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tv   The Papers  BBC News  October 10, 2019 11:30pm-12:00am BST

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water surface water flooding, the weather dapper times across the south—east. this weather front the marks the boundary we have in the south or temperature 17— 18 degrees, with cooler, better air to the north and west of the uk. temperatures were typically 13— 15 celsius. that rain could be very slow to ease away from parts of south—east england, it might not seem clear at all for southern counties, and still lingering through friday night into the early part of saturday. more rain to come for northern ireland and western areas of scotland. the weekend weather prospects, it does look like it will be an unsettled one. for many of us on saturday, a mixture of sun sign as i was but it looks like sunday is going to be a cloudier day with the threat of more general rain particularly moving in across england and. that said, we could have some pretty persistent rainfor could have some pretty persistent rain for most of the day across parts of south—east england, so it could be quite miserable here. and will have plenty of showers in saturday across the northern most of the country, some of those could on
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boundary nature. temperatures, well, easing across england and, it will be better on saturday, the exception saturday, the exception of the channel islands. 17 degrees. a wet start of the day on sunday for many across england under and indeed this area rain could be slower to this weight from eastern areas. as it does so, an area of low pressure will form, and if that happens a bit sooner, will form, and if that happens a bit sooner, we will form, and if that happens a bit sooner, we could have is way the stronger, northerly winds feeding and across eastern england. over time being, it is going to be turning colder on sunday either way, temperatures 11 degrees for scotland in the farof temperatures 11 degrees for scotland in the far of england. we have my heavy rains come on monday, is another area of low pressure, and again, england and bearthe another area of low pressure, and again, england and bear the brunt of this, this time we could also see some rain heading into northern ireland, the northwoods as of this rain is open to a little bit of uncertainty, perhaps scotland will see some drier and brighter weather. does mike northwoods. tuesday, not so does mike northwoods. tuesday, not so bad, potentially with more on the way of sunny spells coming through
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in the afternoon. and out towards the west you can see the next area of rain waiting to move in across the atlantic. temperatures of rain waiting to move in across the atla ntic. temperatures 12— of rain waiting to move in across the atlantic. temperatures 12— 15 celsius. beyond that, we are looking at the jet stream pattern, we've got at the jet stream pattern, we've got a big dip in thejet stream sending up a big dip in thejet stream sending up to a0 centimetres of snow in the northern plains of united states, very cold for the time of year. this drop breaks apart a process cold froth disruption with this area ending up in the mid—atlantic. we get colder air here, and that extends the drop into the mid—atlantic, extends the drop into the mid—atla ntic, that will far areas extends the drop into the mid—atlantic, that will far areas of low pressure and push over towards the united kingdom. so the big picture, even into the middle part of next week and perhaps next weekend is no real change. it's going to stay unsettled with rain or showers. the's your latest weather.
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but if they hello. this is bbc news with carrie gracie. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment — first the headlines. boris johnson and the irish prime minister, leo varadkar, say they can "see a pathway" to a possible brexit deal. it is possible for us to come to an agreement to have a treaty agreed to allow the uk to leave the eu in an orderly fashion and have that done by the end of october. nissan warns that a no deal brexit would threaten the future of its car plant in sunderland — the largest in britain employing 6 thousand people. turkey steps up heavy artillery and air attacks on the kurds in syria — tens of thousands of civilians are reported to have fled. ban snacking on public transport to help tackle childhood obesity — says england's outgoing chief medical officer
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two twists, three somersaults and a smile. america's simone biles makes history — the first woman to win five all—round world gymnastics titles. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are former trade minister, lord digbyjones and talkradio presenter, daisy mcandrew. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the telegraph leading with this picture of prime minister borisjohnson and irish taoiseach leo varadkar walking around the grounds of thornton manor hotel near birkenhead earlier today.
