has laughter been fined 300,000 pounds it isa laughter over the death of a child at one it is a story of nicky dyson, from of its hospitals. amy el—keria, who was 14, was found hanged in her room hessle in north yorkshire, who at the priory in ticehurst, rescued nall, a chow chow breed. has in east sussex, in november 2012. an inquest found her death might have been prevented if she had elbow dysplasia, is on painkillers received proper care. sangita myska reports. and glimpse but nikki hopes amy el—keria was just 14 years expensive showjury
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old when she took her own life. and glimpse but nikki hopes expensive show jury can and glimpse but nikki hopes expensive showjury can cure her. —— the teenager had been diagnosed surgery. the bone robs away the with multiple mental health conditions and had been referred by her local nhs trust for treatment cartilage. complex surgery costs from the private health £8,000 for each leg with extra money care group, the priory. required for scans and after—care. today, that company was handed nikki says the pain is manageable at the moment as she is on painkillers a £300,000 fine by a court for, among other things, failing but she wants her dog to have this to properly assess the risks to amy whilst she stayed in hospital operation, because over time she will get worse and worse, so the it ran in east sussex. only option is to operate. there is the dog, beautiful dog. nikki says outside the court, amy's mother said she would not be a responsible dog she was disappointed by the size the fine. owner if she left her like this. she is going to some lengths to get this the public‘s eyes been opened to what the priory stands for, operation done. talk about a dog profit over safety. love r, operation done. talk about a dog lover, the question is how much is a dog worth? the bill for the surgery and the after—ca re today, it is an historic day dog worth? the bill for the surgery and the after—care is £20,000 will stop nikki has pet insurance, she in our fight for justice for amy. pays £60 a month, but she has amy's mother broke down in court already received the maximum amount the insurance company will pay out. today when she heard the judge issue that fine of £300,000 she started doing some crowdfunding but the big thing about this story,
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she is now preparing to mortgage her to the priory healthcare group. ina house to raise the money for the in a statement, the priory health ca re in a statement, the priory health care group said it wanted to operation for the dog and that is incredible to even think about. this repeat its sincere and profound is one for dog owners who will be apologies to amy's family. watching and will be so interested, it added that significant steps to strengthen those areas pet insurance caps at an amount for at the hospital where the court found weaknesses, including each condition. a good one for pet additional training and support for staff dealing with emergencies owners to think about and remember had taken place. and take notice of. we wish nikki the judge said that amy's tragic and take notice of. we wish nikki and the dog well. named after the death had led to a better understanding of how similar female lead in the lion king. and vulnerable and suicidal teenagers should be cared for in the future. who would have thought, silent, but sangita myska, bbc news, today we were able to put on the lewes crown court. television a large cuddly creature with two front legs. what an achievement that is. you knew it was the court of appeal has ruled unanimously that the royal opera house failed coming. i did. some people would be to take reasonably practicable steps to protect a virtuoso viola player who suffered life changing hearing thinking they are watching beauty damage at a rehearsal of wagner's and the beast tonight for some thunderous opera die walkur. our legal correspondent reason. don't put yourself down! cliver coleman said this case was unprecedented. thank you, ellie, thank you, peter. no musician has ever taken this kind
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of legal action before. let me tell you about christopher goldscheider. he isa you about christopher goldscheider. he is a virtuoso viola player, he has played with some of the great orchestras in the world. in 2012 he was ina orchestras in the world. in 2012 he was in a rehearsal, in the famous pit at the royal opera house, where the orchestra sets, and he was sat in front of the brass section, very it's a year since the government promised to put right its treatment close behind him. the noise generated by the horn behind his ear of the windrush generation — after it emerged that people who came to britain from the caribbean and had been was something in the region of 130 here for decades were being denied services and even decibels. to put that into context, facing deportation — thatis decibels. to put that into context, that is about the noise that a jet for not having the right paperwork. earlier this month, engine would generate, but that the home secretary, sajid javid, announced there'd be no limit close to your ear. he claims as a on the amount of compensation that victims could claim. result of that he suffered something but for many, life has still not returned to normal. called acoustic shock, that is an our community affairs correspondent, instantaneous hearing damage, a mix of ten it is, hyperacusis, adina campbell, reports. this time last year, sylvester ma rs hall, who was born injamaica, dizziness, it ruined his career and was denied life—saving nhs had a serious effect on his life. he treatments for prostate cancer. sued the royal opera house and won 12 months on, he's finally in the high court, on the basis that had radiotherapy and they had failed to take reasonably is now in remission. foreseeable or practical steps to protect him. musicians were
