tv Newsday BBC News July 12, 2019 1:00am-1:31am BST
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very good samaritans. an absolutely heartwarming story there. the chinese are consuming more salt than almost another other nationality. that's according to a new study which has found people in china eat double the recommended limit each day. and in some parts of the country — the situation is showing no sign i'm rico hizon in singapore. of getting better. the headlines: lead author of the study, monique tan told me more about what she discovered. so the amount of salt you eat is directly linked the lion air crash in indonesia — lawyers say the families of those to your blood pressure. who died in the boeing 737 max have so the more salt we eat the higher the blood pressure, been cheated out of compensation. the higher the blood pressure president trump has ordered the greater the strain all government agencies to provide records that will help determine how on the organs, it leads many non—citizens and illegal to heart attacks, strokes, immigrants live in the us. kidney disease, all of which are increasing public health issues in china. nowadays, proximally 40% of deaths in china are cardiovascular disease. we will leave no stone unturned. that is huge. what are the authorities doing about it? they have policy documents. they have actions in place. but progression is still a bit slow. so we need to speed it up now. this different in different parts of the country. also in the programme. the north have been reducing the daily struggle for water. their intake but the south one of india's biggest cities
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continues to feel the effects it is increasing. historically there have been some of the worst drought in decades. this is one of chennai's difference between north and south. largest lakes, now parched and desperate for rain. so the climate is different. in southern china it is warmer and england will face new zealand in the cricket world cup final after thrashing australia. the predictions are already coming in. and rainy outcome in the northern it is cold and drier, so the fresh produce was less available all year round the people englander is too strong. new zealand had to rely on salt have no chance. as much as i love for preservation, actually, them, they have no chance. and they cut their habits over time now we have refrigeration live from our studios in singapore in china is not needed and london, this is bbc world news. for preservation but people it's newsday. still eat a very salty diet. and a lot of the salt they eat come from salt during cooking. now we see the north—south gap is closing over time. there is reduction all ove the country, but it seems been mitigated in the south good morning. it's 8am in singapore, owing to the consumption iam in london and 7o'clock in the morning injakarta where, according to their lawyers, of processed foods an dout of home foods. relatives of people who died is this affecting the whole age in the boeing 737 max crash range of the population in indonesia have been cheated or a particular sector? out of compensation. so everybody in china many families who lost loved ones in the plane crash last october is eating too much salt. were persuaded to sign agreements
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that prevent them from taking legal action against boeing. in children age 3—6 they eat 5g of salt per day, which is the upper limit for adults according to the world health organization. adults eat over twice the bbc has discovered relatives signed similar agreements the recommended amount of salt. following two previous is there something specific salt crashes in indonesia — is in that they eat a lot of or is it across the ingredients and the agreements prevented them that chinese people eat on a daily basis? from suing in the us courts. boeing declined to comment on the agreements. richard bilton reports. last october, a boeing 737 max it is mostly the salt they add during cooking. crashed into the sea off indonesia. there is also a lot from sources, all 189 people onboard were killed. especially soy sauce. within weeks, relatives were offered it is a behavioural change. compensation by insurance lawyers. first you can replace regular salt but families who took up the offer with potassium salt, had to sign agreements that which can be used in exactly the same way, it has less sodium would prevent them from taking legal action against boeing or the airline and more potassium. lion air. it has been shown in controlled trials to lower blood pressure and cardiovascular mortality. we have to start early in life, that is the second point. because childhood and adolescence merdian agustin‘s husband ika are key in taste preferences. and it tracks into adulthood, leading to cardiovascular disease was killed in the crash. later in life. finally, the third point, they give give me some document we need to anticipate to sign, the document said you can for new sources of salt in china.
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have the money but you can't sue us, i'm talking about processed food and out—of—home foods, lion air, you can't sue boeing. street markets, restaurants, fast food chains. merdian didn't sign, if we set maximum targets but it's believed around for the salt content of these foods 50 families did. we create a level playing field where salt is reduced across the board and we can help they will get compensation the entire population to get used ofjust under £74,000 each. to a less salty taste overtime. but under indonesian law, the families were entitled to £71,000 any way. monica tan speaking to samantha. eat the relatives of those who died and have salt in moderation —— in the crash had little to gain by signing these agreements. but they could be very valuable to boeing, because in signing them, monach. the families have agreed never since its opening in 1968, to take legal action over the crash. a small museum in the english we asked boeing if they have had any village of ruddington has had 75,000 communication with the insurance visitors through its doors. lawyers who helped until last month — organise the agreements. when almost half a million virtual they didn't answer our question. tourists from china tuned in live to take a virtual tour. they said the insurers for boeing let's take a look at the video that are in discussions with other was broadcast by feixue huangdu, insurers round the world a chinese student in museum as is typical and customary development, who visited in circumstances such as these. the ruddington museum as part of a series.
