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tv   Breakfast  BBC News  January 27, 2020 6:00am-8:32am GMT

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good morning and welcome to breakfast. with louise michin and dan walker. the headlines: basketball legend, kobe bryant, has died in a helicopter crash alongside his teenage daughter and seven others. there are tributes from the world of sports, politics and show business. millions of fans mourn the loss of one of the sports greatest players. millions of fans mourn the loss of one of the sport's greatest players. remembering the victims of auschwitz, 75 years on from the liberation of the camp. this morning we hear the stories of some of those who survived. big changes are coming to overdrafts in april. the regulator says more people will be better off. customers act to avoid new charges. jurgen klopp says he will not take charge of liverpool replay after shrewsbury forced a 2—2 draw. good morning and welcome to a breezy brea kfast. good morning and welcome to day ahead. breakfast. the headlines: basketball one of bright
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legend, kobe bryant, has died in a spells sunshine and helicopter crash alongside his showers. teenage daughter and seven some showers entering the northern half others. of the country. there are tributes from the world watch out for ice on untreated services first thing this morning. of sports, politics and show business. good morning it's monday millions of fans mourn the loss of the 27th of january. our top story this morning: one of the sports greatest us basketball star kobe bryant has died in a helicopter crash players. remembering the near los angeles. victims of he is 13—year—old daughter, gianna, auschwitz, 75 years on from and seven other people were also the killed when the aircraft hit liberation of the camp. a hillside and burst into flames. big changes the 41—year—old, five—time nba are coming to championship winner and two olympics overdrafts in april. the regulator says more people will gold—medals to his name and became a legend at the la lakers. be better off. customers act our north american correspondent to peter bowes sent this story. avoid new charges. jurgen klopp says the helicopter crashed he will not on a remote hillside. take charge of this plume of smoke could be liverpool seen over a wide area. replay after shrewsbury the rugged terrain meant first responders had to hike to the scene. forced a 2—2 there were no survivors in the badly burned wreckage. draw. a breezy there was a lot of fog at the time, day ahead. some but the cause showers entering the northern half of the crash of the country. watch isn't yet out for ice on untreated services first thing known.
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i have not felt this much grief and this morning. more later in the love for one man programme. that has passed. in my city he was us basketball star kobe bryant an idol, an icon. has died ina love for one man that has passed. in my city he was an idol, an iconm is more than basketball, it was the us basketball star kobe bryant has died in a helicopter crash near los mentality to get through life. angeles. he is so 13-year-old daughter many struggles. one of gianna and seven the hardest losses and i have not even other people died. the met the man. kobe bryant and his daughter had m—year—old, been travelling to a sports academy five—time co—founded by the player two years ago. nba 13—year—old gianna bryant had been planning to play in a basketball game, champion became a with her father acting as coach. according to us media reports, legend. another player and parent were also the helicopter crashed on a remote hillside. on the helicopter. this plume of smoke could be seen over a wide area. kobe brya nt‘s accomplishments the rugged terrain meant first in basketball are legendary — responders had to hike to the scene. five nba championships, there were no survivors the 2008 nba most valuable player, in the badly burned wreckage. and two olympic gold there was a lot of fog at the time, but the cause of the crash medals. he spent his entire 20—year career isn't yet with the los angeles lakers, before retiring known. it's a logistical nightmare, four years in a sense, because the crash site itself is not ago. in 2018 he won an oscar easily accessible. for dear basketball, however, we are now faced with, a five minute film based
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i guess, well—wishers and people mourning who have on a love letter he had written to descended on the area, on the residential community, the sport. and even the crashsite itself. and we have to reiterate, he burned so competitively it is off—limits to everybody hot, and desire to win. except the first responders and investigators. he brought it each and every night, on both ends of the floor. kobe bryant and his daughter had been travelling to a sports academy i mean, not too many guys can say that, throughout nba history. co—founded by the player kobe bryant died as final two years ago. preparations were being made 13—year—old gianna bryant had been for this year's grammy awards planning to play in a basketball at la's staples centre, game, with her also the home of the la lakers. father acting as as the show got under way, alicia keys dedicated coach. the according to us media reports, another player and parent were also night on the helicopter. to kobe brya nt‘s accomplishments in basketball are legendary — five nba championships, kobe. the 2008 nba most valuable player, and two we are standing here olympic gold out broken in medals. the house that he spent his entire 20—year career with the los angeles lakers, kobe bryant built. before retiring four outside, thousands of fans converged on the venue to pay their respects years ago. at a makeshift memorial, in 2018 he won an oscar still numb with the shock of losing their for dear basketball, hero. a five minute film based on the lakers have returned a love home letter he had written to after playing in philadelphia
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the sport. he burned so competitively on saturday, lebronjames visibly overcome with emotion as he arrived hot, and desire to win. at the airport with other he brought it each and every night, members of the team. on both ends of the floor. peter bowes, i mean, not too many guys can say that, throughout nba history. bbc news, kobe bryant died as final los angeles. preparations were being made for this year's grammy awards at la's staples centre, we spoke earlier also the home of to a man the la lakers. who wrote as the show got under way, the star's biography. alicia keys dedicated the night to kobe at the time, bryant. i los angeles, america, first started covering him. my youngest child was quite a and the whole wide world basketball player herself. just 12 lost yea rs a hero, and we are literally standing here heartbroken, old in the basketball player herself. just 12 years old and kobe sat down one day when i was talking to him and house that wrote a sweet note to her about staying kobe bryant true to her dreams. she is a mother today, lives in boston built. and kobe was a big part of outside, thousands of fans converged on the venue to pay their respects her young life, her at a makeshift memorial, still numb with the shock of losing their hero. aspiration, and she went and the lakers have returned home after playing in philadelphia pulled out his letter. it was a sad day for on saturday, lebronjames visibly overcome with emotion as he arrived us but it also at the airport with reminded us of the
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other tremendous impact he had members of the team. on her own the lakers work ethic. we the la kers returned the lakers returned home, will be talking leblon about james visibly him throughout the overcome with programme. the second phase of the grenfell emotions. you can see tower public inquiry begins this people morning with the hearings expected to continue devastated by what until april. the inquiry will hear accounts has happened. of why dangerous cladding was used peter both joins us from los angeles to refurbish the tower and how it and he was such a famous person contributed to the fire. a member of the inquiry panel and he will be resigned this weekend over alleged links she had with the company which greatly missed. he supllied the building's cladding. survivors of the holocaust will are gathering at former be hugely missed. this city of concentration camp, at auschwitz, in poland to mark the 75th los anniversary of angeles is still really shellshocked by what has happened the liberation. over the last more than 6 few hours and all eyes now millionjewish on the people were systematically investigation. people want answers about how this helicopter came to murdered during the second world war. crash in an area over a million of them west of la. some died at auschwitz. people say it was quite jenny hill is there. what foggy, which happens is quite typical of today because it is the city of an important calabasas. difficult day? it is an
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is quite typical of the city of cala basas. difficult rugged extremely important conditions. it is a nightmare day, not least for the men scenario investigators say. and women who survived the horrors getting to the crime scene also made of this worse camp and we have just seen some of by some fans turning up at the them arriving in the last few scene wanting to see minutes. they are gathering where this accident at a place called the wall of happened and the message clearly from authorities is that they should death, where prisoners were lined stay away. a team of investigators up to be are heading to los angeles from executed, political prisoners. those survivors will light candles washington, dc. the safety board at the are saying this could base of that wall. it would take several be appointment moment for months before they get them. the answers. thank you statute —— very much. important moment the chinese new year holiday has for been extended in an attempt to them. can you imagine having to contain the spread of coronavirus. more than 80 people have died and walk past the streets, the more than 300 people death block, right behind me. if you are also critically ill. there has been no went there, let up in the we are told did not rate of infections and out. survivors are walking past it to 750 new cases reported in the take part in last are walking past it to take part in day alone. a number of
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commemorative events. hearing suspected to continue many say it is difficult to tell until april under the their stories and recount what happened here but they say they have brand felt fire to do it and later today some of investigation. them will be doing so formally in a special ceremony because they say it —— is very important that there world never forget what happened here at grenfell. auschwitz. thank you very much. we survivors of the holocaust are will be able to gathering in auschwitz an hear from some survivors later. pollen to mark the 75th anniversary the chinese new year holiday has of the been extended by three days liberation. more than 6 million in an attempt to contain jewish people were systematically the spread of coronavirus. murdered with over a more than 80 people have died from the respiratory infection, million dying more than 300 people are also critically ill. at there has been no let up in the rate auschwitz. of infections and 750 new cases what they enjoyed is difficult reported in to the last describe, harder still to imagine. day alone. the survivors of auschwitz earlier we spoke preparing last night to two british teachers living in hand and to commemorate trying to co nta ct the teachers living in hand and trying to liberation after 75 years. contact last night to commemorate the
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liberation after 75 yearslj last night to commemorate the liberation after 75 years. i heard the those screams and they stay with me all the way to this day. it embassy. is 75 yea rs —— all the way to this day. it is 75 years since russian soldiers flung open the gates of wuhan. auschwitz and the teachers living in hand and trying to contact the embassy. -- wuhan. we talk to them and got an automated world recoiled in horror. the nazis response telling us not killed more than a million to go to people. many systematically gassed wuhan but we were to death already here. because of the time difference, it in purpose—built chambers as part of a plan to wipe is difficult trying to contact authorities back home. we out europe'sjewish population. those who survived really struggle to contact have been starved, authorities. the irish taoiseach, leo varadkar, terrorised, tortured. says the eu will have the upper hand i was nine years old when in the upcoming brexit trade i was negotiations and has also warned liberated. miriam, just a against any uk attempt to get a peacemeal deal with the eu. child at the time, a we are joined from westminster by our political correspondent victim of the nick sadistic eardley. doctor. he did experiments what exactly has on me leo varadkar been as saying? another big week in well but i was just lucky and i lived. and then, an brexit. it may have important disappeared from the reunion. this front pages but friday we officially is miriam. leave but that is not the end of it.