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but at one point he was faced effectively told that they could with a £54,000 health bill, despite living in the uk ta ke effectively told that they could take their own protection, they since the early 19705. could put earplugs and if they it was really rough, wa nted could put earplugs and if they wanted to, but in this case it is to be honest with you. not simply about earplugs. this is such a big issue for the music and because even when i was evicted from the other hospital, entertainment industry. thus far it has almost been a zone that has been i tried to get my medication exempt from noise protection law. and everything had been locked away. the royal opera house appeals this to the court of appeal and they were i could never get hold of it at all. supported by a number of which i think was really terrible. organisations, the association of british orchestras, the society of as well as a delay to his health london theatre is who also had an care, he lost his job as a mechanic interest in this and back to the and is still living in a hostel. royal opera house position. their position was essentially, they said acoustic shock didn't exist and if we've recently heard more detail about the compensation scheme. it did exist, he didn't have it, he are you clear about how you could access some of that money? had another naturally occurring i think the government hearing damage, but they also is very slow on it. and the details that they gave us, i don't think it's all that clear. adopted a defence, some people might you know, i think they should supply find this curious, a defence that some form of booklets effectively allowed them to argue or something like that. that in a case like this, because the artistic quality of the music being produced was so high, there was players producing it, a little sylvester‘s case was one of the most high profile when the scale
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collateral damage to the hearing was of the scandal came to light 12 months ago. acceptable. that defence exists can she tell the house how many have been detained as prisoners under the compensation act. i'm in their own country? slightly paraphrasing it. today, the court of appeal have looked at this case and they have resoundingly can she tell the house how many have been denied health under found against the royal opera house. we are not talking about amplified the national health service? how many have been denied pensions, music, we are talking about orchestras and music that have been how many have lost theirjobs? around for a long time. is it this is a day of national shame. something that is getting worse, the empire windrush brings what is going on? certainly it is to britain 500 jamaicans. a large number of people the case that the material the affected arrived in the uk instruments are made of are harder, between 1948 and 1971. more durable and louder than they used to be. you are right, this is not coming through a huge set of some as children on their speakers, it is the naturally parents‘ passports, known as the windrush generation. occurring sound of the orchestra. interesting, just to look at the way they were granted indefinite leave to remain but many weren't the court of appeal looked at it, given their own formal documents. they said the royal opera house fails to take steps reasonably glenda caesar and her sister joyce came to the uk practicable to reduce noise without from dominica in the 19605. hearing protection. they were therefore in breach of their not having the right paperwork led statutory duty to protect the musicians from the risk of hearing to the end of their careers in the nhs and police service, damage. they also effectively said that the risk assessments being carried out were not good enough. causing the whole family to suffer. this has a massive implication for
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i am not only fighting this all music live events. there was people organising this events now for me and my sister, will have to think carefully about because i get calls on a regular protective measures. they also have basis where people aren't able to anticipate sudden spikes in the to understand what is going on, noise level, because that is what where do i go to, glenda? who do i turn to? happened to christopher i'm going through this. goldscheider. i don't think the case they arejust coming is going to mean the music stops out of the woodwork. they are like, i don't playing, but i think what it will do know what to do. is mean that the music stops playing the home office says as loudly. and people are going to, there is a dedicated helpline and vulnerable persons team orchestras may have to be for those who need support with compensation applications, rearranged. i want to talk to you but in many cases the emotional damage is repairable. about that, the conductor rules when it comes to the setup of the orchestra. are they going to have to it's not ever going to make me forget that thought, that i wanted start taking into account who is going to be loud next to who? the to take my own life because of this. i choke up all the time, conductor will have to talk to because ijust think, health and safety. i'm not sure that i could have done it, i could have done it. isa health and safety. i'm not sure that is a conversation that has been hard i could have. in the past. we have been talking adina campbell, bbc news. about things like the geometry and geography of the orchestra, how far apart people sitting different just to bring you some breaking news levels, perhaps screens that absorb we are getting from peru. sound. it also applies to gigs, pop within the last few minutes, it has been confirmed concerts, i think organisers have to ta ke concerts, i think organisers have to take into account how far... you that the former president of peru, alan has killed himself
