tv Afternoon Live BBC News June 26, 2019 2:00pm-5:01pm BST
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this is bbc news — our latest headlines... public outcry over the border crisis in america as pictures emerge of a migrant father and his daughter lying dead in a river after trying hello, you're watching to cross into the united states. afternoon live, i'm simon mccoy. today at 2: right now, little children outcry in america. are enduring trauma and terror. the distressing images of children many are living in squalor in detention centres as the border crisis deepens. at border patrol stations. political parties some are sleeping on the cold ground there blame each other. without warm blankets or hot meals. right now, little children the bbc discovers that moors are enduring trauma and terror. murderer ian brady was allowed many are living in squalor to mix with vulnerable young at border patrol stations. some are sleeping on the cold ground prisoners for more than five years. without warm blankets or hot meals. a diary clash: the two rivals for the conservative leadership the bbc discovers that moors continue to argue over murderer ian brady was allowed whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu to mix with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years. on october the 31st. a diary clash. the two rivals for the conservative leadership continue to argue over sport now on afternoon live with ben. england play whether the uk should commit norway in the last—16 of the women's world cup tomorrow and they could be missing to leaving the eu on 31st october. a couple of key players? an old baileyjury is shown cctv images moments before lee pomeroy was stabbed 18 times on a train england have played a won a in front of his 14—year—old son. at the world cup so far. much has been built on their solid defence. coming up on afternoon live: two clean sheets in
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their last two games. much built on their defensive all the sport with ben croucher. base of steph houghton and millie bright — england have major doubts for their well, both are — according to their manager — major doubts to face norway first choice centre halves for in tomorrow's quarter final. tomorrow's world cup quarterfinal houghton is struggling with an ankle problem — picked up in this rather ugly against norway. phil neville says he challenge near the end of their win over cameroon on sunday. she's been rated as bets his life their replacements will be the better players on the 50/50 for the match. pitch tomorrow. there's optimism around bright. thanks, ben, and stave danaos she's been confined to her hotel has all the weather. room after picking up a bug. england boss phil neville has given his backing to their potential hotting up by the end of the week replacements to shine and that is why we are drawing up in their absence. you plan for these moments. airfrom the near and that is why we are drawing up i said six months ago we don't air from the near continent. thanks, stav. also coming up: prince william want to get to a quarterfinal on the concerns parents have for their children and throw a young kid in, or throw somebody we have not tested or tried. if they are gay or lesbian. it is something i'm nervous about, there has been a plan behind it, not because i'm worried about them being gay or anything, and it's for moments like this it's more about the fact that i'm where i'm totally relaxed and i said worried about the pressures that only worry about those that can get they're going to face and how much on the bus and those that can get
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harder their life could be. so from a parent point of view, on the bus are the fit ones. i put my life on leah williamson that's the angle i worry about. and abbie mcmanus to be the best two players on the pitch, if called upon. hello, everyone, this now we can talk about cricket, how is afternoon live. are england looking to the future, it's an image that has nervously? shocked many in america — yes, they're not playing today but watching the pakistan versus new zealand match oscar ramirez and his baby daughter with interest because a pakistan win valeria face down in the water, could well put their qualificition drowned as they tried to cross the rio grande for the semi finals in jeopardy. from mexico into texas. it has focused attention this is why. on the treatment of migrant families pakistan — after today — and the conditions in detention have to play bangladesh and afghanistan — centres near the us border with reports children are locked up and would be favourites to win both. in cells where there's an open win all three matches toilet in the middle of the room and they'd have 11 points. where they eat and sleep. the house of representatives has it would mean england approved a multi—billion couldn't afford to slip up dollar aid package, but president trump has said in theirfinal two games — he will veto the bill. a warning that this report from caroline hawley contains images you may find disturbing. against india and new zealand.
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so here's how it stands at birmingham. proud parents, this was the ramirez pakistan need to score 238 family had hoped for a new future to beat new zealand. in the us and who, like so many not the most imposing target, you migrants, risk their lives to get there. might think. the bodies of oscar alberto martinez play was delayed for ramirez and his two—year—old daughter valeria were found an hour because of rain — in the rio grande which new zealand won the toss but slipped separates mexico and texas. to a6 for a and 83 for 5. they were rescued by half centuries they'd apparently given up hope of reaching the us from james neesham and colin de through legal means. this shocking image has emerged grandhomme to post of a father and child, a respectable score but you'd her head tucked into his t—shirt, probably have her arm around his neck. pakistan favourites at this stage. the stark human cost british number onejohanna konta has lost in the third round of of human migrant crisis. the eastbourne international — already, america has been grappling her final tournament before with its conscience over how wimbledon starts on monday. the government is responding. she was beaten in straight sets how children in particular are being treated after being by ons jabeur of tunisia 6—3, 6—2 — detained at the border. and with the start of wimbledon just five days away — only practice will do last night, democrats in the us between now and the third house of representatives approved an emergency humanitarian aid grand slam of the year. package worth billions. it is to improve the conditions jabeur will take on alize cornet in which they are held, in the last eight. conditions which have been described as appalling. at about four o'clock this this situation is child abuse. afternoon british number one kyle edmund faces british number two cameron norrie. these are live shots now
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of the action from centre court. it is an atrocity that violates every value we have, not only as americans but as moral beings. today, sadly, our values are being undermined former world one simona halep by the president's failed policies which has intensified the situation of heartbreak is playing qualifier polona hercog. and horror on the border. well, after her defeat earlier johanna konta is seeded donald trump and republicans 19th for the women's will have to act if the aid is going singles at wimbledon. ash barty — the new women's world to get to where it's needed. number one is seeded first. he's blaming the problems reigning champion on the democrats. angelique kerberfifth. i'm very concerned. serena williams 11th. the women's seedings follow the wta rankings it's in much better shape than it ever was. a lot of these young children come but not so in the men's from places you don't where world number two even want to know about, the way they live and the way... rafa nadal is seeded third — with wimbledon taking into account ..the poverty they grew up in. this is the flow a player's grasscourt record. of human desperation. despite donald trump's tough nadal said it doesnt seem right — stance on immigration, he's likely to be in the same half of the draw as top seed people keep moving north, novak djokovic and in line heading for the us to meet him in the semi finals. despite the dangers. kyle edmund is the 30th seed. a couple of bits of football transfer news to finish where crystal palace defender far removed from the bitter aaron wan bisakka's transfer political debate propelled to manchester united has by misery and hope. moved a step closer. caroline hawley, bbc news. the two clubs our correspondent, barbara plett have agreed a fee of up
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usher, is in washington. to £50 millions for the england under 21 full back. the policy of president trump, the he's set for a big pay hike zero tolerance policy, has too from 10 to £80,000 a week. consequences? yes, and we have been whilst leeds' teenager winger jack clarke is due to undergo a medical shortly ahead seeing them for a number of months, of a £10 million move and you still have a division in to tottenham hotspur. it'll be spurs' first what people believe those signing since january 2018. consequences are. so if you see the that's all the sport for now. image we have been talking about, i'll have more for eve ryo ne image we have been talking about, everyone is shocked by it, nobody wa nts everyone is shocked by it, nobody wants that sort of thing to happen. you after a o'clock. studio: thanks for joining but again, it reinforces where studio: thanks forjoining us. people are on the issue, said those who are outraged by the migration it's a little too far away for a quick bite out on a friday night crisis in the way it is being handled on the border are even more but the best restaurant in the world outraged, those who feel threatened has been declared by a panel of experts as a french by illegal immigration say, they one on the riviera. should not have done that, they should not have done that, they mirazur was awarded the number one spot, should have gone through the legal at the annual award ceremony process and come in the right way for ‘the worlds 50 best restaurants‘, which has otherwise they would not have been been running since 2002. killed in that way. so it reinforces the list is curated by an anonymous group of culinary experts where people are, and president from around the world. this year, just two of the 50 best trump is campaigning on this issue restaurants are in the uk. with me now is richard vines — as well, a hardline approach to
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the chief food critic of bloomberg — who chaired the uk and ireland panel for immigration is the centrepiece of the awards for several years. his re—election campaign, and he is let's pick up on that point, nowhere from the uk until you get to number now using it to blame democrats for the reason that that division 27. we think of london is almost a sense of the food universe but it is persists in congress, that they cannot get legislation to sort out what is happening on the border. how at number 27 sense of the food universe but it is big an issue could this be in the at number27 and sense of the food universe but it is at number 27 and 33, so in the top 20, nothing from new york and presidential campaign?” big an issue could this be in the presidential campaign? i think it london. why? there are panels from will be massive, it will be one of the main issues, it fires up mr around the world and it gets a bit trump's base, it was very central dissipated, and there are so many and his 2016 election campaign and restau ra nts, dissipated, and there are so many restaurants, good restaurants in the uk, they alldid he sees it as being central to his restaurants, good restaurants in the uk, they all did ok but there were not only that did outstandingly. what about mirazur? it is a fabulous re—election campaign. there is an acknowledgement in congress that something need to be done. people in restau ra nt what about mirazur? it is a fabulous restaurant in a small town in the both houses of congress that south of france on a side of the billions needs to be allocated to mountain overlooking the mediterranean. the journey of border operations and facilities and so on getting there is part of the border operations and facilities and so on but you have that division as experience and the ambience is also to how that money should be spent. pa rt experience and the ambience is also the democrats want their not to be part of the thing and then the food money spent on enforcement but is fantastic, the vegetables are conditions and force the how people from the chef's garden outside and are treated and the kinds of the fish are from the sea you are
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facilities they are in. republicans looking at, beautifulfood. have less of it, so that... mr the fish are from the sea you are looking at, beautiful food. you mentioned ambience, location, what trump's positions play into that. is most important? where you are one of the more distressing aspects sitting on what you are looking at of this is the separation of or what you are eating? the most children with their parents in the camps and at the border. yes, the important thing is what is on the plate but all of these things are pa rt plate but all of these things are part of the experience, the winner separation was very controversial and that has essentially ended. you tends to be somewhere that is a have the family is coming in with destination, so you had a place their children, then you have unaccompanied children coming on as well, and there is a difficulty winning in spain which was right on the coast, and i think the memories because the border facilities are not meant to house this number of people, they are meant to hold these are not just of people, they are meant to hold these the coast, and i think the memories are notjust of what is on the plate people for a few hours and then send but also that is the most important them off to the next stage of thing. and what is on the bill? the whatever the immigration processes prices are not crazy. what are you rather than days or weeks and months, that is what some of this saying per head ? prices are not crazy. what are you saying per head? i start thinking funding is supposed to go towards. crazy personally over £100 per head. but it is an issue that has arisen without a glass of wine? with a
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in starc... it is different to glass of wine. mirazur is not... previous immigration issues because previously people would have snuck into the country to find work, now some places you would expect to pay people are showing up at the border, throwing themselves in and asking hundreds of pounds, but it is not for asylum. the question of whether cheap, this food. what will it do these people should be given asylum 01’ these people should be given asylum or not is a big part of how people for a restaurant, to be number one on the list? i have spoken to a respond to the situation. while i have got you, i know that strikes couple of previous winners, one fear in everybody, but i am just person said the next day they had seeing that president trump said any enough applications for restaurant war between the united states and places to fill the restaurant for 15 iran will be swift, although he has yea rs. reiterated so far his desire not to places to fill the restaurant for 15 years. and in spain, another place, go to with iran. yes, he has been they were so overwhelmed by applications, they hired three people to just say, we can't do it. saying a lot of things about iran and the policy towards iran. last there was a table available for lunch this friday at mirazur but i week, he was downplaying the threat. suspect that has now gone. what a this week, he has started to sound more threatening. yesterday, he said shame! forgive me, how much snobbery if any american was attacked, there is there about all this? good food would be an overwhelming response. is there about all this? good food is good food, we can all say that
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was a good glass of wine but maybe now he is saying a response would be not worth hundreds of pounds, what swift. everybody knows a wall would is it that a food critic can judge not be swift if it happened. the that maybe we mortals can't? food question is whether there is a critics are looking for innovation, belief in the administration that so if you take art, and art critic there could be targeted military strikes that sent a strong enough will look for an avant—garde message for iran to back down from painting that is doing something new any actions that might take, but if about the ordinary person might prefer something more familiar and i there is going to be a fully fledged think that is what is happening with wall, most people who know anything these restaurants. some are doing about the region know that this pretty crazy food that interests would draw the united states food critics who eat out every day probably into another protracted and want to try something different middle eastern war. soi and want to try something different so i would not say personally that it is snobbery but snobbery comes into it! when you go out for dinner, a bbc investigation has revealed that the moors murderer, ian brady, was allowed to associate what you wear? i try to keep a low with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years and allegedly had sex with one of them while serving part of his profile, obviously! someone said to life sentence in wormwood scrubs. declassified documents show that serious concerns were raised about brady's access to young me, do you let the restaurants know you are coming, and i said, how the inmates between 1976 and 1981. the ministry ofjustice says hell would i get a good table otherwise? laughter there have been huge changes in the prison system thanks forjoining us. in the last a0 years. sanchia berg has this report.
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the duke of cambridge has said it ian brady was for decades would be "absolutely fine" one of britain's most notorious prisoners. if in the future any of his children came out as lesbian or gay, but if they were, he would ‘be with myra hindley, he had tortured nervous' about the added pressures and murdered five children, they would face. buried their bodies on saddleworth he made the comments while attending moor. the london headquarters of the albert kennedy trust this both were sentenced morning, a charity dedicated to to life in prison. helping young people made homeless brady stayed in the highest because of their sexual orientation. category for security. it is thought to be the first visit yet while here in wormwood scrubs, by a member of the royal family brady was allowed to live to a dedicated lgbt organisation. in the prison hospitalfor more earlier i spoke to our lgbt correspondent, ben hunte, than five years, mixing who told me a bit more... today, for the very first time, with vulnerable teenagers, the duke of cambridge boys sent from bristol with mental health problems. visited an lgbt charity. according to government files just released, he said he would go on hunger it is a charity known as akt that strike if moved. looks after homeless young lgbt he was supported by lord longford, people between 16 and 25. campaigner for prison reform. lgbt young people are particularly then one young prisoner alleged affected by homelessness brady had sex with him. so they take in these young people it's difficult to imagine how that would have happened, actually. who have been kicked out by families because he was closely supervised. and they take them in, i mean, there were always two officers on duty. look after them and support them. but then brady was quite whilst he was at this service a cunning character. do you think it's quite shocking? centre, he was asked questions yes, yeah. definitely.