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a lot of negotiations are still to right here. come on what our relationship with europe looks like in the future. today, they will tell trying to get a trade deal by the end of the year. this their tales again, ina today, they will tell their tales again, in a new age of rising anti—semitism they is one of leo varadkar‘s first interview hope their with a uk voices carry. broadcaster and he talked about how he thinks the process jennyjoins us will go and has gone so far. a couple of key live from things. he's basically wanting the auschwitz. some of the commemorations will uk that the eu is going have be taking place that the upper hand into this because it has a bigger population and today? in an it has a far hour some survivors will bigger economy. he also be lighting that the uk candles at the camp. later on they came to brexit dogs and will be giving speeches and joined misunderstood how europe was going to approach things. by heads of state for a special narrative afternoon. around have a listen. we really understand a lot 200 survivors, adrenaline number, many about britain but i think a lot of british people don't understand of them older and trailer, a lot about ireland, including your politicians. and that's what was very are at badly exposed, i think, the heart of these commemorations. during the whole brexit process. just imagine the courage, the a lot of people in britain underestimated the fact that strength that they need to come back european partners will stay by us. to this camp after the cruelty
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britain has a very powerful history, on an a very colonial history and i think industrial scale that they there are people in britain witnessed who thought that france, within these walls. germany and britain would get together at a big summit and tell inside the the smaller countries what's what and that is not the way barbed wire. they do it, even though the 21st—century works, it's certainly not the way they say it is difficult to relive the european their experiences because they do union works. not want the world to forget what happened here and, of course, it is also worth you mentioning that leo know that the world does appear to be forgetting. recent studies show varadkar is questioning public awareness the timetable. boris johnson wants and knowledge varadkar is questioning the timetable. borisjohnson wants this done by the end of the year and of the holocaust is diminishing, jewish will not extend again. a lot of people in communities around the europe think it is going to be world reporting a rise in anti—semitism difficult and they are saying that and so that is why survivors the view in westminster is that consider it so important to we might be able to settle tell their story and certain parts but europe wants a full deal say never again. and work out everything. friday, we will be hearing stories from 11 o'clock, the uk other auschwitz survivors is officially out stop i have been there as well, last week of the eu but still a lot andi have been there as well, last week and i have a report. i talked to sort in terms of the future and some big to a survivor, ziggy. he was 90 about battles to come. ten days ago. he has been back we will be many times. he is not going back this speaking
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to keir starmer a little later in year but i talked to him and then the programme, one of the contenders went back to visit and for leadership of everybody who the labour party. knows and has been there, it has an impact on anybody who visits. todayis knows and has been there, it has an for leadership of the labour party. impact on anybody who visitsm changes you today is the 75th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz. forever. absolutely. many of the survivors had no family or home the eu to return to. it was says that/ a desperate the irish situation but for some children it leader was a chance to says the eu will rebuild their lives have the upper in england. we went to hand. what is the significance? a meet one of them. we should tell you some parts of this report are upsetting. big week in brexit. it kind of has disappeared but this is a week we leave. friday 11 o'clock would be that moment but there is a lot to come and not least trying to eric lost everybody. agree a everybody. my trade deal with the mother, my father, brother, european union which is due to last for sisters. there was a long time where you the next few decades. leo could just not talk about anything. varadkar thanks the
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no, for many, uk basically got it wrong many years. for with its approach to the first set of 30 negotiations. a bit of a warning yea rs i no, for many, many years. for 30 years i had terrible nightmares. as about what is going to a child, eric was happen now. he believes the eu has the upper sent to auschwitz straight from the orphanage arriving hand. there are far more people in in kew are to survive the eu and he he lied about is arguing that the his age and abilities. he uk needs europe more than sent me to the right side and the uk the stash the eu only three out of 383 children got to the right side, needs the uk. it was the others were badly exposed during all killed that the brexit day. process. people underestimated the i use the others were all killed that day. iusea fa ct the others were all killed that day. i use a very the bodies. you were process. people underestimated the fact that european partners how old? 11 one state by us. half. but his story fact that european partners state by us. it has a very of survival as colonial history and people in britain thought that the germans retreated france, germany and britain would is as outstanding as the brutality get together and tell the hit witness. this is smaller countries but that the train to is not how czechoslovakia. it was captured in a the way the 215t—ce ntury few treasured photographs. we were a countries but that is not how the way the 215t—century works are not the way the eu works. also a whole month on this question about how long he will take train. we buried
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to get this deal. most of the people on the journey. boris johnson set they chronicle the an ambitious dateline saying it has to be done by the end of this year. journey from he would not extend germany to czechoslovakia. this is in prague on the day we that at all. leo took the air varadkar saying europe will try plan. this is the to do so but it is day. your walking not guaranteed a to the applicant with warning that you could agree no idea. certain knowing what you were leaving elements but not the full behind. we were told we were going thing. just the bits we really need to to england. we get sorted right away. he sang just behind. we were told we were going to england. wejust hoped thatjust behind. we were told we were going to england. we just hoped that everything would be will not flight with europe. a big ok. and out brexit moment of this week but a of lot the darkness of war, this is of work where he arrived. one of 300 children still to finally save. it do. 18—year—old betty irish is the big was summertime and winner at this the son was shining. years grammys. —— it was wonderful legs, we walked up to the billie eilish. la kes wonderful legs, we walked up to the lakes and went for a swim. it was wonderful. freedom. freedom, the singer and yes. he first—time nominee took home the was one of the wind award for best song, children, housed best album, in what was once a factory and is
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today a school. should have got better haircut and there were single also best artist. she rooms. all the way down there were says she properties. they were making was aeroplanes in the war so honoured. nicola benedetti they all went home and we taking on took their houses. best classical sixpence to see a instrumental solo. film and then girls and boys we're talking about the came with bicycles. shocking news about kobe bryant. i know you have already spoken to peter here, they were given in los shelter, food, angeles. i want to give a little clothing, english lessons, bit of context to people at home who friendship. six short months but an perhaps know the name but do introduction to a new life not quite know what the man was worth living. he settled in manchester and about. incredible statistics during his married and started a family. today, statistics. five nba with an ob he was at school championship, the fourth leading scorer is to keep their stories alive. after all and one you have seen, that any of this clu b the fourth leading scorer and one club for 20 years. pretty much restore your unheard of. it sounds a bit faith in like a hollywood story but really amenity? yes. desperately sad news. he was simply one of the games but humanity has not learned, there are still boars, there is rates. fourth on
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the nba all—time scoring. in his still fighting and i hope the world will final game, he scored 60 be more people in my time. that is point four why you do the los angeles lakers. he loved them and they what you do? loved him. that's right. jurgen klopp said he will not what a life, what be a story. just to liveable's manager for the next think that 183 children jurgen klopp said he will not be liveable's managerfor the next game against shrewsbury. they drew arriving on that train and only three 2—2 and when they meet again survived the first day. tonight on bbc two at enfield it falls during liverpool's there is a drama cold the windermere children which is all about planned winter break. eric and some of the other children who came england could wrap up to england after the war. the series throughout against south africa. they have today's breakfast we set are marking against south africa. they have set a massive target of 466 to win for holocaust memorial day. we are the opposition. speaking to two more auschwitz survivors and i have spoken to and in ziggy schipper and renee salt and they the australian are telling them that make us their open, nadal stories. you can hear morejust after eight. ziggy against kyrgios. a brilliant piece is 90 years and the paper coming up injust a second about those old no “— after eight. ziggy is 90 years old no —— now. two. big, big i went back match at the australian open. they
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are talking about how much they to auschwitz respect on this behalf this year to see firsthand what it is each like. it is one other... of those places where it is hard for currently. anyone else to tell you what it is we will have a look at the like and then when you are papers today. the guardian reports there, once you have left you can that as many as 100,000 people around the never be the same person again. world could already be infected with the new coronavirus. it for me there are two things. you can hear about says experts the numbers but until you arrive are calling for reassurance from the there and see what nhs that doctors are prepared for an outbreak here. the was done on an telegraph features a portrait taken by the industrial scale, it is hard to duchess of cambridge to mark the comprehend. that is coming up 75th anniversary of the liberation of our fits. it shows a little later. let's find out what is happening now with the weather. yvonne bernstein who went into hiding in france during the war and her good morning, carol. that daughter, her granddaughter. see morning, you everyone. a chilly start for the in court. meg says the day today particularly further north and sun. they it will be a day of have interviewed thomas markle sunshine and showers. some of the showers who has confirmed he will give evidence are against his daughter, the duchess of wintry, it is snowing sussex in a row against his daughter, the duchess of sussex in a row over against his daughter, the duchess of sussex in a row over the publication in tyndrum. ofa sussex in a row over the publication of a private looking at that, there was a weather letter. an online, front yesterday, a cold front going no shortage of tributes to kobe bryant. through the uk in bringing rain with it. behind it, cold airfollowed the metro features one from a
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on. barack obama, the former president who once it isa it. behind it, cold airfollowed on. it is a cool start, cold enough for hosted kobe at the white house and snow at modest levels across parts describes him as a legend. we will of scotla nd snow at modest levels across parts of scotland and northern ireland. talk about him throughout the programme this morning fulljob we the scotland northern ireland in have the weather with carol northern england this morning there is the risk of ice coming up on untreated have the weather with carol coming up but let's look inside some of the surfaces so bear that in mind if newspapers. what do you have for you travel. further south across the us, victoria? at the ft, what a way to rest of england and wales start the week. this story in many a similar story in that we are looking at of the papers about huawei. sunshine, brad smells and showers, if you some showers are heavy and are not familiar, this thundery. is the big through the day it continues in chinese company that has had a lot this vein with brad son sunshine and of concern about it here in the uk showers. will wintry in and in the us as well about the north, what their role should be in regard wintry nurse in the hills of wales, to for example. and the breeze will their role should be in regard to the sg their role should be in regard to the 5g network. currently huawei are freshen across the irish sea and able to provide it around the world across north—west scotland and the that at this stage english channel as no—one else is. well. there are concerns around the amount temperatures ranging from five degrees in the north to nine degrees of chinese state interference that the company might be in the south. still breezy as we subjected to. head through the course of the night huawei says and has consistently which will help alleviate any said that it is not subject to any kind of state interference. you may frost issues and still a lot of showers remember theresa may when she was around. they will still be wintry on modest levels. especially in prime minister, the national the security council at the time north but even in the south we could
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said that huawei could go ahead and see some wintry nurse in the provide a 5g network. since hills and malls and tours. with she stepped down the decision has been temperatures like this, there is the put on hold. we will hear again risk of ice on untreated surfaces, shortly as to what the something else to rememberfirst decision thing tomorrow morning. might be because they are meeting at the moment. that story is set to starting roll and there will be a little more tomorrow morning we have a dry know on that. and one question but with showers around. for you still got a guys, on that. and one question for you guys, do you have any cash on you? breezy day as well and cash in your hand back? not the showers much. i are wintry, temperatures are four in always carry a little the north, seven in the south. bit. cash's very much going out by the north, seven in the south. by the time we reach wednesday, it is of favour. there very much a transient ridge of high isa very much going out of favour. there is a real problem with this. by pressure developing across southern 2028 areas and coming in across the we think that only 9% of north. i suppose once again telling transactions in the uk will be cash. it is unbelievable how quickly you it will be a the noticeably breezy speed has changed. but some people day. so a lot of really rely on cash. it is much dry weather for easier to budget if you have £100 england, wales and for northern ireland and scotland you will have that you can physically see. if more cloud and this you are having issues, whether front comes in from the atlantic it will click northern ireland bringing in for example, the some rain to you and move slowly big issue magazine across scotland bringing rain to you as well. it on its leading edge sellers are having contactless payments now. you we will see some snow and that just tap and add a donation if you will slowly edged north—eastward through
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wish to. i the course of the day. one thing you mentioned these two will notice, the temperatures. and 11 degrees as we sweep down towards how they don't really like each plymouth. as we head on through the other very much. rafael nadal and nick kyrgios are playing today. you latter pa rt plymouth. as we head on through the remember this, a few latter part of the week for thursday and friday, it looks like some of us years ago, nick will see some rain, some of us will kyrgios during a match served under see showers but it will turn arm to rafael nadal which that at the bit milder with most of us time was seen as incredibly disrespectful. there is some getting into double figures by the time we needling going on between them and i have willing about aerials at reach the friday. moment the home crowned love him. thank you, carol. we will have willing about aerials at the moment the home crowned love himlj think he will be pummelled by an see you adult. he smashed a later. 22—year—old iago alvarez ball in lived on the wimbledon and kyrgios did an impression of him the other day when 13th floor of he got told off by the umpire grenfell for tower. he and this family escaped wasting time. and then kyrgios and he now did an impression of rafael nadal, picking his shorts and fiddling with works with grenfell his hair. and that is united, a group who campaigned for mean because safer homes and justice. phase two thatis his hair. and that is mean because that is just his sta rts safer homes and justice. phase two starts this morning and we way, isn't it? are joined by him this morning. thank his hair. and that is mean because that isjust his way, isn't it?|j have spoken to rafael nadal about you forjoining us. looking this and he is not even aware he is doing it. it is almost like a nerves ahead of the second phase, what is it you thing. and it helps to would like to know that needs to get put people off. quickly, talks of a to the bottom of on your