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after injuries he sustained know, roadies, perhaps people selling programmes, how far they are when he shot himself earlier today. from the speakers. it is a real shot across the bow is of those who he was taken to the main hospital in organise live music. and an issue to the city, in lima, but was dead on be taken seriously, it's been around arrival. police had arrived at his for a long time. when i talked to you earlier, you were telling me about pete townsend ? home to execute a preliminary ten day detention order against him in you earlier, you were telling me about pete townsend? although i said no musician has ever sued on this the midst of accusations of him basis, we are used to hearing rock having received legal payments from the brazilian construction company musicians, pete townsend, motema, oda brecht. his death was confirmed by current pete townsend said he went to see a president martin vizcarra. he has tweeted to say he was doctor, and he said, i'm not saying you are going deaf, but you'd better saddened by the news of garcia's learn how to lip read. i don't think death. you are watching afternoon live. people realised it was such a problem with classical musicians. a climate change activists have glued survey revealed 60% of musicians say themselves together outside they suffer from hearing jeremy corbyn's home. survey revealed 60% of musicians say they sufferfrom hearing loss, and 78% said doing theirjob, playing their music, made it worse. four protesters, who are sitting outside the labour leader's front garden in north london, said they supported him but wanted the labour party to do you're watching afternoon live, these are our headlines... more than just declaring france has announced an international competition a "climate emergency". to design a spire to replace the one
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destroyed by fire at the protesters attached the notre dame cathedral. people who view porn websites themsleves to each other will have to prove they're 18, from july the 15th — by glueing their hands together. as part of efforts to make the internet safer for children. as climate change protests in london enter a third day, earlier, three activists were glued activists are arrested after glueing to a docklands light railway themselves to a docklands light railway train train at canary wharf, causing minor delays. in the financial district. now we have the business news in a moment but first the headlines. france has announced in sport, manchester city continue an international competition to design a spire to replace the one destroyed by fire at their support of a historic quadruple, trailing in the champions the notre dame cathedral. league against spurs, who they face people who view porn websites again in the premier league on saturday. no place in the will have to prove they're 18, from july 15th, as part preliminary 15 man world cup squad of efforts to make the internet safer for children. for archer, but he has offered the as climate change protests chance to impress in the warm up in london enter a third day, activists are arrested after glueing themselves to a docklands games. and world heavyweight light railway train champion anthonyjoshua's next fight could be in doubt after his opponent returned an adverse finding on a in the financial district. drugs testing sample. i'll be back with more on those stories at half past. let's get more now on the news that here's your business people in the uk who view headlines on afternoon live.
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pornographic websites will have troubled indian airline jet airways has temporarily suspended to prove they are 18, all its domestic and international from july. flights after failing to find fresh funding. let's talk more about this now the airline said its last flight with executive director would operate on wednesday as it was not able to pay for fuel of the open rights group, jim killock. good to see you. can you explain and other critical services. what the open rights group is? we house prices rose in february area digital what the open rights group is? we are a digital campaigning organisation, standing up forfree at the slowest rate since september expression and user privacy. we are 2012, while in london house prices fell. that's according to data published by the office funded by 3000 supporters and by for national statistics. more on this in a moment. foundations. we campaign to make helium—filled balloons have been sure the internet is safe for people blamed for causing hundreds of train when they visit websites. that is delays for passengers our concern here. we are worried across the uk each year. network rail wants to highlight about privacy. but what about what it says is a growing problem. the rail infrastructure firm has recorded 619 balloon—related incidents — children and the safety of children many dangerous — across england, scotland and wales in the past year. online, which is the government's priority here? yes, they are right to be concerned and they are right to be concerned and they are right to try to do something about that. but they are not reducing the risk to children very much here. because time for markets now. they are only going to apply age verification to a very small number house prices rose in february at the slowest rate since september of websites. the availability of 2012 while in london house prices fell. pornography is not really going to so there's been change very much. there are tens of a slowdown in house price growth over the past two years.