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but we have discovered boeing has benefited from similar agreements actually, it's part of my project, following two earlier crashes. my final essay combines my project together to finish and each time, the same insurance lawyer was involved. boeing use the agreements my masters degree. to prevent families from suing in the us courts. i chose the big museum like the british museum to research now lawyers for the lion air and i chose a tiny museum like the ruddington village museum families say they have lost out. to research. the families who signed the releases and discharge have been cheated out of compensation, they have been it's great research for you and for preyed upon by insurance companies the ruddington village museum. how did you feel, feixue, and by the council for those insurance companies, and ultimately to when you saw the viewing figures, more than 430,000 virtual visitors from china? actually, first i was shocked. the benefit of boeing. and i felt excited. boeing says it truly regrets the loss of life and will continue it's proof that what i'm doing is valuable. to help with the healing process. a chinese audience likes the british culture. last week, the company said it would provide $100 million to help because the ruddington museum is communities and families affected by two recent 737 max accidents. richard bilton, bbc news seattle. about the local people, 100 years ago they live and how they go to
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school. even top museums, feixue, in london don't get these many views. let's take a look at some of the day's other news. what is it about your video and the village museum ruddington president trump has that captured 70 announced an executive order requiring all government agencies and departments to immediately provide information to help determine who and who are not us citizens. his announcement comes people's imaginations? following a legal battle over whether to include a citizenship question in the 2020 census. let's hear what he had to say. we will utilise these vast federal for most of the chinese people, databases to gain a full complete in real life, they have hardly had the chance to travel to the uk and accurate count of the noncitizen population including data bases to see these objects by themselves. maintained by the department of homeland security and the social we now have this live security administration. stream to have them to see we have great knowledge a professional interpretation. in many of our agencies. we will leave no stone unturned. from the curators in the museums. i think it's a good chance for them to see the charm of the british culture. indeed, the time of our north america correspondent peter bowes explains the british culture. why this issue is so important instead dead a virtual tour of 434,000, i'm sure many of them will start to president trump. visiting the museum. it is important to the president because you studied a degree in museum and clearly illegal immigration and the number of people in this
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country without the development. what could be your next web cast? relevant papers to make i think i want to do not them legal citizens is a key issue just nottinghamshire, for president trump and it has been but the whole uk. since his campaign almost three years ago. that is why it is important i also want to broadcast chinese to him and it would have museums to the whole world been a political statement to get that question, is this person a citizen and to a british audience. of the united states on the census next year. i think it's an exchange culture. he started his news conference by saying he was not backing down on the issue but he has all the people like the museum and cultural things conceded that various legal and the objects are interesting. challenges make it difficult from a timing perspective to get that census ready for next year. feixue huangdu. you know what, the ruddington he has a plan b, to use existing village museum is on my bucket list. data from government departments that he mentioned, social security administration join me. i'm rico hizon in and the irs, data that exists on everyone in this country to try singapore. stay with us. find out and collate information about who is a citizen and who is not. why their consumption is frothing in why is this issue so controversial? the region. it seems to be a simple matter to see who was a legal citizen and who is not. thanks for being with us. goodbye
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it may seem so to some people for now. but if you are a person in this hello. thursday brought us a warm and humid day across many parts country who is without the official documentation, of the country, but we also and undocumented resident had some heavy showers and some thunderstorms, too. of the united states friday won't be quite as warm or quite as humid, and you are asked the question, there'll be a mix of sunny spells are you a citizen of this country, and just a few showers around, considering the political atmosphere at the moment, mainly across eastern england many of those people and eastern scotland, too. will be inclined to not but many of us will avoid the showers. fill out a census form altogether. so we've got an area of low pressure which is pushing off towards the east. higher pressure waiting out if people do that in large numbers in the west and that will dominate more as we head on it would skew the figures, through the weekend. so friday morning, then, a reasonably dry start to the day, and the census is important for allocating dry in most places. funds to different areas and states more cloud for northern ireland and the north—west of scotland in the country and allocating seats in the house of representatives. will bring a few spots of drizzly so the figure could ran, a bit mistiness — be actually quite inaccurate if some people just opt particularly around the coasts, too. the bulk of england, wales, out of filling out a form. and southern scotland should be dry with some sunshine. also making news today. but there'll be some afternoon showers bubbling up anywhere from east anglia and lincolnshire the uk has raised through north—east england, the security threat level towards eastern scotland, too. to the maximum for ships sailing in the sunnier spells, near iran after a british warship top temperatures will reach around 25 degrees down warned off three iranian gunboats. towards the south—east. just a small chance of, the ships were trying to intercept perhaps, catching a passing shower at wimbledon. an oil tanker in the gulf. but in general, for the final three tehran denies involvement — days of the championships, we're expecting a lot of dry, but it had threatened retaliation settled weather with some sunshine. after one of its tankers not quite as hot and humid