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saudi ta keover of off. quickly, talks of a saudi takeover of munich castle. 90% behalf?” certain they say in the guardian think notjust for myself this morning. a few leagues along but for the way, it is called bereaved survivors in general, one hot —— project of our main concerns is why this was zebra. they get it allowed to happen in the first place. as survivors we believe estimate saudi involvement are very keen to phase two of the enquiry is the most get involved. they want to basically important part where we find out why reset their sporting image and one the cladding was allowed to be put of the things they on the building and what decisions are doing, lead to that decision being made. talking to various for us, it gets to people. 9096. wow. the crux of what let's talk about some pioneering, an it is that we operation which is done on a experienced that night, it is finally a time retired milkman. damon paid, 76 anomaly when we if can actually get to the bottom and you had treatment for lung cancer it people all over the could be a long operation, five world and hours with months of painful especially all over the country recovery and a stay in hospital. but start to feel that they can trust he was the first person to have a system again. we look at lung removed through a small all over the country there are still cut in his stomach, leaving him with a two buildings with grenfell cladding inch scar. stage four on it and buildings with other types lung cancer, the most life—threatening form of of flammable material and until this the most life—threatening form of the disease. the enquiry uncovers the truth about the scale of how the building industry 2.5 hour procedure fail that night, i don't think we last november involved, perhaps stop will ever get the justice we feel eating breakfast, the patching the lung, compressing it into a fishing we deserve. it took
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net bad before pulling it out of about two things his belly. i was wondering how you there, about justice and deserve. it took about two things there, aboutjustice and future safety. are you hopeful that this suck it out. out of will ensure other people are in a safer place because a two inch gap. of it?” will ensure other people are in a safer place because of it? i would try and be as hopeful as i one of the things can but we saw in an operation it has been over two years now and in a theatre still not enough has been done. there are still many buildings all once was an operation, they had over the country which still need to to totally open the have not just over the country which still need to have notjust this cladding but any chest up, massive. other sort of flammable he says he feels brilliant. at the other end of things, material removed and until icy billy cooper, that actually develop —— happen it will be difficult. but it is a step in the right direction and phase english cricket fan, is quitting. he two is the barmy army trumpeter. his beginning today hopefully we can get to the same conclusions about what wife is fed up with being actually happened that night. at home with the children. he says it is the becoming more complicated phase one report was a now. he pretty good has had many wonderful times but it report, hard—hitting and i still felt like it lacked a bit in terms is time to go home and do of some of the conclusions and the family thing. he is a classically some of some of the conclusions and some of the recommendations but i think it is actually extremely trained musician and he will keep playing in the royal opera house in march. important that we continue pushing on the he is still in west end enquiry to make sure that we do get a good report. and will
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musicals and things but he is calling time on you go? you travelling the world. they will wa nt to a good report. and will you go? you want to hear the proceedings miss the peace and quiet if he yourself? i am going to try is practising at home. that will drive and come them nuts. buti here as often as i practising at home. that will drive them nuts. but i am sure the family will enjoy it. how do you feel can but, obviously, there are things that we about the new sofa? it is firm still have to do. i and bouncy. personally am we have many comments about the applying to go back to new sofa. it's not completely new, we university so my focus will be on that. recycled the base. we while at the same time i also have access to have renewed and refreshed. excellent. the same time i also have access to the enquiry live on youtube. so but we i am not the only one. each don't have our own dip! one of us as we normally have a personal dipper for our don't have our own dip! we normally the bereaved and survivors have our have a personal dipperfor our bum. own individual lives that still they will be back by the end of next continue and also on top of that we week. let's have still have many fights in the years a look at to come. ijust want still have many fights in the years to come. i just want to the still have many fights in the years to come. ijust want to ask still have many fights in the years to come. i just want to ask you about what happened over the weather this morning. good morning, weekend. we know that one of everyone. last week was settled but quite well. this week it will be the expert panellists for the second changeable but also phase of the enquiry resigned. she had links to the company that brighter. what supplied the cladding. what sort of we have today are sunny spells and wintry showers. and it is a impact has that had on you cold feel to the day. this front and other people? well, before brought rain yesterday and behind it, we start speaking about bonito with need to colder air has filtered in. so
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we start the start thinking about who she came day in scotland, northern ireland here to replace and and england with the she came here to risk of ice on replace the other panel surfaces and also some showers, some member whose focus was on community of which will be wintry, even engagement. i to lower levels, to modest levels. in between we will see some bread think that it is extremely important to understand that it spells and some sunshine. coming across the rest of was not a england and com plete to understand that it was not a complete trade, it was a wales, a similar story in the trade for someone sense that it wales, a similar story in the sense thatitis complete trade, it was a trade for someone with the expertise wales, a similar story in the sense that it is sunshine and showers looking at and some at community engagement with —— for sunshine —— someone community engagement with —— for someone with knowledge about the showers will have hail and thunder system. but the other member and lighting in bed the in them. there is dry weather around today we believe is someone who can provide that expertise. that was the first beginning was showers you can thing. obviously it came catch one down the road, maybe to light that benita had bone dry. but if you are out and about it as a some links to cold start and it will be the a cold charitable arm of the cladding feel to the day. temperatures in company. what we as survivors want stornoway and aberdeen aden edinburgh, five degrees. six is for this enquiry to remain in other areas, nine in com pletely is for this enquiry to remain completely impartial and for some people i think it was just a lowly plymouth. a march that she had some breezy day and a breezy evening as links to a well. a lot company that was potentially responsible for that of showers around, night.” company that was potentially responsible for that night. i also
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again wa nt to responsible for that night. i also want to ask on a personal level you we're looking at wind in the hills say you are applying to go back to not just we're looking at wind in the hills notjust in we're looking at wind in the hills not just in scotland we're looking at wind in the hills notjust in scotland northern ireland in northern england but we university. how are could see some that in the you doing? hills in say you are applying to go back to university. how are you doing7m wales. once again with temperatures say you are applying to go back to university. how are you doing? it is difficult to know how i am doing. my are slow in the north there life is completely is the risk of ice on untreated surfaces so changed with the watch out for that first thing in the morning. tomorrow, another day way that grenfell has changed the narrative. my whole life of sunshine and showers and another i had one day of wintry nurse, particularly in plan and now i am the hills. still a blustery day, in a position where i just have four degrees in aberdeen, seven in plan and now i am in a position where ijust have to rethink everything from scratch. and cardiff. so wrap up normally. as we i think head on into the middle of the week in terms of being able to live a for wednesday we have low pressure normal life, that will be difficult in front running across the north of because this is something that will the country and a transient ridge of define me for the rest of high pressure across the my life regardless of where i go.” south. those isobars tell you it will define me for the rest of my life regardless of where i go. i know you have suffered be from ptsd another breezy day. on wednesday itself in the south, dry and as well. bright with sunny skies but in the north we regardless of where i go. i know you have suffered from ptsd as wellm is not just ptsd. have a weather front crossing and have suffered from ptsd as wellm is notjust ptsd. i think this generalisation of ptsd is also, bringing in rain, living northern there are many other ireland as it does so, bringing in mental hills rain through central parts of issues that have come on about since southern scotland. on its then. it was a dramatic event for me leading edge we will see some snow. on and a traumatic event for the rest this whether it would drift of the bereaved and the survivors
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and it is important to slowly north—eastward is and the temperatures will change. 11 put out there that i am personally receiving help in and there are others who are plymouth. as we head towards the receiving help. it is latter pa rt plymouth. as we head towards the latter part of this week it turns important to know that if anyone is ever in that u nsettled latter part of this week it turns unsettled with rain and showers position, whether they feel like wanting you will notice is the they are depressed or whether they temperature. it is going to be feel they are anxious that they can milder. in summery for this get the help they need, something week, that i have been doing and i will‘s we're looking at a chilly start, some snow and some highs, continue to say i do it. it is important for people to realise that dry by the time we reach wednesday and then it is ok to not be milder than unsettled as we head onto the latter part ok. an important message there. thank you of the week. very much thank you very for talking to us and best of luck. much, carol. the great to speak to you again. there is a lot to talk about holocaust was one of the darkest cha pters holocaust was one of the darkest on the chapters in history and throughout programme today. we are reflecting the programme today we will bring on the sad news yesterday of death you some incredibly moving stories of kobe bryant and from some of those who live through it. one of those stories belongs this daughter and seven other people in a helicopter to a man cold ziggy schipper who i had crash in los angeles. we're also the privilege of meeting last week. ziggy spoke with great frank looking at the 75th anniversary of liberation of auschwitz. you went nurse and honesty about his there last week and today we're experience and hearing a lot of survivor stories. we are until quarter past nine today some of these details are and other guest that would join us upsetting. —— later, we will speak to a favourite
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great from cold feet and frankness. she has a my my number was 84,303 and powerful line about surviving cancer. i watched it last i cannot forget it for the life of night. it is incredible and many people are me. i tried so many times to reacting to her performance. she forget it but will be here tells about a little later. and maxime will be on the i cannot. i was completely sofa as well. she is one of those taking part in a brand—new play and dehumanised. how she will tell us about that and what can a she will tell us about that and what she got involved in the first child of place. a lot to talk about the time now for 14 the new get the news, travel and how people should die so that weather where you are. you would have a place to wherever you are. sit. what has good morning. become of me? police in greenwich say i should have they are aware of anti—semitic graffiti scrawled across a number been dead, you know, for thinking of buildings in the borough at the weekend. it appeared on a like that. but that is bank in blackheath how it was. you and outside a could not escape from takeaway in woolwich auschwitz birkenau. it was —— charlton ahead of today's holocaust memorial day. the graffiti also included a celtic electrified fences cross, a symbol of white supremacy. with guards on parents and volunteers in enfield who set up patrols less than one year ago to stop their children top. i cannot being mugged, say they have seen a reduction in crime and the idea forget
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things like that even though i could be copied across london. forget so many things, what it was in response to a series happened to normal. but of muggings, with patrols working with local police those things, killing teams. they are babies... i could neverforget in talks it for with scotland a yard thousand about expanding years. to other knock boroughs. at the bbc‘s panorama programme has found a section of smart motorway the on the m25 has had 20 times more near misses when it comes door to accidents than before it was converted. hello. smart motorways have been criticised for not having a hard shoulder hello. nice to see you. thank you the government says it wants to fix smart motorways for inviting us. come because they are in, come in. i confusing for drivers. that is tonight at 830 said if you want to go to germany to on bbc one. work we will take you madonna says she is deeply sorry for to germany to work. first the thing cancelling her first london show tonight of her madame x world i said, i tour. the singer was due to begin a run of can't see any trains. 15 dates at the london palladium she said there this evening. in a statement she standing in front of you. and what said she had been plagued was in front of you? by injury and was told by doctors to rest for trains, but not for human beings, you know? they and was told by doctors to rest for a few days. refunds will be given to
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those who had tickets. let's have a we re for human beings, you know? they were cattle look now the travel trucks. one every situation. morning the train stopped and through the slits of the train i saw looking at the board we see that the london overground has no the word service between barking and south tottenham and minor delays auschwitz. ziggy in south tottenham because of has been a faulty back to auschwitz many freight line. times now, at half—hour a faulty freight line. delays from king's cross station 90 years old, he is not going this half—hour delays from king's cross station after weekend engineering works overran. year. so i will go in his onto the roads and in brixton, place to light a candle for him and those he brixton road is down to one lane in each direction lost. what you will see because of gasworks. and now the weather in auschwitz forecast with kate. good morning. you will not believe it. it is not an especially cold start you will this morning but we do however not believe it. you are looking at have a few scattered and heavy it and you still think it showers and a scattering of a breeze can't be, it and you still think it can't be, it as well pushing those showers through. and that breeze will make things feel chilly. in the heavier of the showers can't you may get a flash of lightning and hail mixed in as well. a few bright spells and maybe be. some glimpses sunshine between the showers later and temperatures reaching eight degrees.