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thousands of websites with but in london there's been pornography, there are sites which a fall in house prices — are mixed with pornography and other the largest fall since mid—2009. the capital still remains the most material, like reddit, twitter has expensive place to buy property in the country. however — shares in the house—builder countryside properties pornography on it, and the sites jumped today after a solid set of financial results — so house—building like that will not be restricted. appears to be buoyant. that is because it is not as big of jasper lawlerjoins us from london capital group. it is an interesting an audience as on other sites?m that is because it is not as big of an audience as on other sites? it is very ha rd to industry, this, because you have an audience as on other sites? it is very hard to tell companies to apply house—builders and house price age verification, and it would be growth, clearly the two are potentially disproportionate, and connected. are there different factors governing what is going on costly, and probably the companies would not abide by it. so the here? clearly connected but not government would be faced with having to block twitter, and perfectly connected, so one thing that was notable in these sets of probably people would not stand for that. so they have simply brushed results from countrywide is the average selling price has gone down those questioned sighed and said, well, we will go for a handful of over the last six months. so there very large pornographic publishers. is the house price factor right there in the result. that was a u nfortu nately, very large pornographic publishers. unfortunately, in doing this, they have said they are not going to regulate privacy, the government is putting out mixed messages here marginal change versus how much construction they are doing, so new builds in the last six months are today, frankly what they are saying is borderline lying. which bit of around 40% compared to the same time la st around 40% compared to the same time
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last year. they order books are up around 40% compared to the same time that would come under that? so, they la st around 40% compared to the same time last year. their orderbook also have said they are going to improve looking very rosy up in the similar percentage amounts, looking forward to next year. part of the reason for privacy. what they have actually done is to provide a voluntary this as there is a slight disconnect between the general house buyer and scheme for privacy which companies these companies, because one of the don't have to abide by. so, some biggest contributions to their people will get the products, using growth has been there partnerships division, where they typically this new privacy scheme, they will partnerup have some extra protections around division, where they typically partner up with housing associations and the like, almost building on being tracked and profiled, behalf of the government to meet the according to what they watch. and very high demand for housing in the others won't. i just ask country. and other data out today according to what they watch. and others won't. ijust ask myself, why do some people deserve more privacy looked at the cost of living, than others? what about the risks of consumer price index, which measures having... and presumably it would be inflation and the rise of prices. ona having... and presumably it would be on a database somewhere,, the names that came out at 1.9%, unchanged and details of those that are accessing these particular sites? from february, but up on the previous year. clearly it eases the that may well happen, particularly with the unregulated products. the pressure of the bank of england, in terms of an interest rate rise, but regulated products, those that have it is only just chosen to be regulated, they will terms of an interest rate rise, but it is onlyjust below their target try to limit the identity and what of 2%. they know about people, they will probably not store your driving licence. then there will be a range it is onlyjust below their target of 296. yes, precisely. the of other sites where they ask for interesting thing, and i won't linger on it too long, about the your credit card details, maybe they asked for passports, may be some of brexit extension was that for six
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those will just asked for passports, may be some of those willjust be scams and they months, if there are some real will be trying to rip you off. i strong inflation pressures in the uk, there were question marks about mentioned this to margotjames, in the e—mail that has been sent out, whether the bank of england could continue to hold off and sit on the here are the names of 300 people who fence in effect as they have been, have been sent this press release. because of the brexit uncertainty or some of them are company addresses, perhaps increasing uncertainty, depending on the result, but six months is perhaps too long to wait. some are not. this is the department that oversees gdpr. the counterargument to that is as you have to remember that privacy is difficult, and the government market will get it wrong too. the problem you mentioned, inflation low, but wage growth very high. to actually is that porn companies run on very low budgets, they have very poor security records. they have leaked data time and time again. and now consumers for example doing very the government market was saying well, so that would suggest the let's trust the porn industry with user data. i don't think that is a very good idea. economy is going to improve and we don't need these very low interest rates that we still have. moving on to football, juventus, the share british universities price ofjuventus, to football, juventus, the share are being accused of using gagging price of juventus, the to football, juventus, the share price ofjuventus, the football orders to stop claims of bullying, club, in milan, the milan stock discrimination and sexual misconduct being made public. figures obtained by the bbc show exchange, the share price down quite that universities have spent nearly a bit after losing to ajax
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£90 million on pay—offs since 2017, using so—called amsterdam. how has one match had non—disclosure agreements — which prevent people from making their complaints known. such an impact on the share price?l dozens of academics say they've been driven out of theirjobs and made to sign nda5 lot of disappointed fans, i suspect, who are also shareholders. that is after making complaints. legitimately a slight part of this, it is not the most actively traded here's our reporter, stock so there will be somewhat of rianna croxford. i've been bullied for six years across two an overlap between fans and universities by the same man. once designed to protect trade shareholders, but also the other secrets, now creating thing you have to keep in mind here a culture of silence, nondisclosure agreements are keeping allegations of misconduct in the dark — feeling trapped but is these are profit—making organisations these days, and just desperate to be heard. being in the semifinals alone of the champions league has some very cold ha rd champions league has some very cold hard cash behind it. you get a 12 after i complained, i was advised to sign an nda and leave. million euros bonus for simply i ended up hundreds of miles away at a new university, entering the semifinals, so only for the bully to follow me obviously losing this match was a and continue his harassment. i'm depressed and it's big disappointment. the shares are crippling my career. pretty much back to where they started just around march, where if the bbc has spoken to dozens of people who say they felt you remember ronaldo scored a pressurized into signing an nda. hat—trick to put them into the quarterfinals in the first place. many had faced racist they have climbed about 17% at the and sexist bullying. others describe being moment. thank you forjoining us. groped and harassed.