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as reported in the times, hopes of a brexit deal have been revived after a meeting between the two leaders. in a press conference after their meeting, mr varadkar said a brexit deal can be done by the end of october. the financial times using that same photograph, reporting on what the leaders have described as a ‘pathway‘ to a deal. the paper says there are ‘hints' that the pm may have been the one ‘irish eyes are smiling' reads the front of the metro, with a photo of the two prime ministers beaming after that meeting earlier. meanwhile the independent is leading with another of our big stories this evening, as refugees in syria flee from turkish bombing — as turkish forces step up their cross—border offensive on kurdish—held areas.
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the guardian's continuing its special investigation into the firms contributing towards climate change — today, its reporting on a predicted surge in oil production. and the daily mail bringing us back to the story everyone has been talking about across social media — the feud between footballers' wives rebekah vardy and colleen rooney. the paper has an exclusive interview with rebekah after she was accused of leaking private stories about colleen to the press. guarded the front page of the guardian, betrayal is to taste. the power journalism. to guardian, betrayal is to taste. the powerjournalism. to celebrate in such a powerful way in many ways, even more pregnant. this is about the turks invading syria, basically, to get the kurds in the turks in the kurds have been at it for decades, probably centuries and erdogan, the
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boss of turkey has been straining at the leash for a long time, held back mainly by america and trump, for some reason, has given the green light for this to go ahead and i find it extraordinary. what is going to happen, what is happening, is that you are happening, —— having thousands, hundreds of thousands of poor people walking straight across the border to escape all this and whether you think either way, this photograph of the poor woman carrying a child terrified in the independent, or a child looking to the bars of some courage in the guardian, we look on and here we are, the whole of europe is equipped with a crisis of immigration, that's not whether it's right, wrong or indifferent, but it's a crisis and all this is going to do, erdogan of turkey is saying, if you don't like
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what i'm doing, shut up or i'll send you 500,000 immigrants. if trump wa nts to you 500,000 immigrants. if trump wants to make america great again, great this is notjust about domestic severity, greatness is about the projection of a beneficial influence of power around the world andi influence of power around the world and i do not call this america being great again if he is basically letting erdogan off the leash, causing this disgraceful calamity. daisy, president trump has said it's not a green light. however, whatever he says, it's perceived as betrayal by the kurds. they're he pulled out american troops, that was deemed to be the green light and he is now talking about imposing more sanctions on turkey. european countries have been condemning what erdogan is doing. the french have called in the turkish ambassador in
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paris demanding explanations, they are going to withhold arms deals, legitimate arms deals, they are going to withdraw those deals. it's going to withdraw those deals. it's going to withdraw those deals. it's going to have a lot of ramifications but as digby said, this threat that erdogan came out today, europeans, if you don't like it, i'm going to send 3.6 million immigrants your way or refugees your way, it's an extraordinary statement and what is worrying is this idea that yet again, we've got the east and west or different country setting themselves up against each other. meanwhile, all the innocents are being photographed on the front pages of the newspapers. one of the tragedies is, when i was at the cbi and some people find this amazing but ijoined 19 years ago and one of the first journalist who interviewed me was this lady. that's true. 19 yea rs me was this lady. that's true. 19 years ago. and erdogan had just
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arrived back in turkey and he was a western — focused person, turkey was trying to get into the eu, participating big time in nato. this buffer between east and west, the bosphorus in istanbul is literally east meets west. and i remember, we we re east meets west. and i remember, we were all full of hope that this would not happen again and 19 years later, we're back square one.” would not happen again and 19 years later, we're back square one. i was at an event in london, a huge event at an event in london, a huge event at which mrs erdogan was given a humanitarian award for her good deeds and i think she genuinely does doa deeds and i think she genuinely does do a huge amount. refugees, immigration crises, where these poor souls are being housed or barely housed, that is what she cares about. and yet, it's also strange and hypocritical. makes you weep. and in amongst this story and it's
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not exactly on the front pages but the fear obviously that there are not just the fear obviously that there are notjust migrants who are going to come across the border but former iis fighters. they call them prisons but they are not what we would think of his prisons. they are ramshackle. they have just a few guards trying to contain these former terrorists or fighters but those soldiers trying to contain them up fighting on two fronts. they are averting their gaze from trying to keep these prisoners in. many people say, the prisons are going to come out. erdogan saying, a lot of them are european. 1000 are european, he says i'm going to sit in the back to where they come from. european countries say they won't be able to
