Skip to main content

tv   The Papers  BBC News  June 17, 2019 11:30pm-12:01am BST

11:30 pm
most places mid to high teens. disappointingly cool for the time of year. friday, high pressure begins to appearand year. friday, high pressure begins to appear and that means things are trying to settle down. notice hardly any rain showing here. a few showers dotted about, mainly for the north and west. hardly any across southern parts. through friday, high pressure building in and things looking fairerand building in and things looking fairer and finer. high—pressure almost covering part of the british isles at the start of the weekend. that is a promising sign so a lot of dry weather around on saturday. one oi’ dry weather around on saturday. one or two showers, especially into scotland. this area of cloud pushing in from the south—west. low pressure coming back in later in the weekend and into the start of next week. next week's weather, all the answers to be found, in this big deep in the jetstrea m, to be found, in this big deep in the jetstream, indicating low pressure.
11:31 pm
nestled within that, areas of high pressure that will bring showers and spells of rain. as we go deeper onto next week, high—pressure dash look at the expense of that passion wants to topple our way. the winds made on northern league, indicating not a huge amount of north but it may settle down later next week and that is something to watch.
11:32 pm
hello there. you're watching bbc news. i'm clive myrie. we are going to be taking a look at some of tomorrow morning's other papers with my guests, who are here. but let's look at the top stories. the bbc secures rare access to china's sprawling detention camps where it thought more than i million muslims are being detained. translation: we were told ahead of the visits if any of you speak out you're going to a worse place than this. that's why everyone does what they're told. the emergency services say they were hampered by poor communications and
11:33 pm
confusion on the ground during the london bridge attacks. egypt's former president mohamed morsi has died after collapsing in court in cairo. and just five months after the hip operation he thought might end his career andy murray is making his competitive come back this week at queens. hello there and welcome to the papers. with me are the broadcaster henry bonsu and the chris page fair and businessman lord digbyjones. i think they are all in. and a p pa re ntly think they are all in. and apparently there is an election in. so i'm told. it is the conservative party leadership race. is that you're going to say the liberal party. they have one as well.
11:34 pm
leadership hopeful rory stewart is warning that 100 tory mps are ready to block borisjohnson on a potential no—deal brexit. rory stewart is also the subject of the front page of the daily telegraph, which reports he denies working for mi6 which reports he denies working for m16 before becoming an mp. the times says michael gove is attempting to halted the momentum gathering behind rory stewart in the race for number 10. in the metro covers the story, featuring jeremy hunt, who has been criticised for saying he 150% agrees with the sentiment behind the controversial tweet by the us president donald trump about london met sadiq khan. the daily mail says hospitals were told seven years ago not to give ready—made sandwiches to vulnerable patients because of food poisoning risks. while the guardians is the number of camps of homeless people possibly removed by councils across the uk has more than tripled in five years, prompting campaigners to warn that the crisis of rough sleeping is out of control. the
11:35 pm
daily mirror carries an interview with a britishjihadi daily mirror carries an interview with a british jihadi who fought for islamic state. and the financial times features auction house sotheby‘s, and in 31 years of public ownership after it was bought for $3.7 billion by a french billionaire. 0k, billionaire. ok, we are going to start, henry bonsu, with jeremy hunt ok, we are going to start, henry bonsu, withjeremy hunt backs donald trump over mare. and one believes he feels this will do him good in the election campaign —— matt. feels this will do him good in the election campaign -- matt. you said he was underfire. election campaign -- matt. you said he was under fire. is under serious fire on twitter and from other commentators. i think he is trying to curry favour with three audiences, were donald trump himself, it was complimentary when he came in the state visit saying jeremy would do a good job as prime minister, curry favourwith jeremy would do a good job as prime minister, curry favour with boris, because if you attack sadiq khan on knife crime and safety in london, by
11:36 pm