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overnight we hang onto the showers, relentless for a time, soi so i did go back a few clearer spells developing, to auschwitz, i however, and under those clear went for the first time to auschwitz skies, the temperature will drop last week and i know and it will be colder you have been than it was last night, there and so many things i took away from visiting there. for me, one celsius in the suburbs and that means we could see some slippery you talk about numbers but until surfaces first thing tomorrow you go morning after the there, the impact on the scale is difficult to understand. and showers. potentially some tricky driving conditions but those showers also that every story is an will clear away on tuesday morning and a largely dry day individual story and you see those shoes and with sunny spells. temperatures still chilly the rest of it in the westerly breeze. gradually through the week it will stay unsettled post wednesday every single person but the had their shoes taken off them, they temperature will had their shoes taken off them, they had a family. and it is a deeply moving place to be and quite get a impactful. i was grateful to little milder. go there on his behalf and talk to much more through the day on bbc ziggy- there on his behalf and talk to ziggy. you can see more of his story and of my visit at ten london facebook past eight today. just the sheer scale of and twitter. it. you can read about the numbers of good morning. people who went there and died but until you see the industrial nature you're of what they did and why they did watching it, that is when it really hits you. breakfast. and what he told me that had a big asummary of impact was that we must
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tell the a summary of the main stories: investigators say they will look at story, people need to all aspects of the crash which know what happened and we cannot forget about killed kobe bryant and it. exactly. and that is why we do this today. let's get news, travel his 13—year—old daughter. killed kobe bryant and his 13-year-old daughter. all nine people on board died and whether for wherever you are watching. headlines in a when the helicopter hit a hillside and caught few minutes fire. the 41—year—old want time. to good morning. police olympic gold medals, five nba in greenwich championships making him a household say they are aware name in the united states. a of anti—semitic second brand—new hospital especially for graffiti scrawled across a number of the treatment of buildings in the borough at the weekend. it appeared on coronavirus is a bank in being constructed in the blackheath and outside a takeaway ahead of today's holocaust memorial city of day. the graffiti also wuhan completed in two included a weeks' time celtic cross, a symbol of it will have 1300 beds. white supremacy. parents and volunteers more than 80 people have died from in enfield who set up patrols less than the one year ago to stop respiratory infection and more than the children 300 are critically ill. being mugged say they have seen a reduction in crime and the idea no letup in could be copied across london. the rate of infection it was in response to a series of with 750 cases muggings that patrols working with reported in the last few days. local police teams. they ceremonies are taking are in place at
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talks with scotland yard about auschwitz two to 75th expanding to other anniversary of borrowers. the liberation of the concentration hundreds of homes in richmond remain without gas this morning, five days camp in southern poland. more than after water from a burst water main a million people, mostly jewish escaped into gas pipes. engineers people, were killed during the second world war. have been pumping waterfrom escaped into gas pipes. engineers have been pumping water from 20 miles of pipes. it says all homes leaders willjoin affected should have gas holocaust survivors to pay respects. restored this week but will have to visit we can take you to every home individually to turn it a live picture in back on. new research auschwitz where they are shows that on going to be average ten people die every day in laying reese what they call london of air pollution. the role of death. that is significantly more than those who die in traffic accidents. —— wreaths. the centre for cities which conducted studies this is is calling for stricter government guidelines to reduce levels of a pm 2.5 which includes levels of deadly reconstruction. several thousand dust and ash. the government says people lost their lives and shot at it is investing billions of pounds to this wall. we seek dignitaries tackle pollution from transport. walking towards it right let's have a look at the travel now. world situation this morning. looking leaders from germany, at the board we see that the london israeljoining overground has a number of the board we see that the london overg round has no the board we see that the london overground has no service between barking and south holocaust survivors to
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tottenham and pay their respects. louise aware minor delays in south tottenham that last week and you were there on because of a behalf of one survivor, ziggy, who faulty freight line. is now 90 and king's cross station is open after was unable to return weekend engineering works but they this year although he has been there have overrun and that means there before. he described in a are delays of around 30 minutes this vivid morning. onto the roads and in detail what happened when brixton, brixton road is down to one he arrived lane in each direction there, aged 14, alongside his grandmother and seeing because of gasworks. and now the weather forecast with kate. the site of auschwitz and the feeling he had good morning. it is not an especially cold start this when he arrived there in what we know was a cattle morning but we do however have a a few scattered and heavy showers and truck. when he got a scattering of a breeze out people were put as well pushing those showers through. and in one line or that breeze will make things feel another and some of them sent chilly. in the heavier of the straight to that death. it showers you may get a flash of lightning and somehow mixed in as talks about the lucky in so many well. a few bright spells and may ways to have survived. not be some glimpses sunshine entirely sure between the what will be happening but we showers later and temperatures reaching eight degrees. overnight we will hang onto the showers, let you watch this in a relentless for a hang onto the showers, relentless fora time, a few moments. hang onto the showers, relentless for a time, a few clearer spells memorial day, the 75th developing, however, and under those clear skies, the temperature will anniversary
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drop and it will be colder than of the it was last night, one celsius in the liberation of suburbs and that means we auschwitz. could see some slippery surfaces first thing tomorrow morning after the showers. potentially some tricky driving they are walking towards conditions but those showers will this clear away on tuesday morning and execution while where, when i was are largely dry day was sunny there on friday, so many people come spells. temperatures still chilly in to that wall, the westerly breeze. gradually through the week it will stay particularly, in u nsettled through the week it will stay auschwitz two light candles, unsettled post wednesday but the temperature will get a little to milder. there is more on holocaust leave flowers, in respect of all those people who memorial day with vanessa on bbc lost their lives. radio london. she starts her showers 30 minutes. that is on between seven whenever you speak and to survivors from auschwitz, and i know you experience ten. this last week, they all talk about good morning. you're the importance of events watching like this. brea kfast. good morning. you're watching breakfast. it the important been given the time and space to tell their stories and is monday the reason for that morning. we the fear of anything like this ever happening will be reflecting on again and it is only when you the death of understand the scale of it, us basketball star so many personal tragedies, the personal kobe bryant. fans stories of people who lost friends of cold feet and families not
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have praised away only in auschwitz but many other concentration the character is recovering camps during world war ii and you realise from breast the effects it had on so many cancer. an 18th people and those nightmares and century courtroom in thoughts, suffix is the awful memories which continue to setting for maxine this day. this commemoration peak‘s takes suffix is the setting for maxine place this morning. pea k‘s latest project. suffix is the setting for maxine peak‘s latest project. in the play also into the 12 women decide day, the afternoon as well. you can the fate of see some of the survivors, a female which must be a difficult moment with prisoner. a them. i know many of them have been summary of back many times before but i imagine the every time they go back, it must main stories: reaction to the death bring back all those memories of kobe bryant from all they have, the time they spent there over the world. it also killed and the people his 13—year—old daughter. world. it also killed his 13-year-old daughter. he spent 20 they lost. yea rs before 13-year-old daughter. he spent 20 years before retiring three years ago with the la lakers. we are joined by his biographer. when you you can see those first met him, what were your two giant wreaths impressions of him? he was have reached the ball, not the
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younger. it was the first night original vault which he ever was dismantled scored a basket in in 1944 but it has been the professional national basketball league reconstructed exactly as it was, here in where thousands of people were america and i was a executed there and right across reporter covering the event to see auschwitz. i remember a few years him and afterwards he bounced into the ago, i went locker room quite happy and hit me back with... one with a soul shake. he of the had no idea who i was. did survivors who lost 50 members of his family there and you get the feeling while we were back then that he was going to walking around the camp, he was be a superstar? oh, yes, that is why talking about all the unspeakable things his family had seen i was there. i had gone looking. i had and one of the people guiding been writing lots us around about michael said, because quite a few jordan and i had gone looking among people the next generation of players we re said, because quite a few people were talking that the people who did this work barbaric, subhuman. coming along and he was the sort of he said, never think about it like quy coming along and he was the sort of guy that stop you that. you have to remember that the in your tracks. people who perpetrated these acts very talented, very we re people who perpetrated these acts were just like you and me. confident and people who perpetrated these acts werejust like you and me. if people who perpetrated these acts were just like you and me. if you ever think it was something done by very eager to a group of people and they were not prove himself. and
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normal, that is when it can happen absolutely, deeply passionate about again. you have to remember that his sport? yes, these things to place he never lost just a few generations ago and we have to go that. there are so many people, basketball through and remember some of the plays today in america, horrible things through make sure it make huge doesn't happen again. many amounts of money. some of them are thousands of visitors pass good at earning it and some are not. through auschwitz every year and being kobe bryant never cheated fair, it is a the game. he was so quiet place. people are driven and had reflecting an as they are now incredible work on what happened and ethic. what so as they are now on what happened and so many things that struck me is one of your favourite stories about being that but first of all about him? the numbers of people that when i first started covering him, were killed. and i did not my youngest child was quite understand until i a basketball player herself, just 12 went there, the scale of yea rs old basketball player herself, just 12 years old and he sat down one what happened. that every story day when i was talking to him is a personal story, everybody who died and wrote a suite note to her there had a about staying true to her dreams. she is family. these will a mother be today, lives in boston some of the few survivors because many people who arrived
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and kobe brya nt in auschwitz today, lives in boston and kobe bryant was a big part of died a couple off of her young hours of life, her aspiration and she went arriving there. we and pulled out his talk to one letter. it was a of the survivors, erica, he arrived sad letter for us but and pulled out his letter. it was a sad letterfor us but it and pulled out his letter. it was a when he was 11 years old and sad letter for us but it also reminded us of the tremendous he went directly from an orphanage and there impact he had on her we re directly from an orphanage and there were 183 children he arrived own work ethic. so on and he was one of only three children many tributes being paid to who survived the first day and him. we understand his daughter was also in his job from 11 years the helicopter and she was an on was to dig up—and—coming basketball player as graves for some of the others who well? yes, itjust makes died on the train. we will the sadness so much greater. how hear from ziggy a little bit later, he do you think he won't will be best talk to as well and he remembered? as the said when he arrived that he was 14. i said, he person who did was just a arrived that he was 14. i said, he wasjust a child. he everything within his arrived that he was 14. i said, he was just a child. he said, arrived that he was 14. i said, he wasjust a child. he said, given arrived that he was 14. i said, he was just a child. he said, given the things i had seen by power to be the greatest. he was not the age of 14, afraid to say that. he did not consider himself to be a child. he was in when he was auschwitz for a young, he was determined to be couple of months and then moved the greatest stock which is outrageous. other concentration camps and