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was seized last week, for the players or the spectators =— by british forces off gibraltar. certainly compared to the past couple of days. police there have arrested but we couldn'tjust rule out one or two passing showers at wimbledon the captain and searched the ship. during friday afternoon or saturday afternoon. prosecutors in italy have opened a criminal investigation into allegations that the league as we head through friday night party sought millions of dollars into the early hours of saturday in illegalfunding from russia. a lot of dry settled weather, the case centres on a chief once again, with some clear spells. adviser to matteo salvini, who's italy's deputy prime minister the overnight temperatures will be a little bit lower — and leader of the league — than recent nights. so not quite as warm and humid which is a populist as we start off the weekend. right wing party. it's against the law for political through the day on saturday, still the chance of one or two parties in italy to accept large foreign donations. showers lingering, particularly in the east. but this area of high pressure is going to be building in from the west as we move through saturday and on into sunday. the un human rights council has bit of a change in wind direction. voted to set up an investigation into alleged crimes committed we've had the winds coming in from during president rodrigo duterte's more of a westerly direction. waron drugs campaign. but on into saturday the winds turn it will focus on reports of extrajudicial killings, more north or north—westerly, arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearances. bringing a few spots of rain the philippines government strongly initially to the north—west of scotland and then it's parts of eastern scotland, opposes the resolution. north—east england, down the spine of england that we'll start to see a few isolated showers cropping up. forecasters in the most places will avoid them. united states expect some long spells of sunshine and temperatures 17—23 degrees. a hurricane to hit the coast not quite as hot or as humid as it of louisiana early on saturday. has over recent days. heading on into sunday, the region has already been saturated by days of heavy rain. as high pressure builds it's looking
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largely dry and settled. they warn that tropical storm barry not many showers around at all. a little cooler with the breeze will send a dangerous surge of seawater towards coming in off the sea around the city of new orleans. the east coast. as the area braces for worsening the warmest of the weather probably towards the south—west. top temperatures there in cardiff around 25 degrees. just the odd chance of a passing shower but most places conditions, a large waterspout will avoid them. and then it stays largely dry and settled into the start of the new working week. a chance of things turning more unsettled with further showers was filmed on lake pontchartrain. one of india's largest cities cropping up during the middle is running out of water. part of the week. that's it for now. millions of people in the southern bye— bye. city of chennai are struggling as taps run dry. monsoon rains — which the city relies on — were weak last year. environmentalists blame climate change, but urbanisation is also playing a part — and they're warning this is a problem which could affect all countries. our south asia correspondent rajini vaidya nathan reports. scrambling for every last drop. they are running out of water and also out of patience. it is a daily desperate ritual.
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here, trucks have replaced taps as the only source of water. and yet this is chennai, one of india's largest and richest cities. "we are only allowed five buckets of water a day from the lorry", this woman tells me. back at her house she shows me how her family struggles. "we have to use this for drinking, cooking, bathing and washing clothes. it is difficult." even more so because there has been a record heat wave here in india. a few houses away, a mother of two says she used to take water for granted. "water is more precious than food this is bbc news. and gold," she tells me. our top story: the lion "god has to bring the rain. only that can save us." air crash in indonesia. lawyers for the families of those who died in the boeing 737 max say they have been cheated for now, this landscape out of compensation remains thirsty. it's after the bbc discovers
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it is hard to imagine that this is many families who lost loved ones were persuaded to sign one of chennai's largest lakes, agreements that prevent them now parched and desperate for rain. from taking legal action against boeing. in better times, this reservoir donald trump says they will is one of the city's main leave no stone unturned suppliers of water. as he issues an executive order asking government agencies to provide information this satellite image shows just how to determine who is, and who isn't the lake has vanished after a year of poor monsoon rain. a united states citizen. almost all of the city's and this video is trending on bbc.com: a waterspout spins over reservoirs have run dry. lake pontchartrain in new orleans this one reduced to a mere puddle. as the city braces for a hurricane. chennai is a warning card to the global community. tropical storm barry is forecast to hit on friday. if it happens here it can happen anywhere. that's all. stay with bbc world news. environmentalists blame climate change for the erratic weather pattern and drought but they also warned that the number of lakes and ponds that store and collect rainwater has dwindled. taking these water bodies to build commercial and residential property has had an impact in regard to how much water we can conserve and how much water is therefore the population to depend on.