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one woman said she was disciplined for not being at work on the day of her miscarriage. they have climbed about 17% at the moment. thank you forjoining usm would live in the game up a bit if all the players salaries were and this academic has dependent on each result, just throw decided to break her nda. that out there. the markets. it's actually been super—helpful... countryside properties, which we she signed one during ongoing mentioned earlier on, up 5%, one of grievances relating to her disabilities, teaching and research role, the climbers, despite that housing particularly following her cancer data. building going quite well. bhp diagnosis, that she felt had not been fairly addressed. one of the fall is on the ftse100, we need to be a community, a mining company. mining companies are down because of the threat of even if we don't know each other. iron or going up, and as a caution we need to know that there are other people out there who have been brazil decided that vale could through the same horrors that we have. it's not... resume operations, so that has impacted the hb. it's not a small thing, and i think it's important for other people to see people like us. the university of liverpool said... thank you very much. now — from astonishingly intimate film of elephants in the wild, to uncovering the rate of deforestation — a new bbc documentary series hopes to tell the story of our planet as you've never seen it before. for those still trapped ‘earth from space' uses cameras hundreds of miles
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in the present, nda5 may conceal up in the atmosphere, the problem but they don't heal to explore some of the most remote habitats. the wounds left behind. let's take a look. i'm now being prevented from space, the view from doing myjob. i've been prevented of our planet is breathtaking. from doing myjob for years since this person arrived. because of the nda, i can't tell people what went on in the past. i can't tell them why he's doing this, and so the university sets aside a pot of money. they'd rather pay off people to leave rather than push out the person doing the bullying. satellites orbiting the earth can the government is trying to tighten now look down on it in absolutely extraordinary detail. the rules on what nda5 are used for. these women hope breaking their silence will stop them being misused. a supermarket in south wales is offering bargain booze for its customers — but it's too good to be using cameras on the ground, true. in the air, and in space, this sign was in the alcohol—free section we can tell the story of life of the asda in torfaen, on earth from a brand—new but an error meant it translates perspective. to "free alcohol" in welsh. an asda spokesman thanked observant customers for spotting the error and said there would be no free alcohol in stores
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in time for easter. at a time when the earth's surface is changing faster than at any point in human history, we can see just what impact we are having. laughter i don't know why we showed that, just because we can. these pictures are amazing. that isn't what people might think it is? no, this is that is on bbc one at nine o'clock tonight. at five o'clock this japan. it is 2500 metres above sea afternoon on the bbc news channel, it is the news at five. that is with level in the mountains of central sean levey. that is it from the japan. it is this wriggling pathway. afternoon live team for now. now a it looks like a ski track, but it's weather update from ben rich. good not no, it is an alpine route. it afternoon, things have started to feel considerably warmer across most parts of the uk, that is a trend goes over the tops of the mountains. that will continue. having said that, we started off today some in the wintertime, it is closed, areas of fog and cloud but much of because it is too snowy. in the that has been breaking up to reveal springtime, it opens and people get sunny skies forced up we keep some the chance to walk through the snow sunshine into the first part of the evening, then overnight many places walls. they have had so much snow will keep clear skies overhead but it does look like we will develop this year injapan, that they are some extra cloud close to the east coast which will then roll in land, about 16 metres high, unbelievably. you go through on a bus, you can it could make for some rather misty,