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who makes that pronouncement? eventually the camp he was and who it goes after that? and who was liberated in has the may, some months courage and the great to live after auschwitz was liberated and up to such a thing? he then came to live really did. i was in the uk.” after auschwitz was liberated and sitting with michael jordan then came to live in the uk. i know such a thing? he really did. i was sitting with michaeljordan in 2008 it is hard to watch and it is hard in orlando lorinda at a to remember some of basketball event and we these stories but... i have to choose my were talking, —— words carefully... it is a really important place auschwitz and orlando, florida. if you ever get the opportunity to go and iasked michael visit, i would ever get the opportunity to go and visit, iwould recommend ever get the opportunity to go and visit, i would recommend you go there. it strikes you about kobe and he obviously had tremendous regard. he said the first time we are because people just walk around all influenced by people and in silence and i remember being told then i the day went for the first time had this generation followed and me and it is amazing that they were all these people who it is so silent. wa nted they were all these people who wanted to be like mike and you hear about michael jordan said kobe was the one some, but this who did the work, out of all those huge blast area and it is true. when people, who made the effort to be you realise the scale of what happened great. thank you very much for there, and the number of bringing us people who your memories of kobe died there, that it was
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bryant. thank your memories of kobe bryant. thank built to you for having kill people, it was a me. death camp, it so many tributes being really m ea ns kill people, it was a death camp, it really means that you cannot watch paid from the pictures like this or he world of sport, politics, stories like this not imagine what music, entertainment and fans people have been through. one of absolutely the most devastated. you talk of some important things to me to realise when i was there is that of the other sporting heroes. tiger woods people arrived and then he was was playing golf and he selected to work or go to the gas chambers was hearing people shouting things while he was and you never had a chance to say playing and then he realised goodbye after he finished and then to he gave an your insta nt he finished and then he gave an loved instant reaction. the other thing ones. thatis instant reaction. the other thing that is so sad, watching those we pictures of kobe bryant will with his daughter. one of the things i have hear from goodbye to your loved ones. we will hearfrom a goodbye to your loved ones. we will hear from a couple seen daughter. one of the things i have seen overnight, kobe bryant was of survivors interviewed in america about you do later in the programme. it is not have a son to carry holocaust memorial day today out your legacy, and he said it the 75th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz. does not matter, wait till you see my daughter. she was coming in all over leo varadkar the sporting world. he
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-- keir retired from basketball and 2016. he spent his starmer returns to campaigning in entire career with the los angeles the labour leadership race. lakers. one an olympic he will visit places in scotland, wales and gold medal and famously scored 81 england proposing a devolution points in a of match. raheem sterling power and decisions being made at the most local level possible. called him a he legend. usain bolt said joins us now. apologies for keeping he could not believe it. you waiting. it tom brady was very important also tweeted that you did. we his condolences to see returning to the campaign trailand that you did. we see returning to the family. some the campaign trail and many viewers would have seen you had deposit mba badges went ahead as last week because of an accident and your the unusable breaking. family. how is your mother—in—law —— mba now? thank you for matches. one match the players asking. she is still sadly critically ill and did not engage for a full in intensive care and it is very difficult for my wife and her family 24 seconds. 24, of and perhaps i could just say thank course, kobe you to the very many people who sent bryant shirt us kind wishes and support number. houston rockets had a from across the political spectrum but bit of mainly and mostly, a massive
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silence. many thought the game thank you to the nhs for what should not have they are doing, it is incredible. we wish god ahead. you silence. many thought the game should not have god aheadlj and the rest of your family the silence. many thought the game should not have god ahead. ijust do not have a lot very best in the next few days. when to say. the news we have spoken to you in the past, a lot of it was about brexit and the is devastating to all who general election. it knew him and loved him. i do is something you have passionately not have a lot advocated to against. in around four say, i have to go to the days, we team until will have efficiently left the eu. the players what are your thoughts now when we but i reach the first of many cannot. hugely important dates? we are going raw emotions. to leave on jurgen klopp has said friday and my concern is the he will not be government does not have a taking charge of the replay in the clue what fa cup against is coming next because we have argued about the deal shrewsbury. note with the eu first team for 3.5 years but what we have players will not done is to address feature. shrewsbury pulled off the biggest the underlying reasons that people voted in the way shock of the that they did and one of those round with a was because people want 2—2 draw. decisions about
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two goals forjason cummings them made closer to brought the home side level. they them, the city, get there dream fixture at anfield. the region, country. iam them made closer to them, the city, region, country. i am going across the uk making the under 23 coach will case for a radical be managing liverpool. tra nsfer of isaid we 23 coach will be managing liverpool. i said we would have the uk making the case for a radical transfer of power, wealth and opportunity, away from a winter break westminster and we play with the players and whitehall and closer who are here. that is to people. the model is one of the things i it. they cannot wa nt to the model is one of the things i want to discuss this week. what i organise around us. it is our fault am absolutely committed to is the today. but you principal that decision should cannot promise be everybody time off and then at the made much closer to people. we end you take it away so need a new constitutional settlement. i cannot work like this. we are leaving the eu, that was that is our one of the central reasons. in addition, my solution. powers are going to come back from i wonderjurgen klopp will the eu to the uk and we need to know where they are going to be located get away with that? will he have to be and if we're not careful, this push there? a tricky into nationalism and i think one. a that is the wrong answer and i am calling little for a new political consensus, a disrespectful. shrewsbury radical rethink about how we make to. for the united kingdom itself him to say, and the
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i am not regions woke in the 21st century and going. busy. don't cause the upsurge england could wrap up in nationalism which in the end a series when will break up out in the third test against south africa. in complete control united kingdom. the thanks to five wickets to mark snp, they would say the best way to do what you are talking about is to wood. england chose to give them a second referendum. bat again. ten are you ruling that out? they wickets for england today would say will see a that but nationalism for me is 3-1 wickets for england today will see a 3—1 about us versus them. what series i am interested victory. in is what is the alternative to the thiem it is through in status quo? i accept the status the australian open. quo is not work in the 21st century, whether it is in scotland or medvedev and the wawrinka i still playing. and whole of the united kingdom. there is this a yearning that tonight nadal takes power must be closer to the people and i do not on home ground think the answer is a second referendum and i think the case has favourite kyrgios. i can to be made, not only imagine what the atmosphere is the status quo, not going to be like. they nationalism federalism and a radical absolutely love rethink in how we put kyrgios. what do you say nadal will power closer to people, have a new constitutional do? i think he will pummel settle m e nt to people, have a new constitutional settlement that people think put
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him. i might be power when it should be. when we wrong. talk about that sort of the city of wuhan has removal of been in power, it is about lockdown as authorities transport and infrastructure. where do try to contain the outbreak you stand of the on hs2 for example. on coronavirus. everyone must hs2 we need a wear a decision sooner rather than later face mask. two british because work has already started, teachers have including in my constituency. not left their apartment for several i days. thank you forjoining actually think that infrastructure us on like hs2 should have started in the programme. telus the north and worked south and one a little bit of the massive bribes is about what the last few days have been like? we getting across from the north—west to the have not left north—east of england is still incredibly difficult. do you our apartment in five days think it should go now so we're ahead now? it getting a bit of cabin should go fever but we ahead. i have particular have not been able to leave. concerns about where it comes to in we did a massive food london shop, a pileup but it should start in the north and of work its way south. it food and water but now all transport should be in the city has pa rt work its way south. it should be part of a national infrastructure
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plan. one of the difficulties we stopped. no cars, have in this country and we trains, nowhere to go we are pretty much stuck. jason, what is have not had an integrated it like outside? is anybody transport plan for out there? we flying, trains, roads. we have not been outside. looking from havejust our windows, it is a ghost had these ad hoc plants which are town. ba rely our windows, it is a ghost town. barely anyone on the street. they not thought through as a coherent plan for the whole of have bad personal vehicles so it is the united kingdom. i am afraid we just emergency are slightly short of time today but thank you vehicles. normally for coming on and speaking to us the streets are completely packed so it is weird to see. you this morning and all the best to had to go to your mother—in—law. hospital last week, what was this morning and all the best to your mother-in-law. carol will be here shortly with the weather it like? it was more and the story, kobe bryant, so many of a people paying tribute to this precaution. superstar if you had a temperature you of had to have a letter that you did not have sport. the virus and we needed toby bryant, a massive star in the a letter to united states but here even say so because we were travelling to if you just knew his name, this morning we thailand. it was really strange. can probably explain who this man is. he is bigger than everyone in full basket all. he body suit and is. he is bigger than basket all. he is and he was going to
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masks. that was even before the go on to lockdown started. achieve other big things. kobe what information retired in 2016 and he was killed yesterday in a helicopter crash are you getting from local along with his daughter. authorities? do you get the he spent feeling the situation is under his entire career with the la lakers and won an olympic gold medal with control? what the us twice, scored 81 points we have heard from the in a chinese president and from single match, the mayor of he retired wuhan is that expecting it to get and another worse before it gets better. i think retired player, kareem abdul—jabbar, they made the right decision by posted this on twitter to pay shutting down of the city and we tribute. it was an incredible family heard now they are about ten man who loved his wife and daughters. he cities in complete lockdown. i was an think they're trying to contain the virus incredible and prevent it from spreading any athlete and a leader in many ways. more. we keep hearing he inspired a whole generation of athletes. he was one of the first the death toll ones to leave high school and come is accelerating every single day and to the nba and do so all we can do is sit and wait for well. dominated more news. is the game and became one it wiring? have of the best family scorers that the la lakers have ever and friends been in contact? they seen. scorers that the la lakers have ever seen. that was a long must time to make be shaquille o'neal paying a tribute saying he was more than an athlete concerned he was a family man while
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? magic johnson shared that they had had and friends been in contact? they must be concerned? our friends are worried, they have heard so many long conversations the news about life but we are reassuring them that they and basketball. raheem sterling are safe. not going simply called him a legend. there we re simply called him a legend. there were a number of matches in anywhere. although being stuck here is hard we the nba know this is the safest possible yesterday and players stage their own tribute including one option for match us at players did not engage the moment. for 24 seconds, that was jason, how his shirt number. does this they held a minute silent before their match. work weekly? the next -- game for practically? people the la la kers is who knock their match. the next game for the la lakers is due to be at on the home and thatis la lakers is due to be at home and that is against la clippers door, they don't do it here, we and that don't know if the people next door is tomorrow so the matches are here. and when are going ahead. here the liverpool we are in chats manager jurgen klopp says he will not take with people from our schools and our friends and some group chats on the charge of his size replay again chat have been set up shrewsbury town in the fa called work cup. his and help which isjust side's winter break and he says no chat have been set up called work and help which is just a support first team players will group for people who need masks or feature. true spring pulled off the biggest