implication you are saying he is doing a worse job than the previous incumbent, boris johnson, and currying favour with the 160,000 strong tory membership we will decide which of the final two, and he hopes to be one of them, will be out he hopes to be one of them, will be our next prime minister. at the moment we think boris is going to get into the final two, if he survives the tory party in parliament, but we don't know who's going to be the other person and jeremy hunt does really wanted to be himself. interesting, digby, so did javed at the hustings today, he criticised president trump for this tweet and he came out saying you should not be interfering in our affairs —— sajid javid. one might have thought that is the sentiment that, perhaps, your average conservative party member might appreciate more than a candidate siding with us president. definitely. they declare and interest. am on record saying i
11:37 pm
would like sajid javid to winners. interest. am on record saying i would like sajid javid to winnerslj don't want to be thought of as buyers. that sentiment would tap into people more than this —— bias. when i was trade minister and i went around the world banging the drum to get business into britain, i'd a lwa ys get business into britain, i'd always be asked, always, in virtually every country, comment on a domestic political issue, different everywhere, but what do you think about this... and i always at the same thing. i'm not going to be an arrogant englishman coming and telling you anything about your own country. should we talk about what you could do with my country trading together. they would move it onto that. i it is the height of rudeness for a leader, and a by the way i would say the same for us doing it in another country, think it is the height of rudeness for trump doing this. i can see lots of faults in what sadiq khan has been doing, but a fully support sadiq khan to say to donald trump to butt out of this
11:38 pm
one. if i wasjeremy hunt i would have shown a degree of statesmanlike behaviour and said "i want to be prime minister, they want to elevate the debate away from this playground, i don't comment on things like this, but, by the way, do think the mare's record on knife 01’ do think the mare's record on knife or whatever he was trying to make the comment on, is lacking." that is afairthing to the comment on, is lacking." that is a fair thing to say. but to link it to trump, it is very silly. a fair thing to say. but to link it to trump, it is very sillylj thought it was venal and nakedly popular. it was definitely thinking of the ultimate electorate, the 160,000 tory party members in the party. they are always far more right—wing on things like this, as katie hopkins says, london. they need tory party. if we look, and i know the metro did lay down a table looking at the murder rate in london versus other big cities in the us, we don't like it, but we have 1.8
11:39 pm
murders per 100,000 people, that is one point a too many —— modus. murders per 100,000 people, that is one point a too many -- modus. one is too many. in new york it is 3—point for. it is nearly twice. ultimo, 55 people killed the hundred thousand. —— 3—.4. president trump would be so much better dealing with his own backyard. we have got used to president trump being free and saying whatever he likes. and, frankly, it is beginning to flavour people ‘s heads. but this prime ministerial candidate... what sajid javid has tried to do is take the opposite position. he has tried to say i am different from all these others. muslim, pakistani bus driver father, the only candidate who didn't go to a public school, all of that stuff. he has taken the other view on this issue to try to differentiate between the two. i am of the view people should have said i want to be the prime minister of
11:40 pm
the fifth biggest economy on earth and, frankly, the playground between the mayor of london and the president of the united states is not for me. that is what the public would like to see, really believe. not for me. that is what the public would like to see, really believelj was would like to see, really believe.” was disappointed to see jeremy hunt, hu wei new back in the day, at college. does make who like new. but this is relevant. he did not strike me as this kind of person and to see this pivot to this naked populism ill behoves them. it is unbecoming of him. what was it like? i did not like it at times. did you have to light a fire for him every morning and polish issues? i gave in speaks re ce ntly and polish issues? i gave in speaks recently at a reunion and i said the couege recently at a reunion and i said the college needs to be much better at integrating people from different diverse backgrounds. tip you to go off and get his miles burris. nothing like that. —— mars bar is. he was in the year above me. nothing like that. we are friends again. at
11:41 pm
the express, nigel farage i won't do deal with boris. i think the express, nigel farage i won't do dealwith boris. i think we are witnessing an amazing political phenomenon here, which is there is the leader of a party which does not have a single seat in the house of commons who, at this moment, is probably the most important and most powerful man in britain, all women, most important person in britain right now is someone who, in politics, does not have any power base within the organ of democracy. i can't remember a time when that has happened before. the reason is because if these five or six people who want to be prime minister, the one thing it doesn't do is change the arithmetic. the arithmetic, whether it is about a remain parliament committing an act of tyranny against a sovereign people 01’ tyranny against a sovereign people or whether it is, at the end of the