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about whether or not he would be a few months after that, supportive if one of his children was to come out as lgbt. brady was moved. the files, held here at the national archives, show how, even from the early months in the prison hospital, what do you think about that ian brady displayed an unhealthy in terms of one of your kids? interest in adolescent inmates. over the years, concerns i have only started thinking about it when i have had children, were raised, complaints made, so it is something i'm nervous but nothing was done. about, not because i am worried about them being gay, it is more about the fact i'm worried about the pressures that they will face and how much the authorities were worried that, if ian brady complained harder their life could be. and went on hunger strike, lord longford would step in again. the ministry ofjustice said they have been huge changes in the last a0 years and that so from a parent point of view allegations of sexual assault that is the angle i worry about. are taken extremely seriously for my family, in the position and reported to the police. we are in, that's the bit sanchia berg, bbc news. i'm nervous about. i will support any decision the two candidates for the conservative party leadership they make, but it does have been setting out different approaches to how the uk worry me how many barriers, should leave the eu. hateful words, persecution, borisjohnson says britain must discrimination, that leave on 31st october, "deal or no they might encounter. deal", but the foreign secretary, jeremy hunt, says that could trigger that is the bit that troubles me at a general election if parliament the moment. rejects a no—deal brexit.
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our political correspondent, you are too young, but a lot jessica parker, has the latest on the campaign. of people watching that will remember his mother and think, it's a date. the 31st of october, to be precise. it is a very similar sense these two rivals differ of approach and busting some myths away about how the royal family on that deadline. are supposed to behave. he says he is ready... it's an incredible moment. to come out on october... sist. we spoke to that young man 31st, correct. come what may. who asked that question. do ordie? do or die. he says it's not so simple. afterwards, this young man was talking about how well, i think that 31st of october much this means to him, it was huge. come hell or high water the man is from south africa and has deadline is a fake deadline. faced a lot of instances campaigning in chelmsford today, jeremy hunt squeezed in some of homophobia and has come shopping for his wife. she does like her orchids. to the uk and managed to move and rejected the idea that here and get his visa, boris johnson's harder line might and he talked about the fact play better with party members. that the families around the world who may not be supportive of lgbt i am the person who will get us out young people and their families. this is a humongous moment quickly because i will be able for someone they look up to, to negotiate with the eu and negotiate a deal they aspire to be like, through parliament. the british royal family, to throw their full support behind lgbt people internationally is huge. if we do or die, which is what boris is saying. and in such a personal way. well, the trouble with do or die is you could end up yes. with a general election, corbyn in downing street we were there this morning. and no brexit at all. the prince was speaking to so many
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but coming in to bat for borisjohnson, this ex young people who were affected leadership contender says by homelessness and their families jeremy hunt shouldn't flirt with an extension. there is a certain naivete kicking them out for being lgbt. it's really sad, actually, in negotiating terms of saying, that it affects lgbt people in such well, actually, yes, a way but it is the reality. we'd be open to an extension. that, of course, invites the eu to double down. even if they differ on deadlines, there are similarities this visit also comes during pride month. between the two contenders. lgbt people celebrated throughout june and celebrate equality and how both say they want to get a better far we have come as a community. deal out of the eu but they are also prepared to leave without one but some people have said on social if brussels doesn't budge. media that pride month has been and so far, the eu has been pretty clear that the withdrawal agreement a bit cancelled and not is not up for renegotiation. as good as it has been. how can it be a bit cancelled? accused of a submarine strategy, boris johnson surfaced because of the amount of bad things quite a lot yesterday, that have happened this month to lgbt people. sticking to the claim that free usually pride month would be trade can continue if the eu allows, rainbows everywhere, even in the absence celebrations everywhere, of a full formal agreement. lots of different pride festivals, but this month we have seen so many but is such a route really possible? different homophobic attacks. the london bus attack, the lesbian couple who were asked to kiss, it requires both parties‘ cooperation so the ability they refused to and were beaten to use it in a no deal scenario is far less likely as a result of not doing that. to be applicable.
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this is falling on a month that's no one has accused jeremy supposed to be of celebration. hunt of hiding away. the self—described underdog knows last weekend, we saw an incident in liverpool a young person that ballot papers start dropping or a couple was beaten again by a group of young people for just being themselves and being open. through conservative party members' doors in ten days' time. jessica parker, bbc news. our political correspondent, is that because this is happening nick eardley, is at westminster. more or just that we are focused ten more days! it is an interesting on reporting on this more? one. i think we are seeing notjust and we are able to talk about in a way we have not been able to in the past? brexit dominating the increasingly focus on that date of the 31st of is this not a positive thing? the reaction to the attack was huge. you could not go on social media not see something october. everybody is talking about about that incident happening. it, the tories are very interested we are at a time when we have been more in whether or not they can deliver open about the attacks by then, nor that borisjohnson said that we are seeing, but numbers have shown that these incidents are increasing, over the last 2a hours means we are they are on the rise. looking more and more likely to be on that point we were talking about it is a scary time for lgbt people no deal, leaving the eu without any notjust in the uk deal being in place, being a more but around the world. it seems like our rights realistic option, for the simple are being diminished in some ways.
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reason that the alternatives as ben is here — in a moment he will be telling us what's hot and what's not in the business news. different ways to get different first a look at the headlines deals have all been rejected by the on afternoon live. public outcry over the border crisis in america as pictures emerge european union and so far anyway of a migrant father and his daughter they have been reluctant to lying dead in a river after trying entertain any kind of smaller deals to cross into the united states. the bbc discovers that moors to make sure that certain murderer ian brady was allowed cooperation, be a trade or other to mix with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years. the two rivals for the areas, continues. one other person conservative leadership thatis continue to argue over areas, continues. one other person that is very keen on the deadline of whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu the 31st of october that we have been hearing from this morning is on october the 31st. the dup‘s leader. it's very important that we leave here's your business on the 31st of october. headlines on afternoon live. of course, we should have ikea could be building homes in the uk after a council left by now and i think in the south of england agreed a lot of the discontent within the united kingdom to work with a developer owned is caused by the fact by the flat—pack retailer. that we haven't left, worthing council is considering and we've seen that in the european election results. a deal with boklok, owned by ikea as for your first question, and construction company skanska, to build up to 162 homes that is not a matter in the seaside town. for me, thankfully. that is a matter for graham and his colleagues in the conservative party, and i look forward to working with whoever is elected as leader. i have a good relationship withjeremy, i have a good new figures from the department relationship with boris, for international trade show that so i look forward to working with whoever is selected. investment in the uk by overseas firms has declined
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sharply in recent years. interesting, that, not backing a candidate but saying, we have to get the number of new projects in the uk out by the 31st of october, and we fell 1a% in 2018-19. all know that mrjohnson is the only while there was a 2a% fall one of the two who is promising that. michael gove has been out in the number ofjobs created. today. he was until last weekend in the running to be tory leader as san francisco has become the first well. i would give it a go, and i am city in the usa to ban the sale of e—cigarettes. it's because of concerns about a "dramatic surge" afraid i did not get into the top in young people using them. two places on the podium, so i'm stores are now banned from selling the vaporisers. it's also illegal for online listening hard to watch jeremy and retailers to deliver boris have to say. i think both of to addresses in the city. e—cigarette producers say the move will "create them are making good pitches for the a thriving black market". leadership, unlike the other 170,000 membersl leadership, unlike the other 170,000 members i will listen at the g20 is happening this week — hustings and make up my mind in due course. i have not decided yet, i'm and a lot of focus looking at both candidates and reflecting on who i think would be on sorting out trade wars? the best prime minister. i think they are both very good candidates yes — president trump is said to be with a lot to offer and we will hear "comfortable with any outcome" more from them in the weeks ahead. from a potential meeting with his chinese counterpart xijinping at the g20 in osaka. no endorsement from michael gove certainly over the past few months — yet. the big questions remains, a it's clear that global market activity has been unsettled by trade disputes. lot of promises about what the it's been overshadowed various candidates want, a new deal by the ups and downs of the bitter
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trade war between the world's two biggest economies — 01’ various candidates want, a new deal or potentially leaving without one the us and china. former group chairman of hsbc, at all, but those questions remain lord stephen green, who's also served as a uk trade minister, about how they will get it. the big gave the bbc‘sjonty bloom his perspective on how beijing may view one for mrjohnson, he has still not given a concrete answer to, as if he wa nts to given a concrete answer to, as if he wants to leave without a deal having the trade tensions with the us. failed to get another deal or failed to get the many deals that he sees a i think it is quite complex and the asa to get the many deals that he sees a as a potential way to keep the chinese want to see a reasonably current arrangements for a small open trade order and they constantly period of time, if that fails, how does he force it through parliament? talk about a win—win scenario, the we have been hearing from various call point about trade is that mps in westminster, saying they are all talking to each other about how to try and stop are no deal, we were everybody gains —— the central point. although we know perfectly hearing from some of the liberal democrats leadership candidates who well there can be pockets and parts are also running a contest, we have of the individual economy which not had too much from them, but we don't benefit but most of the total heard from joe swinson this morning, saying there are a number of tory mps who would vote for alternatives pie is benefited from open access. i to no deal, potentially another referendum. if push came to shove, suspect they understand perfectly well that there are widespread if they were staring over the precipice of leaving without a deal, concerns in america and europe about
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so big questions still to be a nswered so big questions still to be issues, intellectual property and so answered but a lot promises on brexit being made, and they are forth, they know they have got to do things about these areas of really becoming the main sticking non—competitive practice. broadly points in this race. speaking, they are on the right side you're watching afternoon live. these are our headlines: fundamentally of the debate about outcry in america: the distressing images of children trade. this comes down to a matter in detention centres as the border crisis deepens — political parties of trust? china would like to be there blame each other. the bbc discovers that moors murderer ian brady was allowed treated as a democracy with the west to mix with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years but when it comes to state subsidies and intellectual property is trying the two rivals to have its cake and eat it? one of for the conservative leadership continue to argue over whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu the concerns for the eu and the us, an area where they have essentially on october the 31st. the same perspective is over market economy status under the concern for england ahead of the arrangements by china with the wto, women's world cup quarterfinal against norway tomorrow. major and the chinese asserted their right to market economy status and if you doubts with injury and illness. read the original document it manchester united reached an asserted without qualification, 15 yea rs agreement to sign aaron from crystal asserted without qualification, 15 years after adherence which is in palace in a deal believed to be
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worth £50 million. johanna konta is 2016, and they had a case brought under the world trade organisation's out of the eastbourne international after a disappointing straight sets arrangements because they have been denied that so far, so they withdrew defeat to the world number 62 of the case last month. they withdrew tunisia. more details at 2:30pm. it because they knew that the substance of their position does not the jury at the trial of a man accused of stabbing a rail passenger really add up to full—blown market to death injanuary has been shown cctv of the attack. darren pencille denies murdering lee pomeroy who was travelling and economy status, so they knew with his teenage son on a train they were going to lose the case from guildford to london. against the eu and the us who were our correspondent sarah walton has on the other side of the argument, spent the day in court. so that this evidence they the court he was shown cctv footage understand there is a fundamental shift. the thoughts they are very from several different cameras that show 51—year—old lee pomeroy former uk trade minister. boarding a train with his son at the glastonbury is here again. have you london road station in guildford on ever been? no, but! the 4th london road station in guildford on the 11th of january this year. they also shown getting on the same glastonbury is here again. have you ever been? no, but i would like to get tickets. that is subtle! is that carriage darren who is seen to talk the weather forecast? surely not. to lee pomeroy before he follows darren onto an adjoining carriage.
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there they are seen to continue you can spend all that money and their altercation, they are seen then find it is all muggy, but there gesticulating at each other before the cameras capture a knife in his is increasing money to be made... hand. the two were then seen struggling with each other as blood gathers on the floor of the carriage. the court was told that incident lasted 25 seconds during which lee pomeroy suffered 18 knife wounds. british transport police told the jury that darren then i once stayed in atp but i couldn't appeared to fold up a knife before because he got off the train at the next station. darren denies murder and the association of independent festivals reckons that altogether denies possession of the weapon. his they contributed an estimated £1 billion in revenue to the uk girlfriend chelsey mitchell is also economy in the three—year period on trial here and denies assisting between 201a and 2017. a full weekend an offender. the trial continues. ticket to glastonbury — assuming you could get hold of one — the duke of cambridge has said it would be around £250. would be "absolutely fine" if in the future any of his children came out as gay or lesbian, but if they were, he would worry about how they would be interpreted or seen. he made the comments while attending the london headquarters of the albert kennedy trust this
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morning, a charity dedicated to helping young people made homeless but the world of music festivals because of their sexual orientation. in the uk is becoming our lgbt correspondent, increasingly crowded. are there too many events? would you pay £250? they are having ben hunte, joins me now. fun, look at the smile on their faces, it is living, having an just explain a bit about the context experience. of this, where was he visiting on joining us now is paul reed, chief executive of the association what charity is this? today for the of independent festivals. very first time the duke of cambridge visited an lgbt charity. people paying a lot of money and they are not guaranteed to have good it isa cambridge visited an lgbt charity. it is a charity that looks after weather, why is it worth so much? we homeless young lg bt it is a charity that looks after doa homeless young lgbt people between weather, why is it worth so much? we do a lot of research and we have 16 and 25. lgbt young people are found people by festival tickets for the overall atmosphere and particularly affected by homelessness so they take on these young people who have been kicked experience and over half of people bite for that reason as opposed to a out by families and they take them on, look after them and support single headline act or musical them. whilst he was at this service artist —— people buy it. it is about centre, he was asked questions about the entire experience irrespective whether or not he would be of the weather. the people who run supportive of one of his children these festivals, do they rake it in? was to come out as lgbt. what do you
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when you look at the number of think about that? i have only tickets sold, this must be a good business model? the business model is characterised by very tight started thinking about it when i margins, expenditure is rising, even have had children, so it is something i'm nervous about, not because i am worried about them ona 20,000 margins, expenditure is rising, even on a 20,000 capacity festival you being gay, it is more about the fact can spend £700,000 before you even i'm worried about the pressures that they will face and how much harder get technical production and their life could be. so from a artists, and artist fees are rising across the board, so it is a risky terrible point of view that is the angle i worry about, —— a parent model and a rather crowded point of view. for my family, in the marketplace so the short answer to that would be no. when you look at position we are in, that's the bit i the festival and who runs them, it am nervous about. i will support any is increasingly in the hands of fewer operators who run multiple decision they make, but it does worry me how many barriers, hateful festivals, does that detract from it at all? when it is harderfor new independent festivals to get off the words, persecution, discrimination that they might encounter. you are ground? yes, you have close to a thousand festivals in the uk, a too young, but a lot of people watching that will remember his million people attended 12 years ago mother and think, it is a very but increasingly there is
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similar sense of approach and consolidation in the market for major companies who have over 25% of busting some myths away about how the royal family are supposed to the market and one company in particular. other parts of the behave. it is an incredible moment. supply chain as well including we spoke to that young man who asked that question. afterwards, he was talking about how much this means to ticket sellers. as it grows him, it was huge, the man is from south africa and has faced a lot of regulators become more interested? insta nces south africa and has faced a lot of instances of homophobia and has come to the uk and managed to move here there was a recent select committee and get his views, and he talked report which recommended the competition and markets authority about the fact that the families look into that very issue of around the world who may not be competition in the music industry so supportive of lg bt around the world who may not be supportive of lgbt young people and we are still awaiting a response to theirfamilies, this supportive of lgbt young people and their families, this is supportive of lgbt young people and theirfamilies, this is a humongous moment for someone they look up to, that and we published some data last they aspire to be like, the british year on ownership to illustrate exactly who owns what and we think it is interesting for people to see royalfamily, to they aspire to be like, the british royal family, to throw their full that. paul, thanks forjoining us. support behind lgbt people international is huge. and in such a that's all the business news. personal way. we were there this morning. the prince was speaking to see you later. so many young people who were time for a look at the weather. affected by homelessness and their families kicking them out for being here's stav.
