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tv   The Papers  BBC News  October 25, 2019 11:30pm-12:01am BST

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hello again. letting issues across parts of england and wales and the reason, a lot of cloud and this is rain bearing cloud. stretching not just across the uk, but stretches well out into even the subtropical atlantic. a weather front here stretching for over 3000 miles this pipeline of moisture is targeted at england and wales. across the south we have a met office and weather one enforced were flooding is quite likely to develop. it is not the only place that will see heavy rain. the rent will be pretty incessant gci’oss the rent will be pretty incessant across the moors, and the peaks in the pen ines and even lower down across northern england. we could well see some localised flooding and issues. heading to saturday, this weather front will slowly begin to edge these words but even if the rain clears through, the water it will be running in off of the hills into the river so we could see some
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further flooding. cold into the river so we could see some furtherflooding. cold air into the river so we could see some further flooding. cold air in the north come a day of showers and sunny spells, temperatures a big contrast again, mild in the southeast and heiser 16 but the air is getting cooler in temperature around 9 degrees or parts of scotland. looking at where the air is coming from, you can see we are pulling down very cold air from the arctic across much of the uk, milder slice in the southeast and slightly less cold air just slice in the southeast and slightly less cold airjust to the north of scotland. it will move in for sunday but it colder conditions will spread all the way across into seven counties of england. sunday, a cold start to the day. the clocks have not gone back and you get an extra hourin not gone back and you get an extra hour in bed. and perhaps underneath the warm duvet. the weather, sparkling sunshine and a frosty start, if you showers for northern scotla nd start, if you showers for northern scotland and perhaps a few running down the north sea coast of england. temperatures in scotland coming up a few degrees with the less cold air moving in with the cooler conditions accident all the way she said the england, heights of 12 in london.
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into monday, high—pressure dominating, the winds coming from the northerly direction and they will bring the scattering of showers come across northern scotland, and if you down the eastern coast of scotla nd if you down the eastern coast of scotland and around some of the north sea coast of england. a frosty start, plenty of sunshine, more in the way a cloud in the south but another pretty chilly day and the air is getting colder again across scotla nd air is getting colder again across scotland and temperatures at eight celsius. looking at the weather charts and to tuesday, the high—pressure still with us, starting to see it with the front moving in off at the atlantic, the moment, looks like it will be held at bay which means it should be another dry day with sunshine from both of us and a frosty start and if you showers affecting some of the northern and eastern areas of the uk but by and large it is going to be dry for most of us. in other chilly when the nine to 11 celsius but if the weather front comes in closer, the weather front comes in closer, the more sure and it can be picked up the more sure and it can be picked up by the more sure and it can be picked up by the jet stream and less likely scenario would be something like this. on tuesday we could get an
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area of low pressure and stronger winds and heavy rain tore at the southwest but we think that at the moment it's less likely. into wednesday and thursday, we will state mckinlay notes from these weather systems into the southwest of the uk. —— geta weather systems into the southwest of the uk. —— get a notes from the fourth of high—pressure retreating away and it looks like the dry conditions in the cold conditions and frosty conditions will continue. still with sunshine but across the southwest later in the week we could see rain and strengthening 1's begin to make inroads. that is the latest weather. goodbye for now.
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505 sos hello. this is bbc news with lukwesa burak. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow morning's papers in a moment — first the headlines. families in vietnam say they fear their loved ones are among the 39 people who died in the refrigerated lorry in essex. tonight police are asking for help. i would also like to make an appeal to anyone living illegally in this country, who could help our investigation. please come forward and speak to us without fear. it comes as a fourth person was arrested at stansted airport on suspicion of manslaughter and conspiracy to traffic people. boris johnson tells jeremy corbyn to back an election as the eu agrees to another brexit delay — but won't decide the date until next week. a federaljudge orders redacted parts of the mueller report
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into alleged russian meddling in the 2016 us presidential election to be released. and a huge weekend at the rugby world cup as england and wales try to make it through to the final. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are michael booker, deputy editor of the daily express, and dawn foster, the guardian columnist. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the times leading with the final words of one of the people found dead