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food. people delivering things shock of the round with a two all sort draw against liverpool, they had of stuff. and, gone to nil up due to sophie, i know an awful phone —— own goal. but you have been in contact with family the loan —— back home. how about the british authorities. have they been homesite true level. they get their dream fixture at anfield and liveable will be managed by their at type —— in touch? i can seejake under 23 coach. i told the boys shaking his head. we contacted the embassy weeks ago already that we will have and tried to a winter break. so we ring them. we play with the got a players who are the young boys. and thatis useless automated e—mail response players who are the young boys. and from the embassy saying not to go that is said. they to this province but we are cannot organise around us, it is ourfault already here. and then we that is said. they cannot organise around us, it is our fault today. have been trying but you cannot to ring the embassy and talk to the promise everybody home office but they were shot over time off and then the weekend so we will try and bring them as soon as it opens. it is you take it away. difficult, because of i cannot work like this this weekend the time so i cannot work like this this weekend so that is why it is our difference, it is difficult to contact authorities home so it has solution for. meanwhile, english cricketers been difficult to contact hope to wrap up a series anyone. you said you had a big shop a few win when they resume in ten minutes from now days ago. how much food do in south africa. you have left? about five they had a more days also. first—innings lead of 200 yesterday and then they added
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and plenty more to you are going to continue to try and that, south africa 456 to contact british authorities? i'm sure there are many people in the win, two full days to go, ten same situation as you and it wickets seal a would 31 series victory. be reassuring, i imagine, to hear something about what the plan is. at the australian just anything. whether it open, dominic thiem is to just is through, sit tight or if something will daniel medvedev has change. the silence is disconcerting been defeated by because we have not heard sta n daniel medvedev has been defeated by stan wawrinka and later on rafael anything from outside of wuhan for a nadal meets nick kyrgios, the number—1 meeting hometown week now. we appreciate your fiver it. time with us that will be —— meeting the hometown here on bbc breakfast. hopefully favourite. that will be some game. yourfamilies are here on bbc breakfast. hopefully your families are watching you as well this morning. take care and we time now for the weather with carol hope to speak to this morning. ooh, you again soon.|j ouch! our desk imagine theirfamilies hope to speak to you again soon.|j imagine their families may hope to speak to you again soon.|j imagine theirfamilies may be glad is to be able to see them too close to the sofa. how this morning. are things? we have some beautiful carol will look at the weather today andi carol will look at the weather today and i looked at the photograph already and it is going to be weather watcher pictures in cold this morning, this one is from yesterday, over the next week, isn't it? good snowdrops. if you have been out morning everyone. a cold start to walking recently you may see them the day and for some of us we out already. but even have snow even on what we have modest hills. but is a sunny spells around as well and also mixture of brads balance and shine, some rain showers. we even modest cells in the north and
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have a cold there is the risk of ice first thing this morning. the cold front here front that has brought us rain over moved across the uk yesterday the course of the night and behind it, as the name suggests, cold air bringing rain but behind the cold has filtered in. for front, cold air came our way. a cold scotland, start for some northern ireland and northern foot in the england there is ice on services day. as first thing and we also have well as that we have some showers. some of those showers the showers, will be wintry, even at a modest level. wintry even to modest levels and you and you can also see the odd flash may even hear a rumble of thunder coming out of the of lightning coming out of them as showers as well. well. moving south across the for northern england, wales and west southern england, again it is a of england and wales, here we are mixture of bread spell sunshine and also looking at a mix showers and the sunshine showers of bright heavy with hail and thunder mixed spells, sunshine and showers, some with thunder and lightning and hail in. there will also be a breezy day wherever you are with them picking embedded. wherever you are today up wherever you are with them picking upa wherever you are with them picking will be breezy and particularly so up a touch through the irish sea later on in through the irish sea and the north—west of scotland. the day. temperature temperatures wise, if you're just stepping out, are nothing to write home about, wrap up warmly. it will not be warm only five degrees in aberdeen, six at all. five in the north, in belfast. eight in cardiff and nine degrees as we push down towards the nine in st helier. into the evening south. breezy tonight as well and and overnight it will still be don't forget that when strengthens breezy and that will help to prevent in the areas mentioned stop a fair a frost that we still have a few showers were packing. lot of
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showers and some of them still still wintry to modest wintry on the hills, levels in the still at levels, especially the further south hills and high roots, you travel, east they may fall as rain. but over the tonight once again there is the risk of ice on hills you could untreated surfaces. during the see some snow. temperature wise, course of tuesday it is another day below freezing in the north, just above freezing in the south so of spells, sunshine and the showers and risk of ice on untreated surfaces. some of those showers are still be aware of that first thing wintry in the hills and temperatures in the range between four in the morning. tomorrow, another they are north to bright spells sunshine and showers, seven in the south. by the time we still quite blustery as reach wednesday a transient ridge well. still blustery and the tops of the hills of high pressure will build across southern areas with low pressure on and temperatures between four and the front coming in across seven degrees. but by wednesday, we northern see a little bit of a change areas and these isobars are telling you it will be a in the shape of a transient ridge of high blustery day. fairly settled and acquired across pressure a cross much of england and also wales some shape of a transient ridge of high pressure across southern areas shape of a transient ridge of high pressure across southern areas that will settle things down. in northern sunny skies at times. for areas we have low pressure and that northern will bring in some fronts ireland and for scotland you will see more cloud and without weather and you may notice the isobars there, windy front coming in it will bring in on—site wednesday wherever you are rain across northern into full of a lot of dry weather for southern england and also for wales on and central scotland, preceded by wednesday but we also have a weather some snow and this front coming in across scotland. it weather front is likely to click will move slowly northwards. no northern ireland difference in the temperatures. six on its journey and what it will in the north, 11 in the south.
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do towards the end of the is bring rain preceded by some snow and that will very slowly through week things the day move become more unsettled and there will become more unsettled and there will be some showers with some rain northwards. around but one thing you will notice temperatures climbing, however. sixes and sevens in the north but is that by the time we get to reaching 11 further south. for friday, most of us will be back in mild conditions and the end of the week for thursday and friday it turns unsettled. there double figures. thank you very much, carol and we will be rain and showers and one thing you can take away from this will see you later on this chart is that it will turn milder morning. we have been reflecting on the death across the board. so of us basketball great kobe bryant in summery for throughout the programme this morning. he enjoyed this week, we're off to a chilly start. some snow and ice, dry legendary status by the in la with the la lakers, spending time we get to wednesday, 20 years of this particularly in southern areas but career there. let's thenit particularly in southern areas but then it becomes mild and unsettled speak now to a journalist who in the latter part of the week. covers thank you very the lakers. joe, you personally as well must be devastated, given much, carol. later that you must know on this morning we will find out how him extremely well. much muggy is owed really, for me it has been a long in overdraft across the uk. numerals are coming day and a tough day, he into force soon and we will find was a little bit before my time as far as out about the shortly. but victoria as he was some details. covering in the media but i good morning to you both. we grew up watching him. i am from covering in the media but i grew up think watching him. iam from los covering in the media but i grew up watching him. i am from los angeles so watching him. i am from los angeles soi watching him. i am from los angeles so i watched him for 20 years. we are overd rawn, good morning to you both. we think we are overdrawn, that the uk is overdrawn to the tune of about £6 82 games a year with
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billion. that is quite a lot of him. the city is muggy. and if you are one of those devastated in general. since walking people who is regularly tipping into around today you can sense the sadness in the city. heartbreak, the red listener because there are numerals coming into force for your if you will. there were many people bank and building society and it crying in the street. i was one could affect you. there of them. he was an idol in are 19 million of us that currently the city and he really was kind of like the son use something cold arranged overdraft of the city. they have been many facility, that is when you have an agreed limit with your bank. great sports stars in los angeles remember, you will be but kobe was probably at the top of the list. so it has been a charged for this muggy, for spending muggy you trying a long day here in la for do not actually own and a band he so that fee was absolutely passionate about this tends to be set between sport, wasn't it? that is what we 16, 20%, loved about him. we that sort of rate. however, want our that rate is nothing compared athletes to care as much as we think to the rate we would about what they do on the thatis court and if there is anybody who rate is nothing compared to the rate that is 14 million people have on an arranged overdraft. so when you tip was close to maybe matching what we in and you did not have saw from michaeljordan back in the an agreement day, it was kobe. and in place with your bank. if you are regularly in that position, things he really had that mentality where all he wanted will change for you and 7 to do was win. there are legendary million people are actually using both. not stories about his work ethic, waking only do they have an agreed limit up stories about his work ethic, waking up at 4am, calling his coaching but sometimes they go over that waking him up to go shoot by himself as well. and so everything will ina dark waking him up to go shoot by himself change from april. whether you have an in a dark gym. he wanted to win more
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agreed limit or not, the rate that than anybody and it certainly came the bank will charge you for off and showed with his this is results, five nba championships. he has going to be the same. cemented himself as the rate does a very at the moment depending on a top player who you bank with but it in this league's history and that is not up for debate. i understand that will, it will go up regardless of who you his daughter was on board the bank with, whether it is hsbc, or helicopter with him and she was a someone bank with, whether it is hsbc, or someone else. and why good player as well. very do the sad. 13 regulators say that people will be yea rs good player as well. very sad. 13 better off? basically, at years old. kobe had kind of the moment return to the nba and we saw him a lot more if you are one of those people this year and that had much to do who is on and an arranged limit you with his daughter who was could be charged anything. a basketball player and, as he said at sometimes you are £100 over but you could times, started to get him back into be the game. over the past year, we charged £5 a day for being started to see how much of a family overdrawn. and once there is man he was, even all the other stuff a single rate which could be something he was doing off the floor, force, up single rate which could be something up to 40% which does sound like a how much he loved his family lot but that could just be and his 10p a day. the idea is daughters and it is difficult to see someone daughters and it is difficult to see someone that young an age no longer that the regulator. with us. we are seeing poignant banks from charging a huge amount of pictures of them together now. thank muqqy banks from charging a huge amount of muggy for people who are really you forjoining struggling to budget. they worked out that the banks are making a us. small fortune from this. about half plenty of tributes being paid today to kobe bryant from people of all the muggy they