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lgbt. it families kicking them out for being with the european heat wave reaching lg bt. it is families kicking them out for being lgbt. it is really sad, actually, that affects lg bt its peak later with record—breaking lgbt. it is really sad, actually, that affects lgbt people in such a temperatures we will be tapping into way but it is a reality. this visit some of that heat again towards the end of the week. at the start of the also pulls during pride month. lgbt weekend it could be extremely hot in people celebrated throughout june england and wales, but in the short term fairly cool with slightly lower and celebrate equality and how far we have come as a community. but humidity but the best of the sunshine across the northern half of some people have said on social the country, more cloud in england media that pride month has been and wales, top temperatures 22—23 cancelled and not as good as it has been. because of the amount of bad but cooler along the north sea coast. tonight will be another cold things that have happened this month night across central and northern to lg bt people. things that have happened this month to lgbt people. usually pride month areas with the cooler air mass and would be rainbows everywhere, the varied cloud further south. low celebrations everywhere, lots of different pride festivals, but this month we have seen so many different single digits likely in the north so homophobic attacks, the london bus a chilly start for thursday across northern areas but more sunshine attack, the lesbian couple who were around especially for england and wales but it will be windy across asked to kiss, they refused to and the channel coast especially into we re asked to kiss, they refused to and were beaten as a result of not doing the channel coast especially into the south—west. the best of the that. this is falling on a month is temperatures in western areas but supposed to be of celebration. last still cool along the north sea
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weekend, we saw an incident in liverpool a young person or a couple coasts. was beaten again by a group of young people for just being was beaten again by a group of young people forjust being themselves and being open. is that because this is happening more or just being open. is that because this is happening more orjust that we are focused on reporting on the small, and we are able to talk about in a way we have not been able to win a past? is this not a positive thing? the reaction to the attack was huge. you could not go on social media not see something about that incident happening. but we are at a time when we have been more open about the attacks that we are seeing, but numbers have shown that these incidents are increasing, they are on the rise, it is a scary time to lg bt on the rise, it is a scary time to lgbt people are notjust in the uk but around the world. it seems like our rights are being diminished in some ways. it is a scary time. from speaking to many activists out on the ground working with various
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different charities across the uk, it isa different charities across the uk, it is a time when we are pushing for more to be done to support lgbt hello, you're watching afternoon live. people. it is good that people are today at a: public outcry over the border crisis reporting these incidents as well in america as pictures emerge because for a long time, we have of a migrant father and his daughter been saying we cannot trust the lying dead in a river after trying to cross into the united states. numbers that do, because a lot of people do not talk about what is right now, little children happening to them for fear police are enduring trauma and terror. might tell their families or it many are living in squalor at border patrol stations. might tell their families or it some are sleeping on the cold ground might oust them to their colleagues. without warm blankets or hot meals. an old baileyjury is shown cctv images of the exchange between lee pomeroy and darren pencille on a train before mr pomeroy france is starting to close dozens of schools was stabbed to death. because of the heatwave that's sweeping across southern europe. the bbc discovers that moors exceptionally hot air blowing murderer ian brady was allowed in from the sahara is pushing temperatures in some countries over to mix with vulnerable young a0 degrees, setting new records forjune. prisoners for more than five years. a diary clash. from paris, hugh schofield reports. the two rivals for the conservative leadership continue to argue over whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu on 31st october. airfrom the coming up on afternoon air from the sahara born airfrom the sahara born north by
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high pressure over the atlantic and live: all the sport. in france it is the dog days. england have concerns over their first—choice centre—backs temperatures that may edge up in for tomorrow's women's world cup quarterfinal against norway. places over a0 degrees, numbers you sometimes get in july steph houghton and mille bright places over a0 degrees, numbers you sometimes get injuly or august but are struggling with an ankle injury now unusually early in the year. it and virus respectively. is not even the holidays yet. manager phil neville says they'll be schools are still working and so given until the last minute to prove their fitness. apprehensive as the government that they have postponed public exams that were to take place this week, stav has all the weather. children cannot be expected to work ina children cannot be expected to work in a cauldron. in france memories of it is hotting up again across the the 2003 heatwave weigh heavily when 15,000 mainly elderly people are uk. potentially the highest reckoned to have died from the heat. temperature of the year so far. i the country's environment minister will also have more on the european said there were new measures in heatwave. paris. translation: we will have a traffic thanks, stav. also coming up: prince william management system that will be visiting a charity for people made homeless because of their sexual triggered much faster than before if orientation says he would be we notice that maximum pollution absolutely fine if any of his children were gay or lesbian. threshold is exceeded on any day. so it is something i'm nervous about, not because i'm worried about them today warnings and advice are being gay or anything, everywhere, extra water points and it's more about the fact that i'm stored in paris and air—conditioned worried about the pressures that they're going to face and how much rooms in town halls, frolicking in harder their life could be.
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so from a parent point of view, public fountains is permitted. midday in paris, and it is hot, though maybe not the punishing heat that's the angle i worry about. that some had been predicting, but then this is only the beginning. the peak of the heatwave is supposed to come thursday or friday before probably eating somewhat over the weekend. it is notjust in france, hello, everyone, this is afternoon live. spain, germany, italy and belgium it's an image that has shocked many in america — are all reporting unseasonably high oscar ramirez and his baby daughter, temperatures. is it global warming valeria, face down in the water, drowned as they tried to cross the rio grande which—macro france's health minister from mexico into texas. has said this kind of premature it's too graphic to show you in this heatwave must no longer be regarded screen, but it has focused attention on the treatment of migrant families as unusual and the french should and the conditions in detention prepare for more to come. centres near the us border, with reports children are locked up time for a look at the weather. in cells where there's an open toilet in the middle of the room as he was saying, paris but huge where they eat and sleep. the house of representatives has approved a multi—billion dollar aid parts of europe affected by this. package, but president trump has said he will veto the bill. a warning that this report many central western parts of the from caroline hawley contains that continent. cool air moves down photograph and other images across the east. i will show you the you may find disturbing. pressure pattern as well. this is
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proud parents — this was the ramirez crucial to weather is coming from. i family who'd hoped for a new future have a few stats to show you about in the us and who, like so many the ski resorts. it is very rare to migrants, risk their lives to get there. get heat from this way south. we had the bodies of oscar low pressure across the atlantic, martinez ramirez and his two—year—old daughter, valeria, were found in the rio grande which scooping up the heat, high pressure separates mexico and texas. to the east as well and both they'd apparently given up together bring this southerly wind hope of reaching the us through legal means. but it is the far south depth from this shocking image has emerged where this heat is coming from and of father and child, her head tucked into his t—shirt, her arm around his neck. moving across europe, so it is not the stark human cost just lower level is heating up, it of human migrant crisis. already, america has been grappling is through quite a depth of the with its conscience over how atmosphere which is why we are the government is responding. seeing incredible temperatures in the ski resorts. that is not a ski how children in particular are being treated after being detained at the border. resort! it is also night—time last night, democrats in the us house of representatives approved temperatures as well. getting hotter an emergency humanitarian aid package worth billions. by day and night is hot as well. it's to improve the conditions in which they are held, this was the night time temperature conditions which have been described as appalling. this situation is child abuse. in france. these are record—breaking forjune. that is uncomfortable. we it is an atrocity that violates every value we have, not only as americans
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took about 20 here. the other night, but as moral beings. today, sadly, our values it was 18.5 in london, that was too are being undermined by the president's failed policies much for me. so 26 with high which has intensified the situation of heartbreak humidity! night time temperatures and horror on the border. will increase as well so we could be donald trump and the republicans will have to act if the aid is going looking at records with night—time temperatures but it is the ski to get to where it's needed. he's blaming the problems resorts which are incredible. on the democrats. i'm very concerned. verbier in switzerland, 2000 metres it's in much better shape than it ever was. high, and temperature is 31 celsius! a lot of these young children come from places you don't even want to know about, will there still be snow there? a the way they live and the way... good question. snow will be melting ..the poverty they grew up in. and glaciation as well. 2003 when we this is the flow of human desperation. had that heatwave in western europe, despite donald trump's tough stance on immigration, significant glacial retreats as people keep moving north, well. clasie is do not get heading for the us despite the dangers. far removed from the bitter temperatures like this. the laces political debate propelled which have been there forever will by misery and hope. caroline hawley, bbc news. melt. this is a big concern. you better tell us what is in store for us better tell us what is in store for us closer to home. i want to show you the heatwave, the temperature the jury at the trial of a man
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map. it is shifting slightly and accused of stabbing a rail passenger to death injanuary has been shown thatis map. it is shifting slightly and that is why these records of high cctv of the attack. temperatures will shift around a darren pencille denies murdering little bit from switzerland into lee pomeroy who was travelling with his teenage son on a train from guildford to london. france, northern italy, turin could sarah walton is at the see record—breaking june temperatures as well. temperatures are heating up in spain, on friday, old bailey for us now. it shifts north—westwards, that red creeping towards paris, hence the thejury here the jury here shown a shocking a0, and then at the start of the footage this morning, taken from week in, notice the red colours several cctv cameras on board a coming into the uk as well. train. it shows lee pomeroy and his son boarding a train at london road temperature wise, record—breaking if station in guildford on the ath of we break a5 degrees in france. and it is onlyjune! it is pretty january. it also shows getting onto the same carriage 36—year—old darren incredible stuff, so let's move on pencille. they can be seen talking to each other, having a dispute to the next few days. it is warming about something, then shortly after up to the next few days. it is warming up with temperatures reaching their lee pomeroy follows darren pencille peak on saturday morning, the drew into an adjoining carriage and hottest day of the year so far it is there that they continue this across the uk. a lot of cloud around dispute, they are seen gesticulating england and wales, fresher and at each other, other passengers
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cooler, more comfortable with less humidity, the best of the sunshine reported they were shouting and for scotland, northern ireland and swearing at each other. the jury the far north of england. cooler today was also shown some more down north sea coasts but footage that shows a knife in darren temperature —wise 22 or 23 will be pencille's hand. the two were then the high across south—western and seen struggling with each other, and western parts. tonight under clear that was described as a short skies, without cooler air mass, frenzied attack that lasted just 25 another chilly one, temperatures and seconds and in that time lee pomeroy low single digits last night. that suffered 18 knife wounds. after could happen again. five celsius in newcastle and lower than that that, mr pomeroy can be seen moving further inland but most of the towns and cities holding up a 10—12dc. away and collapsing into one of the tomorrow, a similar day, high train carriage seeds, his blood collecting on the floor of the pressure with us, are largely dry train. mr pencille is seen picking story, less cloud for england and up train. mr pencille is seen picking wales, a lovely day with strong up the phone from the floor before he then gets off the train at the sunshine, less humidity, gorgeous next stop. darren pencille denies summer weather, temperatures reaching 2a or 25 celsius. but it murder and also denies possession of an offensive weapon. his girlfriend will be windy across the south—west is also on trial and she denies of england, gusts of 30—a0 mph. high pressure shifts towards the east and assisting an offender, and the trial
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we lose the northerly and gradually continues. the two candidates for the easterly as well. and we start the conservative party leadership to tap into that heat over the net have been setting out different approaches to how the uk should leave the eu. continent. most evident across the borisjohnson says britain must western side of the country as we leave on 31st october, "deal or no deal", but the foreign secretary, start to pick up the south or south jeremy hunt, says that could trigger easterly wind. further east, low a general election if parliament rejects a no—deal brexit. cloud around, temperatures again, our political correspondent, jessica parker, has the latest on the campaign. mid to high teens, further west, it's a date. higher temperatures 26 or 27. but then as we head on into the weekend, the 31st of october, to be precise. thatis then as we head on into the weekend, that is where we see the real these two rivals differ on that deadline. he says he is ready... surgeon temperature. a to come out on october... south—easterly wind, mainly for 3ist. england and wales, this weather 31st, correct. come what may? front brings showers or storms to come what may. do ordie? scotla nd front brings showers or storms to scotland and northern ireland so do or die. temperatures will fall, but may be he says it's not so simple. well, i think that 31st of october 32 celsius across the southeast with come hell or high water high humidity, that will feel deadline is a fake deadline. unbearable, and the hottest day of campaigning in chelmsford today, jeremy hunt squeezed in some the year so far if that does happen. shopping for his wife. it is hotting up towards the end of she does like her orchids. the week. and rejected the idea that boris johnson's harder line might play better with party members. i am the person who will get us out quickly because i will be able
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to negotiate with the eu and negotiate a deal through parliament. if we do or die, which is what boris is saying... well, the trouble with do or die is you could end up with a general election, corbyn in downing street and no brexit at all. but coming in to bat for borisjohnson, this ex leadership contender says jeremy hunt shouldn't flirt with an extension. there is a certain naivete in negotiating terms of saying, this is bbc news — well, actually, yes, our latest headlines... we'd be open to an extension. public outcry over the border crisis that, of course, invites in america as pictures emerge the eu to double down. of a migrant father and his daughter even if they differ on deadlines, lying dead in a river after trying there are similarities to cross into the united states. between the two contenders. the bbc discovers that moors both say they want to get a better murderer ian brady was allowed to mix with vulnerable young deal out of the eu but they are also prisoners for more than five years. prepared to leave without one the two rivals for the conservative leadership continue to clash over if brussels doesn't budge. whether the uk should and so far, the eu has been pretty commit to leaving the eu clear that the withdrawal agreement is not up for renegotiation. on october the 31st. sport now on afternoon accused of a submarine strategy, boris johnson surfaced live with ben. quite a lot yesterday, england play norway in the last 16 sticking to the claim that free
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of the women's world cup tomorrow trade can continue if the eu allows, and they could be missing even in the absence of a full formal agreement. a couple of key players? but is such a route really possible? it requires both parties‘ "major doubts" according to manager phil neville at a press cooperation so the ability to use it conference in le havre this morning. in a no—deal scenario is far less england's first choice centre half pairing too with steph houghton and mille bright. houghton is still struggling likely to be applicable. with an ankle problem that she sustained near the end of that ill tempered last 16 no one has accused jeremy match with cameroon. hunt of hiding away. a nasty challenge that the cameroon the self—described underdog knows player only got a yellow card for. that ballot papers start dropping through conservative party members' she's been rated as 50/50 doors in ten days' time. for the norway game. jessica parker, bbc news. there's optimism around bright. she's been confined to her hotel room after picking up a bug. temperatures in le havre could reach up to 30 degrees but manager phil neville is looking forward to the game and has backed both abbie mcmanus and leah williamson to shine if called upon. you plan for these moments, i said six months ago we don't want to get several migrant deaths reported in toa six months ago we don't want to get the us. that has helped shape a to a quarterfinal and throw a young kid intimate somebody we have not tested or tried —— so a young kid