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on a lorry in essex. the telegraph says pham thi tra my, a 26 year old woman from vietnam, paid £30,000 to be smuggled to britain from her home in one of vietnam's poorest provinces. the sun describes that final text sent to her parents, as ‘haunting'. a family representative told the guardian that she hasn't been heard from since. the paper says other families are seeking information about their missing loved ones, who'd travelled via china to europe, with the aim of reaching the uk. elsewhere, the financial times reports on fears over workers' rights post brexit — with leaked papers showing plans to diverge from the eu. to japan, with the front page of the independent, which looks ahead to england's rugby world cup semi final against new zealand tomorrow. and the daily mail has an exclusive story about a book which the paper says can be printed on amazon and promotes
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anti—vaccination myths. thatis that is a quick rundown of the front pages. let us start off with the times, in dying because i cannot breathe, i am sorry mum, is the lead story. it is a desperately sad story of one of the victims of the freezing glory with the 39 migrants. we have one picture. —— of the freezing lorry. it looks like any other picture of a young girl on instagram but she has been searching for a better life, she lived in a desperately pure part of vietnam but she did not make it, unfortunately she did not make it, unfortunately she perished in this trailer with 30
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other people in horrific circumstances. again, she had the presence of mind to text her family and saying sorry to her mother because obviously the family had spent £30,000 which is a huge deal to them, they want their daughter to go over and have discreet life in the west which has not worked. she has texted them details of where she is. it is the presence of mind to message herfamily. is. it is the presence of mind to message her family. there is. it is the presence of mind to message herfamily. there are no words to say what that family are going through and 38 other families andi going through and 38 other families and i am sure we will see more teachers in the next few days. it brings forward the reality of what they have been through. it is so difficult to read. it is so difficult to read. it is so difficult to read that she sent a message to her mother, her mother
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has to answer the phone. the last words are from her daughter saying, i cannot be. it is so awful. there are so many i cannot be. it is so awful. there are so many details coming forward. —— i cannot breathe. 0ne are so many details coming forward. —— i cannot breathe. one of the families say they think their loved one has died because the money was returned overnight. the only reason they can know that is because it happens regularly. so how many other people die in containers? perhaps if it isjust one or two nobody else ever finds out. what happens after this? we are outraged now but will laws change, can we think more deeply about our immigration laws? so that people do not have to go through this desperation. many people asking they did not think of
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emigrants from vietnam. when you see how the families were involved in all of this, they have so much riding on this one person. the fact that these gangs can give money back, it shows there are so many people behind them who will keep doing it. if you live a desperately pure lifestyle, it will be attractive to come to this country. police are saying if you live illegally in this country, please come forward but it will be a hard thing for them to do, especially with the ruthlessness of these gangs. if they are prepared to put people in vans and turn it down to -30 people in vans and turn it down to —30 degrees, they do not care. hopefully people will come forward but they will be scared. let us change papers, this is the first of our brexit discussions. 0bviously on
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super saturday, when borisjohnson thought he could get his brexit bill through parliament. it was close. very close, the let win amendments coupled it for him but there were some labour mps who were won over to his side by a written and verbal issues that he would not change the rights of workers. —— assurance. the rights of workers. —— assurance. the rights would stay the same. labour leadership pointed out that workers' rights had been put on the withdrawal agreement legally binding but now they move into a non—legally binding political statements. now it looks as though, from leaked papers, show that contrary to what boris johnson claimed, they are having a
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discussion about whether these will be scuppered. it leaves room for interpretation which does not mean they will deliberately make life hell for our workers once we leave the eu. you want our workforce that is unregulated ? the eu. you want our workforce that is unregulated? no, so i think the brexit shadow minister saying these documents confirm our worst fears, and unregulated economy. there is plenty of red tape which does need cutting back on so it is not necessarily a bad thing this, not everything the eu has done is handed down on tablets of stone and is perfect. 0bviously labour are going to try to this, obviously rna newspaper will keep printing stories like this so that is this idea of
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project fear. —— obviously are remain newspaper. this is the next pa rt remain newspaper. this is the next part brexit, it shows us there will be far more arguments. can i ask to actually use know which workers' rights are being threatened? not according to this, there is no detail. it does not go into detail. the concerns raised see that the reason why it has moved from the withdrawal agreement to a political statement, in the withdrawal agreement there are certain rights that we could not open up certain parts of the economy to us trade, which is a lot less deregulated than the european union. the daily telegraph and questions about the general election, what is your feeling for monday?” general election, what is your feeling for monday? i do not think it will happen. i saw on social media the fact that the idea of an
