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tv   Victoria Derbyshire  BBC News  July 20, 2019 4:30pm-5:01pm BST

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hugely celebrating another success for them. they have made it through to another world cup final but that means england have missed out for a fifth time in a semifinal at a netball world cup. this was never what they wanted to happen, particularly here in liverpool. the team, they came out with huge expectation on their shoulders, they have been unbeaten so far and they have been unbeaten so far and they have looked unstoppable here in liverpool, but they were very tense in the early stages. they went down by five goals in the early stages, they came back and managed to get three ahead at one point but the very experienced new zealand team proved to be too good in the end. the real reality of this is that england struggled under the pressure and let some balls go that they wouldn't usually let go, they were missing shots that they wouldn't usually miss and it has ended in heartbreak. the girls were in tears down on court. tracey neville will help to find some way to lift them up help to find some way to lift them up ready for their bronze medal match tomorrow against south africa.
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but it is not the result anybody wa nted but it is not the result anybody wanted here in liverpool and there will be some tough words for the goal tonight, ready for their bronze medal match tomorrow. thank you very much for that. whether time. cathy is the lead technician and is programmed? there have been some really heavy downpours around. those showers what do you think? is that what you fade, eventually becoming dry across all parts of the uk overnight. a wanted? what do you think? is that what you wanted ? it cold one, though. what do you think? is that what you wanted? it has such a good cockney accent as well. amazing. will had to temperatures 10—14dc. tomorrow, we start off on a dry note with hazy spells of sunshine. cloud will get you on eastenders next. rose's quickly gather in northern ireland. turning heavy and driven along by
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grandmother and aunts have travelled strengthening south—westerly winds. eventually, the rain will arrive. to be here as rose unveiled her new the south and east. it will turn voice. are you ready to play your cloudy as the day goes by. voice? hello, my name is rose. it sounds cheeky, just like you. china plate, mate. going to have some fun hello, this is bbc news with lu kwesa burak. the headlines: with them. you have your new voice and now on bbc news, victoria derbyshire takes a look back at some of the highlights which is now a cockney accent type voice and you also have one of the from her programme this week. cockney rhyming slang there as well. you are good to go. are you happy?” we will show you some of our highlights from the last week. we think she is happy. as voice start with the inspirational story of rose. when she was 12, she was technology improves, hopefully more people can take part so in the hit by a drink—driver and she lost future anyone who has lost their her ability to speak. but now, aged voice from a disability can also 21, and with the help of the young acting graduate, she has found benefit. you have donated your voice
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her voice again. my voice was taken to rose, you have never heard your voice coming out of this device. because of a hit—and—run. what do until now. how are you feeling? you think of my current voice? can nervous, but excited. rose, what you think of my current voice? can you tell where in the country i am from and what age i am? it doesn't difference is this device made to your life? i have struggled to get tell you anything about me, but here iam.i people to understand me and what i tell you anything about me, but here iam. iam tell you anything about me, but here wanted. i used to communicate, but i am. i am rose. it took a long time and may be very tired. you have got tears in your eyes, tash. sorry. please don't i got igota i got a brain injury when i was 12 apologise, tell us why.” following a hit—and—run accident. i can't walk and talk, i communicate eyes, tash. sorry. please don't apologise, tell us why. i hope you are happy with it, are you pleased using a computer which i control with it? as soon as i was contacted, using a computer which i control using a switch and moving my head. i thought this project was the most using a computer which i control using a switch and moving my headlj am using a switch and moving my head.” amazing thing. i was thrilled to be picked by rose and asked to be am amazing. every voice projects the involved. hearing is exactly what i personality of its speaker. your
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voice can identify your gender. your have picked. it suits you so well, voice can identify your gender. your voice gives an indication of your i'm so pleased! i am really pleased. age. what difference will it make to your life to have your own voice? so that i have my own identity, to be it is so interesting to see your emotions because it was so important. i know you have been as independent as possible, i think using this voice communicator for a it will show people that i am an long time, but i want to ask you, individual, and that i am friendly and fun. rose has been given the rose, what would you say is the most challenging thing about losing your voice? sometimes, i feel like i have opportunity to change your voice. she can decide how she wants it to sound on the accents you will have to personalise it for her. can you not heard everything. it takes a remember what your voice was like, long time, and makes me very tired. and can you describe it to me? because it takes a long time, people remember what your voice was like, and can you describe it to me7m was feminine and sound similar to a try to guess what they try to say, london accent. how do you feel about your current voice? i would like a and if they guess wrong it takes voice that sounds like a people to understand. that makes 21—year—old. voice that sounds like a 21-year-old. you were able to choose total sense. i wonder if you wanted your voice. why did you go for a total sense. i wonder if you wanted to say something to tash about her cockney accent? because it sounds donating her voice to you. thank you like me before, and i would like to be on eastenders as i want to be an very much for giving me my voice. i