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growing debate in the united states. we're joined from washington in, somebody. there has been a plan by the vice—president of the american immigration lawyers behind it, and it is for moments association, allen orr. like this, and i'm totally relaxed you have actually visited one of andi like this, and i'm totally relaxed and i said only worry about those these camps. what is it like?” that can get on the bus and those that can get on the bus and those that can get on the bus and those you have actually visited one of these camps. what is it like? i have been to facilities under the obama that can get on the bus other fit 1's and unfortunately in situations you will have injuries and it is and current administration, and the facilities are not like camps at opportunities for others and i will all, they are more like detention put my life on lee williamson and centres and prisons. in what way? abbie mcmanus to be the best two what is it like as you walk in them? players on the pitch. —— leah. i there is no natural light, no freedom of movement, no liberty you would associate with people who are like it being hot, and we feel good not being detained for some criminal in the heat, we have planned for it and we had a few weeks at the same purpose, people and families are separated, and once you are able to talk to individual clients they are disheartened about the situation —— st georges park where they they are in and just want a better virtually lived in a sauna. we have life. it doesn't sound like the planned for it. they have one the united states in the united in the thermals and they are prepared for zist united states in the united in the it, there are no surprises and we 21st century. it isn't. the problem have planned and prepared every eventuality. is there is this problem at both the a couple of other football lines just quickly. aaron wan bisakka is on his way detention centres and the cbt
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to manchester united in a deal worth centres which are government run and up to £50 million. he'll be paid around £80,000 a week — others run by private companies. the eight times what he was issue has been that neither of these on at crystal palace. facilities came to the hill and tottenham look set to sign a player for the first time said, we are at this overflow since last january with leeds' problem, but attorneys overturned teenage wingerjack clarke set to have a medical ahead of a move issues for the public. what do you say to those who say that these in the region of £10 million. images are working and that they are putting people off the idea that these probably still won't be the getting across the border, all your problems are solved?” biggest transfers of the summer. getting across the border, all your problems are solved? i don't think it is putting people off. it is let's talk about tennis now, bad actually literally killing people news forjohanna konta? and harming us by this toxic stress which is turning the world against we were so optimistic for konta after her impressive form on the clay that our own principles and standards. i took her to the semi finals of the french open. am an immigration lawyer by trade she combined a second round exit but an american first. you do not in birmingham last week with a third have to be an american to do that, round exit in eastbourne. it is called due process in the she endured a pretty poor 2018 united states. we are more about so this upturn in form that's what is fair and right than what one seen her back into the world's top 20 but despite having reach administration to do the other. you the wimbledon semis two years ago, have seen finger—pointing. and just she looks a little out of sorts because the obama administration did
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not get it right does not mean that in the short grass trump administration should exasperate that problem. they are court seasons since. keeping people outside the united states on purpose for months and straight sets defeat by world weeks at a time to apply for this number 62 ons jabeur of tunisia. legal assignment. this particular the british number one was beaten in straight sets by ons jabeur of tunisia 6—3, 6—2 — and with the start image released of this father and of wimbledon just five days away — his baby daughter drowned trying to only practice will do between now and the third grand slam of the year. cross the rio grande, does that have jabeur will take on alize cornet in the last eight. the potential to change the sense of well, after her defeat earlier johanna konta is seeded this entire argument the united 19th for the women's singles at wimbledon. states ? ash barty — the new women's world this entire argument the united states? i think the argument has number one is seeded first. naomi osaka is second and reigning already been changed with the understanding that children who are champion angelique kerber fifth. serena williams 11th. not having their diapers changed all the women's seedings toothpaste, that started on monday, follow the wta rankings. that adds more colour to the not so in the men's draw picture. these individuals were crossing the rio grande day trying where world number two to get to the united states. there isa to get to the united states. there is a bit less concern, we should not rafa nadal is seeded third — with wimbledon taking into account a player's grasscourt record. haveit is a bit less concern, we should not have it happen, we should have prevented it, it is a tragedy, but nadal said it doesnt seem right — when we look at people in the detention centres who are dying, not given the medical care they need, he's likely to be in the same half they are in our direct control that we can impact and it is making a big
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him in the semi finals. change on the american public which is why believe the house moved so kyle edmund is the 30th seed. quickly last night. but where does the buck stop? these services are finally new zealand have had a shaky start against pakistan, contracted out, where is the a team who could catch england government on the ground to? that is in the race for a semi final space, in today's world cup match at edgbaston. the problem. the government is not play was delayed for on the ground. if we did not want an hour because of rain — new zealand won the toss but slipped these things to happen, they would to a6 for a. not have happened. over two months kane williamson top scored with a1 after negotiating that wobble. ago, we allocated $1 billion to go england's chances would be boosted to the wall, we could have taken by a new zealand win. that money and given it to these the black caps are now 159 facilities to take care of these human beings in the throes of their for 5 in the a2nd over. lives. even if they are not able to that's all the sport for now. remain in the united states, they still should be treated humanely in our facilities. what options are there? is this something the un as we've been reporting — a heatwave — caused by a plume should get involved in?” of hot airfrom the sahara — there? is this something the un should get involved in? i actually think the un should get involved. is moving across southern europe and is expected to hit records the us has gone around the world forjune temperatures. telling other countries how they large parts of france should treat people and it is time are on red alert over searing heat and humidity, for the world to step in and say, we with even higher temperatures see you doing the same atrocities, forecast for spain and italy. germany is among countries that have if you are about due process, we are imposed termporary restrictions concerned about people around the on traffic and vehicle speed because the heat can damage highways world, these things can happen on and lead to higher pollution levels.
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your soil. we understand that this issueis your soil. we understand that this issue is a global issue. the united let's talk more on this now states are setting the tone for the with professor hannah cloke rest of the world and we can do from the university of reading. better. great pleasure to talk to you. you're watching afternoon live. these are our headlines: hi temperatures per se, are they dangerous? the temperatures public outcry over the border themselves are slightly dangerous, yes, but it will be made worse crisis in america as pictures emerge of a migrant father and his daughter because of the humidity and when it lying dead in a river after trying to cross into the united states. doesn't get cool at night time as an old baileyjury well, that can become problematic so is shown cctv images of an exchange between lee pomeroy it is the combination of factors and darren pencille on a train — before mr pomeroy was together that can be really stabbed to death. dangerous. you are an expert in the bbc discovers that moors murderer ian brady was allowed hydrology and droughts, so it is to mix with vulnerable young access to water that is going to be prisoners for more than five years. crucial? yes, so people keeping 2a hours out from their women's themselves cool and there are also world cup quarterfinal, england have major doubts surrounding the fitness of their first chance centre half. impacts on agriculture and access to water for industry so we have got to be on alert for that but there are johanna konta has played her last
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other hazards like the risk of competitive match ahead of wimbledon. she had a disappointing forest fire and pollution is a big problem when you have got high straight sets defeat at the eastbourne international. crystal temperatures. this pattern of hot aircoming infrom palace full—back aaron is yet to win temperatures. this pattern of hot air coming in from the sahara, does not cause specific risks? it is very a capfor palace full—back aaron is yet to win a cap for his country but are set to join manchester united in a deal worth up to £50 million. just to hot, and because it will stay in that place for a good time, that build—up of heat and the insulation, bring you some breaking news. the so the sunshine, basically, that will make it much worse. we remember prime minister theresa may will meet the heat wave in france in 2003, vladimir putin on friday to deliver that caused thousands of deaths. a message that britain is open to what can countries do to prevent different relationships if russia desist from activity that undermines that? having an early warning that treaties and our collective something bad is coming, that is security. the meeting confirmed also important, and we are making great by the kremlin, a spokesman telling strides towards that, to give those warnings out to the public and to reporters that the pair will discuss authority so they can prepare and sensitive questions around the have extra water available and british russian relationship which is been on the back foot after the cooling areas, putting hospitals on
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alert, and if you can get that chemical attack in salisbury last warning out a good week ahead, that year. russia is willing to explore can be really important and it can the possibility for a thaw in make a difference. this seems to be relations, saying moscow would happening a lot more, is that true welcome any opportunity to establish new cooperation. so confirmation and is it down to climate change? we that that meeting will indeed take place. that is just coming are getting very concerned about a that that meeting will indeed take number of heat waves that have been place. that isjust coming in. a bbc investigation has revealed that the moors murderer, ian brady, hitting us in europe and other parts was allowed to associate of the world and certainly there is with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years and allegedly had sex with one of them while serving part of his climate change which is playing a life sentence in wormwood scrubs. pa rt climate change which is playing a part in that but for this heat wave declassified documents show that serious concerns were raised it will take some time to get to about brady's access to young grips with exactly what the main inmates between 1976 and 1981. drivers were but it is pretty the ministry ofjustice says certain that we should be worrying about this. we are more used to it there have been huge changes in the prison system in the last a0 years. sanchia berg has this report. so we are better perhaps at preparing for it? the more you get ian brady was for decades one of britain's most notorious prisoners. used to extreme heat, you see that with people who live in hot places, with myra hindley, he had tortured and murdered five children, they are used to dealing with this heat all the time but there are buried their bodies on saddleworth moor. both were sentenced limits to map especially for the to life in prison. young and elderly and people who brady stayed in the highest
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have other health conditions —— category for security. yet while here in wormwood scrubs, there are limits, especially for the brady was allowed to live in the prison hospitalfor more young. professor, thanks forjoining than five years, mixing with vulnerable teenagers, us. ministers have ordered a review boys sent from borstal into whether victims with mental health problems. of digital sex crimes, or so—called ‘revenge porn', should be automatically granted anonymity. according to government the practice involves sharing files just released, sexual images of people he said he would go on hunger without their consent. strike if moved. the independent advisory body, the law commission, will also decide he was supported by lord longford, whether new legislation is needed campaigner for prison reform. in england and wales to tackle other forms of offensive communications. then one young prisoner alleged brady had sex with him. it's difficult to imagine how that would have happened, actually. because he was closely supervised. public health england says more i mean, there were always people could die from a rare bacterial infection that has already two officers on duty. killed 12 people. the outbreak began in braintree but then brady was quite in essex, and has affected a cunning character. mainly elderly patients. the nhs says it's taking every do you think it's quite shocking? possible step to protect the local yes, yeah. community from the illness, known as invasive group definitely. a streptococcal disease. nikki fox reports from essex. a few months after that, brady was moved. the files, held here at the national archives, show how, even from the early months the microbiology lab testing in the prison hospital, ian brady displayed an unhealthy for infectious diseases in essex. interest in adolescent inmates. 700 community workers and elderly over the years, concerns
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patients have had swabs taken. were raised, complaints made, but nothing was done. a diagnosis can be the authorities were worried that, if ian brady complained and went on hunger strike, given in four days. lord longford would step in again. the ministry ofjustice said this is what streptococcus a looks they have been huge changes like through a microscope. in the last a0 years and that finding out how it is spreading and containing it is the focus. allegations of sexual assault are taken extremely seriously the problem with this outbreak and reported to the police. and what makes it different is it sanchia berg, bbc news. happened in a community. so it is not an enclosed space, but you have a small geographic area where these are happening, carolyn willows is director of article 39 — a group supporting it is where people are visited the rights of children living in state and privately—run at home by community staff and it institutions, such as prisons. she joins us from nottingham. makes it much more difficult to look at ways of containing that. so what is invasive strep a? it's a bacterium commonly found are you shocked by what we have been in our throats and skin, hearing? i am shocked. it is but this strain is rare and can become harmful if it gets passed the body's defences into the blood. potentially causing blood incredibly upsetting to imagine poisoning or sepsis. desperately ill children being in an environment with ian brady, but most people won't be affected. really this is just the tip of the more vulnerable are the elderly, iceberg in respect of the abuse of
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with an open wound or leg ulcers. children in custody. the independent those with low immune systems or an existing, chronic illness like cancer. inquiry into child sexual abuse in even if they have not been affected, care homes like this one february reported that there have in braintree are taking precautions. our residents are vulnerable been since 2009—171070 allegations and many of them are frail and have existing health conditions. of sexual abuse in child prisons, which may be an issue. but this is the same as any other infection that we would have to be child prisons today. so we should aware of and to be looking for sepsis markers. not imagine that the situation for sepsis is a big children has become any less problem for all of us. perilous. so you are saying that what happened with ian brady could speaking to community equally happen now? the ian brady health staff in essex, extra infection control procedures are being put in place. story is newsworthy because we all know of ian brady. i have researched district nurses who come into contact with patients who have open wounds are being offered antibiotics and staff have also past enquiries and revelations of received an e—mail telling them that children being raped and sexually after each visit they must wipe the soles of their shoes abused in child prisons, and the and their car steering wheels. tests are ongoing to find public inquiry itself reported four out if anyone else is months ago that there have been 1070 carrying the infection. sexual abuse allegations of children
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officials say they are doing in custody. we are talking about the all they can to protect patients. nikki fox, bbc news. most vulnerable in society. i will use in brady as an example of a psychopath, a paedophile, these are ben is here — in a moment he will be telling clever often very charming people us what's hot and what's not in the business news. first a look at the headlines coming face—to—face with the most on afternoon live. vulnerable. yes, but this is not a public outcry over the border crisis in america as pictures emerge of a migrant father and his daughter lying dead in a river after trying story about cunning, manipulative individuals. the real story is about to cross into the united states. the bbc discovers that moors murderer ian brady was allowed to mix with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years. institutions, central government not the two rivals for the being equipped to properly look conservative leadership after and safeguard children. continue to argue over whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu prisons of the places where adults, on october the 31st. mostly men who rape children and here's your business headlines sexually abuse children, are sent to. the prison service cannot claim on afternoon live... that a0 years ago, even now, it is ikea could be building homes in the uk after a council in the south of england agreed not aware that adults inflict terrible abuse on children. on the to work with a developer owned by the flat—pack retailer. worthing council is considering one hand, it does beggar belief that a deal with boklok, owned by ikea
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and construction company skanska, children were allowed to be exposed to build up to 162 homes in the seaside town. to ian brady, but on the other, when troubled fashion chain bonmarche has warned that trading in the first quarter you have an institution that is not professionally qualified to be has been ‘poor‘. looking after children, the institution being children and the it has said it's now central government department being considering a £5.7m takeover offer from uk billionaire philip day — the ministry ofjustice, we should an offer it had rejected. not be surprised that we continue to its shares fell 26% as it blamed bad get these revelations of weather for its performance. mistreatment. your group, how many cases are you dealing with any one time? how widespread is this? the robots are coming... up to 20 million manufacturing jobs problem is lots of this information around the world could be is kept secret. in march this year, replaced by robots by 2030. that's the prediction from oxford economics — a parliamentary question was asked an analysis firm. it's calling for action and the ministry ofjustice as to to prevent a damaging increase in income inequality. more on this in a moment. how many prison officers have been sacked or suspended for sexually abusing children, and the answer that came was that, in every single vaping has really taken off — juvenile and young offender as an alternative to smoking... institution, there had been prison but it seems like it's facing a setback from the ban in san francisco — officer sacked for the sexual why are they doing that?