11:42 pm
day, parliament telling everybody what they do or don't want, we know one thing for sure, which is if they go to one thing for sure, which is if they gotoa one thing for sure, which is if they go to a general election before they have delivered a proper brexit, whatever that may mean, nigel farage will have the tory party's guts for glasses and he will split it and they will be a spent political force regeneration —— garters. that gives him the most enormous power. he is saying i will not do a deal with anybody. but isn't this precisely, henry, why boris johnson anybody. but isn't this precisely, henry, why borisjohnson is saying he is the only person who can put nigel farage back in his box? that is what he said. how things have changed injust is what he said. how things have changed in just a is what he said. how things have changed injust a few is what he said. how things have changed in just a few months. is what he said. how things have changed injust a few months. there was a picture of the two of them in a restaurant, not having dinner together, one of them was standing up together, one of them was standing up on the other sitting down, don't know if it was orchestrated, it was a photo opportunity. but clearly they have had some kind of discussions, the proxies are directly in the past. both have tried to cosy up to steve bannon, donald trump is very close to steve
11:43 pm
bannon. it is interesting that he is being very, very clear and it is a shot across the bows of the tory mps who think boris will be their salvation. he is saying he won't deliver anything to you and you can't trust him. reza nigel farage he cannot be just as izzy voted against reza maples deal price and a third time he backed it. that is why nigel farage says he is not the guy who can be trusted for brexit. just does not change the arithmetic. that is the rory stewart argument. boris, at the end of the day, is becoming guilty. he is almost painting himself into a corner of saying i will say anything to get elected. yes, absolutely. and nigel farage are saying not to me,. to be fair to borisjohnson, he would argue... that's what politicians do. he firmly believes that he can go back to brussels and get a deal and if
11:44 pm
you can't get a deal he will get britain out by... he will be put under tremendous pressure by rory stewart and michael gove to give far more detail than he has thus far. far more than he did with his interview to the times that he did not do the hustings earlier today, but i think he spoke to the 1922 in parliament. his plans for this renegotiation have not been stress tested at all but they will be tomorrow night and a suspect he may well. i said think his advisers, buyers should not be let out on his own, should he... you don't expect a bbc presenter to agree with you on that? whatever you do, you know, don't use ten words of one will do, become monosyllabic. whatever you do, don't go into the careless speech bit. ovid and horace. that well—known. .. virgil. speech bit. ovid and horace. that well-known. .. virgil. wasn't he a thunderbird? yes, he was a
11:45 pm
thunderbird. order. order. the daily telegraph. the mystery of mr stuart's past links with moc. mystery no more because security services told the paper that he was recruited after leaving oxford university and spent seven years as some kind of intelligent officer before entering parliament. he left prematurely. the question is why are they revealing this and giving the impression that this is something to be concerned about. you think he might qualify him but i think it is because they are backing boris who gets five grand a column. they want
11:46 pm
to give the impression that he has lied against his past. it shows what an effective campaign he has a run. he has people rattled. whether that tra nslates he has people rattled. whether that translates into votes tomorrow is another matter. i find this a pathetic story. i tell you why, i am rather proud of somebody who has done something with his life rather than being a career politician and this guy, he went and spy for you and me to keep us safe. the headline is in stuart spied against britain. the stash he is not allowed to say what he did so either way he cannot say what he did. we know that his father was number two in command in
11:47 pm
m15 father was number two in command in mi5 from 1974 — father was number two in command in m15 from 1974 - 1979... father was number two in command in m15 from 1974 - 1979. .. i mislead you, mi6. m15 from 1974 - 1979. .. i mislead you, m16. it would not surprise anybody. you would think the tory party would approve. you made, if your dad was a minor, you should be a minor. but the point is, don't you think there telegraph could have done better than that.” think there telegraph could have done better than that. i cannot pass comment. we have been talking about rory stewart a lot... he is coming home. front page of the times, michael gove tries to knock out stewart. saying the final two candidates should be brexiteers.”