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actress. rose has listened to actors love it, and i hope you love it too. thank you for picking me.l voices and has picked tash cowley, a love it, and i hope you love it too. thank you for picking me. a child who has been injured in a bomb graduate of top drama school rather. attack needs different support to i'm so excited, i can't wait! they are about to meet for the first recover, both physically and psychologically, yet medics in war time. hello! i am tash, lovely to zones like syria continued to rely on training and techniques designed meet you! how are you doing, good? for adults, often struggling to save hello, how are you? you are going to lives and limbs as a result. our do my voice. thank you. you're very reporter has travelled to turkey, where medics they are trialling new welcome. now tash can start the task techniques developed in london to of recording her voice. fog was the help young people affected by conflict. i am going to hospital this morning. this doctor is one of the few surgeons left working in strongest dog of the bunch. i am syria, risking his life to treat people in the last rebel held area sorry about your amnesia, said the of the country opposed to president assad. it has been suffering deadly scarecrow. bombardment by russian and syrian sorry about your amnesia, said the scarecrow. he gave sorry about your amnesia, said the forces. how is it, living in syria scarecrow. he gave a sorry about your amnesia, said the scarecrow. he gave a big hot 00:05:58,008 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 sideways and stood on his hind legs. now? chaos. hospitals have been
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targeted in bombings. i have a little daughter, and when i see every child, i think about my daughter. it is so hard to me. i have seen people die in front of me and suffering. it is a big tragedy. it isa and suffering. it is a big tragedy. it is a shame that we could not stop the war and stop the bombardment, so we need to learn more about surgery in children. bombs have more harmful
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effects on children, physically and psychologically, but will also medics have to rely on training and techniques designed for adults, often struggling to save lives and limbs asa often struggling to save lives and limbs as a result. today, he is crossing the border from syria limbs as a result. today, he is crossing the borderfrom syria into turkey, for just crossing the borderfrom syria into turkey, forjust a few days, to try and change that. he has come to this specialist centre for people who have lost limbs in the conflict in syria. in this classroom, he and other surgeons are being trained on this new manual. it has been specifically designed to teach medics to treat blast injuries in children and was requested by syrian doctors. it has been created and written by save the children and scientists at imperial college london. this is doctor malik, the
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medical director of the centre. this is where we do all the training to use artificial limbs. there is space for recovery here as well as construction of new limbs for those injured. so, the products will look like this. ready for someone to use? yes. site is seven. when he wasjust a yearand a yes. site is seven. when he wasjust a year and a half he was in his car with his whole family, trying to flee aerial bombardment is in aleppo. one air strike landed so close to their car shrapnel pierced the whole vehicle. so i eat, whose name we changed, lost his sister, his brother lost a leg. he was sitting on his mum's lap, shrapnel amputated both his legs. what is he having today? currently, he is doing
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an adjustment for a newly constructed socket for his leg. he needs to do an adjustment to the bone every one to one and a half year because the bone will keep growing but there is no skin or muscles to grow with the bone, so it will be painful, so unfortunately he needs to have an operation every year to cut open the imputation, adjust the bone length and then sew it up again. this sort of problem is why treating a child with a blast injury is not the same as an adult. doctor mustapha is another surgeon who has crossed over from syria today for training. he is a specialist neurological surgeon but like so many of his colleagues in syria has had to become an expert in treating often horrific trauma.” rememberone treating often horrific trauma.” remember one day we received many
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patients in the emergency room. there was a woman, about 20 years. doctor mustapha discovered the woman was seven months pregnant but her uterus had been pierced with shrapnel. i took to the operation room, and then we opened her, the embryo was dead, but mum was very good after about ten days of the operation. but she has no embryo, no child no uterus. can't have the baby at all. are you glad you could save her? we could save her, yes, but i didn't actually know if she wanted to be saved, ok?