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harassment, but the ministry of well — as you say, justice said they do not keep a san francisco has become category called sexual abuse. again, the first us city to ban sales the level of neglect and of e—cigarettes until the health effects are clearer. institutional neglect is staggering. stores have been banned from selling just yesterday, there was a debate the vaporisers and it's illegal in parliament calling for the for online retailers to deliver closure of all child prisons, and for those children that absolutely to addresses in the city. cannot live safely in the community and need to be in a safe environment, they should be in and yet the city council run local authority secure is home to one of the main vaping producers? children's homes. that is where the professional expertise is and where children can be kept safe. it is — its home tojuul labs, the most popular e—cigarette maker the lawyer for most of the families bereaved in the london bridge in the us. and it is warning that the move attacks two years ago has told the inquest that there was a damning would drive smokers list of missed opportunities back to cigarettes and "create a thriving black market". joining us now is our north america correspondent, to identify what was planned. samira hussain. we are seeing a rise in the number our correspondent, richard lister,
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teenagers who are gravitating towards e—cigarettes especially given the fact they have these is at the old bailey. different kinds of flavours and this is the last day of submissions these sweeter mango flavours which to the coroner before he gives his have become very attractive to kids conclusions on the eight deaths so some have become very attractive to kids so some people have suggested they have seen a 36% increase in the caused two years ago. these were numberof have seen a 36% increase in the number of young people that are lawyers for all the parties and getting hooked on tobacco, so that individuals concerned, trying to give the impression of the evidence we have been hearing for the past is the big push and why san francisco has decided to make this seven weeks or so. gareth patterson move right now. when does the band qc who represents six of the eight ta ke effect? bereaved families did indeed say that he thought there had been a move right now. when does the band take effect? the mayor of the city damning list of missed has ten days to sign the bill and by opportunities. the inquest has heard that khuram butt had been under m15 all indications it seems that she will do so, and after that stores investigation for two years up to and including the attack. gareth patterson qc said sadly the evidence does show that the investigators which have have the product, they have 6—7 months to get rid of the failed to discharge their duty. he product before the ban comes into said the attack planning by those place, so there is still a bit of three men was there to be detected and that these eight tragic deaths time, but it is clear during that did not need to happen. he said if time, but it is clear during that time you can expect that there will they had been closer surveillance of be some legal challenges being mounted against this bill. what
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khuram butt by m15, it could have about the rest of the us? other led to links with his states may follow suit? what is co—conspirators, but the council for the home office stressed that there interesting about this is that san was no evidence ever found of any francisco has a very long history of pushing through these kind of more attack planned during the time of the mis attack planned during the time of the m15 monitoring or in fact after. he said this attack was conceived in progressive laws through, so it is secret, was kept from all those not totally unsurprising that you have seen this coming out in san close to the attackers, the investigation has not revealed any francisco first. they were one of one who said anything or heard the first cities to put a ban on anything of any of the attackers plastic straws for example, and which pose a real and immediate whether other american cities will threat to life. he said it would follow suit it will depend on how have not have been either technically feasible orjustified at successful this ban is and of course the time to put closer monitoring on what kind of legal pressure is khuram butt. there was another issue on whether barriers should have been mounted by the tobacco companies that are involved in selling introduced more quickly after the westminster bridge attack in march e—cigarettes. of that year. dominic adamson that are involved in selling e-cigarettes. as always, good to talk to you. representing one of the two people killed on the bridge said there was an institutional fog about who was responsible about implementing we often get told measures to make london bridge the robots are coming — safer. families had expressed
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and now we have an idea concern that medical personnel could have saved those killed if they had of just how many? got their more quickly. lloyd suggested they now believe that would have been impossible. —— yes — up to 20 million manufacturing jobs around the world could be replaced by robots by 2030, lawyers. according to analysis firm france is starting to close dozens oxford economics. but it's notjust manufacturing — of schools because of the heatwave the firm predicts that people that's sweeping across southern europe. exceptionally hot air blowing displaced from those jobs are likely to find that similar roles in from the sahara is pushing in the services sector temperatures in some countries over have also been squeezed a0 degrees, setting by automation. new records forjune. (simon)sounds rather germany, belgium, italy and spain worrying? (ben)they add that are among the countries taking emergency measures sounds rather worrying? as the heat sets in. i've been speaking to our paris they add that correspondent, hugh schofield, and our rome correspondent, increasing automation will also james reynolds, about how boostjobs and economic growth. these two european cities are coping with the heat. the firm called for action pollution is the big word today to prevent a damaging increase in income inequality.each new industrial robot wipes in this story in paris certainly out 1.6 manufacturing jobs, the firm said, because people are very aware with these high temperatures comes with the least—skilled regions a much higher risk of air pollution, being more affected. particles from diesel exhaust. around the world about 1.7 million manufacturing jobs the authorities have put in place a measure have already been lost which they have on standby, to robots since 2000. which is to tell people regions where more people have lower skills, which tend to have weaker economies with certain kinds of cars
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they cannot come in. and higher unemployment rates everyone in paris has anyway, are much more vulnerable to the loss ofjobs due to robots, to have a sticker on their car oxford economics said. which gives it a 1—5 rating, and if you have an older car you are in the 3—5 bracket they will need to find otherjobs? and you are not allowed to come in. only relatively recent petrol and diesel cars are allowed to circulate in the city today, and that is in order to not give parisians the added problem workers who move out of breathing difficulties of manufacturing, tend to get newjobs in transport, construction, maintenance, and office and administration work — amid the discomforts they're which in turn are already suffering from. then there is this schools thing. vulnerable to automation. a number of schools have decided on average, each additional robot they will close tomorrow and friday. installed in those lower—skilled regions could lead to nearly twice i don't think it necessarily means as manyjob losses as those in higher—skilled regions of the same country, they will turn away boys and girls. exacerbating economic inequality and political polarisation, which is growing already, it's more that they oxford economics said. and how do you prevent this? this is will not give classes. there will be some kind of structure a good question. there to look after children, but they will not have lessons. that is the general idea. there is a big programme of awareness that has been the challenge for governments is how launched by the government. to encourage the innovation that the robots offer while making the practical effects
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sure they don't cause new divides of which i think are fairly limited. in society. more important is the communications exercise, saying it will hit. oxford economics also do all those things you know found the more repetitive the job, you have to do to do the greater the risk with keeping your windows shut, of its being wiped out. jobs which require more compassion, rehydrating and so on. creativity or social intelligence are more likely to continue to be the atmosphere in paris carried out by humans "for decades to come", it said. is not spooked, this the firm called on policymakers, business leaders, workers, and teachers to think going to last that long, about how to develop it will end at the weekend, but this feeling also workforce skills to adapt that there is something peculiar to growing automation. about this, it is so early in the year, it isjune, i'm not sure if being a news reader and while we have had many heatwaves comes into that category! and how is here before and survived them, what is odd about this that prevented? laughter is it is so early in the year and that's making people reflect that is a joke. we have some on the significance of this in terms of the larger changes which may be happening to our planet in climate. breaking news. french prosecutors there have been heatwaves before. there was one in particular say after their initial inquiry into where many people lost their lives, and many lessons have been the notre dame fire there are no learnt from that. grounds to believe it was caused by they have. 2003 was the year. criminal action and french prosecutors offices investigation it was a much longer has been opened into the possibility period of excessive heat of negligence by one or more parties ofjuly and august and,
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as you was saying there, regarding the fire and of course the many thousands of people died cathedral was undergoing extensive prematurely for lack of hydration and care. renovation at the time of the fire. millions of pounds has been raised people not looking out for themselves and drying out and dying. by the french government as a it was terrible. result, but that is the latest from the police. that is very much in everyone's mind and has been ever since whenever there is a hot snap. sheryl crow has been speaking there have been many hot snaps about her shock at learning since then, and every time that the master tapes of some the government moves into high gear of her biggest albums were among to keep people aware those destroyed in a huge fire of what they have to do. at universal studios in hollywood. and it's working. it's thought about half a million original recordings, by some of the greatest musicians of the 20th century, were lost in the blaze in 2008 — the campaign is not really because they think people will go but the extent of the damage only to all these cold rooms. emerged following a newspaper report this month. people are not going to them. the singer said the loss felt "apocalyptic". they're empty. mark savage has been but people are aware, speaking to her. they have been informed, they know what to do when this kind for 11 years universal music has of weather kicks in, and they are reacting properly, said the warehouse fire in los and that will avoid the situation angeles had a limited impact we had last time. on its archives but now, the new york times estimates that they're not comparable in the sense half a million songs
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were lost. that that heatwave lasted an awfully long time, this one will be over by the weekend. the affected artists include duke ellington... # hold me closer, tiny dancer... in the sunshine, i'm wondering, if this is a good eltonjohn... news or bad news story? it depends who you are! if you are a roman, # count the headlights you have ways of coping. on the highway...#. a lot of romans work indoors and get # we have to make amends. #. ready to have their summer janet jackson and sheryl crow... holidays in july and august. summer has come early, but they know that this heat is what they see she is the first major in the next few months. artist to confirm they will escape the city, her master recordings they will go to the hills were destroyed as well or the seaside, and then rome as the back—ups known as safeties. is left with what you see behind me, the tourists, who don't well, that's where all my masters have the luxury of staying were stored and itjust... inside all day because they have it absolutely grieves me. got to see the vatican, i can't understand, the colosseum, the trevi fountain, first and foremost, how they have to see it all you could store anything in a vault during the daytime. that didn't have sprinklers. they might be tempted to make and secondly, i can't a temporary swimming pool understand how you in the trevi fountain, they probably shouldn't do that could make safeties and have because they will get fined. them in the same vault.