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be put on trial because the paperwork isn't there in the trial will collapse, they've got to be tried. it's an absolute mess. huge mess. let's go to a story which is looking less of a mess possibly tonight. here we have a walk. it's a walk in the park. i don't know how many times i've talked about exit in the paper of review over the years. too many. everywhere i go in the country, businesses and events and meeting other people and you would say the same, united kingdom and certainly the english public have had brexit up to here. they have had enough of it. remainers have had enough of it. remainers have had enough of it and it's time we come together so today, we've got the varadkar who is the taoiseach in
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ireland, his met with our prime minister and has come out saying, you know what, we might get a deal done by the end of the month. and you don't think that's him being polite? he wasn't put up to it, that would be offensive, but he's been brought to some degree of russia by berlin to get something done. a certain amount of pressure by paris. and they have certainly confirmed that he was feeding everything back to the 27 tomorrow morning, stephen barclay has a meeting at nine o'clock, a breakfast meeting with barnier. at 1030, barnier will brief the 27 and say it's worth pursuing or it's dead. in the way this is worked, europe does this. it puts up on the tuesday barnier saying, there is no way i can do anything but then barnier can be brought to the party being seen as the one who is not
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giving up and do it through the effective nation, which is ireland and ireland, forget what ijust said about the pressurisation and the european gambit, if you just look at ireland, a0% of their trade is with the united kingdom. they have got a special and unique situation because of northern ireland and in a way, it's disgraceful the way europe have bullied them and pushed them and influenced them but on the other hand, island itself deserves special treatment, is that the right word, it needs to be looked at and look after itself because it is so dependent on the uk more than anyone else. tonight, we mightjust be witnessing the beginning of the end. a new customs partnership, we think. the daily express, has boris only gone and done it? if you look at the papers tonight, the pro— remain papers tonight, the pro— remain papers are saying, what boris must‘ve given him a new look at the pro— brexit papers, isn't it great?
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even at the end, the establishment can't even can't even be a little bit positive about it. the daily mail is going, dare we dream of a deal? and they note on their front page which i think is quite interesting, thatjohnson page which i think is quite interesting, that johnson and varadkar spent 90 minutes together without officials. that is interesting. we are all old enough to have witnessed a lot of these summits or private meetings. gorbachev and reagan. thatcher and reagan, whoever it was. but you know, although i was the first year of gcse, which i've given it away now because if you are the first year of gcse, you can say i did gcse and you are a lot younger than you are. anyway, i digress, but you know that when two leaders kick out all their advisors and their civil servants and even their press secretaries or whoever it might be, things are getting serious and you might actually get results. it's
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well worth them briefing that this was a private one—on—one meeting because it looks serious. it's not just it's notjust the british who believe that their political masters should not be let out on their own. they do say things which they cannot say in front of anyone else. they promised things. they promised things they cannot deliver. or they promised things that they will say something, like i've been in positions like this. you say something like i'm just telling you, ican do something like i'm just telling you, i can do that, but i can't take the blame for it. or don't push me on this one, because i really can't do it, but i could do this. if that sort of thing where it is all about the person saving face. it's all about the pride. would it have been helpful to do it earlier? it never happens until down the line. it would have been helpful if parliament hadn't passed a surrender
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act, saying i am going to take the only threat i have of the table. oh, well done. which i still think be unravelled. have you ever bought a car or a house, the person selling it to you knows you won't walk away? life is not like that. so why do 650 people in westminster think that they can behave differently to the rest of united kingdom, it is beyond me? we are going to get into that particular realm. why not? no, we aren't. we have much more important things to talk about. and we're going to acknowledge not everyone would like to call it but moving on, we are going to go does not call it the surrender act, but moving on going to go to the mail. they've got rebecca vardy in a dress that looks like chainmail, looking quite determined. what is going on here?|j determined. what is going on here?”