11:48 pm
do not know what that word means anymore. . . do not know what that word means anymore... i thought you were one. i was a reluctant brexiteer but i wa nted was a reluctant brexiteer but i wanted to stay in a reformed europe. what does brexiteer mean now? i have not heard rory stewart saying if you vote for me i will refuse to bring the country out. i think - is the country out. i think this is michael gove rattled by stewart and translating this into votes tomorrow and trying to stop the stewart bandwagon and saying what you need to ta ke bandwagon and saying what you need to take on a boris is another brexiteer. we have not mentioned dominic raad, to be fair and brexiteer. we have not mentioned dominic raad, to be fairand he would say you need to brexiteers and
11:49 pm
1am the would say you need to brexiteers and i am the other one. i think michael gove is staying have me and they are all saying do not have stewart. he has rattled people but i do not know what brexiteer means anymore. 160,000 people will pick the leader of their party but he is also dash and it is a he dash is going to be prime minister and the suggestion that they should both be brexiteers how is that going to go down to the 48% ? how is that going to go down to the 4896? not well at all but i do not know how many of them are members of the tory party. a fair few. michael gove in the times says it would be a mistake to put forward two candidates who polarise the party that your party is already polarise. the country is polarise. if you want
11:50 pm
to do the country is polarise. if you want todoa the country is polarise. if you want to do a brexit arms race who will deliver the pure brexit, will it be dominic raad who will make sure we leave by the 21st of october or borisjohnson. if you leave by the 21st of october or boris johnson. if you want the purest form of brexit it is those two. you have no problem shutting the doors on parliament... the education of oxford. did you learn... you do not know if you are a brexiteer or not. order! the financial times stop us tightening
11:51 pm
visa rules. the ft is pitching the business readership but america is tightening up saying, you apply for a visa waiver so you do not have to queuein a visa waiver so you do not have to queue in the same way and it goes through very quickly... a couple of years. the whole purpose is they we re years. the whole purpose is they were out whether you deserve a visa before you even try to get into the country and on their there is, have you ever been a naughty boy with class a drugs and offences and so they are going to tighten up, go back into history, see what you say 011 back into history, see what you say on social media, on twitter, see what you did with drugs and alcohol. at university 35 years ago, did you do something naughty when you were drunk. all that stuff and many business women and men thinking
11:52 pm
about what they did when they were 21... and many a politician as well. it comes as politicians have revealed drugtaking, michael gough and boris johnson admitting revealed drugtaking, michael gough and borisjohnson admitting taking cocaine. —— michael gove. the thing you cannot forgive, if you have been asked have you ever and they left it out or said no then interesting to see what america says it to a prime minister... i would be shocked if they did. very quickly because i can hear the music. fewer britons go to the states as visitors and that figure is going down and this will ta ke figure is going down and this will take it down further. if you are a nurse would say i would be dismissed so nurse would say i would be dismissed
11:53 pm
so why shouldn't he. ok. crosstalk. thank you all. thank you for having us. thank you all. thank you for having us. please. let's just thank you all. thank you for having us. please. let'sjust get out of here. good evening. the latest from the bbc sports centre: bangladesh kept alive their hopes of reaching the cricket world cup semi finals after achieving the second highest run chase in the tournament's history. they beat the west indies in somerset by seven wickets. shai hope top scoring with 96 for the windies as bangladesh were set 322 to win. but they always looked in control in their run chase, thanks to an unbeaten 124
11:54 pm
from shakib al hasan. he was well supported by liton das, who finished unbeaten on 94, as bangladesh reached their target with over eight overs to spare. england play afghanistan in their next world cup group game tomorrow and they will do so without openerjason roy who's sidelined from their next two matches. captain eoin morgan, who suffered a back spasm against west indies, will return. roy picked up a hamstring tear during that win over the windies last friday. he'll miss tomorrow's game at old trafford and the match with sri lanka on friday. but morgan says roy's tournament is far from over. i certainly believe jason will play again in this tournament. he will be assessed continuously but out of the next two games. we will see how he pulls up after that. are you