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i mean, what's the point? the only good business # all i want to do for the moment seems to be of ice cream makers whose sales have gone is have some fun...#. up 23% in the last few days. for a song like all i want to do the master tape is the original studio recording. hearing from hugh in france there, it's the one you go back what about the italians‘ approach to if you want to make new to temperatures like this? cds or vinyl copies. sheryl crow says all of those are gone. and she's not the only one affected. one of the interesting things, they are used to this temperature, buddy holly, billie holiday, it is about 36 degrees duke ellington, all this here at the end ofjune. important music has been erased and it is notjust the music, it is the dialogue between the music. it's the takes that didn't make it. they have that regularly injuly and in august, but nevertheless it's the versions of songs that the government has said it we'll never hear now. will have a red alert for six cities it's not even just the versions of the songs, it's songs we'll never hear. tomorrow and then potentially 16 cities on friday. archivists agree that the world as hugh was saying in paris, has lost a valuable part of its musical heritage. it is just to warn people to take sensible measures, from the artist's point to stay indoors if they can and look of view, in many cases, after elderly relatives and make it will be like a bereavement, sure those relatives are drinking, losing the original master tapes. i mean, it's their baby, but italy is used to it's their recording and a having hot summers. lot of these albums, how do you keep cool, james? they are historical albums that have great significance to the general public. by trying not to stand and do lives
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not being able to recreate new high quality versions of these records is in the middle of the day with you! a significant loss. that‘s me told! universal music says the extent of the damage has been overstated but admitted that any loss was painful. mark savage, bbc news. now it‘s time for a look time for a look at the weather. at the weather with stav danaos. with the european heat wave good afternoon. it is a bit fresher reaching its peak later this week with record—breaking temperatures we will be tapping into some and less humidity across much of the of that heat again towards country but over the next few days the end of the week. at the start of the weekend it could be extremely hot the temperatures will be bouncing back up, back with a vengeance at in england and wales, but in the short term fairly cool with slightly lower humidity the start of the weekend and turning but the best of the sunshine very humid, looking at the highest across the northern half of the country, more cloud temperature of the year so far in in england and wales, top temperatures 22—23 but cooler along the north sea coast. the south, and across the uk into saturday. quite a bit of cloud this afternoon, though, the best of the tonight will be another cold night sunshine in scotland and northern ireland and the far north of across central and northern areas england, so we could see 23 in the with the cooler air mass sunshine but cooler under the cloud and the varied cloud further south.
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and cooler in the north sea coasts. low single digits likely the breeze will continue across the north—east of the country mapped in the north so a chilly start picking up also overnight over the for thursday across northern areas but more sunshine around especially south—west, lengthy clear skies, for england and wales but it will be windy across the channel coast central northern areas will be especially into the south—west. turning chili like you did last the best of the temperatures night, low single figures in a few in western areas but still cool along the north sea coasts. places, tomorrow begins on a cold note but it looks like more sunshine across the board tomorrow with very strong sunshine, very high uv and very windy across the south of the country, and still quite cool across eastern coasts, the best temperatures in the south—west of england and the central belt of scotland. temperatures creeping up further in friday the area of high pressure pushing towards the east which draws the heat from the near continent and the most notable part this is bbc news — will be the south and the our latest headlines... public outcry over the border crisis south—west, and parts of the north, in america as pictures emerge of a migrant father and his daughter although a few cooler areas down the lying dead in a river after trying
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east coast, but it is the south to cross into the united states. right now, little children easterly picking up across western are enduring trauma and terror. areas where we will see the higher many are living in squalor at border patrol stations. some are sleeping on the cold ground temperatures and a lot of sunshine, very strong sunshine. the south—west without warm blankets or hot meals. an old baileyjury seeing the mid 20s. into saturday, is shown cctv images of an exchange between lee pomeroy the weather front tries to come in and darren pencille on a train — from the atlantic and that might before mr pomeroy bring a few showers and was stabbed to death. thunderstorms in the north and west of the country, but for england and the bbc discovers that moors murderer ian brady was allowed to mix with vulnerable young wales, a director south—easterly prisoners for more than five years. coming out of the furnace in france and those temperatures will be maybe a diary clash: the two rivals for the conservative leadership continue to argue over 28-32 and those temperatures will be maybe 28—32 across the south—east, that whether the uk should commit to leaving the eu looks like the highest temperature of the year so far if it happens. on october the 31st. french prosecutors find no sign the european heat wave is extensive and pretty wild and it looks like the fire which burned notre dame cathedral was caused the all—time records could be broken by criminal action — but say a cigarette in france towards the ends of the end or an electrical fault could be to blame. week —— the end of the week and temperature records are likely to be across parts of spain, thejune broken across europe — records could be broken, so watch as an early summer heatwave sweeps this space. across the continent. sport now on afternoon
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live with ben. england play norway in the last 16 of the women‘s world cup tomorrow and they could be missing hello, you're watching afternoon live. today at 3: a couple of key players? public outcry over the border crisis in america as pictures emerge of a migrant father and his daughter ben: and it‘s part of lying dead in a river after trying to cross into the united states. the spine of their team too. both centre backs steph houghton and mille bright have been described right now, little children as major doubts for their quarter are enduring trauma and terror. final against norway — not what you need just 28 hours out many are living in squalor at border patrol stations. from your biggest game for four years. some are sleeping on the cold ground two clean sheets in their last two games. without warm blankets or hot meals. houghton even scored against cameroon too but it‘s this challenge near the end the bbc discovers that moors of a tempestuous last 16 tie that murderer ian brady was allowed has left her struggling. to mix with vulnerable young prisoners for more than five years. although she has trained a diary clash. the two rivals for the conservative with the group in the last couple leadership continue to argue over of hours giving some optimism whether the uk should commit that she could recover in time. to leaving the eu on 31st october. manager phil neville says they‘ll be given until the last minute to prove their fitness. french prosecutors find no sign the fire which burned notre—dame cathedral was caused by criminal mille bright was action but say a cigarette the only one absent — she‘s effectively being quaranteened end or an electrical to stop her bug spreading around the group. fault could be to blame. it could lead to abbie mcmanus
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or leah williamson being coming up on afternoon called up instead. live: all the sport. you plan for these moments. england captain steph houghton and centre—back partner i said six months ago we don‘t mille bright are major doubts want to get to a quarterfinal for england's world cup semifinal and throw a young kid in, against norway tomorrow. or throw somebody we have not tested or tried. it could open the door for abbie mcmanus and/or leah williamson to replace them. there has been a plan behind it, manager phil neville has backed them to be the best players and it‘s for moments like this on the pitch if called upon. where i‘m totally relaxed and i said only worry about those that can get on the bus and those that can get it is hotting up across the uk as we on the bus are the fit ones. i‘d put my life on leah williamson end the week, we could be looking at and abbie mcmanus to be the best two players the highest temperature of the year so far as we head on into saturday, on the pitch, if called upon. but more on the developing european it is expected to be around 30 heatwave. thanks, stav. also coming up: prince william degrees for the match tomorrow which visiting a charity for people made homeless because of their sexual is hot enough for sun bathing let orientation says he would be alone one of the biggest matches of absolutely fine if any your career. of his children were gay or lesbian. it is something i'm nervous about, not because i'm worried about them being gay or anything, and now the cricket world cup? it's more about the fact that i'm worried about the pressures that they're going to face and how much harder their life could be. ben: england suffered a rather crushing defeat
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to australia yesterday. so from a parent point of view, general wisdom before the tournament suggested you could possibly lose four matches and still make the semi finals. that's the angle i worry about. and england have already lost three so with two games to go — they‘ve got little margin for error. it could be compounded today because pakistan are playing new zealand and if they win — england‘s hopes of a semi hello, everyone, final spot could be injeopardy. this is afternoon live. pakistan — after today — it's an image that has shocked many in america — have to play bangladesh and afghanistan — oscar ramirez and his baby daughter and would be favourites to win both. valeriaface down in the water, win all three matches drowned as they tried to cross the rio grande from mexico into texas. and they‘d have 11 points. it's too graphic to show you in this screen, but it has focused attention it would mean england on the treatment of migrant families couldn‘t afford to slip up in theirfinal two games — and the conditions in detention against india and new zealand — two centres near the us border, of the pre—tournament favourites. with reports children are locked up in cells where there's an open why might england be worried then? toilet in the middle of the room where they eat and sleep. pakistan are going well against new zealand, restricting them to 237 in their 50 the house of representatives has approved a multi—billion dollar aid overs — the black caps package, but president trump has were a6—a at one stage. said he will veto the bill. in reply, fakar zaman has gone a warning that this report from caroline hawley contains that cheaply — pakistan now aa—2 — photograph and other images with england likely to be hoping you may find disturbing.
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for a new zealand win. proud parents, this was the ramirez family had hoped for a new future in the us and who, like so many migrants, risk their lives to get there. the bodies of oscar alberto martinez ramirez and his two—year—old you can follow that one on the daughter, valeria, were found website stop in the rio grande which johanna konta‘s patchy grass court form has continued ahead of wimbledon — separates mexico and texas. beaten today in the third they'd apparently given up hope of reaching the us round of the eastbourne through legal means. international. this shocking image has emerged of a father and child, ons jabeur of tunisia got her head tucked into his t—shirt, the better of the british no1 in straight sets 6—3, 6—2. her arm around his neck. konta has just five days to get the stark human cost ready for wimbledon now — of human migrant crisis. where she‘ll be seeded 19th. already, america has been grappling with its conscience over how the government is responding. at about four o‘clock this afternoon british number one how children in particular kyle edmund faces british number two are being treated after being cameron norrie. detained at the border. these are live shots now of the action from centre court. last night, democrats in the us former world one simona halep is playing qualifier polona hercog. house of representatives approved an emergency humanitarian aid halep took the first package worth billions. it's to improve the conditions in which they are held, set, hercog the second. conditions which have been described as appalling. this situation is child abuse. it is an atrocity that violates halep has match point. the women‘s tournament every value we have,
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not only as americans is on bbc two and the website. but as moral beings. a couple of bits of football today, sadly, our values transfer news to finish where crystal palace defender are being undermined aaron wan bisakka‘s transfer by the president's failed policies to manchester united has which has intensified moved a step closer. the situation of heartbreak the two clubs have agreed a fee of up to £50 millions for the england under 21 full back. and horror on the border. he‘s set for a big pay hike too donald trump and the republicans from £10k to £80k a week. will have to act if the aid is going whilst leeds‘ teenage winger to get to where it's needed. he's blaming the problems jack clarke is due to undergo on the democrats. a medical shortly ahead i'm very concerned. of a £10 million move it's in much better to tottenham hotspur. shape than it ever was. it‘ll be spurs‘ first a lot of these young children come from places you don't even want to know about, the way they live and the way... signing since january 2018 ..the poverty they grew up in. this is the flow of human desperation. despite donald trump's tough stance on immigration, simona halep might have to wait a bit longer in that match, in fact. people keep moving north, heading for the us despite the dangers. that‘s all the sport for now. holly hamilton will have far removed from the bitter political debate propelled by misery and hope. more for you after 5 caroline hawley, bbc news. now on afternoon live — nicole austin—hillery is the us let‘s go nationwide — and see what‘s happening around director of humans right watch the country — in our daily visit
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who was part of a group of people to the bbc newsrooms around the uk. to visit the clint detention centre in texas where hundreds of children are being held. let‘s go to south east she joins me via webcam today‘s charlotte wright who is going to tell us about a new scheme to help victims from washington. of domestic abuse in kent. this photograph first of all, your and we‘re also joined by north west tonight‘s rogerjohnson to tell reaction to it. it's despicable. and us about a football team that has been making the news for inclusivity. victims of domestic abuse it really is an example of why and are being re—homed in social housing on estates in kent which are rife with drug—dealing, violence and other crime. how the policies of the us have just one community worker says the most vulnerable people are being put gone awry. if we had set up better in the most dangerous situations. charlotte, tell us more about what you‘ve uncovered. we know that victims of domestic systems for entry into the us, abuse are hugely vulnerable and that families like that would not be is well documented, especially not just in the short term but in the forced to take dangerous routes into the us that lead to tragic endings long as well. this applies when it like what we see that picture. how comes to housing, victims of many other families are trying to domestic abuse leaving refugees and make this exact crossing? the being put in social housing we have found that the support that needs to numbers are unknown. but what we do know is that the numbers of people be there for victims of domestic trying to enter the us now are at an abuse in the long term when it comes to housing actually in many cases all—time 15 year high, but we know isn‘t there, and many of them have said they have found they are coming
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it is imperative for the us to try out of refuges and being put in to ensure that the families who are trying to come into the us, and they precarious situations so housing will continue to come despite the estates where there is crime and fa ct will continue to come despite the fact that donald trump as saying he believes his policies will deter drug dealing going on, and one woman entry, we know they will continue to we have spoken to who we are calling come because they will try to flee sarah says she was rehomed in dangerous circumstances and bring da rtford sarah says she was rehomed in dartford and since there she has been subject to threats and attacks. families to a safe environment. what we need to do is ensure safe passage you go through life thinking, is it and we need to ensure that once your fault? that is the hardest bit those individuals coming to the us, for me. i'm thinking is it something we have a system set up to get them through thejudicial we have a system set up to get them i'm doing? i could have died and through the judicial system as quickly as possible, to try and see they would not care. it'sjust... what we can do to help them remain nobody believes me. in the united states or make a sound and effective decision about what how common is it for domestic abuse their ultimate outcome needs to be, survivors to go into social and we need to ensure that we are housing? it is pretty common, and we are told keeping them safe and healthy, that women spend around a—6 months particularly with respect to the children coming into the united states. you have just been to the ina that women spend around a—6 months in a refuge and then often they need to move to a different part of the country to escape their abuser and detention facility last week, what did you see there? i saw babies that means leaving their social networks behind and it means giving
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up networks behind and it means giving up theirjob and moving somewhere crying on a continuous basis, and i com pletely up theirjob and moving somewhere completely different so they rely on am talking about the array of councils for social housing to give children we saw who range from 18 as them a new head start in life. a young as five months. i saw a charity says that 87% of people who pass through their refuges and up five—month—old baby who was going into council run temporary unaccompanied. i saw children wearing the same clothes they were wearing the same clothes they were wearing when they entered the us, i accommodation but campaigners say saw children who had not been bathed that actually the pressure on social for days or who had not brushed housing in the south—east means that their teeth for days if at all, they cannot pick and choose where these women go. sadly we know that children who were sleepy because they were not resting well because they were not resting well because they were not resting well because unsafe and unsuitable housing can they were sleeping on the floors with very thin blankets, and i saw impede their recovery from trauma and can mean they might consider it fear in the faces of these children. some of them were inconsolable. safer with all things considered to there was one young seven—year—old return to the perpetrator. because girli there was one young seven—year—old girl i spoke with who had crossed they are living in a continued into the us with her aunt, and she had been separated from her aunt unsafe and unsuitable environment with their children. because the aunt was not her legal what‘s the response been guardian or her mother. this child from the authorities? da rtford dartford borough council who was in tears. the only thing i could rehoused sarah said they endeavour to place victims of domestic get out of her was, i came to the violence in the most secure united states with my aunt but properties that are available. the