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am sure people will have heard... you admitted to me that you lapped it up and you read it. so don't come across all high and mighty now. this is the thing that everybody's talking about. the suspected for a long time, well, knew someone was leaking stories because the stories had only been on her private instagram account that only her best friends have access to. he then worked out and has accused rebecca vardy, also a footballer's wave, but also somebody who has a high profile of her own, does mike would bother's wife, she has a close relationship with the sun newspaper which is where all of these stories kept ending up. today we have had day two of the story where wags, wives and girlfriends of footballers, is seeing someone else had access to her instagram account. she has instructed not only lawyers but forensic scientists and forensic
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computer technologists, i know, forensic scientists and forensic computertechnologists, i know, it's getting better, and worse.” computertechnologists, i know, it's getting better, and worse. i didn't pay any attention to this, except there was an article, i think in the times, i read it this morning over brea kfast. times, i read it this morning over breakfast. it was quite interesting. i don't understand hiking social media and stuff but i did read this same thing, you know, this woman is being either completely sucked up or foolish. there is one sort of semi- serious angle to it, which i think could end up in the courts, she is instructing lawyers and she could, the sun newspaper would be accused of taking these stories, trying to get a comment, lies, the sun newspaper is also being taken to court by prince harry over phone hacking and things. the other potentially serious aspect of all of
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this is the health aspect of the two individuals involved. it must be very stressful. one of them is pregnant. and getting death threats. there are loads and loads of people who will now turn on one of the two and give them that they're at the rest of that stuff, which they should go to prison for over four, they are taking part in this. it's not much fun. it's not much fun when you're eight months pregnant. when you're eight months pregnant. when you look at the sun's front page, it is subliminally taking vardy‘s side, the photograph of colin rooney is not as glamorous. these wags are saying they have had run—ins with rebecca vardy saying they have had run—ins with rebecca va rdy before, saying they have had run—ins with rebecca vardy before, one said the sun on sunday, there is this anonymous column called the secret wag. how do you know all of this? i
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just read it. this wag is saying rebecca vardy, just read it. this wag is saying rebecca va rdy, rebecca just read it. this wag is saying rebecca vardy, rebecca vardy is the secret wag. it's all gossip, but that would not make her popular with her colleagues. the stories involved we re her colleagues. the stories involved were not that awful, were they? compared to some of the things we have said about our prime minister recently, these stories were really kind of... the fake stories of the real stories? the fake stories that coueen real stories? the fake stories that colleen rooney had made up herself we re colleen rooney had made up herself were kind of stupid stories. but i think going back, the real stories... the amateur ones. even if i had stories... the amateur ones. even if ihada stories... the amateur ones. even if i had a private instagram account just for my friends, and a public one, i wouldn't put really private stuff on the private one. stuff i didn't want people to know, it is still social media, it is still putting stuff out there. a lucidity when you say oh, i didn't want those
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things to get out —— i don't really understand when you say, oh, i didn't want those things to get out. it is kind of taking our mind of turkey, syria, and brexit.” it is kind of taking our mind of turkey, syria, and brexit. i don't think we have openly said we are fed up think we have openly said we are fed up with brexit, look at this tragedy happening in syria, oh, let's trivialise. but i think when it happened, then, people think this is a balm, a soothing thing. she is being told the colombo. does my called. this is probably going to run. digby and daisy, the long—running show on british television. thank you very much. come back soon. that's it for the papers tonight. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website.