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election would be a calmer period compared to what we have been going through at the moment. it used to be quite an event but it does not feel like it. since the vote engine 2016 we have been on this constant merry—go—round. —— since june we have been on this constant merry—go—round. —— sincejune 2016. we have been going round and round, we will see what happens but it looks like there will not be an election, there is not the support for it. at least 22 mps are threatening not to support the motion and we hear the government will keep bringing this day after day and keep going.|j will keep bringing this day after day and keep going. i was chatting toa day and keep going. i was chatting to a member of the public who said, what exactly is a general election going to achieve? how will it solve anything? i had to pause and think, good question. the hope for
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everybody involved is that neither the conservatives or labour would get a majority... i am the conservatives or labour would get a majority... lam more optimistic than you that we may get a general election. not on monday though. maybe on monday. the european union have said they will pause before announcing they will give the extension but i think they would do so over the weekend and i think labour will back it. even if 200 labour mps do not back yet, you need a two thirds majority in the commons, as long as you get that two thirds... i do not think it is necessarily electable for labour.|j would disagree. the big problem for the conservatives is that the brexit party are furious. if they stand, they mop up the hard levers and labour could get in on a lot of seats purely because there is a 5000 majority difference. if the party of
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nigel farage cannon and skipper people, labour could sneak in. —— nigel farage party come in and scoop up nigel farage party come in and scoop up people. theresa may lost the majority. she did but she was still prime minister. i think the lib dems will lose a lot of their apparent mps. ido will lose a lot of their apparent mps. i do not see them holding onto their current mps. i cannot see it being a clear picture at the end of an election. it could all change because according to the front page of the guardian there are plots of 30. there are always ports. rebel mps exploring control of the parliamentary agenda. —— always plots. we will have a general election as early as next week. but as you say, things change every day. last week we almost got a deal
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through, before the let win stepped in. we were also told in the sun city, 0liver letwin will bring back boris's deal. i am not the cleverest man in the world but it is confusing the hell out of me and is doing so to the entire country. i am the cleverest man in the world, that is why am sitting here. it remains me of watches that earlier about a general election, it would be calmer because people know what to expect whereas we never know what to expect now. there was talk yesterday that if labour and the lib dems do not wa nt if labour and the lib dems do not want a general election, the conservatives might go on strike until they grant an election. the opposition would then have the right to bring in whatever laws they like so it is all up for grabs. everybody
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is running around, everything changes day to day. political... if they are going to bring us standing order 24. this is the third paragraph of the guardian story and no one knows what the standing order is. let us return to the times. it has gone through all that campaigning, it is former prime minister theresa may who was very surly while campaigning. minister theresa may who was very surly while campaigninglj minister theresa may who was very surly while campaigning. i was surprised to read this. she was not very good in the 2017 general election campaign apparently. she needed a manger and was constantly grumpy. heraids were needed a manger and was constantly grumpy. her aids were worried about how she came across to the public. in the media, she came across not very well, she always looked unhappy or wooden. she needed very well, she always looked unhappy orwooden. she needed a very well, she always looked unhappy or wooden. she needed a constant reminderto keep heron or wooden. she needed a constant reminder to keep her on track and put her in front of people so you
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begin to understand that every time she had a photograph call, in front of people, the conservatives so that asa of people, the conservatives so that as a warning to borisjohnson, she did badly when she should have walked the election so he thinks he can walk it, he should think again. dc any of this is sexism because they are talking about being tearful? -- do you see. there is a certain amount of that, most of it is about being a wooden politician. i think on the other hand boris johnson is often very aggressive, and people can see that is a gender argument. one thing i would say about boris johnson, when argument. one thing i would say about borisjohnson, when we saw him at the g7, he looked confident, he put on a decent show. he looked more at ease in that company whereas theresa may did not seem at ease. she came across as arrogant. he
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worked for the guardian so you might say that. he looked a bit stronger than theresa may. it is a very unnatural environment to be in. than theresa may. it is a very unnatural environment to be inm is but he went to the right schools and he learned that, social confidence. we are all lacking confidence. we are all lacking confidence around this table. brexit coin production is stopped over the wrong days. these will be priceless. that is 1000 of them either, not there yet. they will be somewhere. they were going to do 10 million of them because apparently everyone was going to have them. we were going to hand them on to our grandchildren. remember stockpiling the 50p piece.