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beyond that she was in tears and government says there is actually a continued to cry. until we use our fund in place for authorities to own personal phones to call her help them place these vulnerable victims of domestic abuse but it aunt. she had a bracelet attached to also says it will be issuing her that said she had a relative in guidance to make sure councils know the united states, and then we then that they prioritise domestic abuse picked up the phone and called. a survivors when it comes to social simple act that we cannot understand housing. campaigners i‘ve spoken to say they are sceptical and worried if we can do that, why can't the border patrol agency, why can't the about the future for survivors of domestic abuse. charlotte, more on us systems in place make it so that that at 630. thanks forjoining us. these children can be connected to relatives who love and care for them and want them and their presence? and roger, tell us more about this football club. this is the 21st century, the united it is based in liverpool, and in states of america, yet us border and some ways there‘s nothing especially immigration services do not seem to different about this club in the be able to cope. they don't. they sense that there are hundreds of claimed that the numbers are them around the country, probably, overwhelming and it is because of but it is all about getting children the democrats were not giving them and young people who have disabilities involved in football the democrats were not giving them and every regional news programme the funding to provide more across the country will do a report services, but that's not true, it about a club like this in their does not take rocket science nor
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region because it is so good to does not take rocket science nor does it take staff to ensure that celebrate and so good to publicise what they are doing and so good to children are getting daily showers. tell people that this is going on. the children in your facility, ensure they can clean themselves they started 18 months ago, they every day and brush their teeth, only have 30 members and they did give them healthy meals. when we one session a week and they are now talk to the children and families, up one session a week and they are now up to three a week and they have we we re talk to the children and families, we were told they eat the same food multiple numbers of members and it isa every day, and it is not nutritious. multiple numbers of members and it is a chance for people who feel excluded, young people from a 5—35 they are eating oatmeal for who are excluded from mainstream brea kfast, they are eating oatmeal for breakfast, ramen noodles for lunch and burritos for dinner. when we football, to come together and play askedif and burritos for dinner. when we asked if they were getting fruit and and to enjoy themselves, one mother vegetables, they said no. that includes the young mothers there who said her son. but he gets back up are nursing, whom we know require a again, and they absolutely love it as you will hear now. it is like certain level of nutritional value as part of their diets to ensure everything i've ever wanted, and that the babies who are even people with disabilities can breast—feeding are being fed healthy come here. i've made new friends mother's milk, but that's not when i first came, i got to be in a happening, and it doesn't matter how big the numbers are, whatever the team, it is inspiring. it means numbers are, treat them humanely and give them these daily necessities while they are in your custody. this everything. it is my future, will be a huge issue in the next
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basically. family atmosphere, as presidential election, the zero well, so the whole family is tolerance policy that president involved all the time and we have trump has brought insofar. do you made many friends and he is happy to sense that the mood of the american come. it is stories like this which people will change as they see more put smiles on peoples faces. it is a and more pictures like this and particularly photographs of her bit trite but it proves the old father and his baby daughter dead in a river? i absolutely think the mood adage that it is not the winning, but the taking part. absolutely will change. in the time since i true, the smiles on the faces, like you said, but actually they are went to clint last week with some of heading off to belfast to take part my colleagues, i can tell you based ina heading off to belfast to take part in a disability football tournament on anecdotal evidence, so many and that is fantastic. these things are being organised to give an people are saying this is opportunity for people to play who outrageous, how can this happen in might otherwise not have that the united states, in a country that is this wealthy and has this many opportunity and it is all about inclusion and getting people resources ? is this wealthy and has this many resources? it doesn't matter what your political leanings are. this is involved and obviously the benefits not about a republican or democratic in terms of physical fitness that issue, this is about humane comes from it but the team based in treatment and what we as the united bootle, one of those clubs featured, states have an obligation to provide to the people who are within our we decided they should be celebrated borders, and i am finding that so we have got them on tonight. people from both sides of the aisle, roger, thanks for joining independent voters, people from all so we have got them on tonight. roger, thanks forjoining us. and to
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walks, reaching out and saying this charlotte, thanks for joining is unacceptable and not what the us roger, thanks forjoining us. and to stands for and we have got to do better, and that will only increase charlotte, thanks forjoining us. as we get further and further into the selection. you are angry? i am if you would like to see more on any of those stories you can access them angry because i care about how we through the bbc iplayer and a reminder we go nationwide every treat children, how we treat other weekday afternoon at a30 here on human beings. this is not what the afternoon live. united states represents. this country was founded to be a place that provides opportunities and equality, and that's not what we are doing. even if at the end of the day the duke of cambridge has said it decisions are made to let some would be "absolutely fine" if in the future any of his children people cannot stand the united came out as gay, but if they were, states, what we do to reach the he would ‘be nervous‘ final conclusions on how we treat about the added pressures they would face. he made the comments while attending people matters. and this is not the the london headquarters of the albert kennedy trust this example of the united states should morning, a charity dedicated to be setting for the rest of the helping young people made homeless because of their sexual orientation. here‘s what he had to say. world. the two candidates for the conservative party leadership what do you think about that have been setting out different approaches to how the uk should leave the eu. in terms of one of your kids?
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borisjohnson says britain must leave on 31st october, "deal or no deal", but the foreign secretary, jeremy hunt, says that could trigger i have only started thinking about it since i've had children, a general election if parliament rejects a no—deal brexit. so it is something i'm nervous our political correspondent, about, not because i am worried jessica parker, has about them being gay, the latest on the campaign. it is more about the fact i'm worried about the pressures that they will face and how much it's a date. the 31st of october, to be precise. harder their life could be. so from a parent point of view these two rivals differ that is the angle i worry about. i wish we lived in a world in which on that deadline. he says he is ready... it was really normal and cool. to come out on october... 3ist. 31st, correct. but for my family, in the position we are in, that's the bit come what may? come what may. i'm nervous about. do ordie? i will support any decision do or die. they make, but it does he says it's not so simple. worry me how many barriers, hateful words, persecution, discrimination, that well, i think that 31st of october, they might encounter. come hell or high water that is the bit that deadline, is a fake deadline. campaigning in chelmsford today, jeremy hunt squeezed in some shopping for his wife. troubles me at the moment. she does like her orchids. and rejected the idea that boris johnson's harder line might play better with party members. i am the person who will get us out the eastenders and z cars star, quickly because i will be able douglas fielding has died aged to negotiate with the eu and negotiate a deal through parliament. 73 — fielding was best known for playing sergeant alec quilley in z cars — the second longest
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if we do or die, which is serving character — which ran what boris is saying. from 1969 until 1978. well, the trouble with do he also took on the role or die is you could end up of policeman roy quick in eastenders with a general election, from 1985 until 1986. corbyn in downing street the actor‘s passing was confirmed and no brexit at all. by his family in a statement but coming in to bat for borisjohnson, this ex reading: "we all love and miss him." leadership contender says jeremy hunt shouldn't flirt with an extension. and the actor bryan marshall, best known for his role there is a certain naivete injames bond, has died in negotiating terms of saying, at the age of 81. well, actually, yes, the actor was commander talbot we'd be open to an extension. in the spy who loved me, that, of course, invites starring opposite roger moore the eu to double down. as 007, and as councillor harris in the long good friday. even if they differ on deadlines, confirming the news, there are similarities marshall‘s agent esta charkham between the two contenders. tweeted: "so sad that my dear old chum bryan marshall both say they want to get a better "has gone. deal out of the eu but they are also prepared to leave without one "a wonderful actor — he was so good if brussels doesn't budge. you never noticed how good he was." and so far, the eu has been pretty clear that the withdrawal agreement ben is here — in a moment he will be telling is not up for renegotiation. us what‘s hot and what‘s not in the business news. first a look at the headlines on afternoon live. public outcry over the border crisis accused of a submarine strategy, in america as pictures emerge boris johnson surfaced of a migrant father and his daughter quite a lot yesterday, lying dead in a river after trying sticking to the claim that free to cross into the united states. trade can continue if the eu allows, even in the absence an old baileyjury is shown cctv images of an exchange between lee pomeroy of a full formal agreement. and darren pencille on a train — before mr pomeroy but is such a route really possible?
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was stabbed to death. it requires both parties‘ the bbc discovers that moors cooperation so the ability to use it murderer ian brady was allowed in a no—deal scenario is far less to mix with vulnerable young likely to be applicable. prisoners for more than five years. no one has accused jeremy hunt of hiding away. here‘s your business the self—described underdog knows headlines on afternoon live. that ballot papers start dropping through conservative party members' ikea could be building homes in the uk after a council doors in ten days' time. in the south of england agreed jessica parker, bbc news. to work with a developer owned by the flat—pack retailer. worthing council is considering a deal with boklok, owned by ikea meanwhile, the leader of the democratic unionist party, and construction company skanska, which supports the conservative to build up to 162 homes government, has been asked this in the seaside town. morning about the tory leadership battle and what it could mean for brexit. it's very important that we leave on the 31st of october. of course, we should have san francisco has become the first left by now and i think city in the usa to ban a lot of the discontent the sale of e—cigarettes. within the united kingdom is caused by the fact it‘s because of concerns that we haven't left, about a "dramatic surge" and we've seen that in young people using them. in the european election results. as for your first question, stores are now banned that is not a matter from selling the vaporisers. for me, thankfully. it‘s also illegal for online that is a matter for graham retailers to deliver to addresses in the city. and his colleagues in the conservative party, and i look forward to working with whoever is elected as leader. i have a good relationship e—cigarette producers say
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withjeremy, i have a good the move will "create relationship with boris, a thriving black market". so i look forward to working robots are coming... with whoever is selected. we can talk about all this now with our political correspondent, up to 20 million manufacturing jobs around the world could be nick eardley, who's at westminster. replaced by robots by 2030. that‘s the prediction from oxford economics — an analysis firm. it‘s calling for action it is really interesting. that date to prevent a damaging increase of the 31st of october is becoming a in income inequality. central part of the debate between the two characters at the heart of this conservative race. boris johnson saying we will stick to it gold — a precious metal no matter what, jeremy hunt far less that‘s become even more precious over the past month? convinced, yesterday he was saying it was a fake deadline. one of his ben: yes, the price of gold supporters is here. it is not a fake has gone up recently — deadline, is it, because that's the in the last month, it rose by more than $100 an ounce, from just under point at which legally the uk leaves $1300 to just over £1,a00. the eu? that is right, as it was by the eu? that is right, as it was by the end of march, and that didn't why has this happened? happen, so what jeremy said as the end of march, and that didn't happen, so whatjeremy said as if the end of march, and that didn't happen, so what jeremy said as if we are there with an agreement but not ben: various factors quite there it makes a date that affect the price and it‘s all based around the idea that gold makes sense to extend. it is holds its value so it‘s seen as safe pragmatic politics rather than having a red line which will vanish haven in times of trouble —
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but unlike shares or bonds it and fade as the red lines faded at doesn‘t pay any dividends the end of march. there is a big so if you put your money in gold it‘s not making you any more money. question over whether boris johnson now — one factor is interest rates. could get a no—deal brexit through when the us federal reserve hinted that interest rates might fall — parliament. what is your assessment the value of the us dollar fell. of that? would parliament block it and because gold is priced in us dollars, when the dollar gets and bring down the government? we weaker, it becomes cheaper for the rest of the have seen no deal blocked three times in parliament as we are right world to buy gold. so people buy more of it and the price goes up. now. i was one of the last mps to and also — when interest rates go down, vote for it. if parliament can find you tend to get less of a return on government bonds so you‘re not a way of debating it, parliament missing out on as much income will block it. i believe that will by having your money in gold. add to that the tensions happen. jeremy hunt has not made it between the us and iran — and the fears about the us china clear what his deadline is. he says trade war and its impact on global it does not necessarily have to be trade and the world economy growth rate — a safe haven becomes more attractive. the 31st of october, we could extend things a bit. when willjeremy hunt definitely get the uk out of the eu? he has talked about us... he wants to get us out by the end of october joining us now is craig erlam, senior market analyst are scheduled but he has talked at oanda. about us leaving by the end of this year, so it is essential that we are talking this year so then we can gold prices spiked at 10% in the
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move on to the other issues that last month but today they have edged have been badly neglected because we are so have been badly neglected because we are so fixated with something we off that, why? these things never have so far failed to deliver, and that's where he has got a good heading a straight line so tend to fighting chance of getting a good see a bit of profit—taking along the deal from the eu, fighting chance of getting a good dealfrom the eu, getting it fighting chance of getting a good deal from the eu, getting it through parliament and focusing on the key way and we have seen extraordinary gains ina domestic challenges that our voters way and we have seen extraordinary gains in a short period of time in wa nt domestic challenges that our voters want us to focus on. so your gold, that we would eventually start to see profit—taking with a understanding thatjeremy hunt, by five—year high at this point, but the end of december will say we will that doesn‘t mean it can‘t continue not get a deal now, it is time to go to go up and it does depend on the with no deal? it is not interesting factors you alluded to. the most volatile of which will be what the so with no deal? it is not interesting so much about what we say but what the eu says. but what is jeremy us does with interest rates and gold is priced in dollars so a weaker hunt's deadline? in december, does dollar tends to lift the price of he walk away? he wants to deliver gold and as you have alluded the brexit by the end of this year and no deal is still on the table as far issues in the middle east, the safe as that's concerned. it would be haven aspects of it, that is looking difficult to get that through favourable right now.” parliament. we have a great interest in getting a deal through as the eu. haven aspects of it, that is looking favourable right now. i want to talk closer to home about retail, and the question will be how long their tolerance will last with us failing let‘s touch on bonmarche, the tolerance will last with us failing to deliver anything through parliament so don't rule out the fa ct parliament so don't rule out the fact that the eu may pull the plug fashion retailer is changing its on us, which would be a huge worry. tune ona fashion retailer is changing its tune on a takeover offer that it had