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join us tomorrow night, same place, same time. good evening. here's your latest sports news. we start with football, and three of the home nations — scotland, wales and northern ireland — have all been in action tonight in the euro 2020 qualifiers. jane dougall has been watching the action. the last time northern ireland played another lens here in rotterdam, george best was in the side. the travelling fans hoping that might inspired their boys in blue. and in the second half, just mcguinness delighted them. mcguinness delighted them. mcguinness scores! sensational! but moments later, the netherlands equalised, then two more goals and ata time equalised, then two more goals and at a time brought northern ireland back to earth, slipping out of the qualification spots. wales' global star was a near starting lineup, but
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it wasn't gareth bell who scored, a first international goal forgive for america, putting them ahead. slovakia equalised, qualification for wales now a daunting task. in moscow, as the temperature dropped, so did the tartan army's hopes. this, the second of four goals were russia, confirming colin will not automatically qualify. an icy stare from the manager as getting to a major tournament still seems far away. jane dougall, bbc news. england manager gareth southgate says they'll abide by uefa's three—step protocol if they encounter any racial abuse during the euro qualifiers in the czech republic tomorrow and in bulgaria next week. england will qualify for the euros if they beat the czechs. on wednesday, tammy abraham said the players were prepared to come off the pitch all together if they were not happy. uefa's protocol for racial abuse ends with the officials abandoning a match if announcements inside a stadium do not stop the problem.
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there is of course the uefa process, and we have to have faith in the process , and we have to have faith in the process, again was recently stopped in italy because of that. and then everything else is hypothetical because we don't know the situation we will be in as a team, or that albion as a manager. but we are very clear —— i'll be in, but we are very clear —— i'll be in, but we are very clear in terms of the staff, what would need to happen. we want the players to concentrate on football. the american superstar simone biles has won another world gymnastics title, her 16th in all and 22nd medal in all at the championships. she's already become the most successful female gymnast in the history of the championships this week with team gold, and has now clinched herfifth all—around individual title. she has another four individual finals still to come. it means the world to me. i mean,
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it's kind of unheard—of, it was really exciting but we finished strong and we gave it our old, and it's just really exciting that i had the opportunity to do this. over at the rugby world cup, fans and players will be watching the weather forecast with typhoon hagibis set to make landfall very soon. england's final pool match against france has already been cancelled. both sides had already qualified for the quarterfinals, this match was due to decide who tops pool c. england head coach eddiejones says the typhoon gods are smiling on them because they now have a clear nine days off before the knockout stage. a nervous wait for scotland, though. they're due to play in yokohama on sunday, their must—win match againstjapan is on, but depending on the damage the typhoon causes, that could also be cancelled. if that's the case, then two points for the scots is unlikely to be enough for them to reach the last eight. that's all the sport for now. enjoy the rest of your evening.
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hello. october has been a very wet month for many of us. but we won't get done with the rain. this forecast will take us all the way through the weekend. an operator, some heavy rain in the four customer parts of england, wales and scotland, another blustery day. but this will show you the chances of rain continue all the way into sunday as well. not so much on saturday, away from southern england, if you so is affecting parts of scotland, overnight, saturday into sunday, rain becomes more widespread once again and france coming in of the atlantic, it stays unsettled into next week as well. though we are seeing rain across large parts of england and on friday morning, this zone and this loa n friday morning, this zone and this loan here and heavy showers into colin, though some sunshine to start the day in northern ireland. just focusing on some of the wetter areas, yellow met office warnings in south wales, the peak district into the pennines, quite widely15—30
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millimetres. heavy showers north of glasgow in scotland, rain totals are mounting here, there could be some impact asa mounting here, there could be some impact as a result, it's notjust wait, it's also quite windy, too. particularly on this line of rain moving further south across england and. north wales drying up a bit, sunny spells in northern ireland, southern and eastern scotland. some will stay dry here, later, showers and the rest of scotland will push further east across scotland. overnight into saturday morning, those showers affecting parts of northern and western scotland, one or two northern and western scotland, one ortwo in northern and western scotland, one or two in northern ireland, still cloudy and damp in southern england. lower temperatures will be where we have the clearest guys. yes, we have the weather front close to southern parts of england, an area of,000 northern scotland. elsewhere, you will see quite a bit of dry weather on saturday, variable cloud, some sunny spells could be yours. but it looks like the rain will pep up south wales later in the day, more
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persistent as it does so. temperatures round about the mid—teens by day. overnight, heavy rainfor mid—teens by day. overnight, heavy rain for parts of england and, we will see another area of cloud affecting more of scotland as well. we'll keep you updated on the detail of that because it may change. that's your forecast.
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hello, and welcome to newsday.

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