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stand around and take photographs. they reckon 1 million murky conditions in places. stand around and take photographs. they reckon1 million people stand around and take photographs. temperatures generally between five they reckon 1 million people are going to see this during the course and 9 degrees, possibly a touch of of this year. is it safe? would you grass frost across the far north—east of scotland. into stand there? i guess it's safe. i tomorrow, early cloud, mist and fog think a lot of people... i mean, i will break up and like today we are know what you mean. you are worried expecting large amounts of sunshine. that the snow is going to collapse? quite a keen south easterly breeze they have been doing this for years, though, if you are exposed to that it is not a new kind of thing. along some of the north sea coast, people have been visiting this part it might feel a little on the chilly of japan for years. i side. come inland, highs of between people have been visiting this part ofjapan for years. i am assuming it is relatively safe. the snow is cut 17 and 21 degrees. those through, apparently, by machines. temperatures continue to climb on good friday and by saturday some of us will get up into the middle 20 rather enormous snow ploughs, i imagine. it does make you laugh. we getan inch imagine. it does make you laugh. we celsius. get an inch of snow on any motorway and the country comes to a standstill, look at that. absolutely, buses going through there as well. i also want to show you something for our weather here at home as well. we know it is warming up. how warm is it going to get? 25 degrees. i thought we would play a game of where are we going to be warmer than, where we often do.
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that is what we play when people have gone abroad and we are a bit better! malaga, may become lovely destinations, 18 degrees is not bad, compared to our 25, that is what we have got this weekend. you have cheered everybody up that is here for the holidays. what about the next few days? looking good, it is getting warmer over the next few days. it is all because of high pressure. it is partly that feeding freezing eco air into europe. for us it is bringing south—easterly wind. we started with mist and fog, and some cloud. much of that breaking up. although if you look closely to the south coast, there is a clump of sea mist and fog, legging some of the coastal areas. for many more, blue today at 5: skies and sunshine. that is how it two days on from the devastating looked close to wakefield. we will fire at notre dame, plans to restore the cathedral see some patchy cloud here and there. there is a small chance of a within five years. shower in eastern england, but most the french prime minister announces an international competition
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will stay dry on low temperatures, even as we get through the first to design a replacement spire pa rt even as we get through the first part of the evening, between 15 and following its loss. firefighters describe 18 degrees. a little cooler close to their total shock after being called to the blaze. the north sea coast. that is a theme that will continue for the next day translation: in the beginning, or so. that will continue for the next day or so. this evening and tonight is we were incredulous, dry with clear spells for many. it we could not imagine that a cathedral could burn. looks like we will develop extra and then afterwards you become cloud close to the north sea coast, professional, and you carry which will roll in land. lower on out your orders, your mission... the hills of the peak district and pennines, it could give some murky bells from cathedrals conditions of a high ground. most of across france will ring out within the hour, us avoiding a frost, may be a touch to mark mondays fire. of grass frost across the far we'll be live with ur north—east of scotland. tomorrow, we correspondent in paris. do it all again. that will break and the other main stories lift, and then we see a lot of on bbc news at 5: people who view porn sunshine. you will notice the south websites will have to prove they're18, from july, easterly breeze. a brisk breeze in new measures hoped to make which, if you are heading to the the internet safer for children. east coast, will make it feel quite chilly. 10 degrees in dundee, for example, tomorrow afternoon. 13 in bridlington. similarly, for some of the channel coasts, where you are exposed to the south easterly breeze, portland, 12 degrees. come inland, we have highs of 19, 20, may be 21 degrees. that warmth is
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extending ever further north westwards a cross extending ever further north westwards across the uk. that process continues into friday, good friday. looks like wall—to—wall blue skies for most of us, and as far as the temperatures go, 21 or 22 degrees. even south—west scotland getting up into the 205 at this stage. for the north sea coasts, it will start to feel a bit less chilly. as we get into the rest of the weekend, high pressure trying to hold on. the higher is going to be quite stubborn. weather systems trying to push on from the north—west. it doesn't look like they are going to make a lot of progress. some uncertainty about that. for the most part it stays dry, particularly on saturday, very warm indeed. we could touch 25 degrees. that is all from me. 01:30:39,924 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 goodbye for now.
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