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rejected but now it says they might you have been with team hunt, look again at it? it is amazing what talking about how the campaign is going. a lot of people in a terrible fourth quarter will do to westminster seem to think this is a the perception of an offer on the foregone conclusion, boris johnson table, and we have seen the share will be the next prime minister, are price drop more than 20% in the they wrong? i think they are wrong. aftermath to a level which is below there has been a lot of bounce. we the offer which was on the table so had members going into the hustings it now looks more attractive. the in birmingham, very much, i am board are looking at the off on the supporting boris, then at the end table and saying, a quarter ago we not as convinced in switching and might have thought that the saying they want to vote forjeremy short—term prospects and the medium because they more people seem to and long—term prospects are still looking quite favourable but now short—term prospects are looking so much more unfavourable that it hear and see of him the more they threatens the medium and long term like. he is the kinda guy that is prospects and maybe if i‘d taken more likely to bring people together this back into sole ownership we can and we need parliament brought together because we will not get a deal through if we don't have a majority in the conservative side so actually see a much stronger medium i think momentum is withjeremy. i and long—term future at the current have just been with him, he is going shareholders may lose out on the timeframe but unless you protect the around the country, and there is a real zest on him. he is really short—term on a very challenging optimistic that he could win this. retail environment, the medium and long term might not actually exist simon, four weeks of this to go, a as we have seen with plenty of other examples. the difficulties do not couple of weeks yet until those
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ballot papers go out should team hunt ballot papers go out should team just find themselves confined to h u nt clearly fashion and the high street but also ballot papers go out should team hunt clearly think they can pull some of the ground back. in the food retailers and we have seen that meantime, we will talk about this a with pizza express. when you look at lot, and they will hope they will their accounts it seems the losses win more tories over. for weeks, are accounting for a bigger slice of the numbers? this is a privately nick! owned firm and we typically see a conservative mps have clashed over whether trade rules, known as gatt 2a, would allow tariff—free trade with the eu high amount of debt on the cards and in the event of a no—deal brexit. that was a major factor within this joining me now is our reality check correspondent, chris morris. but the casual dining scene, we have so what is gatt article 2a? seen plenty of casualties, the most it isa recent of which was jamie‘s and we it is a bit of international trade law that allows you to move goods have seen others on top of that. the across borders without tariffs or border taxes, and we are talking issue for consumers, there is so much competition out there at the everything from cars to cabbages to moment and it feels like the chemicals. it allows you to do that competition is getting better and better and better, so some of these ona chemicals. it allows you to do that on a temporary basis until a free older names which have been around for a long time, they are offering trade agreement is finalised. now, a something we are aware of for a long lot of brexiteers say we can do that after brexit between the uk and eu, time, not necessarily new or and but there is a catch which is that pizza express falls into that you need two sides to agree, you category and their losses were doubled last year. —— not
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cannot impose on somebody else will necessarily new or trendy. they need demand that it be implemented. therefore, you do need an agreement to revitalise and come back with why and some goodwill. the problem we should be going back to their restau ra nts a nd we should be going back to their restaurants and offering discounts therefore is, if you leave with no is not currently doing that at the deal, you don't have that much moment. craig, thanks forjoining goodwill and you don't have an agreement. for example, the uk is us. that‘s all the business news. probably not going to pay if we leave with no deal all of the £39 million divorce bill, it will want to ditch the irish backstop. a lot of brexiteers say it doesn't matter, evenin of brexiteers say it doesn't matter, even in those circumstances, why can't we just have a free trade now — the chartered institute of housing‘s annual housing festival agreement, sign off, use article 2a? is not a particularly well known gig on the stand—up comedy circuit, the problem with that is the eu has but one of the speakers managed to get a big laugh from delegates said that's not happening, the other when she took the stage. it was the prime minister theresa may — whose last 27 countries have been repeatedly and explicitly clear, if you leave appearance at the venue, the manchester central convention with no deal, tariffs will be complex, was not one of her finest. you might remember the letters falling off imposed and article 2a not apply. the backdrop behind her — and a protester disrupting her speech. let‘s see what happened this time... evenif good afternoon everyone, it is a imposed and article 2a not apply. even if it does apply, it is pleasure to be here at europe‘s limited? it is because it deals with largest housing festival and i have to say i was a little apprehensive a very specific area of the economy when i heard where you were holding your meeting this year and the last
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which is goods, taking stuff across timei your meeting this year and the last time i visited this venue it was borders does not include services, hosting the 2017 conservative party and the service sector is 80% of the conference when it is fair to say i had a few problems with my speech. i british economy. quite a lot of the companies in that sector do not think the backdrop is pretty solid. trade with europe but for the ones that do are no deal would mean they there is somebody waiting with cough are guaranteed access to the rest of sweets if i need them. and just in the single market. big companies, case anyone is planning to run on stage with a p a5, you are a little that will disappear for them. there are other areas of policy that it bit late. laughter does not cover. cooperation on policing, security issues, data protection, all the other things that need to be sorted out and right... a newborn baby has been found alive brexit have nothing to do with inside a plastic bag dumped article 2a. when people talk about in woods in the us state of georgia. the wto brexit, they are talking about a fairly narrow and specific pa rt about a fairly narrow and specific part of the whole equation, even if how did you hear it? we heard it they could use that bit of trade law. it seems to me, what both the from our house. i thought it was candidates are saying in effect is, maybe an animal. yes, there is all this policy and law and technical stuff, but in the end we hope that hard politics will
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trump policy once we look them in the eye and say, we are serious 0h, oh, look at you, sweetheart. i‘m so about this. so far though, there has sorry, i‘m so sorry. been no evidence whatsoever that the eu will change course. good to have forsyth county sheriff‘s you back. you decided to have an office released this dramatic bodycam footage of an officer cutting the abandoned girl from the bag. argument with someone on a bicycle! her umbilical cord still appears to be attached. a local resident can be heard don't cycle down hill quickly and saying he heard the cries and raised the alarm. rescue workers then swaddle cycle into a parked car! it is the baby in a blanket. she‘s been named ‘india‘ and is said to be doing well getting better. in the care of family services. remarkable images. france is starting to close dozens of schools because of the heatwave that's sweeping across southern europe. exceptionally hot air blowing in from the sahara is pushing now, let‘s meet ali, temperatures in some countries over a0 degrees, setting the 13—week—old orphaned pig that new records forjune. thinks she is a sheep. germany, belgium, italy and spain are among the countries taking emergency measures the runt of the litter had to be hand—rea red to survive as the heat sets in. so staff at houghall farm in a moment we'll get at east durham college the latest from james reynolds moved her to the same barn as some orphaned lambs. in rome but first let's talk
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to our correspondent each morning hugh schofield in paris. they noticed she was escaping into the sheep pen, and now she spends most of her day with her new friends, pollution is the big word today eating hay and playing. that‘s it from your because people are very aware with afternoon live team for today. these high temperatures come much next the bbc news at five with carrie gracie. higher risk of air pollution, time for a look at the weather. here‘s stav da naos. particles from diesel exhaust. the with the european heat wave reaching authorities have put in place a its peak later this week are measure which they have on standby, record—breaking temperatures we will which is to tell people with certain be tapping into the heat again kinds of because they cannot come towards the end of the week. in. anyone in paris has to have a sticker on their car which gives it a 1—5 rating, and if you have an at the start of the weekend it could be extremely hot in england and wales, older car you are in the 3—5 bracket but in the short term fairly cool and you are not allowed to come in. with slightly lower humidity but the best of the sunshine across the northern half the relatively recent petrol and of the country, more cloud in england and wales, top temperatures 22—23 but cooler diesel cars are about to circulate along the north sea coast. in the city today, and that is in tonight will be another cold night order to not give parisians the across central and northern areas added problem of breathing with the cooler air mass difficulties amid the discomfort is and the varied cloud further south. already suffering from. then there
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is this schools thing. a number of low single digits likely schools have decided they will close tomorrow and friday. i don't think in the north so a chilly start for thursday across northern areas but more sunshine around especially it necessarily means they will turn for england and wales but it will be away boys and girls. it is more that windy across the channel coast especially into the south—west. the best of the temperatures they will not give classes. there in western areas but still cool along the north sea coasts. will be some kind of structure there to look after children, but they will not have lessons. that is the general idea. there is a big programme of awareness that has been launched by the government. the practical effects of which i think a fairly limited. more important is the communications exercise, saying it will hit. do all those things you know you have to do to do with keeping your windows shut, rehydrating and keeping your windows shut, rehyd rating and so keeping your windows shut, rehydrating and so on. the atmosphere in parish is not spooked, this is not lost ink that long, it will end at the weekend, but this feeling also that there is something peculiar about this, it is so early in the year, it isjune, and while we have had many heatwaves before
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and survived them, what is odd about this is it is so early in the year and that's making people reflect on the significance of this in terms of the significance of this in terms of the larger changes which may be happening to our planet in climate. there have been heatwaves before. there have been heatwaves before. there was one in particular where many people lost their lives, and many people lost their lives, and many lessons have been learnt from that. they have. 2003 was the year. it was a longer period of excessive heatin it was a longer period of excessive heat in the middle ofjuly and august, and as you was saying there, many thousands of people died prematurely for lack of hydration and care. people not looking after themselves and drying out and dying. it was terrible. that is very much and everyone's mind and has been ever since whenever there is a hot snap. they have been many hot snaps since then, and every time the government moves into high gear to keep people aware of what they have
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to do. and it is working. the campaign is not because they think people will go to all these cold today at five — the us—mexico rooms. people are not going to them. border crisis deepens after the deaths of a father and toddler, pictured face down in a river. they are empty. but people are aware, they have been informed, they know what to do when this kind of a public outcry about the treatment weather kicks in, and they are of thousands of migrant families reacting properly, and that will held in poor conditions in us camps. avoid the situation we had last time. they are not comparable in the right now, little children sense that that heatwave lasted an awfully long time, this one will be are enduring trauma and terror. over by the weekend. in the many are living in squalor at border patrol stations, some are sleeping on the cold ground without warm sunshine, iam over by the weekend. in the sunshine, i am wondering, if this is blankets or hot meals. a good news or bad news story? we‘ll speak to an american lawyer who‘s just returned from one of the camps. the other main stories sunshine, i am wondering, if this is on bbc news at five... 7m depends who you are. if you are a jurors at the old bailey are shown cctv footage — of the moments before train roman, you have ways of coping. a passenger lee pomeroy was stabbed to death. lot of roman work indoors and get the bbc reveals the moors murderer ready to have their summer holidays ian brady was allowed to associate injuly and ready to have their summer holidays in july and august. ready to have their summer holidays injuly and august. summer has come early but they know that this heat
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is what they see in the next few months. they will escape the city, they will go to the hills or the seaside, and then rome is left with what you see behind me, the tourists, who don't have the luxury of staying inside all day because they have got to see the vatican, they have got to see the vatican, the colosseum, the trevi fountain, they have to see all during the daytime. they may be tempted to make a temporary swimming pool in the trevi fountain, they probably shouldn't do that because they will get fined. the only good business for the moment seems to be of ice cream makers whose sales have gone up cream makers whose sales have gone up 23% in the last few days. curing from hugh in france there, what about the italians's approach to temperatures like this? one of the interesting thing since they are used to this temperature, it is about 36 degrees here at the end of june. they have that regularly in
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july and august, but nevertheless the government has said it will have a red alert for six cities tomorrow and potentially 16 cities on friday. as he was saying in paris, it is just to warn people to take sensible measures, to stay indoors if they can and look after elderly relatives and make sure those relatives are drinking, but they are used to having hot summers. how do you keep cool having hot summers. how do you keep cool, james? by trying not to stand and do live's in the middle of the day with you! that is me told! let's get a look at the weather. i have been told of royally! that is another way to cool off. following on from what james another way to cool off. following on from whatjames said, temperatures across six cities could
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break records, mainly in the north because we could be looking at during breaking its all—time record of 31.7 degrees. that is record—breaking for northern italy. it is remarkable the temperatures we are seeing in areas you would not normally associate. that is because where we are seeing this heatwave come from. it is notjust a bit of warm air moving across the plains of europe and warming up with home—grown sunshine, this is a from the sahara, a big depth of their mass moving up towards europe which is why we see these record—breaking temperatures across the alpine regions. the nights are hot as well. nice also broke the record forjune, no lower than 26 degrees there, so unbearable with high humidity. there is no relief from the daytime heat and also the night—time heat could get worse as temperatures rise.
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going back to the alpine situation, verbier, temperatures will be in the upper teens celsius but we are going for 31 celsius potentially in the next couple of days, this will break all—time records. are we talking areas where normally there would still be snow and ice? there could be glazier‘s in some pockets although most of it melts, but there is concern that they could melt all they could thaw or retreat with temperatures like this. thankfully, it doesn't last too long because temperatures drop next week so that will bring some relief but you are absolutely right, that is the issue we have with the alpine regions. but it is not just we have with the alpine regions. but it is notjust western europe which has seen his temperatures, as we had to friday and into saturday, so that he will push northwards and we could look at the highest temperature of the year so far across the uk. it is
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june, exactly! it is hot, it is a sa ha ra june, exactly! it is hot, it is a sahara heatwave moving across europe. 32 degrees possible across the southeast and high humidity, that would be unbearable. those temperatures will rise, increasing sunshine as we start to draw up air from the near continent. in the short cool air around with lower humidity, lovely sunshine for parts of scotland, northern ireland and northern england. where you get the sunshine, temperatures into the low 20s but for most, high teens, are noticeably cooler across eastern coastal areas. as we had to tonight, it stays breezy across the north of scotland, a bit of clarity, variable clapper england and wales, but where we have clear spells, it would turn chilly. that will be the case again
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tonight. most of the towns and cities holding in double figures. into tomorrow, a similar day, largely dry thanks to high pressure, a cool breeze down the east coast and a stronger went. gusts of up to a5 mph, windy day, turning warmer though, mid 20s and one or two places. high pressure moving towards the east for friday and that is where we will start to draw up the airfrom the near where we will start to draw up the air from the near continent which will be in heatwave conditions really pushing northwards into northern parts of france. it would turn warmer and more humid to friday. we will lose a lot of that low cloud which we have had across eastern areas as well. cooler spots further west with all that sunshine, 26-27d, at the further west with all that sunshine, 26—27d, at the same for the central belt of scotland. then beyond there, this is where we see temperatures
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rise further. that wind comes right out of france, a weather front pushing on of the atlantic. cool and fresh conditions here, a chance of a few thunderstorms, the low 20s in the north—west, but look at england and wales, perhaps 32 degrees in the south—east which will make the 01:33:19,516 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 hottest day of the year so far.
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