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didn't actually know if she wanted to be saved, 0k? because she was so devastated? why did you decide to stay and do this kind of work? because i am a doctor, and this is my country. doctor mustapha showed mea my country. doctor mustapha showed me a picture of this baby, but it is too upsetting to show. the doctors all have stories of horror like this, things you can neverforget. this new blast injury's manual has been written to try and help these doctors. nothing like it has ever been written and it is designed for war zones. one of the people who worked on it in imperial college london is doctor emily mayhew. we got a lot of doctors in a room and said if you are treating a blast
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injury toa said if you are treating a blast injury to a child, what do you need? and the actually said, we need a little book that gives us the basics that allows us to adapt what we already know the children. that allows us to adapt what we already know the childrenm that allows us to adapt what we already know the children. it feels almost like it couldn't be enough, a little book to treat something so catastrophic. i am conscious that we need an encyclopaedia, we need a room's worth of paediatric specific information, but that does not exist anywhere doesn't exist in the uk, in some of the best resourced hospitals and universities in the us it exists, so this is a start. the crisis is not over. a lot of patients are scared, there are not enough staff to help them. i have to stay and help my people.
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the anti—semitism crisis in the labour party and its leadership continues. this week's 60 labour party members who sit in the house of lords took out a full—page newspaper ad to accuse jeremy of lords took out a full—page newspaper ad to accusejeremy corbyn are failing his leader to deal with the issue. tracy is another prominent voice to quit labour over anti—semitism this week she explained why she believes the party has not been trained of the poison of anti—jewish racism. has not been trained of the poison of anti-jewish racism. as an actor and writer, the fact i am here to talk about being jewish in the labour party and the activism i felt i had to take on, i find labour party and the activism i felt i had to take on, ifind incredible. iam i had to take on, ifind incredible. i am normally on programmes to promote my work but so little has been done about abuse that people like myself are faced online and in real life that i have ended up coming on to talk to you. what is it like when you put your head above the parapet? for a long time, i hadn't. twitter which is my medium
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when it was a fun place to be, very witty platform, and then i started to notice things changing around 2015 and i started to watch a lot of the abuse and misogynistic abuse againstjewish mps. and i kept thinking, why am i seeing rothschilds's, all dues are anti—jeremy corbin because they don't want to pay higher taxes. these things were going around and nobody from the labour party was challenging them. the final straw for me came was when a woman called eva spray painted the wall so ghetto wall with the words, free gaza. my family and a lot of other people's families died in the warsaw ghetto and that war is the only surviving one. daesh wall. i put on social media, why is this woman being dignified on a legitimate platform.
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—— wall. i thought it was wrong. the response i got online from labour members, labour councillors, people with their red rose twitter feed who said they were hardcore members of the labour party was unprecedented, abuse beyond imagining. i then sat in the carand abuse beyond imagining. i then sat in the car and cried because i could not believe what people were saying and what they were sending to me under the guise of labour supporters and jeremy corbyn supporters. so every day, it is like wanting people to silence you, people smearing you, calling you a prostitute, a slot, i have been told i have a castle where i hide my tax evading money, i can't even begin to tell you that they had proof i am a grooming paedophile, and anon. and it is notjust against me but against anybody who speaks out against anti—semitism. —— and on
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and on. and a lot of it is misogynistic. when i approached the labour party with my own complaints... people like rachel riley and other women who have been amazing on this, we did not get anything back. and watching the programme the other night, it suddenly became clear why we hadn't, because in my opinion, underjeremy corbyn's leadership, the labour party and his core group of organisers don't want to deal with it. they say the labour party takes all complaints of anti—semitism extremely seriously. all complaints are fully investigated in line with our rules and procedures, and the rate at which these cases are dealt with has increased more than fourfold since jennie formby with has increased more than fourfold sincejennie formby became general secretary. i have heard that read up many times over the last few yea rs. read up many times over the last few years. i don't bite because it is