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right across the spectrum. he make from an arranged overdraft comes from just 296, was mentioned at the grammys quite a bit arranged overdraft comes from just 2%, under 2% of bank last night as well. it is customers. they think that that is abusive and they coming up to five minutes to eight and we wa nted think that that is abusive and they wanted to stop so the regulator has will talk a little about how much money stepped in. yes, who are is owed in overdraft across the uk. struggling. so if you are in the red quite a it isa is owed in overdraft across the uk. it is a huge amount, isn't it? we bit during the month, what should you do, what is the process? at this know it is around £6 billion stage it is musical chairs. but we will find out a little more what you can do is swap to at 930 when those figures will be a bank that has 0% published. if you are one of those interest on an overdraft. there are people who occasionally or routinely some banks around that still tips into the red, listen up today do that. but the chairs disappear because there are new rules for your bank and building society that will in those banks disappear. more and more banks will charge for overdraft. so affect you. there are 19 then what? another situation million of you us who have arranged could perhaps use is 0% credit overdraft facilities where card, so could perhaps use is 0% credit card, so swap the debt onto you arranged a credit card. however that comes with a big hills limit, warning, you must have some kind of but there are many people, 14 plan for paying million in fact, to have an arranged down that before overdraft a nd million in fact, to have an arranged overdraft and that is when you tip that 0% offer expires because otherwise you could be hit with a in and you can end up being charged higherfee again. an awful lot of money. for an otherwise you could be hit with a higher fee again. the whole idea arranged overdraft it depends on the otherwise you could be hit with a higherfee again. the whole idea of these changes is that the regulator bank but somewhere between 16 to 20%
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wa nts to these changes is that the regulator wants to wind us off the idea that of the moment. for we can spend beyond our means all the time and that it will not cost those on an arranged overdraft it could be us much muggy. that is absolutely staggering and 7 why these million changes are coming into force of us are using both. some people because it is a difficult thing to do. we will have a personal have a limit and then they are going over on top of that. so fine and expert in next hour so the regulator has said it is time to put send us in an end on all of this. your questions and your thoughts, let me know your situation and we we want a will try our best to get you some simple fairer clearer structure for the bank. so what will happen in advice. you can tweet us or april is that there will be send us an e—mailat bbc one flat rate that whether or not you have advice. you can tweet us or send us an e—mail at bbc breakfast at bbc .co.uk. an arranged overdraft or in an arranged overdraft, it is just one fee for an e—mail at bbc breakfast at bbc .co .uk. thank you very much. i am everyone. it is said to pretty much sure many people will be interested double so about 40%. to hear that. it sounds complicated to hear that. it sounds complicated to my having to many people today have gotten in touch with us swap things around. you can get stung. it is on e—mailand on today have gotten in touch with us on e—mail and on twitter saying how is this fair? how is this complicated. lots to fit in the fair if overdraft facilities will be more programme today. we are here expensive? the reality is that until quarter past nine but right now time they will be cheaper for most people who for the news, travel and whether wherever you are watching and we had an arranged limits. many people will return who may be £100 over in two a being charged £5a who may be £100 over a being charged minutes time. £5 a day but those daily and monthly figures are disappearing. it should good morning. be fairerfor some police in greenwich say
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they are aware of anti—semitic but graffiti scrawled across a number figures are disappearing. it should be fairer for some but many upset and much confusion over this. there of buildings in the borough is more available on the website. at the thank you, victoria. weekend. 757 and time it appeared on a bank in blackheath and outside a takeaway ahead for some news, travel and of today's weather wherever you are watching. national headlines on the weighed holocaust memorial eight o'clock. day. good the graffiti also included a celtic cross, a symbol of white supremacy. morning. parents and volunteers in enfield police in greenwich say who set up patrols less than one they are aware of anti—semitic year ago to stop the graffiti scrawled across a number children being mugged, say they have of buildings in the borough seen a reduction in crime and the idea at the could be copied across london. it was in response weekend. it appeared on a bank in blackheath to a series and outside a takeaway in charlton of muggings that ahead of today's holocaust memorial day. patrols working the graffiti also included a celtic cross, a symbol of white supremacy. with local police teams. they are in talks with scotland yard parents and volunteers in enfield about expanding to other boroughs. who set up patrols less than one hundreds of homes in richmond remain without gas this morning, year ago to stop their children five days after water from a burst being mugged, say they have seen water main escaped into gas pipes. a reduction in crime and the idea could be copied across london. engineers have been pumping water it was in response to a series from 20 miles of pipes. of muggings, with patrols working it says all homes affected should with local police teams. have gas restored this week they are in talks with but will have to visit every home individually to turn it back on. scotland yard about expanding to other
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new research shows that boroughs. on average hundreds of homes in richmond remain without gas this morning, ten people die every day in london the bbc‘s panorama programme has found a section of smart motorway the bbc‘s panorama programme has found a section of smart motorway has had 20 times more near misses has had 20 times more misses when it comes to accidents than before when it it was converted. comes to accidents before it was smart motorways have been criticised converted. smart motorways have been for not having a hard shoulder the government says it wants criticised for not having a hard to fix smart motorways because they are shoulder with drivers who breakdown confusing for drivers. being trapped in speeding traffic. the government says it wants to fix that will be smart motorways because they are confusing for 830 tonight on drivers. bbc one city madonna says she is deeply sorry for cancelling her first let's have a look at the travel london show tonight. the situation this morning. looking at the board we see singer was due to begin a run of 15 dates at that the london overground has no service between barking the london palladium this evening and south tottenham and minor delays but ina the london palladium this evening but in a statement she said she had in south tottenham because of a faulty freight line. been plagued by injury and was king's cross station is open after weekend engineering works told but they have overrun and that by doctors to rest for a few days. refunds will be given to those means there are delays who had tickets. of around 30 let's have a look at the travel minutes this morning. situation this morning. onto the roads and in brixton, looking at the board we see brixton road is down to one lane that the london overground has no in each direction because of gasworks. service between barking
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and now the weather and south tottenham and minor delays forecast with kate. in south tottenham because of good morning. a faulty freight line. it is not an especially cold start this morning but we do however king's cross station is open after weekend engineering works but they have overrun and that means have a few scattered and heavy there are delays of around 30 showers and a scattering of a breeze minutes this as well pushing those showers through. and that breeze will make things feel chilly. morning. in the heavier of the the m25 is slow but still moving showers you may get a flash of anticlockwise at the dartford tunnel lightning and that is and hail mixed in after a crash. as well. a few bright spells and maybe some glimpses sunshine and now the weather forecast with kate. between the showers good morning. later and temperatures it is not an especially cold start reaching eight degrees. this morning but we do however overnight we hang onto the showers, relentless for a time, have a few scattered and heavy showers and a scattering of a breeze a few clearer spells developing, however, and under those clear as well pushing those skies, the temperature will drop showers through. and that breeze will make and it will be colder things feel chilly. than it was last night, in the heavier of the showers one celsius in the suburbs and that you may get a flash of lightning means we could see some slippery and hail mixed in as well. surfaces first thing tomorrow a few bright spells and maybe morning after the some glimpses sunshine between the showers later and temperatures showers. reaching eight degrees. potentially some tricky driving overnight we hang onto the conditions but those showers will clear away on tuesday morning showers, relentless for a time, and are largely dry day was sunny a few clearer spells developing, however, and under those clear skies, the temperature will spells. drop temperatures still chilly and it will be in the westerly breeze. gradually through the week it colder than it was last night, will stay unsettled post wednesday
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but the temperature will one celsius in the suburbs and that means we could see some slippery get a surfaces first thing tomorrow little milder. morning after the the second phase of the granville showers. potentially some tricky driving enquiry starts today and vanessa has conditions but those showers more on that on bbc radio london will clear away on tuesday morning and a largely dry day in with sunny ten 01:00:14,121 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 minutes. spells. temperatures still chilly in the westerly breeze. gradually through the week it will stay unsettled post wednesday but the temperature will get a little milder. the london breakfast show is on now and ina the london breakfast show is on now and in a few minutes she will speak to somebody from grenfell united about the grenfell enquiry. good morning. welcome to breakfast with dan walker and louise minchin. our headlines today: basketball legend kobe bryant has died in a helicopter crash alongside his teenage daughter and seven others. there are tributes from the world of sport, politics and showbusiness as millions of fans mourn the loss of one of the sport's
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greatest players. survivors of the holocaust gather at auschwitz in poland, to mark the 75th anniversary of the concentration camp's liberation — we'll hear some of their stories. jurgen klopp says he won't take charge of liverpool's fa cup replay, after shrewsbury pulled off one of the shocks of the fourth round to force a 2—2 draw with the premier league leaders. good morning. it is a breezy day and with bright spells, sunshine and showers with some of those showers wintry even at modest levels. i will have more later. it's monday 27th january. our top story. us basketball star kobe bryant has been hailed as an "extraordinary" athlete, devoted father and an inspiration to millions around the world, following his death in a helicopter crash near los angeles. his 13—year—old daughter, gianna, and seven other people were also killed when the aircraft hit a hillside and burst into flames.
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the 41—year—old won five nba championships and two olympic gold medals and became a legend at the la lakers. our north america correspondent peter bowes reports. the helicopter crashed on a remote hillside. this plume of white smoke could be seen over a wide area. the rugged terrain meant first responders had to hike to the scene. there were no survivors in the badly burned wreckage. there was a lot of fog at the time but the cause of the crash isn't yet known. 45 years of living, i have not felt this much grief and love for one man that has passed. for a city, my city, he was an idol, he was an icon. for me, man, just watching his videos, it was more than basketball. it was just the mentality to get through life and he's got me through so many struggles in my life and it's one of the hardest losses i've ever dealt with and i never even met the man. kobe bryant and his daughter had been travelling to a sports academy co—founded by the player two years ago. 13—year—old gianna bryant had been planning to play in a basketball
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game with her father acting as coach. according to us media reports, another player and parent were also on the helicopter. kobe brya nt‘s accomplishments in basketball are legendary. five nba championships, the 2008 nba most valuable player and two olympic gold medals. he spent his entire 20—year career with the los angeles lakers before retiring four years ago. in 2018, he won an oscar for ‘dear basketball‘ a five minute film based on a love letter he'd written to the sport. he burned so competitively hot and desire to win. he brought it each and every night, on both ends of the floor. not too many guys can say that throughout nba history. kobe bryant died as final preparations were being made for this year's grammy awards at la's staples centre, also the home of the
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la lakers. as the show got under way, alicia keys dedicated the night to kobe. and we are literally standing here heartbroken in the house that kobe bryant built. outside, thousands of fans converged on the venue to pay their respects at a makeshift memorial, still numb with the shock of losing a hero. the lakers have returned home after playing in philadelphia on saturday. lebron james, physically overcome with emotion as he arrived at the airport with other members of the team. peter bowes, bbc news, los angeles. survivors of the nazi death camp at auschwitz—birkenau, in southern poland, have been laying wreaths in the last half hour, to mark the 75th anniversary of its liberation.