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when hollywood actor leonardo dicaprio shared this picture of a well in one town, the plight of chennai gained wider attention. when we visit the same well, it is almost empty. it is estimated that by 2025, half of the world's population will live in an area where demand for water exceeds supply. as the crisis in chennai continues, millions rely on these trucks. "oh, lord, please fill the lake," they chant. families keep praying for the rains but that alone cannot solve this city's water woes. environmentalists warn this is a problem of our own making. england have secured their place in the final of the cricket world cup after thrashing australia by eight wickets.
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it's the first time in 27 years the side has made it to the final match, which will take place this weekend in london against new zealand. for more on how the match unfolded, here's our sports correspondent will perry. "cricket‘s coming home" was the chant from the england fans as they left edgbaston having watched their side thump their old rivals australia by eight wickets to book their place in the world cup final on sunday against new zealand. australia won the toss and it looked like a good toss to win because they put themselves into bad but, reg retta bly put themselves into bad but, regrettably the might not think that was the right thing to do. they were 14 /3 having lost an early wickets. david warner went cheaply as did peter hanson them. then they had steve smith get them into a position to put up some sort of fight against england. it was the only australian batsmen to go past 50, eventually run out for 85 runs. the australian
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tail went cheaply thanks to decent bowling from geoff archer. so 224 was the target for england and they knocked it off very comfortably. their opening partnership, 124 between jonny bairstow and jason roy. jonny bairstow eventually going for lbw — bowled by mitchell starc, which he reviewed, and that meant that england were out of reviews whenjason roy really needed one, because pat cummins bowled, caught behind, he didn't get anything on it, was given out, and he was on his way back to the pavilion. that wasn't to matter. eoin morgan, the one—day captain, and joe root, the test captain, saw england over the line with morgan hitting the winning runs to put england into that showpiece finale against new zealand. england have been to three world cup finals before, they've lost all three of them, the last one back in 1992 when they beat south africa in sydney to get to the final against pakistan. that wasn't to be for england. 27 years on they've certainly put the semi—final hoodoo that's been over england this summer and last summer to bed.
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and england, can they go to lords and get their hands on the world cup trophy? while some england fans have already got their sights firmly set on that silverwear, others think the last game will be a tough one. new zealand, the been the best for last two or three games and i think they are due a big one. that will give them a run for the money in the finals. boo! boo! ithink england just need to win. england is too strong. new zealand have no chance, i love them but they have absolutely no chance. crickets coming home! one thing is for sure, it will be an epic match and we are looking forward to the finals this weekend. you're watching newsday on the bbc. still to come on the programme: some nations are putting too much salt in theirfood. how alarmed should they be?
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also on the programme: we'll explain why half a million chinese people have taken a special interest in this museum in nottinghamshire. central london has been rocked by a series of terrorist attacks. police say there have been many casualties, and there is growing speculation that al-qaeda was responsible. germany will be the hosts of the 2006 football world cup. they pipped the favourites, south africa, by a single vote. in south africa, the possibility of losing hadn't even been contemplated, and celebration parties were cancelled. the man entered the palace through a downstairs window and made his way to the queen's private bedroom. then he asked her for a cigarette, and on the pretext of arranging for some to be brought, she summoned a footman on duty, who took the man away.
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one child, one teacher, one book and one pen can change the world. education is the only solution. applause hello, everyone, and welcome. this is newsday on the bbc. i'm rico hizon in singapore. i'm samantha simmonds in london. our top stories. the lion air crash in indonesia — lawyers say the families of those who died in the boeing 737 max have been cheated out of compensation. donald trump says they will leave no stone unturned as he asks government agencies to provide information to determine who is, and who isn't a united states citizen. let's take a look at some front pages from around the world. the japan times leads with the story
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of the spacecraft hayabusa2, which has successfully collected samples from a distant asteroid after a second touchdown. the newspaper has a picture of researchers at japan's aerospace exploration agency celebrating the news in its mission control room. the philippine star's front page examines the un human rights council's decision to investigate alleged crimes in the country's war on drugs. it says president duterte has expressed confidence that the un review will not prosper. and finally, the straits times runs this heartfelt story about two brothers who donated their organs to strangers. in may, hanwei, on the left, gave part of his liver to a critically ill patient. he was inspired by his younger brother dilun, who in 2012 donated 00:18:42,070 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 a kidney to a six—year—old boy.
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