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never followed up by any action. years. i don't bite because it is neverfollowed up by any action. a party that can get rid of alistair campbell within 15 hours because of his voting tactic, if they want to protect people, they will take this complaints and lose them in a black hole. more to the point, party that's meant to be an anti—racist party that runs on an antiracism ticket and a safe for women, and anybody in the workspace, to have these brave whistle—blowers come out, a party that supports whistle—blowers like seeing julian sanchois whistle—blowers like seeing julian sancho is a hero, they bullied, frightened young people. —— a sancho. within hours of the programme going out, these young people who were so brave, who said, this is a culture of fear and secrecy, were this is a culture of fear and secrecy, were being called disgruntled blairites, most of them we re disgruntled blairites, most of them were not even born when tony blair was prime minister! it has been horrific. on the one mp who reached out to me was tom watson, the deputy
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leader of the labour party, he was trying to do something, more than anyone else, was equally turned into the traitorous tom watson, he has to resign. instead of labour turning around and admitting and that leadership of the seine, we have a problem, we have not dealt with it properly, we are hiding complaints against people we would like to protect, they came out the next day, all guns fighting, saying, it is everybody else's problem for our own. the labour party says it is tackling anti—semitism and they have increased off working on cases. jeremy corbyn says he has fought against racism all his life. finally, shaun wright it's going back on tour with a happy mondays and this time he says he will do it drugs free. you have recently had a hip—hop collaboration, are you going to be all right staying up for an hour and to be all right staying up for an hourand a to be all right staying up for an hour and a half with the tour?” managed it. how do you feel about
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going on the road again?m managed it. how do you feel about going on the road again? it is better than ever. we are a lot older, a bit wiser. the sex and drugs have gone, it'sjust rock and roll, and we have enjoyed it more than ever, we are of that treadmill, that album tour for two years. so the sex and drugs has gone.” that album tour for two years. so the sex and drugs has gone. i know the sex and drugs has gone. i know the mrs is gutted! you said you used to get smashed before you went on stage partly because of stage fright? 0h, stage partly because of stage fright? oh, yeah. do you not have stage fright anymore?” fright? oh, yeah. do you not have stage fright anymore? i deal with it differently. i am stage fright anymore? i deal with it differently. lam pushing stage fright anymore? i deal with it differently. i am pushing 60. stage fright anymore? i deal with it differently. lam pushing 60. i stage fright anymore? i deal with it differently. i am pushing 60. i am more comfortable with myself now, with my body. it is dealt with in a different way. what is the backstage routine like now compared to when you are 18? different. it is very
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quiet. we finish now, i am straight back on to bed, watching the news. no parties, no clubs, no drinking? no. it is the whole of the original gang,is no. it is the whole of the original gang, is that right? pretty much. paul, my brother, is back. you did fall out for a few years. any advice that noel and liam ? fall out for a few years. any advice that noel and liam? if me and paul can make it work, they can. how did you manage it? just time, really. it just took a bit of time. we were on the road with my dad as well. when your dad starts becoming more like one of the boys instead of your dad, it was a bit skiwear. what has changed in the music industry?
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probably not as much waste now. there was a lot of waste, even on cars, waiting for you all day, grande an hour. an hour for a taxi? ! with the cocaine scales in the boot. it was rock and roll! a lot of waste record companies paid for. that seems to have gone, everyone is ona that seems to have gone, everyone is on a budget. that's it for this week. you can see more of our films online and if you have a story, do let us know, send us an e—mail. see you next week.
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earlier on today, cumulus cloud and on the same place the heavens opened a little time later. really heavy downpours around. those showers fade away over the next coming hours over eastern scotland and eastern england so it will eventually become dry across all parts of the uk overnight with clear skies and light winds. not a cold one though, temperatures 10-14dc. not a cold one though, temperatures 10—14dc. tomorrow we will start off ona dry 10—14dc. tomorrow we will start off on a dry note with haiti's positive sunshine the scotland england and wales but cloud will gather in northern ireland with outbreaks of rain spreading in here, turning heavy and driven by strengthening south—westerly winds. eventually the rain will arrive per western scotland, the isle of man and into cumbria. the south and east turning dry but it will turn cloudy as the day goes by. that is your latest weather. this is bbc news.
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the headlines at five... the threat level to british shipping has been raised by the government after the seizure of a british—flagged tanker in the gulf. the foreign secretary has expressed "extreme disappointment" to his iranian counterpart. this is totally and utterly unacceptable. it raises very serious questions about the security of british shipping and indeed international shipping in the straits of hormuz. police in hong kong say they've seized a large amount of explosives ahead of a weekend of marches by both pro and anti—china demonstrators. england's hopes of reaching their first netball world cup final have been dashed after being beaten by four—time winners
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