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more than a million people, most of them jews, were murdered at the camp during the second world war. the wreaths were laid at the so—called "wall of death", where thousands of prisoners were executed by firing squad. in a few minutes you can hear the first—hand account of one survivor, zigi shipper, who was taken to auschwitz when he was 14. a second brand new hospital, specially for the treatment of people with coronavirus, is under construction in the chinese city of wuhan. it will have 1300 beds and is expected to be completed in two weeks' time. another facility which is also dedicated to treating the virus will be finished on monday. more than 80 people have died from the respiratory infection and more than 300 other people are critically ill. there's been no let up in the rate of infections with more than 750 new cases reported
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in the last day alone. the second phase of the grenfell tower public inquiry begins this morning, with the hearings expected to continue until april. the inquiry will hear accounts of why dangerous cladding was used to refurbish the tower and how it contributed to the fire. a member of the inquiry panel resigned this weekend over links she had with the company which supplied the building's cladding. the irish taoiseach, leo varadkar has questioned the timetable set by borisjohnson to secure a trade deal with the rest of the eu by the end of the year. the uk will leave the eu at 11 o'clock on friday night and in an interview with the bbc, mrvaradkarsaid the eu will have the upper hand in the upcoming brexit trade negotiations. i think the reality is, the eu is a union of 27 member states and the uk is only one country and we have a population of
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400 people. —— 450 million people. if these two teams we re million people. if these two teams were up against each other playing football, who do you think has the stronger team, as long as we are united. here's carol with a look at this morning's weather. it isa it is a chilly day particularly further north you travel. showers will be wintry, even at modest levels. another thing to watch out for a northern england, northern ireland is ice on untreated surfaces. we do have the mix of bright spells, sunshine and showers. as we come south across england and wales, again we are looking at the mix of sunshine and showers, some of the showers will be of hail stones and also thunder and lightning in there. it is a breezy day wherever you are. that will have an impact on the temperatures and the breeze
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picking up through the irish sea, northern and western scotland, the english channel and around the channel islands as we go through the day. temperatures five, 9 degrees. showers wintry, especially on higher ground but even coming down to modest levels during the course of the night. not just modest levels during the course of the night. notjust in the north but cross wales, the north generally. tomorrow morning, watch out for ice on untreated surfaces. as for tomorrow, it remains a mixture of bright spells, sunshine and showers, some of those showers will be wintry on the tops of the hills. still quite breezy with highs of between four and seven. thank you very much, we will see you later. it's exactly 75 years today since the notorious nazi death camp at auschwitz—birkenau was liberated and all morning we've been bringing you the stories of some of those who not only survived the holocaust,
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but somehow managed to pick themselves up afterwards and build new, happy lives. one of those people is zigi shipper, who shared his experiences with me before i went to see the camp at auschwitz for myself. a warning — some parts of this report are upsetting. my number was 84,303 and i can't forget it for the life of me. i tried so many times to forget it, but i can't. i was completely dehumanized. how can a child of 14 hope people should die so that he will have a place where to sit? what has become of me? i should have been dead, you know,
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for thinking like that. you see, but that's how it was. you could not escape from auschwitz—birkenau. it was electrified fences with guards on top. i cannot forget things like that even though i forget so many things, what happened to normal. but those things, killing babies... i could neverforget it if i live a thousand years. knock at the door. hi, zigi. hello. nice to see you. and you. thanks for inviting us. come in,
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come in. they said, if you want to go to germany to work, we will take you to germany to work. the first the thing i said, i can't see any trains. she said they are standing in front of you. and what was in front of you? trains, but not for human beings, you know? it was cattle trucks. they opened those shutters and they started to take people in. and, you know, when they finished, they couldn't close it, it was so many people. if anybody sat down, other people were standing on him or sitting on him and they were dying. one early morning, the train stopped and through the slits of the train i saw the word auschwitz . they opened those doors
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and there were german guards pointing right, left, right, left. all the people that went to the left were old people, disabled people, children, and also women holding babies. the guards came over to the women that were holding babies and told them to put their baby down, go to the other side. can you imagine a mother do it? she wouldn't do it. they tried to rip that baby out of their arms. zigy‘s been back to auschwitz many times, but now, at 90 years old, he's not going this year. so i'm going to go in his place to light a candle for him and for those that he lost. what you'll see in auschwitz, you, you won't believe it. you won't believe it. you are looking at it and you still think, it can't be, it
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can't be. so i just arrived here at auschwitz, and that is the sign that you see — the first thing you see as you walk in — that promise, which we know was not what happened. "work sets you free." and even now, it still feels an intimidating place to be. you've got the double sets of barbed wire, you've got the watchtowers above you. and you can get the sense of people arriving here with that promise about work setting them free with no idea about what was going to happen when they walked through these metal gates and it slammed behind them. the ss men who are running
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this process, they quite quickly understood that violence, beatings, dogs, it is of course working. but then it can start panic and panic in their work is something that they're really trying to avoid. and they very quickly learned that hope is a much better weapon. one of the senior officers walked up to the roof of the gas chamber looking at the people who are standing in front of the entrance, and he asked them a question — is there any tailor here? and you know, someone raised their... "i'm a tailor." "wonderful — we need tailors. there will be plenty of work for you." and then people started — "i'm a shoemaker!" great, there are shoemakers and... no. "but first, ladies and gentlemen, you need to go through disinfection. please go inside." they almost happily entered into the building not knowing what will happen. all we saw is big chimneys with smoke coming out and we thought, maybe they have their own bakeries. we didn't know about gas chambers. maybe the grown—ups did, you know.
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but we did not have a clue about. so we're not allowed to film in the gas chamber and, actually, as you walk through it, you're asked to be silent in respect of all the many thousands of people who died in there. it's incredibly claustrophobic. the walls are really thick and the ceilings are low. and you can see just the gap in the ceiling where those gas pellets would have been dropped in. and it's a chilling place — chilling because you can see the beginnings of the industrial scale that this was done on. what motivated — how can one human do this to others? this is the power of human hatred. people really can hate others so much or think about them as not human beings. thinking about that they're better than others. and this is one of the most challenging and most difficult lesson for us because it's so easy to call them monsters. it's so easy to tell... "they were bloodshed monsters,"
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and but they were not. they were people. and they started believing in this world. i cannot understand it. you know, you think if they were done by such wicked people like that — there were doctors, lawyers, engineers that were doing it. and then they went home in the evening and they sat down... ..with their wife and children. and eating their dinner and listen to music, knowing what they did daytime. the worst thing up till today for me was there were two rooms. there were children's toys, two precious little shoes. and up till today, whenever
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i think about it, that room is in front of my eyes. so i saw that first gas chamber in auschwitz. we're now in birkenau now about three kilometers away from there. this is what they became. look at the size of it. this is where people would have stood for the last few moments of their life. and then they have to walk through. and in the far distance, you can see where the crematorium would have been, where they would have burned those many, many thousands of bodies. and it looks like this because a week before the camp was actually liberated, the germans tried to destroy the evidence so nobody would know of the atrocities. zigi spent months in different concentration camps after he left auschwitz—birkenau and he never
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saw his grandmother — who he traveled there with — again. he was finally freed by british troops on 3rd may 1945 and the uk became his home. i always say in school because, you know, students, they don't know and they say, "have you ever spoken to hitler or met hitler?" i said, "no, thank god." but i say, "i would love to see him today for one reason. "i want to show him my family, my two daughters, my four grandsons two great girls, and then four great—great ones.
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good morning. good
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morning. today is very much about hearing from around 200 survivors who are attending these commemorative events. let me know introduce you to one of them. renee salt was incarcerated here and in bergen—belsen. good morning. thank you so much forjoining us. how are you doing? i am ok, thank you very much. it is not easy to come back? i get very nervous every timel come back? i get very nervous every time i come back. i'd come back a lot. why is that? i come with groups. i want to show them, children especially, what happened here and how we suffered, and perhaps we can avoid one day another holocaust. so yes, that is why i come back. it's a very beautiful, quiet morning. we can hear some birdsong. a very different of course to how it was. can you describe to
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usa to how it was. can you describe to us a little bit of what it was like? so terribly frightening. we never knew from one hour to the next what was going to happen to us. there we re was going to happen to us. there were experiments going on here, operations made by german doctors. it was very, very bad. you were always afraid. you didn't know what was going to happen. we suffered a lot. the hunger here and the cold. all i had was a man past my pyjama jacket and a skirt to put on. no shoes, nothing. it was very bad. it's a miracle that anyone us survived. and you did. what was it, do you think? it was god's well. that is all i can say. and throughout all this time i
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was lucky i was with my mother and she kept me going. i kept her going in a way. otherwise without my mother i don't think i would have survived. a lot of survivors say auschwitz will never leave them. it is with them all their life. you see it all the time, all the time. all their life. you see it all the time, allthe time. you all their life. you see it all the time, all the time. you can never forget it. one of the things that a lot of people talk about this year is the fact that anti—semitism is increasing again across the world. how does that make you feel? very frightening. i how does that make you feel? very frightening. lam how does that make you feel? very frightening. i am very, very worried sometimes. i hope it will quieten down. at the moment it is very bad all over europe. what will be going through your mind this afternoon as the ceremony goes on, people make their speeches and you are sat there, having once been a prisoner, back for the anniversary? that's right. now i appreciated. i could
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come here and i can go back out whenever i want to. at one time i could not have done it. what about you now? how are you in yourself? what has got you through the years afterwards ? what has got you through the years afterwards? when we left after the liberation, each of us, i think, we all have illnesses from the camp. you can never forget it. i came out of the camp, i was very, very ill. surprisingly i survived, i don't know how but i did. good medical care. ithink know how but i did. good medical care. i think everyone of us came out having some problems. does it surprise you when you hear research that says some people don't really know what happened, both here and across europe during the holocaust? i think everybody knows by now. it is too big a thing to hide. everybody knows. how
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important is it that people remember? we must remember. we must never forget. we much to teach schoolchildren —— we must teach schoolchildren about what happened here, and perhaps we can avoid another holocaust from coming. renee, thank you so much. we will leave you to get warm and make the most of the rest of your time here. thank you very much. that is renee salt, very brave, because it's not easy for people to come back and walk amongst these buildings alongside the barbed wire and the concrete walls, but they do so because, as you heard, they are united in their message. never again. jenny, thank you. please pass on our thanks to renee for talking to us. it is so powerful to hear from survivors and to hear what it was like for them. thank you very much indeed. that is the message i got from ziggy. we must never forget.
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there are so many things that take you back when you visit. i talked to them about that. that is what the survivors wanted. they wanted it to be left so people could go back and see. there is nothing like arriving at birkenau, which they cause —— call auschwitz two, and it is just a desolate place. you arrive there. it is very much left as it was when people were killed there. it is devastating actually to see. thank you for sharing your thoughts and comments. divina says, such a powerful and moving story. never forget what some people have to go through. if you want to see any of that again, we will have it on bbc brea kfast that again, we will have it on bbc breakfast social media. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. hi, there, good morning. it's been a rather icy start to the day across the north—east of england, across scotland and in northern ireland,
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and we've had some snow showers throughout this morning. many above about 100 metres or so, but we'll continue with some wintry showers into the afternoon and they'll be some sunny spells, too. now this is the air mass picture. you can see the blues across the uk. quite a chilly north—westerly wind. that's going to feed in quite a few showers today and, as mentioned, they're wintry over the higher ground of scotland, continuing into the afternoon. showers then moving their way gradually eastward across england and wales, but you can see there will also be some brighter spells of sunshine in between those showers, and maximum temperatures today getting up to around five to nine, possibly 10 celsius in the far south—east. through tonight, more showers to come. perhaps more significant snowfall for a time across central and southern scotland. look at it here, coming in here. that could bring a few centimetres into the early part of tuesday morning. that's just something to be aware of and, again, potentially icy across scotland, northern ireland and the far north of england as temperatures here fall below freezing. further south, overnight lows down to about three or 4 degrees. throughout tuesday, perhaps a bit
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more of a breezy day and that wind coming in from the west or north—west. further showers, again those could be wintry over the high ground of scotland, perhaps northern ireland, the far north of england. some drier spells, some sunshine at times to the south—east, and temperatures on tuesday pretty similar to this afternoon. five to 8 degrees. going into wednesday, we've got this long area of low pressure here. that's going to move its way in across northern parts. that will introduce some rain across the far north of northern ireland, into scotland. further south, though, it should be a drier day on wednesday compared to today and tuesday. still that breeze coming from the west or south—west, and temperatures will be around about six to nine, again maybe 10 degrees down to the south—east of england. quite a changeable week to come. bye— bye.
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this is worklife from bbc news, with ben bland and david eades. travel bans and strict health surveillance measures: china counts the cost of the coronavirus outbeak.
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live from london, that's our top story on monday 27th of january. china warns that coronavirus could spread more quickly as it imposes yet more travel restrictions. also in the programme... tributes are paid to one of basketball‘s biggest stars — kobe bryant — who's died in a helicopter crash. and what needs to be done to empower more female leaders? we hear from the women at the world economic forum in davos. and we'll be getting the inside track on how social media influencers are notjust having impact on our lives, but also our shopping habits. the head of a private school in england has called for more to be done to drive boys into female—dominated professions, such as nursing, to encourage gender equality.
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today we want to know whether you agree with this.
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