11:55 pm
optimistic he will be back for australia. if not australia the following game. the hosts france, who've already qualified for the knockout phase, play their final group match of the women's world cup. they're up against nigeria, who can still qualify for the last 16 automatically. they reached the knockout stage as group winners. derby are yet to receive an approach from chelsea, with manager frank lampard tipped to replace maurizio sarri at stamford bridge after he joined juventus. lampard is currently in charge of championship side derby, who he led to the playoff final in his first season in charge. their owner mel morris says chelsea haven't enquired over lampard's availability and has stressed the club want him to stay for the long term. joanna konta has got her grass
11:56 pm
court season off to a winning start. she beat world number 20 from estonia in straight sets 6—4, 6—2. it is the british number one's first match since her loss in the french open semi final. cameron norrie has missed out on one of the biggest scalps of his career, losing in three sets to last year's wimbledon runner—up kevin anderson. he took the first set but was eventually beaten in three by the south african. tour de france champion geraint thomas says he is for ready the defence of his title next month. team ineos' preparations were dealt a severe blow when four—time tour winner chris froome suffered multiple injuries in a serious crash. thomas says there is no doubt that froome will be missed but it means he can stop answering questions about the team's leadership. he is one of the grand tour riders ever so not having him in a team is
11:57 pm
a big blow because it gives us one less option over the big mountain stages. it doesn't stop all those questions. even every interview i have done i've been asked about that. everyone can just ask me about that. that's all the sport for now. sundry downpours for the south—east in the past few days. the moment things fairly quiet. some rain arriving towards the north—west of scotla nd arriving towards the north—west of scotland across the channel and in between a band of crowd across northern england but that will not be producing any rain and a chance it will be dry for the cricket at old trafford. temperatures of 18- 19 degrees. showery rain coming into scotland, mainly western scotland. a few showers into northern ireland.
11:58 pm
bursts of rain pushing up from the south. temperatures on tuesday very similarto south. temperatures on tuesday very similar to those on monday. it will feel increasingly humid in the south—east with the wetter weather around. some rain for the start of royal ascot and quite heavy overnight and into wednesday before things turn dry for thursday and ladies day. ahead of that, this is the main area at risk of heavy rain. but also some thunderstorms. it could be a high impact event but details still uncertain. tuesday night, the first area of rain clearing during the evening. things come down but every chance of catching storms from the near continent towards the midlands, south—east england and potentially lincolnshire as well. wet weather around for the rush hour. pushing
11:59 pm
towards the north sea. potential for more storms in the south—east. scotla nd more storms in the south—east. scotland and northern ireland with spells of sunshine, showers chiefly in the north—west and temperatures not changing an awful lot. warmth and humanity for parts of england and humanity for parts of england and they storms on the weather front as it moves away pushing all the heat away. slightly fresh air, lower humidity, sunshine and showers. most of england and wales by thursday will be dry with some sunshine. the weather improving here stop those temperatures 16 to a high of 20 celsius. goodbye.
12:00 am
this is newsday on the bbc. i'm sharanjit leyl in singapore. the headlines: rare access inside the hidden world of china's detention camps, where a million muslims are thought to be held. translation: we were told ahead of the visits "if any of you speak out you'll go to a worse place than this." that's why everyone does what they're told. the united states says it's sending a thousand extra troops to the gulf to defend american assets. i'm kasia madera in london. also in the programme: after hundreds of thousands call for hong kong's leader to resign, beijing declares its full support for her.
12:01 am
i'm laura

73 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on