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there are 1000 of them out and they could be worth thousands of pounds. if anyone manages to get the hands—on them. but yes, desperate for these things. are you surprised people are going to keep doing this? iam people are going to keep doing this? i am shocked they have not printed all of these. they talked about three million and revised estimates to 10 million. the second looked like brexit would not happen on 0ctober like brexit would not happen on october 31, the first thing the boring people did was ask about the coins. it turns out that they were not 10 million coins with treasury officials sitting there with a nail file scraping things off. they had not printed but many so it makes you wonder if the government and treasury genuine belief we would ever leave ? treasury genuine belief we would ever leave? prosperity. did they
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believe the words, peace and prosperity? is the start of things could said at christmas. thank you very much. that's it for the papers tonight. you can see the front pages online on the bbc news website at bbc.co.uk/papers. and if you miss the papers you can watch it on bbc iplayer. a big thank you to my guests this evening, michael and dawn. that's all from us, and goodnight. good evening, we are starting with football and leicester's incredible victory over southampton which moves them up to second place in the table. i night for the premier
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league purists, torrential rain in the south coast and a warning of the night we are about to come because these visiting leicester pack have a heck of a bite. soon enough, southampton were cut to pieces. for the saints a double blow, this tackle was spotted by va are. the full—back was shown a red and southampton 2010 after ten minutes. it only got much, much worse. ice cool for leicester. two minutes later they were in again. who is a pet is this time hammering in, the home fans already heading home. leicester new when we take them second and they were determined. peres got his second before jamie vardy joined the party. peres got his second before jamie vardyjoined the party. the second half was just the same, peres with a hat—trick before jamie vardy got his
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second. leicester running riot in southampton. perhaps the pick of the goals came from james maddison with this free kick before jamie vardy finished his hat—trick from the sport and media name, the biggest away win in premier league history. now there is a huge weekend of rugby ahead with england and wales both playing in the world cup semifinals. the first match is tomorrow morning between england and new zealand. preparations have been dampened by the weather injapan. this is what they had to put up with a head of they had to put up with a head of the semifinal tomorrow. the weather is supposed to improve by nine o'clock uk time. new zealand have not lost a game at the world cup since 2007. how do you beat the all blacks? eddie jones is since 2007. how do you beat the all blacks? eddiejones is a celibate mentality. sport is one of those things which you cannot teach, you have to learn from experience. there
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is the story about the guy hanging off the cloth, he said the only thing that can stop me is my mind. —— of the cloth. so to about the game. yesterday we told you liam williams was out for wales but today warren gatland revealed the starting line—up. jonathan davies and hadlee parkes both feature despite being injury doubts before the game. leigh halfpenny will replace williams. the match is also in yokohama on sunday morning. it looks like lewis hamilton will have to be until next weekend to secure his sixth world cup title after struggling in practice at the mexican grand prix. sebastian vettel topped the time sheets. hamilton could only manage
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fifth, he needs 14 points more than his mercedes team—mate to claim the title. boxing now and scotland's josh taylor takes on regis prograis to become the super lightweight champion this weekend. the peer region earlier today but the american was one as over the limit so he dropped his underpants to make the weight. thankfully a towel was on hand to preserve his modesty. no problems for taylor. the title takes place tomorrow night at the 02 stadium. that is all the sport for now. hello again, heavy and persistent outbreaks of rain will continue to affect parts of wales and england notjust through that night—time but well on into saturday as well. this is our rain bearing cloud and it is a weather front thatjust does not stretch out to the atlantic that goes all the way into the subtropics and stretches for over 3,000 miles. the conveyor belt of moisture
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is really targeting the hills of england and wales and we are likely to see some flooding issues in place and the heaviest rain is likely across the hills of southern wales and the met office have already issued an amber weather warning and flooding seems likely on account of those large accumulations of rain and here we could see as much as 120 mm of rain as we head into the night and into saturday as well and it is not the only place where we'll see heavy rain, the moors will get a lot of rain in southwest england, the peaks and pennines and even lower down across the midlands and northern england, enough to cause localised flooding issues. it's mild in the south overnight but colder air in the north means patchy frost and some showers across southwest scotland as well. —— northwest of scotland. here's saturday forecast — even as a band of rain slowly pulls away from the southwest areas a lot of water coming up over the hills
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so any flooding could get worse as the days go by. plenty of sunshine in the north of the country and for most of us a cold day, with temperatures in the single figures for most of us. going through saturday night the colder air will arrive and it takes on into sunday, a cold and frosty start day and an extra hour in bed as clocks go back an hour and remember that, an extra hour perhaps spent huddled under a warm duvet. the cold north west wind extends to southern england. for most of us after a frosty start there will be sparkling blue skies and plenty of sunshine and a few showers for northern and eastern scotland and perhaps one or two running down the north sea coast of england. temperature wise, 12 degrees in london, another cooler day here but not quite so chilly in scotland and temperatures here around 11 degrees in edinburgh and we will keep this cold weather with us and there will be a few showers in the north and east.
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this is bbc news — i'm simon pusey. our top stories... a day of deadly protests in iraq — as thousands demand jobs and an end to corruption. at least 40 people are killed across the country. the bbc learns of six vietnamese families who fear their children are among the 39 people who died in the refrigerated lorry in eastern england. protesters in chile force the suspension of congress — in another day of demonstrations and violence. a federaljudge orders redacted parts of the mueller report to be released — just hours after the justice department opens a criminal investigation into the origins of the russia probe.

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